Date: Wednesday 28 March 2012 (This is a Wednesday, not our
regular Thursday!)
Time: 15.00-17.00
Place: Room SC01 (basement), Pieter de la Court building, Wassenaarseweg 52,
Leiden.
Speaker:
Prof. Deborah Brautigam, International Food Policy Research Institute
and American University, Washington DC
Discussants:
Robert Dijksterhuis, Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and Antony
Otieno Ong'ayo, International Development Studies, Utrecht UniversityIn cooperation with Knowing Emerging Powers See the ASC's
webdossier 'China and Africa' (2008):
http://www.ascleiden.nl/Library/Webdossiers/ChinaAndAfrica.aspx
You are kindly requested to register for this seminar.
South-South cooperation is gaining prominence and was high on the agenda
at the Busan conference on aid effectiveness. All eyes were on China:
would China be in or out? Ultimately China signed the Busan Declaration
because it states that the nature, modalities and responsibilities of
South-South cooperation are different from North-South cooperation and
that the principles and commitments are only a voluntary reference for
China.
How do we understand South-South cooperation and Sino-African relations
in particular? Is there anything Western donors can learn from the
Chinese approach to development partnerships in Africa? This seminar
outlines the Chinese model of development cooperation and the
implications of this approach for recipient countries (governments,
business and civil society) as well as for western donors and
international financial institutions (IFIs).
Many Western donors think they know what China is doing in Africa. They
have seen the headlines: the Chinese arrived a few years ago in a
desperate search for oil, have set up a huge aid programme and are
propping up governments in resource‐rich, pariah states that the West
will not touch. Their companies are bringing in their own workers and
refuse to hire Africans. And they are leading the ‘land grab’ in Africa
and growing food to ship back toChina. This an alarming story ... but,
on closer inspection, none of it is true.
Deborah Brautigam is a professor in the American University's
International Development Program at the School of International Service
and from 2011 to 2012 is a senior research fellow at the International
Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI). She has lived in Asia and
Africa, studied Chinese for many years and done research in more than a
dozen countries in Africa. She is the author of The Dragon’s Gift: The
Real Story of China in Africa, a book on Chinese aid and economic
engagement in Africa (Oxford University Press, 2009, revised 2011). Her
blog ‘China in Africa: The Real Story’ takes up where the book leaves
off. Blog:
http://www.chinaafricarealstory.com/.
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