Breaking the Engagement: How China Won & Lost America
| AUTHOR | Shambaugh, David |
| PUBLISHER | Oxford University Press (06/12/2025) |
| PRODUCT TYPE | Hardcover (Hardcover) |
Description
An internationally recognized scholar provides a powerful explanation of the Breaking the Engagement: How China Won & Lost America between the United States and China. For over five decades following the 1972 rapprochement between the United States and China, the two countries seemed to be steadily building a sound relationship, even accounting for periodic setbacks like the Tiananmen Square massacre. The last decade, though, has seen a sharp increase in tensions and a complete reorientation of American policies toward China--from "engagement" to "competition." What happened? In Breaking the Engagement: How China Won & Lost America, esteemed scholar David Shambaugh examines the evolution, expansion, and disintegration of the American engagement strategy towards China. Shambaugh attributes the recent sharp deterioration of relations to a combination of China's actions and American expectations. Xi Jinping's increasingly assertive foreign policy and domestic repression has directly challenged American interests. More deeply, he argues that the real underlying cause is America's longstanding paternalistic approach to transform China into a liberal state and society which conforms with the US-led global liberal order. When China has generally evolved in this direction-- politically, economically, socially, intellectually, and internationally--it corresponds with American aspirations and the two could cooperate. But when Beijing pushes back against this transformative strategy--which Beijing sees as subversion--Americans become disillusioned and U.S. policymakers see China as a malign regime, which must be countered. By focusing on the role of perceptions and U.S. expectations in fueling the shift towards competition and rivalry in the last decade, Shambaugh provides a unique new perspective on this critical global relationship.
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Product Format
Product Details
ISBN-13:
9780197792421
ISBN-10:
0197792421
Binding:
Hardback or Cased Book (Sewn)
Content Language:
English
More Product Details
Page Count:
456
Carton Quantity:
20
Product Dimensions:
6.62 x 1.31 x 9.47 inches
Weight:
1.77 pound(s)
Feature Codes:
Bibliography,
Index,
Illustrated
Country of Origin:
US
Subject Information
BISAC Categories
Political Science | International Relations - Diplomacy
Political Science | World - Asian
Political Science | Geopolitics
Dewey Decimal:
327.510
Library of Congress Control Number:
2024062344
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
publisher marketing
An internationally recognized scholar provides a powerful explanation of the Breaking the Engagement: How China Won & Lost America between the United States and China. For over five decades following the 1972 rapprochement between the United States and China, the two countries seemed to be steadily building a sound relationship, even accounting for periodic setbacks like the Tiananmen Square massacre. The last decade, though, has seen a sharp increase in tensions and a complete reorientation of American policies toward China--from "engagement" to "competition." What happened? In Breaking the Engagement: How China Won & Lost America, esteemed scholar David Shambaugh examines the evolution, expansion, and disintegration of the American engagement strategy towards China. Shambaugh attributes the recent sharp deterioration of relations to a combination of China's actions and American expectations. Xi Jinping's increasingly assertive foreign policy and domestic repression has directly challenged American interests. More deeply, he argues that the real underlying cause is America's longstanding paternalistic approach to transform China into a liberal state and society which conforms with the US-led global liberal order. When China has generally evolved in this direction-- politically, economically, socially, intellectually, and internationally--it corresponds with American aspirations and the two could cooperate. But when Beijing pushes back against this transformative strategy--which Beijing sees as subversion--Americans become disillusioned and U.S. policymakers see China as a malign regime, which must be countered. By focusing on the role of perceptions and U.S. expectations in fueling the shift towards competition and rivalry in the last decade, Shambaugh provides a unique new perspective on this critical global relationship.
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