Wednesday 13 May 2020

Great Powers, Grand Strategies: The New Game in the South China Sea - edited by Anders Corr


This review has been submitted to the Australian Naval Review 

Title: Great Powers, Grand Strategies: The New Game in the South China Sea
Author: edited by Anders Corr
ISBN: 978-1-68247-235-4
Publisher: Naval Institute Press
Year: 2018
Hardcover
Pages: 327
Photos/Maps: 0/1

Very few arenas of the globe have the potential for overlapping geopolitical interests as does the South China Sea. Replete in resources, focus for international trade routes, experiencing growing populations and border to numerous island and mainland states; it is a region in dispute. Central to this concentration of competing interests sits China who, for the last twenty years, has been increasingly assertive in its dealings with not only neighbouring claimants within the region but also other Great Powers. Presented in a series of individual essays edited by Corr, Great Powers, Grand Strategies provides a timely and insightful analysis of the many facets of this new region of Great Power politics.

Three of the chapters focus exclusively on the Chinese perspective, two from the US perspective and one for each of the remaining powers: Japan, India and Russia. Notably, the book also addresses the perspective of regional ASEAN and EU concerns. The analysis is robust and the data presented in a comprehensive and informative manner. The information provided by each of the authors provides the reader with concrete examples to explain the actions and concerns of the nation states involved.

Interestingly, while the information provided is extremely insightful and useful in and of itself, the narrative, overall, does leave the reader with a sense of there being a lack of an overarching framework within which the contributor’s chapters would be able to be contextually better understood. Great Powers will generally act according to certain broad characteristics that would be better understood if explained at the outset of the work. These characteristics manifest themselves within different international relations theories. Thus if one had been presented with a synopsis of the Realist or Constructivism schools and their sub-components and were then able to view the actions of the Great Powers through these lenses, it would have gone a long way towards providing the reader with improved context to help explain the ‘why’ behind a Great Powers actions while using the data as tangible examples.  Constructivism postulates that a nation will draw upon its belief systems (identified within historical, cultural or social contexts) rather than material gain, as the foundation of its actions. Realism, on the other hand, suggests that the goal of any nation is the accumulation of power in an effort to eclipse or offset the power of its rivals (perceived or otherwise).  

This observation, notwithstanding, Great Powers, Grand Strategies remains an excellent synopsis of the confluence of international interests and challenges within the South China Sea. The work is timely given the ongoing stresses manifesting themselves as China expands its military and economic influence in the region. I recommend this work to those seeking to understand the potential impacts of the Great Power’s actions, the reasoning behind them and the methodologies that support them.

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