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CHINESE FOREIGN RELATIONS (3) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   127417


Chinese strategic co-operation with Central Asia: continuity and change / Das, Krishnasri   Journal Article
Das, Krishnasri Journal Article
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Publication 2011.
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2
ID:   103977


Stability and instability in Sino–US relations: a response to Yan Xuetong's superficial friendship theory / Johnston, Alastair Iain   Journal Article
Johnston, Alastair Iain Journal Article
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Publication 2011.
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3
ID:   141451


Tenacious tributary system / Perdue, Peter C   Article
Perdue, Peter C Article
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Summary/Abstract Recently, some writers on Chinese foreign relations have argued that the tributary system is a useful concept for describing imperial China's relations with its neighbors, and that it can even serve as a model for the future of international relations in East Asia. An examination of China's historical practice of foreign relations shows that there was no systematic tributary system, but instead multiple relationships of trade, military force, diplomacy and ritual. Furthermore, China's neighbors did not accept the imperial center's definition of hierarchy and subordination, but interpreted ritual relationships in their own way. Even in the 1930s, when scholars invoked Chinese history to advocate peaceful relations, they recognized the importance of military force, colonial settlement and domination in East Asian state relationships. The current myth of the tributary system ignores historical reality and misleads us about China's true position in East Asia and the world.
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