Taiwan's Identity Challenge
In: SAIS Review, Band 25, Heft 2, S. 83-92
Abstract
Taiwan's geo-strategic position & its domestic political development have been in conflict throughout its modern, post-Chinese civil war history. Taiwan's geo-strategic position, defined by its oppositional relationship to China, has ensured that Taiwan & the cross-strait relations have remained a global flash point for close to 60 years. For the first 40 years, Taiwan's goal to reclaim China has underpinned the authoritarian Kuomintang party-state & its domestic program of enforced Sinification. Since the end of the Cold War, Taiwan's democratization has fundamentally changed Taiwan's political identity & unleashed an irreversible nation-building process. Taiwan's nation-building is moving the country away from reunification with a rising China. Unfortunately, this decision compromises its already vulnerable geo-strategic position & external support. Adapted from the source document.
Themen
Sprachen
Englisch
Verlag
Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore MD
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