The Rise of China's Soft Power

The New Yorker 

Last year, the Africa Cup of Nations, the continent's biggest international soccer tournament, kicked off in Côte d'Ivoire, in a stadium designed, financed, and built by China. This should not come as a surprise to anyone who follows the sport, nor is it some new development. The first Chinese-made stadium in Africa was completed more than fifty years ago. By the end of the millennium, nine more African countries would open their capital cities to what came to be known as "stadium diplomacy." The quantity and scale of these stadiums grew alongside an increasingly robust push to quickly build infrastructure in poor African countries.