China’s Assertive Relational Strategies: Engagement, Boycotting, Reciprocation, and Pressing

IF 0.8 Q2 AREA STUDIES
Hung-Jen Wang
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

In the past decade, observers in Western countries have been increasingly challenged to describe China’s rising power in one of two ways: as contributing to established world systems, or as a growing threat fulfilling certain predictions made at the end of the Cold War. For some, perceptions of increasingly assertive regional behaviors confirm that China’s self-proclaimed policy of pacifism is being used to cloak selfish national interest and power goals. The current international relations (IR) literature tends to treat China’s assertiveness as evidence that it is indeed a threat, with few attempts to conceptualize assertiveness as a relational strategy. In this paper, the author uses eight current and historical cases involving four relational strategies — engagement, boycotting, reciprocation, and pressing — to examine conventional assessments of assertiveness that focus solely on perceptions of and responses to threatening statements and behaviors made in defense of Chinese national interests. In the end, this paper tries to contribute to the general IR literature that has tended to misinterpret China’s assertiveness, which is actually an identity issue regarding bilateral relationality instead of power or interest calculations.
中国自信的关系策略:接触、抵制、回报和施压
在过去的十年里,西方国家的观察家们越来越难以用两种方式来描述中国崛起的力量:要么是对现有世界体系的贡献,要么是实现冷战结束时某些预测的日益增长的威胁。对一些人来说,对日益自信的地区行为的看法证实,中国自称的和平主义政策正被用来掩盖自私的国家利益和权力目标。当前的国际关系(IR)文献倾向于将中国的自信视为其确实是一种威胁的证据,很少尝试将自信概念化为一种关系策略。在本文中,作者使用了八个当前和历史案例,涉及四种关系策略——接触、抵制、互惠和施压——来检验传统的自信评估,这些评估只关注对捍卫中国国家利益的威胁性言论和行为的看法和反应。最后,本文试图为一般的国际关系文献做出贡献,这些文献倾向于误解中国的自信,这实际上是一个关于双边关系的身份问题,而不是权力或利益计算。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
ISSUES & STUDIES
ISSUES & STUDIES Multiple-
CiteScore
1.30
自引率
25.00%
发文量
15
期刊介绍: ISSUES & STUDIES (ISSN 1013-2511) is published quarterly by the Institute of International Relations, National Chengchi University, Taipei. IS is an internationally peer-reviewed journal dedicated to publishing quality social science research on issues ¨C mainly of a political nature ¨C related to the domestic and international affairs of contemporary China, Taiwan, and East Asia, as well as other closely related topics. The editors particularly welcome manuscripts related to China and Taiwan.
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