Legitimizing China's Growing Engagement in African Security: Change within Continuity of Official Discourse
Peer-reviewed Journal Article
Carrozza, Ilaria (2021) Legitimizing China's Growing Engagement in African Security: Change within Continuity of Official Discourse, The China Quarterly 248(1): 1174–1199.
Peace and security were once marginal in Sino-African relations.
Recently, however, reflecting China's more proactive role as a global
security actor, they have become central. Yet while China's actions
mirror this shift, the official China–Africa discourse has not changed.
This article, based on fieldwork interviews and discourse analysis of
official Forum on China–Africa Cooperation (FOCAC) documents, proposes a
theoretically grounded study of China's Africa discourse to account for
the role it plays in maintaining continuity through time. It makes a
threefold claim. First, while the China–Africa discourse has not been
given much attention in the literature, it is crucial to explaining the
overall success of China's engagement in the continent. Second, the
shift in China's policies towards greater participation in peace and
security is not mirrored by changes in the official discourse. Third,
and related, this is owing mostly to the successful articulation of the
link between the promotion of economic growth and the achievement of
stability – the security–development nexus – and to the generally
positive reception the discourse has found among African leaders.
Read the article here (Open Access)