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China and the Geopolitics of Rare Earths

«Kalantzakos has produced a concise and well-written analysis of the role of China in the field of rare earth metals ... While China claims to follow free market principles at home and abroad, this account reveals with great clarity the strategies its government pursues in support of its economic and political interests. The book provides insights into a possible future trajectory of China's continued rise and is vital reading for academics and policy analysts in the field of international political economy.»

Philip Andrews-Speed, The China Journal

Rare earths are elements that are found in the Earth's crust, and are vital ingredients for the production of a wide variety of high tech, defense, and green technologies - everything from iPhones and medical technologies, to wind turbines, efficiency lighting, smart bombs, and submarines. Les mer

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Rare earths are elements that are found in the Earth's crust, and are vital ingredients for the production of a wide variety of high tech, defense, and green technologies - everything from iPhones and medical technologies, to wind turbines, efficiency lighting, smart bombs, and submarines. While they are not particularly "rare" in availability, they are difficult and expensive to mine. Yet, China has managed to gain control over an estimated 97 percent of the rare
earth industry since the 1990s through cheap production, high export taxes, and artificial limitations of supply.

Rare earths, and China's monopoly over them, became international news after China "unofficially" halted exports to Japan, the United States, and Europe in 2010. This embargo followed a collision between Chinese and Japanese boats in the East China Sea, a locus of geopolitical and economic tension between the two countries. Although the World Trade Organization forced China to scrap its restrictions, it still holds a stranglehold over these elements that are so critical to the economic and
security interests of the United States and its allies.

Sophia Kalantzakos argues that the 2010 rare earth crisis signaled more than just a trade dispute. Rather, it raises questions about China's use of economic statecraft, and must be regarded as a part of the larger discourse of global power relations. Importantly, this book also argues that the failure of political actors in the United States and Europe to pass policy to address future supply, or the scientific and business communities to devise sustainable rare earth production outside of
China, points to future resource competition. Focusing on China's monopoly over the rare earth industry, this book examines the impacts of growing worldwide resource competition and the complexities policymakers face as they develop strategies and responses in an increasingly globalized
world.

Detaljer

Forlag
Oxford University Press Inc
Innbinding
Innbundet
Språk
Engelsk
ISBN
9780190670931
Utgivelsesår
2017
Format
16 x 24 cm

Anmeldelser

«Kalantzakos has produced a concise and well-written analysis of the role of China in the field of rare earth metals ... While China claims to follow free market principles at home and abroad, this account reveals with great clarity the strategies its government pursues in support of its economic and political interests. The book provides insights into a possible future trajectory of China's continued rise and is vital reading for academics and policy analysts in the field of international political economy.»

Philip Andrews-Speed, The China Journal

«Sophia Kalantzakos's China and the Geopolitics of Rare Earths is a book that the broader political science and international relations community has needed ... Concisely and elegantly written, Kalantzakos embeds the specifics of rare earths within broader elements of 'geoeconomics', providing a political economy framework to understand them as another strategic resource ... This book is an engaging read, and fills an important knowledge gap about the rare earth industry for scholars of China and international political economy. It is also accessible for advanced undergraduates and masters students, and would provoke fascinating classroom discussion about emerging technologies, economic statecraft, and the rise of China as a 'geoeconomic' power.»

Kristin Vekasi, Journal of Chinese Political Science

«China and the geopolitics of rare earths is an important and timely analysis of China's monopoly on rare earth minerals and the 2010 rare-earth crisis ... While China continues to assert that other countries need to look to alternative sources for rare earth minerals, it has 'carefully orchestrated conditions that ensure its own continued monopoly', an asymmetry that other international actors have been unable to counter. China's policies are therefore a source of rising international tension, which makes the analysis in this book and the lessons drawn from its case-study of increasing international and multisectoral importance.»

Miriam Aczel, International Affairs

"[This] book suggests that we have much to learn about international politics and governance—historically and in the current age—via more attention to the rare earth elements that have recently become collectively famous (but that few of us can name individually).

Stacy D. VanDeveer, Global Environmental Politics

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