Interests, Values, and Geopolitics: The Global Public Opinion on China
Abstract
<jats:p>The essay discusses the public opinion surveys on the rise of China in the
United States, Asia and Latin America since 2010, conducted by Shanghai Jiao Tong
University and Duke University’s collaborative research team headed by the author.
It examines the world public recognition of China’s growing influence, their attitudes
toward China’s influence, and reactions to the ‘China Model’ and impressions of China’s
political, economic, social, and cultural development. These assessments of China’s
domestic issues or internal behavior show not only the amount of information and knowledge
that the people in various countries know about China, but the intrinsic value judgments
and ideological biases that influence their perceptions of China. The essay argues
that the rise of China is a complicated phenomenon with a multifarious nature, including
material dimensions, such as military power, economic development, and technological
innovation, as well as ideational dimensions, such as perception, understanding, or
prejudice. Public opinion, attitudes and perceptions of China’s rise are the outcome
of dynamic interactions and assemblage of factors, a synergy of material interests,
ideational and emotional reactions, and values, ideologies, principles, unraveling
themselves against a highly volatile, precarious and contentious geopolitical backdrop,
in which the interests of nation-states and individuals became all intertwined and
inseparable.</jats:p>
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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/24300Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1017/s1062798714000714Publication Info
Kang, Liu (2015). Interests, Values, and Geopolitics: The Global Public Opinion on China. European Review, 23(2). pp. 242-260. 10.1017/s1062798714000714. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/24300.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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