Paper Title
New Developments in Cross-Strait Relations: Employing Constructivist Models to Analyze Prospects for Homogeneity Consensus

Abstract
The past thirty years has been a time of complexity and change in Cross-Strait relations. Amidst these ups and downs, the constant repetition of reconciliation and conflict in Cross-Strait relations has become an irreversible interactive model between the two sides. This study is based on Wendt’s analysis of the concepts of “structure” and “concept” in constructivism, and (1) analyzes the changes in policies and relations between the two sides over the past decade; (2) examines the political, economic, and cultural aspects of “interdependence,” “opportunity sharing,” and “joint risk” to discuss how the current stagnation in Cross-Strait relations will ensure the intangible “public good” of bilateral peaceful development, deepen the consensus of “homogeneity” between the two sides, reduce the conflict of “heterogeneity” consciousness, and achieve a behavioral norm of “self-discipline” in Cross-Strait relations, deriving a new interactive model of Cross-Strait integration. Index Terms - Constructivism, Cross-Strait relations, 92 Consensus, interdependence, public good.