China, The United States, and the Future of Latin America: U.S.-China Relations, Volume III
China, The United States, and the Future of Latin America: U.S.-China Relations, Volume III
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Abstract
The U.S. has been the preeminent power in Latin America in terms of military capability, foreign investment, and cultural ties. The growing presence of China in Latin America prompted agricultural and raw material exports of LAC countries. However, with the Chinese economy slowing down, the trade balance has turned against the LAC countries and China’s economic role is seen as a mixed blessing. The split in LAC states on their varying attitudes toward the U.S. complicated the relationship between the LAC region and the outside powers. The Chinese have built on the skepticism and resentment toward the U.S. and have widened the coalition of anti-U.S. states as regimes with related views arose in Argentina, Brazil, Bolivia, and Venezuela. This volume looks into key cross-regional trends and critical policy issues involving the changing relationship between China, the U.S., and LAC states. Case studies into recent political and economic developments in Mexico, Venezuela, Brazil, Argentina, the Andes, and the Caribbean provide a more in-depth analysis of the implications of China’s and the U.S.’s evolving interaction with the region.
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Front Matter
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Part I The Context
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Part II Perspectives from Key Countries
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5
Mexico–United States–China: Conditions and Challenges of This New Triangular Relationship from a Mexican Perspective
Enrique Dussel Peters
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6
A Structural Explanation for Sino-US-Venezuelan Relations
Anthony Petros Spanakos
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7
U.S., China, and Brazil: Do We Need Three to Samba?
José Augusto Guilhon-Albuquerque
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8
Argentina, the US, and China: A New Triangle in the Making?
José Luis Machinea andLucio Castro
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9
China and the United States in the Andes
Ruben Gonzalez-Vicente
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10
Central America and the Caribbean’s Relations with China and the United States: Contrasting Experiences! Converging Prospects?
Richard L. Bernal
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5
Mexico–United States–China: Conditions and Challenges of This New Triangular Relationship from a Mexican Perspective
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Part III Outside Powers
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11
China’s Rise in Latin America: Myths and Realities
He Li
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12
Strategic Aspects of the China–Latin America Interaction
Haibin Niu
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13
The United States, China, and Latin America: Taking Advantage of Globalization and Moving beyond aThreat Matrix
Daniel A. Restrepo andFrank O. Mora
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14
China’s Security Challenge to the United States in Latin America and the Caribbean
R. Evan Ellis
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11
China’s Rise in Latin America: Myths and Realities
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Part IV Conclusion
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End Matter
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