ABSTRACT

Drawing upon insights from international socialization theory and social psychology, this book examines China’s efforts to multipolarize – and hence potentially de-liberalize – the international system from the local perspective of a non-democratic (yet democratizing) nation and then applies these insights to Beijing’s current global agency in the context of the Belt and Road Initiative.

Specifically, the book scrutinizes Beijing’s normative engagement in Kazakhstan, a nation that evolved from an enthusiastic supporter of the West’s normative domination of international affairs into an overt critic – after having institutionalized relations with Beijing through the Shanghai Cooperation Organization. Tracing and juxtaposing the respective patterns of Kazakhstan’s political identity development before the SCO entered the region and after, this book not only yields unexpected conclusions about the quality of post-Soviet democratization outcomes, but also about Beijing’s local and global influence potentiality for the time to come – and its limits.

This book will be of key interest to scholars and students of China’s normative power, democratization studies, post-Soviet studies, and International Relations.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

Democracy and the global-local nexus of Western dominance

chapter 2|38 pages

Localizing the international

On similar pathways and variant outcomes of socialization in IR

chapter 3|47 pages

Post-Soviet Kazakhstan’s democratization pathway (1991–2001)

‘Failed’ socialization or ‘successful’ localization? How newly independent Kazakhstan became a ‘democracy with Soviet characteristics’

chapter 4|40 pages

Kazakhstan’s continued democratization pathway (2002–2012)

From ‘Soviet characteristics’ to the ‘Kazakh Way’

chapter 5|27 pages

The ‘Kazakh Way’

A Chinese construct?

chapter 6|15 pages

Strategic localization going global

The Belt and Road Initiative

chapter |7 pages

Conclusion

Democracy and the global-local nexus of Western dominance in a multipolar world