Comprehensive power shifts in the making: China's policy transfer partnerships with the United Nations

Haug, Sebastian / Laura Trajber Waisbich
External Publications (2024)

in: Global Policy 15 (S2) Special Issue, 62-73

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/1758-5899.13360
Open access

China and the United Nations (UN) have set up a growing number of partnerships to transfer Chinese domestic development policies across the South. By examining these partnerships through a power shift lens, we suggest that UN-endorsed policy transfer processes can function as a window into shifting international cooperation dynamics. The paper first provides an overview of the evolution and key characteristics of China–UN policy transfer partnerships, focusing on China's trajectory as a provider of policy solutions. It then analyses the extent to which the evolving partnership landscape contributes to and reflects shifts in China's compulsory, institutional, structural and productive power. Overall, we argue that policy transfer partnerships contribute to comprehensive power shifts in the making: while empirical data point to China's often (still) limited and evolving ability to influence the actions of others, our findings provide evidence for increasing levels of Chinese influence in and through policy transfer partnerships across all power types.
Policy Implications:
- China–UN policy transfer partnerships suggest that China's multifaceted exercise of power can unfold beyond contestations observed in the UN human rights or peace and security fields.
- Member states and UN entities should pay attention to how China provides less financial resources through trust funds than Northern donors but exercises more direct control over the use of these funds.
- Policy transfer partnerships can be effective vehicles for Southern states to introduce their policy priorities into global (development) agendas.

About the author

Haug, Sebastian

Political Science

Haug

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