Abstract

In order to analyse the main driving forces in Chinese foreign policy, this article advances a neoclassical realist argument detailing how certain domestic dynamics that develop between an authoritarian leadership and the society when the country is ‘rising’ constrain its foreign policy behaviour in complex ways. Subsequently, the derived analytical framework is applied in an analysis of China’s ‘assertive turn’ in East Asia. It shows how certain authoritarian regime concerns intensify as China’s great power capabilities and influence grow, resulting in a different room to manoeuvre for Beijing in East Asia, which both encourages and enables a more assertive foreign policy behaviour. In the foreign policy literature, there is general agreement that regime type matters and has explanatory power when seeking to specify the domestic restraints on states’ foreign policy. However, there is still a lack of systematic conceptualisation of the regime type variable and theoretical explanations for how it matters. The neoclassical realist argument on the foreign policy of rising authoritarian states developed in this article is a step in this direction bridging the research fields of international relations, comparative politics and area studies.

Highlights

  • When their power position in the international system dramatically improves, authoritarian states show a tendency to conduct a more assertive foreign policy as currently seen in the case of China, while Germany and Japan stand as historical cases (Allison 2017: 244-86)

  • In order to understand why, there is a strong need to break with the prevalent tendency in International Relations (IR) scholarship to treat rising powers as unitary actors and to take regime type more seriously in analyses of foreign policy

  • This article advances a neoclassical realist argument on the foreign policy of rising authoritarian states detailing how certain domestic dynamics that develop between an authoritarian leadership and the society when the country is ‘rising’ constrain its foreign policy behaviour in complex ways

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Summary

Introduction

When their power position in the international system dramatically improves, authoritarian states show a tendency to conduct a more assertive foreign policy as currently seen in the case of China, while Germany and Japan stand as historical cases (Allison 2017: 244-86). The added value of the neoclassical realist explanation of China’s assertive turn is its emphasis on Chinese foreign policy behaviour as contingent upon both systemic stimuli and intervening domestic-level processes highlighting how certain authoritarian regime concerns intensify as China’s great power capabilities and influence grow.

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