Read more
This book offers a sweeping yet incisive account of how China has navigated world politics from the late Qing dynasty to the Xi Jinping era. Moving beyond single-factor explanations, the book reveals that China s strategic choices have always been shaped by a dynamic interplay of three factors: security, development, and ideology. Through historical cases and contemporary analysis, it explains how the Chinese political leadership understood their interests, and reveals that ideological factors played a more decisive role in the making of Chinese foreign policy when China was economically and institutionally isolated from the international society, whereas deep engagement and economic interdependency reinforced diplomatic pragmatism. It concludes that China s foreign policy under President Xi Jinping remains fundamentally anchored in security and development imperatives, and is therefore more pragmatic than widely assumed. This book will be of particular interest to scholars and students of international relations, Chinese politics, diplomatic history, and the evolving dynamics of great-power competition.
List of contents
Chapter 1: Introduction: Security, Development, and Ideology.- Chapter 2: China s Resistance against and Integration into the European System of States in the Late 19th Century.- Chapter 3: The Rise of Nationalism and China s Diplomacy During the Republican Era.- Chapter 4: The Maoist Diplomacy: Between Coexistence and a World Revolution.- Chapter 5: Keeping a Low Profile: Deng s Pragmatic Diplomacy.- Chapter 6: China s Re-integration into the World Economy in the Jiang Zemin Era.- Chapter 7: Hu Jintao and Contentions over the Peaceful Rise of China.- Chapter 8: The Rise of China s Grand Strategy in the Xi Jinping Era.- Chapter 9: Conclusion.
About the author
Guo Hai (PhD, University of Leeds) is Executive Dean of the Institute of Public Policy at South China University of Technology. His research focuses on East Asian geopolitics, with particular attention to US–China relations, Japanese foreign policy, and the historical evolution of Chinese foreign policy. His work has been published in leading peer-reviewed journals such as
Critical Asian Studies
and
Asian Studies Review
, and he is an active contributor to policy debates on China’s international relations and regional order in East Asia.
Summary
This book offers a sweeping yet incisive account of how China has navigated world politics from the late Qing dynasty to the Xi Jinping era. Moving beyond single-factor explanations, the book reveals that China’s strategic choices have always been shaped by a dynamic interplay of three factors: security, development, and ideology. Through historical cases and contemporary analysis, it explains how the Chinese political leadership understood their interests, and reveals that ideological factors played a more decisive role in the making of Chinese foreign policy when China was economically and institutionally isolated from the international society, whereas deep engagement and economic interdependency reinforced diplomatic pragmatism. It concludes that China’s foreign policy under President Xi Jinping remains fundamentally anchored in security and development imperatives, and is therefore more pragmatic than widely assumed. This book will be of particular interest to scholars and students of international relations, Chinese politics, diplomatic history, and the evolving dynamics of great-power competition.