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Journal ArticleDOI

China Perceives America: Perspectives of international relations experts

Rosalie Chen
- 01 May 2003 - 
- Vol. 12, Iss: 35, pp 285-297
TLDR
Wang et al. as mentioned in this paper examine Chinese analysts' perceptions of America, particularly their views on US China policy, and explore how that issue has evolved over time, what progress has been made, what factors have shaped it, what principal impediments have existed and what the prospects are for future management.
Abstract
This article seeks to examine Chinese analysts' perceptions of America, particularly their views on US China policy. It intends to explore how that issue has evolved over time, what progress has been made, what factors have shaped it, what principal impediments have existed, and what the prospects are for future management. Focusing on the period from the mid-1990s to the present, the study finds that there remains a perceptual gap in US-China relations today, though Chinese understanding of America continues to improve. Specifically, there seems to be a lessened diversity of opinions and an emerging consensus on the hegemonic nature of US foreign policy, particularly its intention of containing a rising China--though its dual strategy of containment and engagement continues to exist. More importantly, many Chinese analysts remain highly critical and negative. Thus, American external behavior worldwide would always be viewed with a great deal of suspicion.

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‘The Loud Dissenter and its Cautious Partner’ – Russia, China, global governance and humanitarian intervention

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Journal ArticleDOI

Framing Sino-American Relations under Stress: A Reexamination of News Coverage of the 2001 Spy Plane Crisis

TL;DR: In this article, the authors consider the 2001 spy plane crisis as a revealing episode and consider the framing of media coverage of the crisis in both countries, concluding that prominent news outlets serve as purveyors of mutual distrust rather than the easing of inherent tensions in the bilateral relationship.
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