This book explains the increasingly turbulent Sino-Japanese
relations since the 2000s by innovatively investigating the
formation mechanism of mutual misperception deeply rooted in
China-Japan-U.S. trilateral structural dynamics. The political and
security relationship has been increasingly deteriorating against
the high interdependency between the world's second and third
largest economies. More ironically, both sides have also shown the
intent and made efforts to improve bilateral ties. The author
systematically conducts a focused comparison of the evolution of
the Sino-Japanese mutual perceptions and policies toward one
another during the past decade and a half. Empirically, Yun Zhang
closely examines five case studies that provide insights to IR
students and scholars and policy makers on how misperception and
mistrust have formed, replicated, and intensified.
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