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DITTGEN, ROMAIN (3) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   170745


(Un)writing “Chinese space” in urban Africa: of city-making, lived experiences, and entangled processes / Dittgen, Romain; Chungu, Gerald   Journal Article
Dittgen, Romain Journal Article
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Key Words Africa  China  Space  Foreign Relations 
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2
ID:   137195


Of other spaces: hybrid forms of Chinese engagement in Sub-Saharan Africa / Dittgen, Romain   Article
Dittgen, Romain Article
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Summary/Abstract Chinese economic activities in Africa have gained increased visibility in parallel to the recent acceleration of Sino-African relations. This paper, which is framed from a geographical perspective that is often absent or neglected in studies covering China–Africa, focuses on the spatial forms and dynamics. It depicts the way in which two contrasting Chinese economic entities – a state-owned company in Chad and privately owned commercial malls in Johannesburg, South Africa – engage with their respective host environments. While drawing on concepts of “liminality” as well as “heterotopias”, I argue that the modalities of the Chinese footprint are characterised both by closure and interaction, creating a dynamic tension that produces its own set of unique practices. This ambivalence between enclave and active linkages with host societies is not only perceivable from a spatial point of view, but also emerges with regard to economic strategies. In the midst of a transitional period, along with a launching and a consolidating phase, the Chinese economic entities in both case studies show signs of change in terms of behaviour and territorial foothold.
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3
ID:   137196


Of other spaces: hybrid forms of Chinese engagement in Sub-Saharan Africa / Dittgen, Romain   Article
Dittgen, Romain Article
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Summary/Abstract Chinese economic activities in Africa have gained increased visibility in parallel to the recent acceleration of Sino-African relations. This paper, which is framed from a geographical perspective that is often absent or neglected in studies covering China–Africa, focuses on the spatial forms and dynamics. It depicts the way in which two contrasting Chinese economic entities – a state-owned company in Chad and privately owned commercial malls in Johannesburg, South Africa – engage with their respective host environments. While drawing on concepts of “liminality” as well as “heterotopias”, I argue that the modalities of the Chinese footprint are characterised both by closure and interaction, creating a dynamic tension that produces its own set of unique practices. This ambivalence between enclave and active linkages with host societies is not only perceivable from a spatial point of view, but also emerges with regard to economic strategies. In the midst of a transitional period, along with a launching and a consolidating phase, the Chinese economic entities in both case studies show signs of change in terms of behaviour and territorial foothold.
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