Home Contact Us Advanced Search Journal Help
IJoC
EDITORIAL BOARD
FOUNDING EDITORS
Editor
Larry Gross
USC Annenberg School for Communication & Journalism
Managing Editor
Arlene Luck
USC Annenberg School for Communication & Journalism
Book Review Editors
Gustavo Cardoso
University of Lisbon
Josh Kun
USC Annenberg School
Jack Linchuan Qiu
Chinese University of Hong Kong
Editorial Board
Sean Aday
George Washington University
Jonathan David Aronson
USC Annenberg School
Sandra Ball-Rokeach
USC Annenberg School
Svetlana Balmaeva
Liberal Arts University
Sarah Banet-Weiser
USC Annenberg School
Howard S. Becker
San Francisco
Yochai Benkler
Harvard Law School
Lance Bennett
University of Washington
Bruce Bimber
UC Santa Barbara
Pablo Javier Boczkowski
Northwestern University
Jennings Bryant
University of Alabama
Susan Douglas
University of Michigan
John D.H. Downing
Southern Illinois University
William Dutton
Oxford University
Richard Dyer
University of London
John Nguyet Erni
Lingnan University
Oscar Gandy
Annenberg/ University of Pennsylvania
Dilip Gaonkar
Northwestern University
Ian Glenn
University of Cape Town
Trudy Govier
University of Lethbridge
Sergio Godoy
Universidad Catolica de Chile
Larry Grossberg
University of North Carolina
Manuel Alejandro Guerrero
Universidad Iberoamericana
James Hamilton
Duke University
Eszter Hargittai
Northwestern University
John Hartley
Queensland University of Technology, Australia
Kathleen Hall Jamieson
Annenberg/ University of Pennsylvania
Henry Jenkins
USC Annenberg School
Steve Jones
University of Illinois-Chicago
Elihu Katz
Annenberg/ University of Pennsylvania
Douglas Kellner
UCLA
Marwan M. Kraidy
Annenberg/ University of Pennsylvania
Justin Lewis
Cardiff University
Sonia Livingstone
London School of Economics
Robin Elizabeth Mansell
London School of Economics
Robert McChesney
University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Toby Miller
UC Riverside
Peter R. Monge
USC Annenberg School
Thomas Nakayama
Northeastern University
Horace Newcomb
University of Georgia
Zhongdang Pan
University of Wisconsin - Madison
John Durham Peters
University of Iowa
Alejandro Piscitelli
University of Buenos Aires
Dana Polan
NYU
Marshall Scott Poole
University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Adam Powell
University of Southern California
Monroe Price
University of Pennsylvania
Janice Radway
Northwestern University
N. Bhaskara Rao
Centre for Media Studies, New Delhi
Michael Renov
USC Cinematic Arts
Ellen Seiter
USC Cinematic Arts
Michael Schudson
Columbia University
Jonathan Sterne
McGill University
John Thompson
Cambridge University
Yariv Tsfati
University of Haifa
Ingrid Volkmer
University of Melbourne
Simon J. Wilkie
USC Economics
Barbie Zelizer
Annenberg/ University of Pennsylvania
Yuezhi Zhao
Simon Fraser University

University of Southern California

International Journal of Communication, Vol 2 (2008)

The American Hegemonic Responses to the U.S.-China Mid-air Plane Collision

Dexin Tian, Chin-Chung Chao

Abstract


This paper examines the major documents of the American side concerning the U.S.-China mid-air plane collision incident, which occurred April 1, 2001. Through the hegemonic theoretical lens of Robert Cox’s frame of action and via the research method of hermeneutics of the selected rhetorical artifacts, we aim to shed light on the understanding of the incident and provide insightful implications for handling similar international conflicts in the future. Our findings indicate that the United States has preserved the most resourceful material capabilities and established all the necessary human institutions to implement its shared notion of American hegemony all over the world. Seeing China as a strategic competitor, the Bush administration considers it its mission to gather Chinese military and government information via military surveillance planes and obligation to guard against the rise of China in the Asia Pacific in the name of maintaining world peace and regional stability. Should the United States continue with its current grand strategy of hegemonic primacy, similar crises may occur again in Asia Pacific and potential conflicts of the same nature may arise elsewhere in the other parts of the world.

Full Text: PDF Copyright Notice Privacy Policy University of Southern California USC Annenberg Center