ABSTRACT

Gerald Segal’s last published paper ‘Does China Matter?’ made a considerable splash, and had he lived, it is certain that he would have followed it up with a book. This new volume honours his memory and takes forward his project, bringing together ten leading writers on China to reassess his argument.

This book opens with an detailed assessment of Dr Segal’s contribution, and a reprint of the article. The rest of the chapters address the question of ‘does China matter?’ by focusing separately on both the global and Asian dimensions of China’s presence, and on the military, political, economic and cultural aspects of its capabilities and activities. They provide an extension and critique of Segal’s work in the context of an authoritative up-to-date and forward looking evaluation of China’s prospects. Segal’s question remains central to world politics. This essential book sets out a detailed case for exactly how, why and to whom China matters.

chapter |10 pages

Middle Kingdom, middle power

chapter |16 pages

actor

chapter |17 pages

Segal’s global China

chapter |17 pages

Introduction

chapter |16 pages

world culture

chapter |20 pages

politico-economic model

chapter |17 pages

Introduction

chapter |19 pages

power

chapter |22 pages

Barry Buzan

How and to whom does China matter?

chapter |29 pages

highlights