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China’s foray
into Africa: Ideational underpinnings and geoeconomic
interests
Chaldeans Mensah
Grant
MacEwan University, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.
E-mail:
Mensahc@macewan.ca.
Accepted 18 February, 2010 |
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China’s new foreign policy stance in Africa is a marked
departure from its previous emphasis on purely ideational
principles designed to strengthen its standing as a
supporter of the Third World. The ideational affinity with
Africa has not changed in China’s foreign policy discourse,
but the new emphasis is on an aggressive pursuit of its
geoeconomic and geopolitical interests on the continent,
marked by an acquisitive impulse for Africa’s natural
resources and a concerted effort to offer political support
to its allies in Africa to secure those resources in an
uncertain post bipolar international system. This paper
explores the transformation of China’s African policy,
ideationally, from the Bandung principles to the Beijing
Consensus, while noting the geoeconomic and geopolitical
motivations behind China’s engagement with Africa as it
cements its position as an emerging global power. The paper
concludes that despite the presumed coincidence of interests
and ideational affinity that formed the basis of pre-Deng
China-Africa relations, China’s new geoeconomic and
geopolitical engagement represents a major pathway for the
continent, but serious steps must be taken to harness the
relationship to ensure that it fulfils Africa’s desire to
pursue a sustainable development agenda that moves it away
from overdependence on commodity exports and marginality in
the global economy. A version of this paper was presented in
July 2008 at the Second Global Studies Conference in
Ljubljana, Slovenia.
Key words:
Beijing consensus, geoeconomics, geopolitics, hard power,
natural resources, soft power, South-South cooperation. |