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The book presents the views of leading Chinese and American scholars working in the fields of Chinese foreign policy, national security and international political economy. It seeks to challenge the conventional wisdom about China's recent rise, contending it is a much more complex and contested trend than it has often been portrayed to be.
Table des matières
Chapter 1 Introduction. A Time of Some Significance: The People's Republic at Sixty and New Frontiers in Chinese Foreign Relations
Part 2 Part I: Foreign Relations
Chapter 3 Chapter 1. The Moral Dimension of Chinese Foreign Policy
Chapter 4 Chapter 2. Unconventional Sources of Chinese Insecurity: What The Emergence of NTS Concerns within Chinese Foreign Policy and National Security Circles Reveals about China's "Rise"
Chapter 5 Chapter 3. Shaping China's Foreign Policy: The Paradoxical Role of Foreign-Educated Returnees
Part 6 Part II: Domestic-Foreign Policy Nexus
Chapter 7 Chapter 4. The Economic Factor in Chinese Foreign Policy
Chapter 8 Chapter 5. China's Domestic Policy Fragmentation and "Grand" Strategy in Global Politics
Part 9 Part III: National Security Concerns
Chapter 10 Chapter 6. Security Policy and China's Defense Modernization: A Sixty-Year Perspective
Chapter 11 Chapter 7. Strategic Priority and Choice: China's Search of Security in an Era of Multiple Threats
Chapter 12 Chapter 8. Pragmatic Compliance: China's Policy toward Multilateral Export Control Regimes
Part 13 Part IV: Emerging and Future Issues
Chapter 14 Chapter 9. Chinese Foreign Policy Challenges: Periphery as Core
Chapter 15 Chapter 10. China's Foreign Policy in a Globalized World: Challenges and Opportunities
A propos de l'auteur
Cheng Li is director of and a senior fellow in the Brookings Institution's John L. Thornton China Center. He is also a director of the National Committee on U.S.-China Relations. His most recent book is Middle Class Shanghai: Reshaping U.S.-China Engagement (2021).
Résumé
The book presents the views of leading Chinese and American scholars working in the fields of Chinese foreign policy, national security and international political economy. It seeks to challenge the conventional wisdom about China's recent rise, contending it is a much more complex and contested trend than it has often been portrayed to be.