Ruben Gonzalez Vicente
Gastmedewerker
- Naam
- Dr. R. Gonzalez Vicente
- Telefoon
- +31 71 527 2727
- r.gonzalez.vicente@hum.leidenuniv.nl
- ORCID iD
- 0000-0001-7099-3085
Ruben Gonzalez Vicente is gast universitair docent aan het Instituut voor Regiostudies.
Meer informatie over Ruben Gonzalez Vicente
Gastmedewerker
- Faculteit der Geesteswetenschappen
- Leiden Institute for Area Studies
- SAS China
- Alami I., Dixon A.D., Gonzalez Vicente R., Babic M., Lee S.O., Medby I.A. & Graaff N. de (2022), Geopolitics and the ‘new’ state capitalism, Geopolitics 27(3): 995-1023.
- Gonzalez Vicente R. & Montoute A. (2021), A Caribbean perspective on China–Caribbean relations: global IR, dependency and the postcolonial condition, Third World Quarterly 42(2): 219-238.
- Gonzalez Vicente R. (2021), Over Hills and Valleys Too: China’s Belt and Road Initiative in the Caribbean. In: Schneider F. (red.), Global Perspectives on the Belt and Road Initiative: Asserting Agency through Regional Connectivity. Amsterdam: University of Amsterdam Press. 171-194.
- Gonzalez Vicente R. (2021), Why a critical geopolitics cannot be Confucian, Dialogues in Human Geography 11(2): 248-252.
- Gonzalez-Vicente R. (2021), Global China's business frontier: Chinese enterprises and the reach of the state. In: Pieke F.N. & Iwabuchi K. (red.), Global East Asia. Into the Twenty-First Century. The Global Square nr. 4. Oakland: University of California Press. 253-262.
- Gonzalez-Vicente R. (2020), Varieties of capital and predistribution: the foundations of Chinese infrastructural investment in the Caribbean, Made in China Journal 5(1): 164-168.
- Gonzalez-Vicente R. (2020), The liberal peace fallacy: violent neoliberalism and the temporal and spatial traps of state-based approaches to peace, Territory, Politics, Governance 8(1): 100-116.
- Gonzalez Vicente R. (2019), Where is the South? Global, postcolonial and intersectional perspectives. In: Mawdsley E., Fourie E. & Nauta W. (red.), Researching South-South Development Cooperation: The Politics of Knowledge Production. London: Routledge.
- Gonzalez Vicente R. (2019), Make development great again? Accumulation regimes, spaces of sovereign exception and the elite development paradigm of China's Belt and Road Initiative, Business and Politics 21(4): 487-513.
- Carroll T., Gonzalez-Vicente R. & Jarvis D.S.L. (2019), Capital, conflict and convergence: a political understanding of neoliberalism and its relationship to capitalist transformation, Globalizations 16(6): 778-803.
- Gonzalez Vicente R. (2017), The empire strikes back? China's new racial sovereignty, Political Geography 59: 139-141.
- Gonzalez Vicente R. & Carroll T. (2017), Politics after national development: Explaining the populist rise under late capitalism, Globalizations 14(6): 991-1013.
- Gonzalez Vicente R. (2017), South-South relations under world market capitalism: The state and the elusive promise of national development in the China-Ecuador resource-development nexus, Review of International Political Economy 24(5): 881-903.
- Gonzalez Vicente R. (2017), China and the United States in the Andes. In: Denoon David B.H. (red.), China, the U.S. and the Future of Latin America. New York: New York University Press. 209-231.
- Gonzalez Vicente R. (2015), The limits to China's non-interference foreign policy: Pro-state interventionism and the rescaling of economic governance, Australian Journal of International Affairs 69(2): 205-223.
- Gonzalez Vicente R. (2013), Development dynamics of Chinese resource-based investment in Peru and Ecuador, Latin American Politics and Society 55(1): 46-72.
- Gonzalez Vicente R. (2012), The political economy of Sino-Peruvian relations: A new dependency?, Journal of Current Chinese Affairs 41(1): 97-131.
- Gonzalez Vicente R. (2012), Mapping Chinese mining investment in Latin America: Politics or market?, The China Quarterly 209: 35-58.
- Gonzalez Vicente R. (2011), The internationalization of the Chinese state, Political Geography 30(7): 402-411.
- Gonzalez Vicente R. (2011), China’s engagement in South America and Africa’s extractive sectors: New perspectives for resource curse theories, The Pacific Review 24(1): 65-87.
- Director - advising on funding decisions