The United States, China, and the Politics of Hegemonic Ordering in East Asia
Loke, B
Date: 18 January 2021
Article
Journal
International Studies Review
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP) / International Studies Association
Publisher DOI
Abstract
China’s rise has raised important questions about the durability of US hegemony in East Asia.
Much of the debate, however, has generally been cast in fairly simplistic terms, suggesting the
durability or end of US regional hegemony. Such framings nevertheless fail to fully capture
regional dynamics and complexity. Advancing an English ...
China’s rise has raised important questions about the durability of US hegemony in East Asia.
Much of the debate, however, has generally been cast in fairly simplistic terms, suggesting the
durability or end of US regional hegemony. Such framings nevertheless fail to fully capture
regional dynamics and complexity. Advancing an English School conception of hegemony, this
paper examines the politics, contestation, and renegotiation of the post-Cold War US hegemonic
order in East Asia. It maps out four logics of hegemonic ordering in the existing literature,
outlines their shortfalls and advances a twofold argument. First, although regional order will not
disintegrate into binary “order versus disorder” or “US versus Chinese hegemony” scenarios, the
politics of hegemonic ordering—the interactive discourses, processes, relations, and practices
that underpin hegemony—will intensify as the United States and China continue to both
cooperate and compete for power, position, and influence in East Asia. Second, I argue that the
East Asian regional order will evolve in ways that resemble hybrid forms of hegemony in a
complex hierarchy. Specifically, I develop a new logic—“coalitional and collaborative
hegemonies in a complex hierarchy”—that is anchored in assertiveness, fluidity, and
compartmentalization. It demonstrates that Washington and Beijing will form coalitional
hegemonies, seeking legitimation from multiple and often overlapping constituencies, but also
engage in a collaborative hegemony on shared interests. This better reflects evolving regional
dynamics and yields theoretical insights into examining hegemonic transitions less as clearly
delineated transitions from one distinct hegemonic order to the next, and more as partial and
hybrid ones.
Social and Political Sciences, Philosophy, and Anthropology
Faculty of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences
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