本書重視宏觀與微觀相結(jié)合、歷史與現(xiàn)狀相結(jié)合的分析方法,對(duì)當(dāng)代中國外交進(jìn)行了全景式綜合考察,又特別重視對(duì)國際關(guān)系、國際體系的理論分析。全書內(nèi)容分為四大部分:中國外交政策的演變、中國獨(dú)立自主的外交政策、中國與大國關(guān)系、全球秩序中的中國。閱讀本書不僅有助于讀者認(rèn)識(shí)當(dāng)代中國外交戰(zhàn)略制訂對(duì)國際關(guān)系的影響,也使讀者了解中國外交決策的過程。重視研究中國和平發(fā)展與承擔(dān)相應(yīng)的國際責(zé)任的相互關(guān)系。
仇華飛,江蘇寶應(yīng)人,同濟(jì)大學(xué)政治與國際關(guān)系學(xué)院副院長(zhǎng)、教授、博士生導(dǎo)師,1996年7月畢業(yè)于復(fù)旦大學(xué)歷史系世界地區(qū)國別史專業(yè),獲歷史學(xué)博士學(xué)位。2006年8月至2007年7月美國紐約州立大學(xué)政治學(xué)系富布萊特高級(jí)訪問學(xué)者,2009年8月至2010年9月先后是美國約翰·霍普金斯大學(xué)高級(jí)國際問題研究院,芝加哥大學(xué)政治系高級(jí)研究學(xué)者。2012年1月至2月在德國柏林自由大學(xué)高級(jí)研究學(xué)者。2012年8月至2012年9月在美國喬治敦大學(xué)、萊斯大學(xué)講學(xué)。
2005年以來先后主持國家哲學(xué)社會(huì)科學(xué)基金項(xiàng)目,上海市哲學(xué)社會(huì)科學(xué)規(guī)劃課題系列項(xiàng)目,上海市浦江計(jì)劃特殊人才項(xiàng)目,上海市哲學(xué)社會(huì)科學(xué)重大課題,國家哲學(xué)社會(huì)科學(xué)重大委托課題子課題,兩次主持并完成上海市教委人文社會(huì)科學(xué)重點(diǎn)課題。出版學(xué)術(shù)專著《中美經(jīng)濟(jì)關(guān)系研究1927-1937》、《早期中美關(guān)系研究1784-1844》、《美國的中國學(xué)研究》等,在國內(nèi)外各種學(xué)術(shù)期刊上發(fā)表中英文學(xué)術(shù)論文90余篇。
Introduction
PART ONE:THE EVOLUTION OF CHINA'S FOREIGN POLICY
Chapter One China and World
Historical Legacy and Worldview
Lean to One Side(1949-1959)
Revolutionary Self-Reliance ( 1960-1969 )
Triangular Diplomacy ( 1970-1989)
Influence of ideology
Chapter Two China's Decision-Making Institutions
Government and Party Organizations
Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Ministry of Foreign Ec:onomic Relations and Trade
Ministry of National Defense
The Decision-Making Process
PART TWO:CHINA'S INDEPENDENT FOREIGN POLICY
Chapter Three Five Principles and
Peaceful Coexistence
The Bandung Conference
Fundamental Norms Guiding International Relations
Chapter Four China and International Organizations
The History of China in International Organizations
China and the United Nations
China's Role in the United Nations
Recent Events with Respect to Taiwan
China and WTO
Chapter Five China's Public Diplomacy
“People to People” Diplomacy
Public Diplomacy and China's Image in the World
The Significance of Public Diplomacy
PART THREE: CHINA AND POWERS
Chapter Six Sino-Soviet Relationslup
Sino-Soviet Split
From Split to Confrontation
Return to Normality
Views for the Sources of Sino-Soviet Conflict
Chapter Seven Sino-Russian Relationship
Sino-Russian Economic Relations
Issues for Sino-Russian Economic Relations
Russian-Chinese Military Cooperation
The Shanghai Cooperation Organization
Outlook on Russia-China Relations
Conclusion
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PART FOUR: CHINA ON THE GLOBAL SETTINGS
Prospects: China's Position in International Order
Selected Bibliography
Index
List of Abbreviations
Chapter One China and World
Understanding the origins and forces that have shaped China's foreign policy provides a framework in which to view both the changes and the continuities in Chinese foreign policy from 1949. The origins of China's foreign policy can be found in its size and population, historical legacy, worldview, nationalism, and Marxism-Lenimsm- Mao Zedong Thought. In China, Marxism found a similai link between the moral quality of a social class and its rule society. So the propensity of both Confucianism and Marxism to explain and justify policy in terms of historical principles probably contributed to the intellectual appeal of various grand theories of international relations to the leaders of the People's Republic of China. The first generations of PRC leaders have usually felt a need to frame their foreign policies in terms of broad historical epochs and categories. So these various historical schemes were rooted the China's immediate political situation and needs, they also reflected traditional Chinese notions about the appropriate relationship between power and morality. Power had to serve a moral purpose, which was derived from a study of history. The legitimacy of political power in contemporary China is still rooted squarely in interpretations of history, just as it was in traditional China.
Three international factors-the foreign policies of the superpowers, the structure of the international system, and China's calculation of its relative power and interests were obviously important but played a relatively minor role during this period. The reasons that domestic factors dominated were the newness of the Chinese revolution and the role of Mao himself.
Historical Legacy and Worldview
China's long and rich history as the world's oldest continuous civilization has affected Chinese foreign relations in various ways. For centuries the Chinese empire enjoyed basically unchallenged greatness and self-sufficiency. China saw itself as the cultural center of the umverse, a view reflected in the concept of the Middle Kingdom (Zhongguo “中國”, the Chinese word for China). For the most part, it viewed non-Chinese peoples as uncivilized barbarians.
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