Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:1124Hits:21532332Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Article   Article
 

ID141449
Title ProperRethinking the Chinese world order
Other Title Information the imperial cycle and the rise of China
LanguageENG
AuthorZhao, Suisheng
Summary / Abstract (Note)Looking to China's imperial history to understand how China as a great power will behave in the twenty-first century, some scholars have rediscovered the concept of the traditional Chinese world order coined by John K. Fairbank in the 1960s in the reconstruction of the benevolent governance and benign hierarchy of the Chinese Empire, and portrayed its collapse as a result of the clash of civilizations between the benevolent Chinese world order and the brutal European nation-state system. China was forced into the jungle of the social Darwinist world to struggle for its survival. As a result, China's search for power and wealth is to restore justice in an unjust world. China's rise would be peaceful. This article finds that while imperial China was not uniquely benevolent nor uniquely violent, the reconstruction of China's imperial past to advance the contemporary agenda of its peaceful rise has, ironically, set a nineteenth century agenda for China in the twenty-first century to restore the regional hierarchy and maximize China's security by expanding influence and control over its neighborhoods.
`In' analytical NoteJournal of Contemporary China Vol. 24, No.96; Nov 2015: p.961-982
Journal SourceJournal of Contemporary China Vol: 24 No 96
Key WordsRise of China ;  Regional Hierarchy ;  China's Imperial History ;  Chinese World Order ;  Imperial Cycle ;  Contemporary Agenda


 
 
Media / Other Links  Full Text