Routledge handbook on global China:

This innovative Routledge Handbook sheds light on the complex and transformative nature of Global China, prompting a re- evaluation of existing theories on global and regional dynamics. It encourages theoretical innovation, methodological reflection and analytical transformation, providing new avenu...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Beteilige Person: Mayer, Maximilian (VerfasserIn)
Weitere beteiligte Personen: Mayer, Maximilian 1980- (HerausgeberIn), Kavalski, Emilian ca. 20./21. Jh (HerausgeberIn), Rudyak, Marina 1981- (HerausgeberIn), Zhang, Xin (HerausgeberIn)
Format: Buch
Sprache:Englisch
Veröffentlicht: London; New York Taylor & Francis Group 2025
Schlagwörter:
Zusammenfassung:This innovative Routledge Handbook sheds light on the complex and transformative nature of Global China, prompting a re- evaluation of existing theories on global and regional dynamics. It encourages theoretical innovation, methodological reflection and analytical transformation, providing new avenues for critical engagement with China’s global interactions. The chapters propose three key commitments for the study of Global China: Advocating for diverse viewpoints and non- binary frameworks, employing nuanced analysis to understand Beijing’s transnational relations and utilizing alternative methodological approaches to explore different trajectories for China in international affairs.The Handbook also identifies and avoids epistemic traps that hinder the understanding of Global China, such as othering and strategic narcissism. It suggests five analytical frameworks related to relationality, global capitalist processes, language and discourse power, planetary- scale modernization and experimentalism to guide future research. By adopting these frameworks, researchers can gain a deeper understanding of the multifaceted factors shaping Global China within the broader global context of cooperation, competition and crisis
Beschreibung:List of figures; List of tables; List of contributors; Introduction: Global China: New Approaches to Research on China and the World; Maximilian Mayer, Emilian Kavalski, Marina Rudyak and Xin Zhang; I. Framing Global China; 1. Global China, Sinology, and Chinese Studies; Bart Dessein; 2. China’s Questions in Geography; Ingo Liefner; 3. China’s Traditional, Modern, and Neo–Socialist World Orders; William A. Callahan; 4. Americans’s Reactions to Global China’s Rise: Power Shift, Problem Shift, and Policy Shift; Steve Chan; 5. China as a Driver of a Post–Western Global Imaginary; Yih-Jye Hwang; 6. The China Challenge? A Holographic Global China Perspective; Chengxin Pan and Wanyi Zhao; II. Actors and Agencies of Global China; 7. Great Power Relationships or Common Destiny? Chinese Government and Private Actors’s Long and Winding Road to Find a Place in Global Cyberspace; Rogier Creemers; 8.
- International Actorness of the Chinese Local Governments; Dominik Mierzejewski and Anna Rudakowska; 9. The Party–State’s Global Transgressive Political Activities and Influence Work; Ralph Weber; 10. Chinese Rationality and the Design of Diplomatic Initiatives; Chiung-Chiu Huang; 11. Exporting Chinese Digital Authoritarianism; Martin K. Dimitrov; 12. From the Oriental to the Global City: China’s Urban Rise; Ryanne Flock and Elena Meyer-Clement; 13. The State of the American and Chinese Technological Competition; Czaba Moldicz; III. Global China and International Organizations; 14. Alternative Leadership: China and Global Finance; Jörn-Carsten Gottwald and Niall Duggan; 15. Global China in Health Governance: Inherent Conflicts in Governance Norms; Lai-Ha Chan; 16. Global Climate Governance in Transition and China’s Contribution; Hongyuan Yu, Bo Yu and Yunhan Yu; 17.
- China in Global Cultural Governance: Crafting a Culture of Dialogue and Cooperation through UNESCO; Tiewa Liu and Huawei Zong; 18. China, Catalyst of Change: Altering the Dynamics of Development in the Global South; Jeremy Garlick; 19. Decoding China's Reading of Global Development and Cooperation Norms; Marina Rudyak; IV. Global China’s Responses to Global Challenges; 20. China and Sustainable Transition—Chairman Coal vs. Green Cyber–Dragon; David Tyfield; 21. Meating Global China at Home; Tracey Fallon; 22. Global China in the Age of Algorithms; Séverine Arsène; 23. China and Modernity; Josef Gregory Mahoney; 24. From "Debt Diplomacy" to Donorship: China’s Changing Role in Global Development; Pádraig Carmody, Tim Zajontz, and Ricardo Reboredo; V. Entangled Encounters: Internalizing Global China at Home and Localizing Global China Abroad; 25. Innovation in China: Indigenous Efforts and Global Integration; Cong Cao and Yutao Sun; 26.
- China’s Subnational Foreign Policymaking; Nicholas Thomas; 27. Chinese Indonesian Intellectuals’s Quest for Post–Chineseness: Introduction of an Intellectual History Agenda; Harryanto Aryodiguno and Chih-yu Shih; 28. Nationalism with Chinese Characteristics: Xinjiang and the Politics of (In)Security; David O’Brien and Melissa Shani Brown; 29. Regionalizing Global China: Institutions, Competitions and Reactions; Tony Tai-Ting Liu; 30. Limits of Chinese Infrastructure Power and the Local Political Economy in Developing Countries: Evidence from Pakistan; Muhammad Tayyab Safdar; 31. Globalising China and Peripheral Urbanisation; Xiangming Chen; Epilogue: Epistemic Traps and Analytical Registers; Maximilian Mayer, Emilian Kavalski, Marina Rudyak, and Xin Zhang; Index
Umfang:xv, 524 Seiten 1160 gr
ISBN:9780367491314
9781032855936