The Upside of US-Chinese Strategic Competition

  • Termin in der Vergangenheit
  • Dienstag, 6. Februar 2024, 18:00 Uhr
  • Heidelberg Centre for Transcultural Studies, Gebäude 4400, Raum 400.02.12, Voßstraße 2, 69115 Heidelberg
    • Prof. Dr. Kai He, Griffith University (Australien), School of Government and International Relations

The world is in crisis. The Russian invasion of Ukraine in early 2022 has signified a military challenge of a resurgent Russia to the existing international order in the 21st century. The conflict between Israel and Hamas, which began in October 2023, has further jeopardized international peace and stability in the international order. However, in the eyes of US policymakers, China was still seen as “America’s most consequential geopolitical challenge” in the 21st century. Strategic competition between the United States and China has intensified since the COVID-19 pandemic. The constant downward spiral of US-China relations might eventually push the two nations into the “Thucydides trap”—the potential military conflict between the hegemon and a rising power in the international system. While acknowledging, without understating, the inherent dangers of the two powers involving wars or military conflicts, Prof. He contends that competition is not necessarily detrimental. Constructive competition between the US and China, if managed with strategic foresight and restraint, could inadvertently lead to positive consequences for regional stability and peace. The concept of forging “institutional peace” in the Asia-Pacific, anchored in the practice of institutional balancing between the US and China, is a challenging yet feasible goal during the period of international order transition in the Asia-Pacific region.

Zur Person: Kai He

Kai He ist Professor of International Relations in der School of Government and International Relations an der Griffith University (Australien). Derzeit forscht er als Fellow an der Acadamy of International Affairs NRW in Bonn. Zuvor war er als non-resident Senior Scholar am United States Institute of Peace (2022-2023) tätig sowie als Australian Research Council Future Fellow (2017-2020) und als Postdoctoral Fellow im Princeton-Harvard China and the World Program (2009-2010). Er ist Autor und Co-Autor von sechs Büchern und Herausgeber bzw. Mitherausgeber von fünf Bänden. Zu seinen wichtigsten Werken gehören After Hedging: Hard Choices for the Indo Pacific States between the US and China (mit Huiyun Feng, Cambridge Elements in IR, 2023), Contesting Revisionism: China, the United States, and Transformation of International Order (mit Steve Chan, Huiyun Feng, Weixing Hu, Oxford, 2021), China's Crisis Behavior: Political Survival and Foreign Policy (Cambridge, 2016), China's Challenges and International Order Transition: Beyond “Thucydides's Trap" (mit Huiyun Feng, University of Michigan Press, 2020), und Contested Multilateralism 2.0 and Asian Security Dynamics (Routledge 2020).