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Showing papers by "Peter Hays Gries published in 2009"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors explored the impact of historical beliefs on threat perception and foreign policy preferences in northeast Asia today, based on surveys of Chinese, Japanese, and South Korean university students, and found that historical beliefs have little impact on threats perception and policy preferences.
Abstract: Historical controversies continue to plague northeast Asian politics today, with Chinese and Koreans protesting Japanese history textbooks and Japanese politicians’ visits to Yasukuni Shrine, and Koreans protesting Chinese claims that the ancient Kingdom of Goguryo was Chinese, not Korean. Yet, there is little empirical research exploring what, if any, impact historical beliefs have on threat perception and foreign policy preferences in northeast Asia today. On the basis of surveys of Chinese, Japanese, and South Korean university students, this paper explores the

36 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This paper explored the impact of history textbook controversies on US-China relations and found that the historical relevance of a shared past to national identities in the present has a dramatic impact on how historical controversies affect threat perception.
Abstract: Chinese and Korean protests over “revisionist” Japanese histories of World War II are well known. The impact of contested Chinese and US histories of the Korean War on US-China relations today has received less attention. More broadly, there has been little research seeking to systematically explore just how history textbook controversies matter for international relations. This article experimentally manipulates the impact of nation (US/China), of source (in-group/out-group textbooks), and of valence (positive/negative historical narratives) on measures of beliefs about the past, emotions, collective self-esteem, and threat perception in present-day US-China relations. A 2 × 2 × 2 design exposed randomized groups of Chinese and US university students to fictional high school history textbook accounts of the Korean War. Findings reveal significant effects of nation, source, and valence and suggest that the “historical relevance” of a shared past to national identities in the present has a dramatic impact on how historical controversies affect threat perception.

12 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jan 2009-Orbis
TL;DR: For instance, this article argued that it is the political psychology of international relations that provides the most leverage on the role that misperceptions play in generating mistrust and insecurity in U.S.-China relations.

10 citations