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Japan's response to China's rise: regional engagement, global containment, dangers of collision

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Hughes, Christopher W.. (2009) Japan's response to China's rise: regional engagement, global containment, dangers of collision. International Affairs , Vol.85 (No.4). pp. 837-856. ISSN 0020-5850

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Official URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-2346.2009.00830.x

Abstract

Japan and China's ability to manage their bilateral relationship is crucial for the stability of the East Asian region. It also has a global impact on the security and economic development of other regions. For just as China's rise has inevitably involved an expansion of its global reach, so Japan's responses to the challenges posed by China have increasingly taken a global form, seeking to incorporate new partners and frameworks outside East Asia. Japan's preferred response to China's regional and global rise in the post-Cold War period has remained one of default engagement. Japan is intent on promoting China's external engagement with the East Asia region and its internal domestic reform, through upgrading extant bilateral and Japan-China-US trilateral frameworks for dialogue and cooperation, and by emphasizing the importance of economic power to influence China. Japan is deliberately seeking to proliferate regional frameworks for cooperation in East Asia in order to dilute, constrain and ultimately engage China's rising power. However, Japan's engagement strategy also contains the potential to tilt towards default containment. Japan's domestic political basis for engagement is becoming increasingly precarious as China's rise stimulates Japanese revisionism and nationalism. Japan also appears increasingly to be looking to contain China on a global scale by forging new strategic links in Russia and Central Asia, with a `concert of democracies' involving India, Australia and the US, by competing for resources with China in Africa and the Middle East, and by attempting to articulate a values-based diplomacy to check the so-called `Beijing consensus'. Nevertheless, Japan's perceived inability to channel China's rise either through regional engagement or through global containment carries a further risk of pushing Japan to resort to the strengthening of its military power in an attempt to guarantee its essential national interests. It is in this instance that Japan and China run the danger of a military collision.

Item Type: Journal Article
Subjects: D History General and Old World > DS Asia
Divisions: Faculty of Social Sciences > Politics and International Studies
Library of Congress Subject Headings (LCSH): East Asia -- Politics and government, Japan -- Military policy, Japan -- Foreign relations -- United States, Japan -- Foreign relations -- China, China -- Foreign relations -- Japan
Journal or Publication Title: International Affairs
Publisher: 0020-5850
ISSN: 0020-5850
Date: July 2009
Volume: Vol.85
Number: No.4
Page Range: pp. 837-856
Identification Number: 10.1111/j.1468-2346.2009.00830.x
Status: Peer Reviewed
Access rights to Published version: Restricted or Subscription Access
URI: http://wrap.warwick.ac.uk/id/eprint/1014

Data sourced from Thomson Reuters' Web of Knowledge

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