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HSS: China and Intervention at the UN Security Council: Reconciling Status

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  Topic: China and Intervention at the UN Security Council: Reconciling Status   
 

Abstract:

What explains China’s response to intervention at the UN Security Council? I argue that status is an overlooked determinant in understanding its decisions, even in the apex cases that are shadowed by a public discourse calling for foreign-imposed regime change in Sudan, Libya, and Syria. The book posits that China reconciles its status dilemma as it weighs decisions to intervene: seeking recognition from both its intervention peer groups of great powers and developing states. Understanding the impact and scope conditions of status answers why China has taken certain positions regarding intervention and how these positions were justified. Foreign policy behavior that complies with status, and related social factors like self-image and identity, means that China can select policy options bearing material costs. China and Intervention at the UN Security Council draws on an extensive collection of data, including over two hundred interviews with UN officials and Chinese foreign policy elites, participant observation at UN Headquarters and a dataset of Chinese-language analysis regarding foreign-imposed regime change and intervention.  The book concludes with new perspectives on the malleability of China’s core interests, insights about the application of status for cooperation, and the implications of the status dilemma for rising powers.   ​ 

Speaker: Dr Courtney Fung
Assistant Professor 
University of Hong Kong
     
About the
Speaker:
Courtney Fung is Assistant Professor of International Relations in the Department of Politics and Public Administration at the University of Hong Kong.  She was previously a research fellow with the East Asia Institute in their Program on Peace, Governance, and Development in East Asia, and a post-doctoral research fellow with the now Columbia-Harvard China and the World Program, based at the Fairbank Center for Chinese Studies, Harvard University. Her research focuses on how rising powers, like China and India, address the norms and provisions for a global security order, with a particular focus on how status affects these states as they address United Nations politics, peacekeeping, intervention, and the responsibility to protect. 
     
Chair: Assistant Professor Inwook Kim
School of Social Sciences
Singapore Management University
     
Date: Monday, 8 July 2019
     
Time: 3.30 pm - 5.00 pm
     
Venue: Seminar Room 3.10, Level 3
School of Social Sciences
Singapore Management University
Singapore 178903                                (Location Map)
     
Registration: Click here to register
     
 
     
 
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