Academic literature on the topic 'China’s peaceful rise'
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Journal articles on the topic "China’s peaceful rise"
Choo, Jaewoo. "Ideas matter: China’s peaceful rise." Asia Europe Journal 7, no. 3-4 (November 10, 2009): 389–404. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10308-009-0241-3.
Full textHajrullahu, MSc Besjan. "Is China’s Rise going to be Peaceful?" ILIRIA International Review 5, no. 2 (December 31, 2015): 265. http://dx.doi.org/10.21113/iir.v5i2.92.
Full textHan, Enze. "China’s peaceful rise: perceptions, policy and misperceptions." Cambridge Review of International Affairs 30, no. 5-6 (September 3, 2017): 583–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09557571.2018.1439313.
Full textBhattacharya, Abanti. "Revisiting China’s “peaceful rise”: Implications for India." East Asia 22, no. 4 (December 2005): 59–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12140-005-0004-8.
Full textLiu, Weihua, and Yufan Hao. "Australia in China's Grand Strategy." Asian Survey 54, no. 2 (March 2014): 367–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/as.2014.54.2.367.
Full textLi, Xin, and Verner Worm. "Building China’s Soft Power for a Peaceful Rise." Journal of Chinese Political Science 16, no. 1 (November 24, 2010): 69–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11366-010-9130-2.
Full textzha, daojiong. "comment: can china rise?" Review of International Studies 31, no. 4 (October 2005): 775–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0260210505006753.
Full textYu, Lei. "China’s Free Trade Area Strategy: An alternative avenue to China’s “peaceful” rise?" Social Science Journal 57, no. 2 (January 28, 2020): 206–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.soscij.2018.10.009.
Full textSiek, Yany. "China’s Peaceful Rise and the Security Dilemma: A Theoretical Assessment of the Possibility and Inevitability of War." Political Science Undergraduate Review 1, no. 1 (October 15, 2015): 56–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.29173/psur11.
Full textOkuda, Hiroko. "China’s “peaceful rise/peaceful development”: A case study of media frames of the rise of China." Global Media and China 1, no. 1-2 (March 2016): 121–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2059436416646275.
Full textDissertations / Theses on the topic "China’s peaceful rise"
Bjällstrand, Thomas. "China: Friend or Foe? : Understanding the U.S Pacific Pivot to China's Confusing Confucianism." Thesis, Stockholms universitet, Ekonomisk-historiska institutionen, 2014. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:su:diva-100928.
Full textKokkinos, Stephanie Helen. "China in Africa: The use of soft power and its implications for a global peaceful rise." Thesis, Stellenbosch : Stellenbosch University, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/10019.1/20172.
Full textENGLISH ABSTRACT: Soft power is more relevant now than ever before. In fact, in the current world system it has become an important element in exercising state power and mapping out leadership strategies. This assignment attempts to analyse the use of soft power as a post-Cold War foreign policy strategy on the part of China. Chinese relations with the African continent are assessed to prove the increasing rate at which China has expended trade and diplomatic relations in the past two decades, and to determine the degree to which soft power is contributing to China’s prospects of a harmonious rise to a position of global power. China’s foreign policy is ideologically underpinned by nationalism and confucianism. This stance is based on the need to protect and promote the economic and social stability of the state, as well as to secure a sound diplomatic identity in the international arena. For this reason, China has expanded economic interests abroad, particularly, looking upon Africa as a source of mutual development and investement, economic cooperation and an enhanced network for trade. This has lead to the growth of ‘soft’ ties between the Chinese nation and many African states, through the provision of aid, diplomatic cooperation on policy issues and the sharing of cultural values and institutional norms. In this way, China has been able to promote the perception of a peaceful rise to power and make a valuable contribution to the Chinese goal of constructing a harmonious world. Concluding a thorough analysis of China’s foreign policy behaviour it is determined that China-Africa relations are based, at least in part, on soft power, as a means to gain increased international influence. This is contended by the likeness between the behaviour advocated by soft power theory and that of Chinese interaction with African states. Furthermore, this partnership can be understood as a potential global shift towards multilateralism and the belief in an emerging international order that organised by regionalised powers that cooperate with each other on international platforms. The theory of constructivism, particularly its emaphasis on the roles of ideas, identities and institutions, is a valuable perspective to consider in approaching this discussion of China as a peacefully emerging global power.
AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: ‘Sagtemag’ is nou meer relevante vandag as ooit tevore. Dit is inderdaad ‘n belangrike element in die uitoefening van staat mag en leierskap strategieë in die huidige wêreld. Hierdie werkstuk poog om die gebruik van sagte mag te ontleed as ‘n buitelandse beleid strategie op die deel van Sjina sedert die einde van die Koue Oorlog. Sjinese verhoudings met Arika word geassesseer om te bewys die toenemende tempo waarteen diplomatieke betrekkinge in die afgelope twee dekades bestee het, en die graad aan wat sagte mag dra Sjina se vooruitsigte van ‘n harmonieuse aanleiding tot wêreld mag te bepaal. Sjina se buitelandse beleid is ideologies ondersteun deur nasionalisme en Confucianisme. Hierdie standpunt is gebaseer op die behoefte om die ekonomiese stabiliteit van die staat te beskerm en om ‘n gesonde diplomatieke indentiteit te verseker op ‘n internasionale vlak. Om hierdie rede het Sjina uigebrei om die ekonomiese belange in die buiteland, veral op soek op die Afrika-vasteland as ‘n bron van wedersydse ontwikkeling en belegging, ekonomiese samewerking en ‘n groter handelsmerk netwerk. Dit het gelei tot die groei van die ‘sagte’ bande tussen Sjina en baie Afrika-lande, deur die voorsiening van fonds, diplomatieke samewerking oor beleidskwessies en die deel van kulturele waardes en institusionele norme. Op hierdie manier het Sjina die persepsie van ‘n vreedsame opkoms by wêreld mag te bevorder en ‘n waardevolle bydrae tot die Sjinese doel vir ‘n ‘Harmonious World’ te bou. Die sluiting van ‘n deeglike ontleding van Sjina se buitelandse beleid word bepaal dat Sjina-Afrika verhoudings is op sagtemag gebou om ‘n verhoogde internaionale invloed te kry. Dit is aangevoer deur die gelykenis tussen sagtemag teorie en die gedrag wat bepleit word deur Sjinese interaksie met Afrika-lande. Verder kan hierdie vennootskap verstaan word as ‘n moontlike globale verskuiwing na multilateralisme en die potensiële van ‘n nuwe internationale bestel wat gereël is deur regionalisering magte. Konstruktivisme, veral die teorie se nadruk op die rolle van idees, indentiteite en instellings, is ook ‘n waardevolle perspektief te oorweeg in die nader van heirdie bespreking van Sjina as ‘n vreedsame wyse opkomende wêreld mag.
Dikmen, Neslihan. "Political Economy Of China'." Master's thesis, METU, 2008. http://etd.lib.metu.edu.tr/upload/12610171/index.pdf.
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Amaral, Gabriela Cristina Granço do. "A diplomacia de "ascensão pacífica" como estratégia de política externa da China : as relações com o Vietnã e as disputas sobre as ilhas /." Marília, 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/11449/127981.
Full textResumo: A rápida ascensão da China e seu crescente poderio vêm ampliando os questionamentos sobre o que fará para atingir a proeminência que julga merecer: se continuará aceitando a ordem internacional a que se ligou e na qual desenvolveu seu caminho de crescimento acelerado, ou se vai preferir contestar essa ordem, ou alguns de seus componentes básicos. A dissertação analisa as relações da China com o Vietnã, em especial o conflito em torno das ilhas do Mar do Sul, para os chineses, ou do Mar do Leste, para os vietnamitas. O objetivo é verificar como se aplica nesse caso a diplomacia de "ascensão pacífica", expressão adotada em 2003, e que quer sinalizar o interesse da China em ascender sem causar danos a outros país e sem abalar a ordem internacional, ou seja, o compormisso da China de promover o desenvolvimento do seu país e dos demais por meio de cooperação e paz. Os dois países têm disputas territoriais antigas em torno de ilhas localizadas em região de grande interesse para a segurança e para a projeção externa da China. A dissertação analisa a política externa o peso do nacionalismo na questão e examina os desdobramentos diplomáticos da dispouta sobre as ilhas.
Abstract: The rapid rise of China and its growing power have broadened the questions about what he will do to achieve the prominence that judges deserve: whether to continue accepting international order that is called and in which developed its accelerated growth path, or if you prefer vai contest this order, or some of its basic components. The dissertation examines China's relations with Vietnam, especially the dispute over the islands of the South Sea, to the Chinese, or East Sea, to the Vietnamese. The goal is to see how it applies in this case diplomacy of "peaceful rise", expression adopted in 2003, and wants to signal that China's interest in ascend without causing damage to other country without undermining international order, ie the compormisso China to promote the development of their country and the other through cooperation and peace. Both countries have ancient territorial disputes around islands located in a region of great interest to the security and the external projection of China. The dissertation examines the foreign policy of nationalism in the weight issue and examines the ramifications of diplomatic dispouta on the islands.
Chang, Chang-Yueh, and 張長嶽. "The Political Economy of China’s Peaceful Rise." Thesis, 2016. http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/50706738462872214565.
Full text國立臺灣大學
政治學研究所
104
The international situation is treacherous and volatile. Since the dismemberment of the former Soviet Union and the end of The Cold War in the late twentieth century, the world has changed from the “bi-polar system” to “one superpower and multi powers”, in which the U.S. has become the world’s sole superpower. However, under the implementation of the “reform and opening-up” policy, China’s economy has been growing rapidly, political ecology changing tremendously, and overall strength increasing dramatically. All of above has made China the region’s strongest country in terms of its political, economic, and military powers. China has since also been regarded as the U.S.’s main competitor. While facing the U.S.’s constant hegemonic conducts and the reality of international constraints, China is aware that with its current ability it still can not compete against the U.S., even given it a few more years, and is less likely to be able to dominate the world. However, because of the strategic need to “reach out”, China’s fourth generation of leadership, the “Hu-Wen regime” proposed a strategic international new way of thinking called the "peaceful rise" in the end of 2003, which advocated ideas such as common development and common prosperity. This strategy stated that China would continue to participate in economic globalization, adhere to a peaceful and non-hegemonic foreign policy and initiate the "harmonious world" concept so that China can promote a multi-polar world pattern, counterbalance American hegemony, and eventually seek the chance to establish its status as a global superpower. As part of social science, the study of political economy not only focuses on the theoretical research, it also takes into account the objective structure pulses and cause and effect changes in politics and economics. It emphasizes analyzing and solving practical problems in politics and economics. Under the perspective of political and economic analysis, when it comes to the study of China''s "peaceful rise" issue, in order to explain or solve related problems, we must start from the open context in the core body of politics and economics to position the structural characteristics in related subjects, and look into the long term development and change of the overall political and economic structures. In other words, when it comes to “peaceful rise” such a diversified subject that involves national strategies, the political system, economic development, ideology and value, China is the major actor and therefore affects the behaviors of other actors including its co-competition relationships with the U.S. and other major countries such as Japan, Russia, Britain, France and Germany. All of these interactions lead to interactive effects upon multi-level political and economic systems and structures, both at home and abroad. In summary, the "peaceful rise" has been China’s grand strategy entering the 21st century which not only inherited national development history, but also extended future revival strategic thinking. This strategy was embedded in China''s internal political and economic situations but also extended outside to international political and economic systems. Whether analyzing it on a political or economic level, it is subject to the effects of time and changes of context. Therefore, this study will start with "China''s peaceful rise" and cover the various current "Chinese internal" and "international environment" phenomenon and its causal context to analyze, interpret and decide its future potential development, and then build accordingly to a complete set of political and economic analysis.
Wang, Ling, and 王羚. "Representing Myths of China’s Peaceful Rise in Yan’s Social Relational Structure diagram." Thesis, 2013. http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/79874272253330357046.
Full text中國文化大學
政治學系
101
In order to understand “the myth of China’s peaceful rise,” it is suggested to use the strategy in the methodology of Bourdieu that has systematic reflection on group unconscious. Thus, the subject of “China’s peaceful rise” is being handled by “mythology”. First of all, myth can be aimed on reality facts. This involves the group unconscious of the context of the times: when the west sees the rise of China with the context of “ultra-modernism,” it often forgets the imperial colonial interest in the modern period and the long process of democracy. On the contrary, when China sees its own rise with the context of entering “modernism,” on one hand, to the change of the times, it stills tangled with Marxism of the previous history or it ignores the western experiences of the post modern and ultra modern. On the other hand, in the opinion of China Communist Party, it is still wondered in the origin interpretation control of power legitimacy and it does not understand that the deformed aristocratic republic actually includes the factors of traditional scholar politics. Secondly, myth can aim on methodology issues. This involves the systematic reflection of the research method of semiotics and republic methodology. As for the “social relationship structure” of the main method of the paper, it was originally the systematic reflection outcome of Hsiao-ping Yen on international relationship theory through semiotic. Here, this diagram is going to be reflected, applied, and re-reflected through the disciplines intertextuality methodology. As for the systematic reflection on republic methodology, first is the distorted theory of Montesquieu on China Empire and unconsciously reflect his Epistemology. Then the long originated western republic theory is being discussed in reflection. Then naturally, the unconscious issue of each thinker after bias ignorance is presented. Later, the historical changes of the context of the republic theory can be sorted out as the references of the China Communist Party, which will be discussed later. Finally, myth can aim on the content of China’s peaceful rise. Here it involves the description of western people to China and the description of our national people. Huntington and Nye of the national security field, Becker and Naigbitt of the economic field, Fox and Almond of the political field, and Halper and Jacques of the cultural field are the representatives of the western theorists; for China theorists, the collection edited by the military representative Lee Er-Bin, New Right Wing Ho Di, and New Left Wing Wang Shao-Guan and the interview summary of Leonard on China theorists are chosen to represent the four fields respectively. They make comments on the subjects of China’s peaceful rise or the deformation of “China mode” or the context of “globalism.” The key is the reasons of their judgment often follow the origin of the conscious such as civilizationism, Machiavellism, and neoliberalism. However, these reasons are presented in the fields of the “structure diagram” with the content of the judgment and make appropriate reflective adjustment of the factors of the original items of the diagram.
Jo-Ku, Tseng, and 曾若谷. "An analysis of the relationship between China’s development of carrierand peaceful rise -with the theory of paradox." Thesis, 2011. http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/85154259719550136239.
Full text淡江大學
國際事務與戰略研究所碩士在職專班
99
In 2008, Mr.Hu Jin-tao said, "The Navy has played an important position and role in the maintenance of country''s maritime rights and developing benefits." To safeguard national maritime security, China has built up a maritime power to support the country. China''s naval strategy has transferred from coastal coast defense, coastal defense into "offshore operation". Of the combat capability, the Chinese navy has gradually developed from the yellow water, blue water into a dark blue navy. In the white paper, "National Defense of China in 2010", it was mentioned that the PLA Navy has been in accordance with the requirements of coastal defense, and has committed to the development of modern warfare combat capability, enhanced the strategic deterrent and counterattack capability, cooperation and development of open sea and responses to non-traditional security threats. By multilateral anti-terrorism military drill, and the active participations in international peacekeeping operations, it is a solution for the imbalance caused by the development of aircraft carrier, and also for the accomplishment of promoting the harmonious world. The "peaceful rise" strategy in China has adopted a full range of foreign policy, and was used in bilateral or multilateral cooperation politically, economically, and securely to create a winning mode and to fight for international recognition. It is also to maintain the lifeline of the offshore power, and to effectively stop the traditional and non-traditional threats, and to create a peaceful rise in the external environments. As for the internal environments, aircraft carriers development not only intensifies the power of the country, but also revitalizes the Chinese nation, and to establish a mutual wealthy and harmonious society. This is to consolidate the core benefits of China and to strengthen the Chinese Community Party regime. From the research of the paradoxical theory of the aircraft carriers development and the peaceful rise, it was discovered that the strategy in aircraft carriers development in the peacetime of China has great impact on "business with swords". As a result, the development of aircraft carriers to protect the lifeline of offshore power was established to solve the problem of the power requirements; the development of aircraft carriers to guard the country and oceanic benefits was established to avoid the fall happened in Qing Dynasty; the development of aircraft carriers to curb the separatism was established to safeguard the sovereignty in China, the development of aircraft carriers to regain the national complex was established to revive the nationalism. According to the strategy of peaceful development, China has claimed that peaceful development emphasized the winning policy in peacekeeping. However, from the war of punishing Vietnam, and the event of Zhenbao Island, it was discovered of how important China treats core benefits, China might not give way while facing the dispute of sovereignty. It is beyond the necessary defense in the military of China, especially when there is no threat from any country to China, and yet China has put efforts on the development of the aircraft carriers. This leads to the paradox and the conflict phenomenon. The aircraft carriers strategies mentioned above are all developed from the same core benefits, even if it is for consolidating the stability and legitimacy of the Chinese communists. In conclusion, from the points of view of the policy and the comments of every leadership with the five rules of peaceful coexistence, the coordination, and the peaceful development in China, it is helpful to create double winning and mutual benefits if China takes the Chinese contract to deal with territorial disputes and maritime benefits. Therefore, the rise in China will lead a peaceful development.
Huang, Yi-lung, and 黃奕龍. "On China's "Peaceful Rise" Diplomatic Strategy." Thesis, 2007. http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/57981592554251092932.
Full text國立政治大學
外交研究所
95
This dissertation focuses on the “peaceful rise” argument brought by China in the end of 2003. By contending that China will rise by peace, for peace, and peacefully, the so-called “peaceful rise” argument tried to counter “China threat” argument, which distributed for a long time. The making of China’s “peaceful rise” national strategy is motivated and forced by the international environment. On top of that, the confidence of Chinese decision-makers for a rising China provides power to the formation of the new national strategy as well as the expectation for a new national development discourse. Following the national development strategy which aims at a peacefully rising China, the “peaceful rise” diplomatic strategy was built by a series of concrete foreign policies, including “Big-power diplomacy,” “Good-neighboring diplomacy,” “Relations with developing countries,” and “Multi-lateral diplomacy”. This dissertation starts from the background of a rising China, comprehends the reason, goal and character of China’s “peaceful rise” by international environment, national power, and decision-maker’s cognitive approaches. Moreover, concrete foreign policies accompanying its national strategy are analyzed. Finally, this research finds that the peaceful rise diplomatic strategy needs to deal with certain challenges such as Sino-U.S. power struggle with conflicting issues, Sino-Japan security dilemma with conflicting issues, peripheral territorial sea and land disputes, and last but not least, the Taiwan problem.
Chiang, Chun-hsien, and 江俊賢. "The Study of China's Peaceful Rise." Thesis, 2006. http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/12237402225400024493.
Full text南華大學
亞太研究所
94
This article discusses about the content and feasibility of China’s “peaceful rise.” In this article, it uses three types of international relationship theories: defensive realism, institutional liberalism, and social constructivism, to analysis the content of “peaceful rise.” Defensive realists believe that China should strengthen and modernize their military, defensive national defense, and toward multi-polar world; institutional liberalists in another way feel that China should further enhance on their internal balance development, nontraditional security, and integrate into the economic of East Asia; social constructivists put “peaceful rise” as China should change into a modernize country with “Peace and Development” as the dominant themes in mind, setting a responsible role as one of the biggest country in the world and establish a peaceful image. In this article, it mainly describes on how America, European Union, Russia, Japan and AESAN s’ reactions toward China’s “peaceful rise.” With the acceptance of China’s “peaceful rise” by America, America will still require China to rise under the present international system. European Union is pleased to see China’s “peaceful rise” but hope that China can integrate into the western system. In the point of view of Japan in China’s “peaceful rise”, it will be the biggest challenge between both countries than an opportunity in proving their relationship. The prominent conflict between Japan and China is the competition in the East Asia leadership and the historical problems. As for Russia, it sees China’s “peaceful rise” as a fear more than a hope. Russia worries China will establish its power in Russia. In due of the good relationship between ASEAN and China, ASEAN still need to have long-term worries in China development. This article evaluates that China will forged ahead continuously. Although there are still some problems had not been solved, but it does not alter China in the process of peaceful rise. Regardless of how China establish the “peaceful rise”, the policy makers should take into due consideration on how it will affect Asia countries’ reactions and worries. Keywords: peaceful rise, defensive realism, institutional liberalism, social constructivism, nontraditional security, China
Ho, Tze-Man, and 何策民. "The Study of China Peaceful Rise." Thesis, 2005. http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/88357603808240444532.
Full text國立東華大學
公共行政研究所
93
The purpose of this article is try to analyze and explain China's "peaceful rise". Including of the definition of the meaning and function of China's "peaceful rise". All interesting and creative theory, China's global role and responsibilities appears to have been set aside this year, in part as a result of leadership disagreements. The idea of China's "peaceful rise" (heping jueqi)to international prominence as a responsible, peaceable, and nonthreatening global power was introduced by Zheng Bijian in November 2003. It caught the interest of many Chinese and Western scholars and observers, becoming the subject of intense and surprisingly open debate. General Secretary Hu Jintao and Premier Wen Jiabao both used the term in speeches in December, suggesting that the idea might become a more formal component of Chinese foreign policy. The concept itself has not been anathematized, however, and it remains the subject of academic inquiry. However, in the international arena the PRC leadership is rather restrained in promulgating the notion of the "rise" or "'revival" of China. The Chinese are aware that, despite the progress China has made so far, the existing gap between China and the developed nations, and the United States in particular, is enormous in term of national wealth, standard of living, education, and science and technology. It will take at least decades for China to catch up with the "Western world. In the interim, formidable impediments lie on the road ahead that might derail modernization programs. The least example of such impediments is the unexpected consequences of the epidemic or SAR.S (severe acute respiratory syndrome), which has caused a sharp reduction of tourism and international commercial activities in China in the spring of 2003 and damaged China's image abroad. China has been keeping a low profile faced with increased international attention to a "rising" China. The Chinese leadership is conscious of the ambivalent feelings in neighboring countries as well as in the United States and Europe about the growth of Chinese power. The Chinese carefully read comments on 'the China threat." "the coming collapse of China," and other opinions expressed in international media, but have not overreacted to them. As Vice Premier Qian Qichen, China's foreign policy architect, commented on Gordon Change’ s book The Coming Collapse of China, only wants to promote sales by giving the book such a sensational tide." Qian added, "The 'China threat' theory and the 'China collapse' theory appear to contradict each other, but they are in fact two sides of the same coin. They both reflect the views of anti-China elements in the world. They are not worth refuting anyway." According to Mr. Oian, if China's comprehensive power today were at the same level as it was decades ago, there would be no such loud voices about the "China threat," and there will be no market for [his theory in a few decades from now when China becomes much more developed-' The Chinese leadership has reached the realization that exaggerations of Chinese economic achievements, either by foreigners or by Chinese themselves. might result practically in a reduction of foreign aid and pressures for China to reevaluate its currency and to use more of its foreign trade surplus. In the coming years China is likely to make strenuous public relations efforts to reshape its international image, especially in Asia. What is lacking in the Chinese deliberation of the 'rise of China' is any clear realization of the need to promote an institutionalized regional or global order in which China would play a major role in cooperation with other great powers, and in which China would be committed to more international obligations. As is pointed out by a-report to the Trilateral Commission in 2001, "China's rapid rise is occurring in a region that lacks firmly established, integrating institutions like die European Union that help build trust. Asia has no security community in the transatlantic sense of peace in which resort to violence has become virtually unimaginable."
Books on the topic "China’s peaceful rise"
Bhatty, Maqbool Ahmad. China's peaceful rise and South Asia. Islamabad: Islamabad Policy Research Institute, 2008.
Find full textFrom early Tang court debates to China's peaceful rise. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2009.
Find full textChina's peaceful rise in a global context: A domestic aspect of China's road map to democratization. Lanham, Md: Lexington Books, 2010.
Find full textUSC U.S.-China Institute, ed. Past and present in China's foreign policy: From "tribute system" to "peaceful rise". Portland, ME: MerwinAsia, 2010.
Find full textChina's road to peaceful rise: Observations on its cause, basis, connotation, and prospect. New York, NY: Routledge, 2011.
Find full textLun Zhongguo he ping jue qi fa zhan xin dao lu: Peaceful rise : China's new road to development. Beijing Shi: Zhong gong zhong yang dang xiao chu ban she, 2005.
Find full textToje, Asle, ed. Will China's Rise Be Peaceful? Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190675387.001.0001.
Full textSoeya, Yoshihide. The Rise of China in Asia. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190675387.003.0014.
Full textChina's Peaceful Rise: Perceptions, Policy and Misperceptions. Manchester University Press, 2016.
Find full textHerrick, Christopher, Zheya Gai, and Surain Subramaniam. China's Peaceful Rise: Perceptions, Policy and Misperceptions. Manchester University Press, 2016.
Find full textBook chapters on the topic "China’s peaceful rise"
Dessein, Bart. "‘Pacifism’, and China’s ‘Peaceful Rise’ and ‘Peaceful Development’." In Pacifism’s Appeal, 179–97. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-13427-3_9.
Full textKong, Zhiguo. "Peaceful Rise: Strategic Prospect and Recommendations." In Research Series on the Chinese Dream and China’s Development Path, 145–72. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-10-1786-5_6.
Full textPan, Zhongqi, and Zhimin Chen. "Peaceful Rise, Multipolarity, and China’s Foreign Policy Line." In The Troubled Triangle, 63–86. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781137316851_4.
Full textChang Liao, Nien-chung. "Domestic Politics and China’s Assertive Foreign Policy: Why China’s Rise May Not Be Peaceful." In Decoding the Rise of China, 85–106. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-10-8288-7_5.
Full textXue, Li. "South China Sea Disputes: Litmus Test for China’s Peaceful Rise—How US Scholars View South China Sea Issues." In China’s Rise and Changing Order in East Asia, 217–23. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/978-1-352-00023-8_12.
Full textKeller, William W., and Thomas G. Rawski. "CHINA’S PEACEFUL RISE:." In China's Rise and the Balance of Influence in Asia, 193–208. University of Pittsburgh Press, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv11cwbfq.13.
Full text"Will China’s ‘Peaceful Rise’ be Peaceful?" In Sino-Indian and Sino-South Korean Relations, 41–60. Routledge India, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315656311-3.
Full textRavenhill, John. "CHINA’S “PEACEFUL DEVELOPMENT” AND SOUTHEAST ASIA:." In China's Rise and the Balance of Influence in Asia, 162–92. University of Pittsburgh Press, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv11cwbfq.12.
Full text"AUSTRALIA AND THE ERA OF CHINA’S ‘PEACEFUL RISE’." In China’s Strategic Engagement with East Asia, 2–6. ISEAS Publishing, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1355/9789814620352-005.
Full text"2. China’s Rise Will Be Peaceful: How Unipolarity Matters." In China's Ascent, 34–54. Cornell University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.7591/9780801456992-005.
Full textConference papers on the topic "China’s peaceful rise"
Alperen, Ümit, and Ahmet Günay. "Trade Expectations Theory and China’s Rising: Towards a Peaceful Future?" In International Conference on Eurasian Economies. Eurasian Economists Association, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.36880/c05.00907.
Full textZhu, Xuanyi. "China’s Peaceful Rise: A Necessary Path with Challenges." In 6th International Conference on Humanities and Social Science Research (ICHSSR 2020). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/assehr.k.200428.019.
Full textRomadhon, Mahfudz Ibnu, and Moch. Yunus. "The Implementation of China Peaceful Rise in The IMF Reform." In International Conference on Contemporary Social and Political Affairs. SCITEPRESS - Science and Technology Publications, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.5220/0008820903130319.
Full textReports on the topic "China’s peaceful rise"
Nelson, Michael G. China's Peaceful Rise. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, May 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada611980.
Full textHorrell, Steven L. China's Maritime Strategy Peaceful Rise. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, March 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada479123.
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