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      China’s Belt and Road Initiative: Views from the ground

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          Abstract

          The Chinese government promotes the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) as a global strategy for regional integration and infrastructure investment. With a projected US$1 trillion commitment from Chinese financial institutions, and at least 138 countries participating, the BRI is attracting intense debate. Yet most analysis to date focuses on broad drivers, risks, and opportunities, largely considered to be emanating from a coherent policy imposed by Beijing. In this special issue, we instead examine the BRI as a relational, contested process - a bundle of intertwined discourses, policies, and projects that sometimes align but are sometimes contradictory. We move beyond policy-level, macro-economic, and classic geopolitical analysis to study China's global investments “from the ground”. Our case studies reveal the BRI to be dynamic and unstable, rhetorically appropriated for different purposes that sometimes but do not always coalesce as a coherent geopolitical and geoeconomic strategy. The papers in this special issue provide one of the first collections of deep empirical work on the BRI and a useful approach for grounding China's role in globalization in the critical contexts of complex local realities.

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          Most cited references31

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              Denaturalizing Dispossession: Critical Ethnography in the Age of Resurgent Imperialism

                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Polit Geogr
                Polit Geogr
                Political Geography
                Elsevier Ltd.
                0962-6298
                0962-6298
                3 August 2020
                3 August 2020
                : 102225
                Affiliations
                [1]Department of Global and International Studies, University of California, Irvine, USA
                [2]School of Integrated Sciences, James Madison University, USA
                [3]School of Humanities, Tallinn University, Estonia
                [4]Department of Urban and Environmental Studies, Loyola Marymount University, USA
                [5]Asia Research Institute, National University of Singapore, Singapore
                Author notes
                []Corresponding author. gustavo.oliveira@ 123456uci.edu
                Article
                S0962-6298(20)30117-7 102225
                10.1016/j.polgeo.2020.102225
                7398643
                32836922
                e1ee8733-c0f9-42ad-ab1e-6c8c5a1ff1fc
                © 2020 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

                Since January 2020 Elsevier has created a COVID-19 resource centre with free information in English and Mandarin on the novel coronavirus COVID-19. The COVID-19 resource centre is hosted on Elsevier Connect, the company's public news and information website. Elsevier hereby grants permission to make all its COVID-19-related research that is available on the COVID-19 resource centre - including this research content - immediately available in PubMed Central and other publicly funded repositories, such as the WHO COVID database with rights for unrestricted research re-use and analyses in any form or by any means with acknowledgement of the original source. These permissions are granted for free by Elsevier for as long as the COVID-19 resource centre remains active.

                History
                : 14 March 2020
                : 5 May 2020
                : 11 May 2020
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