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WIN-WIN COOPERATION (2) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   128318


From "golden decade" to "diamond decade": China-ASEAN relations in retrospect and prospect / Jianguo, Qi   Journal Article
Jianguo, Qi Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract With profound foundations and solid bonds, China-ASEAN relations boast huge cooperation potentials, broad prospect and vigorous stamina. In 2013, the Chinese government set forth a cooperation framework of "two consensus and seven cooperation areas" for the next decade of China-ASEAN relations. This is a policy proclamation of the new Chinese government on the development of China-ASEAN relations in the forthcoming decade and has received active response from leaders of ASEAN countries.
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2
ID:   183924


Win-win’ contested: negotiating the privatisation of Africa's Freedom Railway with the ‘Chinese of today / Tim Zajontz   Journal Article
Tim Zajontz Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract As infrastructure development has become a key ingredient in Africa–China relations, the role of African governments in co-determining the design, funding and governance of the continent's infrastructures has come under close scrutiny. This article sheds light on the rehabilitation of a symbol of Sino–African friendship: the Tanzania–Zambia Railway Authority (TAZARA). Employing Jessop's strategic-relational approach, it is shown that the strategies of the shareholding governments in the negotiations with a Chinese consortium were informed by strategic learning from previous railway privatisations, corresponding cost–benefit analyses and reflection about Chinese commercial interests. Zambia's indebtedness and Tanzania's autocratic developmental state under President Magufuli formed crucial elements of the structural context in which the fate of Africa's Freedom Railway was negotiated. The article transcends both crudely structuralist accounts of a supposedly all-powerful China and voluntarist conceptions of African agency that are void of structure. Assessing (African) agency requires analytical sensitivity towards the dialectical interaction between specific strategic capacities and strategically selective political–economic contexts.
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