European University Institute Library

China's foreign policy, who makes it, and how is it made?, edited by Gilbert Rozman

Label
China's foreign policy, who makes it, and how is it made?, edited by Gilbert Rozman
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Illustrations
illustrations
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
China's foreign policy
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
846546989
Responsibility statement
edited by Gilbert Rozman
Sub title
who makes it, and how is it made?
Summary
The May 19-20, 2011 Asan conference provided a venue to reassess foreign policy decision-making in China. Bringing together leading voices in this reassessment, the meeting elicited lively exchanges centered not on refuting rival interpretations but on jointly exploring leads that clarify the processes of China's foreign policy formulation that have yet to be adequately explained. Updating the conference papers to cover the end of 2011, this book reflects the state of analysis on the eve of the important 2012-13 transition to China's fifth-generation leaders. The Asan Institute for Policy Studies is an independent think tank located in Seoul, South Korea, that provides innovative policy solutions and spearheads public discourse on many of the core issues that Korea, East Asia, and the global community face. The goal of the institute is not only to offer policy solutions but also to train experts in public diplomacy and related fields in order to strengthen Korea's capacity to better tackle some of the most pressing problems affecting the country, the region and the world today --, Provided by Publisher
Table Of Contents
Introduction: Gilbert Rozman -- PART I: CHINA'S LEADERSHIP AND FOREIGN POLICY -- 1. More Actors, Less Coordination? New Challenges for the Leaders of a Rising China; Thomas Christensen -- 2. China's Foreign Policy and the Leadership Transition: Prospects for Change under the 'Fifth Generation'; Avery Goldstein -- 3. Another Take on Prospects for the Foreign Policy of the Chinese Fifth-Generation Leadership; Shin Jung-seung -- PART II: CHINA'S THINK TANKS AND FOREIGN POLICY -- 4. Chinese Foreign Policy Research Institutes and the Practice of Influence; Bonnie S. Glaser -- 5. Moving between the 'Inner Circle' and the 'Outer Circle': The Limited Impact of Think Tanks on Policy Making in China; Quansheng Zhao -- PART III: CHINA'S NATIONAL IDENTITY AND FOREIGN POLICY -- 6. Chinese National Identity and Foreign Policy: Linkages between the Two; Gilbert Rozman -- 7. Chinese Nationalism and the American Response: Sources of Tension and Prospects for Renewed Cooperation; Robert S. Ross -- PART IV: FINANCIAL FACTORS IN CHINESE FOREIGN POLICY MAKING -- 8. China's Leadership and Their Financial and Monetary Policies; William H. Overholt -- 9. How Do Monetary and Financial Issues Interact with China's Foreign Policy Making?; Fraṅois Godemont -- PART V: CHINA'S FOREIGN POLICY TOWARD THE KOREAN PENINSULA -- 10. China's North Korea Policy: Misperception and Reality (An Independent Chinese Perspective on Sino-Korean Relations); Chen Ping -- 11. China's Korea Policy in the Making; Yufan Hao -- 12. Disillusionment and Dismay: How Chinese Netizens Think and Feel about the Two Koreas; Peter Gries
Content
Mapped to

Incoming Resources