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ID178697
Title ProperQuad’s search for non-military roles and China’s strategic response
Other Title Informationminilateralism, infrastructure investment, and regional balancing
LanguageENG
AuthorPark, Jae Jeok ;  Paik, Wooyeal
Summary / Abstract (Note)The Quadrilateral Security Dialogue (‘Quad’)—a cooperative consisting of the US, Japan, Australia, and India—has re-emerged since 2017 after a decade of dormancy. After typologizing the minilateral security cooperation’s goals and its expansion, this article explains that the current Quad is an expanded minilateral cooperation of the existing various security bilaterals and trilaterals among its member states. This minilateral has increased its non-military cooperation, focusing on infrastructure-building to counter that of China’s Belt and Road Initiative in the Indo-Pacific region. It also examines how China has been responding to this line of the Quad’s economic responses, while China is cautious about the Quad’s security implications. It concludes with some predictions as to how this set of interactions is likely to influence the regional order.
`In' analytical NoteJournal of Contemporary China Vol. 30, No.127; Jan 2021: p.36-52
Journal SourceJournal of Contemporary China Vol: 30 No 127
Key WordsChina ;  Minilateralism ;  Infrastructure Investment ;  Quad ;  Strategic Response ;  Regional Balancing


 
 
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