Combinative Hedging: Japan and Russia in the East Asian Contested Hierarchical Order

IF 0.8 Q3 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
Yohanes Putra Suhito, I. G. W. Wicaksana
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

The recent developments in world politics have demonstrated that East Asia has emerged as a critical locus for great power politics, characterised by the pluralisation of power centres resulting from the competing strategic interests of the United States and China. Indeed, the regional order’s power constellation is moving towards a contested hierarchical model. The first-tier United States seeks to maintain its ‘plural hegemony’ through social compacts, while China fits within the hierarchy as a second-tier state, gradually emerging as an influential actor on the regional and global stage. Third-tier states, such as Japan, the world’s third-largest economy, and Russia, with its abundant energy resources and military prowess, have become potential swing players of influence within the evolving orders— appropriate to their respective capabilities. Observing this dynamic geopolitical environment, our article discusses the relationship between Japan and Russia as they attempt to protect their interests within a pluralising region. We argue that Japan and Russia take a combinative hedge, focusing on flexible collaboration, enabling risk mitigation and maximising short or long-term benefits.
联合对冲:东亚有争议的等级秩序中的日本和俄罗斯
世界政治的最新发展表明,东亚已成为大国政治的关键地点,其特点是美国和中国的战略利益竞争导致权力中心多元化。事实上,地区秩序的权力格局正朝着有争议的等级模式发展。第一梯队的美国试图通过社会契约维持其 "多元霸权",而中国则作为第二梯队国家融入这一等级体系,逐渐成为地区和全球舞台上有影响力的角色。第三级国家,如世界第三大经济体日本,以及拥有丰富能源资源和军事实力的俄罗斯,都已成为不断演变的秩序中具有影响力的潜在摇摆者--与其各自的能力相适应。观察到这一动态的地缘政治环境,我们的文章讨论了日本和俄罗斯之间的关系,因为它们试图在一个多元化的地区保护自己的利益。我们认为,日本和俄罗斯应采取组合式对冲,注重灵活协作、降低风险并实现短期或长期利益最大化。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
29
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