1 / 18

Territorial Integrity

Territorial Integrity. Territorial Integrity. Population 1.3 billion people in an area of 9,596,960 sq km. Ethnic diversity – Han Chinese are the majority ethnic group. 3 areas that are challenging the autonomy of Beijing; Taiwan Tibet Uighur. Uighur. Tibet. Taiwan. ‘ One China ’.

adem
Download Presentation

Territorial Integrity

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Territorial Integrity

  2. Territorial Integrity • Population 1.3 billion people in an area of 9,596,960 sq km. • Ethnic diversity – Han Chinese are the majority ethnic group. • 3 areas that are challenging the autonomy of Beijing; • Taiwan • Tibet • Uighur

  3. Uighur Tibet Taiwan

  4. ‘One China’ • Chinese territory can’t be divided into two Chinas or one China and one Taiwan. • ‘One country, two systems’ with Taiwan is possible.

  5. Power and Territorial Integrity • How does China use power to achieve territorial integrity?

  6. Terminology • ROC: Republic of China = Taiwan

  7. ‘One China’ • The policy advocated by the PRC that the government in Beijing is the sole legitimate government of China. • How does this relate to • Taiwan? • Tibet? • Xinjiang? • China is a concept… not a nation?

  8. History of Taiwan • Prior to WWII Chinese Nationalists (KMT) and Communists (CCP) were engaged in civil war. • Japanese invaded in 1937 and made significant territorial gains. • KMT and CCP stopped fighting each other and turned to fighting the Japanese. • WWII occurs: US supports China. • Civil War resumes after WWII

  9. History of Taiwan • CCP forces KMT to retreat to Formosa (Taiwan). • KMT (Chiang Kai-shek) establishes government in Formosa (Taiwan). • US shields Taiwan from Chinese aggression, because of Cold War politics. • China / US exist in stalemate; China doesn’t attack as long as US doesn’t recognise Taiwan.

  10. China’s National Interest • How does this relate to China’s National Interest?

  11. Article analysis • “From troublemaker to peacemaker” • What are the main points of this article? • Do a SWOT analysis for Taiwan’s position in the Asia-Pacific.

  12. US Involvement • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3d59UtxRdLE&feature=related

  13. Two agreements… • 1978 Normalisation Agreement • 1979 Taiwan Relations Act (TRA)

  14. Hot Flashes • These are good illustrations of the different methods of resolution that Beijing pursues alongside other long-term policies.

  15. Hot Flashes • 1995-1996 Taiwan-China missile crisis • 2000 Taiwanese presidential election • 2001 EP-3 crisis • 2001 APEC and WTO crisis • 2004 Taiwanese referenda and presidential elections • 2005 Events of 2005 • 2006 Taiwan scraps the National Unification Council • 2008 Events of 2008

More Related