International governance, regimes, and globalization : case studies from Beijing and Taipei / edited by Peter Kien-hong Yu, W. Emily Chow, and Shawn S.F. Kao.
Material type:![Text](/opac-tmpl/lib/famfamfam/BK.png)
- text
- computer
- online resource
- 9780739143216
- 0739143212
- 1282561499
- 9781282561496
- 9786612561498
- 6612561491
- International organization -- Case studies
- China -- Foreign relations -- 1976-
- Taiwan -- Foreign relations -- 1945-
- Organisation internationale -- Études de cas
- Chine -- Relations extérieures -- 1976-
- Taiwan -- Relations extérieures -- 1945-
- LAW -- International
- Diplomatic relations
- International organization
- China
- Taiwan
- Since 1945
- 341.2 22
- JZ1318
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OPJGU Sonepat- Campus | E-Books EBSCO | Available |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Description based on print version record and CIP data provided by publisher; resource not viewed.
Preface; 1 International Governance and International Regimes; 2 Norms, Power, the Power of Norms, and Community: Essentials of International Governance; 3 Does Beijing Understand the Term "International Regimes"?: A Content Study; 4 Beijing's Hegemony under International Relations and International Regimes; 5 Adaptation and Strategic Calculation: China's Participation in International Regimes and Institutions; 6 The PRC's Governance Diplomacy in the Asia-Pacific Region; 7 Governing the Taiwan Strait in a Globalizing World: Using Military and Nonmilitary Adversary Regimes as a Tool.
8 Globalization, East Asia, and the Future of Global Politics9 Universality Claims and "Failures" across Cultures: Liberalism vs. Asian Values; Index; About the Contributors.
In the this collection, International Governance, Regimes, and Globalization, the writers explore international political relations and globalization by using specific examples from Beijing and Taipei. In December 1949, when China was politically divided the People's Republic of China (PRC), the central government was in control of most resources, tangible and intangible. For that reason, our unit of analysis has to be the state, meaning a government or a politically organized body. With the rise of civil society at both national and international levels, applying the international/global gove.
English.
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