Chinas belt and road vision: geoeconomics and geopolitics
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Cham
Springer
[2020]
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Schriftenreihe: | Global power shift
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Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | xx, 330 Seiten |
ISBN: | 9783030362430 |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | Contents 1 Introduction................................................................................................. 1.1 Beijing’s Belt and Road Initiative................................................... 1.2 The Initiative Triggers a Polarising Discourse................................. 1.3 A Schizophrenic Response to China’s ‘National Rejuvenation’...................................................................... References...................................................................................................... 1 2 3 2 Fear Factor: Strategists Versus Bankers................................................. 2.1 Xi Jinping’s ‘New Silk Road’.......................................................... 2.2 Belt and Road Initiative’s Basic Design.......................................... 2.3 Conflicting Perspectives ................................................................... 2.3.1 China-Rooted Angst............................................................... 2.3.2 A Darkening Landscape........................................................ 2.3.3 Warriors to the Fore............................................................... 2.3.4 The Butter Versus Guns Argument..................................... 2.4 The Bankers’ View............................................................................. 2.4.1 The Asian Development Bank Perspective.......................... 2.4.2 The United Nations Vision................................................... 2.5 Belt and Road Initiative’s Adversarial Strategic Backdrop............ 2.5.1 Beltway-
Zhongnanhai Dialectics ........................................ 2.5.2 Polarisation Cemented.......................................................... 2.5.3 Belt and Road Initiative’s Hostile Landscape..................... References...................................................................................................... 11 11 16 19 20 25 28 32 35 40 42 45 45 50 53 56 3 China’s Belt and Road: An Evolving Network..................................... 3.1 A ‘New Silk Road’ Emerges............................................................ 3.2 The Silk Road Economic Belt’s Accretive Evolution ................... 3.3 Eurasia’s Post-Soviet Coalescence................................................... 3.4 The ‘Shanghai Spirit’ Paradigm........................................................ 3.5 Beijing’s Regional Developmental Drivers..................................... 69 69 72 74 78 85 5 8
xii Contents 3.6 3.7 3.8 Ьг the Great Recession’s Wake........................................................ Xi Jinping’s ‘New Era’ of Reform and Opening-up..................... The Silk Road Economic Belt’s Longitudinal Spurs..................... 3.8.1 The Lancang-Mekong Economic Corridor.......................... 3.8.2 The Bangladesh-China-India-Myanmar Economic Corridor.................................................................................. 3.8.3 The Balkan Silk Road........................................................... References....................................................................................................... 89 94 97 98 103 Ill 114 4 East Meets West: BRI’s Eclectic Origins................................................ 4.1 The New Silk Road’s United Nations-Driven Germination......... 4.2 US Visionaries Imagine a New Silk Road..................................... 4.3 Brussels Builds a Trans-Eurasian ‘Land-bridge’............................ 4.4 Multinationals Revive the Silk Road............................................... 4.5 The World Bank Pushes China’s Global Integration..................... 4.6 Japan and the US Proclaim New Silk Road Visions..................... 4.6.1 Tokyo Thinks up the New Silk Road................................. 4.6.2 Washington’s New Silk Road Proposal.............................. 4.6.3 The US’ Lower Mekong Initiative ...................................... References....................................................................................................... 123 123 130 134 137 144 150
150 158 164 167 5 Case Study 1: The China-Pakistan Economic Corridor..................... 175 5.1 China-Pakistan Economic Corridor, a Belt and Road ‘Flagship’............................................................................................. 175 5.2 China-Pakistan Economic Corridor Deepens Threat Perceptions........................................................................................... 182 5.2.1 India’s Critique of the Corridor............................................. 182 5.2.2 Western Anxiety.................................................................... 185 5.3 China-Pakistan Economic Corridor’s ‘Long-Term Plan’.............. 188 5.3.1 Connectivity.......................................................................... 190 5.3.2 Energy.................................................................................... 191 5.3.3 Trade and Industry.................................................................. 191 5.3.4 Agricultural Development and Poverty Alleviation............ 192 5.3.5 Tourism.................................................................................... 192 5.3.6 People’s Livelihood and Non-governmental Exchanges................................................................................ 193 5.3.7 Financial Cooperation............................................................. 193 5.4 The Corridor’s Investment and Financing Mechanisms................ 194 5.5 The Corridor s Projects in Pakistan................................................. 195 5.5.1 Energy
Projects...................................................................... 195 5.5.2 Major Infrastructure Projects................................................. 196 5.5.3 Mass-Transit Rail Projects.................................................... 197
Contents хш 5.5.4 Special Economic Zones........................................................ 5.5.5 Social Sector Development Projects................................... 5.5.6 Other Major Projects............................................................ 5.6 The Corridor’s Early Harvest Projects............................................ 5.6.1 Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Province............................................ 5.6.2 Punjab Province...................................................................... 5.6.3 Sindh Province...................................................................... 5.6.4 Balochistan Province............................................................ 5.6.5 Additional ‘New Projects’ ................................................... 5.7 The China-Pakistan Economic Corridor’s Terminal Challenges....................... 5.7.1 The Corridor’s Karakoram Highway-Rooted Beginnings............................................................................. 5.7.2 Gwadar’s Evolutionary Emergence..................................... 5.7.3 Gwadar’s Chinese-Funded Projects..................................... 5.8 The USA’s Corridor Critique............................................................. 5.9 China-Pakistan Economic Corridor’s Geopolitical Ecology......... 5.9.1 The Corridor’s Multi-layered Implications.......................... 5.9.2 Preliminary Questions.......................................................... 5.9.3 First-Order Analytical Issues................................................. 5.9.4 Second-Order Analytical
Issues............................................ 5.9.5 Third-Order Analytical Issues............................................... 5.9.6 Fourth-Order Analytical Issues............................................ 5.10 The Corridor’s Insecurity Challenges............................................... References...................................................................................................... 197 198 198 198 199 199 199 200 200 6 Case Study 2: The Twenty-First Century Maritime Silk Road......... 6.1 Maritime Silk Road Deepens Anxiety............................................ 6.2 Naval Dynamics................................................................................. 6.2.1 Djibouti Base Jitters............................................................... 6.2.2 Commercial Rationales and Strategic Mistrust................... 6.2.3 Duqm Dramatics.................................................................... 6.3 Clashing Perspectives, Purposes and Narratives............................ 6.3.1 The Chinese Framework..................................... 6.3.2 Maritime History as a Mirror............................................... 6.3.3 Hambantota Histrionics........................................................ 6.3.4 Maldives Malarkey ............................................................... 6.3.5 Maritime Silk Road’s Malaysian Misadventure................. 6.4 The Quad’s ‘Free and Open’ Countermoves................................... 6.4.1 Geoeconomics Reinforce Geopolitics ................................. 6.4.2 A Quadrilateral
Maritime Focus.......................................... 231 231 235 235 238 241 243 244 247 249 252 257 259 260 264 200 201 205 208 210 213 214 215 215 216 217 217 218 223
Contents XIV 7 6.4.3 Quad-China Competition in Bangladesh............................ 6.4.4 The Indian Ocean Region’s Big Guns................................. 6.5 Maritime Silk Road’s Insecure Origins.............................................. References....................... 265 270 271 276 Conclusion.................................................................................................... 7.1 The Belt and Road Initiative’s Volatile Strategic Backdrop......... 7.1.1 Economic Outcomes ............................................................. 7.1.2 The Geopolitics of Geoeconomics........................................ 7.1.3 Dialogue de Sourds............................................................... 7.2 Empiricism’s Rational Sobriety........................................................ 7.2.1 The Continuity and Disruptions Marking Xi’s China .... 7.2.2 Beijing’s Insecurity Angst.................................................... 7.2.3 Belt-and-Road’s Dialectic Dynamics................................... 7.3 Concluding Observations.................................................................... 7.3.1 Displacement Anxiety and Terminal Fears.......................... 7.3.2 The Belt and Road Initiative in the Systemic Context.... 7.3.3 The Outlook........................................................................... References....................................................................................................... 291 291 292 294 296 299 300 302 305 307 308 312 315 320 Index 325
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adam_txt |
Contents 1 Introduction. 1.1 Beijing’s Belt and Road Initiative. 1.2 The Initiative Triggers a Polarising Discourse. 1.3 A Schizophrenic Response to China’s ‘National Rejuvenation’. References. 1 2 3 2 Fear Factor: Strategists Versus Bankers. 2.1 Xi Jinping’s ‘New Silk Road’. 2.2 Belt and Road Initiative’s Basic Design. 2.3 Conflicting Perspectives . 2.3.1 China-Rooted Angst. 2.3.2 A Darkening Landscape. 2.3.3 Warriors to the Fore. 2.3.4 The Butter Versus Guns Argument. 2.4 The Bankers’ View. 2.4.1 The Asian Development Bank Perspective. 2.4.2 The United Nations Vision. 2.5 Belt and Road Initiative’s Adversarial Strategic Backdrop. 2.5.1 Beltway-
Zhongnanhai Dialectics . 2.5.2 Polarisation Cemented. 2.5.3 Belt and Road Initiative’s Hostile Landscape. References. 11 11 16 19 20 25 28 32 35 40 42 45 45 50 53 56 3 China’s Belt and Road: An Evolving Network. 3.1 A ‘New Silk Road’ Emerges. 3.2 The Silk Road Economic Belt’s Accretive Evolution . 3.3 Eurasia’s Post-Soviet Coalescence. 3.4 The ‘Shanghai Spirit’ Paradigm. 3.5 Beijing’s Regional Developmental Drivers. 69 69 72 74 78 85 5 8
xii Contents 3.6 3.7 3.8 Ьг the Great Recession’s Wake. Xi Jinping’s ‘New Era’ of Reform and Opening-up. The Silk Road Economic Belt’s Longitudinal Spurs. 3.8.1 The Lancang-Mekong Economic Corridor. 3.8.2 The Bangladesh-China-India-Myanmar Economic Corridor. 3.8.3 The Balkan Silk Road. References. 89 94 97 98 103 Ill 114 4 East Meets West: BRI’s Eclectic Origins. 4.1 The New Silk Road’s United Nations-Driven Germination. 4.2 US Visionaries Imagine a New Silk Road. 4.3 Brussels Builds a Trans-Eurasian ‘Land-bridge’. 4.4 Multinationals Revive the Silk Road. 4.5 The World Bank Pushes China’s Global Integration. 4.6 Japan and the US Proclaim New Silk Road Visions. 4.6.1 Tokyo Thinks up the New Silk Road. 4.6.2 Washington’s New Silk Road Proposal. 4.6.3 The US’ Lower Mekong Initiative . References. 123 123 130 134 137 144 150
150 158 164 167 5 Case Study 1: The China-Pakistan Economic Corridor. 175 5.1 China-Pakistan Economic Corridor, a Belt and Road ‘Flagship’. 175 5.2 China-Pakistan Economic Corridor Deepens Threat Perceptions. 182 5.2.1 India’s Critique of the Corridor. 182 5.2.2 Western Anxiety. 185 5.3 China-Pakistan Economic Corridor’s ‘Long-Term Plan’. 188 5.3.1 Connectivity. 190 5.3.2 Energy. 191 5.3.3 Trade and Industry. 191 5.3.4 Agricultural Development and Poverty Alleviation. 192 5.3.5 Tourism. 192 5.3.6 People’s Livelihood and Non-governmental Exchanges. 193 5.3.7 Financial Cooperation. 193 5.4 The Corridor’s Investment and Financing Mechanisms. 194 5.5 The Corridor's Projects in Pakistan. 195 5.5.1 Energy
Projects. 195 5.5.2 Major Infrastructure Projects. 196 5.5.3 Mass-Transit Rail Projects. 197
Contents хш 5.5.4 Special Economic Zones. 5.5.5 Social Sector Development Projects. 5.5.6 Other Major Projects. 5.6 The Corridor’s Early Harvest Projects. 5.6.1 Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Province. 5.6.2 Punjab Province. 5.6.3 Sindh Province. 5.6.4 Balochistan Province. 5.6.5 Additional ‘New Projects’ . 5.7 The China-Pakistan Economic Corridor’s Terminal Challenges. 5.7.1 The Corridor’s Karakoram Highway-Rooted Beginnings. 5.7.2 Gwadar’s Evolutionary Emergence. 5.7.3 Gwadar’s Chinese-Funded Projects. 5.8 The USA’s Corridor Critique. 5.9 China-Pakistan Economic Corridor’s Geopolitical Ecology. 5.9.1 The Corridor’s Multi-layered Implications. 5.9.2 Preliminary Questions. 5.9.3 First-Order Analytical Issues. 5.9.4 Second-Order Analytical
Issues. 5.9.5 Third-Order Analytical Issues. 5.9.6 Fourth-Order Analytical Issues. 5.10 The Corridor’s Insecurity Challenges. References. 197 198 198 198 199 199 199 200 200 6 Case Study 2: The Twenty-First Century Maritime Silk Road. 6.1 Maritime Silk Road Deepens Anxiety. 6.2 Naval Dynamics. 6.2.1 Djibouti Base Jitters. 6.2.2 Commercial Rationales and Strategic Mistrust. 6.2.3 Duqm Dramatics. 6.3 Clashing Perspectives, Purposes and Narratives. 6.3.1 The Chinese Framework. 6.3.2 Maritime History as a Mirror. 6.3.3 Hambantota Histrionics. 6.3.4 Maldives Malarkey . 6.3.5 Maritime Silk Road’s Malaysian Misadventure. 6.4 The Quad’s ‘Free and Open’ Countermoves. 6.4.1 Geoeconomics Reinforce Geopolitics . 6.4.2 A Quadrilateral
Maritime Focus. 231 231 235 235 238 241 243 244 247 249 252 257 259 260 264 200 201 205 208 210 213 214 215 215 216 217 217 218 223
Contents XIV 7 6.4.3 Quad-China Competition in Bangladesh. 6.4.4 The Indian Ocean Region’s Big Guns. 6.5 Maritime Silk Road’s Insecure Origins. References. 265 270 271 276 Conclusion. 7.1 The Belt and Road Initiative’s Volatile Strategic Backdrop. 7.1.1 Economic Outcomes . 7.1.2 The Geopolitics of Geoeconomics. 7.1.3 Dialogue de Sourds. 7.2 Empiricism’s Rational Sobriety. 7.2.1 The Continuity and Disruptions Marking Xi’s China . 7.2.2 Beijing’s Insecurity Angst. 7.2.3 Belt-and-Road’s Dialectic Dynamics. 7.3 Concluding Observations. 7.3.1 Displacement Anxiety and Terminal Fears. 7.3.2 The Belt and Road Initiative in the Systemic Context. 7.3.3 The Outlook. References. 291 291 292 294 296 299 300 302 305 307 308 312 315 320 Index 325 |
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series2 | Global power shift |
spelling | Ali, Syed Mahmud 1952- Verfasser (DE-588)13700933X aut Chinas belt and road vision geoeconomics and geopolitics S. Mahmud Ali Cham Springer [2020] xx, 330 Seiten txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Global power shift Security, International AsiaPolitics and government Economic geography AsiaEconomic conditions Economic development Diplomacy Außenwirtschaftspolitik (DE-588)4003857-9 gnd rswk-swf Geopolitik (DE-588)4156741-9 gnd rswk-swf Geldpolitik (DE-588)4019902-2 gnd rswk-swf One-Belt-One-Road-Initiative (DE-588)1177403080 gnd rswk-swf China (DE-588)4009937-4 gnd rswk-swf China (DE-588)4009937-4 g Geldpolitik (DE-588)4019902-2 s One-Belt-One-Road-Initiative (DE-588)1177403080 s DE-604 Außenwirtschaftspolitik (DE-588)4003857-9 s Geopolitik (DE-588)4156741-9 s 1\p DE-604 Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe 978-3-030-36244-7 Digitalisierung UB Regensburg - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=032040534&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis 1\p cgwrk 20201028 DE-101 https://d-nb.info/provenance/plan#cgwrk |
spellingShingle | Ali, Syed Mahmud 1952- Chinas belt and road vision geoeconomics and geopolitics Security, International AsiaPolitics and government Economic geography AsiaEconomic conditions Economic development Diplomacy Außenwirtschaftspolitik (DE-588)4003857-9 gnd Geopolitik (DE-588)4156741-9 gnd Geldpolitik (DE-588)4019902-2 gnd One-Belt-One-Road-Initiative (DE-588)1177403080 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4003857-9 (DE-588)4156741-9 (DE-588)4019902-2 (DE-588)1177403080 (DE-588)4009937-4 |
title | Chinas belt and road vision geoeconomics and geopolitics |
title_auth | Chinas belt and road vision geoeconomics and geopolitics |
title_exact_search | Chinas belt and road vision geoeconomics and geopolitics |
title_exact_search_txtP | Chinas belt and road vision geoeconomics and geopolitics |
title_full | Chinas belt and road vision geoeconomics and geopolitics S. Mahmud Ali |
title_fullStr | Chinas belt and road vision geoeconomics and geopolitics S. Mahmud Ali |
title_full_unstemmed | Chinas belt and road vision geoeconomics and geopolitics S. Mahmud Ali |
title_short | Chinas belt and road vision |
title_sort | chinas belt and road vision geoeconomics and geopolitics |
title_sub | geoeconomics and geopolitics |
topic | Security, International AsiaPolitics and government Economic geography AsiaEconomic conditions Economic development Diplomacy Außenwirtschaftspolitik (DE-588)4003857-9 gnd Geopolitik (DE-588)4156741-9 gnd Geldpolitik (DE-588)4019902-2 gnd One-Belt-One-Road-Initiative (DE-588)1177403080 gnd |
topic_facet | Security, International AsiaPolitics and government Economic geography AsiaEconomic conditions Economic development Diplomacy Außenwirtschaftspolitik Geopolitik Geldpolitik One-Belt-One-Road-Initiative China |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=032040534&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT alisyedmahmud chinasbeltandroadvisiongeoeconomicsandgeopolitics |