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  • China's Rise and Australia-Japan-US Relations: Primacy and Leadership in East Asia (Book Review)

    Author(s)
    Wirth, Christian
    Griffith University Author(s)
    Wirth, Christian
    Year published
    2020
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    In China’s Rise and Australia-Japan-US Relations: Primacy and Leadership in East Asia, Michael Haezle and Andrew O’Neil pursue the objective of providing policy-related observations and recommendations on the nature of the US-led liberal regional order and the shared interest of Australia and Japan in maintaining it. The eleven chapters, written by experts in security politics from Australia, Japan, and the United States, aim to achieve this objective through an analysis of US leadership as seen from Canberra and Tokyo. As the editors rightly point out, this perspective is worthwhile because the two US allies’ views can serve ...
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    In China’s Rise and Australia-Japan-US Relations: Primacy and Leadership in East Asia, Michael Haezle and Andrew O’Neil pursue the objective of providing policy-related observations and recommendations on the nature of the US-led liberal regional order and the shared interest of Australia and Japan in maintaining it. The eleven chapters, written by experts in security politics from Australia, Japan, and the United States, aim to achieve this objective through an analysis of US leadership as seen from Canberra and Tokyo. As the editors rightly point out, this perspective is worthwhile because the two US allies’ views can serve as ‘critical indicators of the prospects for change in the regional order’ (4). Grouped into five parts, the contributions cover the prominent themes of the post-war ‘hub-and-spokes’ alliance system, the strength of the Australian, Japanese, and US commitments to this system, and the challenge for those actors to manage it together with other East Asian security partners.
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    Journal Title
    Social Science Japan Journal
    Volume
    23
    Issue
    1
    DOI
    https://doi.org/10.1093/ssjj/jyz036
    Subject
    Commerce, Management, Tourism and Services
    Social Sciences
    Area Studies
    Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary
    Social Sciences - Other Topics
    Publication URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10072/397487
    Collection
    • Journal articles

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