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Will Africa Feed China? Deborah Brautigam (Professor of International Development, Professor of International Development, Johns Hopkins University-SAIS)

Will Africa Feed China? von Deborah Brautigam (Professor of International Development, Professor of International Development, Johns Hopkins University-SAIS)

Zusammenfassung

In this clear-eyed and incisive book, one of the world's leading authorities on China's relationship with Africa exposes the myths and realities of the so-called Chinese land grab.

Will Africa Feed China? Zusammenfassung

Will Africa Feed China? Deborah Brautigam (Professor of International Development, Professor of International Development, Johns Hopkins University-SAIS)

Is China building a new empire in rural Africa? Over the past decade, China's meteoric rise on the continent has raised a drumbeat of alarm. China has 9 percent of the world's arable land, 6 percent of its water, and over 20 percent of its people. Africa's savannahs and river basins host the planet's largest expanses of underutilized land and water. Few topics are as controversial and emotionally charged as the belief that the Chinese government is aggressively buying up huge tracts of prime African land to grow food to ship back to China. In Will Africa Feed China?, Deborah Brautigam, one of the world's leading experts on China and Africa, probes the myths and realities behind the media headlines. Her careful research challenges the conventional wisdom; as she shows, Chinese farming investments are in fact surprisingly limited, and land acquisitions modest. Defying expectations, China actually exports more food to Africa than it imports. Is this picture likely to change? African governments are pushing hard for foreign capital, and China is building a portfolio of tools to allow its agribusiness firms to go global. International concerns about land grabbing are well-justified. Yet to feed its own growing population, rural Africa must move from subsistence to commercial agriculture. What role will China play? Moving from the halls of power in Beijing to remote irrigated rice paddies of Africa, Will Africa Feed China? introduces the people and the politics that will shape the future of this engagement: the state-owned Chinese agribusiness firms that pioneered African farming in the 1960s and the entrepreneurial private investors who followed them. Their fascinating stories, and those of the African farmers and officials who are their counterparts, ground Brautigam's deeply informative, deftly balanced reporting. Forcefully argued and empirically rich, Will Africa Feed China? will be a landmark work, shedding new light on China's evolving global quest for food security and Africa's possibilities for structural transformation.

Will Africa Feed China? Bewertungen

[the book] presents well-informed deductions on a subject that has considerable consequences for the future of world stability... Those working in the fields of food security, Sino-African relations, rise of China and its overseas agrarian policies as well as students of politics, economics, strategic studies, development studies, media and communication and international relations will find this book of great interest. * Enock Ndawana, Insight Turkey *
interesting, thorough * David Pilling, Financial Times *
The book is a delight ... a compelling and much needed argument * Johanna Malm, E International Relations *

Über Deborah Brautigam (Professor of International Development, Professor of International Development, Johns Hopkins University-SAIS)

Deborah Brautigam is Professor and Director of the International Development Program at Johns Hopkins University's School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS) in Washington, DC and the author of The Dragon's Gift: The Real Story of China in Africa. A long-time observer of Asia and Africa, she has lived in China, West Africa, and Southern Africa, and travelled extensively across both regions as a Fulbright researcher and consultant for the World Bank, the UN, and other development agencies.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Introduction Who Will Feed China? Long March: History of Chinese Agricultural Engagement in Africa The Mountains are High and the Emperor is Far Away Zombie Investments Green Shoots The Future Conclusion Appendix: Database of Media Reports and Actual Outcomes Endnotes Index

Zusätzliche Informationen

GOR007633124
9780199396856
019939685X
Will Africa Feed China? Deborah Brautigam (Professor of International Development, Professor of International Development, Johns Hopkins University-SAIS)
Gebraucht - Sehr Gut
Gebundene Ausgabe
Oxford University Press Inc
20160107
248
N/A
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