
Tabita Rosendal Ebbesen
Doctoral student

Fragmented Power : The Reception of China's Foreign Policy Strategies in Sri Lanka
Author
Summary, in English
Article 1 examines China’s utilization of Buddhist strategic narratives to facilitate the smooth implementation of the “Belt and Road” Initiative in Sri Lanka, a Buddhist-majority country. Article 2 dives into the case of the Hambantota International Port project, where the interests and efforts of the Chinese Communist Party, Chinese state-owned enterprises, and the Sri Lankan government have converged and diverged in manifold ways. Article 3 illuminates the reception of China’s political and economic efforts among Sri Lankans against the backdrop of regional great power competition, highlighting the limitations of China’s current strategy. Finally, article 4 analyzes the increased party-to-party relations between the Chinese Communist Party and various Sri Lankan parties, including China’s role as a regional “Authoritarian Gravity Center.”
Together, the dissertation contributes to several important, emerging bodies of scholarship on the linkages between Chinese domestic and foreign policy practices, including the adverse effects that this decentralization can bring, China’s increasing use of religious and party diplomacy, the strategic use of narratives, and the importance of contextualized, “bottom-up” analyses showcasing local voices. Consequently, the dissertation also highlights the permeability of China’s international engagements and presence – which can be referred to as “Global China” – by presenting insights on host country agency in the face of its “Fragmented Power."
Department/s
- Centre for East and South-East Asian Studies, Lund University
Publishing year
2025-04-22
Language
English
Publication/Series
Lund East and Southeast Asian Studies
Volume
1
Full text
Document type
Dissertation
Publisher
MediaTryck Lund
Topic
- Political Science
- Development Studies
- Interdisciplinary Studies in Humanities and Arts
Keywords
- China
- Sri Lanka
- Foreign Policy
- Belt and Road Initiative
- International Relations
- Agency
Status
Published
Project
- Fragmented Power: Contemporary Chinese Governance Practices of the 21st Century Maritime Silk Road
Supervisor
- Paul O'shea
- Nicholas Loubere
ISBN/ISSN/Other
- ISSN: 3035-854X
- ISBN: 978-91-90055-05-2
- ISBN: 978-91-90055-04-5
Defence date
3 June 2025
Defence time
13:00
Defence place
LUX C121
Opponent
- Julie Yu-Wen Chen (professor)