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Searching with a thematic focus on Trade Policy, Regional Trade in China
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Sino-Indian economic dialogue: from bilateral trade to srategic partnership
Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies, India, 2012This paper is a conference report the IPCS India-China Relations Conference held in February 2012. The main discussions focused on economic cooperation and bilateral trade. Some Policy Recommendations Include:DocumentChinese engagement in Africa: drivers, reactions, and implications for U.S. Policy
RAND Corporation, 2014Most analyses of Chinese engagement with African nations focus on what China gets out of these partnerships—primarily natural resources and export markets to fuel its burgeoning economy, and agricultural products to feed its increasingly urbanised population.DocumentAlternative strategies towards China: charting India’s course for the next decade
Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies, India, 2011Sino-Indian bilateral ties at the start of the 21st century saw the two sides announcing rapid growth of their economic interactions, and claiming that economic imperatives would be the new driver in their relationship. However, that approach have proved little success up to now.DocumentChinese development co-operation in Africa: the case of Tembisa's Friendship Town
South African Institute of International Affairs, 2009Chinese development co-operation in Africa has invoked both admiration and criticism, much of it based on limited empirical or anecdotal evidence, contributing to conflicting perceptions as to its purpose, means and outcomes.DocumentChina and Africa's natural resources: the challenges and implications for development and governance
South African Institute of International Affairs, 2009China’s energy concerns have been playing an increasingly crucial role in its foreign policymaking in the new century. This paper proposes to analyse China’s growing engagement in Africa’s mineral sector and assess its impact on local governance.DocumentThe oil factor in Sino–Angolan relations at the start of the 21st Century
South African Institute of International Affairs, 2010Even though trade figures are the most impressive feature of Sino–Angolan bilateral relations after 2002, the main reason why China’s engagement in Angola has been attracting so much attention from scholars, the media and politicians is the fact that its presence in Angola is most evident in the sectors that have been driving Angola’s rapid economic growth in recent years, whiDocumentAid to Africa: What can the EU and China learn from each other?
South African Institute of International Affairs, 2010With China’s increasing role in Africa, the issue of aid to Africa has been high on the China–EU agenda and the subject of considerable debate. This occasional paper focuses on one area of potential co-operation, i.e.DocumentDevelopment aid for infrastructure investment in Africa: Malian relations with China, the European Commission and the World Bank
South African Institute of International Affairs, 2010In a widely publicised declaration of co-operation (February 2009), the government of China pledged to build a third bridge in Bamako, the capital of Mali. Construction commenced soon afterwards.DocumentElephants, ats and superpowers: Nigeria’s relations with China
South African Institute of International Affairs, 2009Analysis of China’s relations with Africa has often been generalised, yet these relations vary considerably across the continent, suggesting the need for greater attention to the specificities of each case. This paper considers economic and political relations between China and Nigeria.DocumentThe myth and reality of Chinese investors: a case study of Chinese investment in Zambia's copper industry
2010In any attempt to analyse the implications of Chinese foreign direct investment (FDI) for African countries, Zambia is the example par excellence, its historical relationship with China and its ever-increasing economic ties with the emerging power being the main reasons for this.Pages
