Source Notes
China Geopolitical Profile: Source Notes
An intermediate note for organizing research material, evidence links, issue structure, and inclusion decisions before the reader-facing article is written.
China Geopolitical Profile: Source Notes
Source Map
Primary / authoritative
- Military and Security Developments Involving the People’s Republic of China 2025
- Government of China
- China
Authoritative data / current context
- Fourth session of the 14th National People’s Congress
- World Bank warns China must enact bigger reforms to tackle ‘mounting’ economic challenges
- Unemployment in China
Secondary context
- Secondary reporting was used only to frame structural issues that were already supported by a primary or authoritative source.
- No single news article was treated as sufficient for leadership, Taiwan, maritime disputes, or the longer-run policy direction.
Evidence Notes
- China is a party-state in which the Chinese Communist Party leads the state, and the people’s congress system does not function like U.S.-style separation of powers.
- The 2026 public power map is easiest to read through Xi Jinping, Li Qiang, Zhao Leji, Wang Huning, and Wang Yi.
- The Pentagon’s 2025 report treats Taiwan, the South China Sea, the East China Sea, AI, dual-use technology, and Belt and Road as central external issues.
- China has a huge manufacturing base, but property adjustment, local finance, population decline, low fertility, and fragile youth employment constrain the growth model.
- Social control and minority policy are best treated as governance and regime-stability issues, not as isolated rights topics.
- The Japan-facing reading works best when Taiwan contingency, sea-lane risk, economic security, sanctions, and crisis management are treated as one bundle.
Downweighted Sources
- Fine-grained ship counts and missile inventories were omitted because they were too detailed for a country profile.
- Monthly property indicators were too short-lived for the profile’s durable framing.
- Unverified party rumors and informal personnel speculation were excluded.
- Detailed incident-by-incident human-rights chronologies were trimmed so the article could stay focused on institutions and strategy.
Open Questions
- Which combination of exercises, law-enforcement activity, information warfare, and trade restrictions will be used next around Taiwan.
- Whether property and local-debt adjustment can improve household confidence before growth slows further.
- How far China’s push for self-sufficiency in AI, semiconductors, EVs, batteries, and materials can absorb export controls.
- At what point population decline and weak youth employment become a visible political cost.