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Full Description
China-watching is not the realm of intelligence agencies alone; diplomats, journalists, and scholars, among others, also play an important part. Although global attention has been focused on conflicts in Ukraine and the Middle East, perhaps nowhere is there a greater potential for serious conflict between the major powers than in the Indo-Pacific. China-watching plays a vital role, yet until now, except for China-watchers themselves, there has been little appreciation of who is undertaking this work, why, where, and what shapes the perspectives of China-watchers and hence the information they present. Augmented by oral history interviews with China-watchers, this meticulous multi-method study illuminates how the scrutiny of China has evolved over the decades. Greater substance is given by chapters exploring the work undertaken by China-watchers in the Global South. The result is an intriguing study that raises important issues about the enduring interactions between politics and the knowledge about China being produced.
Contents
List of Illustrations and Tables
List of Abbreviations
Preface
1. Introduction
Part 1. China-Watchers: The Agency and Diversity
2. Knowledge about China Is Epistemological
3. China Studies in Southeast Asia
4. Void of China Studies in Central Asia?
5. Revolving Doors Between Research, Journalism, and Politics
Part 2. The Structure Where China-Watchers Operate
6. Continuities and Ruptures in Knowledge Production about China
7. Securitization of China-Knowledge
8. China as a Knowledge Co-Producer
Back to Transnational Knowledge Production about China
9. Taiwan
10. Knowledge Production about Global China
Bibliography
Index



