South African foreign policy and China: converging visions, competing interests, contested identities

Alden, C.ORCID logo & Wu, Y. (2016). South African foreign policy and China: converging visions, competing interests, contested identities. Commonwealth and Comparative Politics, 54(2), 203-231. https://doi.org/10.1080/14662043.2016.1151170
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South Africa's burgeoning relationship with China exposes the increasing complexities of its post-apartheid international relations. On one hand bilateral relations have deepened since 1998, due to the increasing complementarities with South Africa's foreign policy priorities that emphasise developmental pragmatism and a Southward orientation within the broader African context. On the other hand this relationship emphasises the deeper schisms within South African society itself, where divergent and multi-layered perspectives on South Africa's post-apartheid identity and relationship with China, the country's largest trading partner, remains unresolved. This article maps out the nature of China–South Africa relations through a thematic approach. This allows for nuanced consideration of South Africa's contemporary foreign policy, one that remains compressed between a combination of external and domestic factors.

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