Related changes

Jump to navigation Jump to search

Enter a page name to see changes on pages linked to or from that page. (To see members of a category, enter Category:Name of category). Changes to pages on your Watchlist are in bold.

Recent changes options Show last 50 | 100 | 250 | 500 changes in last 1 | 3 | 7 | 14 | 30 days
Hide registered users | Hide anonymous users | Hide my edits | Show bots | Hide minor edits
Show new changes starting from 10:38, 26 November 2025
   
 
Page name:
List of abbreviations:
N
This edit created a new page (also see list of new pages)
m
This is a minor edit
b
This edit was performed by a bot
(±123)
The page size changed by this number of bytes

24 November 2025

  • N Infrastructural Capitalism in China 05:14 +652Mbauwens talk contribs(Created page with " =More information= PUN, N. (2025). China’s Deepening Infrastructural Capitalism : The Hard Landing of Artificial Intelligence, Big Data, and Automated Technology. The Weizenbaum Journal of the Digital Society, 5(1). https://doi.org/10.34669/wi.wjds/5.1.1 TSE, T., & PUN, N. (2024). Infrastructural capitalism in China : Alibaba, its corporate culture and three infrastructural mechanisms. Global Media and China, 9(1), 11-30. https://doi.org/10.1177/20594364241226846...")
  • N Adam Tooze on China's Geopolitical Strategy of Connections 01:44 +4,184Mbauwens talk contribs(Created page with " =Discussion= Adam Tooze: "China is not just inheriting the world the West made, including through imperialism; it is actively engaged in reshaping it, or world making. This difference is more than methodological, it may help us, perhaps, both to see the world more clearly and to come to terms of it in a less antagonistic manner. China in the late 1990s effectively created a new Bretton Woods - some call it Bretton Woods 2.0 - by autonomously by pegging its currency...")

22 November 2025

  • N China as a Status Quo Power 02:00 +1,746Mbauwens talk contribs(Created page with " '''* Article: What Does China Want? Open By David C. Kang, Jackie S. H. Wong, Zenobia T. Chan. International Security (2025) 50 (1): 46–81. [https://doi.org/10.1162/ISEC.a.5 doi]''' URL = https://direct.mit.edu/isec/article/50/1/46/132729/What-Does-China-Want =Abstract= "The conventional wisdom is that China is a rising hegemon eager to replace the United States, dominate international institutions, and re-create the liberal international order in its own image. D...")