Tao Wenzhao, born at east China''s Zhejiang Province, February
1943, is an honorary academician of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences and
senior fellow of the Institute of American Studies.He served as the deputy
director at the Institute and as secretary general of the Chinese Association of
American Studies from 1994 to 2003. His publications include A History of
Sino-American Relations 1911-2000 in three volumes, China''s Foreign
Relations During the China''s War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression
co-author, US'' China Poficy After the End of the Cold War co-author,American
Think-tanks and US'' China Policy After the End of the Cold War co-author.
目錄:
Chapter 1 Exchanges
1.1 Early Trade and Cultural Exchanges
1.2 The Treaty of Wanghia and the Establishment of Relations Between China and the U.S.
1.3 Controversy over the Burlingame Treaty
1.4 Exclusion of Chinese and the Issue of Chinese Labor in the United States
Chapter 2 The Open-door Policy and Its Implementation
2.1 The Open-door Poficy: The Gap Between Policy and Practice
2.2 The United States and the 1911 Revolution
2.3 The Paris Peace Conference: A Proud Day for Chinese
Chapter 3 The Washington Conference: The United States and Wars and Revolution in China
3.1 The Washington Conference and Settling of the Shandong Issue
3.2 The United States, Wars and Revolution in China in the 1920s
3.3 The U.S. and the Nanjing Nationalist Government
Chapter 4 The 1930s: Toward a China-U.S. Alliance
Against Japanese Aggression
4.1 From Liutiao Lake to Marco Polo Bridge
4.2 The Nationalist Government "Clings On in Hope of Rescue"
4.3 Toward an Alliance Against Japanese Aggression
4.4 The Early War Period, CPC Non-Governmental
Contacts with the U.S.
Chapter 5 Wartime Allies
5.1 The Rocky Road of Military Cooperation
5.2 Building a Special Relationship
5.3 The U.S. Army Observer Section in Yah''an
5.4 Shift in U.S. Policy Toward China
5.5 The Yalta Conference, the United States and the
Sino-Soviet Treaty
Chapter 6 U.S. Involvement in China''s Civil War
6.1 The Marshall Mediation
6.2 The China Aid Act of 1948
6.3 Toward Confrontation
Chapter 7 The Age of Confrontation and Isolation
7.1 Confrontation in Korea
7.2 American Containment of China
7.3 Two Crises in the Taiwan Strait
7.4 China-U.S. Ambassadorial Talks
Chapter 8 A Slow Thaw
8.1 Changes in China''s Diplomacy
8.2 Adjustment in U.S. Policy Toward China
8.3 A Historic Handshake
Chapter 9 Difficult Normalization
9.1 Stagnation
9.2 Normalization
9.3 The Taiwan Relations Act
9.4 The Birth of the August 17 Communique
9.5 China Reiterates Its Independent Foreign Policy
Chapter 10 Renormalization of China-U.S. Relations in the Post Cold War Era
10.1 U.S. Pressure Follows 1989 Turmoil in Beijing
10.2 Drastic Changes Across the Taiwan Strait
10.3 Heads of State Visits
10.4 Disaster Out of the Blue
10.5 China''s Accession to the WTO and U.S. Legislation on PNTR for China
Chapter 11 China-U.S. Relations in the New Century
11.1 Establishing Constructive and Cooperative Relations
11.2 Maintaining Stability in the Taiwan Strait Region
11.3 Continuing to Promote Mutually Beneficial and Win-Win Trade and Economic Relations
11.4 Cooperation on Regional and International Issues
Conclusion Toward a New Model of Major-Country
Relationship
Index