China's millennium transformation: the belt and road initiative / Da Hsuan Feng
Call number: 382.9 F332C 2020 Material type: BookPublisher: London : United Kingdom, 2020Description: 364 p. : ill. ; 26 cmISBN: 9789811216909 :Subject(s): Economic development -- China | China -- Commercial policy | China -- Foreign economic relationsDDC classification: 382.9 F332C 2020 Online resources: ดูปกและสารบัญ (see cover and contents) Summary: This is a book on the Belt and Road Initiative, written from an unusual perspective — it is written by someone who was born in India but raised in Singapore; who has never spent a day of schooling in the greater China (Mainland, Taiwan, Hong Kong and Macau) but has Chinese heritage; who eventually built a long and distinguished career in the West. With such an atypical background, he took an off-the-beaten-path approach by asking the fundamental question of how such an important initiative, began entirely by China, can deeply impact and transform the millennium mindset of Chinese. Such a transformation of the Chinese shall render a new definition of what a "powerful nation" in the 21st century should be, for the betterment of humanity. This is unlike the one made by Western civilization for many centuries since the Renaissance days. Three main outcomes of the BRI have been embedded directly or indirectly throughout the book: Supercontinent, Neo-Renaissance and Cultural Communications. The author felt that these three outcomes are the possible mitigation for the world in the 21st century, facing existential challenges.Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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General Books | สำนักวิทยบริการ (Center) ชั้น 7 หนังสือทั่วไปภาษาอังกฤษ 000-900 | Non-fiction | 382.9 F332C 2020 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 3000027614 |
This is a book on the Belt and Road Initiative, written from an unusual perspective — it is written by someone who was born in India but raised in Singapore; who has never spent a day of schooling in the greater China (Mainland, Taiwan, Hong Kong and Macau) but has Chinese heritage; who eventually built a long and distinguished career in the West. With such an atypical background, he took an off-the-beaten-path approach by asking the fundamental question of how such an important initiative, began entirely by China, can deeply impact and transform the millennium mindset of Chinese. Such a transformation of the Chinese shall render a new definition of what a "powerful nation" in the 21st century should be, for the betterment of humanity. This is unlike the one made by Western civilization for many centuries since the Renaissance days. Three main outcomes of the BRI have been embedded directly or indirectly throughout the book: Supercontinent, Neo-Renaissance and Cultural Communications. The author felt that these three outcomes are the possible mitigation for the world in the 21st century, facing existential challenges.
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