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Westward ho—the China dream and ‘one belt, one road’: Chinese foreign policy under Xi Jinping

Peter Ferdinand
- 01 Jul 2016 - 
- Vol. 92, Iss: 4, pp 941-957
TLDR
For example, the one belt, one road (one-one-road) initiative as discussed by the authors aims to expand land and maritime transport links between China and Europe, and if successful, it will transform economic relations across large parts of Eurasia.
Abstract
China's domestic politics and foreign policy have evolved considerably under President Xi Jinping. Domestically the regime has actively promoted the idea of the ‘China dream’ to restore optimism and enthusiasm about its future, particularly among young people. Yet it has also sought to differentiate the socialist China dream from any resemblance to the American dream. Its main emphasis is on making China ‘strong and powerful’ again. In foreign policy, the leadership has become more active. While China has pursued a more robust policy in the South China Sea, it has also launched two extremely ambitious long-term projects to expand land and maritime transport links between China and Europe, termed the ‘one belt, one road’ initiative. They aim to promote development of western China, but if successful, they should also help to transform economic relations across large parts of Eurasia. In geopolitical terms, they will expand China's shadow over regions of the world where hitherto its presence has been relatively modest. They should strengthen links with Europe, as well as with other countries along the routes, to counterbalance potentially conflictual relations with the US. However, success will require active and enthusiastic cooperation from many neighbours. For that reason the risks are as great as the ambition.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Factors Affecting the Trade Dependence Relationship of Asian Countries with China: Implications for China’s Belt and Road Initiative

TL;DR: In this paper, the impact of the Belt and Road Initiative (B&R) on the degree of trade dependence in Asia has been investigated and four national characteristics, including income levels, geographical location characteristics, social development levels and intimacy with China, have been analyzed.
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China and Bollywood: The Potential for Building the World’s Largest Film Market

TL;DR: In this article, the authors analyze publicly available box office data focusing on the expanding market of Indian films in China, then review the explanations often given for the rise of Chinese interest in Indian cinema, concluding that the high Chinese box office returns reported in the media potentially challenges previous findings linking diasporic enclaves and potential overseas profits.
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“Silk Road here we come”: Infrastructural myths, post-disaster politics, and the shifting urban geographies of Nepal

TL;DR: In this article , the authors explain how China's Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) drives urban transformation in Nepal reconfiguring geopolitical and geoeconomic relations and remaking the sociopolitical, cultural and material fabric of hitherto peripheral spaces.
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Political discourse analysis in operation: Belt and Road Summit coverage through translation

TL;DR: In this article, the authors address the questions of how the summits were covered in translated news by using empirical data from news published on the Reference News, a state-owned newspaper that publishes translated news, in comparison to news carried in People's Daily, an authoritative national newspaper in China.
Book ChapterDOI

The Belt and Road Initiative and China’s Relations with Iran and Saudi Arabia: A Delicate Balancing Act

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss China's bilateral energy, trade, political, and security ties with Iran and Saudi Arabia and assess the current dynamics of China's relations with these two countries.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Reclassifying Chinese Nationalism: the geopolitik turn

TL;DR: The authors assesses the rise of China by exploring a number of recent popular Chinese political texts to go beyond explanations that take the international system as the level of analysis, and propose that a merging of nationalism and geopolitical thinking is taking place, resulting in the emergence of a new form of nationalism that can be categorised as "geopolitik nationalism" because it deploys many of the themes evident in the political thought of Germany and Japan before the two world wars.
Journal ArticleDOI

China's "new" silk road.

TL;DR: Promise or peril for health, development, and human rights?
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China’s ‘One Belt One Road’ Strategy: Opportunity Or Challenge For India?

TL;DR: In this paper, the strategic implications of the One Belt One Road (OBOR) strategic implications for India are examined, and the implications need to be considered within the framework of the future development of the China...
Journal ArticleDOI

Michael Pillsbury. The Hundred-Year Marathon: China's Secret Strategy to Replace America as the Global Superpower

Jeremy Garlick
- 15 Oct 2015 - 
TL;DR: The central thesis of this polemical book (that the People's Republic of China (PRC) has a long-term secret plan to replace the USA as the global hegemon) immediately reminds one of a number of oth...
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