Engagement and contestation: The entangled imagery of the Silk Road

Timur Dadabaev, R. Allison, A. Bukh
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引用次数: 7

Abstract

There is considerable debate over how and in what form Central Asian (CA) states should conduct relations among each other and with other post-Soviet states. The notion of the “Silk Road” has become one of the symbols of extended economic and political cooperation. Notably, however, Japan (Silk Road Diplomacy, 1996–1999), China (One Belt, One Road [OBOR] or the Belt and Road initiative [BRI]) and South Korea (Silk Road Strategy, 2011) have used the rhetoric of reviving the Silk Road to imply closer engagement with the CA region but with different connotations. This paper focuses on the formation of this discourse of engagement with the CA region through the notion of the Silk Road in China, South Korea and Japan and raises the following questions: What are the approaches that facilitate the most effective ways of engaging CA states under this “Silk Road” rhetoric? What are the principles that have detrimental effects on the successes and failures of the engagement of China, Japan and South Korea? The primary objective of this paper is to address these questions and to stimulate debate among both academics and policy makers on the formats of engagement and cooperation in Eurasia.
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参与与争论:丝绸之路的纠缠意象
关于中亚(CA)国家之间以及与其他后苏联国家之间应该如何以及以何种形式处理关系,存在着相当大的争论。“丝绸之路”的概念已成为扩大经济和政治合作的象征之一。然而,值得注意的是,日本(1996-1999年的“丝绸之路外交”)、中国(“一带一路”或“一带一路”倡议)和韩国(“丝绸之路战略”,2011年)都使用复兴丝绸之路的修辞来暗示与中亚地区更密切的接触,但内涵不同。本文重点关注通过中国、韩国和日本的丝绸之路概念与中亚地区接触的话语形成,并提出以下问题:在这种“丝绸之路”的修辞下,哪些方法有助于最有效地与中亚国家接触?哪些原则对中国、日本和韩国接触的成败有不利影响?本文的主要目的是解决这些问题,并激发学者和政策制定者就欧亚大陆接触与合作的形式进行辩论。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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