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Panda diplomacy - Literally soft power?

Hinderson, Stina LU (2017) STVK02 20171
Department of Political Science
Abstract
This thesis focuses on panda diplomacy as a part of Chinese interest in soft power and its public diplomacy. The main purpose is to examine the role of the panda in Chinese foreign affairs. A previous research chapter is mapped out to understand the domestic discussion on soft power and the state of public diplomacy in Chinese foreign affairs. Pandas and the concept of panda diplomacy is then examined from an empirical perspective in different ways they are being used, concluding that pandas and their popularity makes them a unique and powerful source of soft power. Panda diplomacy is further analyzed in three different contexts: Nordic countries, in the US and Japan, and in Taiwan, the conclusion is that countries must both have a good... (More)
This thesis focuses on panda diplomacy as a part of Chinese interest in soft power and its public diplomacy. The main purpose is to examine the role of the panda in Chinese foreign affairs. A previous research chapter is mapped out to understand the domestic discussion on soft power and the state of public diplomacy in Chinese foreign affairs. Pandas and the concept of panda diplomacy is then examined from an empirical perspective in different ways they are being used, concluding that pandas and their popularity makes them a unique and powerful source of soft power. Panda diplomacy is further analyzed in three different contexts: Nordic countries, in the US and Japan, and in Taiwan, the conclusion is that countries must both have a good relationship with China and be of economic interest. In the analysis, the previous chapters are analyzed from Gilboa’s framework for analyzing public diplomacy. Concluding that the uniqueness and strongly emphasized ties to China makes it an effective measure of drawing attention from other domestic issues, as well as generally being a good way of engaging the public which thereby makes it a useful and utilized tool of public diplomacy. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
Hinderson, Stina LU
supervisor
organization
course
STVK02 20171
year
type
M2 - Bachelor Degree
subject
keywords
Panda diplomacy, China, Soft power, public diplomacy, Chinese foreign affairs
language
English
id
8907633
date added to LUP
2017-07-11 15:26:55
date last changed
2017-07-11 15:26:55
@misc{8907633,
  abstract     = {{This thesis focuses on panda diplomacy as a part of Chinese interest in soft power and its public diplomacy. The main purpose is to examine the role of the panda in Chinese foreign affairs. A previous research chapter is mapped out to understand the domestic discussion on soft power and the state of public diplomacy in Chinese foreign affairs. Pandas and the concept of panda diplomacy is then examined from an empirical perspective in different ways they are being used, concluding that pandas and their popularity makes them a unique and powerful source of soft power. Panda diplomacy is further analyzed in three different contexts: Nordic countries, in the US and Japan, and in Taiwan, the conclusion is that countries must both have a good relationship with China and be of economic interest. In the analysis, the previous chapters are analyzed from Gilboa’s framework for analyzing public diplomacy. Concluding that the uniqueness and strongly emphasized ties to China makes it an effective measure of drawing attention from other domestic issues, as well as generally being a good way of engaging the public which thereby makes it a useful and utilized tool of public diplomacy.}},
  author       = {{Hinderson, Stina}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  note         = {{Student Paper}},
  title        = {{Panda diplomacy - Literally soft power?}},
  year         = {{2017}},
}