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Searching with a thematic focus on Rising powers in international development, Rising powers business and private sector in China

Showing 91-100 of 206 results

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  • Document

    China’s hunger for U.S. planes and cars: assessing the risks

    U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission, 2014
    Contrary to many other industries, which now view China more as a consumer market than an export platform, the reverse appears to be occurring in the auto sector.
  • Document

    Chinese engagement in Africa: drivers, reactions, and implications for U.S. Policy

    RAND Corporation, 2014
    Most 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.
  • Document

    Sino-Indian economic dialogue- global business plan for an Asian century

    Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies, India, 2012
    India and China share a complicated relationship with diverse strands. There is the long civilizational connection built from the time of the Buddha. Then there is the more ominous overhang from the 1962 conflict, which has left a trail of hurt, anger and suspicion, especially in India.
  • Document

    Chinese migration in Africa

    South African Institute of International Affairs, 2009
    With all the scholarly and media interest in the China/Africa relationship of late, it is somewhat surprising that so little has been written about Chinese migrants in Africa. What little is published in media reports often presents the Chinese in increasingly confusing, inaccurate and negative ways.
  • Document

    China in the African solar energy sector

    South African Institute of International Affairs, 2009
    Access to reliable and affordable electricity is critical for poverty alleviation and the improvement of livelihoods, including in the areas of education, health, and industrial development in Africa.  However, a combination of factors, such as climate change, insufficient investments, slowness to adopt energy efficiency measures and renewable energy sources and damage due to war and confl
  • Document

    Chinese investment in African Free Trade Zones: lessons from Nigeria’s experience

    2009
    Nigeria’s free trade zone (FTZ) legislation has been in place for 17 years, but progress in implementation has been uneven and slow. The main FTZ in which Chinese companies play a significant role is the Lekki Free Trade Zone (LFTZ), where work began in 2006.
  • Document

    Chinese development co-operation in Africa: the case of Tembisa's Friendship Town

    South African Institute of International Affairs, 2009
    Chinese 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.
  • Document

    Strategic Partnerships: the European Union's quest for global clout

    South African Institute of International Affairs, 2009
    The European Union (EU) has revisited many of its external policies with the view to strengthen its relations with strategic partners in the developing world, and to boost its visibility as a pivotal political actor on the global stage.
  • Document

    China and Africa's natural resources: the challenges and implications for development and governance

    South African Institute of International Affairs, 2009
    China’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.
  • Document

    Chinese business interests and banking in Nigeria

    South African Institute of International Affairs, 2010
    China and Nigeria have extensive economic links covering a broad range of sectors from construction and retailing to manufacturing and oil production. Indeed, the impact of China is easily discernible in many aspects of Nigeria’s socio-economic life.

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