Introduction: Gilbert Rozman -- PART I: CHINA'S LEADERSHIP AND FOREIGN POLICY -- 1. More Actors, Less Coordination? New Challenges for the Leaders of a Rising China; Thomas Christensen -- 2. China's Foreign Policy and the Leadership Transition: Prospects for Change under the 'Fifth Generation'; Avery Goldstein -- 3. Another Take on Prospects for the Foreign Policy of the Chinese Fifth-Generation Leadership; Shin Jung-seung -- PART II: CHINA'S THINK TANKS AND FOREIGN POLICY -- 4. Chinese Foreign Policy Research Institutes and the Practice of Influence; Bonnie S. Glaser -- 5. Moving between the 'Inner Circle' and the 'Outer Circle': The Limited Impact of Think Tanks on Policy Making in China; Quansheng Zhao -- PART III: CHINA'S NATIONAL IDENTITY AND FOREIGN POLICY -- 6. Chinese National Identity and Foreign Policy: Linkages between the Two; Gilbert Rozman -- 7. Chinese Nationalism and the American Response: Sources of Tension and Prospects for Renewed Cooperation; Robert S. Ross -- PART IV: FINANCIAL FACTORS IN CHINESE FOREIGN POLICY MAKING -- 8. China's Leadership and Their Financial and Monetary Policies; William H. Overholt -- 9. How Do Monetary and Financial Issues Interact with China's Foreign Policy Making?; Fraṅois Godemont -- PART V: CHINA'S FOREIGN POLICY TOWARD THE KOREAN PENINSULA -- 10. China's North Korea Policy: Misperception and Reality (An Independent Chinese Perspective on Sino-Korean Relations); Chen Ping -- 11. China's Korea Policy in the Making; Yufan Hao -- 12. Disillusionment and Dismay: How Chinese Netizens Think and Feel about the Two Koreas; Peter Gries.