This book explores how international sanctions on Iran reshaped the contours of East Asia’s interactions with the Middle Eastern state. Almost all East Asian political entities, from the industrialized and developed nations of Japan and South Korea, to the communist and developing countries of China and North Korea, have become major international partners of Iran over the past several decades. In addition, East Asian states were, by and large, thought to be among leading foreign beneficiaries of Iran sanctions, and the overall impacts of sanctions in transforming both the scope and size of their rather multifaceted connections to the Middle Eastern country have been consequential.

Despite its significance, academic studies about this topic have remained sparse and scattered. This book aims to partially fill that research lacuna by surveying all relevant information and data available in the archives of several languages, including Chinese, English, Japanese, Korean, and Persian. While the book strives to cover the entire sanctions period, most of the analysis focuses on the past one and a half decades, when Iran came under the severest sets of international sanctions. It was during this particular time period that international quandary over the Iranian nuclear program led to a slew of far-reaching penalties and stringent restrictions levied against Iranians by the United Nations and the United States. These recent waves of international sanctions and limitations transformed many quintessential characteristics of East Asia’s interactions with Iran. Such sanctions-induced critical developments and changes, moreover, are bound to play an instrumental role in the direction and volume of exchanges between East Asian states and Iran in the coming years and decades.

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This book explores how international sanctions on Iran reshaped the contours of East Asia’s interactions with the Middle Eastern state.

Chapter 1: The sweep of Iran sanctions: Its essence and Eastern entanglement.- Chapter 2: Sanctions reverberate: Stoking up political allegiance.- Chapter 3: Targeting the lifeline: Oil and energy security in trouble Chapter 4: In other party’s terms: Frozen oil funds.- Chapter 5: Clogged up: The world of non-oil banking and credit matters.- Chapter 6: The minefield for moneymakers: Investment in a fluctuating land.- Chapter 7: Tipped to profit: The non-stop gravy train of trade.- Chapter 8: Not impervious to pressure: Teetering technology transfer.- Chapter 9: Arms embargoes: Military and security adjustment.- Chapter 10: Cracks in the ivory tower: Academic and cultural repercussions.- Chapter 11: Looking East or looking elsewhere: Fault lines of international orientation.- Chapter 12: The empire strikes back: Smuggling and bypassing sanctions.- Chapter 13: The West and the East on the lookout: Tracking a tangled web of sanctions-busting.- Chapter 14: Iran and East Asia in retrospective and prospective: The staying power of sanctions.
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This book explores how international sanctions on Iran reshaped the contours of East Asia’s interactions with the Middle Eastern state. Almost all East Asian political entities, from the industrialized and developed nations of Japan and South Korea, to the communist and developing countries of China and North Korea, have become major international partners of Iran over the past several decades. In addition, East Asian states were, by and large, thought to be among leading foreign beneficiaries of Iran sanctions, and the overall impacts of sanctions in transforming both the scope and size of their rather multifaceted connections to the Middle Eastern country have been consequential.

Despite its significance, academic studies about this topic have remained sparse and scattered. This book aims to partially fill that research lacuna by surveying all relevant information and data available in the archives of several languages, including Chinese, English, Japanese, Korean, and Persian. While the book strives to cover the entire sanctions period, most of the analysis focuses on the past one and a half decades, when Iran came under the severest sets of international sanctions. It was during this particular time period that international quandary over the Iranian nuclear program led to a slew of far-reaching penalties and stringent restrictions levied against Iranians by the United Nations and the United States. These recent waves of international sanctions and limitations transformed many quintessential characteristics of East Asia’s interactions with Iran. Such sanctions-induced critical developments and changes, moreover, are bound to play an instrumental role in the direction and volume of exchanges between East Asian states and Iran in the coming years and decades.

Shirzad Azad is an independent scholar with a doctorate in International Relations. He has studied and taught in Japan, South Korea (ROK), and China for roughly a decade. This is his eighth scholarly book.

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Offers an added dimension to the Western sanctions literature on Iran by focusing on the East Asia region Highlights the political, economic, and cultural implications of international sanctions against Iran Makes essential use of archival sources in Chinese, English, Japanese, Korean, and Persian languages
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9783030974268
Publisert
2022-05-18
Utgiver
Springer Nature Switzerland AG
Høyde
210 mm
Bredde
148 mm
Aldersnivå
Research, P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
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Forfatter

Biografisk notat

Shirzad Azad is an independent scholar with a doctorate in International Relations. He has studied and taught in Japan, South Korea (ROK), and China for roughly a decade. This is his eighth scholarly book.