TY - JOUR
T1 - Chinese Thinking on the Future of International Relations
T2 - Realism as the Ti, Rationalism as the Yong?
AU - Lynch, Daniel
PY - 2009/3
Y1 - 2009/3
N2 - China's evidently unstoppable "rise" energizes PRC political and intellectual elites to think seriously about the future of international relations. How will (and should) China's international roles change in the forthcoming decades? How should its leaders put the country's rapidly-increasing power to use? Foreign China specialists have tended to use an overly-streamlined "resisting" the West versus "co-operating" with it (or even simpler "optimistic" versus "pessimistic") scale to address such questions, partly reflecting the divide between Realism and Neoliberalism in American international relations theory. By 2002, a near-consensus had developed (though never shared universally) that China had become an increasingly co-operative power since the mid-1990s and would continue to pursue the policy prescriptions of Neoliberal international relations theory. But using more nuanced "English school" analytical techniques - and examining the writings of Chinese elites themselves, aimed solely at Chinese audiences - this article discovers an unmistakably cynical Realism to be still at the core of Chinese thinking on the international future. Even elites who appear sincere in their promotion of co-operation firmly reject "solidarism" among the world's leading states and insist upon upholding the difference between China and all others. Many demand - and foresee - China using its future power to pursue world objectives that would depart in significant respects from those of the other leading states and non-state actors. © The China Quarterly 2009.
AB - China's evidently unstoppable "rise" energizes PRC political and intellectual elites to think seriously about the future of international relations. How will (and should) China's international roles change in the forthcoming decades? How should its leaders put the country's rapidly-increasing power to use? Foreign China specialists have tended to use an overly-streamlined "resisting" the West versus "co-operating" with it (or even simpler "optimistic" versus "pessimistic") scale to address such questions, partly reflecting the divide between Realism and Neoliberalism in American international relations theory. By 2002, a near-consensus had developed (though never shared universally) that China had become an increasingly co-operative power since the mid-1990s and would continue to pursue the policy prescriptions of Neoliberal international relations theory. But using more nuanced "English school" analytical techniques - and examining the writings of Chinese elites themselves, aimed solely at Chinese audiences - this article discovers an unmistakably cynical Realism to be still at the core of Chinese thinking on the international future. Even elites who appear sincere in their promotion of co-operation firmly reject "solidarism" among the world's leading states and insist upon upholding the difference between China and all others. Many demand - and foresee - China using its future power to pursue world objectives that would depart in significant respects from those of the other leading states and non-state actors. © The China Quarterly 2009.
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U2 - 10.1017/S0305741009000010
DO - 10.1017/S0305741009000010
M3 - RGC 21 - Publication in refereed journal
SN - 0305-7410
VL - 197
SP - 87
EP - 107
JO - China Quarterly
JF - China Quarterly
ER -