The Oxford Handbook of Geoeconomics and Economic Statecraft
The Oxford Handbook of Geoeconomics and Economic Statecraft
Vinod K. Aggarwal is Distinguished Professor and holds the Alann P. Bedford Endowed Chair in Asian Studies, Department of Political Science; Affiliated Professor, Haas School of Business; Director of the Berkeley Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation Study Center (BASC); and Fellow, Public Law and Policy Program, Berkeley Law School, all at the University of California, Berkeley. He is Editor-in-Chief of the journal Business and Politics, and has published 23 books, 8 special issues of journals, and over 130 articles and book chapters. His latest book is Great Power Competition and Middle Power Strategies. He received his BA from the University of Michigan and his MA and PhD from Stanford University.
Tai Ming Cheung is Director of the University of California Institute on Global Conflict and Cooperation and a professor at the School of Global Policy and Strategy at UC San Diego, where he teaches courses on the international relations and national security of China and Chinese security and technology policy. Dr. Cheung is a long-time analyst of Chinese and East Asian defense and national security affairs, especially defense economic, industrial and science, and technological issues. His latest book is Innovate to Dominate: The Rise of the Chinese Techno-Security State (Cornell University Press, 2022). He was based Hong Kong, China, and Japan from the mid-1980s to 2002 covering political, economic, and strategic developments in Greater China and East Asia. Dr. Cheung has a PhD in War Studies from King’s College, London.
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Abstract
The Oxford Handbook of Geoeconomics and Economic Statecraft is a comprehensive, critical, and contemporary exploration of issues at the intersection of political economy and security studies. Long considered separate branches of political science, economics and security have become increasingly intertwined. The volume examines the state of the field, where it has been in the recent past, and where it is likely to go in future. Contributors examine conceptual edges of geoeconomics and economic statecraft as well as its core, the globalizing context of the field, and the challenges posed by social, economic, and technological changes. The thirty chapters in the volume are divided into five parts. After the introduction to the volume, Part I considers past and present thinking about the field; Part II explores the methods used in geoeconomics and economic statecraft; Part III looks at key issues; Part IV covers the intersection of national security and geoeconomics; and Part V looks at regional perspectives in the field. Geoeconomics and economic statecraft are issues of contemporary concern and on the front pages of newspapers on an almost daily basis. This book provides the intellectual context and insights to understand the challenges and prospects that the world faces currently and over the long term, making it a useful resource for academics, practitioners, business executives, journalists, and students.
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Front Matter
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1
Introduction
Vinod K. Aggarwal andTai Ming Cheung
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Part I Thinking about Geoeconomics and Economic Statecraft
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2
The Intersection of Economics and Security: Mapping the Landscape
William J. Norris
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3
Defining Geoeconomics, Economic Statecraft, and the Political Economy of National Security
James Lee
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4
How Not to Let a Good Crisis Go to Waste: 1970s IPE and Contemporary Economic Statecraft and Geoeconomics
Matt Ferchen
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5
Bringing Domestic Politics Back into Economic Statecraft
Audrye Wong
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2
The Intersection of Economics and Security: Mapping the Landscape
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Part II Analyzing Geoeconomics and Economic Statecraft
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6
Small Data and Big Data Analysis of Geoeconomics
Victor Shih andGeoffrey Hoffman
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7
Public Opinion and Geoeconomics
Andrew Chubb
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8
The Notion of Weaponizing Trade and the Example of Moscow’s Threat to Food Security in 2023
Simon J. Evenett andMarc-Andreas Muendler
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9
Spatial Analysis in Geoeconomics: An Interdisciplinary Synthesis
Kun-Chin Lin
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10
Assessing Great Power Competition and the Role of Middle Powers in Outer Space through the Lens of Geoeconomics
Namrata Goswami
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6
Small Data and Big Data Analysis of Geoeconomics
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Part III Key Issue Areas
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11
Geoeconomics and International Investment
Peter Enderwick
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12
Technology and Economic Statecraft: Weaponizing Technology Export Controls in an Era of Globalized Production
Douglas B. Fuller
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13
Foreign Aid and Strategic Foreign Policy
Jonas Gamso
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14
The Geoeconomics of Traditional and Digital Government Money: Strategic Interaction in Central Bank Digital Currencies
Tim Marple
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15
Revitalized Tools for Economic Statecraft: Vertical Industrial Policy in the Context of Global Power Competition
Seung-Youn Oh
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11
Geoeconomics and International Investment
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Part IV National Security and Geoeconomics
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16
Global War Finance in the Twenty-First Century
Rosella Cappella Zielinski andPatrick E. Shea
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17
Geoeconomics, Varieties of Capitalism, and Great Power Competition: The United States, China, and Russia
Peter Dombrowski
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18
Classical Strategic Theory and the Link between Economics and Security
James Lee and others
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19
Sanctions in an Era of Strategic Competition
Andrew W. Reddie andLeah P. Walker
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16
Global War Finance in the Twenty-First Century
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Part V Regional Perspectives
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20
Africa’s Geoeconomics and Economic Statecraft
Paa-Kwesi Heto
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21
Argentina and Brazil Face Bipolarity
Francisco de Santibañes
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22
Theory and Practice of Geoeconomics in South Asia
Smruti S. Pattanaik andLaxman Kumar Behera
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23
European Perspectives on Geoeconomics
Richard Maher
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24
South Korea’s Perspectives on Geoeconomics: The Origins and Evolution of South Korea’s Economic Statecraft
Seungjoo Lee
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25
The Russian Approach to Geoeconomics: Russian Economic Statecraft since the Beginning of the War in Ukraine
Vasily Kashin and others
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26
Chinese Thinking on Geoeconomics and Economic Statecraft
William J. Norris and others
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27
Geoeconomics and US Economic Statecraft
James Lee
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28
Beyond Bamboo Diplomacy: Unpacking Vietnam’s Ascent as a Regional Middle Power
Tung X. Bui
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20
Africa’s Geoeconomics and Economic Statecraft
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End Matter
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