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ID108500
Title ProperRuthless player or development partner? Britain's ambiguous reaction to China in Africa
LanguageENG
AuthorGallagher, Julia
Publication2011.
Summary / Abstract (Note)British reactions to China's increasing engagement with Africa in recent years have been manifested in particularly negative and reductive ways tending to depict China's presence in Africa as destructive and self-serving, in contrast to Britain's more enlightened, supportive approach. However, more recently official discourse has begun to stress the shared outlook between British and Chinese objectives, emphasising Chinese moves towards a more constructive, development-focused approach in Africa. This article discusses the ways in which China in Africa is viewed in British political circles and assesses the degree to which such views resonate with the British sense of its own idealised identity. It suggests that the two narratives represent two sides of a dual 'liberal' approach to the problem of 'non-liberal' actors in international politics: first the tendency to reject and see them as outside the international order; and second the attempt to rehabilitate them and bring them within it. The article concludes by exploring a number of reasons for the particular ways in which Britain, China and Africa are configured, arguing that this dual conception represents a sense of ambiguity about the potential universality of liberalism.
`In' analytical NoteReview of International Studies Vol. 37, No. 5; Dec 2011: p. 2293-2310
Journal SourceReview of International Studies Vol. 37, No. 5; Dec 2011: p. 2293-2310
Key WordsBritain ;  China ;  Africa ;  Development Partner ;  Ruthless Player ;  Liberalism


 
 
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