Handbook of China's International Relations

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Allen Carlson
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CCP.
Chen Zhimin
China's International Relations
China's Strategic Calculus
China’s Strategic Calculus
chinese
Chinese foreign relations case studies
Chinese Government
Chinese IR
Christian A. Hess
Civil Society
Common Language
confucius
Confucius Institutes
Daojiong Zha
David Scott
diplomatic strategy
East Timor
Energy Policy
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EU China Relationship
Federal Bureau Of Investigation
foreign
Foreign Affairs Leading Small Group
foreign policy analysis
Giovanni B. Andornino
global governance studies
government
Gregory J. Moore
Ground Forces
Harmonious Society
Ian Taylor
institute
IR Study
Jean Pierre Cabestan
jiang
John Armstrong
Kerry Brown
Li Xing
Marc Lanteigne
Muhamad Olimat
Nicholas Thomas
peacekeeping operations
policy
post-Cold War International Community
public opinion research
Quansheng Zhao
Reinhard Drifte
republic
Riordan Roett
Robert G. Sutter
Rosemary Foot
Sea Waters
security studies
Shaun Breslin
Shogo Suzuki
Simon Shen
socialist
soviet
Tai Ming Cheung
Western IR Theory
Western Sahara
Zhengyi Wang

Product details

  • ISBN 9781857435085
  • Weight: 1170g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 26 Apr 2010
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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In a relatively short period of time, the study of China’s international relations has gone from being a topic that interested a fairly small group of scholars and analysts to one that is close to – if not actually at – the centre of academic and policy agendas. Moreover, it is not just the importance of these relations that have changed, but also their type and scale. China’s relations with the USA and questions of ‘great power’ politics may continue to dominate, with relations with the rest of Asia coming a close second; but economic interactions, and their political consequences, with countries in Latin America, the Middle East and Africa are also becoming increasingly important, and have implications far beyond the price and distribution of key commodities.
Following an introductory overview of the nature of China’s international relations and diplomacy, this handbook is divided into three main sections:

Part I: Ideas and Interests – changes in theoretical thinking on international relations in China; how ideas are transmitted into the policy-making community; the role of public opinion.
Part II: Issues – major concerns and objectives that shape China’s international relations; historical legacies; sovereignty; energy; human rights; peace-keeping and international responsibility; military modernization.
Part III: Relations – case studies of relations with the USA, Japan, East Asia, Europe, the Shanghai Co-operation Organization, the Middle East, Africa, Latin America, South Asia and Australasia.
For some, China’s rise suggests an inexorable momentum towards instability and conflict. Conversely, others (including most of the authors in this handbook) point to the steps China has taken to conform to existing norms and expectations of ‘great power’ responsibility. In spite of these disagreements, there seems to be a growing consensus that how China defines and pursues its national interests will become the key determinant of how the global system evolves in the future.
The editor, Shaun Breslin, is Professor of Politics and International Studies at the University of Warwick.
He has published books on comparative politics, Mao Zedong, centre-local relations in China and, most recently, China and the global political economy.

University of Warwick, UK