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1 |
ID:
089607
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Publication |
2009.
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Summary/Abstract |
October 1, 2009, is a good occasion to recall the day when the People's Republic was proclaimed in China and many people who left a bright mark on the country's history of that period. Chen Yun (1905-1995) is certainly one of these people. An insider of the top party and government leadership for many years, from the first generation under Mao Zedong to the second led by Deng Xiaoping, he made an enormous contribution, undoubtedly much larger than anyone else, to his country's economic growth.
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2 |
ID:
134557
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Summary/Abstract |
In 2021 Russian-Chinese Treaty on Good-Neighborliness and Friendly Cooperation may be not just extended but transformed into a format that would be close to an alliance. So, Russia’s equidistance from the United States and China in the geopolitical triangle is hardly possible in the foreseeable future.
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3 |
ID:
160717
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Summary/Abstract |
Although not formal allies, China and Russia have steadily increased their strategic cooperation. However, crises and tensions in each other's areas of strategic interest continue to complicate each country's relations with the other and the rest of the international community. In this article we explore China's reaction toward major crises in the post-Soviet space (the Caucasus crisis of 2008 and the Ukraine crisis of 2014) and Russia's responses to the South China Sea dispute and show that they share many similarities. To explain the reaction patterns and better understand the nature of contemporary China-Russia relations, we apply a neoclassical realist framework, which helps assess the impact of both system-level and unit-level factors on great powers' behavior. The assessment demonstrates that the observed behavior pattern is an outcome of causal forces of different levels simultaneously pushing in different directions.
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4 |
ID:
146269
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Summary/Abstract |
When China caught up with Japan in terms of GDP in 2010, that fact attracted worldwide attention and sparked numerous responses and comments from the international media. Meanwhile, another event, probably just as important, which took place a few years later, has remained almost unnoticed.
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5 |
ID:
183438
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Summary/Abstract |
This article considers the main trends and features of Chinese studies in India for the first time in Russia's scientific literature. The author provides reasons for the high level of activity among Indian Sinologists, describes the leading centers of Chinese studies in India, and analyzes the main forms of such studies. They include regular weekly seminars, lectures by foreign Sinologists, annual nationwide conferences, and special forums on China supported by the K. Adenauer Foundation. This article considers the topics of analyses and occasional reports published in the journal China Report and describes the most important Indian monographs on China published in recent years. The author analyzes works by Srikanth Kondapalli, a leading Indian Sinologist, as a concrete example, along with his approach to Indian-Chinese relations. This article shows the meager attention Indian researchers give to Russian-Chinese relations.
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6 |
ID:
166017
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Summary/Abstract |
This article analyzes the main specific features of the modern foreign-policy course of China. It shows that the leading place in the theoretical base of present activity of China in the international arena belongs to Xi Jinping's view of mankind as a "common destiny community" and his Belt and Road initiative. However, one can trace the influence of the views of PRC leaders of former generations. As to practical policy, the main priority of Beijing remains its relations with Washington, which have noticeably worsened after raising trade tariffs on goods imported from China on President Trump's initiative.
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7 |
ID:
058657
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Publication |
Oct-Dec 2004.
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8 |
ID:
146022
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Summary/Abstract |
On the basis of methods proposed by scholars of the Institute of Modern International Relations at Tsinghua University (PRC), the author examines the evolution of China's relations with leading countries of East Asia. A forecast is given concerning possible changes in the nature of the PRC's interaction with Vietnam, the U.S.A., Japan, Russia, and the Republic of Korea under the fifth-generation leaders headed by Xi Jinping.
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9 |
ID:
170641
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Summary/Abstract |
This paper shows the growth dynamics in China's foreigntrade turnover over seven decades, and highlights the principal features of today's commodity and geographical export and import makeup. It analyzes China's trade in services, Beijing's attraction of foreign investment, and export of Chinese capital abroad. Among the issues examined are the peculiarities of principal territorial forms of the country's external economic openness, i.e. special economic zones and experimental free-trade zones.
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10 |
ID:
153441
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Summary/Abstract |
The author analyzes the main features and directions of China's foreign policy in 2016. The trend shows Beijing's desire to play an ever greater role in global management, for which it uses "summit diplomacy" and the initiative of interaction in the format of the overland and maritime Silk Roads. The author also examines the situation around disputes on the South China Sea and the PRC's relations with the U.S.A. and the RF.
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11 |
ID:
095415
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12 |
ID:
181408
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Summary/Abstract |
In the context of the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, the Chinese leadership had to make major adjustments to its foreign policy. Central to it were attempts to remove the blame from China for the spread of the pandemic worldwide. Beijing's practical policy in the international arena was significantly influenced by unprecedented pressure from the Trump administration, which declared its rejection of the CPC and its domestic and foreign policy and threatened a complete break between the United States and China. Beijing's relations with Europe have become more complicated, and those with India have noticeably deteriorated. In the current situation, Beijing has confirmed a policy of close cooperation with the Russian Federation. This article examines features of China's interaction with leading international organizations in 2020.
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13 |
ID:
147747
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Summary/Abstract |
The author analyzes specific features of integration processes in Southeastern part of Guangdong province (PRC) in recent years. He examines the correlation of the economy scope of three parts of the Delta - Guangzhou, Shenzhen, and Zhuhai. The article contains data on the foreign trade of nine cities of the Delta. It shows the leading role of Shenzhen in economic ties of the region with Hong Kong.
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14 |
ID:
099574
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15 |
ID:
082850
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Publication |
2008.
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Summary/Abstract |
One of the distinguishing features of post-Soviet Russia has been a steady decrease in its population: from 148.6 million in 19931 to 146.89 million by January 1, 2000, and 142.01 million by January 1, 2008.2 A definite improvement of the socio-economic situation has made it possible to reduce the natural decline in the population to 477.7 thousand annually during the 2000 - 2007 period, as compared with 929.6 thousand in the 1990s.3 However, the continuing depopulation shows that it is the consequence of not only the specific reforms in post-Soviet Russia, but, to a great degree, the numerous social cataclysms which the country has lived through (the Bolshevik revolution and the Civil war, fight against well-to-do
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16 |
ID:
095417
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17 |
ID:
129569
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Publication |
2014.
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Summary/Abstract |
The initial results from implementing the foreign policy of the fifth generation of PRC leaders are analyzed; Signs of continuity and innovation in the foreign policy efforts of Xi, Jinxing and his team are delineated. It is shown that Beijing is taking special paints to point out the innovate character of today's Chinese diplomacy.
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18 |
ID:
073215
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19 |
ID:
078452
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20 |
ID:
164834
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Summary/Abstract |
This article attempts to advance the neoclassical realist framework by elaborating on the interaction between system-level and unit-level factors in the formation of states’ behavior. With an empirical focus on post-Cold War China–Russia relations, which represent the ambivalent combination of a consistently growing strategic entente and a simultaneous reluctance to form a full-fledged political-military alliance, this study establishes two major unit-level factors – differing economic models and negative historical memories – that create hurdles for alliance formation between the two countries. However, under greater systemic pressure from the US-led unipolarity, China’s and Russia’s state leaders have not only increased bilateral military-to-military cooperation but have begun to actively implement policies to deliberately transform, if not remove, the existing non-systemic hurdles. Therefore, the neoclassical realist framework can be understood and further tested as a dynamic interaction model in which the unit-level circumstances, while moderating the causal impact of the system, are themselves being transformed by the system via state policies, as is their impact on states’ foreign policy.
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