Next Brown Bag Talk: The BRI and the Evolving Role of Multilateral Development Banks

The De:link//Re:link Brown Bag Talks concentrate on a specific areas of research, both from guests and associated researchers, thus offering a platform for synergies under the umbrella of the project’s own research orientation. In general, each talk will consist of a short input of around 15 to 20 minutes, sometimes based on a text distributed prior to the meeting. The events are planned in a hybrid format. 

Our next Brown Bag Talk will take place on 12 March 2026 at 14:00 CET. De:link//Re:link PI Valentin Krüsmann (ZOiS) will discuss his research in a short lecture moderated by fellow PI and ZOiS researcher Julia Langbein. The talk is titled The Belt and Road Initiative and the Evolving Role of Multilateral Development Banks.

Since its launch in 2013, the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) has contributed to addressing infrastructure gaps around the world. While often under investigated, Multilateral Development Banks have been central to the initiative. In this talk, Valentin Krüsmann will examine how the role of these banks has reshaped the financing of the BRI and discuss the implications of multilateral finance for the initiative’s governance qualities and its position as a Chinese geo-economic strategy.

Register here

 
Upcoming talks

21 May 2026
Reform, Opening Up, Going Out:
Africa-China Engagement from the 1990s to the Present

Jamie Monson (Michigan State University)
This talk will focus on a book chapter Jamie Monson is currently writing. The chapter will use experiences and stories from everyday life to illustrate the local, regional and global context of China-Africa engagement from the 1980s to the present. African states and the PRC implemented economic reforms in the context of globalization in the 1980s, becoming more fully integrated into the global trade and production system. As China developed into the world’s new manufacturing center, goods “made in China” quickly took over African markets. Chinese traders were attracted to do business in many African countries, while the Chinese government invested heavily in African infrastructure projects. These activities of “Chinese in Africa” were welcomed at the same time that they were contested. Meanwhile, African entrepreneurs and students traveled to China to pursue new opportunities and as a result multiple and diverse African communities have now become established in China.

15 July 2026
Gwadar, Imperial Outpost since 1862:
A Survey of Archives and Sources

Hasan H. Karrar (LUMS) 

 
Past talks

13 November 2025
14:00 CET
GCC Economies and Changing Geopolitics:
Connectivity through Sustainability at Sohar Port and Free Zone
Dr. Abdullah Al-Abri
Dr. Dawud Al-Ansari
Chair: Sabine Dorpmüller (AGYA)

15 January 2026
13:00 CET
Navigating the Field in Afghanistan Post-2021:
Epistemological Reflections on Infrastructure (re)Construction and Development Efforts

Katja Mielke (bicc) 
Chair: Andrea Fleschenberg dos Ramos Pinéu (HU Berlin)
Discussant: Conrad Schetter (bicc)  

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