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Fuelling the Dragon: China's Rise and Its Energy and Resources Extraction in Africa*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 September 2009
Abstract
China's rapidly expanding role in Africa as an energy and resource extractor reveals much of the dynamics and complexities of its growing ties with the continent. Rather than studying the subject in the framework of bilateral interactions, as most existing literature does, this article explores the impact of China's domestic development process on the behaviour of Chinese foreign policy and business operations in Africa. Based on the author's extensive field research in Africa and China, the article argues that much of what the Chinese government, Chinese companies and individual entrepreneurs are doing today in Africa is an externalization of China's own modernization experiences in the past three decades. China's interactions with African countries are reflective of its own development contradictions, and major patterns of Chinese behavour in Africa can be attributed to complex motivations and objectives of the actors involved.
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References
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34 Author's interview with a CEO of Chinese firm based in South Africa with operations in both Angola and Zimbabwe. Johannesburg, South Africa, 13 September 2008.
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36 “International society should help Darfur people as China has: Sudan ambassador,” Xinhua News Agency, 20 March 2008.
37 Ibid.
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54 According to data complied by the author.
55 Chinese NGOs are still weak and their existence is dependent on the approval of the state apparatus. They are normally registered as part of an institutional attachment to a government body. And the NGO developments in Africa are very uneven. Although in Gabon NGOs play a strong role, the same cannot be said for DRC or many other African states.
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57 See for example, Christoher Burke, Lucy Corkin and Nastasya Tay, “China's engagement of Africa: preliminary scoping of African case studies. Angola, Ethiopia, Gabon, Uganda, South Africa, Zambia,” research undertaking prepared for the Rockefeller Foundation, Centre for Chinese Studies, Stellenbosch University, 2007, p. 95.
58 Author's interview, 18 September 2008, Libreville.
59 Author's interview, 18 September and interview by the author's research team member, 22 September 2008, Libreville.
60 Author's interview, 18 September 2008, Libreville. For more information on EITI, visit the initiative's website at: http://eitransparency.org.
61 Author's interview, 18 September 2008, Libreville.
62 Interview by the author's research team member, 23 September 2008, Libreville.
63 Interview by the author's research team member, 23 September 2008, Libreville.
64 Ian Verrender, “The resources boom that fuelled prosperity is now a bust,” Sydney Morning Herald, 9 December 2008; “The commodity super cycle isn't looking so super these days,” Business Day (South Africa), 30 August 2008.
65 These observations are derived from the author's interviews with Chinese policy makers and academics since 2006.
66 See Jiang, Wenran, “China's emerging strategic partnership in Africa” “Chinese inroads in DR Congo: a Chinese ‘Marshall plan’ or business?” China Brief, Vol. 9, No. 1 (2009)Google Scholar. See also Tables 1, 4 and 5 in this article.
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