[1] “Press Conference for the Second Session of the 14th National People's Congress” (People's Daily Online), March 7, 2024 (http://lianghui.people.com.cn/2024/GB/458541/458666/index.html, last accessed on May 2, 2024)
[2] “The Central Conference on Work Relating to Foreign Affairs was held in Beijing: Xi Jinping delivered an important address at the Conference” (Xinhuanet), December 28, 2023 (http://www.news.cn/politics/leaders/20231228/27cf6e7328174edaad94aeb083369616/c.html, last accessed on May 2, 2024). It is worth noting that the Central Conference on Work Relating to Foreign Affairs was also held during Jiang Zemin's era in 1991, but it is only since 2006 during the Hu Jintao administration that it has come to be held at a high level -- as seen today -- with the participation of all members of the Politburo Standing Committee. Under the Xi Jinping administration, the conference has been held three times: in November 2014 during his first term, in June 2018 during his second term, and this time marks the third.
[3] BRICS, comprising the emerging economies of Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa, approved the addition of the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Iran, Egypt, and Saudi Arabia as new members at its summit meeting in August 2023. As a result, the BRICS membership expanded to 10 countries in January 2024.
[4] The above is from the “Press Conference for the Second Session of the 14th National People's Congress.” As for Japanese translation, the following was used for reference: “Oki gaiko bucho no dai 14-ki zenjindai dai 2-kai kaigi deno kisha kaiken” (Foreign Minister Wang Yi's press conference for the second session of the 14th National People's Congress), Chugoku naigai doko (China's domestic and overseas trends), pp. 5-24, No. 1545, Issue 8, Volume 48, 2024, Radio Press
[5] There are many arguments regarding China's perception of international order, with the following being one of representative examples: Shinji Yamaguchi, “Chugoku no kokusai chitsujyo kan: Sentakuteki jyuyo kara ruru settei wo meguru kyoso e” (China's views on international order: From selective participation to competition over rule-making), The Journal of International Security, pp. 48-67, Issue 4, Volume 45, 2018
[6] Kazuyuki Suwa, “Zenjindai go no chugoku gaiko” (China's post-NPC diplomacy), Views on China, The Tokyo Foundation for Policy Research, May 22, 2014 (https://www.tkfd.or.jp/research/detail.php?id=849, finally confirmed on May 2, 2024)
[7] Naohiro Kitano, “China's Foreign Aid: Current Status and Future Challenges,” JICA Ogata Sadako Research Institute for Peace and Development, October 2018 (https://www.jica.go.jp/jica_ri/publication/other/20181005_01.html, finally confirmed on May 2, 2024)
[8] Yu Jie, “Global South is moving toward the center of Chinese Foreign Policy,” NIKKEI Asia, March 19, 2024 (https://asia.nikkei.com/Opinion/Global-South-is-moving-toward-the-center-of-Chinese-foreign-policy, accessed on May 2, 2024).
[9] Elizabeth Economy, The World According to China (MA: Polity Press, 2022), p.173.
[10] For “discourse power” advocated by China, please refer to the following: Seiichiro Takagi, “Chugoku gaiko no shin-kyokumen: Kokusai “wagoken” no tsuikyu” (A new aspect of Chinese diplomacy: Pursuit of the international “discourse power”), The Aoyama Journal of International Politics, Economics and Communication, No. 85, 2011; Naoko Eto, “Shu kinpei seiken no “wago taikei kensetsu” ga mezasu mono: Fuhenteki kachi heno chosen to naruka” (What the Xi Jinping administration's “construction of discourse system” aims for: A challenge to universal values?, Views on China, The Tokyo Foundation for Policy Research, 2017 (https://www.tkfd.or.jp/research/detail.php?id=258, finally confirmed on May 2, 2024)
[11] Comment by Steve Tsang, Professor, School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), University of London: “The Political Thought of Xi Jinping,” CSIS China Power Project, March 28, 2024 (https://chinapower.csis.org/podcasts/the-political-thought-of-xi-jinping/ Accessed on May 2,2024).