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On a random Tuesday in May 2019, I found myself in Shanghai's Pudong International Airport, waiting in a fortunately short and quickly moving immigration line prior to a return flight home. Just to the right was an immigration desk with what appeared to be a new sign: a “Belt-and-Road” channel ( Yidai yilu tongdao ). There was no one behind the BRI desk. I was intrigued by this, but of course did not dare to take a photograph of the sign in a restricted zone. Twenty minutes later I attempted to log on from the airline lounge, and ended with failure. The relevant two-step process now involved a passport scan, the receipt of a registration number that required inputting an (overseas) mobile number and receiving SMS verification with further password. The juxtaposition of the fast-track but empty BRI immigration desk and the clunky double verification procedure to get online at all seemed to encapsulate much China's current position in the world.
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Julia C. Strauss
University of London
The China Quarterly
University of London
Universidad de Londres
SOAS University of London
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Julia C. Strauss (Sun,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a12ab9a19b8e19607351aca — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/s030574101900105x