China’s Neighbors
Title | China’s Neighbors PDF eBook |
Author | Dezan Shira & Associates |
Publisher | Springer Science & Business Media |
Pages | 83 |
Release | 2012-06-12 |
Genre | Business & Economics |
ISBN | 3642276156 |
Designed with the foreign investor in mind, this guide presents region and city-specific intelligence available through few other English sources. Its pages overview the region from a business standpoint, examine the economy of the region's provinces and prominent cities in depth, and introduce the basics of establishing a business in the region. With detailed economic indicators and primary research largely from Chinese government and news sources, this guide is an accessible and engaging compilation of the practical information you need for doing business in the region. This is part of a five book business guide series: the Yangtze River Delta, Beijing and Northeast China, South China and the Greater Pearl River Delta, Central China and West China.
Beijing's Power and China's Borders
Title | Beijing's Power and China's Borders PDF eBook |
Author | Bruce Elleman |
Publisher | M.E. Sharpe |
Pages | 392 |
Release | 2015-05-18 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 0765627663 |
China shares borders with 20 other countries. Each of these neighbors has its own national interests, and in some cases, these include territorial and maritime jurisdictional claims in places that China also claims. Most of these 20 countries have had a history of border conflicts with China; some of them never amicably settled. This book brings together some of the foremost historians, geographers, political scientists, and legal scholars on modern Asia to examine each of China's twenty land or sea borders.
Asymmetrical Neighbors
Title | Asymmetrical Neighbors PDF eBook |
Author | Enze Han |
Publisher | |
Pages | 257 |
Release | 2019 |
Genre | Political Science |
ISBN | 0190688300 |
Is the process of state building a unilateral, national venture, or is it something more collaborative, taking place in the interstices between adjoining countries? To answer this question, Asymmetrical Neighbors takes a comparative look at the state building process along China, Myanmar, and Thailand's common borderland area. It shows that the variations in state building among these neighboring countries are the result of an interactive process that occurs across national boundaries. Departing from existing approaches that look at such processes from the angle of singular, bounded territorial states, the book argues that a more fruitful method is to examine how state and nation building in one country can influence, and be influenced by, the same processes across borders. It argues that the success or failure of one country's state building is a process that extends beyond domestic factors such as war preparation, political institutions, and geographic and demographic variables. Rather, it shows that we should conceptualize state building as an interactive process heavily influenced by a "neighborhood effect." Furthermore, the book moves beyond the academic boundaries that divide arbitrarily China studies and Southeast Asian studies by providing an analysis that ties the state and nation building processes in China with those of Southeast Asia.
Beijing's Power and China's Borders
Title | Beijing's Power and China's Borders PDF eBook |
Author | Bruce Elleman |
Publisher | Routledge |
Pages | 390 |
Release | 2014-12-18 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 131751565X |
China shares borders with 20 other countries. Each of these neighbors has its own national interests, and in some cases, these include territorial and maritime jurisdictional claims in places that China also claims. Most of these 20 countries have had a history of border conflicts with China; some of them never amicably settled. This book brings together some of the foremost historians, geographers, political scientists, and legal scholars on modern Asia to examine each of China's twenty land or sea borders.
China Among Equals
Title | China Among Equals PDF eBook |
Author | Morris Rossabi |
Publisher | Univ of California Press |
Pages | 448 |
Release | 1983 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 9780520043831 |
Scholars have long accepted China's own view of its traditional foreign relations: that China devised its own world order and maintained it from the second century B.C. to the nineteenth century. China ruled out equality with any nation: foreign rulers and their envoys were treated as subordinates or inferiors, required to send periodic tribute embassies to the Chinese emperor. The Chinese court was otherwise uninterested in foreign lands. Its principal interests were to maintain peace with what it perceived to be barbarian neighbors and to coax or coerce them into admitting China's superiority and accepting the Chinese emperor as the Son of Heaven.
Russia and Its Northeast Asian Neighbors
Title | Russia and Its Northeast Asian Neighbors PDF eBook |
Author | Kimitaka Matsuzato |
Publisher | Rowman & Littlefield |
Pages | 223 |
Release | 2016-12-07 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 1498537057 |
As a result of the Aigun (1858) and Beijing Treaties (1860) Russia had become a participant in international relations of Northeast Asia, but historiography has underestimated the presence of Russia and the USSR in this region. This collection elucidates how Russia's expansion affected early Meiji Japan's policy towards Korea and the late Qing Empire's Manchurian reform. Russia participated in the mega-imperial system of transportation and customs control in Northern China and created a transnational community around the Chinese Eastern Railway and Harbin City. The collection vividly describes daily life of the emigre Russians' community in Harbin after 1917. The collection investigates mutual images between the Russians and Japanese through the prism of the descriptions of the Japanese Imperial House in Russian newspapers and memoirs written by Russian POWs in and after the Russo-Japanese War and war journalism during this war. The first Soviet ambassador in Japan, V. Kopp, proposed to restore the division of spheres of interest between Russia and Japan during the tsarist era and thus conflicted People's Commissar of Foreign Affairs, G. Chicherin, the Soviet ambassador in Beijing, L. Karakhan, and Stalin, since the latter group was more loyal to the cause of China's national liberation. As a whole, the collection argues that it is difficult to understand the modern history of Northeast Asia without taking the Russian factor seriously.
Sui-Tang China and Its Turko-Mongol Neighbors
Title | Sui-Tang China and Its Turko-Mongol Neighbors PDF eBook |
Author | Jonathan Karam Skaff |
Publisher | Oxford University Press |
Pages | 421 |
Release | 2012-08-06 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 019999627X |
A comparative history that reconsiders China's relations with the rest of Eurasia, Sui-Tang China and Its Turko-Mongol Neighbors challenges the notion that inhabitants of medieval China and Mongolia were irreconcilably different from each other.