Rising Powers and International Organisations:
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Writen byVikash Chandra - PublisherChina Report (SAGE Publications)
- Year2019
This study analyzes China’s evolving counterterrorism strategy within the United Nations framework, situating it within the broader context of rising powers shaping global security governance. Vikash Chandra examines how China leverages multilateral institutions to advance its counterterrorism priorities, influence international norms, and redefine security discourse. The work explores China’s framing of terrorism, extremism, and separatism, as well as its advocacy for state-centric, sovereignty-based approaches at the UN. By mapping diplomatic engagement, voting behavior, and policy narratives, the study highlights how counterterrorism is increasingly embedded in global governance, peace, and stability debates.The book is highly relevant in the context of multipolar global order, international counterterrorism cooperation, and norm contestation at the UN. It provides insights useful for GRACE-oriented policy dialogue, academic research, and awareness-building on how global institutions address terrorism while balancing peace, coexistence, and state sovereignty. The study supports community engagement by fostering critical understanding of international counterterrorism narratives, enabling informed discussion on moderation, rehabilitation, and inclusive global security approaches.Rising Powers and International Organisations is a valuable analytical contribution that deepens understanding of global counterterrorism governance and the role of emerging powers, making it a relevant and credible addition to the GRACE Repository

