This paper, which is conceptually located at the intersection of trade–economics, resource politics, and environmental assessment, is a narrative-analytic review of Chinese economic expansionism in Africa especially its quest for the continent’s natural resources in the past 10 years. We seek to examine the environmental, ecological, and sociopolitical impacts of the current China–Africa engagement within the context of the Environmental Kuznets Curve (EKC) hypothesis. The EKC hypothesis posits that an inverted U-shape relationship exists between economic growth and environmental quality. This implies that the quality of a country’s environment will initially decrease due to its economic growth, but will soon start to improve when the count...
Since the turn of the millennium, China has become an increasingly important economic and political ...
China's growing economic involvement in Sub-Saharan Africa and Latin America has been a source of ma...
China’s influence in Africa, implications for the West Today it is generally acknowledged that the c...
This paper, which is conceptually located at the intersection of trade–economics, resource politics,...
China’s unprecedented economic growth path over the last two decades has been paralleled by an expon...
Since 2000 and the implementation of China’s ‘going abroad’ policy, mainland Chinese state-owned and...
China's resource-driven foreign policies have led to closer relations with Africa where mineral reso...
This paper aims to explain and demonstrate why China's increasing engagement in Africa presents itse...
The market-oriented economic reforms that started in 1978 have greatly transformed the Chinese econo...
The purpose of this essay is to explain China’s growing economic presence in Africa through a case s...
Purpose This study investigates the relationship between economic growth, international trade, and ...
China is one of the fastest growing economies in the world. It is very interesting to study what pri...
This paper studies the causal impact of China’s rising demand for natural resources (NR) on Sub-Saha...
Africa has been, for centuries, stereotypically represented as the continent of "failed" states. Thr...
In recent years, China's rapid economic growth and increasing political clout have significantly acc...
Since the turn of the millennium, China has become an increasingly important economic and political ...
China's growing economic involvement in Sub-Saharan Africa and Latin America has been a source of ma...
China’s influence in Africa, implications for the West Today it is generally acknowledged that the c...
This paper, which is conceptually located at the intersection of trade–economics, resource politics,...
China’s unprecedented economic growth path over the last two decades has been paralleled by an expon...
Since 2000 and the implementation of China’s ‘going abroad’ policy, mainland Chinese state-owned and...
China's resource-driven foreign policies have led to closer relations with Africa where mineral reso...
This paper aims to explain and demonstrate why China's increasing engagement in Africa presents itse...
The market-oriented economic reforms that started in 1978 have greatly transformed the Chinese econo...
The purpose of this essay is to explain China’s growing economic presence in Africa through a case s...
Purpose This study investigates the relationship between economic growth, international trade, and ...
China is one of the fastest growing economies in the world. It is very interesting to study what pri...
This paper studies the causal impact of China’s rising demand for natural resources (NR) on Sub-Saha...
Africa has been, for centuries, stereotypically represented as the continent of "failed" states. Thr...
In recent years, China's rapid economic growth and increasing political clout have significantly acc...
Since the turn of the millennium, China has become an increasingly important economic and political ...
China's growing economic involvement in Sub-Saharan Africa and Latin America has been a source of ma...
China’s influence in Africa, implications for the West Today it is generally acknowledged that the c...