Abstract

This study examines the primary determinants of the European Union’s strategic engagement with China, with reference to three competing analytical approaches: institutional, social, and agency/stakeholder. The article examines the utility of each claim and outlines complementary variables amongst the three approaches, with the aid of recent evidence looking at the E.U.’s arms embargo on China, E.U.-China engagement in Africa, and the E.U.’s longstanding dispute on granting China market economy status. The study’s findings can reduce the misunderstandings and uncertainties embedded in European Union-China interactions, by demystifying the factors and variables that drive their relationship.

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