ABSTRACT

Much is being written about China’s new 'One Belt, One Road' initiative, but much of the writing focuses on China itself, on the destinations of the road – Europe and the Middle East – or on the countries through which the road passes, such as Central Asia. This book takes a different approach, assessing the views of East Asian and other countries on the Belt and Road Initiative, both from a transnational and multidisciplinary perspective. The book considers international visions and limitations of the New Silk Road as a new paradigm, explores economic and trade aspects, including infrastructure networks, financial mechanisms, and the likely impact for other countries and regions, and analyses the likely implications for regional and trans-regional cooperation and competition.  Western and Asian regional perspectives on the New Silk Road, including from India, Pakistan, Southeast Asia and Japan are considered throughout the book.

chapter |4 pages

Introduction

China’s New Silk Road

part I|2 pages

The general context

chapter 1|14 pages

New paradigms for the New Silk Road

chapter 2|17 pages

Building a community of shared destiny

The Belt and Road Initiative in the political speeches of Xi Jinping

chapter 3|13 pages

Whose Silk Road?

The Chinese, US, European Union and Russian strategic projects for regional integration in Central Asia

chapter 4|16 pages

Sustainability implications of the New Silk Road

Environmental and social planning

part II|2 pages

The economic dimension

chapter 6|17 pages

The New Silk Road

Perspectives for EU–China economic cooperation

chapter 7|16 pages

The China–Pakistan Economic Corridor

Lessons for the New Silk Road