13 results
Search Results
2. Divergencias y convergencias de los debates autonomistas en América Latina y la Unión Europea.
- Author
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Álvarez von Gustedt, Anuschka and Gratius, Susanne
- Subjects
- *
INTERNATIONAL relations , *INTERREGIONALISM , *GEOPOLITICS - Abstract
In a world of growing international competition and rivalry between China and the United States, Latin America and the European Union (EU) are caught in the same thorny dilemma. Positioned between these global giants, both regions are facing a retorn to a Westphalian system of nation-states, which undermines their roles as emerging regional players. In view of these new global challenges in Latin America and the EU, this paper uses a qualitative and comparative approach to explore foreign policy discourses on autonomy in both regions. It examines their goals and priorities and assesses the potential regional and interregional consequences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Latin America and China: international trade and economic growth.
- Author
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Cardozo de Barrios, Mónica Liseth, Luna Domínguez, Edgar Mauricio, and Moreno Treviño, Jorge Omar
- Subjects
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INTERNATIONAL trade , *ECONOMIC development - Abstract
In 1990, the participation of China in the global imports of Latin America (LAC) was incipient, while by 2019, China had become the second largest supplier of the region. This paper uses a sample of 14 LAC countries, estimates the effects of imports from China on each LAC country's economic growth, and verifies if these effects are evidenced in these countries' non-exporting or exporting sectors. This study proposes a Seemingly-Unrelated-Regressions (SUR) system for each sector. Results show that before China entered into World Trade Organization (WTO), LAC imports from China positively affected the economic growth of some LAC countries. However, beneficiary countries increased after China's adhesion to WTO. Imports from China drive the economic growth of the non-exporting sectors of Argentina, Costa Rica, Ecuador, and El Salvador, the exporting sector of the Dominican Republic, and both sectors of Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Peru, Uruguay, and Venezuela. Except for the Dominican Republic, the countries whose export sectors benefit from China's imports are primary exporting countries. Adverse or null effects are estimated for the rest of the countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. CELAC como vehículo estratégico de relacionamiento de China hacia América Latina (2011-2018).
- Author
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Bonilla Soria, Adrián and Herrera-Vinelli, Lorena
- Subjects
- *
REGIONALISM , *ECONOMICS , *POLITICAL integration , *INTERNATIONAL economic relations , *INTERNATIONAL economic integration , *DECISION making in political science - Abstract
This paper examines China-Latin America relations through the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC) in the 2011-2018 period. In this context, the main perspectives on integration and regionalism are discussed, and CELAC is shown to possess the characteristics of a regional body. It is proposed that the relationship China seeks through this body can be explained by its interest in institutionalising a mechanism for rapprochement with Latin America and the Caribbean. It is noted that CELAC is seen by China as a strategic vehicle that allows it to engage bilaterally with various countries and develop an economic strategy under structurally asymmetric conditions. However, its institutional nature has prevented it from serving these interests. As per the methodology, documentary and qualitative data analysis is made using the systematisation of an unpublished database. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. What LED to the Boom? Unpacking China's Development Cooperation in Latin America.
- Author
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Malacalza, Bernabé
- Subjects
- *
INTERNATIONAL economic assistance , *INTERNATIONAL economic relations , *ECONOMICS & politics - Abstract
What led to the boom of Chinese development cooperation in Latin America? This article provides a systematic analysis of China's foreign behavior, motives, and policies regarding development cooperation toward the region between 2000 and 2014. I propose a comparative framework that defines Chinese development cooperation as a tool of economic diplomacy. Drawing on empirical evidence from AidData's Global Chinese Official Finance Dataset and Chinese white papers on foreign aid, the findings evidence that China was motivated by multiple and conjunctural factors in providing development cooperation. In the realm of theory, the article contributes to the literature on economic statecraft—filling in gaps in understanding the relationship between economics and politics. Empirically, it provides a set of tools for understanding the important role that development cooperation plays in a nation's statecraft. Regarding Chinese foreign policy studies, it offers insight into the financial dimension of China's international economic relations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Exploring New Territory: Recent Contributions to the Study of the Relations between China and Latin America.
- Author
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Creutzfeldt, Benjamin
- Subjects
- *
INTERNATIONAL relations , *INTERNATIONAL trade , *NATIONAL character , *REGIONAL identity (Psychology) - Abstract
This paper discusses five recent contributions to the study of the relations between China and Latin America: (1] Hearn & León-Manríquez, 2011; (2) Fornés & Philip, 2012; (3) Fung & García-Herrero, 2012; (4) He, 2012; and (5) Strauss & Armony 2012. These five books on China, Latin America and the Western Hemisphere are reviewed in light of the question of whether the relationship promises a re-ordering of the region or a repetition of old patterns. Similar to an earlier review essay by Nicola Phillips, which this paper builds on, we observe that studies lack historical context and analysis of deeper repercussions, that the Chinese perspective is very much underrepresented, and there is a lack of differentiation between national and regional identities, in that Latin America is disaggregated into national units while China is treated as a monolithic unitary actor, which is increasingly inadequate, as it diversifies its approaches and interests. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. EL CONSENSO DE BEIJING Y LA REPRIMARIZACIÓN PRODUCTIVA DE AMERICA LATINA: EL CASO ARGENTINO.
- Author
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Bolinaga, Luciano and Slipak, Ariel
- Subjects
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INTERNATIONAL trade , *POWER (Social sciences) , *GLOBALIZATION , *COMMERCE , *INTERNATIONAL economic relations - Abstract
One of the most decisive ways in which the global economy and power relations were transformed at dawn of the twenty-first century was the rise of China as a major power, as well as the consequent influence the country has been able to exercise over peripheral nations. Although the majority of administrations in Latin America have rejected the policies once hailed by the Washington Consensus, it is striking that they have largely accepted a new system of asymmetrical relations with another major world power, which is fostering the reprimarization of the productive structure in Latin American economies. Thus, beginning with the case of Argentina, this paper explores the path to what is now known as the Beijing Consensus, with an emphasis on a characterization based on the analysis provided below. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. CHINA'S USE OF THE MILITARY INSTRUMENT IN LATIN AMERICA: NOT YET THE BIGGEST STICK.
- Author
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Watson, Cynthia
- Subjects
- *
MILITARY relations , *TWENTY-first century , *HISTORY , *INTERNATIONAL relations ,CHINESE foreign relations, 1976- ,CHINESE military - Abstract
China's involvement in Latin America has grown steadily over the past decade but there are a number of constraints on the role of the People's Liberation Army that prevents it from becoming the most important mechanism in expanding China's role in Latin America. This paper discusses those constraints and the methods China's military has used to engage with Latin America in the twenty-first century. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
9. Novas dimensões na relação entre os Estados Unidos e a América Latina.
- Author
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Júnior, Haroldo Ramanzini
- Subjects
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INTERNATIONAL relations research , *POLICY sciences , *GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
The paper presents a general analysis of the relations among United States and Latin America considering issues such as the questioning of the US centrality globally and in the hemisphere, Brazil's policies to the region and the impact of the growing relations with China. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
10. China's Global Expansion and Latin America.
- Author
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JENKINS, RHYS
- Subjects
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INTERNATIONAL competition , *INTERNATIONAL trade , *ECONOMIC globalization , *MANUFACTURING industries , *FOREIGN investments ,LATIN American economy, 1982- ,ECONOMIC conditions in China, 2000- - Abstract
China's rapid growth and increased integration with the global economy over the past three decades have significant economic impacts and political implications for Latin America. This paper reviews the debate over whether these impacts have on balance been positive or negative for the region. It argues that those who emphasise the positive economic impacts of China have been over-optimistic and underplay some of the negative impacts associated with Chinese competition in manufacturing and increasing Latin American specialisation in primary products. On the other hand, when focusing on the political dimensions, there has been a tendency to exaggerate both the extent of China's influence in the region and the fears to which this gives rise, particularly among US commentators. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. El impacto de China en América Latina.
- Author
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Jenkins, Rhys
- Subjects
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ECONOMIC development , *INTERNATIONAL competition , *TERMS of trade , *RAW materials , *ECONOMICS - Abstract
China's rapid economic growth and increased openness has been one of the most significant developments in the global economy over the past 25 years. This paper analyses Chinas impacts on the Latin American economies, and in particular the challenges that China poses for the region. It discusses both the direct impacts arising from bilateral trade and investment flows between China and Latin America, the indirect impacts associated with Chinese competition in export markets and for foreign direct investment, and the positive terms of trade effects resulting from Chinas increased demand for raw materials. Challenges identified include the recent rapid increase of competition from Chinese imports in the Latin American market, the concentration of exports to China in a narrow range of primary products and the uneven distribution of profits from trade with China within Latin America. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
12. CHINA MATTERS. China's Economic Impact in Latin America.
- Author
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Gallagher, Kevin P. and Porzecanski, Roberto
- Subjects
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ECONOMIC impact , *EXPORTS , *ECONOMIC development , *INTERNATIONAL trade , *FOREIGN investments , *ECONOMICS - Abstract
This paper analyzes two aspects of China's economic relationship with Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC). First, we examine the extent to which China's economic growth is affecting trade and investment flows between China and LAC. Second, we analyze the extent to which the emergence of China as a world exporter affects the ability of LAC countries to compete in world markets bath in terms of exports as well as in the capacity to attract foreign investment. For each of these questions, we provide a critical assessment of a new body of work in this area, as well as offer a series of analyses that build on and confirm some of this previous work. Furthermore, we offer implications for policy and future research. We show that there is an emerging consensus regarding China and LAC. With respect to trade and investment flows, China accounts for a significant amount of the boost in LAC exports and foreign investment in recent years, but is exporting more than it imports. In terms of global competitiveness, LAC is not significantly threatened by Chinese exports in global markets, with the exception of Mexico. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. The Long View.
- Author
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JIANG SHIXUE
- Subjects
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INTERNATIONAL relations , *DIPLOMACY ,CHINESE foreign relations, 1976- - Abstract
The article reports on the first Latin American policy paper issued by China. The policy paper on Latin American and the Caribbean is expected to improve the development of relations between China and the Latin American region. It is asserted tha the paper will clear out Chinese diplomatic goals and foreign policy.
- Published
- 2008
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