1st Edition

Power and Influence in the Pacific Islands Understanding Statecraftiness

    256 Pages 2 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    This book outlines an analytical framework to understand power, influence, and statecraft in the Pacific Islands region. With contributions by scholars from the United States, Australia, China, New Zealand, and across the Pacific Islands region, it provides ‘both sides of the story’ of statecraft and explores how power and influence are being exercised in the Pacific Islands.  

    Amid escalating strategic competition, the United States, China, Australia, and a range of other partners are trying to exercise power and influence in their Pacific Islands region through their statecraft. But which partners are doing what, where are they doing it, and how are Pacific Island countries and people responding? Through case studies of key examples – such as economic assistance, defence diplomacy, scholarships, and strategic narratives – this book analyses how tools of statecraft are being deployed by a range of key partners and Pacific Island states, and how they are being received by Pacific Island countries and people.

    A vital resource for scholars and practitioners in International Relations and diplomacy as well as those seeking to understand how statecraft, power, and influence are being exercised in the Pacific Islands region.

    The Open Access version of this book, available at http://www.taylorfrancis.com, has been made available under a Creative Commons [Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives (CC-BY-NC-ND)] 4.0 license.

    Table of contents

    Acknowledgement

    Chapter 1 – Understanding and analysing statecraft in the Pacific Islands
    Joanne Wallis, Henrietta McNeill, Michael Rose, and Alan Tidwell

    Chapter 2 – Pacific Island statecraft: where relationships are more important than might and money
    Derek Futaiasi, Priestley Habru, Maima Koro, William Waqavakatoga, and Henrietta McNeill

    Chapter 3 – Scholarships as tools of statecraft
    Priestley Habru, Wilhelmina Utukana, Feagaimaalii Soti Mapu, Jim Tawa Biliki, and Epo Mark

    Chapter 4 – Reimagining economic tools of statecraft
    Maima Koro and Henrietta McNeill

    Chapter 5 – Australia and the United States’ defence diplomacy
    Joanne Wallis, Quentin Hanich, Michael Rose, and Alan Tidwell

    Chapter 6 – The ‘Blue Pacific’ strategic narrative as a tool of Pacific statecraft
    Joanne Wallis, Maima Koro, and Corey O’Dwyer

    Chapter 7 – The United States’ statecraft in the Pacific Islands
    Alan Tidwell and Joanne Wallis

    Chapter 8 – Australia’s statecraft towards its ‘Pacific family’
    Joanne Wallis

    Chapter 9 –New Zealand’s statecraft ‘in and of the Pacific’
    Henrietta McNeill

    Chapter 10 – Asia in the Pacific: India, Indonesia, Japan, and Korea’s statecraft in the Pacific Islands
    Joanne Wallis, Chloe Le, and Alexander Jun-Li Yeong

    Chapter 11 – European statecraft in the Pacific Islands
    Henrietta McNeill and Nicholas Ross Smith

    Chapter 12 – China’s strategic narratives in the Pacific
    Geyi Xie

    Chapter 13 – How do Pacific Island countries respond to China’s statecraft?
    William Waqavakatoga, Priestley Habru, and Maima Koro

    Biography

    Joanne Wallis is Professor of International Security, director of the Stretton Institute ‘Security in the Pacific Islands’ research program at the University of Adelaide, and a Nonresident Senior Fellow at the Brookings Institution. She is the author or editor of ten books on security in the Pacific Islands region.

    Henrietta McNeill is a Research Fellow in the Department of Pacific Affairs at the Australian National University. She has published in Political GeographyThe Contemporary Pacific, and International Relations of the Asia-Pacific. She was awarded a 2021 Fulbright New Zealand General Graduate Award.

    Michael Rose is an anthropologist and adjunct fellow of the School of Social Sciences at the University of Adelaide.

    Alan Tidwell is Professor of Practice and Director of the Center for Australian, New Zealand and Pacific Studies (CANZPS) at the Georgetown University Walsh School of Foreign Service. His areas of interest include Australian-American relations, smaller states of Oceania, and conflict resolution.