Volume 54, Issue 4 p. 775-792
Original Article

China, the European Union and the Fragile World Order

Zhimin Chen

Corresponding Author

Fudan University

Correspondence:

Zhimin Chen

Fudan University

School of International Relations & Public Affairs

220 Handan Road, Shanghai 200433, China.

email: zhmchen@fudan.edu.cn

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First published: 12 April 2016
Citations: 23
This article is based on the JCMS Annual Lecture delivered on 27 February 2015 in Brussels following the IdeasLab co‐sponsored by the Centre of European Policy Studies (CEPS). I thank the editors and anonymous reviewers at JCMS for their feedback on earlier version of this article.

Abstract

The EU (European Union) and China are the two arguably most unusual powers in today's world: the EU as the most integrated regional association of states and China as the largest developing great power. As the post‐Cold War American‐led liberal world order is facing challenges from forces unleashed by the power transition and power diffusion in the international system, this article will look into the order‐shaping roles of the EU and China, to identify their respective visions of a desirable world order and to conceptualize how the EU and China can make themselves ‘building blocks’ of a working world order through parallel, complementary and concerted order‐shaping.

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