With the pace of trade and investment picking up, coupled with closer international cooperation with Beijing through the G20, FOCAC and BRICS grouping, South Africa-China ties are assuming a significant position in continental and even global affairs. At the same time, it is a relationship of paradoxes, breaking with many of the assumptions that underpin contemporary analyses of ‘China-Africa’ ties. This edited volume examines the South Africa-China relationship through a survey of its diplomatic partnership, economic ties, and broader community relations. These important aspects that are often conflated as a single relationship, yet what is important to explore are how these components reflect different China-South Africa relationship(s), and how they intersect.
Jadual kandungan
Chapter 1. Introduction.- Chapter 2. Explaining South Africa’s China Choice.- Chapter 3. Leadership, global agendas and domestic determinants of South Africa’s foreign policy towards China: the Zuma and Ramaphosa years.- Chapter 4. South Africa-China Relations of Seven Decades (1949-2019): Review and Reflection.- Chapter 5. The Political Economy of South Africa-China Trade and Economic Relations.- Chapter 6. Manufacturing for intra-Africa trade: a focused response to China’s dominant position in Africa for South Africa.- Chapter 7. Behind the Headlines: Chinese Media Engagement in South Africa.- Chapter 8. South Africa’s Special Economic Zones as destinations for Chinese investment: Problems and possibilities.- Chapter 9. The Drive For Investment in South Africa: Does Chinese Agro-investment Differ In The Country Compared To Elsewhere On The Continent? .- Chapter 10. Chinese and South African Labour Relations: An Analysis.- Chapter 11. The Role of Culture and Education in South Africa-China relations.- Chapter 12. South Africa’s Chinese Communities: An Update.- Chapter 13. The Chinese community and the search for security.- Chapter 14. Melting Point – A personal essay by Ufrieda Ho.
Mengenai Pengarang
Chris Alden is Professor in International Relations at the LSE and Director of LSE-IDEAS. He is a Senior Research Associate with the South African Institute of International Affairs and a Research Associate with the Department of Political Sciences, University of Pretoria.
Yu-Shan Wu is NIHSS Postdoctoral Research Fellow, University of Pretoria, South Africa.