ABSTRACT

The European Union uses a confidential, institutionalized Dialogue to raise human rights concerns with China, but little is publicly known about its set-up, its substance, its development over time and its impact.

This book provides the first detailed reconstruction and assessment of the EU’s responses to human rights violations in China from 1995 to the present day. Using classified documents in the EU’s historical archives and interviews with diplomats, officials and human rights experts in Europe, China and the United States, Kinzelbach lifts the veil of secrecy on the EU-China Human Rights Dialogue and provides a rare insight into how the European Union and China conduct quiet diplomacy on human rights. The book reconstructs the evolution of the Dialogue and the EU’s internal debate on the merits of quiet diplomacy, and draws comparisons with the approach of other actors, notably that of the United States. In doing so, the EU’s relative impact is concluded to be tenuous if not counter-productive. The book also chronicles and analyzes numerous human rights concerns that were raised in the period, ranging from structural issues to individual cases.

This ground-breaking, in-depth case study will be of interest to students and scholars of international politics, human rights, international law, EU politics, especially the EU’s Common Foreign and Security Policy, and Chinese politics.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|21 pages

1995–1997

From public condemnation to quiet diplomacy

chapter 3|25 pages

1998–1999

Tactical concessions abroad and repression at home

chapter 4|25 pages

2000–2002

From litmus test to breach of trust

chapter 5|23 pages

2003–2004

Human rights diplomacy in a honeymoon relationship

chapter 6|29 pages

2005–2006

Dialogue fatigue meets growing confidence

chapter 7|22 pages

2007–2008

Principles between stand-off and sweet-talk

chapter 8|23 pages

2009–2010

Dialogue ritual and power shift

chapter |8 pages

Conclusion