Lexington Books
Pages: 184
Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
978-1-66694-970-4 • Hardback • January 2024 • $100.00 • (£77.00)
978-1-66694-971-1 • eBook • January 2024 • $45.00 • (£35.00)
Shirzad Azad is independent scholar possessing a doctorate in International Relations. He studied and taught in the East Asian countries of Japan, South Korea (ROK), and China for roughly one decade (2005–2015).
Chapter 1: The Move that Casts Shadow over an Emerging Entente
Chapter 2: Trade in Crude Oil: Running Afoul of Sanctions Diktats
Chapter 3: The Truculent World of Financial Matters
Chapter 4: Dwindled to a Trickle: Investments by China
Chapter 5: Troubles for the Transfer of Technology
Chapter 6: From Model to Mafia: The Car Industry Morphed into a Chinese Garage
Chapter 7: Hardly a Best Bang for the Buck: Non-Oil Exports to China
This book provides the reader with a deep dive into the latest developments in multifaceted aspects of Iran-China relations. Nuanced and textured, the research is laced with insights into the broader contexts that inform the policy frameworks and political and economic outcomes on both sides. As such, it is much needed corrective that enables us to look beyond the hype and the mainstream media headlines. Students, academics and policy makers alike would find much food for thought in this volume on this increasing significant relationship with regional and global ripple effects.
— Manochehr Dorraj, Professor of International Affairs, Texas Christian University
“This book is a much-needed contemporary overview of the economic, financial, and technological aspects of Sino-Iranian relations. Azad brings to the foreground new areas of interest, such as the mobile and car industries, that move us past just an examination of oil and nukes to illuminate the deep ties that Iran and China have established over the years. Examining these issues in the aftermath of the US’s retreat from the JCPOA, Azad provides new insight into what the future holds for the relationship.”
— Carrie Currier, Texas Christian University
[This] volume makes for a coherent analysis of the political economy of China–Iran relations over the last few years. This is based on interesting though fairly rudimentary data. The volume will likely interest academics and students. It is a solid contribution to the literature on China’s relations with the Middle East.
— The China Quarterly