ONLY $9.90 DELIVERY INFO

Close Notification

Your cart does not contain any items

National Role Conception and Neoclassical Realism

A Synthetic Exploration of the Sino-Soviet Alignment

Guangyi Pan

$367.95   $294.45

Hardback

Not in-store but you can order this
How long will it take?

QTY:

English
Routledge
26 June 2025
Despite China’s alignment with Russia being one of the most significant factors shaping the international order, the dynamics of their historic relationships and, more importantly, the sources of China’s alignment policy remain underexplored. In this book, National Role Conception and Neoclassical Realism, a synthetic exploration into the Sino-Soviet alignment, Guangyi Pan investigates this question by analysing the changes in China’s national role conception from a cross-level perspective.

Adding value to existing scholarly works on China’s decision-making logic, he examines two critical and dramatic moments in the history of Beijing’s alignment policy towards Moscow: the Sino-Soviet split in the 1960s and the normalisation in the 1980s. Based on massive historic documents and archives, he argues that the evolution of Beijing’s approach to aligning with Moscow results from its changing perception of China’s role in the world platform, especially its role relationship with the Soviet Union. The fundamental logic lies in how China positions itself, with the Soviet Union long serving as a mirror reflecting Beijing’s desired roles during pivotal transformations. By developing a more rigorous and coherent framework to analyse role conceptions, Guangyi Pan explores unit-level factors – including leader images, elite cohesion and political culture – alongside the impact of systemic stimuli. This approach constructs the complex process of role formation, evolution, performance and policy outcomes, offering a comprehensive understanding of China’s alignment with Russia throughout modern history.

Aimed primarily at scholars whose research fields include international relations theory, the Cold War history and politics of China, National Role Conception and Neoclassical Realism may also be of interest to foreign policymakers, students and political history enthusiasts.
By:  
Imprint:   Routledge
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 229mm,  Width: 152mm, 
Weight:   660g
ISBN:   9781041052340
ISBN 10:   1041052340
Series:   Role Theory and International Relations
Pages:   258
Publication Date:  
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Primary
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Introduction Part 1. Key concepts Chapter 1. Reviewing the Sino-Soviet relationship. Chapter 2. Theoretical development. Chapter 3. Methodology. Part 2. The Sino-Soviet split Chapter 4: The quarrelling brothers: China’s evolving national role conception in the socialist bloc, 1956–1960. Chapter 5: Towards the split: China’s changing roles and the struggle for communist leadership, 1960–1966 Part 3. The Sino-Soviet Normalisation Chapter 6: Defining ‘normalisation’: China’s modernisation and Sino-Soviet rapprochement. Chapter 7: ‘Farewell to the past’: the road to normalisation, 1986–1989. Epilogue: Before the smoking gun: bridging causation across multi-level factors

Guangyi Pan is Lecturer in international political studies at the University of New South Wales, Canberra. His research primarily focuses on asymmetric politics, China’s alliance/alignment policy, Sino-Soviet (Russia) relations and the neoclassical realism of International Relations. Guangyi has published journal articles, media reports and analytical pieces in the areas of Indo-Pacific politics, foreign policy analysis and Cold War history. His recent articles appeared in International Affairs, International Relations of Asia-Pacific, Pacific Review, the Chinese Journal of Political Science, Technological Forecasting and Social Change and other journals. He received his PhD in international politics from the University of New South Wales, Sydney in 2024. Previously, he studied at Nanjing University and worked at UNICEF China.

See Also