Assistant Professor Enrico V. Gloria published a new journal article entitled “National Identity and the Limits of Chinese Public Diplomacy in the Philippines” in Journal of Contemporary China, Volume 32, Issue 139.
The abstract reads:
Despite a rise in Chinese public diplomacy efforts in the Philippines, Filipino perceptions of China have mainly remained negative during the Duterte period. This article examines why and how China’s public diplomacy efforts have primarily failed despite President Duterte’s pro-China position. It draws on constructivist approaches to demonstrate how national identity mediates the impact of Chinese influence. In particular, Chinese incursions in the West Philippine Sea, and an influx of China-based offshore gaming businesses in the country, have elicited a strong nationalist response from Filipinos, perpetuating perceptions of China as untrustworthy and threatening. Evidence is drawn to determine correlation between an increase in Chinese public diplomacy and a decrease in public trust towards China. This is followed by process-tracing how national identity dampens any positive effect Chinese public diplomacy may have on Philippine attitudes towards China.
Read the full text of the article through this link: National Identity and the Limits of Chinese Public Diplomacy in the Philippines.