Abstract

Since initiated in 2013, the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) has been widely focused on and debated in the context of political science and international relations. Given the character of the rise of China, which remains one of the most profound factors in East Asia and the world, BRI has been strongly promoted by the Chinese government and officially supported by involved countries, though how this initiative could reshape international order in the twenty-first century remains debatable. This paper’s central puzzle is exploring how China could influence the international relations through the BRI, in a domestic context related in foreign policies, by focusing on an empirical study of the BRI project in the Central Eastern European Countries (CEEC).

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