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JOURNAL OF CURRENT CHINESE AFFAIRS VOL: 42 NO 1 (8) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   120104


Aid donor meets strategic partner? the European Union’s and China’s relations with Ethiopia / Hackenesch, Christine   Journal Article
Hackenesch, Christine Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract The motives, instruments and effects of China's Africa policy have spurred a lively debate in European development policy circles. This paper assesses the "competitive pressure" that China's growing presence in Africa exerts on the European development policy regime. Drawing on a large number of interviews conducted in China, Ethiopia and Europe between 2008 and 2011, the paper analyses Ethiopia as a case study. Ethiopia has emerged as one of the most important countries in Chinese as well as European cooperation with Africa. Yet, Chinese and European policies toward Ethiopia differ greatly. The EU mainly engages Ethiopia as an aid recipient, whereas China has developed a comprehensive political and economic partnership with the East African state. China has thereby become an alternative partner to the Ethiopian government, a development that both sheds light on the gap between European rhetoric and policy practice and puts pressure on the EU to make more efforts to reform its development policy system.
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2
ID:   120111


Bringing the low-carbon agenda to China: a study in transnational policy diffusion / Hofem, Andreas; Heilmann, Sebastian   Journal Article
Heilmann, Sebastian Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract This study traces the transnational interactions that contributed to introducing the low-carbon economy agenda into Chinese policymaking. A microprocessual two-level analysis (outside-in as well as inside-access) is employed to analyse transnational and domestic exchanges. The study provides evidence that low-carbon agenda-setting - introduced by transnational actors, backed by foreign funding, promoted by policy entrepreneurs from domestic research institutes, propelled by top-level attention, but only gradually and cautiously adopted by the government bureaucracy - can be considered a case of effective transnational diffusion based on converging perceptions of novel policy challenges and options. Opinion leaders and policy-brokers from the government-linked scientific community functioned as effective access points to the Chinese government's policy agenda.
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3
ID:   120105


China’s impact on the global wind power industry / Lema, Rasmus; Berger, Axel ; Schmitz, Hubert   Journal Article
Lema, Rasmus Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract China's economic rise has transformed the global economy in a number of manufacturing industries. This paper investigates whether China's transformative influence extends to the new green economy. Drawing on the debate about how China is driving major economic changes in the world - the "Asian drivers" debate - it identifies five corridors of influence and investigates their relevance for the wind energy industries. Starting with the demand side, it suggests that the size and rapid growth of the Chinese market have a major influence on competitive parameters in the global wind power industry. While Western firms have found ways of participating in the growth of the Chinese market, the government's procurement regimes benefit Chinese firms. The latter have invested heavily and learned fast, accumulating production capabilities that have led to changes in the global pecking order of lead firms. While the combined impact of Chinese market and production power is already visible, other influences are beginning to be felt - arising from China's coordination, innovation and financing power.
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4
ID:   120106


China–Europe relations in the mitigation of climate change: a conceptual framework / Berger, Axel; Fischer, Doris; Lema, Rasmus; Schmitz, Hubert   Journal Article
Schmitz, Hubert Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract Despite the large-scale investments of both China and the EU in climate-change mitigation and renewable-energy promotion, the prevailing view on China-EU relations is one of conflict rather than cooperation. In order to evaluate the prospects of cooperation between China and the EU in these policy fields, empirical research has to go beyond simplistic narratives. This paper suggests a conceptual apparatus that will help researchers better understand the complexities of the real world. The relevant actors operate at different levels and in the public and private sectors. The main message of the paper is that combining the multi-level governance and value-chain approaches helps clarify the multiple relationships between these actors.
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5
ID:   120108


Chinese economic statecraft: a comparative study of China's oil-backed Loans in Angola and Brazil / Alves, Ana Cristina   Journal Article
Alves, Ana Cristina Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract Africa's and South America's rich endowments of resources and great need for infrastructure development make them perfect candidates for China's "infrastructure-for-resources" loans. Over the past decade, such an arrangement for pursuing China's resource-security goals overseas - namely, securing long-term supply contracts and accessing exploration rights - has proved more effective in Africa than in South America. This article discusses the reasons for this regional variation by providing a comparative study of China's economic statecraft in Angola and Brazil, focusing on the deployment of infrastructure-for-oil deals. It argues that the variation in China's energy-security outcomes (long-term supply and access to oil equity) in Angola and Brazil can be attributed mostly to fundamental differences between the institutional structures of each country's oil industry. Although this foreign policy instrument has worked well for the centralised structure encountered in Angola, it has been less suitable for the far more liberalised and regulated environment that characterises Brazil's oil sector.
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6
ID:   120103


Chinese impacts and impacting China / Giese, Karsten   Journal Article
Giese, Karsten Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
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7
ID:   120109


Learning from failure: China's overseas oil investments / Moreira, Susana   Journal Article
Moreira, Susana Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract Thirsty for oil and other raw materials needed to fuel its breakneck development, China is funnelling money and manpower into an expanding number of countries in order to secure access to natural resources. This effort has successfully increased Chinese oil assets overseas but it has also exposed Beijing and Chinese national oil companies (NOCs) to significant risks. The present paper focuses on one type of risk - political risk - and how it has affected China's global quest for oil since 1993. It starts with a brief overview of political risk. It then looks at political risk management as applied to the oil industry in general. The paper continues with a discussion of the political risk management of Chinese national oil companies over time. This includes a concise exam-ination of several instances in which the interests of Chinese NOCs have been undermined due to political risk and the shortcomings in the approaches of Chinese NOCs to political risk. Recent developments suggest that Chinese NOCs are learning from these mistakes and adjusting their strategies accordingly. Although progress toward these readjust-ments has been made, China's own socio-political context is still hampering the ability of Chinese NOCs to deal with on-the-ground realities that are clearly much more unstable than China's own.
Key Words Oil  China  Political Risk  Chinese NOCs 
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8
ID:   120110


Safety of Chinese citizens abroad: a quantitative interpretation of the special notices for Chinese citizens abroad (2008-2010) / Wang, Duanyong   Journal Article
Wang, Duanyong Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract In recent years, the security risk to Chinese citizens overseas has become an increasingly prominent issue owing to a rapid increase in the number of Chinese citizens moving and travelling abroad. Protecting the legitimate rights and interests of Chinese citizens abroad has become a key priority within the overall field of protecting China's overseas interests. This article uses an alternative sample analysis to perform a quantitative interpretation of the "Special Notices for Chinese Citizens Abroad" issued by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the People's Republic of China from 2008 to 2010. It analyses the distribution characteristics of the risks posed to Chinese citizens overseas in terms of geographical distribution, various risk categories. Based on the results, the article concludes with a summation of the main features and causes of security risks to Chinese citizens overseas.
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