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Silk Road archipelagos: Islands of the Belt and Road Initiative
Author(s) -
Adam Grydehøj,
Sasha Davis,
Rui Guo,
Huan Zhang
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
island studies journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1715-2593
DOI - 10.24043/isj.137
Subject(s) - archipelago , archipelagic state , geography , china , tourism , economy , sustainability , geopolitics , political science , ecology , archaeology , politics , law , economics , biology
The concept behind the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI; formerly ‘One Belt, One Road’) began to take shape in 2013. Since then, this Chinese-led project has become a major plank in China’s foreign relations. The BRI has grown from its basis as a vision of interregional connectivity into a truly global system, encompassing places—including many island states, territories, and cities—from the South Pacific to the Arctic, from East Africa to the Caribbean, from the Indian Ocean to the Mediterranean. Islands and archipelagos are particularly prominent in the BRI’s constituent 21-Century Maritime Silk Road (MSR) and Polar Silk Road or Ice Silk Road projects, but little scholarly attention has been paid to how the BRI relates to islands per se. This special section of Island Studies Journal includes nine papers on islands and the BRI, concerning such diverse topics as geopolitics, international law and territorial disputes, sustainability and climate change adaptation, international relations of autonomous island territories, development of outer island communities, tourism and trade, and relational understandings of archipelagic networks. Taken together, these papers present both opportunities and risks, challenges and ways forward for the BRI and how this project may impact both China and island and archipelago states and territories.

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