ID | 110070 |
Title Proper | Charmed or alarmed? reading China's regional relations |
Language | ENG |
Author | Beeson, Mark ; Li, Fujian |
Publication | 2012. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | China has rapidly re-emerged as a major regional power in East Asia. Although this represents a return to a long-established historical pattern, the ability of China's political elites to reassure nervous neighbours about the implications of its rise will be a major test of its evolving and increasingly sophisticated foreign policies. In this paper we focus primarily on China's regional engagement strategies, detailing the way such initiatives are understood in China, and the way they are received elsewhere. We focus primarily on the political and economic impacts of China's policies, and briefly consider their reception in Northeast Asia and Southeast Asia. We highlight the different dynamics and issues that China's policymakers must consider in each area, and suggest that despite some difficulties and tensions, on balance, China's policies are proving surprisingly effective. |
`In' analytical Note | Journal of Contemporary China Vol. 21, No. 73; Jan 2012: p.35-51 |
Journal Source | Journal of Contemporary China Vol. 21, No. 73; Jan 2012: p.35-51 |
Key Words | East Asia ; Regional Power ; China ; Foreign Policy ; Southeast Asia ; Northeast Asia |