ID | 131838 |
Title Proper | Chinese bureaucracy and the United States |
Language | ENG |
Author | Troush, S |
Publication | 2014. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | FOREIGN POLICY of any state is a product and a common denominator of different and frequently opposite interests. Their combinations vary from country to country even if the process as a whole is affected by general global and social regularities, motivations and mechanisms. The relations between the United States and China have been and will probably remain in the field of interdependence and conflict. Which factors are responsible for these motivations in China? How stable are they and how deeply rooted in the context of internal dynamics and the development logic of the Chinese socium? What social forces and institutions personify and determine them? Which mechanisms do Chinese politicians employ when seeking a compromise and the common denominator in their relationships with the United States? |
`In' analytical Note | International Affairs (Moscow) Vol. 60, No.1; 2014: p.83-98 |
Journal Source | International Affairs (Moscow) Vol. 60, No.1; 2014: p.83-98 |
Key Words | Foreign Policy ; United States ; China ; Chinese Bureaucracy ; Chinese Domestic Policies ; Authoritarian Economic Policy ; Economic Growth ; American Financial Market |