China's BRI developmental agency in its own words: a content analysis of key policy documents

Since its announcement in 2013, the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) has inspired an ever-growing stream of literature cutting across several disciplines, with highest concentration of studies in the social sciences. Unsurprisingly a great deal of these studies are concerned with the rationale behind...

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Main Authors: Alves, Ana Cristina, Lee, Su-Hyun
Other Authors: School of Social Sciences
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2022
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/159746
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1597462023-07-26T07:20:06Z China's BRI developmental agency in its own words: a content analysis of key policy documents Alves, Ana Cristina Lee, Su-Hyun School of Social Sciences S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies Social sciences::Economic development Belt and Road Initiative Development Since its announcement in 2013, the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) has inspired an ever-growing stream of literature cutting across several disciplines, with highest concentration of studies in the social sciences. Unsurprisingly a great deal of these studies are concerned with the rationale behind this massive undertaking and its potential impact in the current world order. Here a clear rift is apparent between those who think of it as a tool serving China's geopolitical interests and rise at the world stage, and those who see it as a more nebulous and fragmented undertaking driven by domestic economic and political pressures. A similar concern is reflected in a smaller body of literature that looks at the BRI from a development angle, the dominant inquiry line revolving around its likely impact in global development governance and the underlying neoliberal cooperation norms and practices. Here too there is a clear divide between those who see China's increasing development agency as a positive complement and those who perceive it in a direct collision course with the neoliberal aid paradigm. This dichotomy of interpretations project two contrasting images of China's development agency that are often difficult to reconcile. This study contributes to this body of literature by providing a profile of China's development agency according to its own words. Since 2015 a raft of BRI policy documents have been published by Beijing to fill the initial void and regain control over the narrative. Through a content analysis of key policy papers and speeches, we attempt to uncover what are the initiative's aims, governance mechanisms, normative under pinnings, and targeted areas as per the official discourse. In doing so we hope to bring more clarity as to the nature of China developmental agency. Based on our findings we argue that much like its domestic development model, China's development cooperation approach is pragmatically hybrid with the rhetoric showing clear signs of convergence but also divergence with the dominant paradigm. The evolving discourse suggests a highly fluid approach and thus a work in constant progress, which progression hinges upon reactive and cumulative adjustments to feedback as the initiative is rolled out. 2022-06-30T07:46:43Z 2022-06-30T07:46:43Z 2022 Journal Article Alves, A. C. & Lee, S. (2022). China's BRI developmental agency in its own words: a content analysis of key policy documents. World Development, 150, 105715-. https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.worlddev.2021.105715 0305-750X https://hdl.handle.net/10356/159746 10.1016/j.worlddev.2021.105715 2-s2.0-85118480144 150 105715 en World Development © 2021 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Social sciences::Economic development
Belt and Road Initiative
Development
spellingShingle Social sciences::Economic development
Belt and Road Initiative
Development
Alves, Ana Cristina
Lee, Su-Hyun
China's BRI developmental agency in its own words: a content analysis of key policy documents
description Since its announcement in 2013, the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) has inspired an ever-growing stream of literature cutting across several disciplines, with highest concentration of studies in the social sciences. Unsurprisingly a great deal of these studies are concerned with the rationale behind this massive undertaking and its potential impact in the current world order. Here a clear rift is apparent between those who think of it as a tool serving China's geopolitical interests and rise at the world stage, and those who see it as a more nebulous and fragmented undertaking driven by domestic economic and political pressures. A similar concern is reflected in a smaller body of literature that looks at the BRI from a development angle, the dominant inquiry line revolving around its likely impact in global development governance and the underlying neoliberal cooperation norms and practices. Here too there is a clear divide between those who see China's increasing development agency as a positive complement and those who perceive it in a direct collision course with the neoliberal aid paradigm. This dichotomy of interpretations project two contrasting images of China's development agency that are often difficult to reconcile. This study contributes to this body of literature by providing a profile of China's development agency according to its own words. Since 2015 a raft of BRI policy documents have been published by Beijing to fill the initial void and regain control over the narrative. Through a content analysis of key policy papers and speeches, we attempt to uncover what are the initiative's aims, governance mechanisms, normative under pinnings, and targeted areas as per the official discourse. In doing so we hope to bring more clarity as to the nature of China developmental agency. Based on our findings we argue that much like its domestic development model, China's development cooperation approach is pragmatically hybrid with the rhetoric showing clear signs of convergence but also divergence with the dominant paradigm. The evolving discourse suggests a highly fluid approach and thus a work in constant progress, which progression hinges upon reactive and cumulative adjustments to feedback as the initiative is rolled out.
author2 School of Social Sciences
author_facet School of Social Sciences
Alves, Ana Cristina
Lee, Su-Hyun
format Article
author Alves, Ana Cristina
Lee, Su-Hyun
author_sort Alves, Ana Cristina
title China's BRI developmental agency in its own words: a content analysis of key policy documents
title_short China's BRI developmental agency in its own words: a content analysis of key policy documents
title_full China's BRI developmental agency in its own words: a content analysis of key policy documents
title_fullStr China's BRI developmental agency in its own words: a content analysis of key policy documents
title_full_unstemmed China's BRI developmental agency in its own words: a content analysis of key policy documents
title_sort china's bri developmental agency in its own words: a content analysis of key policy documents
publishDate 2022
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/159746
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