Research Article Open Access Double-Blind Peer Review

SOUTH AFRICA-CHINA RELATIONS: EXPLORING CULTURAL, ECONOMIC, AND ENVIRONMENTAL COOPERATION DURING THE ZUMA ERA

Mbeki Sibusiso
Published 28 January 2025
Vol. 11, No. 3 (2023)
pp. 36-56
CC BY 4.0
  1. 1
    Mbeki Sibusiso
    Center for African Studies, University of Pretoria
    ZA

This article examines the South Africa-China relationship during Jacob Zuma's administration from 2013 to 2017, with a focus on whether it was mutually beneficial from an Afrocentric perspective. Through a desktop qualitative research approach using secondary data analysis, the article emphasizes the importance of studying and understanding African phenomena from an African perspective rather than using a Eurocentric lens and highlights key areas like cultural exchange, financial trade, wildlife conservation, and tourism. The study establishes that South Africa's shift towards the East brought about changes in foreign policy with a greater focus on "realpolitik" rather than human rights. Despite this, the relationship proved to be mutually beneficial, with agreements signed between both countries in mining, energy, environment, and transport. The article recommends the strengthening of bilateral relations further to overcome challenges that may arise and maximize mutual gains. However, the article also highlights concerns such as the de-industrialization of South Africa's economy as a result of China, China's contribution to the destruction and marginalization of South African indigenous languages, China's usage of South Africa and the African continent as a testing ground for alternative policies, and poaching by Chinese nationals posing a threat to South African tourism and the identity of some African South African communities

JournalColumbia Journal of Entrepreneurship and Management
ISSN3065-0623
Volume / IssueVol. 11, No. 3 (2023)
Pages36-56
Published28 January 2025
Access Open Access
LicenseCC BY 4.0 — reuse with attribution
PublisherKeith Publications
Sibusiso , M. (2025). SOUTH AFRICA-CHINA RELATIONS: EXPLORING CULTURAL, ECONOMIC, AND ENVIRONMENTAL COOPERATION DURING THE ZUMA ERA. Columbia Journal of Entrepreneurship and Management, Vol. 11 No. 3, pp. 36-56

 Submit Your Research to Columbia Journal of Entrepreneurship and Management

We invite original research articles, review papers, and case studies. Benefit from rigorous double-blind peer review, rapid decision within 4–8 weeks, DOI for every article, and worldwide open-access distribution.