Interpreting great power rights in international society: Debating China's right to a sphere of influence
Abstract
The special rights and responsibilities of the great powers have traditionally been treated
as a key component – even a primary institution – of international society in the English
School literature. Recent interpretivist work has focused on the meanings of special
responsibilities in contemporary international society with far less scholarly attention
being given to the corollary of this – special rights. This article uses an interpretivist
approach to attempt to uncover what recent debates over China’s right or otherwise
to a sphere of influence in East Asia tells us about understandings of great power rights
in contemporary international society. The argument advanced is that if Beijing’s right
to a sphere of influence is successfully rejected by the rest of international society
without repudiating its status as a great power more broadly, China will indeed be a
great power without historical precedent.
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Journal of International Political Theory
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2037-12-31
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