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NEOMERCANTILISM (3) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   152749


China and global energy governance: integration or confrontation? / Gao, Shuqin   Journal Article
Gao, Shuqin Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract China has been pursuing a risk averse counterweight energy strategy, cultivating strategic energy allies and diversifying its energy sources, generating a power shift of energy distribution from international oil companies to national oil companies. China's neomercantilism and NOCs suggest neither integration into the US-led international energy regime nor confrontation with the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development–centered global energy governance. Instead, China is working toward creating a China-led alternative competitive regime. The prospect is therefore the emergence of a more fragmented and multilayered global energy governance.
Key Words China  Neomercantilism  Global Energy Governance  Power Shift  Nocs 
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2
ID:   183186


China’s evolving energy security strategy / Taylor, Monique   Journal Article
Taylor, Monique Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract This article explores the ways in which China's energy security strategy has evolved over the past fifteen years. Energy security had become an urgent policy priority for Beijing by the mid-2000s due to China's rapidly increasing oil import dependency set against the backdrop of oil scarcity and rising oil prices. Rather than rely on purely market-based means to secure oil supply, China pursued a state-led or neomercantilist approach. Initially, the most notable and distinctive element of its oil neomercantilism was the overseas acquisition of oil assets by China's national oil companies (NOCs) under broad strategic direction from Beijing. However, increasingly over the past decade China's energy security strategy, while remaining neomercantilist in orientation, exhibits greater reliance on the market. Reasons for this shifting emphasis include the changing geopolitics and geoeconomics of the global oil industry, which moved to oversupply following the US shale oil revolution, along with transformations within the Chinese state under the leadership of President Xi Jinping.
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3
ID:   049926


Comparing neomercantilism and State capitalism: pre-crisis Korea and Brazil, 1960-1997 / Pang, Eul-Soo 2000  Book
Pang, Eul-Soo Book
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Publication Malaysia, Strategic and Security Studies Unit (UPSK), 2000.
Description 26p.
Series UPSK Occasional Paper 6/00
Standard Number 9832237068
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Copies: C:1/I:0,R:0,Q:0
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Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
044987330.122/PAN 044987MainOn ShelfGeneral