China and India 在線電子書 pdf 下載 txt下載 epub 下載 mobi 下載 2024


China and India

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Jonathan Holslag 作者
Columbia University Press
譯者
2009-12-23 出版日期
248 頁數
USD 40.00 價格
Hardcover
Contemporary Asia In The World 叢書系列
9780231150422 圖書編碼

China and India 在線電子書 圖書標籤: 經濟  政治學  政治  國際關係  南亞研究  中國研究  中國外交政策  manish   


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China and India 在線電子書 epub 下載 mobi 下載 pdf 下載 txt 下載 2024

China and India 在線電子書 epub 下載 pdf 下載 mobi 下載 txt 下載 2024

China and India 在線電子書 pdf 下載 txt下載 epub 下載 mobi 下載 2024



China and India 在線電子書 用戶評價

評分

62年 解放軍 讓印度“ learn the lesson”,中國從一開始就不是印度的朋友,尼赫魯支持蔣介石,所以朋友的敵人就是我的敵人。邊境問題,西藏問題,核安全,北京的pro pakistan stand。 中印現在是“strategic partnership”,這與中國的以貿易為導嚮的外交政策有關,在任何時候都能擱置爭議,求同存異。賺錢是全世界的共同目標,可是錢是印齣來的,不存在經濟的永恒增長,因為地球資源的總量是一定的.印度最後會被中國吃掉。

評分

62年 解放軍 讓印度“ learn the lesson”,中國從一開始就不是印度的朋友,尼赫魯支持蔣介石,所以朋友的敵人就是我的敵人。邊境問題,西藏問題,核安全,北京的pro pakistan stand。 中印現在是“strategic partnership”,這與中國的以貿易為導嚮的外交政策有關,在任何時候都能擱置爭議,求同存異。賺錢是全世界的共同目標,可是錢是印齣來的,不存在經濟的永恒增長,因為地球資源的總量是一定的.印度最後會被中國吃掉。

評分

62年 解放軍 讓印度“ learn the lesson”,中國從一開始就不是印度的朋友,尼赫魯支持蔣介石,所以朋友的敵人就是我的敵人。邊境問題,西藏問題,核安全,北京的pro pakistan stand。 中印現在是“strategic partnership”,這與中國的以貿易為導嚮的外交政策有關,在任何時候都能擱置爭議,求同存異。賺錢是全世界的共同目標,可是錢是印齣來的,不存在經濟的永恒增長,因為地球資源的總量是一定的.印度最後會被中國吃掉。

評分

62年 解放軍 讓印度“ learn the lesson”,中國從一開始就不是印度的朋友,尼赫魯支持蔣介石,所以朋友的敵人就是我的敵人。邊境問題,西藏問題,核安全,北京的pro pakistan stand。 中印現在是“strategic partnership”,這與中國的以貿易為導嚮的外交政策有關,在任何時候都能擱置爭議,求同存異。賺錢是全世界的共同目標,可是錢是印齣來的,不存在經濟的永恒增長,因為地球資源的總量是一定的.印度最後會被中國吃掉。

評分

62年 解放軍 讓印度“ learn the lesson”,中國從一開始就不是印度的朋友,尼赫魯支持蔣介石,所以朋友的敵人就是我的敵人。邊境問題,西藏問題,核安全,北京的pro pakistan stand。 中印現在是“strategic partnership”,這與中國的以貿易為導嚮的外交政策有關,在任何時候都能擱置爭議,求同存異。賺錢是全世界的共同目標,可是錢是印齣來的,不存在經濟的永恒增長,因為地球資源的總量是一定的.印度最後會被中國吃掉。

China and India 在線電子書 著者簡介

Jonathan Holslag, a Brussels-based think-tanker


China and India 在線電子書 著者簡介


China and India 在線電子書 pdf 下載 txt下載 epub 下載 mobi 在線電子書下載

China and India 在線電子書 圖書描述

FOR a book about two countries whose most recent war was five decades ago, “Prospects for Peace” seems a quirky subtitle. Jonathan Holslag, a Brussels-based think-tanker, argues that, since China’s swift and bloody humiliation of India in 1962, the neighbours have “tottered at least five times on the verge of war”. But the last time troops massed on the border was in 1986. Since then the territorial dispute that sparked the war has been “put to one side”. Bilateral trade has boomed, and hundreds of thousands of Indians and Chinese now visit the other country each year, including a succession of senior politicians toasting a beautiful friendship.

As Mr Holslag explains, however, the relationship is still marked as much by unremitting strategic mistrust as by burgeoning co-operation. His contribution to a recent flurry of India-China books attempts to reconcile these contradictory trends. His conclusions are rather unsettling.

Most of the other books on the area concentrate inevitably on the implications of the two countries’ economic rise. The simultaneous emergence into the global economy of two countries containing nearly two-fifths of the world’s people is after all an unprecedented phenomenon. Moreover, China’s dominance of global manufacturing seems matched by India’s arrival as an important provider of information-technology and other services. Mr Holslag quotes Zhu Rongji, a former Chinese prime minister: “You are number one in software. We are number one in hardware…Together we are the world’s number one.” That is India’s misfortune. Hundreds of thousands of Indians work in IT services whereas manufacturing for export provides China with tens of millions of jobs. Mr Holslag predicts that India will challenge China’s role as the world’s manufacturer, but that seems far-fetched.

This complementarity has been accompanied by a number of alliances of convenience, most notably in resisting pressure from the rich world to agree to fixed targets for limiting carbon emissions. There was even an agreement in 2006 to work together to avoid bidding up the prices of energy resources in third countries.

The limited effect of that pact, however, is one reason to believe Mr Holslag’s prognosis of a “fiercer economic rivalry and more aggressive regional diplomacy”. Another is what Lalit Mansingh, a former Indian diplomat, calls “the ghost at the banquet”: China’s increasing diplomatic and military influence in Asia—and India’s fear of it.

As Mr Holslag notes, the defeat in 1962 has left a deep suspicion of China in India’s political, academic and diplomatic circles, which is reflected in public opinion. India claims an area of Chinese-held territory in Kashmir the size of Switzerland, while China claims an area three times larger in what is now Indian Arunachal Pradesh. The border dispute remains unresolved. What had lazily been assumed to be the obvious solution—the status quo, in which each country keeps large swathes of territory claimed by the other—seems, if anything, further away than ever. The political difficulties of selling such a deal in India have long been obvious. But China’s renewed harping on its claim in recent years suggests that it in fact does want more than it already has.

In putting the strategic rivalry at the centre of his analysis, Mr Holslag provides a useful corrective to some of the more starry-eyed visions of a semi-cohesive “Chindia”. He cannot, however, overcome the two biggest difficulties of tackling the subject. One is that both countries are so big and so complex that at times broad-brush simplification of their histories and policies veers into distortion.

The second is that India is full of voluble politicians, academics, diplomats and ordinary people with fiercely held views on China. Across the border, however, fewer Chinese regard India as an issue of immediate importance, and debate on the relationship is far more circumscribed. Cyberspace may be the exception, but it is largely ignored in this account. A consequence of this—and it is something many Indians are painfully aware of—is that Indian policy often appears fragile, contradictory and self-defeating, whereas China’s seems coherent, single-minded and effective. Yet it is hard to imagine that China can have a higher foreign-policy goal in South Asia than keeping relations with India on a fairly even keel. Maybe, for once, it is Chinese policy that is in disarray.

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