In addition to numerous journal articles and chapters in edited volumes, Bräutigam has been the solo author of three books: Chinese Aid and African Development: Exporting the Green Revolution (1998), The Dragon’s Gift: The Real Story of China in Africa (2009), and Will Africa Feed China? (2015).
In her first book, Chinese Aid and African Development, Bräutigam discusses three rice-growing demonstrations by China and Taiwan in The Gambia, Liberia, and Sierra Leone.[3] She documents the short-term successes of those projects, and the reasons that they did not succeed on longer timescales.[3] In her second book, The Dragon’s Gift, Bräutigam turned to the topic of whether China's engagement with Africa has been a harmful or beneficial enterprise.[4] The book presents data on China's agricultural and commercial investments in Africa, in the context of infrastructural projects as early as the 1960s, and argues that China's engagement with Africa may be genuinely aimed at sharing lessons about economic development and not just at China's narrow commercial interests.[5] In a book review, Jane Golley wrote that Bräutigam "falls into the relatively small category of Western scholars who are positive about the role that China has played in African economic development to date and also optimistic about the role it will play in the future".[4]The Dragon's Gift received several awards, including being chosen as the Book of the Week by The Independent for January 1, 2010.[6]
Will Africa Feed China?, Bräutigam's third book, studies salient claims that Chinese companies have been involved in significant purchases of land throughout Africa, with mixed conjectures about the outcomes of those purchases.[7] Bräutigam studies the veracity of claims that Chinese corporations have purchased substantial arable land in Africa and populated it with laborers from China, and that these actions have been directed by the government in Beijing with the goal of improving food security in China.[7][8] Through extensive field work in a series of countries,[7] Bräutigam rebuts these claims, concluding that "The Chinese are not building a new empire on the continent" of Africa.[8]
In December 2021, BBC contacted Bräutigam to give a brief explanation of debt trap diplomacy, an example of it, and why the evidence doesn't support it. The morning after, a BBC broadcast recording used clips of the brief interview with Bräutigam and misrepresented her position on the debt-trap issue, discarding all the evidence she brought forth that the "conventional wisdom was not correct." Bräutigam contacted the BBC reporter that had reached out to her, who said that it was an editing decision by an inexperienced producer.[14][15][16] An apology for the error was issued by BBC on the same day noting that Bräutigam had explained why the ideas of Debt-Trap diplomacy have little basis in fact, but those comments were edited out of the broadcast interview.[17]
Selected works
Chinese Aid and African Development (1998)
Taxation and State-Building in Developing Countries: Capacity and Consent, edited with Odd-Helge Fjeldstad and Mick Moore (2008)
The Dragon’s Gift: The Real Story of China in Africa (2009)
Will Africa Feed China? (2015)
Selected awards
University Award for Outstanding Research, American University (2010)[18]
Book of the Week, The Independent, for The Dragon's Gift (2010)[6]
^ abWarren, Peter B. (1999). "Review Chinese Aid and African Development: Exporting the Green Revolution". African Studies Review. 42 (3): 108–109. doi:10.2307/525225. JSTOR525225.
^ abGolley, Jane (19 August 2011). "Review of The Dragon's Gift: The Real Story of China in Africa". Economic Record. 87 (278): 501–502. doi:10.1111/j.1475-4932.2011.00753.x.
^Van De Walle, Nicholas (January 2010). "Reviewed Work(s): The Dragon's Gift: The Real Story of China in Africa". Foreign Affairs. 89 (1pages=158).