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Analysing Indonesian media and government representation of China

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Analysing Indonesian media and government representation of China. / Febrica, Senia; Sudarman, Suzie.
In: Journal of the British Association for Chinese Studies, Vol. 8, No. 2, 15.03.2018, p. 89-119.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Febrica, S & Sudarman, S 2018, 'Analysing Indonesian media and government representation of China', Journal of the British Association for Chinese Studies, vol. 8, no. 2, pp. 89-119. https://doi.org/10.51661/bjocs.v8i2.8

APA

Febrica, S., & Sudarman, S. (2018). Analysing Indonesian media and government representation of China. Journal of the British Association for Chinese Studies, 8(2), 89-119. https://doi.org/10.51661/bjocs.v8i2.8

Vancouver

Febrica S, Sudarman S. Analysing Indonesian media and government representation of China. Journal of the British Association for Chinese Studies. 2018 Mar 15;8(2):89-119. doi: 10.51661/bjocs.v8i2.8

Author

Febrica, Senia ; Sudarman, Suzie. / Analysing Indonesian media and government representation of China. In: Journal of the British Association for Chinese Studies. 2018 ; Vol. 8, No. 2. pp. 89-119.

Bibtex

@article{9c8a733310d047d7a9df5ab68b383b9d,
title = "Analysing Indonesian media and government representation of China",
abstract = "The discussion of regional leadership in Southeast Asia tends to be dominated by analysis of the relationship between the United States and China. Looking beyond great power competition this article examines how China{\textquoteright}s relations with Indonesia and Southeast Asia are represented in Indonesian national media, government documents and statements through a content analysis of government documents and media reports from 2008-2015. This is worth studying because Indonesia is the largest country in Southeast Asia and has its own aspirations of regional leadership. Using semi-structured interviews and content analysis of government documents and newspaper articles, this article presents empirical evidence that is currently lacking in research regarding perception or representation of China. The current literature on Sino-Indonesian relations points to Indonesia{\textquoteright}s ambiguity in dealing with China. The findings presented in this article support this line of argument.",
author = "Senia Febrica and Suzie Sudarman",
year = "2018",
month = mar,
day = "15",
doi = "10.51661/bjocs.v8i2.8",
language = "English",
volume = "8",
pages = "89--119",
journal = "Journal of the British Association for Chinese Studies",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Analysing Indonesian media and government representation of China

AU - Febrica, Senia

AU - Sudarman, Suzie

PY - 2018/3/15

Y1 - 2018/3/15

N2 - The discussion of regional leadership in Southeast Asia tends to be dominated by analysis of the relationship between the United States and China. Looking beyond great power competition this article examines how China’s relations with Indonesia and Southeast Asia are represented in Indonesian national media, government documents and statements through a content analysis of government documents and media reports from 2008-2015. This is worth studying because Indonesia is the largest country in Southeast Asia and has its own aspirations of regional leadership. Using semi-structured interviews and content analysis of government documents and newspaper articles, this article presents empirical evidence that is currently lacking in research regarding perception or representation of China. The current literature on Sino-Indonesian relations points to Indonesia’s ambiguity in dealing with China. The findings presented in this article support this line of argument.

AB - The discussion of regional leadership in Southeast Asia tends to be dominated by analysis of the relationship between the United States and China. Looking beyond great power competition this article examines how China’s relations with Indonesia and Southeast Asia are represented in Indonesian national media, government documents and statements through a content analysis of government documents and media reports from 2008-2015. This is worth studying because Indonesia is the largest country in Southeast Asia and has its own aspirations of regional leadership. Using semi-structured interviews and content analysis of government documents and newspaper articles, this article presents empirical evidence that is currently lacking in research regarding perception or representation of China. The current literature on Sino-Indonesian relations points to Indonesia’s ambiguity in dealing with China. The findings presented in this article support this line of argument.

U2 - 10.51661/bjocs.v8i2.8

DO - 10.51661/bjocs.v8i2.8

M3 - Journal article

VL - 8

SP - 89

EP - 119

JO - Journal of the British Association for Chinese Studies

JF - Journal of the British Association for Chinese Studies

IS - 2

ER -