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ID162506
Title ProperEurope’s engagement with China
Other Title Information shifting Chinese views of the EU and the EU-China relationship
LanguageENG
AuthorChang, Vincent K. L
Summary / Abstract (Note)This article discusses the dramatic recent shifts in Chinese policy perspectives on the European Union (EU) and on EU-China relations. Whereas for more than a decade, policy makers and Europe specialists in China had regarded the EU as an exemplar of regional integration and as a promising new ‘pole’ in the global order, a recent survey shows that today, in the wake of the Eurozone crisis, the refugee crisis, and the ‘Brexit’ referendum, many perceive the EU as a troubled actor unfit to deal with the existential challenges confronting it, let alone play a credible leadership role beyond its own borders. Despite this, Beijing’s ambitious international agenda at a time of increasing global uncertainty guarantees China’s ever-growing stake in building a reliable, long-term partnership with the EU, even though recent Chinese diplomatic and economic initiatives are gravitating toward the Union’s periphery, targeting subregional groupings of Member States along Europe’s re-emerging, traditional fault lines. Based on the research findings presented in this paper, the authors argue that the EU and the Member States need to rethink the basic assumptions underlying their China policies in the so-called ‘New Era’ and explore new approaches of engagement that match these shifting perceptions, policies and political realities.
`In' analytical NoteAsia Europe Journal Vol. 16, No.4; Dec 2018: p.317–331
Journal SourceAsia Europe Journal Vol: 16 No 4
Key WordsChinese Foreign Policy ;  Chinese Perceptions ;  China-EU Relations ;  Subregional Diplomacy


 
 
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