ABSTRACT

This volume critiques contemporary power trends by examining key bilateral dynamics between five putative ‘poles’ of the multipolar order in the twenty-first century.

Written by emerging scholars and established academics, this work provides a timely and authoritative analysis of one of the most controversial and compelling security debates of the twenty-first century. Adopting a detailed case study approach, the volume examines contemporary great power relations between the US, China, Russia, India and the EU. Each chapter explores the essential nature and characteristics of individual inter-state relationships in order to explicate and appraise the empirical evidence for a putative multipolar order. The volume aims to deepen understanding of power trends and critically assess the individual inter-dynamics at play. In doing so, it critiques the various models offered, such as the hub and spoke model (with the US remaining as the primary actor) and Zakaria’s ‘networked’ model, as part of a purported ‘post-American world’. The work places each of the individual relationships into a wider strategic and political context, in relation to the continued international turbulence and change that has seemed even more prominent in recent times, taking into account the twin challenges of Brexit and the presidency of Donald Trump. It concludes by returning the focus to the central questions of if, how and when a post-American, multipolar world could develop.

This volume will be of much interest to students of global security, foreign policy, and IR in general.

chapter |17 pages

Introduction

The perpetual preoccupation with power

chapter 1|16 pages

US–China relations

A challenge to conventional wisdom

chapter 2|17 pages

US–India relations in a multipolar world

Shaping the balance of power and ideas

chapter 3|22 pages

The US and Russia

An exceptional power relationship?

chapter 4|17 pages

The US and the EU

Partners and competitors

chapter 5|22 pages

Sino-Russian relations

Same bed, different dreams?

chapter 6|25 pages

India and China

Managed competition

chapter 7|20 pages

The European Union and China

An uneasy strategic partnership

chapter 8|16 pages

Russia–India relations

Strategic partnership put to the test?

chapter 9|18 pages

Russia’s polycentrism

Between Europe and Eurasia

chapter 10|16 pages

The EU and India

Partners on paper?

chapter |17 pages

Conclusion

Brave new world