Constructivist theory in international relations emphasises that norms and ideas are not fixed but instead evolve through social interaction, thereby influencing how states define their interests and conduct themselves. This essay examines the idea of democracy as a case study, focusing on China. It traces the changing interpretations of democracy within Chinese political discourse from the early twentieth century to the present and assesses whether corresponding shifts have occurred in state behaviour. The analysis draws on constructivist insights to argue that although the idea of democracy has been substantially reinterpreted in China, state behaviour has adapted in ways that largely reinforce rather than challenge existing authoritarian structures.
Theoretical Framework: Constructivism and Norm Evolution
Constructivists maintain that state interests are socially constructed rather than exogenously given. Wendt (1999) argues that anarchy itself is what states make of it, meaning that shared ideas can reshape identities and therefore foreign and domestic policy. In this view, norms such as democracy travel across borders yet are locally adapted. Reus-Smit (2005) further notes that international norms are frequently internalised at different rates and in different forms, depending on domestic historical contexts. Applied to China, this framework suggests that the global spread of democratic norms does not automatically produce convergence; instead, Chinese actors reinterpret democracy to align with existing political structures.
The Changing Meaning of Democracy in China
The concept of democracy entered Chinese political thought in the late Qing and early Republican periods as an imported ideal associated with Western constitutionalism and popular sovereignty. Sun Yat-sen’s Three Principles of the People incorporated a version of democracy, albeit tempered by tutelage requirements that postponed full popular participation. After 1949 the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) rejected liberal democracy as a bourgeois illusion and advanced the notion of “people’s democratic dictatorship.” Within this understanding, democracy was equated with class-based representation exercised through the party.
Following the reform and opening-up initiated in 1978, official discourse introduced the phrase “socialist democracy with Chinese characteristics.” This formulation retained the leading role of the CCP while allowing limited experiments in village elections and intra-party consultation. Under Xi Jinping since 2012 the idea has evolved further into “whole-process people’s democracy,” presented in official white papers as a superior form because it combines electoral, consultative and deliberative mechanisms under party guidance (Central Committee of the Communist Party of China, 2021). Thus the meaning of democracy has shifted from outright rejection, through qualified incorporation, to an alternative model that explicitly contrasts with liberal democratic standards.
Implications for Chinese State Behaviour
Despite these discursive adjustments, observable state behaviour reveals substantial continuity. Domestically, the CCP continues to prohibit competitive multiparty elections and maintains tight control over civil society and the media. Village elections, first piloted in the late 1980s, remain circumscribed; candidates must be approved by party branches and higher-level authorities retain dismissal powers. Internationally, China has engaged selectively with democratic norms, for instance by joining the UN Human Rights Council yet consistently opposing country-specific resolutions that criticise its governance model.
Nevertheless, some behavioural adaptation is evident. In foreign policy China promotes the idea of a “community of shared future for mankind,” which implicitly challenges the universality of liberal democracy by advocating mutual respect for differing political systems. Economic statecraft, including the Belt and Road Initiative, is framed as compatible with diverse governance models, thereby normalising non-democratic development pathways. These actions illustrate how an adapted conception of democracy can justify practices that diverge from Western expectations, confirming constructivist expectations that new meanings attached to norms reshape interests and policy choices.
Conclusion
The Chinese case demonstrates that democratic norms are not static; they have been repeatedly redefined to serve domestic political priorities. While the idea of democracy has expanded rhetorically from outright opposition to an asserted alternative model, state behaviour has changed only modestly, preserving CCP dominance at home and promoting pluralist conceptions of governance abroad. Constructivist analysis therefore illuminates both the malleability of norms and the limits of normative diffusion when powerful domestic structures mediate external ideas. Future research might usefully compare China’s trajectory with other states that have similarly adapted rather than adopted democratic norms.
References
- Central Committee of the Communist Party of China (2021) China: Democracy That Works. Beijing: Foreign Languages Press.
- Reus-Smit, C. (2005) ‘Constructivism’, in Burchill, S. et al. (eds) Theories of International Relations. 3rd edn. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 188–212.
- Wendt, A. (1999) Social Theory of International Politics. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

