ThinkChina.dk China Study Project Policy Brief: "China’s Belt and Road Initiative – where to?"
Research output: Working paper › Research
Standard
ThinkChina.dk China Study Project Policy Brief: "China’s Belt and Road Initiative – where to?". / Delman, Jørgen; Ebbesen, Tabita Rosendal; Liu, Queenie ; Thormann, Rasmus Sehested; Dich, Karina Klaris; Hansen, Kristina Brunnenberger W.; Schmidt, Sofie Baun .
Copenhagen : ThinkChina.dk, 2019.Research output: Working paper › Research
Harvard
APA
Vancouver
Author
Bibtex
}
RIS
TY - UNPB
T1 - ThinkChina.dk China Study Project Policy Brief: "China’s Belt and Road Initiative – where to?"
AU - Delman, Jørgen
AU - Ebbesen, Tabita Rosendal
AU - Liu, Queenie
AU - Thormann, Rasmus Sehested
AU - Dich, Karina Klaris
AU - Hansen, Kristina Brunnenberger W.
AU - Schmidt, Sofie Baun
PY - 2019/5/14
Y1 - 2019/5/14
N2 - This China Study - Project Policy Brief takes as its point of departure the recognition that the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) has gained global importance and that we need to understand how it affects the world. The Brief is the result of a Master Class study module on BRI at China Studies, the Department of Cross-cultural and Regional Studies (ToRS), University of Copenhagen, in March and April 2019. We examined BRI as an instrument in China’s foreign policy, the organization and governance of BRI, initiatives to make BRI green, the Digital Silk Road, as well as projects in Kenya as examples of how BRI works on the ground. We also worked on how to conduct government affairs in relation to BRI. This policy brief reflects our findings and recommendations. During our study module, we read and discussed texts in Chinese and non-Chinese languages. We joined hands with the Danish-Chinese Business Forum (Line Elk Hansen) to understand how they work with BRI related issues, and we visited COWI to get a bottom-up perspective from a company that has worked with BRI projects. We are grateful for this collaboration.
AB - This China Study - Project Policy Brief takes as its point of departure the recognition that the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) has gained global importance and that we need to understand how it affects the world. The Brief is the result of a Master Class study module on BRI at China Studies, the Department of Cross-cultural and Regional Studies (ToRS), University of Copenhagen, in March and April 2019. We examined BRI as an instrument in China’s foreign policy, the organization and governance of BRI, initiatives to make BRI green, the Digital Silk Road, as well as projects in Kenya as examples of how BRI works on the ground. We also worked on how to conduct government affairs in relation to BRI. This policy brief reflects our findings and recommendations. During our study module, we read and discussed texts in Chinese and non-Chinese languages. We joined hands with the Danish-Chinese Business Forum (Line Elk Hansen) to understand how they work with BRI related issues, and we visited COWI to get a bottom-up perspective from a company that has worked with BRI projects. We are grateful for this collaboration.
KW - Faculty of Humanities
KW - China
KW - Belt and Road Inititive
KW - Digital Silk Road
KW - Kenya
KW - Green BRI
KW - BRI governance
M3 - Working paper
BT - ThinkChina.dk China Study Project Policy Brief: "China’s Belt and Road Initiative – where to?"
PB - ThinkChina.dk
CY - Copenhagen
ER -
ID: 218005292