South African foreign policy and China : converging visions, competing interests, contested identities
Loading...
Date
Authors
Alden, Chris (Christopher)
Wu, Yu-Shan
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Routledge
Abstract
South Africa’s burgeoning relationship with China exposes the increasing
complexities of its post-apartheid international relations. On one hand
bilateral relations have deepened since 1998, due to the increasing
complementarities with South Africa’s foreign policy priorities that
emphasise developmental pragmatism and a Southward orientation
within the broader African context. On the other hand this relationship
emphasises the deeper schisms within South African society itself,
where divergent and multi-layered perspectives on South Africa’s postapartheid
identity and relationship with China, the country’s largest
trading partner, remains unresolved. This article maps out the nature of
China–South Africa relations through a thematic approach. This allows
for nuanced consideration of South Africa’s contemporary foreign
policy, one that remains compressed between a combination of external
and domestic factors.
Description
Keywords
China, Foreign policy analysis, Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa (BRICS), South African foreign policy, Visions, Competing interests, Identities
Sustainable Development Goals
Citation
Chris Alden & Yu-Shan Wu (2016) South African foreign policy and China:
converging visions, competing interests, contested identities, Commonwealth & Comparative Politics, 54:2, 203-231, DOI: 10.1080/14662043.2016.1151170.