Fool’s gold?: Sino-British elites and the ‘Golden Era’ of relations

Fool’s Gold?: Sino-British Elites and the ‘Golden Era’ of Relations, employs an investigative research approach and novel elite theory framework to investigate elite level relations between the People’s Republic of China (PRC) and the United Kingdom (UK) in the 2010s. The study employs exploratory a...

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Main Author: Thorley, Martin
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/65611/
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author Thorley, Martin
author_facet Thorley, Martin
author_sort Thorley, Martin
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Fool’s Gold?: Sino-British Elites and the ‘Golden Era’ of Relations, employs an investigative research approach and novel elite theory framework to investigate elite level relations between the People’s Republic of China (PRC) and the United Kingdom (UK) in the 2010s. The study employs exploratory and experimental data gathering and data generation strategies. These include open source intelligence methods, extensive Freedom of Information requests and challenges, as well as Chinese and English language dual search source comparisons. The study examines the British decision to allow PRC involvement in its civil nuclear energy programme; PRC-UK cooperation in the City of London around renminbi internationalisation; and the hitherto under-investigated acquisitions of ultra-high value properties in London by PRC-linked entities and individuals. All three cases feature revelatory findings including apparent targeting by the party-state of senior British political figures and the creation of an All Party Parliamentary Group, ostensibly promoting Chinese party-state interests inside Parliament. By uncovering elite linkages not only within the three case studies but also between them, the thesis sheds light on previously obscure coordination of party-state activities and strategies abroad. The thesis also presents substantial evidence that party-state activity is particularly successful when utilising pre-existing channels forged by international commercial and financial interests to influence British politics. The thesis finds that, according to the elite theory framework it employs, the relationship between PRC and UK elites during the 2010s is best considered one of antagonistic cooperation. The thesis includes proposals that the UK (and comparable liberal democracies) could employ to reduce the efficacy of party-state operations. It also includes a discussion of the hitherto little understood role of financialisation and capitalisation in the post-Cold War West as factors in Western incapacity to repel party-state intrusion.
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format Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
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institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
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language English
last_indexed 2025-11-14T20:48:33Z
publishDate 2021
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spelling nottingham-656112025-02-28T15:12:28Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/65611/ Fool’s gold?: Sino-British elites and the ‘Golden Era’ of relations Thorley, Martin Fool’s Gold?: Sino-British Elites and the ‘Golden Era’ of Relations, employs an investigative research approach and novel elite theory framework to investigate elite level relations between the People’s Republic of China (PRC) and the United Kingdom (UK) in the 2010s. The study employs exploratory and experimental data gathering and data generation strategies. These include open source intelligence methods, extensive Freedom of Information requests and challenges, as well as Chinese and English language dual search source comparisons. The study examines the British decision to allow PRC involvement in its civil nuclear energy programme; PRC-UK cooperation in the City of London around renminbi internationalisation; and the hitherto under-investigated acquisitions of ultra-high value properties in London by PRC-linked entities and individuals. All three cases feature revelatory findings including apparent targeting by the party-state of senior British political figures and the creation of an All Party Parliamentary Group, ostensibly promoting Chinese party-state interests inside Parliament. By uncovering elite linkages not only within the three case studies but also between them, the thesis sheds light on previously obscure coordination of party-state activities and strategies abroad. The thesis also presents substantial evidence that party-state activity is particularly successful when utilising pre-existing channels forged by international commercial and financial interests to influence British politics. The thesis finds that, according to the elite theory framework it employs, the relationship between PRC and UK elites during the 2010s is best considered one of antagonistic cooperation. The thesis includes proposals that the UK (and comparable liberal democracies) could employ to reduce the efficacy of party-state operations. It also includes a discussion of the hitherto little understood role of financialisation and capitalisation in the post-Cold War West as factors in Western incapacity to repel party-state intrusion. 2021-08-04 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/65611/1/M.%20Thorley%20Submission%20-%20Corrections.pdf Thorley, Martin (2021) Fool’s gold?: Sino-British elites and the ‘Golden Era’ of relations. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. China UK International relations financialisation capitalisation Chinese influence PRC
spellingShingle China
UK
International relations
financialisation
capitalisation
Chinese influence PRC
Thorley, Martin
Fool’s gold?: Sino-British elites and the ‘Golden Era’ of relations
title Fool’s gold?: Sino-British elites and the ‘Golden Era’ of relations
title_full Fool’s gold?: Sino-British elites and the ‘Golden Era’ of relations
title_fullStr Fool’s gold?: Sino-British elites and the ‘Golden Era’ of relations
title_full_unstemmed Fool’s gold?: Sino-British elites and the ‘Golden Era’ of relations
title_short Fool’s gold?: Sino-British elites and the ‘Golden Era’ of relations
title_sort fool’s gold?: sino-british elites and the ‘golden era’ of relations
topic China
UK
International relations
financialisation
capitalisation
Chinese influence PRC
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/65611/