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Between Compliance and Conflict
The English-language monograph Between Compliance and Conflict-East Asia, Latin America and the "New" Pax Americana, co-edited by Director Kim Byung-kook and Professor Jorge I. Dominguez of Harvard University, has been published by Routledge in the United States. Based on the results of the "International Conference on East Asia, Latin America, and "New" Pax Americana" held at Harvard University's Weatherhead Center for International Affairs in February 2003, this book contains nine essays offering an in-depth analysis of the new challenges facing the United States through the cases of East Asia and Latin America.
The following is the book description from Routledge.
This book examines the responses to U.S. power in the two areas of the world where U.S. primacy was first successfully consolidated: East Asia and Latin America. The U.S. has faced no comparably powerful challengers to the exercise of its power in Latin America for much of the past century. It established its primacy over much of East Asia in the aftermath of WW II and extended its influence in the late 1970"s and after the end of the Vietnam War through its entente with China to balance the Soviet Union. By contrast, the U.S. has always encountered rivals and challengers in Europe, has attempted unsuccessfully thus far to impose its primacy in the Middle East, and has paid only intermittent attention to South Asia and Africa.
The essays in this volume will explore three important themes 1.) How do region-wide economic trends and arrangements sustain or modify U.S. influence in the region? 2.) How do rising powers in these regions (Japan, China, Brazil) reshape their policies to cope with the U.S. and 3.) How do new (South Korea) and old (Cuba) challengers to U.S. power shape their policies to account for the unrivaled exercise of U.S. power.This collection will place the United States at the hub of relations with countries in East Asia and Latin America and examine the new policies and new styles of engagement that are employed to address the prolonged U.S. interest in these areas-approaches from which the rest of the world might learn.
Byung-Kook Kim is professor of political science at Korea University and director of the East Asia Institute(www.eai.or.kr) in Seoul.
Jorge I. Dominguez is the Clarence Dillon Professor of International Affairs and Director fo the Weatherhead Center for International Affairs, Harvard University.
Table of Contents
1. Between Compliacne and Conflict: Comparing U.S. - East Asian and U.S. - Latin American Relations | Jorge I. Dominguea and Byung-Kook Kim
2. A New Pax Americana? Thye U.S. Exercise of Hard Power in East Asia and Latin America | Robert Paarlberg
3. A Rise of Regionalist Ideas in East Asia: New East Asian Regionalism and Pax Americana | Young Jong Cho
4. Pax Americana in Latin America: The Hegemony behind Free Trade | Pamela K. Starr
5. The U.S. - China Peace: Great Power Politics, Spheres of Influence, and the Peace of East Asia | Roberts S. Ross
6. Japan"s Ambition for Normal Statehood | Takashi Inoguchi
7. Brazilian Foregn Policy since 1990 and the Pax Americana | Monica Herz
8. Cuba and the Pax Americana: U.S. - Cuban Relations Post - 1990 | Jorge I. Dominguesz
9. To Have a Cake and Eat It Too: The Crisis of Pax Americana in Korea | Byung-Kook Kim
*This text is an AI translation of an original written in Korean. Some translations or nuances may be inaccurate.