Abstract
1This is an un-refereed version of an address delivered to the Symposium Security and Co-operation in Asia Pacific: Chinese and Australian Perspectives, held at La Trobe University, Melbourne and jointly sponsored by East China Normal University, Shanghai, China, 5–6 July 2004.
Notes
1This is an un-refereed version of an address delivered to the Symposium Security and Co-operation in Asia Pacific: Chinese and Australian Perspectives, held at La Trobe University, Melbourne and jointly sponsored by East China Normal University, Shanghai, China, 5–6 July 2004.
2Yu Xintian, The Tide of the Southern World—Impacts of the Developing Countries on the International Relations, (Shanghai: Shanghai Academy of Social Science Press, 1993), pp. 46–9.
3Ernest Gellner, Nations and Nationalism, (Beijing: Press House of the Bureau of Translation and Editorial of the Central Commission of the CCP, 2002), p. 181.
4Elie Kedourie, Nationalism, (Beijing: Press House of the Bureau of Translation and Editorial of the Central Commission of the CCP, 2002), p. 138.
5John D. Steinbruner, Principles of Global Security, (Beijing: Xinhua Press, 2000), pp. 24–29.
6Yuan Peng, ‘Iraq War and Major Contradictions of the World Politics’, Contemporary International Studies, 5, (2003); Liu Ming, ‘Comparison of World System and World Society, International Order and World Order’, China Social Science, 2, (2004).
7Anthony Giddens, The Nation-State and Violence, (Shanghai: Sanlian Bookstore, 1998), pp. 314, 331.
8President of the United States of America, The National Security Strategy of the United States of America, Washington D.C., September 2002.
9Rajan Menon, ‘The End of Alliances’, World Policy Journal, 20, 2, (2003).
10Paul Kelly, ‘Australian for Alliance’, National Interest, (Spring 2003).
11 Jiang Zemin's Report at 16th Party Congress, (Beijing: People's Publishing House, 2002), p. 47.