Fr. 103.00

Regulating the Rise of China - Australia's Foray into Middle Power Economics

English · Hardback

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Description

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This book revises the existing account of the first Rudd Government's engagement with China, placing Australian foreign direct investment screening policy at the centre of the story. At the time, the Rudd Government was accused of holding an unnecessarily interventionist approach to Chinese Sovereign-Owned Enterprise investments into the Australian mining sector. This book claims that the Australian Government had a deep and coherent understanding of the problem posed by Chinese investments that went well-beyond any simplistic 'China Inc.' or geopolitical threats. The key policymakers believed that the Chinese state-directed investments threatened the integrity of the liberal governance structures on which the Australian state is founded, and so Australian sovereignty itself. While the response of the Rudd Government was largely ineffectual, the logic underpinning it remains the best framework for guiding Australia's engagement with China into the 2020s, as well as the engagementof other liberal states coming to grips with China's rise.

List of contents

Chapter One: Introduction.- Chapter Two: Governmental Policy Analysis.- Chapter Three: The Policy Departure.- Chapter Four: The Policy Problemetisation.- Chapter Five: Official Discourses of Economics.- Chapter Six: Official Discourses of Security.- Chapter Seven: A governmental account of the policy.- Chapter Eight: Evaluating the Policy.- Chapter Nine: Conclusion.

About the author

Michael Peters studied International Relations at the University of New South Wales, Australia. He teaches International Relations and works on the editorial and publicity teams of the Economic and Labour Relations Review.

Summary

This book revises the existing account of the first Rudd Government's engagement with China, placing Australian foreign direct investment screening policy at the centre of the story. At the time, the Rudd Government was accused of holding an unnecessarily interventionist approach to Chinese Sovereign-Owned Enterprise investments into the Australian mining sector. This book claims that the Australian Government had a deep and coherent understanding of the problem posed by Chinese investments that went well-beyond any simplistic 'China Inc.' or geopolitical threats. The key policymakers believed that the Chinese state-directed investments threatened the integrity of the liberal governance structures on which the Australian state is founded, and so Australian sovereignty itself. While the response of the Rudd Government was largely ineffectual, the logic underpinning it remains the best framework for guiding Australia's engagement with China into the 2020s, as well as the engagementof other liberal states coming to grips with China's rise.

Product details

Authors Michael Peters, Michael David Peters
Publisher Springer, Berlin
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 01.01.2019
 
EAN 9783030054656
ISBN 978-3-0-3005465-6
No. of pages 309
Dimensions 152 mm x 218 mm x 25 mm
Weight 550 g
Illustrations XV, 309 p. 3 illus., 1 illus. in color.
Series Studies in the Political Economy of Public Policy
Studies in the Political Economy of Public Policy
Subject Social sciences, law, business > Political science > Politics and business

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