Failure of China's COVID-19 health diplomacy in wining hearts and minds in Thailand and the Philippines: political efficacy constrained by local politics
Amid the COVID-19 pandemic, China extended significant medical aid to international communities, aiming to combat the virus’s spread and foster global solidarity. However, despite the appreciation expressed by recipient governments for China’s assistance, the general public’s perception of China did...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1821872025-01-19T15:43:28Z Failure of China's COVID-19 health diplomacy in wining hearts and minds in Thailand and the Philippines: political efficacy constrained by local politics Li, Xirui Yang, Zi Li, Mingjiang S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies Social Sciences China–Philippines relations China–Thailand relations Amid the COVID-19 pandemic, China extended significant medical aid to international communities, aiming to combat the virus’s spread and foster global solidarity. However, despite the appreciation expressed by recipient governments for China’s assistance, the general public’s perception of China did not significantly improve. This prompts the question: why did China’s COVID-19 health diplomacy fail to resonate with foreign audiences? This article delves into the cases of Thailand and the Philippines to argue that public perceptions of countries providing aid can be heavily influenced by domestic political dynamics, particularly when incumbent governments already face legitimacy challenges prior to aid delivery. By scrutinizing the implementation of China’s aid and the state-to-state relations between China and incumbent governments, political opposition forces can exploit any shortcomings or missteps, placing blame squarely on the incumbents. Given the existing distrust toward incumbent governments, the public is more inclined to accept messages propagated by opposition groups, thereby hindering any positive shift in perception toward China. This perspective complements existing research that predominantly focuses on the diplomatic strategies of donor countries, suggesting instead that the domestic politics of host countries play a pivotal role in shaping the effectiveness of foreign nations’ efforts to cultivate favorable images among foreign audiences. Published version 2025-01-14T01:12:01Z 2025-01-14T01:12:01Z 2024 Journal Article Li, X., Yang, Z. & Li, M. (2024). Failure of China's COVID-19 health diplomacy in wining hearts and minds in Thailand and the Philippines: political efficacy constrained by local politics. International Journal of Asian Studies, 1-20. https://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S147959142400024X 1479-5914 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/182187 10.1017/S147959142400024X 2-s2.0-85207326866 1 20 en International Journal of Asian Studies © The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press. This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited. application/pdf |
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Social Sciences China–Philippines relations China–Thailand relations Li, Xirui Yang, Zi Li, Mingjiang Failure of China's COVID-19 health diplomacy in wining hearts and minds in Thailand and the Philippines: political efficacy constrained by local politics |
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Amid the COVID-19 pandemic, China extended significant medical aid to international communities, aiming to combat the virus’s spread and foster global solidarity. However, despite the appreciation expressed by recipient governments for China’s assistance, the general public’s perception of China did not significantly improve. This prompts the question: why did China’s COVID-19 health diplomacy fail to resonate with foreign audiences? This article delves into the cases of Thailand and the Philippines to argue that public perceptions of countries providing aid can be heavily influenced by domestic political dynamics, particularly when incumbent governments already face legitimacy challenges prior to aid delivery. By scrutinizing the implementation of China’s aid and the state-to-state relations between China and incumbent governments, political opposition forces can exploit any shortcomings or missteps, placing blame squarely on the incumbents. Given the existing distrust toward incumbent governments, the public is more inclined to accept messages propagated by opposition groups, thereby hindering any positive shift in perception toward China. This perspective complements existing research that predominantly focuses on the diplomatic strategies of donor countries, suggesting instead that the domestic politics of host countries play a pivotal role in shaping the effectiveness of foreign nations’ efforts to cultivate favorable images among foreign audiences. |
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S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies |
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S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies Li, Xirui Yang, Zi Li, Mingjiang |
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Article |
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Li, Xirui Yang, Zi Li, Mingjiang |
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Li, Xirui |
title |
Failure of China's COVID-19 health diplomacy in wining hearts and minds in Thailand and the Philippines: political efficacy constrained by local politics |
title_short |
Failure of China's COVID-19 health diplomacy in wining hearts and minds in Thailand and the Philippines: political efficacy constrained by local politics |
title_full |
Failure of China's COVID-19 health diplomacy in wining hearts and minds in Thailand and the Philippines: political efficacy constrained by local politics |
title_fullStr |
Failure of China's COVID-19 health diplomacy in wining hearts and minds in Thailand and the Philippines: political efficacy constrained by local politics |
title_full_unstemmed |
Failure of China's COVID-19 health diplomacy in wining hearts and minds in Thailand and the Philippines: political efficacy constrained by local politics |
title_sort |
failure of china's covid-19 health diplomacy in wining hearts and minds in thailand and the philippines: political efficacy constrained by local politics |
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2025 |
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https://hdl.handle.net/10356/182187 |
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1821833184182009856 |