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The US–Chinese power shift and the end of the Pax Americana
by
LAYNE, CHRISTOPHER
in
Foreign policy
/ Hegemony
/ Institutions
/ International relations
/ Ordering the world? Liberal internationalism in theory and practice
/ Post World War II period
/ Power
/ Structural change
/ World order
2018
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The US–Chinese power shift and the end of the Pax Americana
by
LAYNE, CHRISTOPHER
in
Foreign policy
/ Hegemony
/ Institutions
/ International relations
/ Ordering the world? Liberal internationalism in theory and practice
/ Post World War II period
/ Power
/ Structural change
/ World order
2018
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The US–Chinese power shift and the end of the Pax Americana
Journal Article
The US–Chinese power shift and the end of the Pax Americana
2018
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Overview
In this article, I show that far from consenting to be bound by institutions and rules of the Pax Americana, China is already working to recast the international order in ways that favour its interests, not those of the United States. The US foreign policy establishment does not grasp this, and, instead, has invested the idea of a ‘rules-based, institutionalized’ international order with a talismanic quality. It claims that rules and institutions are politically neutral, and, ipso facto, beneficial for all. However, in international politics, who rules makes the rules. Rules and institutions reflect the distribution of power in the international system. A power transition is taking place in the early twenty-first century: US power is in relative decline and China is rising quickly. No international order—not even the Pax Americana—lasts forever. The liberal world order cannot survive the erosion of US hegemonic power. It is this structural change, not Donald Trump, that threatens the post-Second Word War international order’s survival. It requires a huge leap of faith to believe that a risen China will continue to subordinate itself to the Pax Americana.
Publisher
Oxford University Press
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