Ford Foundation and the development of International Relations in China
Parmar, I.
ORCID: 0000-0001-8688-9020 (2025).
Ford Foundation and the development of International Relations in China.
Review of International Studies,
Abstract
Current explanations of Sino-American relations are dominated by realist and liberal understandings of world politics, neglecting crucial transnational actors that complexify Sino-American relations. In contrast and drawing from internationally-informed Gramscian hegemony theory, and on extensive archival work, we offer an alternative complex multidimensional transnational account. By researching the Ford Foundation’s activities in China and the United States, specifically its contribution to the development of the International Relations (IR) discipline in China, we break new ground and show that Ford was key in profoundly shaping Sino-American relations especially by developing transnational knowledge networks. These transnational elite networks simultaneously integrated China into the LIO and had unintended consequences, particularly in encouraging Chinese counter-hegemonic dynamics that challenge the LIO from within. Our approach indicates the richer complexity of Sino-US relations than extant theories, suggesting that the future trajectories of this strategic relationship are uncertain and do not fall neatly into an inevitable war or peaceful interdependence binary.
| Publication Type: | Article |
|---|---|
| Additional Information: | This is the author accepted version of an article due to be published by Cambridge University Press in Review of International Studies. It will be available online at: www.cambridge.org/core/journals/review-of-international-studies |
| Publisher Keywords: | Hegemony; Contested hegemonic transition; competitive-conflictual cooperation; transnational elite knowledge networks China-US relations; China IR |
| Subjects: | H Social Sciences > HB Economic Theory J Political Science > JZ International relations |
| Departments: | School of Policy & Global Affairs School of Policy & Global Affairs > Department of International Politics |
| SWORD Depositor: |
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