"China Engages Global Health Governance" is the first book to
systematically examine China's participation in the global health
domain. It examines how and why China changed its stance on its
HIV/AIDS epidemic and investigates China's emerging role in
Africa's AIDS crisis and the controversial issue of access to
anti-retroviral drugs for the continent's impoverished people. In
scrutinizing China's evolving global role and its intentions for
global governance and global health governance, this book argues
that China is neither a system-defender nor a system-transformer of
the liberal international order. While acting in concert with other
major powers, China strives to defend itself from the encroachment
of liberal democratic values on the world stage. In order to carve
out some international space for itself and to fend off attacks by
the liberal normative structure, China calls for multilateral
cooperation in a "harmonious world." With the suggestion that there
is no universally applicable blueprint for development, Beijing
tries to shore up the principle of national sovereignty and
non-intervention and strengthen ties with developing countries to
consolidate a normative and political bulwark against liberal
democratic values. In short, China possesses a hybrid national
identity in its deepening engagement with global governance.
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