Tropical Silk Road
portes grátis
Tropical Silk Road
The Future of China in South America
Amar, Paul; Viteri, Maria Amelia; Rofel, Lisa; Brancoli, Fernando; Fernandez, Consuelo
Stanford University Press
11/2022
472
Mole
Inglês
9781503633803
15 a 20 dias
Descrição não disponível.
0.0 Acknowledgments
-Paul Amar, Lisa Rofel, Maria Amelia Viteri,
Consuelo Fernandez-Salvador, and Fernando Brancoli
0.1 Introduction: China Stepping Out, the Amazon Biome,
and South American Populism
-Paul Amar, Lisa Rofel, Maria Amelia Viteri,
Consuelo Fernandez-Salvador, and Fernando Brancoli
1.1: China's State and Social Media Narratives about Brazil during the COVID-19 Pandemic
-Li Zhang
1.2: Cracks in the Coca Codo Sinclair Hydroelectric Project: Infrastructures and Disaster from a Masculine Vision of Development
-Pedro Gutierrez Guevara, Sofia Carpio, and Mayra Flores
1.3: Brazil and China's "Inevitable Marriage"? Post-Bolsonaro Futures and Beijing's Shift from North America to South America
-Zhou Zhiwei
1.4: The China-Ecuador Relationship: From Correa's Neodevelopmentalist "Reformism" to Moreno's "Postreformism" during China's Credit Crunch (2006-2021)
-Milton Reyes Herrera
1.5: China Studies in Brazil: Leste Vermelho and Innovations in South-South Academic Partnership
-Andrea Piazzaroli Longobardi
1.6: Chinese Financing and Direct Foreign Investment in Ecuador: An Interests and Benefits Perspective on Relations between States through the Lens of the Win-Win Principle
-David Mosquera Narvaez
2.1: An Indigenous Theory of Risk: The Cosmopolitan Munduruku Analyze Chinese Megaprojects at Tapajos-Teles Pires
-Luisa Pontes Molina and Alessandra Korap Silva Munduruku
2.2: Challenges for the Shuar in the Face of Globalization and Extractivism: Reflections from the Shuar Federation of Zamora Chinchipe
-Jefferson Pullaguari
2.3: "Yes, We Do Know Why We Protest": Indigenous Challenges to Extractivism in Ecuador, Looking Beyond the National Strike of October 2019
-Julia Correa, Israel Chumapi, Paul Ghaitai Males, Jennifer Yajaira Masaquiza, Rina Pakari Marcillo, and David Menacho
3.1: From Elusiveness to Ideological Extravaganza: Gender and Sexuality in Brazil-China Relations
-Cai Yiping and Sonia Correa
3.2: The Refraction of Chinese Capital in Amazonian Entrepots and the Infrastructure of a Global Sacrifice Zone
-Gustavo Oliveira
3.3: "The Bank We Want": Chinese and Brazilian Activism around and within the BRICS New Development Bank
-Laura Trajber Waisbich
3.4: Rio Blanco: The Big Stumbling Block to the Advancement of China's Mining Interests in Ecuador
-The Yasunidos Guapondelig Collective
3.5: Protectionism for Business, Precarization for Labor: China's Investment-Protection Treaties and Community Struggles in the Latin American and Caribbean Region
-Ana Saggioro Garcia and Rodrigo Curty Pereira
4.1: A Mine, a Dam, and the Chinese-Ecuadorian Politics of Knowledge
-Karolien van Teijlingen and Juan Pablo Hidalgo Bastidas
4.2: Rafael Correa's Administration of Promises and the Impact of Its Policies on the Human Rights of Indigenous Groups
-Emilia Bonilla
4.3: China Oil and Foodstuffs Corporation in the Tapajos River "Logistics Corridor": A Case Study of Socioenvironmental Transformation in Brazil's Northeast
-Alana Camoca and Bruno Hendler
4.4: Deforestation, Enclosures, and Militias: The Logistics "Revolution" in the Port of Cajueiro, Maranhao
-Sabrina Felipe and Lucilene Raimunda Costa
5.1: Hungry and Backward Waters: Events, Actors, and Challenges Surrounding the Coca Codo Sinclair Hydroelectric Project in Times of COVID-19
-Sigrid Vasconez D.
5.2: Electrification of Forest Biomes: Xingu-Rio Lines, Chinese Presence, and the Sociotechnological Impact of the Belo Monte Hydroelectric Dam
-Lais Forti Thomaz, Aline Regina Alves Martins, and Diego Trindade d'Avila Magalhaes
5.3: Vanity Projects, Waterfall Implosions, and the Local Impacts of Megaproject Partnerships
-Consuelo Fernandez-Salvador and Maria Amelia Viteri
5.4: "Yes We Do Exist": Ferrograo Railway, Indigenous Voices in the Trail of Trade Corridors, and Building the Axis of "Brazilian Pragmatist Policy" toward China
-Diana Aguiar
5.5: Green Marketing Extractivism in the Amazon: Imaginaries of the Ministry versus Realities of the Land
-Maria Elena Rodriguez
6.1: Steel Industry's Legacies on the Outskirts of Rio de Janeiro and White Brazilian Capital-State Alliances: A Feminist Approach
-Ana Luisa Queiroz, Marina Praca, and Yasmin Bitencourt
6.2: Rio de Janeiro's Unruly Carbon Periphery: Community Entrepreneurs, Chinese Investors, and the Reappropriation of the Ruins of the COMPERJ Oil Port-and-Pipeline Megaproject
-Fernando Brancoli and Wander Guerra
6.3: From Cheap Credit to Rapid Frustration: Real Estate in Rio de Janeiro
-Pedro Henrique Vasques
6.4: The China-Ecuador Economic Relationship's Impact on Unemployment during the Administration of President Moreno
-David F. Delgado del Hierro
7.1: Savage Factories of the Manaus Free Trade Zone: Chinese Investments in the Amazon and Social Impacts on Workers
-Cleiton Ferreira Maciel Brito
7.2: National Development Priorities and Transnational Workplace Inequalities: Challenges for China's State-Sponsored Construction Projects in Ecuador
-Rui Jie Peng
7.3: Rio's Phantom Dubai?: Porto do Acu, Chinese Investments, and the Geopolitical Specter of Brazilian Mineral Booms
-Marcos A. Pedlowski
-Paul Amar, Lisa Rofel, Maria Amelia Viteri,
Consuelo Fernandez-Salvador, and Fernando Brancoli
0.1 Introduction: China Stepping Out, the Amazon Biome,
and South American Populism
-Paul Amar, Lisa Rofel, Maria Amelia Viteri,
Consuelo Fernandez-Salvador, and Fernando Brancoli
1.1: China's State and Social Media Narratives about Brazil during the COVID-19 Pandemic
-Li Zhang
1.2: Cracks in the Coca Codo Sinclair Hydroelectric Project: Infrastructures and Disaster from a Masculine Vision of Development
-Pedro Gutierrez Guevara, Sofia Carpio, and Mayra Flores
1.3: Brazil and China's "Inevitable Marriage"? Post-Bolsonaro Futures and Beijing's Shift from North America to South America
-Zhou Zhiwei
1.4: The China-Ecuador Relationship: From Correa's Neodevelopmentalist "Reformism" to Moreno's "Postreformism" during China's Credit Crunch (2006-2021)
-Milton Reyes Herrera
1.5: China Studies in Brazil: Leste Vermelho and Innovations in South-South Academic Partnership
-Andrea Piazzaroli Longobardi
1.6: Chinese Financing and Direct Foreign Investment in Ecuador: An Interests and Benefits Perspective on Relations between States through the Lens of the Win-Win Principle
-David Mosquera Narvaez
2.1: An Indigenous Theory of Risk: The Cosmopolitan Munduruku Analyze Chinese Megaprojects at Tapajos-Teles Pires
-Luisa Pontes Molina and Alessandra Korap Silva Munduruku
2.2: Challenges for the Shuar in the Face of Globalization and Extractivism: Reflections from the Shuar Federation of Zamora Chinchipe
-Jefferson Pullaguari
2.3: "Yes, We Do Know Why We Protest": Indigenous Challenges to Extractivism in Ecuador, Looking Beyond the National Strike of October 2019
-Julia Correa, Israel Chumapi, Paul Ghaitai Males, Jennifer Yajaira Masaquiza, Rina Pakari Marcillo, and David Menacho
3.1: From Elusiveness to Ideological Extravaganza: Gender and Sexuality in Brazil-China Relations
-Cai Yiping and Sonia Correa
3.2: The Refraction of Chinese Capital in Amazonian Entrepots and the Infrastructure of a Global Sacrifice Zone
-Gustavo Oliveira
3.3: "The Bank We Want": Chinese and Brazilian Activism around and within the BRICS New Development Bank
-Laura Trajber Waisbich
3.4: Rio Blanco: The Big Stumbling Block to the Advancement of China's Mining Interests in Ecuador
-The Yasunidos Guapondelig Collective
3.5: Protectionism for Business, Precarization for Labor: China's Investment-Protection Treaties and Community Struggles in the Latin American and Caribbean Region
-Ana Saggioro Garcia and Rodrigo Curty Pereira
4.1: A Mine, a Dam, and the Chinese-Ecuadorian Politics of Knowledge
-Karolien van Teijlingen and Juan Pablo Hidalgo Bastidas
4.2: Rafael Correa's Administration of Promises and the Impact of Its Policies on the Human Rights of Indigenous Groups
-Emilia Bonilla
4.3: China Oil and Foodstuffs Corporation in the Tapajos River "Logistics Corridor": A Case Study of Socioenvironmental Transformation in Brazil's Northeast
-Alana Camoca and Bruno Hendler
4.4: Deforestation, Enclosures, and Militias: The Logistics "Revolution" in the Port of Cajueiro, Maranhao
-Sabrina Felipe and Lucilene Raimunda Costa
5.1: Hungry and Backward Waters: Events, Actors, and Challenges Surrounding the Coca Codo Sinclair Hydroelectric Project in Times of COVID-19
-Sigrid Vasconez D.
5.2: Electrification of Forest Biomes: Xingu-Rio Lines, Chinese Presence, and the Sociotechnological Impact of the Belo Monte Hydroelectric Dam
-Lais Forti Thomaz, Aline Regina Alves Martins, and Diego Trindade d'Avila Magalhaes
5.3: Vanity Projects, Waterfall Implosions, and the Local Impacts of Megaproject Partnerships
-Consuelo Fernandez-Salvador and Maria Amelia Viteri
5.4: "Yes We Do Exist": Ferrograo Railway, Indigenous Voices in the Trail of Trade Corridors, and Building the Axis of "Brazilian Pragmatist Policy" toward China
-Diana Aguiar
5.5: Green Marketing Extractivism in the Amazon: Imaginaries of the Ministry versus Realities of the Land
-Maria Elena Rodriguez
6.1: Steel Industry's Legacies on the Outskirts of Rio de Janeiro and White Brazilian Capital-State Alliances: A Feminist Approach
-Ana Luisa Queiroz, Marina Praca, and Yasmin Bitencourt
6.2: Rio de Janeiro's Unruly Carbon Periphery: Community Entrepreneurs, Chinese Investors, and the Reappropriation of the Ruins of the COMPERJ Oil Port-and-Pipeline Megaproject
-Fernando Brancoli and Wander Guerra
6.3: From Cheap Credit to Rapid Frustration: Real Estate in Rio de Janeiro
-Pedro Henrique Vasques
6.4: The China-Ecuador Economic Relationship's Impact on Unemployment during the Administration of President Moreno
-David F. Delgado del Hierro
7.1: Savage Factories of the Manaus Free Trade Zone: Chinese Investments in the Amazon and Social Impacts on Workers
-Cleiton Ferreira Maciel Brito
7.2: National Development Priorities and Transnational Workplace Inequalities: Challenges for China's State-Sponsored Construction Projects in Ecuador
-Rui Jie Peng
7.3: Rio's Phantom Dubai?: Porto do Acu, Chinese Investments, and the Geopolitical Specter of Brazilian Mineral Booms
-Marcos A. Pedlowski
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.
China/PRC; Amazon; Asian studies; Latin American studies; global studies; Indigenous studies; international relations; environmental studies; Black studies; gender/sexuality and feminist studies
0.0 Acknowledgments
-Paul Amar, Lisa Rofel, Maria Amelia Viteri,
Consuelo Fernandez-Salvador, and Fernando Brancoli
0.1 Introduction: China Stepping Out, the Amazon Biome,
and South American Populism
-Paul Amar, Lisa Rofel, Maria Amelia Viteri,
Consuelo Fernandez-Salvador, and Fernando Brancoli
1.1: China's State and Social Media Narratives about Brazil during the COVID-19 Pandemic
-Li Zhang
1.2: Cracks in the Coca Codo Sinclair Hydroelectric Project: Infrastructures and Disaster from a Masculine Vision of Development
-Pedro Gutierrez Guevara, Sofia Carpio, and Mayra Flores
1.3: Brazil and China's "Inevitable Marriage"? Post-Bolsonaro Futures and Beijing's Shift from North America to South America
-Zhou Zhiwei
1.4: The China-Ecuador Relationship: From Correa's Neodevelopmentalist "Reformism" to Moreno's "Postreformism" during China's Credit Crunch (2006-2021)
-Milton Reyes Herrera
1.5: China Studies in Brazil: Leste Vermelho and Innovations in South-South Academic Partnership
-Andrea Piazzaroli Longobardi
1.6: Chinese Financing and Direct Foreign Investment in Ecuador: An Interests and Benefits Perspective on Relations between States through the Lens of the Win-Win Principle
-David Mosquera Narvaez
2.1: An Indigenous Theory of Risk: The Cosmopolitan Munduruku Analyze Chinese Megaprojects at Tapajos-Teles Pires
-Luisa Pontes Molina and Alessandra Korap Silva Munduruku
2.2: Challenges for the Shuar in the Face of Globalization and Extractivism: Reflections from the Shuar Federation of Zamora Chinchipe
-Jefferson Pullaguari
2.3: "Yes, We Do Know Why We Protest": Indigenous Challenges to Extractivism in Ecuador, Looking Beyond the National Strike of October 2019
-Julia Correa, Israel Chumapi, Paul Ghaitai Males, Jennifer Yajaira Masaquiza, Rina Pakari Marcillo, and David Menacho
3.1: From Elusiveness to Ideological Extravaganza: Gender and Sexuality in Brazil-China Relations
-Cai Yiping and Sonia Correa
3.2: The Refraction of Chinese Capital in Amazonian Entrepots and the Infrastructure of a Global Sacrifice Zone
-Gustavo Oliveira
3.3: "The Bank We Want": Chinese and Brazilian Activism around and within the BRICS New Development Bank
-Laura Trajber Waisbich
3.4: Rio Blanco: The Big Stumbling Block to the Advancement of China's Mining Interests in Ecuador
-The Yasunidos Guapondelig Collective
3.5: Protectionism for Business, Precarization for Labor: China's Investment-Protection Treaties and Community Struggles in the Latin American and Caribbean Region
-Ana Saggioro Garcia and Rodrigo Curty Pereira
4.1: A Mine, a Dam, and the Chinese-Ecuadorian Politics of Knowledge
-Karolien van Teijlingen and Juan Pablo Hidalgo Bastidas
4.2: Rafael Correa's Administration of Promises and the Impact of Its Policies on the Human Rights of Indigenous Groups
-Emilia Bonilla
4.3: China Oil and Foodstuffs Corporation in the Tapajos River "Logistics Corridor": A Case Study of Socioenvironmental Transformation in Brazil's Northeast
-Alana Camoca and Bruno Hendler
4.4: Deforestation, Enclosures, and Militias: The Logistics "Revolution" in the Port of Cajueiro, Maranhao
-Sabrina Felipe and Lucilene Raimunda Costa
5.1: Hungry and Backward Waters: Events, Actors, and Challenges Surrounding the Coca Codo Sinclair Hydroelectric Project in Times of COVID-19
-Sigrid Vasconez D.
5.2: Electrification of Forest Biomes: Xingu-Rio Lines, Chinese Presence, and the Sociotechnological Impact of the Belo Monte Hydroelectric Dam
-Lais Forti Thomaz, Aline Regina Alves Martins, and Diego Trindade d'Avila Magalhaes
5.3: Vanity Projects, Waterfall Implosions, and the Local Impacts of Megaproject Partnerships
-Consuelo Fernandez-Salvador and Maria Amelia Viteri
5.4: "Yes We Do Exist": Ferrograo Railway, Indigenous Voices in the Trail of Trade Corridors, and Building the Axis of "Brazilian Pragmatist Policy" toward China
-Diana Aguiar
5.5: Green Marketing Extractivism in the Amazon: Imaginaries of the Ministry versus Realities of the Land
-Maria Elena Rodriguez
6.1: Steel Industry's Legacies on the Outskirts of Rio de Janeiro and White Brazilian Capital-State Alliances: A Feminist Approach
-Ana Luisa Queiroz, Marina Praca, and Yasmin Bitencourt
6.2: Rio de Janeiro's Unruly Carbon Periphery: Community Entrepreneurs, Chinese Investors, and the Reappropriation of the Ruins of the COMPERJ Oil Port-and-Pipeline Megaproject
-Fernando Brancoli and Wander Guerra
6.3: From Cheap Credit to Rapid Frustration: Real Estate in Rio de Janeiro
-Pedro Henrique Vasques
6.4: The China-Ecuador Economic Relationship's Impact on Unemployment during the Administration of President Moreno
-David F. Delgado del Hierro
7.1: Savage Factories of the Manaus Free Trade Zone: Chinese Investments in the Amazon and Social Impacts on Workers
-Cleiton Ferreira Maciel Brito
7.2: National Development Priorities and Transnational Workplace Inequalities: Challenges for China's State-Sponsored Construction Projects in Ecuador
-Rui Jie Peng
7.3: Rio's Phantom Dubai?: Porto do Acu, Chinese Investments, and the Geopolitical Specter of Brazilian Mineral Booms
-Marcos A. Pedlowski
-Paul Amar, Lisa Rofel, Maria Amelia Viteri,
Consuelo Fernandez-Salvador, and Fernando Brancoli
0.1 Introduction: China Stepping Out, the Amazon Biome,
and South American Populism
-Paul Amar, Lisa Rofel, Maria Amelia Viteri,
Consuelo Fernandez-Salvador, and Fernando Brancoli
1.1: China's State and Social Media Narratives about Brazil during the COVID-19 Pandemic
-Li Zhang
1.2: Cracks in the Coca Codo Sinclair Hydroelectric Project: Infrastructures and Disaster from a Masculine Vision of Development
-Pedro Gutierrez Guevara, Sofia Carpio, and Mayra Flores
1.3: Brazil and China's "Inevitable Marriage"? Post-Bolsonaro Futures and Beijing's Shift from North America to South America
-Zhou Zhiwei
1.4: The China-Ecuador Relationship: From Correa's Neodevelopmentalist "Reformism" to Moreno's "Postreformism" during China's Credit Crunch (2006-2021)
-Milton Reyes Herrera
1.5: China Studies in Brazil: Leste Vermelho and Innovations in South-South Academic Partnership
-Andrea Piazzaroli Longobardi
1.6: Chinese Financing and Direct Foreign Investment in Ecuador: An Interests and Benefits Perspective on Relations between States through the Lens of the Win-Win Principle
-David Mosquera Narvaez
2.1: An Indigenous Theory of Risk: The Cosmopolitan Munduruku Analyze Chinese Megaprojects at Tapajos-Teles Pires
-Luisa Pontes Molina and Alessandra Korap Silva Munduruku
2.2: Challenges for the Shuar in the Face of Globalization and Extractivism: Reflections from the Shuar Federation of Zamora Chinchipe
-Jefferson Pullaguari
2.3: "Yes, We Do Know Why We Protest": Indigenous Challenges to Extractivism in Ecuador, Looking Beyond the National Strike of October 2019
-Julia Correa, Israel Chumapi, Paul Ghaitai Males, Jennifer Yajaira Masaquiza, Rina Pakari Marcillo, and David Menacho
3.1: From Elusiveness to Ideological Extravaganza: Gender and Sexuality in Brazil-China Relations
-Cai Yiping and Sonia Correa
3.2: The Refraction of Chinese Capital in Amazonian Entrepots and the Infrastructure of a Global Sacrifice Zone
-Gustavo Oliveira
3.3: "The Bank We Want": Chinese and Brazilian Activism around and within the BRICS New Development Bank
-Laura Trajber Waisbich
3.4: Rio Blanco: The Big Stumbling Block to the Advancement of China's Mining Interests in Ecuador
-The Yasunidos Guapondelig Collective
3.5: Protectionism for Business, Precarization for Labor: China's Investment-Protection Treaties and Community Struggles in the Latin American and Caribbean Region
-Ana Saggioro Garcia and Rodrigo Curty Pereira
4.1: A Mine, a Dam, and the Chinese-Ecuadorian Politics of Knowledge
-Karolien van Teijlingen and Juan Pablo Hidalgo Bastidas
4.2: Rafael Correa's Administration of Promises and the Impact of Its Policies on the Human Rights of Indigenous Groups
-Emilia Bonilla
4.3: China Oil and Foodstuffs Corporation in the Tapajos River "Logistics Corridor": A Case Study of Socioenvironmental Transformation in Brazil's Northeast
-Alana Camoca and Bruno Hendler
4.4: Deforestation, Enclosures, and Militias: The Logistics "Revolution" in the Port of Cajueiro, Maranhao
-Sabrina Felipe and Lucilene Raimunda Costa
5.1: Hungry and Backward Waters: Events, Actors, and Challenges Surrounding the Coca Codo Sinclair Hydroelectric Project in Times of COVID-19
-Sigrid Vasconez D.
5.2: Electrification of Forest Biomes: Xingu-Rio Lines, Chinese Presence, and the Sociotechnological Impact of the Belo Monte Hydroelectric Dam
-Lais Forti Thomaz, Aline Regina Alves Martins, and Diego Trindade d'Avila Magalhaes
5.3: Vanity Projects, Waterfall Implosions, and the Local Impacts of Megaproject Partnerships
-Consuelo Fernandez-Salvador and Maria Amelia Viteri
5.4: "Yes We Do Exist": Ferrograo Railway, Indigenous Voices in the Trail of Trade Corridors, and Building the Axis of "Brazilian Pragmatist Policy" toward China
-Diana Aguiar
5.5: Green Marketing Extractivism in the Amazon: Imaginaries of the Ministry versus Realities of the Land
-Maria Elena Rodriguez
6.1: Steel Industry's Legacies on the Outskirts of Rio de Janeiro and White Brazilian Capital-State Alliances: A Feminist Approach
-Ana Luisa Queiroz, Marina Praca, and Yasmin Bitencourt
6.2: Rio de Janeiro's Unruly Carbon Periphery: Community Entrepreneurs, Chinese Investors, and the Reappropriation of the Ruins of the COMPERJ Oil Port-and-Pipeline Megaproject
-Fernando Brancoli and Wander Guerra
6.3: From Cheap Credit to Rapid Frustration: Real Estate in Rio de Janeiro
-Pedro Henrique Vasques
6.4: The China-Ecuador Economic Relationship's Impact on Unemployment during the Administration of President Moreno
-David F. Delgado del Hierro
7.1: Savage Factories of the Manaus Free Trade Zone: Chinese Investments in the Amazon and Social Impacts on Workers
-Cleiton Ferreira Maciel Brito
7.2: National Development Priorities and Transnational Workplace Inequalities: Challenges for China's State-Sponsored Construction Projects in Ecuador
-Rui Jie Peng
7.3: Rio's Phantom Dubai?: Porto do Acu, Chinese Investments, and the Geopolitical Specter of Brazilian Mineral Booms
-Marcos A. Pedlowski
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.