A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Nationalism, Patriotism and Foreign Policy Attitudes among Chinese University Students




AuthorsSinkkonen, Elina

Publication year2013

Journal acronymChina Quarterly

Volume216

Issue4

First page 1045

Last page1063

DOIhttps://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.1017/S0305741013001094

Web address https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/china-quarterly/article/nationalism-patriotism-and-foreign-policy-attitudes-among-chinese-university-students/20DCD294E1E9308F59D153E5130E40B2


Abstract

Does empirical evidence support treating “nationalism” and “patriotism” as separate concepts in China and is there a relationship between strong nationalist/patriotic attitudes and foreign policy preferences? To analyse the construction of Chinese national identity, Chinese university students (N = 1346) took part in a survey in Beijing in spring 2007. The data supported the assumption of a conceptual separation between nationalism and patriotism. CCP members and students from rural backgrounds were more nationalistic than non-members and students with urban upbringings. Moreover, nationalism had a stronger link to foreign policy preferences than patriotism, and respondents with a greater degree of nationalism were less likely to favour international cooperation and more likely to prefer protectionist policies. The associations of nationalism and patriotism with foreign policy attitudes, and the contribution of other potential explanatory factors to the relationship between nationalism, patriotism and policy attitudes were explored with linear regression models.



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