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Securing China's core interests: the state of the debate in China
Authors:JINGHAN ZENG  YUEFAN XIAO  SHAUN BRESLIN
Affiliation:1. Vice‐Chancellor's 2020 Lecturer in the Department of Politics and Public Policy at De Montfort University and an Associate Fellow in the Centre for the Study of Globalisation and Regionalisation at the University of Warwick.;2. Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the Amsterdam School for Cultural Analysis, University of Amsterdam.;3. Professor of Politics and International Studies at the University of Warwick and Senior Scientist on the EU funded GR:EEN Project (Global Reordering: Evolution through European Networks) that focuses on the EU's role in a multipolar world. He is also Associate Fellow of the Chatham House Asia Programme and co‐editor of The Pacific Review.
Abstract:As China has grown stronger, some observers have identified an assertive turn in Chinese foreign policy. Evidence to support this argument includes the increasingly frequent evocation of China's ‘core interests’—a set of interests that represents the non‐negotiable bottom lines of Chinese foreign policy. When new concepts, ideas and political agendas are introduced in China, there is seldom a shared understanding of how they should be defined; the process of populating the concept with real meaning often takes place incrementally. This, the article argues, is what has happened with the notion of core interests. While there are some agreed bottom lines, what issues deserve to be defined (and thus protected) as core interests remains somewhat blurred and open to question. By using content analysis to study 108 articles by Chinese scholars, this article analyses Chinese academic discourse of China's core interests. The authors’ main finding is that ‘core interests’ is a vague concept in the Chinese discourse, despite its increasing use by the government to legitimize its diplomatic actions and claims. The article argues that this vagueness not only makes it difficult to predict Chinese diplomatic behaviour on key issues, but also allows external observers a rich source of opinions to select from to help support pre‐existing views on the nature of China as a global power.
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