A study of China’s participation in United Nations human rights reviews argues that its public statements are more than diplomatic rhetoric. The paper published in the International Journal of Public Law and Policy also suggests that they serve as strategic signals that shape later negotiations.
The researchers analysed 51 statements made by China at the United Nations General Assembly between 2018 and 2024 alongside its responses to 428 recommendations during the fourth cycle of the Universal Periodic Review (UPR). The latter is a UN process in which every member state undergoes a peer assessment of its human rights record.
The study identified three recurring themes in China’s human rights discourse. The first being the importance of economic development and basic living standards. The second, the principles of sovereignty and non-interference in domestic affairs. The third appeals to shared values across humanity. The authors argue that these themes define China’s negotiating boundaries.
The study found that China often accepts development-focused recommendations and even accepts policy commitments that carry implementation costs. However, recommendations that touched on issues Beijing sees as a matter of sovereignty were often rejected, despite the reputational costs of refusal.
The findings suggest that analysing a state’s public discourse may help anticipate where compromise is possible in international negotiations and where entrenched positions are likely to persist as competing interpretations of human rights become more prominent in an increasingly multipolar international system.
Jiang, Y. and Song, W. (2026) ‘Costly signals and compliance boundaries in human rights diplomacy: China’s UPR engagement’, Int. J. Public Law and Policy, Vol. 12, No. 5, pp.1–28.
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