Abstract

ABSTRACT This paper provides an evaluation of the main characteristics of Chinese domestic cultural policy and international cultural trade strategy. The objective is to assess whether China has developed a type of pattern addressing the culture and trade issue, and to advance meaningful lessons to reconcile cultural diversity and trade liberalization in the context of international law. This paper starts with a brief introduction of Chinese cultural industries and Chinese cultural laws and policies. The analysis then dives into Chinese international agreements, including WTO agreements, the UNESCO Convention 2005, Chinese FTAs, and the BRI. Chinese international cultural practices can be grouped into cultural trade liberalization commitments and cultural cooperation mechanisms. This paper argues that China takes a cautious attitude towards liberalizing cultural trade while holding a relatively open position towards promoting cultural cooperation. The cultural cooperation approach deserves more attention as an alternative route for reconciling cultural diversity and free trade in international law.

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