This book investigates China’s evolving relations with the Liberal International Order (LIO) over the 40 years of China’s Reform and Opening since 1979.Arguing that China’s recent ascendance in wealth and power is more explained by the effective function of the historic LIO than that of the Chinese model of political economic organization, the book goes on to proffer that the same structural, institutional and normative forces that motivated engagement also led to the pluralization of the international system. By utilizing systemic time series data on key indicators of global industrial production and distribution, alongside network analysis, the book identifies international structures in global industrial production and distribution at key points of time in China’s industrial rise, highlighting the effects and consequences of the structural change on the organizing principles and mechanisms of the international economic order.Revealing how dynamic interactions among the structural, institutional and civilizational forces were pivotal for-China-LIO relations, this book will be a valuable resource to students and scholars of Chinese Politics, International Relations and International Political Economy.
Xiaoming Huang is Professor of International Relations at Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand. Dr Huang publishes extensively on East Asian politics, political economy, international relations, and the world economic structure.
1. Introduction 2. The International Liberal Order 3. Global Industrial Order 4. LIO Expansion in East Asia 5. Power Shifts 6. Effects and Consequences 7. Futures of World Order