Nordic-China Cooperation: Challenges and Opportunities
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edited by Andreas Bøje Forsby
For all the Nordic countries, China has become an important trading partner. It also plays a central role in the management of the international order on which the Nordic states are highly dependent. At the same time, the Nordic countries risk being drawn into the unfolding great power struggle between the United States and China. For China, the Nordic region is not a major economic partner nor is it closely affiliated with China’s Belt & Road Initiative. Even so, Nordic expertise, technology and innovation skills are in high demand in China, especially with respect to green growth and sustainable development solutions that are critical to China’s overall modernization objectives.
Against this backdrop of existing interconnectivities and mutual interests, there is a need to take a closer look at Sino–Nordic relations in order to identify the opportunities as well as constraints for advancing the relationship further. This pioneering study investigates the relationship, exploring the range of inter-connectivities and collaborative practices between China and its Nordic partners. It maps the scope and recent history of current relations across various dimensions, not only from an overall comparative perspective but also from the perspectives of the individual countries.
The study also focuses on five issue areas – business and innovation, sustainable development, research and education, welfare solutions and people-to-people relations – where opportunities exist for enhanced cooperation. At the same time, it identifies the main obstacles and challenges to Sino–Nordic relations, including differences of political values and the burgeoning US– China great power rivalry. Furthermore, by examining the rather limited measures taken by the Nordic countries to adopt a joint approach to China, it discusses the extent to which such a joint approach might augment bilateral relations that individual Nordic countries have with Beijing as well as wider EU–China relations. Finally, the study ends with a set of thought-provoking recommendations for how to deal with current opportunities and constraints in order to expand and deepen the Sino–Nordic relationship.
Andreas Bøje Forsby is a Senior Researcher at the Danish Institute for International Studies (DIIS). His research includes Danish/Nordic-Chinese relations, the Taiwan conflict, maritime conflicts in the South China Sea, the strategic partnership between China and Russia, and the role played by identity and emotions in China’s external relations.
Publication year: 2021
141 pp / 209mm x 147mm
6 figures, 8 tables
ISBN: 978-87-7694-277-9, Paperback
NIAS Press