The implementation issue in norm diffusion : the cases of WTO anti-dumping duty and countervailing duty in China

China increasingly integrates into the international system, but has the social capitalist China been effectively contained by the Western-led liberal order? Most current literatures assume China’s ratification of international treaties as the signal to its full adoption of international norms, and...

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Main Author: Zhao, Yujia
Published: University of Nottingham 2016
Subjects:
382
Online Access:https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.724759
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-7247592019-03-05T15:55:11ZThe implementation issue in norm diffusion : the cases of WTO anti-dumping duty and countervailing duty in ChinaZhao, Yujia2016China increasingly integrates into the international system, but has the social capitalist China been effectively contained by the Western-led liberal order? Most current literatures assume China’s ratification of international treaties as the signal to its full adoption of international norms, and scholars such as John Ikenberry thus argue that China is getting contained by the Western liberal order. However, a new wave of norm diffusion scholars suggests that even the ratified norms may not have the expected domestic impacts; the implementation process is decisive to the real changes ‘on the ground’. Following this vein, this thesis studies China’s implementation of international liberal norms in order to understand how the liberal world contains China in its order. This thesis compares the implementation of two WTO trading norms namely anti-dumping duty and countervailing duty in China as the representative case studies. The analysis suggests that these two norms have made important changes to China’s legal system, institution-building, field-level practices and its domestic discourse. By employing political comparative methods, it proves the WTO implementing instruments as effective in promoting the progresses of this implementation process. However, the analysis further suggests that the cultural match of these two international liberal norms with China’s social capitalist traditions also contributes to strong domestic resistances to the implementation process. The consequences of this dis-match are largely reflected in China’s field-level practices of and its domestic discourses over these two norms. This thesis provides a complex answer to the question raised at the beginning. As the case studies illustrate, although anti-dumping duty and countervailing duty conflict with China’s social capitalist traditions, China chooses to play by the rules because of its ‘problem-solving’ concerns and because of the pressure from the WTO and its members. China, both the state sectors and non-state actors, values its identity as a member of the international society, and is willing to act as the defender of the current international order. Even though, China is not a passive receiver of the liberal normative structure. The dis-match between the liberal norms and China’s social capitalist tradition inevitably results in the internal resistance to the tendency of China being fully contained by the international liberal order. This resistance will not be eliminated by any external pressure.382JZ International relationsUniversity of Nottinghamhttps://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.724759http://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/37600/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 382
JZ International relations
spellingShingle 382
JZ International relations
Zhao, Yujia
The implementation issue in norm diffusion : the cases of WTO anti-dumping duty and countervailing duty in China
description China increasingly integrates into the international system, but has the social capitalist China been effectively contained by the Western-led liberal order? Most current literatures assume China’s ratification of international treaties as the signal to its full adoption of international norms, and scholars such as John Ikenberry thus argue that China is getting contained by the Western liberal order. However, a new wave of norm diffusion scholars suggests that even the ratified norms may not have the expected domestic impacts; the implementation process is decisive to the real changes ‘on the ground’. Following this vein, this thesis studies China’s implementation of international liberal norms in order to understand how the liberal world contains China in its order. This thesis compares the implementation of two WTO trading norms namely anti-dumping duty and countervailing duty in China as the representative case studies. The analysis suggests that these two norms have made important changes to China’s legal system, institution-building, field-level practices and its domestic discourse. By employing political comparative methods, it proves the WTO implementing instruments as effective in promoting the progresses of this implementation process. However, the analysis further suggests that the cultural match of these two international liberal norms with China’s social capitalist traditions also contributes to strong domestic resistances to the implementation process. The consequences of this dis-match are largely reflected in China’s field-level practices of and its domestic discourses over these two norms. This thesis provides a complex answer to the question raised at the beginning. As the case studies illustrate, although anti-dumping duty and countervailing duty conflict with China’s social capitalist traditions, China chooses to play by the rules because of its ‘problem-solving’ concerns and because of the pressure from the WTO and its members. China, both the state sectors and non-state actors, values its identity as a member of the international society, and is willing to act as the defender of the current international order. Even though, China is not a passive receiver of the liberal normative structure. The dis-match between the liberal norms and China’s social capitalist tradition inevitably results in the internal resistance to the tendency of China being fully contained by the international liberal order. This resistance will not be eliminated by any external pressure.
author Zhao, Yujia
author_facet Zhao, Yujia
author_sort Zhao, Yujia
title The implementation issue in norm diffusion : the cases of WTO anti-dumping duty and countervailing duty in China
title_short The implementation issue in norm diffusion : the cases of WTO anti-dumping duty and countervailing duty in China
title_full The implementation issue in norm diffusion : the cases of WTO anti-dumping duty and countervailing duty in China
title_fullStr The implementation issue in norm diffusion : the cases of WTO anti-dumping duty and countervailing duty in China
title_full_unstemmed The implementation issue in norm diffusion : the cases of WTO anti-dumping duty and countervailing duty in China
title_sort implementation issue in norm diffusion : the cases of wto anti-dumping duty and countervailing duty in china
publisher University of Nottingham
publishDate 2016
url https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.724759
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