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2. Science and Security: Strengthening US-China Research Networks through University Leadership. Research & Occasional Paper Series: CSHE.11.2021
- Author
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University of California, Berkeley. Center for Studies in Higher Education (CSHE) and Farnsworth, Brad
- Abstract
This paper describes the current criticisms of academic research collaboration between the US and China and proposes a university-led initiative to address those concerns. The article begins with the assertion that bilateral research collaboration has historically benefitted both countries, citing cooperation in virology as an example. The paper continues with a discussion of the criticisms leveled by several US government agencies against the Chinese government, especially with regard to the Thousand Talents Program (TTP). A close examination of publicly available appointment letters under the TTP suggests that Chinese universities are given wide discretion when it comes to defining the specific terms of scholarly collaboration. Along with additional supporting arguments, the paper concludes that the most significant violations of commonly accepted research norms are owing to the behavior of individual Chinese institutions and are not directed by the TTP or the Chinese national government. The paper then suggests several steps for addressing these issues at the university level, beginning with a convening of campus leaders from both countries.
- Published
- 2021
3. Two City-States in the Long Shadow of China: The Future of Universities in Hong Kong and Singapore. Research & Occasional Paper Series: CSHE.10.2021
- Author
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University of California, Berkeley. Center for Studies in Higher Education (CSHE), Penprase, Bryan E., and Douglass, John Aubrey
- Abstract
Hong Kong and Singapore are island city-states that exude the complicated tensions of postcolonial nationalism. Both are influenced directly or indirectly by the long shadow of China's rising nationalism and geopolitical power and, in the case of Hong Kong, subject to Beijing's edicts under the terms of the 1984 Sino-British Joint Declaration. Both have productive economies dependent on global trade, and each has similar rates of population density--Hong Kong's population is 7.4 million and Singapore is home to 5.8 million people. It remains to be seen whether Hong Kong's peripheral nationalist identity will be retained, or whether the increasingly assertive influence and control by mainland China will prevail and fully assimilate Hong Kong. But it is apparent that Hong Kong is at a turning point. Throughout 2019, protesters filled the streets of the city, worried about declining civil liberties, specifically Beijing's refusal to provide universal suffrage as promised previously in law and the disqualification of prodemocracy candidates, along with the growing control of Hong Kong's government and universities by Chinese central government designates and fears of an ever-expanding crackdown on dissent. Singapore provides a less dramatic but relevant example of the tension caused by the influx of foreign national students and academics who often displace native citizens, combined with government-enforced efforts to control dissent in universities. And like Hong Kong, the long shadow of China influences the role universities are allowed to play in civil society. The following is an excerpt from the book "Neo-Nationalism and Universities: Populists, Autocrats and the Future of Higher Education" (Johns Hopkins University Press) that explores the implications of nationalist movements on universities in Hong Kong and Singapore. In both, university leaders, and their academic communities, value academic freedom and the idea of independent scholarship. Yet the political environment is severe enough, and the opportunity costs great enough, that they, thus far, remain generally neutral institutions in a debate over civil liberties and the future of their island states. The exception is the key role students have played in the protest movement in Hong Kong, but for how long?
- Published
- 2021
4. All talk, no walk?: A review of the 2016 defence white paper
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Le, Felicity
- Published
- 2021
5. Critical review of intelligence issues and recommendations relevant to the next defence white paper
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Dudley, Jake
- Published
- 2021
6. Exposing the Dangers of the Influence of Foreign Adversaries on College Campuses. Hearing before the Subcommittee on Higher Education and Workforce Development of the Committee on Education and the Workforce. U.S. House of Representative, One Hundred Eighteenth Congress, First Session (July 13, 2023). Serial No. 118-17
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US House of Representatives. Committee on Education and the Workforce, Subcommittee on Higher Education and Workforce Development
- Abstract
This document records testimony from a hearing before the Subcommittee on Higher Education and Workforce Development of the Committee on Education and the Workforce exposing the dangers of the influence of foreign adversaries on college campuses. Opening statements were provided by: (1) Honorable Burgess Owens, Chairman, Subcommittee on Higher Education and Workforce Development; and (2) Honorable Frederica Wilson, Ranking Member, Subcommittee on Higher Education and Workforce Development. Witness statements were provided by: (1) Paul R. Moore, Senior Counsel, Defense of Freedom Institute; (2) John C. Yang, President and Executive Director, Asian Americans Advancing Justice--AAJC; and (3) Craig Singleton, China Program Deputy Director and Senior Fellow, Foundation for Defense of Democracies. Additional submissions include: (1) Honorable Mark Takano, a Representative in Congress from the State of California: Article dated April 15, 2020, from Politico; and (2) Honorable Pramila Jayapal, a Representative in Congress from the State of Washington: Article dated January 18, 2023 from The Daily Pennsylvanian.
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- 2024
7. Power, Politics, and Education: Canadian Universities and International Education in an Era of New Geopolitics
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Trilokekar, Roopa Desai, El Masr, Amira, and El Masry, Hani
- Abstract
This paper focuses on the recent political spars between Canada and Saudi Arabia as well as China and their impact on Canadian universities. It asks three questions: (1) What key issues did Canada's political strains with Saudi Arabia and China raise for Canadian universities' international education (IE) initiatives and what issues were absent? (2) What do these key issues suggest about Canada's approaches to IE in an era of new geopolitics? and (3) What implications can be drawn from these cases about Canadian university-government relations in the context of new geopolitics? Given the powerful role media plays in education policy, a systematic study was conducted across three main media sources to identify 74 articles and news releases between August 2018 and November 2019. Three dominant themes are identified and analyzed, each vividly illustrating the close ties between global politics, government foreign policy and IE within Canadian Universities. On the one hand, the narratives speak to concerns about IE as a risk to national security and, on the other, as a vehicle for Canada's economic prosperity. However, what the media has not achieved is a broader discussion on how Canada needs to revisit its IE objectives and approaches in light of broader geopolitical shifts. Using the theoretical framework of soft power, the paper speaks to the limitations and short-sightedness of Canada's approach to IE as soft power in this era of new geopolitics and concludes with three recommendations for Canada.
- Published
- 2020
8. An Operational Code Analysis of China’s National Defense White Papers: 1998-2015.
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Yang, Yi Edward, Keller, Jonathan W., and Molnar, Joseph
- Subjects
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NATIONAL security , *INTERNATIONAL relations , *INTERNATIONAL cooperation , *FOREIGN relations administration ,CHINA-United States relations - Abstract
Scholarly efforts to predict the future character of the U.S.-China relationship abound. Few however looks to leaders’ beliefs as valid explanatory variables. In this paper, we argue that state leaders’ belief systems are key to understanding both the states’ intentions and policy choices. We analyze China’s national defense white papers (1998-2015) published to date as the source material to gauge the core collective beliefs of three generations of Chinese leadership. The operational code framework is employed to conceptualize and measure these beliefs. Our results identified important crossgenerational changes in a few belief indicators. In the Xi Jinping era, for instance, the political world is seen as less friendly and cooperative strategies are viewed less favorably. In terms of tactics, the policy tools “threaten” and “promise” are viewed as significantly more useful by the current leadership than by past Chinese leaders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
- Full Text
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9. China's Defense White Papers: a critical appraisal.
- Author
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Zhang, Jian
- Subjects
GOVERNMENT report writing ,MILITARY policy ,NATIONAL security ,COMPARATIVE government ,CHINESE military ,CHINESE politics & government, 2002- - Abstract
China's defense white papers have long been dismissed as lacking substance and offering little useful information on China's real strategic intentions and military capabilities. Nevertheless, since 1998 Beijing has continued to issue defense white papers on a regular two-year frequency. Indeed, in recent years it has accorded greater importance to these documents. This paper argues that China's defense white papers warrant more attention than they have received so far. An examination of the making of the white papers, the functions designated for these documents and their evolving content and structure reveals not only the different nature and purpose of the Chinese white papers compared with their counterparts in Western countries, but also important changes and continuities in China's strategic outlook and its evolving perceptions of the role of the use of force in the context of the country's re-emergence as a major player in international affairs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2012
- Full Text
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10. Australia's 2015 Defence White Paper: Seeking Strategic Opportunities in Southeast Asia to Help Manage China's Peacefiil Rise.
- Author
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LEE, JOHN
- Subjects
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NATIONAL security , *DIPLOMATIC history , *TWENTY-first century , *STRATEGIC planning , *INTERNATIONAL relations , *MILITARY policy ,AUSTRALIAN foreign relations, 1945- - Abstract
Australia's new government is committed to delivering the next defence white paper in 2015. The two previous white papers took a predominantly risk-management approach to Southeast Asia, generally ignored the strategic opportunities in the region, treated it as a stand-alone region largely unrelated to developments in East Asia and failed to link Australia's policies in Southeast Asia with the broader goal of helping to ensure greater strategic stability in Asia by putting constraints on Chinese assertiveness and encouraging its peaceful rise. After offering a summary of recent Australian defence thinking on Southeast Asia, this paper outlines why managing China is the key variable when it comes to strategic stability in the region. It then examines how China's strategy and behaviour can be shaped and influenced by events and relationships in Southeast Asia, and offers some suggestions as to the role Australia can seek to play in Southeast Asia that relates to Canberra's China-focused objectives and strategic stability in Asia more broadly If that can be achieved in the 2015 defence white paper, Australia - which is often criticized for being preoccupied primarily with managing the relationship with its superpower ally the United States - will demonstrate to itself and Asia that its heavy reliance on the ANZUS treaty is no barrier to strategic creativity in Asia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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11. Editor's Note: Re-engineering China's Innovation Machine.
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Naughton, Barry
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ECONOMIC conditions in China ,NATIONAL security ,BUSINESSPEOPLE - Abstract
An introduction to articles in the issue is presented on topics including the conscious effort to reshape incentives, organized scientific research within China's elite university, and increased attention universities are putting into engineering research centers.
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- 2024
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12. Watch Out! The Great University Implosion Is on Its Way
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Hil, Richard
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In this article, Richard Hill addresses the topic of China supposedly undermining Australia's national security and way of life, and causing ructions on university campuses. He writes that Chinese infiltration, or so it seems, is everywhere, from excessive housing investments and land buy-ups to dodgy dinner dates with ALP officials; and from Confucian Institutes (as fronts for espionage activities) to the take-over of student unions by Chinese students. Concern has even arisen over the spread of Chinese takeaways and the growing demand for Mandarin courses, both clearly promoting Chinese influence across the nation. Hill goes on to say that three journalists from the "Sydney Morning Herald/The Age" (Baker, Hunter & Bonyhady, 2019) took the brave step of striding into the murky world of Chinese students to expose the shadowy goings on. Hill opines that following some general observations on 'the Chinese issue', their report morphs into a more general discussion of how Australian universities deal with international students -- no trivial matter, given their contribution to university coffers. Apparently, to no surprise, not all of these student visitors are happy campers. Hill asserts that after all, Australian journalists inform the public, that these students have to fork out up to three times more for their education than domestic students, often live in dilapidated and over-crowded accommodation, and feel estranged, lonely and depressed. Many of them struggle with the most basic English, which makes reading turgid academic texts and assignment completion tough going. Worried by such questionable investigative reportage, Hill shares a slightly amended version of a letter he wrote directly to the journalists. He concludes that 'corruption risks' notwithstanding, it has become glaringly obvious that Australian universities are massively over-reliant on overseas students for their income and face an epic implosion when this revenue stream dries up, which it will once China and India build up their own sectors.
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- 2020
13. Government White Paper: China's National Defense in 2006.
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NATIONAL security , *NUCLEAR disarmament , *NUCLEAR weapons , *INTERNATIONAL relations - Abstract
In this white paper the Chinese government assesses the security environment; defines, and elaborates on, its national defense policy including its commitment to the policy of no first use of nuclear weapons at any time and under any circumstances; and describes the defense situation and activities in 2006. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
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14. CHINA'S MILITARY STRATEGY WHITE PAPER: WHAT DOES IT MEAN FOR THE REGION?
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GALDORISI, GEORGE
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NATIONAL security ,DEFENSIVE (Military science) ,MILITARY science ,CHINESE politics & government, 2002- ,MILITARY policy - Abstract
The article presents an overview of the first white paper of China about its defense and military strategy. The topics discussed include the reasons for creating the white paper, the reorganization of the Chinese People's Liberation Army (PLA), and the changes imposed by the Chinese government on its national security.
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- 2016
15. 'Chinese Students Syndrome' in Australia: Colonial Modernity and the Possibilities of Alternative Framing
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Song, Xianlin
- Abstract
There are around 400,000 international students studying on Australian campuses in 2018, and the education of international students is Australia's third largest export, behind that of iron ore and coal, thereby playing a significant role in the country's economy and particularly the financial sustainability of Australian universities. Chinese international students, account for one-third in this cohort, are paradoxically both coveted as 'cash cows' and labelled as a 'security threat' to Australian society. The paper examines this particular 'Chinese Student Syndrome' through the lens of 'colonial modernity' and argues that along with the problems of Chinese firms in Australia, Chinese international students on Australian campuses, in many ways, take on the persona of China itself in Australia, and the implications associated with its global rise. At the core of this syndrome lies a deep-seated ontological framing of a historical teleology that centres the Anglo-European pathway to modernity as universal that grounds the epistemic certainty of higher education institutions in Australia and regards Chinese students as the outsider to this teleology.
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- 2020
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16. Achieving Youth Employment and National Security in Nigeria: TVET Imperatives
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Ogbuanya, T. C. and Ofonmbuk, Michael
- Abstract
The rate of unemployment in Nigeria is alarming and could promote social vices some of which are kidnapping, armed robbery, child trafficking, Cultism, Drug peddling and ritual killing. These social vices could in no small measure constitute a threat to national security as a matter of fact. Therefore, the development of a workable Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET) programme in the country is the needed panacea to creating Job opportunities for the teaming youths. This will definitely reduce to its barest minimum threat to national security. This paper gives insight into: Youth employment as a vehicle for enhancing national security, ways adopted by other countries in promoting the poor perception of TVET, lessons to be learnt from other countries as regards enhancing the perception of the TVET, existing youth employment programmes in Nigeria and the way forward to boosting employment creation in Nigeria.
- Published
- 2015
17. The Impact of Chinese Influence on Bhartiya (Indian) Media: An Analysis of Trends and Implications for National Security.
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Dhangar, Mohan Singh, Uppal, Akriti, Rani, Neeta, and Sharma, Surajbhan
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BURGLARY protection ,MILITARY personnel ,PUBLIC opinion ,MASS media influence ,NATIONAL security - Abstract
China has lately grown more active in several fields, particularly the media, trying to affect Indian society in multiple ways. Aiming for national security and how these actions have affected the impartiality and independence of Indian media sources, this paper investigates the effects of Chinese intervention in Indian media. Using a mixedmethods approach, data was acquired from people comprising media professionals, academics, and military personnel. The paper emphasizes the various sophisticated strategies China employs, such as financial investments and narrative control to affect media coverage and public opinion in India. By means of an analysis of these developments, this research provides an awareness of the way Chinese intervention is altering the Indian media scene. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
18. Perspectives on U.S. Competitiveness in Science and Technology. Conference Proceedings (Washington, DC, November 8, 2006)
- Author
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RAND National Defense Research Institute, Galama, Titus, and Hosek, James
- Abstract
Concern has grown that the United States is losing its competitive edge in science and technology (S&T). The factors driving this concern include globalization, the rise of science centers in developing countries such as China and India, the increasing number of foreign-born Ph.D. students in the United States, and claims of a shortage of S&T workers in the United States. A loss of prowess in S&T could hurt U.S. economic competitiveness, standard of living, and national security. The Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness asked the RAND Corporation to convene a meeting in November 2006 to discuss these issues. This volume contains the short papers presented at the meeting and discussed by the analysts, policymakers, military officers, professors, and business leaders who attended. The papers cover a broad range of topics, including science policy, the quantitative assessment of S&T capability, globalization, the rise of Asia (in particular, China and India), innovation, trade, technology diffusion, the increase in foreign-born Ph.D. recipients working in the United States, new directions in the management and compensation of federal S&T workers, and national security and the defense industry. Taken as a set, the papers provide at least a partial survey of the facts, challenges, and questions posed by the possible erosion of U.S. S&T capabilities. The papers comprising this volume are: (1) Rising Above the Gathering Storm: Energizing and Employing America for a Brighter Economic Future--Executive Summary (The National Academies); (2) The Global Diffusion of S&T and the Rise of China (Adam Segal); (3) Scientific Wealth and the Scientific Investments of Nations (Jonathan Adams); (4) The World Is What? (David Warsh); (5) National Security in a Knowledge-Based Global Economy (Jonathan Eaton and Samuel Kortum); (6) Recent Trends in U.S. Science and Engineering: Prospects, Challenges, and Implications (James D. Adams); (7) Globalization of the Scientific/Engineering Workforce and National Security (Richard B. Freeman); (8) The Gathering Storm and Its Implications for National Security (Michael S. Teitelbaum); (9) Comments on the "Gathering Storm" and Its Implications for National Security (Paula E. Stephan); (10) Comments at a Meeting on the "Gathering Storm" and Its Implications for National Security (Thomas L. Magnanti); (11) Some Thoughts on the "Gathering Storm," National Security, and the Global Market for Scientific Talent (Paul Oyer); (12) Summative Evaluation of Personnel Management and Compensation Initiatives (Brigitte W. Schay); and (13) The Economic Complexities of Incentive Reforms and Engineers in the Federal Government (Beth J. Asch). Appended is the conference agenda, a list of attendees, and biographical information. (Each paper contains references, tables, and figures.) [This research was sponsored by the Office of the Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness and conducted within the Forces and Resources Policy Center of the RAND National Defense Research Institute.]
- Published
- 2007
19. Language Policy: Lessons from Global Models (1st, Monterey, California, September 2001).
- Author
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Baker, Steven J.
- Abstract
These papers come from a 2001 conference that explored language policy issues at the global, U.S. national, and California regional levels. There are 15 papers in five sections. Section 1, "National Language Policy," includes (1) "Language and Globalization: Why National Policies Matter" (Chester D. Haskell) and (2) "Real World Language Politics and Policy" (Joseph Lo Bianco). Section 2, "Language Policy, Migration, and Indigenous Peoples," includes (3) "Immigrant Integration: The Ongoing Process of Reform in France and Quebec" (James Archibald) and (4) "Education Language Policies in Francophone Africa: What Have We Learned from Field Experiences?" (Hassana Alidou and Ingrid Jung). Section 3, "National Security and Language Policy," includes (5) "The Language Crisis in the United States: Language, National Security and the Federal Role" (Richard D. Brecht and William P. Rivers); (6) "Meeting Current and Future Language Needs of the German Public Sector, with Special Emphasis on Defense" (Herbert Walinsky); and (7) "Heritage Languages and the National Security: An Ecological View" (Bernard Spolsky). Section 4, "Linguistic Rights and Language Policy," includes (8) "Linguistic Rights, Language Planning and Democracy in Post-Apartheid South Africa" (Neville Alexander); (9) "The Other Languages of Multicultural Europe: Perceptions, Facts and Educational Policies" (Guus Extra); (10) "Quebec's Language Policy: Perceptions and Realities" (Guy Dumas); and (11) "Language Policy for Multicultural Japan: Establishing the New Paradigm" (John C. Maher). Section 5,"Language Policy and Foreign Language Education," includes (12) "Foreign Language Policies in Europe, with Special Reference to the Roles of the Council of Europe and the European Union" (John L.M. Trim); (13) "Fish Bowl, Open Seas and the Teaching of English in Japan" (Yoshida Kensaku); (14) "Language Policy and Planning in Tunisia: Accommodating Language Policy" (Mohamed Daoud); and (15) "English Language Education in China" (He Qixin). (Papers contain references.) (SM)
- Published
- 2002
20. Position Paper of the People's Republic of China on the United Nations Reforms*.
- Subjects
NATIONAL security ,CIVIL defense - Abstract
An excerpt from the white paper "China's National Defense in 2004," is presented.
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- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. INTEGRATED DETERRENCE: RELEVANCE & IMPLICATIONS FOR SOUTH ASIA.
- Author
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Sultan, Adil, Haider, Faraz, and Jamy, Shayan Hassan
- Subjects
NATIONAL security ,GREAT powers (International relations) ,ARMS race ,TECHNOLOGICAL innovations - Abstract
The US National Security Strategy of 2022 introduced a relatively new concept of Integrated Deterrence (ID) that will likely impact security discourse amongst global rivals such as the US, China, and Russia while affecting the strategic thinking of relatively smaller powers like India, Pakistan, and others. With an expanded scope and objectives, ID aims to build and integrate the entire spectrum of capabilities of the US, its allies, and partners against the perceived threat from China and possibly Russia. Resultantly, the paper focuses on implications of ID for security and strategic stability in South Asia. India, being a major strategic partner with the will to play a significant role in the US-led China containment strategy, is likely to be a major beneficiary of the new US posture of ID. With enhanced and integrated military capabilities, India is likely to adopt a more hostile posture towards its neighbours, especially Pakistan, thus forcing the latter to develop options in the form of 'Integrated Response', to help maintain strategic stability in the region without indulging in an arms race, and by maintaining neutrality in the evolving US-China great power competition. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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22. A Paradigm Shift for Hong Kong's National Security Constitution – A Comparative Study of the Impact of Its National Security Law.
- Author
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Lin, Feng and Fei, Mengtian
- Subjects
NATIONAL security laws ,NATIONAL security ,CONSTITUTIONS ,COMPARATIVE studies - Abstract
The Chinese national legislature has enacted a national security law (NSL) for Hong Kong. This paper applies the theory of national security constitution as developed by Professor Koh to examine the impact of the NSL upon four core constitutional principles in Hong Kong's mini-constitution which underly its national security constitution and to evaluate the nature of the impact. The paper argues that the NSL has, instead of applying and supplementing the existing underlying constitutional principles in the mini-constitution, changed them to various degrees, and the pre-NSL bifurcated national security system for Hong Kong and mainland China has been replaced by an integrated national security system under the NSL. The impact caused by the NSL is so significant as to amount to a permanent paradigm shift to a new post-NSL national security constitution. The paper also argues that the theory of national security constitution has its limitation in its application to subnational Hong Kong because its mini-constitution and the underlying principles therein can be modified by national legislation, such as the NSL, of its sovereign, China. Through a comparative study with the USA, the paper proposes that the theory of national security constitution needs to be modified by adding that different effects may occur to a sub-national national security constitution depending on the source of the framework national security legislation. Hong Kong's failure in its constitutional duty to enact national security legislation under Article 23 of the Basic Law has led to the enactment of the NSL by China. Such legislation from the sovereign has changed the underlying constitutional principles and is fundamentally different from sub-national framework legislation that only implements and supplements those principles. However, a comparative study with Macau indicates that the theory of national security constitution is still applicable to a sub-national entity such as Macau so long as China as sovereign exercises self-restraint and any framework national security legislation is enacted at the sub-national level. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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23. Politicizing Study Abroad: Learning Arabic in Egypt and Mandarin in China
- Author
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Diao, Wenhao and Trentman, Emma
- Abstract
This paper examines ideologies of American study abroad in politically and culturally "non-Western" countries. Drawing from the theory of orientalism (Said, 1978), we analyze how American public discourse on study abroad for learners of Mandarin and Arabic manifests an orientalist thinking, and how such macro discourse both produces multilingual subjects (Kramsch, 2010) and considerable tensions with the micro discourses of these subjects. Our findings show that despite linguistic and cultural differences between China and the Arab world, the two contexts are imagined together as the political "East" in American public rhetoric. The two languages are also assumed to be crucial to the somewhat contradictory goals of "bridge-building" and "national defense." These imaginings provide students a mode of identity construction, but they are also contested in students' everyday experience. Using these findings, we argue that the discursive links between the two study abroad destinations result from a geopolitically situated American gaze, a view that obscures differences between the two destinations, the goals of individual language learners, and the locals they interact with when abroad.
- Published
- 2016
24. White Paper reveals Beijing's defence thinking.
- Author
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Hill, John
- Subjects
GOVERNMENT publications ,NATIONAL security ,MILITARY spending ,MILITARY policy ,LOGISTICS - Abstract
Focuses on a defence White Paper report which outlines Beijing, China's national security concerns that covers a wide range of activities from military modernisation, arms control and civil-military relations. Increase in Beijing's military spending for 2005; Key areas that are being considered by Beijing as critical to its national security; Reformation of the People's Liberation Army's logistic organisation to produce an integrated tri-service joint logistical support system.
- Published
- 2005
25. Who Does "Endowment Insurance" Support: The Elderly or Their Grown-up Children?
- Author
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Liu, Ligang, Xiao, Zhiwu, and Deng, Yang
- Subjects
LIFE insurance endowment policies ,PENSIONS ,NATIONAL security ,FINANCIAL management - Abstract
This research paper seeks to understand whether the current basic endowment insurance policy has properly played the role of supporting the elderly needs through intergenerational support within the family. Theoretically, there are problems of the imbalanced structure of pension security, retirees' comparatively higher pension and the low-level security of young people's in-service income, and drawbacks of the existing endowment insurance system, both have a certain causal relationship with "gnawing the old." Data on China's family tracking survey in 2016 (CFPS2016), Probit model, IV and PSM robustness testing methods were also used to study the relationship between parents' pensions and their grownup children's "gnawing-the-old" behavior. The results show that: (1) Compared with young people from families without pension income, those with pensioned parent(s) will less possibly choose to work; the parents' financial assistance behavior would restrain the children's intention to work and increase the possibility of "gnawing the old"; (2) Neither the amount of pension income nor financial assistance given to the children is significantly related to young people's "gnawing the old"; (3) Young people's "gnawing the old" behaviors are different according to their parents' professions and living areas; (4) The gap between parents' pension income and children's in-service income also adds to the causes of "gnawing the old." The policy implications of these findings are discussed particularly the formulation of a scientific mechanism for pension income. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. The UK's Indo-Pacific Policy: A Comparative Perspective.
- Author
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Jyun-Yi Lee
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL organization ,NATIONAL security ,GEOPOLITICS ,MILITARY policy ,BRITISH withdrawal from the European Union, 2016-2020 - Abstract
This paper explores the UK's future Indo-Pacific policy by looking into the newly published Integrated Review (IR) and comparing it with the French and German policy papers. The "Indo-Pacific tilt" is one of the most highlighted themes in the IR, but a reading of the review suggests that the UK remains Euro-Atlantic centered when it comes to defense and security policy. It is only after the internal and external security issues are addressed that the UK pursues its "global interest" through diplomacy and trade. Hence, while the geopolitical and economic importance of the Indo-Pacific is acknowledged, and the stance of the UK towards the region appears more ambitious and confident than that of France and Germany, it remains a question as to the degree to which the UK may commit to the Indo-Pacific. The UK defines China as a "systemic competitor" rather than a "threat," suggesting that while the challenges China poses may be comprehensive and profound, they are not taken as immediate and urgent. This designation is peculiar. On the one hand, it differs from the US policy, which sees China (and Russia) as threats to its national security. On the other hand, compared with the European counterparts, the UK is the only one that calls out China, expressing a stronger will to counter China when necessary. Therefore, it is suggested that the post-Brexit UK is likely to side with the US in the US-China-EU triangular relations. Being very much a middle power, however, the UK's space for maneuver is limited. It pledges to compete against China and seek the latter's cooperation simultaneously, but such a stance requires power and will that the country may be lacking. The deployment of HMS Queen Elizabeth to the Indo-Pacific, for instance, has been described as an expression of the UK's commitment to the rules-based international order. Yet Prime Minister Johnson's emphasis on not antagonizing anyone and the decision that the Carrier Strike Group will not sail through the Taiwan Strait indicates a concern about China and consequently difficulty implementing the "co-opetition" strategy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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27. The United States' Policy of Counterbalancing China: Constraints and Implications.
- Author
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Abubaker, Muhammad
- Subjects
NATIONAL security ,INTERNATIONAL organization ,ATHLETIC fields - Abstract
The Asia-Pacific region has emerged as the central playing field of the US and China strategic competition. The US views China as the competitor undermining the US regional influence in the Asia-Pacific region. This paper explores the US-China strategic competition, layers of instability in the Asia-Pacific, and specifically the constraints for the US in its Indo-Pacific Strategy and security implications for the region. The US National Security Strategy - 2022 strategises to counterbalance China by constructing regional deterrence infrastructure by strengthening its long-standing alliances and building new partnerships such as the QUAD and AUKUS, and is also cementing ties with the ASEAN. In order to avert crisis escalation in the Asia-Pacific region, the US and China bilaterally and the regional states, as crucial stakeholders, would require to carefully manage their roles and strategies in the ongoing competition for world order determination. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. CHINA'S STRATEGIC PRESENCE IN EAST AFRICAN PORTS: IMPLICATIONS FOR INDIAN OCEAN SECURITY.
- Author
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Hazra, Sharmistha and Bhaskar, Pranav
- Subjects
OCEAN energy resources ,OCEAN ,NATIONAL security - Abstract
This paper examines how China's presence in the East African seaports has created a threat to the Indian Ocean's security. In particular, the research empirically analyses whether China's growing activities in the Western Indian Ocean along the East African coast have dismantled the security architecture of the Indo-Pacific. This paper aims to understand the responses of India and her allies in containing China's rise in the region. The paper has taken three East African ports, Dar es Salaam, Lamu, and Doraleh port of Djibouti, as a case study to examine how Chinese presence in these three ports could dismantle the security architecture of Indo-Pacific in the Western Indian Ocean region. The paper demonstrates that the present competition of power projection in the Indian Ocean is a power maximization strategy for the national security of each state. Using primary and secondary data available on China, India, and other states' policies and activities, the study finds that it is a policy failure of the Indo-Pacific, accelerating China's rise in the region. However, the Indo-Pacific partners are revamping their policies to check China's rise in the Indian Ocean region. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Understanding the risks of China-made CCTV surveillance cameras in Australia.
- Author
-
Bernot, Ausma and Smith, Marcus
- Subjects
VIDEO surveillance ,CLOSED-circuit television ,DATA security ,HUMAN rights violations ,NATIONAL security ,INTERNET of things - Abstract
In the global interconnected economy, China-made information-collecting technologies such as closed-circuit television (CCTV) surveillance cameras have become popular products for routine video-based surveillance. Hikvision and Dahua are the two largest global suppliers of CCTV cameras, with both companies supplying their products to over 200 countries. Despite their popularity, national security concerns are commonly cited when adopting these cameras, citing manufacturer links with the Communist Party of China (CPC), cybersecurity vulnerabilities, and sales recorded in the Xinjiang region, that has records of human rights violations. This paper is structured in three parts: first, we explore the predominance of China-made information-gathering technologies in Australia; second, we summarise common national security concerns usually associated with China-based technology manufacturers; and third, we propose regulatory measures to regulating China-made CCTV cameras in Australia. The paper suggests that while state and Federal decision-makers are free to remove Chinese CCTV surveillance cameras, they should avoid overt politisation. Overall, a stronger focus should be placed on evaluating cybersecurity risks of Internet of Things (IoT) information-collecting technologies and considering their timely and effective regulation from the perspective of individual and national interests. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Cross-Border Educational Collaboration between Taiwan and China: The Implications for Educational Governance
- Author
-
Chan, Sheng-Ju
- Abstract
Taiwan has undertaken a series of cross-border collaboration with China for the past two decades. This paper aims to investigate the Taiwanese approach and policies of educational collaboration with China in a globalized context, where international competitiveness has become a great concern for most countries. It also examines how the Taiwanese government's cross-border educational collaboration will affect the flow of human capital across the Taiwan Strait and reflect upon the challenges of educational governance in Taiwan. It is argued that the rhetorical purposes stated by government may not be entirely realized due to the great concerns of national security, military threat, and employment issues among the public in Taiwan. These make overarching collaboration with China not possible at this stage. The lingering effects of this hesitation not only create an apartheid-type system among non-local students, but might also lead to an undesirable outcome of the outflow of human capital to China. In order to maintain effective collaboration with China, a wide range of governance challenges have been raised and need to be addressed. (Contains 1 note.)
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Suspect until Proven Guilty a Problematization of State Dossier Systems via Two Case Studies: The United States and China
- Author
-
Farrall, Kenneth N.
- Abstract
This dissertation problematizes the "state dossier system" (SDS): the production and accumulation of personal information on citizen subjects exceeding the reasonable bounds of risk management. SDS--comprising interconnecting subsystems of records and identification--damage individual autonomy and self-determination, impacting not only human rights, but also the viability of the social system. The research, a hybrid of case-study and cross-national comparison, was guided in part by a theoretical model of four primary SDS driving forces: technology, political economy, law and public sentiment. Data sources included government documents, academic texts, investigative journalism, NGO reports and industry white papers. The primary analytical instrument was the juxtaposition of two individual cases: the U.S. and China. Research found that constraints on the extent of the U.S. SDS today may not be significantly different from China's, a system undergoing significant change amidst growing public interest in privacy and anonymity. Much activity within the U.S., such as the practice of suspicious activity reporting, is taking place outside the domain of federal privacy laws, while ID systems appear to advance and expand despite clear public opposition. Momentum for increasingly comprehensive SDS appears to be growing, in part because the harms may not be immediately evident to the data subjects. The future of SDS globally will depend on an informed and active public; law and policy will need to adjust to better regulate the production and storage of personal information. To that end, the dissertation offers a general model and linguistic toolkit for the further analysis of SDS. [The dissertation citations contained here are published with the permission of ProQuest LLC. Further reproduction is prohibited without permission. Copies of dissertations may be obtained by Telephone (800) 1-800-521-0600. Web page: http://www.proquest.com/en-US/products/dissertations/individuals.shtml.]
- Published
- 2009
32. The political economy of US maritime strategy in the Indo-Pacific.
- Author
-
Furse, Thomas
- Subjects
ECONOMIC elites ,NAVAL officers ,MILITARY strategy ,POLITICAL integration ,NATIONAL security ,CORPORATE giving - Abstract
Political economy impacts and influences a state's military strategy. This article focuses on how the integration of the US political economy in the Indo-Pacific drives US Navy officers and the broader national security state to establish the Free and Open Indo-Pacific (FOIP). Investigating the strategic thought of senior Naval officers shows that they think far beyond military threats and engage with the United States and the Indo-Pacific political economy. Even as the US Navy competes with China's military, its FOIP strategy benefits corporate elites in both China and the US, whose cooperation creates a mutually supportive economic relationship. This argument leads to the finding that the US hegemony in the region is a strategy that avoids a bipolar 'New Cold War' of an entirely de-coupled US and China. The FOIP supported by the US Navy continues to integrate China into regional and global economies, even as it attempts to push back against China by gathering allies and partners. The emphasis on international political economy highlights how the region is a network of 'patchwork' relations, where states rely on one another for economic prosperity. Through investigating speeches and strategic papers from US Naval officials, this paper demonstrates how the US competes and cooperates with China in the context of relations in the region that are in constant flux. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. China Releases Defense White Paper.
- Author
-
CRAIL, PETER and GEBBEN, NIK
- Subjects
MILITARY strategy ,NATIONAL security - Abstract
The article reports that China has released "China's National Defense in 2010," its seventh defense paper that provided an overview of Chinese military strategy, its security threats and its arms control.
- Published
- 2011
34. China's Military: Real or Paper Tiger?
- Subjects
CHINESE military ,MILITARY modernization (Equipment) ,NATIONAL security ,NATIONAL interest ,UNITED States military relations ,INTERNATIONAL relations - Abstract
The article focuses on the growth of the military capabilities of China. The author looks into the comprehensive force modernization program of China, as well as the possible implications of China's military capabilities to the national security and national interests of the U.S. He states that it is important for the U.S. to cooperate bilaterally with China, because China is an important factor in international relations. He also talks about the modernization of the Chinese People's Liberation Army (PLA).
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. The Historic Missions of the People's Liberation Army under Xi Jinping: The Military's Role in the "New Era".
- Author
-
Heath, Timothy R.
- Subjects
GREAT powers (International relations) ,MILITARY policy ,GRAND strategy (Political science) ,NATIONAL security ,ANXIETY - Abstract
China's leadership has modified the military's formal role in national strategy, which is known as its "historic missions." The change reflects an appreciation of both the opportunities and the perils posed by China's rise as a great power as well as by anxiety about the intensifying domestic political vulnerabilities that stem from economic deceleration and persistent official malfeasance. Paradoxically, the government's expanded view of national security has meant a diminution in the role of the military in security policy toward one of "strategic support." As non-military threats intensify, the role of the People's Liberation Army in national strategy will likely focus on modernization and assistance to non-military efforts to protect an expanding array of interests along China's periphery and beyond. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
36. Theoretical approach and practice of "National Spatial Planning Theory": how Chinese cities and towns precisely adapt to nature and culture.
- Author
-
Wang, Kai, Xu, Hui, and Zhou, Yajie
- Subjects
URBANIZATION ,CULTURAL property ,REGIONAL disparities ,NATIONAL security - Abstract
Over the past 40 years, China has witnessed the world's largest urbanization process. In light of its natural and cultural conditions featuring resource scarcity, frequent natural disasters, rich cultural heritage and regional disparities and dynamics, this process aggravates the complex and severe problems faced by urban areas, including resource and environmental damage, security risks and cultural degradation. To address these issues, a shift in national and regional urban spatial layouts from improving economic competitiveness to balancing protection and development as well as security and development is needed. Related theories and research methods should also be adjusted accordingly. Therefore, given China's specific conditions and regional spatial layouts, the paper introduces the "national spatial planning theory," which aims to create a sound living environment. The core concept is "precise adaptation," which ensures the adaption of urban development to natural and cultural conditions. It is the first theory that proposes to develop the national urban spatial layout based on the analysis of ecological environment. It also suggests shifting the focus from eco-environment to security and culture as urbanization progresses and problems change constantly. In addition, a method framework and technical system of "precise analysis, adaptive distribution and dynamic evaluation" is formulated to build an adaptive urban spatial layout on the basis of quantitative analysis of the capacity of spatial resources. The practices of regional planning processes on varying scales in the past 20 years are to illustrate the specific applications of the theoretical approach. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Governance, legitimacy, and decision-making capability of the Chinese national social security fund-against the backdrop of international comparison.
- Author
-
Gan, Yujie
- Subjects
SOCIAL security ,NATIONAL security ,PENSION trusts ,DECISION making ,BOARDS of directors - Abstract
To deal with the pension crisis, many countries have established the 'Public Pension Reserve Funds (PPRFs)'. The Chinese government has also established the Chinese National Social Security Fund (NSSF), a typical PPRF to deal with the Chinese pension crisis. This paper focuses on the governance issues of the Chinese NSSF. More specifically, it focuses on the NSSF's board to determine its decision-making capabilities, during which I will talk about the expertise and representation issues in the NSSF. The paper found that, first, the NSSF's board may have more symbolic significance than substantive powers, which may be the result of the government's endorsement of the legitimacy of the NSSF. Second, we found that the representation and expertise tension that prevail in Western pension funds governance also exist in China's NSSF, and the analytical framework for this tension is also applicable to the discussion of Chinese cases. Third, through international comparison, we infer that an efficient board of directors might be a necessary condition for the pension funds' good performance, but not a sufficient condition. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. China's National Security Review of Foreign Investment: A Comparison with the United States.
- Author
-
Hui Huang, Robin
- Subjects
- *
FOREIGN investments , *NATIONAL security , *FOREIGN investment laws , *STATE capitalism ,CHINA-United States relations - Abstract
This paper critically examines China's national security review regime of foreign investment and compares it with that of the United States. Over the years, China has gradually established a comprehensive legal framework for national security review of foreign investment. Recent efforts were made to refine the public enforcement mechanism of the review in tandem with a new "pre-establishment national treatment plus negative list" system under the 2020 Foreign Investment Law. The United States also enacted the Foreign Investment Risk Review Modernization Act of 2018 to enhance its national security review regime. By analyzing the law and practices of China and the United States, this paper finds that the national security review regimes of the two jurisdictions have functional convergences despite some formal divergences caused by diverse political-economy landscapes. Their functional convergences are highlighted by China's local practices, such as the de-facto national security screening in the name of anti-monopoly review. There are many factors affecting China's national security review regime for foreign investment, including the ongoing (and escalating) US-China competition (or conflict) at the international level and the evolution of state or party capitalism at the domestic level. These research findings will not only contribute to the existing comparative law scholarship but also benefit multinational enterprises that seek to enter Chinese and the US markets. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
39. From liberal to conservative? The role of Hong Kong Court of final appeal in safeguarding fundamental rights under China's One Country Two Systems policy.
- Author
-
Wang, Wanli
- Subjects
CIVIL rights ,APPELLATE courts ,HUMAN rights ,COMMON law ,NATIONAL security laws ,COMPARATIVE method - Abstract
This paper explores Hong Kong Court of Final Appeal's role in protecting fundamental rights under China's One Country Two Systems practice. It starts by giving an account of the constitutional and legal framework for Hong Kong's judicial protection of human rights. It examines the Court's efforts in obtaining constitutional jurisdiction, employing generous interpretation approach to rights guarantees, reforming standards such as proportionality and reasonableness for scrutinising rights restrictions, and broadening reference inputs by comparative approach and amicus curiae for interpretation of rights provisions. It indicates that through these ways the CFA has developed freedom-friendly common law constitutionalism and formed judicial preferences in favour of personal liberty. It advocates that the so-called conservative performance of the CFA on rights issues in national security cases may be its efforts to secure judicial independence and the common law system in a changing political climate. The article posits that due to the CFA's strong foundation in judicial protection of human rights, and its recent efforts to incorporate national security law into common law, it is well-positioned to play a crucial role in preserving the way of life for Hong Kong residents as China's Hong Kong policy enters a new era. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. گذار دریاپایه و پویاییهای دریایی چینامریکا.
- Author
-
فاطمه محروق
- Subjects
POWER (Social sciences) ,MARITIME security ,NATIONAL security - Abstract
The evolution of the 21st century international system towards a complex and chaotic system, due to the simultaneous global and regional transition of power between China and the United States, has made the seas more prominent in the process of order transition. Such a transition can be seen in Indo-Pacific maritime tensions, especially in the South China Sea. Such a multi-level transition has brought new challenges to the traditional model of power transition theory and it’s necessary to adjust it within the framework of complex systems. This paper examines the role do seas and oceans play in the transition of power in complex international systems? The author argues that competition to dominate the seas and oceans can be the point of transferring systemic pressures to the branches of the regional order and changing its security architecture towards a new maritime-based security order. The paper, using the multi-level power transition theory, contributes to a better understanding of the dynamics surrounding maritime competition and contestation between China and the United States in the process of power transition from a systemic perspective. The research method is deductive-inductive based on inference and synthesis. In this regard, at first the principles and rules of transition in complex and chaotic systems are extracted, then by combining them, the bifurcation transition model and comprehensive network control system is presented. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Four factors in the "special relationship" between China and North Korea: a framework for analyzing the China–North Korea Relationship under Xi Jinping and Kim Jong-un.
- Author
-
Hoshino, Masahiro and Hiraiwa, Shunji
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL relations ,FACTOR analysis ,NATIONAL security ,INFORMATION resources management - Abstract
Analyzing North Korea is essential for examining international relations in East Asia as a whole, but North Korea's tight control over information makes this difficult. Another factor complicating analysis of North Korea is its "special relationship" with China. The aim of this paper is to examine four factors contributing to the "special relationship" between China and North Korea, how that relationship came about, and how it functions within the context of international politics today. This paper is a structural analysis of China–North Korea relations that describes four factors behind their "special relationship." It continues by analyzing China–North Korea relations under Xi Jinping and Kim Jong-un up to the deployment of THAAD in South Korea. The "special relationship" between China and North Korea is based on four factors. What is distinctive about these factors is that they can bring the two sides together but also push them apart. In terms of national security issues, the force bringing them together has ultimately prevailed. Socialist ideology issues have surfaced much less frequently now and have lost their capacity to both bring the two together and push them apart. In the area of traditional ties, the two leaders are attempting to use their personal relationship to have closer relations, but this is not having much lasting effect. Where economic relations are concerned, Beijing and Pyongyang have become even more dependent on each other and this is a strong force pushing them closer together. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. COVID-19 - implications for China’s national security.
- Author
-
Gębska, Marta Halina and Krukowska, Monika
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,NATIONAL security ,STAY-at-home orders ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic began in March 2020 and China has since been under public scrutiny for neglecting the first signs of this global health challenge and for its lockdown strategy. Although lockdowns have not lasted for long, China needs to confront the political, social, and economic implications for its national security. The paper aims to fill a gap in the knowledge and investigate aspects of China’s national security in light of the pandemic. The study is based on desk research using secondary data and statistical and comparative analysis. It also employs an inductive method to build general theorems. The Chinese government can be seen as successful in dealing with the pandemic because of a low death toll and minimal economic losses. By early February 2022, only 106,863 Chinese had been diagnosed, and 4,636 had died from the virus. China also achieved enviable economic success and, its output grew by 18.3% year on year in the first quarter of 2021, the fastest rate since the 1990s, and it was the first major economy to withdraw its pandemic stimulus. China consolidated its position in low-income countries and improved its image as a global leader in trade by supplying vaccines, masks and ventilators, and strengthened its geopolitical standing. It will face threats from other countries working on a joint approach to the challenges posed by Beijing and while the aftereffects of the crisis can be seen, it also fears that they might further affect China’s national security. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. China's White Paper on National Military Strategy.
- Author
-
KAPOOR, V. K.
- Subjects
NATIONAL security ,CHINA-India relations ,MILITARY policy - Abstract
The article focuses on China's White Paper on military strategy, and talks of dependence of China's national security on energy, communication, and its assets abroad, list of responsibilities of the armed forces, and need for India's military to prepare for China's increasing territorial claims.
- Published
- 2015
44. China assumes lead in science and tech research paper output.
- Subjects
SCIENTIFIC method ,TECHNOLOGICAL innovations ,NATIONAL security - Published
- 2018
45. 'Stand up like a Taiwanese!': PRC coercion and public preferences for resistance.
- Author
-
Chong, Ja Ian, Huang, David W. F., and Wu, Wen-Chin
- Subjects
TAIWANESE people ,AUTHORITARIANISM ,NATIONAL security ,CHINA-Taiwan relations ,DIPLOMACY - Abstract
Taiwan's opposition to PRC demands such as acceptance of the '92 Consensus' and 'One Country, Two Systems' formula since 2016 has invited a series of retaliatory measures from Beijing, designed to coerce Taiwan into compliance. Given the stark asymmetry in economic size, military capability, and diplomatic status, Taiwan provides a case for studying coercive diplomacy that takes the form of threats to punish. Material differences suggest that Taiwan should capitulate, and 'cheap talk' theses expect PRC threats to have no discernible effect, while balance of threat arguments expect resolve. In this article, we use the survey data collected in the 2016, 2019, and 2020 rounds of the Taiwan National Security Study to examine how Taiwanese respond to China's intensifying and expanding threats. Our paper identifies four strategies that the public sees as responses to PRC coercion: isolation, bandwagon with China, balance against China by allying with the USA and Japan, and hedge by deepening economic ties with China while aligning with the USA and Japan against China. We show that the popular support for balancing against China rises as PRC coercion grows and Taiwanese citizens increasingly perceive China to be a threat. Our findings imply that citizens in a liberal democracy can develop the will to pushback against pressure from an authoritarian regime despite sharp asymmetries in capabilities and material limitations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. The significance of clean energy development for China's energy security from 2010 to 2019.
- Author
-
Tong, Fei and Feng, Chao
- Subjects
ENERGY security ,ENERGY development ,NATIONAL security ,ECONOMIC security ,ECONOMETRIC models - Abstract
Energy security is a matter of economic security and national security. This paper examines the influencing mechanism of clean energy on China's energy security from 2010 to 2019, by using the entropy method and spatial econometric model. The results show that (1) from 2010 to 2019, China's energy security index shows an overall decreasing trend. The western region has the highest energy security index, followed by the central, northeastern, and eastern regions; (2) there is an inverted u-shaped relationship between clean energy and energy security; (3) in the short term, clean energy will have a negative effect on industrial structure upgrading. But with the expansion of its scale, clean energy development will promote the industrial structure upgrading, and then improve energy security; and (4) the development of clean energy has a positive effect on the adjustment of energy structure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. All geopolitics is local: the China–Pakistan Economic Corridor amidst overlapping centre–periphery relations.
- Author
-
Abb, Pascal
- Subjects
SILK Road ,TRANSPORTATION corridors ,GEOPOLITICS ,INTERNATIONAL relations ,NATIONAL security - Abstract
Pakistan occupies an elevated role in the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) and hosts its so-called flagship project, the China–Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC). Existing literature has often interpreted this project from a geopolitical perspective, as a vehicle through which a rising China projects influence on a peripheral country and advances its own centrality in international affairs. While such motivations certainly played a major role in getting the project off the ground, they are not the sole determinant of its design, or the heated controversies it triggered within Pakistan. This paper seeks to capture both dimensions by analysing the development of CPEC, and the handling of the conflicts it sparked, through a lens of overlapping centre–periphery relations: one between China and Pakistan at the international level, and one between Islamabad and peripheral regions and groups within the country. I argue that this model best captures the pivotal position and resulting agency of national governments in shaping local BRI implementations. It also shows how the BRI is not a straight case of Chinese influence radiating outwards; rather, contestation by local actors in turn forces adaptations in Chinese foreign and security policy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. A comparison of the US and EU regulatory responses to China's state capitalism: implication, issue and direction.
- Author
-
Yin, Wei
- Subjects
STATE capitalism ,FOREIGN investments ,INVESTMENT policy ,ECONOMIC globalization ,NATIONAL security ,EYE care - Abstract
The rise of 'state capitalism' in the field of investment catches the eyes of western countries. The North is currently getting stuck and facing uncertainty while the South is actively participating in global markets and embracing economic globalization. Protectionist stances on trade and immigration result in a more conservative view towards inbound foreign investment in the North. The South sees China becoming an active and important capital exporter. Given that, the USA and EU seek solutions to the changing investment dynamics and issues raised by Chinese state-owned investors in critical infrastructure. National security, reciprocity and competitive neutrality are frequently raised by the USA and EU when dealing with China's state capitalism. This paper therefore aims to explore the implication of the US and EU measures on Chinese investment and domestic reform by comparing investment policies and treaty practices adopted by these two leading economies. The reasons behind and the convergence and divergence of adopted approaches are discussed. It found that concerns about China's state capitalism is a clash between two types of development models presented by the North and South. The paper recognizes the legitimacy and necessity of state intervention in foreign investment to protect national security and ensure a level playing field while it also emphases the principles of proportionality and non-discrimination in rule-making. An adaptive version of competitive neutrality and increased transparency are critical for China to respond to the US/EU demands and to further domestic reform. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. China's evolving biosafety/biosecurity legislations.
- Author
-
Cao, Cong
- Subjects
BIOSECURITY ,BIOSAFETY ,NATIONAL security ,COMMUNICABLE diseases ,LIFE sciences ,EMERGING infectious diseases - Abstract
This paper represents a systematic effort to describe and assess China's evolving biosafety/biosecurity legislative and regulatory regime. It catalogs and analyzes laws, regulations, and measures, including the newly passed Biosafety/Biosecurity Law. Various reasons are underlying China's recently accelerating legislative process for such a law, from international attention increasingly turning biosafety/biosecurity governance into a more regular fixture; the emergence of infectious diseases and even pandemics linked with zoonosis; advances in the global frontier of the life sciences and biotechnology and their integration with other technologies, which, while holding great promise for advancements in global health, raises biosafety/biosecurity concerns; to the strengthening of biosafety/biosecurity governance in many countries. Chinese leadership's 'holistic view of national security' encompasses broad areas of concerns of national security with biosafety/biosecurity being an integral part. However, having progressed alongside its development of the life sciences and biotechnology, China's current biosafety/biosecurity legislative and regulatory regime is far from rising to the challenges and even the newly enacted Biosafety/Biosecurity law still has room for improvement. The paper's findings have significant policy implications for further enhancing China's biosafety/biosecurity legislation and governance and making them better serve domestic interests while converging with international norms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. 加快生物育种研发应用 推进农业科技自立自强.
- Author
-
张文
- Subjects
TECHNOLOGICAL revolution ,AGRICULTURAL development ,ARABLE land ,FOOD security ,NATIONAL security ,TECHNOLOGICAL progress ,AGRICULTURAL technology - Abstract
Copyright of Journal of Agricultural Science & Technology (1008-0864) is the property of Journal of Agricultural Science & Technology and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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