Fr. 236.00

China and Europe Relations in the Twenty-First Century - Politics, Law and Ordinary Life

English · Hardback

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This book argues that although relations between China and Europe are strained in many areas, including trade, human rights and views about political systems, nevertheless established linkages, especially when considered in the context of long-term historical linkages, development trajectories and intellectual cultures, offer good prospects for future progressive collaborative exchanges. Approaching the subject in a balanced way, giving equal weight to the perspectives of both sides, the book examines China and Europe's shared experiences of age-old civilizations, of the disorienting effects of the economic, social and political upheavals triggered by the late eighteenth century creation of the modern world, and of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries era of European empires, warfare and the Cold War. It contends that although China and Europe appear superficially to have followed different paths, with many problems in their relationship resulting, they in fact have a very great deal in common concerning how they have coped with the long shift from ancient civilizations to the modern world of natural-science-based industrial capitalism.

List of contents

List of figures

List of tables

Preface

Acknowledgements

[1] Introduction: Changing perceptions of the relationship between China and Europe

[2] China, Europe and the creation of the modern world

[3] China and Europe in the twenty-first century: New linkages

[4] China: The structure of government and the role of the law

[5] The EU: Politics, law and decision-making

[6] China and the EU: Peaceful rising

[7] The EU and China: Evolving policy towards China

[8] China: Recent problems

[9] The EU: Managing recent problems

Afterword

Index

About the author

Aifen Xing is a Professor of International Law at Beijing Normal University
Peter Preston is an Emeritus Professor of Political Sociology at the University of Birmingham

Summary

Although relations between China and Europe are strained in many areas, including trade, human rights and views about political systems, nevertheless established linkages, development trajectories and intellectual cultures, offer good prospects for future progressive collaborative exchanges.

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