Journal Article

IDS Bulletin Vol. 45 Nos. 4

The Impact of China on the Donor Landscape in African Fragile States

Published on 15 July 2014

This article analyses the impact of China on the donor landscape in African fragile states. This is undertaken by first discussing the global trends of South–South collaboration as part of the broader post‐Busan development debate, and secondly, the specific role of China in four African fragile states, which are respectively Liberia, Angola, Mali and Sudan.

The article has two main findings. Firstly, China provides additional development opportunities but is not applying the same development cooperation model as traditional Development Assistance Committee (DAC) donors. This fragmentation of global development cooperation modalities requires capacity to coordinate donors by aid‐recipient countries. Secondly, as China’s economic interests grow in Africa, it is also expanding its support for regional stability by participating in UN peacekeeping operations. One of the key conditions for China’s participation, however, is a clear mandate by an African regional organisation such as the African Union and Regional Economic Communities. This approach ensures that China maintains its principles of respecting national sovereignty and non‐interference in the domestic affairs of other countries.

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This article comes from the IDS Bulletin 45.4 (2014) The Impact of China on the Donor Landscape in African Fragile States

Cite this publication

Schiere, R. (2014) The Impact of China on the Donor Landscape in African Fragile States. IDS Bulletin 45(4): 46-56

Authors

Richard Schiere

Publication details

published by
Institute of Development Studies
doi
10.1111/1759-5436.12092

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Region
Africa China

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