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9780765610256

The Bear Watches the Dragon: Russia's Perceptions of China and the Evolution of Russian-Chinese Relations Since the Eighteenth Century: Russia's Perceptions of China and the Evolution of Russian-Chinese Relations Since the Eighteenth Century

by
  • ISBN13:

    9780765610256

  • ISBN10:

    0765610256

  • Format: Hardcover
  • Copyright: 2002-11-30
  • Publisher: Routledge

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Summary

China and Russia, two giants dominating the Eurasian landmass, share a history of understanding and misunderstanding whose nuances are not well appreciated by outsiders. In his interpretation of this relationship from the Russian point of view, Alexander Lukin shows how, over the course of three centuries, China has seemed alternately to threaten, mystify, imitate, mirror, and rival its northern neighbor. Lukin traces not only the changing dynamics of Russian-Chinese relations, but also the ways that Russia's images of China more profoundly reflected Russia's self-perception and its perception of the West as well.

As both Russia and China take distinctive approaches to political and economic integration in the twenty-first century global economy, this reinterpretation of their relationship is valuable not only to historians but to all students of international affairs.

Table of Contents

List of Tables ix
Introduction xi
1. From Mysterious Neighbor to Weak Ally:
The Image of China in Imperial Russia
3(72)
2. Proletarian Brother or Revisionist Foe?
The Image of China in the Soviet Union
75(89)
3. A Genuine Threat or a Political Weapon?
The Image of China in Russian Border Regions
164(30)
4. An Ally, a Foe, or a Model to Follow?
The Image of China in Moscow after the Collapse of the Soviet Union
194(57)
5. Unsinkable Aircraft Carrier or a Beautiful Island?
The Image of Taiwan in Russia
251(49)
6. China's Image and Foreign Policy:
The Image of China in Russia and Post-Soviet Russian Foreign Policy in the 1990s
300(19)
Notes 319(56)
List of Works Cited 375(22)
Index 397
1572309075
List of Abbreviations xiv
Preface xv
Acknowledgements xix
1 Introduction 1(4)
PART I: THE SHIFTING CONTOURS OF THE GEO-ECONOMY 5(78)
2 A New Geo-Economy
7(25)
Something is happening out there - but what is it?
7(3)
A 'new' geo-economy? The globalization debate
10(4)
A new geo-economy: unravelling the complexity
14(8)
Even in a globalizing world, economic activities are geographically localized
22(3)
The geo-economy and the environment
25(4)
Conclusion
29(1)
Notes
30(2)
3 The Changing Global Economic Map
32(51)
The imprint of history
32(1)
The roller-coaster ride: aggregate trends in global economic activity
33(3)
Changing contours of the global economic map: global shifts are production and trade
36(15)
Changing contours of the global economic map: global shifts in foreign direct investment
51(21)
Changing the lens: the macro-, micro- and meso-scale geography of the global economy
72(7)
Conclusion: a multi-polar, kaleidoscopic global economy
79(2)
Notes
81(2)
PART II: PROCESSES OF GLOBAL SHIFT 83(232)
4 Technology: The 'Great Growling Engine of Change'
85(37)
Technology and economic transformation
85(1)
Processes of technological change: an evolutionary perspective
86(3)
The 'space-shrinking' technologies
89(15)
Technological changes in products and processes
104(11)
Geographies of innovation
115(4)
Conclusion
119(1)
Notes
120(2)
5 'The State is Dead ... Long Live the State'
122(42)
'Contested territory': the state in a globalizing economy
122(4)
States as containers of distinctive cultures, practices and institutions
126(3)
States as regulators of trade, foreign investment and industry
129(11)
States as competitors
140(4)
States as collaborators: the proliferation of regional economic blocs
144(17)
Conclusion
161(1)
Notes
162(2)
6 Doing Things Differently: Variations in State Economic Policies
164(34)
From the general to the specific
164(1)
A degree of convergence
164(2)
The older industrialized economies of Europe and the United States
166(5)
Japan
171(4)
The newly industrializing and emerging market economies
175(20)
Conclusion
195(1)
Notes
196(2)
7 Transnational Corporations: The Primary 'Movers and Shapers' of the Global Economy
198(40)
The significance of the TNC
198(1)
Why (not) transnationalize? Some general explanations
199(13)
A diversity of organizational architectures: how transnational operations are coordinated
212(9)
The myth of the 'placeless' TNC
221(14)
Conclusion
235(1)
Notes
236(2)
8 'Webs of Enterprise': The Geography of Transnational Production Networks
238(36)
The geography of the TNC: configuring the firm's internal production network
238(15)
TNCs within networks of externalized relationships
253(12)
Synthesis: connecting the organizational and geographical dimensions of transnational production networks
265(6)
Conclusion
271(1)
Notes
272(2)
9 Dynamics of Conflict and Collaboration: Both Transnational Corporations and States Matter
274(41)
The ties that bind
274(4)
TNCs and host economies
278(22)
TNCs and home economies
300(4)
The bargaining relationship between TNCs and states
304(7)
Conclusion
311(2)
Notes
313(2)
PART III GLOBAL SHIFT: THE PICTURE IN DIFFERENT SECTORS 315(192)
10 'Fabric-ating Fashion': The Textiles and Garments Industries
317(38)
The textiles-garments production chain
318(2)
Global shifts in the textiles and garments industries
320(7)
The dynamics of the market
327(3)
Production costs and technology
330(6)
The role of the state and the Multi-Fibre Arrangement
336(3)
Corporate strategies in the textiles and garments industries
339(7)
Regionalizing production networks in the textiles and garments industries
346(7)
Conclusion
353(1)
Notes
354(1)
11 'Wheels of Change': The Automobile Industry
355(44)
The automobile production chain
355(2)
Global shifts in the automobile industry
357(5)
The dynamics of the market
362(1)
Production costs, technology and the changing organization of production
363(6)
The role of the state
369(3)
Corporate strategies in the automobile industry
372(14)
Regionalizing production networks in the automobile industry
386(11)
Conclusion
397(1)
Notes
397(2)
12 'Chips With Everything': The Semiconductor Industry
399(38)
Semiconductors within the electronics production chain
400(1)
Global shifts in the semiconductor industry
401(2)
The dynamics of the market
403(2)
Production costs, technology and the changing organization of semiconductor production
405(5)
The role of the state
410(9)
Corporate strategies in the semiconductor industry
419(14)
Regionalizing production networks in the semiconductor industry: the case of East Asia
433(1)
Conclusion
434(1)
Notes
435(2)
13 'Making the World Go Round': The Financial Services Industries
437(34)
Money matters
437(2)
The structure of the financial services industries
439(2)
The dynamics of the market for financial services
441(1)
Technological innovation and the financial services industries
442(5)
The role of the state: regulation and deregulation in financial services
447(2)
Corporate strategies in financial services
449(9)
Geographical structures of financial services activities
458(10)
Conclusion
468(1)
Notes
469(2)
14 'Making the Connections, Selling the Goods': The Distribution Industries
471(36)
'Whatever happened to distribution in the globalization debate?'
471(1)
The structure of the distribution industries
472(3)
The dynamics of the market
475(1)
Technological innovation and the distribution industries
475(6)
The role of the state: regulation and deregulation in the distribution industries
481(4)
Corporate strategies in the distribution industries
485(19)
Conclusion
504(1)
Notes
504(3)
PART IV: WINNERS AND LOSERS IN THE GLOBAL ECONOMY 507(95)
15 Winners and Losers: An Overview
509(15)
From processes to impacts
509(3)
The contours of economic development
512(9)
Making a living in the global economy
521(2)
Notes
523(1)
16 Making a Living in Developed Countries: Where Will the Jobs Come From?
524(28)
Increasing affluence - but not everybody is a winner
524(1)
The jobs scene
525(13)
Why is it happening?
538(6)
Policy responses
544(6)
Conclusion
550(1)
Notes
550(2)
17 Making a Living in Developing Countries: Sustaining Growth, Enhancing Equity, Ensuring Survival
552(25)
Some winners - but mostly losers
552(1)
Heterogeneity of the developing world
553(9)
Sustaining economic growth and ensuring equity in newly industrializing economies
562(8)
Ensuring survival and reducing poverty in the least developed countries
570(3)
To be 'globalized', or not to be 'globalized'?
573(3)
Notes
576(1)
18 Making the World a Better Place
577(25)
'The best of all possible worlds'?
577(1)
Globalization and its 'discontents'
578(1)
Global governance structures
579(13)
Two key concerns: labour standards and environmental regulation
592(6)
What might the future be? What should the future be?
598(2)
Notes
600(2)
Bibliography 602(20)
Index 622(11)
About the Author 633

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