Open Access
International Relations with Chinese Characteristics
Author(s) -
Ralph Pettman
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
chinese journal of international review
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2630-5321
pISSN - 2630-5313
DOI - 10.1142/s2630531319500069
Subject(s) - admiration , china , tribute , civilization , state (computer science) , political science , foreign policy , political economy , law , sociology , literature , art , politics , computer science , algorithm
International relations, as currently construed, are multi-dimensional. They are also Euro-American, which means modern-day China had no hand in making them. It was obliged to adapt to the state-centered, marketeering, nationalistic realities with which it was confronted when it became independent. And adapt it did. It also, however, revised these realities by adopting its own approach. Its leaders first repudiated China’s traditional experiences, while reworking its world ones to promote their own ends. Later, however, they began to express admiration for the values and vision of their own culture and civilization. They began to articulate policies, like the Belt and Road Initiative, that were not only representative of Euro-American principles, such as international cooperation and free trade, but also representative of non-Euro-American principles, such as the so-called “tribute system”. The latter characterized China’s foreign policy approach for millennia. It still arguably demonstrates China’s willingness not only to accept — while reforming — those Euro-American practices imposed upon it, but also to repudiate — by revolutionizing — those very same practices.