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Introduction to the Special Issue
( Jean-marc F. Blanchard ) 경남대학교 극동문제연구소 2016 ASIAN PERSPECTIVE Vol.40 No.4
There is a relative dearth of research on China-Latin America political economic relations, especially where Chinese outward foreign direct investment (COFDI) is concerned. In my introductory article, I aim to enrich our knowledge about how external and internal political and economic factors interact to shape Sino- Latin American links. I offer background information on Chinese investment in Latin America, identify several analytical questions that have arisen in conjunction with COFDI in Latin America, and specify some of the key findings of the other articles in this special issue. The contributors indicate that COFDI and other Sino- Latin American economic ties may not be dramatically reshaping host country foreign policies toward China, that positive political relations are not sufficient to ensure smooth economic relations or growing COFDI, and that the activities of Chinese firms in Latin America may be shaped by the host country`s institutional environment and their own operational interests rather than by any dictates from Beijing.
Thinking Hard About Soft Power: A Review and Critique of the Literature on China and Soft Power
( Jean-marc F. Blanchard ),( Fujia Lu ) 경남대학교 극동문제연구소 2012 ASIAN PERSPECTIVE Vol.36 No.4
This article critically reviews the literature on China and soft power. Among other themes, it tackles the conceptualization and operationalization of soft power, measurement of the effectiveness of Chinese soft power, and the analysis of variables that intervene between China`s soft-power tools, realized images, and policy influence results.
Contemplating Chinese Foreign Policy: Approaches to the Use of Historical Analysis
Jean-Marc F. Blanchard,Kun-Chin Lin 인하대학교 국제관계연구소 2013 Pacific Focus Vol.28 No.2
Many have contemplated Chinese foreign policy and its future direction, but few have queried how Chinese history might illuminate both. This is unfortunate since researchers have shown that history can influence foreign policy agendas, discourses, and national goals. Moreover, it provides an invaluable tool for comparative analysis. The purpose of this introduction is to provide historical background to the articles comprising this special issue, whose contributors employ historical analysis, with the period preceding and following the Xinhai Revolution as a basis, to illuminate contemporary Chinese foreign policy – e.g., China’s interest in remaking the international order and its security norms – or to suggest differences between past and present – for example, in regards to China’s Asia–Pacific posture. This introduction also hopes to stimulate further work on Chinese history and foreign policy by highlighting similarities and differences between past and present with respect to, inter alia, pressures against China’s territorial integrity, sovereignty,and independence, the penetration of foreign actors and ideas into China, and domestic factors limiting China’s efforts to filter external influences and to respond to them.