Aufsatz(elektronisch)Juni 1998

The Chinese Conception of National Interests in International Relations

In: The China quarterly, Band 154, S. 308-329

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Abstract

The pursuit of national interests is the legitimate goal of a state's foreign policy. Yet in the 1990s, politicians in the West and the U.S. have criticized the Chinese government for its allegedly narrow-minded, backward view, especially on issues concerning human rights and irredentist claims. Many scholarly analyses in North America also point to a "hard-core," well-entrenched Chineserealpolitik"worldview" with little ingrained liberal thinking. The conclusion seems to be that, in the Chinese worldview, the international system consists essentially of atomistic nation-states locked in a perpetual struggle for power. China's foreign policy is based on an outmoded Westphalian notion of sovereignty in a world where state sovereignty is being eroded and the traditional notion of national interests is under increasing challenge, thanks to unprecedentedly "dense interdependence." The blunt policy criticisms and subtle scholarly analyses point to a problematic Chinese definition of national interests.

Sprachen

Englisch

Verlag

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

ISSN: 1468-2648

DOI

10.1017/s0305741000002058

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