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ID186180
Title ProperSeeking support beyond alliance? rethinking great power partner politics after the cold war
LanguageENG
AuthorDing, Lu ;  Sun, Xuefeng
Summary / Abstract (Note)Since the end of the Cold War, establishing partnerships has been part and parcel of the grand strategy of great powers. The partners that great powers seek fall under the two categories of security partners and political-economic partners. Statistics show a significant variation in the proportions of great powers’ security partners. The authors argue that such variation is mainly determined by two factors, namely, great powers’ strategic threats, and their ways of maintaining national security [self-help or security-dependent (on the United States)]. Specifically, both the security-dependent great powers that are under China’s strategic threat and the self-help great powers that are under the US’s strategic threat have a higher proportion of security partners than the security-dependent great powers that are not under China’s strategic threat and the self-help great powers that are under China’s strategic threat. These findings will help to refine the current theories of great power politics.
`In' analytical NoteInternational Relations of the Asia-Pacific Vol. 21, No.3; 2021: p.431–464
Journal SourceInternational Relations of the Asia-Pacific Vol: 21 No 3
Key WordsGreat Powers ;  Grand Strategy ;  Cold War ;  Great Power Partner Politics ;  China’s Strategic Threat


 
 
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