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This book advances the establishment of a contemporary New Zealand geopolitical tradition. It details and examines New Zealand's geopolitical reality in an increasingly fractured global security (dis)order defined by interdependent strategic competition and emerging multipolarity. A centrepiece is the multidimensional US-China Great Power Competition that has the makings of a Second Cold War . This has immense implications for New Zealand's greater region, the Indo-Pacific, and its immediate area, the South Pacific. The latter is of existential importance to New Zealand, becoming an active area of strategic competition as China projects its influence southwards, and New Zealand, Australia and the United States respond. In this context, New Zealand's location is increasingly geopolitically relevant and the idea it occupies a 'benign security environment' has now been cast into the dustbin of history. The decisions it makes presently will determine the country's prosperity and geostrategic security for decades.
Geopolitical theory, along with a detailed empirical account of strategic competition in the Indo-Pacific and South Pacific, offers a clear exposition of the implications of US-China competition for New Zealand. This directs us to the nation's material characteristics and imperatives that flow from it. The book also appraises the country's strategic options and indicates how and why Wellington's approach has shifted over time from hedging between the US and China to, increasingly, balancing against Beijing's efforts to alter the global and regional status quo.
Through analysis and provocation, this book marks a major new contribution that will interest policymakers, academics, students and everyday citizens.
Explains how major international security developments augur a new era for NZ foreign policy and grand strategy Focuses on New Zealand's geopolitics; it's geostrategic position, capabilities, vulnerabilities and interests Shows how a shift in the balance of power from US-centric unipolarity to multipolarity has implications for Oceania
Auteur
Dr Reuben Steff is a Senior Lecturer of International Relations and Geopolitics at the University of Waikato, New Zealand. His research encompasses US-China Great Power Competition, emerging technologies, missile defence and nuclear deterrence, and New Zealand foreign policy. He has publications in multiple journals and is the author of four books, including Emerging Technologies and International Security: Machines, the State and War (Routledge, 2020) and US Foreign Policy in the Age of Trump: Drivers, Strategy and Tactics (Routledge, 2021).
Contenu
Chapter 1: New Zealand's Geopolitical Awakening in the Second Cold War.- Chapter 2: Theoretical Framework: Geopolitical Realism and Great Power Competition.- Chapter 3: New Zealand's Material Hand: Physical Geography, Economics, Soft Power, the Foreign Policy System, Defence Force, Memberships and Alliances.- Chapter 4: The Geopolitics Tradition and New Zealand: From Imperial Defence to Interdependent Security.- Chapter 5: The US-China Great Power Competition in the Indo-Pacific: Colliding Strategies and Ambitions.- Chapter 6: Great Power Competition in Oceania and New Zealand's shift from Hedging to Balancing.- Chapter 7: The Case for Tight Five Eyes Alignment.- Chapter 8: The Case for Armed Neutrality and Comprehensive National Resilience.- Chapter 9: Shaping the Balance: New Zealand's Strategic Significance, Defense Revival and Future Research.