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Informationen zum Autor Robert S. Ross is Professor of Political Science at Boston College, Associate, John King Fairbank Center for East Asian Research, Harvard University, and Senior Advisor, Security Studies Program, Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Klappentext This volume provides a coherent and comprehensive overview of Chinese security policy, comprising essays written by one of America's leading scholars. Zusammenfassung This volume provides a coherent and comprehensive overview of Chinese security policy, comprising essays written by one of America's leading scholars. Inhaltsverzeichnis Introduction: Structure, Power, and Politics in Chinese Security Policy Part 1: Great Power Politics and East Asian Security 1. China Learns to Compromise: Change in U.S.-China Relations, 1982-1984 (1991) 2. The Geography of the Peace: Great Power Stability in Twenty-First Century East Asia (1999) 3. The U.S.-China Peace: Great Power Politics, Spheres of Influence, and the Peace of East Asia (2003) 4. Balance of Power Politics and the Rise of China: Accommodation and Balancing in East Asia (2006) Part 2: Deterrence and Coercive Diplomacy in Chinese Security Policy 5. China and the Cambodian Peace Process: The Value of Coercive Diplomacy (1991) 6. The 1995-96 Taiwan Strait Confrontation: Coercion, Credibility, and Use of Force (2000) 7. Navigating the Taiwan Strait: Deterrence, Escalation Dominance, and U.S.-China Relations (2002) Part 3: Domestic Politics and Foreign Policy 8. International Bargaining and Domestic Politics: Conflict in U.S.-China Relations Since 1972 (1986) 9. From Lin Biao to Deng Xiaoping: Elite Instability and China's U.S. Policy (1989) 10. The Diplomacy of Tiananmen: Two-Level Bargaining and Great Power Cooperation (2001)