In: Lusotopie: enjeux contemporains dans les espaces lusophones ; publication annuelle internationale de recherches politiques en science de l'homme, de la société et de l'environnement sur les lieux, pays et communautés d'histoire et de langue officielle ou nationale portugais et luso-créoles ; revue reconnue par le CRNS, S. 223-230
The present article analyses the Brazilian approach to the Asian countries, specially, to China, in a historical perspective. At the end of the 19th century & beginning of the 20th, the relationship with that continent was sparse & restricted basically to the coming of Japanese workers & to the non-official migration of Chinese. During the Cold War, under the Brazilian attempt to diversify its partnerships, there was a political approach to China on the multilateral sphere, nevertheless the economic ties stayed with Japan. Despite the traditional discourse of the Brazilian diplomacy about the universalization of the country's international relations, just at the 1990's there was in fact a strengthening of the economic approach to China -- and not only political. The main reasons were the Chinese high economic growth & the trade battle that was raised by the proposal for the creation of a Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA), which is understood as an obstacle to the insertion of external actors. Tables, References. Adapted from the source document.