“…It has stimulated the most hotly debated international imaginaries of China, the 'visible hands' behind its overseas expansion, along with a possible new variety of capitalism challenging the current international business regime and global governance (Alden and Davies 2006;Gill and Reilly 2007;Kaplinsky and Morris 2009), coupled with global food security, poverty reduction and land/resource grab issues (Bräutigam and Tang 2009;Cotula, Vermeulen, Leonard and Keeley 2009;Smaller and Mann 2009;Görgen, Rudloff, Simons, Ullenberg, Vath and Wimmer 2009;Hairong and Sautman 2010;Bräutigam and Zhang 2013;Buckley 2013), which all rank as the topmost issues of concern in the international media, academic and policy circles. Specifically, four primary narratives debating the nature and significance of China's SOE overseas investment, particularly agricultural investment in resource-abundant African and Latin-American countries, can be summarised as follows: China Inc., new coloniser, alternative developer and global system learner.…”