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ID144641
Title ProperChina syndrome
LanguageENG
AuthorFontaine, Richard ;  Rapp-Hooper, Mira
Summary / Abstract (Note)CHINA’S RAPID ascent to great-power status has, more than any other international development, raised concerns about the future of the liberal international order. Forged in the ashes of the Second World War, that order has enabled a seven-decade period of great-power peace, the expansion of democratic rule and a massive increase in global prosperity. Now, it seems, world order is under threat—not least from China’s rising power. While Beijing has thus far avoided active military aggression and refrained from exclusionary economic arrangements, American policymakers worry quite openly about China’s challenge to the underlying rules of the road. They hope that Beijing will embrace the existing pillars of global order and even work to support them; they fear that China will prove revisionist, seeking to undermine the rules-based order and fashion an illiberal alternative that excludes the United States.
`In' analytical NoteNational Interest , No.143; May-Jun 2016: p.10-18
Journal SourceNational Interest 2016-05
Key WordsWorld Order ;  China ;  US ;  Obama Administration ;  Liberal International Order ;  China Syndrome ;  Great-Power Status