<p>“Ostensibly, this is a book about Laos and China. But it is more than this. Phill Wilcox has written a book about the idea of development, and how it has colonised the space of Laos, the minds of its inhabitants, and the actions of its government. She does this from the ground up, as she puts it, and with China as the key agent of contemporary change. Importantly, Wilcox addresses the question of what the rise of China in the world means for low-income countries like Laos, and she does this with verve. This book represents an engaging and important addition to the literature.” </p><p><b>Jonathan Rigg FBA, </b><i>Professor of Human Geography, University of Bristol, UK</i></p>

This book uses the case of Chinese development in Laos to ask what development is and why it happens as it does.

Development may seem self-evidently positive, but it is fraught with different agendas and seemingly competing visions of what so-called developing countries should become and how they should get there. As a country soon to graduate from Least Developed Country status as defined by the United Nations, Laos is a rich case study for considering the shifting drivers and priorities for development. This book considers how the rapid arrival of China has brought visions of development which converge and contest what has gone before, and how these inform individual and collective aspirations on the ground in Laos. This book starts by situating China’s Belt and Road Initiative and development priorities, before going on to consider what the rise of China in Laos really means for agendas of change and for individual aspirations. This book concludes that China is changing ideas of future making and visions of what a developed society looks like, but not yet altering a long-standing preoccupation with the very notion of development itself. Based on many years of original on the ground research in Laos, this book moves beyond macro scholarship on China’s influence to provide a nuanced picture of what Global China means and what development, aspiration, and future building mean in a changing Laos.

It will be a thought-provoking read for researchers across the fields of global development and Asian studies.

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This book considers how the rapid arrival of China has brought visions of development which converge and contest what has gone before, and how these inform individual and collective aspirations on the ground in Laos.

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Contents List of figures ix
List of maps xi
Preface – Development is the future xiii
Acknowledgements xix
Author’s note xxi
List of acronyms and abbreviations xxiii

PART I
The inevitability and allure of development
1
1 Development as (a) given 3
2 “Development is roads” – infrastructures, desires, and debts 30

PART II
Land and (im)mobility
55
3 Development means change: ambivalent – and
inevitable – encounters with China 57
4 Express train to the good life: all aboard the Laos‑
China Railway 79

PART III
Aspiring (with) China
95
5 Making aspirations move: future building in a
changing Laos 97
6 “They cannot buy the land, but they will own the land”:
coming to terms with China in Laos 116

PART IV
Conclusion
137
7 Conclusion: future building: possibility, pragmatism,
and price 139
Index 153

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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781041080657
Publisert
2025-10-16
Utgiver
Taylor & Francis Ltd
Vekt
500 gr
Høyde
234 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Aldersnivå
U, P, 05, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
156

Forfatter

Biografisk notat

Phill Wilcox is Research Associate in Social Anthropology at the Faculty of Sociology, Bielefeld University, Germany.