中国:革命派还是修正主义者?

IF 1.2 3区 社会学 Q2 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS Washington Quarterly Pub Date : 2022-07-03 DOI:10.1080/0163660X.2022.2124017
Rana Mitter
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引用次数: 1

摘要

在国际秩序中,中国是革命大国还是修正主义大国?沿着这条路线进行的辩论有可能产生一个根本不存在的反对派。中国在全球秩序中的利益取决于物质因素,以及随着时间的推移改变规范的愿望,以便经济总量增长和国家主权的观念优先于个人权利的跨国概念。俄罗斯在破坏现有全球基础设施的关键部分(尤其是在欧洲和中东)方面有着明显的利益,而中国不同,它有很多动机来维护或慢慢适应现有国际秩序的各个方面。除了能源以外,中国在全球经济中扮演着重要角色,而俄罗斯则不然;这意味着更多的国家依赖与中国的联系,但也意味着中国自己会发现,这种破坏更具破坏性。然而,中国肯定发现当代秩序的许多方面都令人深感不快,比如将个人公民自由作为人权议程的核心要素,或者跨越主权边界的“保护责任”的持续辩论。它的首要任务是找到维持当代秩序结构的方法,同时寻求以更符合其利益的方式重新定义或重新利用这些结构。
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China: Revolutionary or Revisionist?
Is China a revolutionary or revisionist power in the international order? Debates along these lines run the danger of creating an opposition which isn’t really there. China’s stake in the global order is dependent on material factors, as well as the desire over time to shift norms so that ideas of aggregate economic growth and national sovereignty take precedence over transnational concepts of individual rights. Unlike Russia, which has a clear interest in destroying key parts of the existing global infrastructure particularly in Europe and the Middle East, China has many motivations to preserve or slowly adapt aspects of the existing international order. China is central to the global economy in a way that Russia is not, energy aside; that means that many more countries are dependent on links to China, but also that China itself would find disruption all the more damaging. However, China certainly finds many aspects of the contemporary order deeply irksome, such as its concentration on individual civil liberties as a core element of the human rights agenda, or the continuing debate over the “responsibility to protect” across sovereign borders. Its priority has been to find ways to maintain the structures of contemporary order while seeking to redefine or reinhabit them in ways that better suit its interests.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.90
自引率
5.90%
发文量
20
期刊介绍: The Washington Quarterly (TWQ) is a journal of global affairs that analyzes strategic security challenges, changes, and their public policy implications. TWQ is published out of one of the world"s preeminent international policy institutions, the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), and addresses topics such as: •The U.S. role in the world •Emerging great powers: Europe, China, Russia, India, and Japan •Regional issues and flashpoints, particularly in the Middle East and Asia •Weapons of mass destruction proliferation and missile defenses •Global perspectives to reduce terrorism Contributors are drawn from outside as well as inside the United States and reflect diverse political, regional, and professional perspectives.
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