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2015, China Brief, Volume 15, Issue 15
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6 pages
1 file
China is dramatically changing the strategic environment in Eurasia. What does it all mean for the EU’s China policy? While there is little to suggest that China aims and is able to perform as an ideological counter-model and an agenda-setting actor in Europe and its periphery, or even endanger the coherence and stability of the EU, such worries are voiced more often as China engages Europe more intensively and ever-closer to home. Whether policy-makers in the EU and the individual European countries take these concerns in calculus as they craft the response to OBOR will greatly influence how Sino-European relation is shaped. However, despite a slow start, various uncertainties and potential problems, Europe will find it impossible not to engage with OBOR and China and hard to resist the prospects of benefits a cooperative approach promises to bring.
One Belt One Road (OBOR) initiative is a historical initiative which connects the people over the world and facilitates various opportunities for global peace. The main purpose of this study is to explore implication of One Belt One Road initiative for global future development. It also analyzes the reasons of origin, strategy, opportunities and challenges of OBOR initiatives on the basis of business, economic, political, social and environmental aspects. This study uses qualitative approach and secondary data particularly journal articles, conference proceedings, various documents of government, books, newspaper articles, magazine articles, and various websites of internet have been extensively used to determine the objectives. This article argues that partner countries and agencies will get economic and political benefits from these initiatives. It facilitates to connect people through road ways, air ways and water ways, coordinating policies of various governments, financial integration through cross border business, productivity and regional energy security. This study also analyzes risks and challenges associated to OBOR initiative implementation. It suggests that strong coordination among partners of OBOR is necessary to get full fruits of OBOR through supportive law, policy, rules and regulations, proper strategy implementation, transparent procurement system, sincere consideration on political, financial, environmental and social factors.
Polish Journal of Political Science, 2018
Since 2013 “One Belt, One Road” (OBOR, also “Belt and Road Initiative”) has been one of the most commonly used terms in public discourse regarding Chinese foreign policy. This show the importance of the initiative to the Chinese leaders, particular president Xi Jinping. The enterprise consists of two parts: The Silk Road Economic Belt and The 21st-century Maritime Silk Road. The article aims to consider the future development of the project. The analysis of Chinese documents, statements of political leaders, and expansion of the project from 2013 to mid-2017 was employed in order to assess possible outcomes of the policy. The results of the study lead to three conclusions. Firstly, OBOR is becoming an umbrella term for different regional development strategies across Eurasia, Africa and perhaps beyond. Those strategies include many aspects, ranging from economy, through security, science to environmental protection. Secondly, OBOR became the cognitive framework, a paradigm, for international relations – the way that people perceive them. Thirdly, the introduction of the initiative may be the beginning of China in the role of architect of new global institutions and rules. However, the rapid expansion of OBOR, both in term of quantity of participants as well as various aspects of cooperation, may lead to ineffectiveness of the initiative.
The purpose of this report is to provide a comparative perspective of China’s ‘One Belt, One Road’ initiative (OBOR), as seen from the various European Union (EU) member states. The Chinese leadership officially launched this framework in autumn 2013, presenting it immediately as a key national concept and foreign policy priority for the years to come. Yet OBOR is not a formal policy or a well-defined strategy, but rather a very broad conceptual framework for policies that aim at contributing to greater economic integration within Asia, between Asia and Europe, and between Asia and Africa through a diversity of activities and projects. At the heart of OBOR is a strategic approach to infrastructure development in a very broad sense. Accordingly, China’s first action plan on OBOR1 identified transport, energy and telecommunication infrastructure as priorities (although this list is not exhaustive).
One Belt One Road (OBOR) initiative is a historical initiative which connects the people over the world and facilitates various opportunities for global peace. The main purpose of this study is to explore implication of One Belt One Road initiative for global future development. It also analyzes the reasons of origin, strategy, opportunities and challenges of OBOR initiatives on the basis of business, economic, political, social and environmental aspects. This study uses qualitative approach and secondary data particularly journal articles, conference proceedings, various documents of government, books, newspaper articles, magazine articles, and various websites of internet have been extensively used to determine the objectives. This article argues that partner countries and agencies will get economic and political benefits from these initiatives. It facilitates to connect people through road ways, air ways and water ways, coordinating policies of various governments, financial integration through cross border business, productivity and regional energy security. This study also analyzes risks and challenges associated to OBOR initiative implementation. It suggests that strong coordination among partners of OBOR is necessary to get full fruits of OBOR through supportive law, policy, rules and regulations, proper strategy implementation, transparent procurement system, sincere consideration on political, financial, environmental and social factors.
Aft er decades of self-contained economic development, China realised that future growth depends on closer international cooperation. Th erefore Beijing enforces a new strategy of multilateral partnership called the New Silk Road, consisting of two sister initiatives: the Silk Road Economic Belt and the 21 st Century Maritime Silk Road. Th e strategy is directed to all interested countries of East, South and Central Asia, the Middle East and Europe. For crisis-hit European countries, China has become a valuable partner due to unprecedentedly fast economic development, stable economy and signifi cant fi nancial reserves. As multilateral cooperation aims at the construction of maritime and land transport routes, oil and gas pipelines, as well as power grids, Internet networks and maritime links stretched from Beijing to European capitals, the European countries should make the best use of the Chinese initiative by engaging in its realisation and wisely using it to their own growth. Economic development, growing trade and prosperity, as well as deeper people-to-people ties will strengthen multilateral relations and enforce stabilisation to the benefi ts of all.
This article attempts to cast an analytic light on China’s “One Belt and One Road” (OBOR) initiative and investigates the prospects for a new China-led Eurasian integration discourse as an alternative to the U.S.-led Euro-Atlanticism. To this end, it compares China’s development-oriented strategy in Europe with the security-driven Atlanticist model and examines how the new governance framework relates to present-day international relations. It holds that the Eurasia-centered OBOR signifies a paradigm that is fundamentally different from the Atlanticist strategy that has come to define the European geopolitical landscape since the end of World War II. The OBOR aims to de-emphasize security arrangements and ensure sustainable development and prosperity by introducing an omnidirectional connectivity and cooperation agenda in the Eurasian strategic context. It is recognized, however, that although the new Eurasian discourse of inclusive development does not aim to directly challenge the United States’ highly-institutionalized security presence in Europe, mindful of its larger paradigmatic implications, the United States is likely to view the OBOR unfavorably and seek to reinforce material and ideational fundamentals of the Atlantic alliance.
This is the latest version of an electronic library of resources on the BRI. It is intended to offer support to teachers and students studying the BRI as part of their undergraduate education and to act as a springboard to individual projects. It defines the BRI countries as those listed in the original scheme by the National Development and Reform Commission (i.e. everything from mainland Asia to Central and Eastern Europe but, excepting Egypt, excluding Africa). Any suggestions will be welcome. The IIAS 'New Silk Road' project has over 700 researchers wanting to engage in collaborative teaching and research. The project help facilitate making new connections. To join, please sign up here:
One Belt One Road (OBOR) is the initiative from China on transforming the political and economic landscape. OBOR is not a new dream but a revival of Silk Road history. If it is a success, it will be the greatest economic integration. Five major goals for OBOR are policy coordination, facilities connectivities, unimpeded trade, financial integration and people-to-people bonds. Malaysia is one of participating countries of OBOR. However, OBOR receives some responses in the fear of sovereignty relinquish. Thus, researchers try to see if OBOR can unite the countries through Islamic banking and finance. This is because OBOR unites more than 40 billion of Muslim and the demand of Islamic banking and finance product can be expected. It is also found that OBOR countries are progressing toward Islamic finance. Malaysia for example among the top-ranked countries which have comprehensive Islamic banking and finance system. Thus, it is hope that the union of Ummah can be benefited from the integration of Islamic banking and finance among the countries. Therefore, this paper intends to review the OBOR project, review the development of Islamic Banking and Finance (IBF) and the feasibility of IBF in OBOR countries. .
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