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Palgrave Macmillan

Competition and Compromise among Chinese Actors in Africa

A Bureaucratic Politics Study of Chinese Foreign Policy Actors

  • Book
  • © 2020

Overview

  • Explores China's foreign policy in relation to Africa
  • Differentiates between different foreign policy actors and explains their motives
  • Theorizes on the significance of a rising China in Africa

Part of the book series: Governing China in the 21st Century (GC21)

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Table of contents (10 chapters)

Keywords

About this book

This book explains why conflict exists among Chinese foreign-policy actors in Africa and argues against the concept that China has a grand strategy in relation to Africa. It does so by examining Sino-African relations by focusing on how China’s Africa policy is constructed and implemented concluding that a large number of actors are active in its formulation and implementation. The book argues that China’s Hegemonic Political Discourse (HPD), the goal of achieving a Harmonious Society and later the Chinese Dream through the Scientific Concept of Development, has dominated Chinese political discourse. It is this HPD that acts as the structural imperative that allows for collective action in the Chinese foreign-policy process in Africa rather than a Chinese grand strategy since the actors are unwilling to break the social norms of the collective process for fear of exclusion. 

This book will be of great interest to China watchers and those eager to understand how China's rise will impact the developing world.  



Authors and Affiliations

  • University College Cork, Republic of Ireland, Ireland

    Niall Duggan

About the author

Niall Duggan is a lecturer in the Department of Government and Politics at University College Cork, He was the Acting-Chair of Modern Chinese Society and Economy at Georg-August-Universität Göttingen and lecturer at the Institute of East Asian Politics, Ruhr Universität Bochum.

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