Affiliation:
1. Coastal Carolina University.
2. University of Bridgeport's College of Public and
International Affairs.
Abstract
China's non-interference policy has come under scrutiny in regards to its growing and deepening relations in Africa. The policy has come to represent an about-face from conditional assistance and investment associated with the Washington Consensus. Although often well received in much of the global South, this policy has drawn a lot of criticism from the West and others. These commentators have perceived non-interference as an opportunistic and often inconsistent instrument for enabling China's increasing access to African resources and markets. This article suggests that despite some consistent support for the rhetoric of non-interference, China's implementation of the policy has become increasingly varied and contextualized in reaction to Africa's ever-more diversified political and economic landscape since the early 2000s.
Subject
General Economics, Econometrics and Finance,Political Science and International Relations,Sociology and Political Science
Cited by
27 articles.
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