HCSS REPORT
31
on the one hand, and a need to show that Russia stands firm regarding certain
occasions – not necessarily depending
on the issue at stake, as is the case with
Chinese territorial disputes, but rather on the circumstances – on the other.
What Does the Scholarly Literature Tell Us? EBSCO
After the media and the official websites, we also wanted to survey the evidence for
assertiveness that is adduced by experts in the scholarly literature.
Contrary to the
media (GDELT; where we analyzed millions of newspaper articles) or the websites
(HCSS Off-Base, also containing tens of thousands of text documents), in this case
the sources that were published in the past year and contained the words ‘China’ or
‘Russia’ within five words of terms like ‘assertiveness’ or ‘aggressiveness’ were far
more manageable (tens). These were therefore analyzed manually. Across the articles,
several findings can be highlighted for both the rhetorical and the factual Chinese and
Russian
types of assertiveness, as well as their respective tones, i.e., either positive/
neutral, or negative.
This review included EBSCO’s articles, in English, thereby producing a ‘Western’
perspective. To balance this vision, we added the work
of our Chinese and Russian
analysts, who looked at how Chinese and Russian scholars, in their languages,
interpret the so-called assertiveness of their respective nations.
China
Statistics
Figure 2.19 shows that across the literature selected for China, we found more
evidence for factual than rhetorical assertiveness. This differs, for instance, from the
results of GDELT-data which suggested that words were more widely used than acts.
FIGURE 2.19: NUMBER OF RHETORICAL OR FACTUAL SIGNALS
OF ASSERTIVENESS FOR CHINA, BY TYPE (MILITARY,
ECONOMIC, DIPLOMATIC)
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
Factual (events)
Rhetorical (verbal)
Diplomatic
Economic
Military
32
STRATEGIC MONITOR 2014
However, similarly to GDELT-trends, diplomacy is the most common way through
which rhetorical assertiveness transpires, by far, and it can be mainly associated with
a positive or neutral level than a negative one. We found no evidence of negative
military assertiveness, nor did we of positive/neutral economic assertiveness.
FIGURE 2.20: NUMBER OF POSITIVE/NEUTRAL OR NEGATIVE RHETORICAL SIGNALS OF ASSERTIVENESS FOR CHINA, BY
TYPE (MILITARY, ECONOMIC, DIPLOMATIC)
The factual assertiveness seems more balanced across all three categories, although
here again, diplomatic assertiveness dominates, followed by the military category.
Factual assertiveness tends to be more positive or neutral than the rhetoric, especially
in the diplomatic and economic fields.
FIGURE 2.21: NUMBER OF POSITIVE/NEUTRAL OR NEGATIVE FACTUAL SIGNALS OF ASSERTIVENESS FOR CHINA,
BY TYPE
(MILITARY, ECONOMIC, DIPLOMATIC)
Negative
Positive/Neutral
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
Diplomatic
Economic
Military
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
Diplomatic
Economic
Military
Negative
Positive/Neutral