Based on extensive interviews, and focusing on individual perceptions and practices, the book also highlights how intercultural misunderstanding and unreflective beliefs contribute to this troubling status quo with serious implications. Furthermore, these dynamics run contrary to the Lisbon Treaty (2009) - where the EU states that its values inform its external relations - threatening the rules-based order that upholds the universal values and international norms the EU shares. At a time of flux in EU-China relations and geopolitical instability, this book's timely insights will be of great interest and value to scholars and practitioners alike.
This book will be of key interest to scholars and students of European (Union) foreign policy and diplomacy, EU-China relations, Chinese foreign policy, human rights diplomacy, sustainable development, trade policy and more broadly in European and Asian Studies, and International Relations.
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Andreas Fulda, Associate Professor at the University of Nottingham's School of Politics and International Relations, UK
'Can the European Union successfully externalise its values in a world increasingly defined by power politics and inter-cultural divergence? In this landmark volume, Max Roger Taylor shows first-hand how diplomats seek to articulate the EU's normative power in their relations with China, and the challenges they face in doing so. By studying dynamics behind closed doors, Taylor paints a vivid picture of normative power in practice. A must-read for followers of EU foreign policy.'
Benjamin Martill, Lecturer in Politics and International Relations at the University of Edinburgh, UK and Associate at LSE IDEAS