TY - JOUR
T1 - The East Is Red . . . Again! How the Specters of Communism and Russia Shape Central and Eastern European Views of China
AU - Gries, Peter
AU - Turcsányi, Richard
N1 - Funding Information:
Can public opinion data help us better understand the role that East/West identities, views of each nation’s communist past, and attitudes toward communism and Russia today play in structuring CEE views of China? We designed a series of questions for the Sinophone Borderlands 2020 survey to find out. Funded by the European Regional Development Fund, the Sinophone Borderlands project at Palacky´ University Olomouc in the Czech Republic hired NMS Market Research to conduct a survey of China attitudes in Europe. In September and October 2020, adults aged 18–70 in the Czech Republic (n = 1,506), Hungary (n = 1,504), Latvia (n = 1,552), Poland (n = 1,503), Serbia (n = 1,500), and Slovakia (n = 1,502) completed the survey online. The samples were nationally representative with respect to age, gender, education level, region, and population density (and in Latvia, language use).
Funding Information:
This work was supported by the European Regional Development Fund Project “Sinophone Borderlands—Interaction at the Edges,” CZ.02.1.01/0.0/0.0/16_019/ 0000791.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 by the Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
PY - 2022/3/1
Y1 - 2022/3/1
N2 - During the past decade, China has rapidly emerged as a major player in Central and Eastern Europe (CEE). Will it divide Europe? Might these formerly communist countries align themselves again with a communist superpower to their east? Or does their past experience of Russia and communism generate suspicions of China? This article explores what public opinion data from a fall 2020 survey of six CEE countries (the Czech Republic, Hungary, Latvia, Poland, Serbia, and Slovakia) can teach us about the drivers of CEE attitudes toward China. It suggests that China has become a “second Eastern power” beyond Russia against which many people in the CEE have come to define themselves. Although there are large differences between CEE publics in their views of China, individual-level self-identifications with the East or West, and attitudes toward the communist past and communism today consistently shape views of both Russia and China. Russia looms large for all in the CEE, but especially for Latvia and Poland, whose views of China appear to be almost completely mediated through attitudes toward their giant Russian neighbor. We conclude with thoughts on the implications of these findings about the structure of CEE public opinion toward China for the future of the “16þ1” mechanism and CEE-China relations more broadly.
AB - During the past decade, China has rapidly emerged as a major player in Central and Eastern Europe (CEE). Will it divide Europe? Might these formerly communist countries align themselves again with a communist superpower to their east? Or does their past experience of Russia and communism generate suspicions of China? This article explores what public opinion data from a fall 2020 survey of six CEE countries (the Czech Republic, Hungary, Latvia, Poland, Serbia, and Slovakia) can teach us about the drivers of CEE attitudes toward China. It suggests that China has become a “second Eastern power” beyond Russia against which many people in the CEE have come to define themselves. Although there are large differences between CEE publics in their views of China, individual-level self-identifications with the East or West, and attitudes toward the communist past and communism today consistently shape views of both Russia and China. Russia looms large for all in the CEE, but especially for Latvia and Poland, whose views of China appear to be almost completely mediated through attitudes toward their giant Russian neighbor. We conclude with thoughts on the implications of these findings about the structure of CEE public opinion toward China for the future of the “16þ1” mechanism and CEE-China relations more broadly.
KW - China-CEE relations
KW - Foreign policy
KW - Post-communism
KW - Public opinion
KW - Russia-CEE relations
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85127059757&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1525/j.postcomstud.2022.55.1.1
DO - 10.1525/j.postcomstud.2022.55.1.1
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85127059757
SN - 0967-067X
VL - 55
SP - 1
EP - 23
JO - Communist and Post-Communist Studies
JF - Communist and Post-Communist Studies
IS - 1
ER -