Configuring the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank
Power, Interests and Status
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Book Description
Studying the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) through the lens of international relations (IR) theory, Chen argues that it is inappropriate to treat the AIIB as either a revisionist or a complementary institution.
Instead, the bank is still evolving and the interaction of power, interests, and status that will determine whether the bank will go wild. Theoretically, the current shape of the AIIB will influence global strategic conditions and global perceptions of the bank itself, consequently affecting China’s level of dissatisfaction with its power and status in the international financial system and maneuvering in the AIIB. To empirically show that, this book presents the evolution of the AIIB, compares the bank with its main competitors in the Asia-Pacific region, and conducts ten comparative case studies to show how countries around the world have positioned themselves in response to the emergence of the AIIB.
This book presents critical insights for scholars and foreign-policy practitioners to understand China’s surging influence in international organizations and how China can shape the world order. It should prove of interest to students and scholars of IR, strategic studies, China Studies, Asian Studies, developmental studies, economics, and global finance.
Table of Contents
1 Introduction PART I Evolution of the AIIB 2 An integrative framework: power, interests, status and global responses 3 China and the evolution of the AIIB 4 AIIB in comparative perspectives PART II Global responses to the AIIB 5 Asia-Pacific participation in the AIIB 6 European participation in the AIIB 7 Countries shunning the AIIB 8 Conclusion: Crouching tiger, hidden dragon
Author(s)
Biography
Ian Tsung-yen Chen is Associate Professor in the Institute of Political Science at National Sun Yat-sen University, Taiwan.