This CCPS issue features four articles. These papers reflect the multidimensional nature of China’s rise. They argue that China’s global presence today is not defined by domination or isolation but by “mutual entanglement”—an interdependence that is simultaneously economic, narrative, and perceptual. Hence, it can be argued further that Beijing’s influence emerges not merely from its economic might but from the interplay of structural, discursive, and perceptual forces. These forces are integrated, specifically, as dimensions of perceptual geo–economics.
Reymund B. Flores (ed.) (Mon,) studied this question.