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ID167687
Title ProperUnderstanding China’s ‘Belt and Road Initiative’
Other Title Informationbeyond ‘grand strategy’ to a state transformation analysis
LanguageENG
AuthorJones, Lee ;  Zeng, Jinghan
Summary / Abstract (Note)China’s massive ‘Belt and Road Initiative’ (BRI) – designed to build infrastructure and coordinate policymaking across Eurasia and eastern Africa – is widely seen as a clearly-defined, top-down ‘grand strategy’, reflecting Beijing’s growing ambition to reshape, or even dominate, regional and international order. This article argues that this view is mistaken. Foregrounding transformations in the Chinese party-state that shape China’s foreign policy-making, it shows that, rather than being a coherent, geopolitically-driven grand strategy, BRI is an extremely loose, indeterminate scheme, driven primarily by competing domestic interests, particularly state capitalist interests, whose struggle for power and resources are already shaping BRI’s design and implementation. This will generate outcomes that often diverge from top leaders’ intentions and may even undermine key foreign policy goals.
`In' analytical NoteThird World Quarterly Vol. 40, No.8; 2019: p.1415-1439
Journal SourceThird World Quarterly Vol: 40 No 8
Key WordsInvestment ;  China ;  Governance ;  Grand Strategy ;  State Transformation ;  Belt and Road Initiative


 
 
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