Saturday, May 31, 2025
NEWSDAY
  • News
  • Politics
  • Lifestyle
  • World
  • In pictures
  • Luganda
  • In History
  • Sports
  • Perspective
  • Business
No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Politics
  • Lifestyle
  • World
  • In pictures
  • Luganda
  • In History
  • Sports
  • Perspective
  • Business
No Result
View All Result
NEWSDAY
No Result
View All Result
Home World

China’s response to the ‘Clash of Civilizations’

by www.newsday.co.ug
July 10, 2021
in World
121 1
3.1k
VIEWS

By Gao Lei –CGTN Insight

BEIJING-CHINA/NEWSDAY: “Roots of China’s Growth” is a 10-episode series marking the centenary of the founding of the Communist Party of China (CPC), which has presided over the country’s meteoric rise as a global power. The series focuses on 10 fundamental elements of the strategy that has led to China’s transformation from an impoverished nation over the past 100 years. “China’s inclusive culture” is the ninth in the series. The article is part of a special series from CGTN and its international media partners.

  • China’s response to the clash of civilisation in pictures

After the Cold War, Samuel Huntington, Professor of Political Science at Harvard University, put forward the “Clash of Civilizations” theory, arguing that the fault lines between cultures would replace the political and ideological boundaries of the Cold War as the main flashpoints for crises and bloodshed.

Huntington forecast that the paramount axis of world politics would be conflicts between “the West and the Rest,” requiring the West to contain the expansion of military strength among non-Western civilizations.

Related articles

Update: Omni-media, platform-based communication on the rise in China’s news media sector

May 22, 2022
Development, not ideology, is the hard truth

Development, not ideology, is the hard truth

July 11, 2021

Decades on, does Huntington’s thesis reflect how the world works?

The answer from China is no. You can get a glimpse of how diversified cultures peacefully coexist in China through this simple question: What is authentic “Chinese food”? Sichuan hotpot, Cantonese Wonton soup, Peking duck, Hunan’s stinky tofu? All of these and more. Diverse cuisine from different regions of China can be found in one city, and sometimes even in the same block.

The nation’s inclusiveness has made this happen.

This is also reflected in dozens of dialects, the traces of diverse philosophies that can be found in a single style of Chinese architecture, the popularity of traditional ethnic clothing across ethnicities, to name just a few cultural expressions.

China’s stability is a result of its open attitude to diversity and not stifling minorities for a land of sameness.

The risk of identity-based conflicts does exist but can be avoided by smart policymaking. Religious and ethnic differences can sometimes lead to chaos and even violence, but China, a multi-ethnic country, has endeavored to build a diversified and cohesive community, respecting differences while promoting underlying unity.

There is no ethnic or cultural discrimination in China. People’s ethnic identities are recognized by law. While some ethnic groups in certain countries, out of fear of discrimination, choose not to reveal their racial identity in public life, all ethnic minorities in China have actively participated in the country’s political and social life.

Chinese President Xi Jinping has stressed on several occasions that cultural inclusiveness, economic independence, and emotional closeness are the bonds that unify China’s ethnic groups. Every achievement by the country is a product of the collective wisdom and sweat of the Chinese people. Indeed, their common identity as a unified national community has become a powerful driving force for the country’s growth.

The balance between “differences” and “unity” is vital to China’s stability and development.

A typical Sichuan hotpot, with two choices of flavors – spicy and non-spicy. Photo-VCG

The relevance of an open and inclusive culture is evident not only in China’s ethnic relations, but also in the exchanges between China and the rest of the world. Globalization may have intensified identity conflicts in some cases, but China has embraced foreign cultures with an open mind.

Some advanced foreign cultural and technological products, after being introduced to China, have developed by leaps and bounds in the Chinese market, further enhancing and enriching Chinese culture.

For many years, China was an importer and imitator of foreign technologies. According to the Xinhua News Agency, up to the year 2000, China’s patent applications accounted for only 3.77 percent of the world total, well below the U.S. and Japan.

Yet over the past decade, China has turned from an imitator, follower and traditional manufacturer into an innovator, leader, and smart manufacturer. Its annual patent filings have surpassed Japan’s and were double those of the U.S. in 2016. The country is now a global innovation powerhouse and the engine for an increase in the world’s intellectual property assets.

China’s openness towards foreign cultures and technologies has been a catalyst for the transformation.

Undeniably though, the emergence of “historical nihilism” and “cultural nihilism” in recent years has posed a major challenge to Chinese culture. Therefore, boosting cultural confidence is also an integral part of enhancing cultural identity.

Burying one’s head in the sand is not the right way forward. In response to the “clash of civilizations” scenario, China’s open and inclusive culture is a solution.

Gao Lei is an associate professor at the School of Marxism, University of International Business and Economics, and a research fellow at the Research Institute of Globalization and China’s Modernization. You can contact her directly at gglei9496@sina.com. Please send any other contributions, including expressions of interest in sharing expertise with us, to opinions@cgtn.com.

Post Views: 106

Do you want to share a story, comment or opinion regarding this story or others, Email us at newsdayuganda@gmail.com Tel/WhatsApp........0726054858
Do you want to share a story, comment or opinion regarding this story or others, Email us on info@newsday.co.ug or ,Tel/WhatsApp........0702451828
Share159Tweet99SendShare
Next Post

What is the Difference Between Public and Permissioned Blockchains?

  • Profile: Who is Hajjat Uzeiye Hadijah Namyalo

    Profile: Who is Hajjat Uzeiye Hadijah Namyalo

    1052 shares
    Share 421 Tweet 263
  • What caused a mysterious death of Former Elite High School Student

    468 shares
    Share 187 Tweet 117
  • Sex video appearing to show a look alike of BBS’s Diana Nabatanzi in bed with man concerns her fans

    1680 shares
    Share 672 Tweet 420
  • Video shows Lwasa naked and why Diana Nabatanzi chucked him

    733 shares
    Share 293 Tweet 183
  • Security investigating Dubai company over Congolese stolen Gold

    503 shares
    Share 201 Tweet 126
NEWSDAY

Your source of the most critical on spot breaking news from www.newsday.co.ug. Newsday Uganda is recognized by audiences around the world as a trusted supplier of news.

info@newsday.co.ug
+256702451828

Categories

  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • In History
  • In Luganda
  • in pictures
  • Lifestyle
  • News
  • Perspective
  • Politics
  • Sport
  • World

Recent Posts

  • Shame As Katwe Police Officer Is Nabbed Destroying Evidence To Implicate An Innocent Man To Grab His Land
  • Court Finally Served Justice In Nakifuma Land Dispute

© 2021 NEWSDAY.

No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Politics
  • Lifestyle
  • World
  • In pictures
  • Luganda
  • In History
  • Sports
  • Perspective
  • Business

© 2021 NEWSDAY.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In