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> East Asian International Relations

East Asian International Relations Evolution and Social Construction

Coming soon Late 2024/Early 2025

Available from early 2025. Some formats may be released early - please check purchase options next to format information.

Authors

, George Mason University, Virginia

New in this edition

• Provides an extensive coverage of ancient world order and European imperialism preceding contemporary themes of security, economic development, money and finance, regionalism, the US-China rivalry, and democracy versus autocracy

• Demonstrates systemically how facts and theories are constructed, and how these are bound by evolutionary constraints

• Students gain a realistic view of knowledge production and the mindset and tools to participate actively in determining which facts and theories are more acceptable than alternatives

• Feature boxes, discussion questions, exercises, and recommended readings are incorporated into each chapter to encourage active learning.

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Through the outline of a coherent theoretical foundation for understanding East Asian international relations, this textbook offers a fresh, analytical approach, including applications of evolutionary theory that differ from and contextualize the prevailing theories currently offered for studies of East Asia. It provides an extensive coverage of ancient world order and European imperialism preceding contemporary themes of security, economic development, money and finance, regionalism, the US-China rivalry, and democracy versus autocracy. Demonstrating systemically how facts and theories are constructed, and how these are bound by evolutionary constraints, students gain a realistic view of knowledge production and the mindset and tools to participate actively in determining which facts and theories are more acceptable than alternatives.

Feature boxes, discussion questions, exercises, and recommended readings are incorporated into each chapter to encourage active learning. A vital new resource for advanced undergraduate and graduate students in political science, international relations, and Asian studies.

About the book