China Inside-Out – March 2010

An innovative creative writing conference will take place in early March with options to attend some or all of the varied event programme.

Organised by the Confucius Institute in conjuntion with Scottish PEN this three day event brings together Chinese women writing fiction, non-fiction and poetry in English with Scottish women writers. Opening with a keynote public lecture on Thursday 11 March in the Playfair Library and two days of events at Abden House on 12 and 13 March booking is now available. For full details please visit our micro-site, www.confuciusinstitute.ac.uk/china-inside-out

Year of the Tiger – New Year Party – February 2010

Friday 12 February will see the doors open at 6-30pm for the Confucius Institute`s annual Spring Festival Party when Abden House will have an Open House event with the opportunity for you to try your hand at mah-jong, Chinese chess and of course, the ever popular Karaoke! A full programme of entertainment is planned and drinks and snacks will be provided.

This is an Open House event but it would help us greatly if you could notify us if you plan to come along. Simply drop an email to info@confuciusinstitute.ac.uk to let us know how many of you wish to join in.

All old and new friends of the Institute, Chinese students and students of Chinese are especially welcome.

The evening starts at 6.30pm and will finish by 10pm

Shanghai and the 2010 Expo

A special exhibition, curated by the Confucius Institute on the history of Shanghai and the 2010 Expo opens this week.

Shanghai Expo 2010, with the theme `Better City, Better Life`, will explore the full potential of urban life in the 21st century, a significant period in urban evolution with 55% of the world`s population currently living in cities.

With over 70 million people expected to visit the Expo over its 184 day life, the Confucius Institute has created a special exhibition and website on Shanghai and the Expo to provide advance information.

The first venue for the Exhibition is at the Scottish Government HQ at Victoria Quay, Edinburgh. During February, senior school pupils from Scottish schools, will visit the exhibition to gain insight into the history of the city of Shanghai and the plans for the 2010 Expo.

While this venue has restrictions on access further venues will be announced on our website as dates are confirmed. Meantime visit our micro site to find out more about Shanghai and the 2010 Expo.

Guest Lecture Eric Schwitzgebel – January 2010

Event Date: 19/01/2010

Eric Schwitzgebel, Professor of Philosophy, University of California at Riverside will present a talk entitled `An Empirical Perspective on the Mencius-Xunzi Debate about Human Nature`

Mencius and Xunzi were two of the early followers of Confucius with polarised opinions on the essential nature of humankind.
Our speaker, Eric Schwitzgebel, Professor of Philosophy at University of California at Riverside, is a prolific writer and a popular and accessible speaker. His areas of interest include philosophy of psychology; philosophy of mind; cognitive development; philosophy of science; classical Chinese philosophy; epistemology; perceptual and cognitive psychology; and metaphilosophy.

The Confucius Institute for Scotland is delighted to have secured him to present this talk on Tuesday 19 January in the Confucius Institute from 6pm. To reserve a seat please email info@confuciusinstitute.ac.uk.

This talk while self-contained is linked to a seminar by Eric Schwitzgebel on the following evening, Wed 20 January. This will be held in the School of Philosophy, Psychology and Language Sciences. Entitled `The Moral Behavior of Ethics Professors: Empirical Evidence`

Three Times a Winner

For the third year running, the Confucius Institute for Scotland has received an award of excellence for its work.

Professor Gentz, Director of the Institute, received this third award at the 2009 Fourth Worldwide Conference of Confucius Institutes in Beijing, chaired by the State Councillor Chen Zhili and the Minister of Education Yuan Guiren.

This Award is given to 20 Institutes from the 282 Institutes worldwide in recognition of their outstanding performance. Among them only the Confucius Institute for Scotland has received the award three times in a row which marks it as the most successful Confucius Institute worldwide.

Among the various activities of the Institute to promote engagement between Scotland and China across education, business and culture in 2009, was the spectacular performance by the Beijing Film Academy during the Fringe Festival in the McEwan Hall, a programme of 60 days marking the 60th anniversary of the PRC comprising of lectures, dance performance, a student career networking day, as well as activities at Aberdeen and across Scotland. The Institute has also begun to deliver video conference teaching of Chinese language in collaboration with UHI.

Award

China 60@60 – October – November 2009

A special programme of events arranged and supported by the Confucius Institute for Scotland to commemorate the 60th Anniversary of the PRC has seen `house full` signs for our special lecture series, appreciative audiences for dance and music events, an international business conference, a student/business networking event and still to come, debates on China in schools across Scotland.

China’s Economic Transformation-Lecture – November 2009

Dr Felix Boecking, University of Edinburgh will present `Understanding China`s Economic Transformation` the last in our series of special PRC at 60 lectures series.

In the last three decades, the People’s Republic of China has experienced a successful market transition with impressively high GDP growth rates. As average incomes have risen dramatically, hundreds of millions of Chinese people have been lifted out of poverty. Equally important is China’s new position as a key player in today’s world economy. However, the increased social inequality and environmental depredation associated with economic reforms in the PRC raise the question of their sustainability. In this talk, Dr Boecking will trace some of the key features of China’s economic development since 1978, and consider the question of China’s economic future.

Felix Boecking is Lecturer in Modern Chinese Economic and Political History in the School of History, Classics and Archaeology at the University of Edinburgh. His research interests focus on China’s political economy in its historical context, as well as material culture and consumption in 20th-century China. Felix’s PhD thesis “Tariffs, Power, Nationalism and Modernity: Fiscal Policy in Guomindang-Controlled China 1927-1941” fundamentally challenged the widespread idea that the key to the Communist seizure of power in China lies in the incompetence of the Nationalist Government of Chiang Kai-shek (1927-1949) by demonstrating the strength of Nationalist state-building in the crucial area of taxation and fiscal policy.

This lecture will take place in the Raeburn Room, Old College, North Bridge starting at 6pm. The talk will be followed by a drinks reception.

While bookings for this lecture have closed standby places are available to those without tickets from 6pm

China’s Rise in Africa-Lecture – November 2009

Professor Ian Taylor, University of St Andrews is our fifth speaker in the PRC at 60 Lecture Series.

China`s rise in Africa is arguably the most momentous development on the continent since the end of the Cold War. China is now Africa’s second most important bilateral trading partner, behind only the United States, with Sino-African trade hitting over $100 billion in 2008 (up from $5 billion in 1997). Yet this rise has been met with some criticism in the West and in Africa. This lecture seeks to discuss whether such scepticism is wholly justified.

Ian Taylor is Professor in International Relations at the University of St. Andrews’ School of International Relations and a Professor Extraordinary in Political Science at the University of Stellenbosch, South Africa. He is also Honorary Professor in the Institute of African Studies, Zhejiang Normal University, China and Joint Professor in the Centre for European Studies, Renmin University of China. He is interested primarily in Africa`s political economy and its international relations and in Chinese foreign policy. These two strands come together in an extensive body of work, conducted since 1994, on China`s emerging relationships with Africa. Ian Taylor’s most recent books include China’s New Role in Africa (2009) and China and Africa: Engagement and Compromise (London Routledge, 2006).

This lecture will take place in the Raeburn Room, Old College, North Bridge starting at 6pm. The talk will be followed by a drinks reception.

While booking for this lecture has now closed standby places are available from 6pm on a first come, first served basis.

China-Nigeria Relations: A Chinese Perspective – November 2009

Event Date: 11/11/2009

Dr. Li Wengang, a visiting fellow from the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences will present a lunchtime seminar entitled, `China-Nigeria Relations: A Chinese perspective` on Wed 11 Nov 2009.

The seminar begins at 1300 and the venue is Seminar Room 5, Chrystal Macmillan Building, 15A George Square. All are welcome.

Dr. Li Wengang is on sabbatical with the Centre of African Studies from the Institute of West Asian and African Studies of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

For more information please email African.Studies@ed.ac.uk.

Public Lecture: The Open Door, Edinburgh – November 2009

Event Date: 04/11/2009

Professor Natascha Gentz, Director of the Confucius Institute, will give a talk on `The influence of Confucianism on China and the modern world` at the Open Door, Morningside Road, Edinburgh on Wed 4 Nov 10.30-11.30.

Professor Gentz studied in Germany at Heidelberg University, where she took her MA (1994) and PhD (1998) degrees. She has also studied and conducted research at Fudan University, Shanghai (1988-1990), People’s University, Beijing (1995-6), and Tokyo University (1997).

After the completion of her PhD she was engaged in research projects and teaching in the Chinese Departments at Heidelberg University and Göttingen University.

Appointed as a junior professor at Frankfurt University in 2002, she moved to the University of Edinburgh to take up the post of Chair of Chinese in May 2006. In addition to her directorship of the Institute she is Head of Asian Studiea and also Dean International, China in the University of Edinburgh.

PRC at 60: The China Challenge: Models, Visions and Global Futures – October 2009

In this the fourth of six lectures in the `PRC at 60` series, Professor Jane Duckett`s topic is `The China Challenge: Models, Visions and Global Futures.`

China`s economic power and global influence have led commentators to suggest that it has a model of development and modernity that will challenge the West`s. This lecture looks at the models that China has embraced since 1949 and considers both their origins and very different economic and social outcomes. It argues that having rejected both Maoism and neoliberalism, China may now be at an important crossroads. As it reconsiders its development strategy its government has the opportunity to forge a new model. But will it have the vision and will to overcome formidable opposition?

Jane Duckett is Professor of Chinese and Comparative Politics in the Department of Politics at the University of Glasgow. She studied modern Chinese at Leeds University in the 1980s, and Chinese politics at SOAS, University of London, in the early 1990s. She first lived in China in 1984 and has travelled widely there. Her early work on the Chinese state under market reform included a book-length study, The Entrepreneurial State in China (Routledge 1998). Jane also (with Bill Miller) made a comparative study of public attitudes to economic openness in East Asia and Eastern Europe, published as The Open Economy and its Enemies (Cambridge, 2006). Her current research is concerned with China’s social and health policy and politics. She is now completing two books, The Chinese State`s Retreat from Health, and (with Beatriz Carrillo) China`s Changing Welfare Mix.

All lectures in the PRC at 60 series are fully booked. Standby places are offered to those without tickets subject to spaces being spaces due to no-shows.

Public Lecture: Opening Pandora`s Box – October 2009

In this third lecture of the `PRC at 60` series, Professor Natascha Gentz, University of Edinburgh will lecture on Opening Pandora`s Box: the Cultural Revolution and its repercussions on the ‘Reform and Opening Period’ of the 1980s.`

The Cultural Revolution (1966-76) has been described as a period of `ten chaotic years`. All governmental efforts after the death of Mao Zedong aimed at reuniting society and encouraging contribution to the new opening and reform policy. The lecture will discuss the intricacies involved in this process and why the Cultural Revolution still poses problems for Chinese society today.

Natascha Gentz is Professor of Chinese Studies in the School of Languages, Literatures and Cultures at the University of Edinburgh and Director of the Confucius Institute for Scotland in the University of Edinburgh. Her publications include a monograph on the history Chinese journalism and two edited volumes, on transcultural knowledge transfer in Late Qing China, and on how global media are shaping cultural identities. She has also published a book on contemporary Chinese historical drama as well as dozens of articles on Late Qing and contemporary Chinese drama, literature and media. She has also translated a novel and two volumes of short stories by the Chinese nobel laureate Gao Xingjian.

This lecture will take place in the Raeburn Room, Old College, North Bridge starting at 6pm. The talk will be followed by a drinks reception.

All lectures in the PRC at 60 series are fully booked. Standby places are offered to those without tickets subject to spaces being spaces due to no-shows.

Dr Kimho Ip – Lunchtime Seminar – October 2009

Dr Kimho Ip, musical curator at the Confuicus Institute for Scotland, will examine one of his latest compositions `Requiem for Travellers` in this lunchtime seminar.

`Requiem for Travellers` will be examined as a symbol and model for the process of translocation of cultural identity.

The talk takes place on Friday 23rd October from 1.10pm-2.00pm in the Conference Room at 27 George Square. No booking is required.

Kimho Ip works as a composer, director, cellist and Yangqin performer. He has worked extensively with the Confucius Institute for Scotland since its opening. In addition to organising various musical recitals and concerts, he also is involved in the promotion of Chinese music and instrumentation to schools and the wider community in conjunction with the Institute.

In 1997 he received a fellowship from DAAD (German Academic Exchange Service) which enabled him to study composition in Germany. With the Sir Edward Youde Memorial Fellowship and the Composers & Authors Society of Hong Kong Fellowship he furthered his study and research in Edinburgh and London.

Ensembles which have performed his works include the Edinburgh String Quartet, Emperor String Quartet, Shanghai New Ensemble, the Paragon Internationals, BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra, Hong Kong Chinese Orchestra, Hong Kong Bach Choir and Hong Kong Sinfonietta.

He composed the music for `Spirit: A Chinese Lantern Festival` the opening event for China Now in Scotland and he performs regularly both solo and with other musicians in China, London, Edinburgh and elsewhere.

To visit Kimho`s own iMAP (Intercultural Music & Arts Project) website please click here. To sample some of Kimho`s compositions and collaborations click here.

Chinese Diplomatic Thought and Foreign Policy – October 2009

The Playfair Library will host this special guest lecture from Dr Jiemian Yang, President of Shanghai Association of International Relations; and Vice President, China Association of International Relations on the morning of Tuesday 13 Oct. Doors open at 10.15 for a 10.30 start.

Recipient of a number of National Special Awards as well as Shanghai Outstanding Talent Award, Dr Yang has published many papers and books on international relations and foreign policy.

His most recent books include: Sino-US Relations in Post-Cold War Era: Elaboration and Exploration; Sino-US Relations in Post-Cold War Era:Comparative Studies on Foreign Policies; The Taiwan Issue and the World Configuration of Powers: Changes and Challenges; (co-authored), International Terrorism and Contemporary International Relations: Impacts and Influence of the `9-11` Attacks; (co-authored) International Cooperation on Anti-Terrorism: Thinking Beyond Geopolitics; (co-authored) and Sino-US Relations in the Post-Cold War Era: Crisis Management Comparative Studies.

Following the guest lecture tea and coffee will be available from 11.30.

To reserve seats for this prestigious lecture please click here

New wine in old bottles – October 2009

Event Date: 14/10/2009

In this second talk in the series of six on The PRC at 60, Paul Bailey, Professor in Modern Chinese History at the University of Edinburgh will address the topic: “The 1950s in China: New Wine in Old Bottles.`

The event is free but ticketed.

This event will be held in the Raeburn Room, Old College, South Bridge, University of Edinburgh. Starting at 6pm with a few words of welcome this event will be followed by a drinks reception.

Should you have any questions please call us on 0131 662 2180

First lecture: PRC at 60 – Prof Rana Mitter, Uni of Oxford – October 2009

“How China`s Wartime Past is Changing its Present – and Future” is the title of this first talk scheduled for Wed 7 Oct from 6pm.

ADDITIONAL SEATS ARRANGED TO INCREASE CAPACITY – please retry if previously notified fully booked

Our internationally renowned first speaker is Rana Mitter, Professor of the History and Politics of Modern China at Oxford University. His most recent book is `Modern China: A Very Short Introduction` (OUP, 2008). He also regularly presents the arts and ideas show ‘Night Waves’ on Radio 3, and his writing and reviews have appeared in publications including the Financial Times, London Review of Books, and History Today

`China has always drawn on its past to draw lessons for the contemporary political scene. We`ve been transfixed by the Olympics, but China is changing and opening to the world in a whole variety of other new and often unexpected ways.

What does the new interest in wartime history in China mean for its new status as a global power? Using a combination of historical analysis of wartime China and an assessment of China`s future goals in domestic and foreign policy, the talk will give a new insight into ways to rethink how China operates as a global power in the 21st century.”

The event is free but ticketed.

This event will be held in the Raeburn Room, Old College, South Bridge, University of Edinburgh. Starting at 6pm with a few words of welcome this event will be followed by a drinks reception.

Should you have any questions please call us on 0131 662 2180.

Guest Lecture: Confucius – The Humourist – October 2009

Prof Christoph Harbsmeier, Oslo University, will speak on “Wit and Humour in Confucius: The Rhetoric of the Analects” at Abden House on Monday 19 October.

Confucius is well known as the founder of Chinese moral philosophy and teacher of strict etiquettes. This lecture will introduce a different face of Confucius the philosopher with an – ambiguous – smile.

`The Confucian Analects are read by commentators ancient and modern as an authoritative foundational text of `Confucianism`. Philologists have often claimed the Analects as an early document of conversational colloquial Chinese.I shall set out to show that the Analects are full of rhetorically highly sophisticated non-colloquial artistic prose.
I shall demonstrate how the Analects are basically pre-Confucianist in spirit. The Analects will be shown to be full of material that is manifestly ill-suited to an authoritative foundational text of a school of philosophy.

In particular, the Analects will be shown to be suffused with a delightful subtle sense of humour and self-humour in many places. It is this subtle humour which is the main subject of the present lecture.`

Christoph Harbsmeier studied Chinese at Merton College in Oxford. In addition to his position as Professor of Chinese at the University of Oslo, he serves as Adjunct Professor of Chinese at Peking University, Fudan University in Shanghai, and Zhejiang University

This special lecture will be held at Abden House, home of the Confucius Institute from 6.30-7.30pm and will be followed by a drinks reception. This event is free but ticketed. Please book your ticket through the Confucius Institute by email to info@confuciusinstitute.ac.uk.

Dancer in Residence-Insight Evening – October 2009

Join us at Abden House to discover the current state of modern dance in China today. Together Janis Claxton, of Janis Claxton Dance and Ding Qi Rui will reflect on the current state of modern dance in China today.

Modern Chinese dance, combining the physical skills of traditional Chinese training with modern artistic expression is a pioneering and most exciting new field of exploration. Ding Qi Rui, from Beijing Dance Academy, together with the choreographer Janis Claxton, of Janis Claxton Dance, present insights on the most current developments.

Under a sponsorship from the Confucius Institute, Ding Qi Rui has been brought to Edinburgh for three weeks to participate in an international dance workshop sponsored by British Council, New Zealand and Dance Base.

This free insight evening will run from 6.00-7.00pm followed by a drinks reception. The evening is free but as seats are limited, please email info@confuciusinstitute.ac.uk or call on 0131 662 2180 to request seats.

ABOUT OUR SPEAKERS

Ding Qi Rui is one of the rising stars in the new wave of Chinese contemporary dancers working in both Chinese and international contexts. Based in Beijing he is currently an MA student at Beijing Dance Academy.

Choreographer, Dancer and Teacher Janis Claxton, is based in Edinburgh, Scotland. She is Artistic Director of Janis Claxton Dance. Please click here to visit Janis Claxton Dance website

VIDEO LINKS

The clips here show short samples of workshop activity led by Janis Claxton during her visit to Beijing this summer where she met Ding Qi Rui.

Video 1 July 09 LDTX and Janis Claxton
Video 2 July 09 LDTX and Janis Claxton

Silver Moon over China – October 2009

Event Date: 03/10/2009

Join in the 60th Anniversary celebrations by attending ECSSA`s special programme `Silver Moon over China` on Sat 03 October. This event will be held at Heriot-Watt University from 7-10pm with the support of the Confucius Institute.

A special performance in the evening entertainment programme will be given by Ding Qi Rui, a rising young contemporary dancer from LDTX Beijing, China who has been brought to Scotland by the Confucius Institute to attend an international dance workshop programme.

The event will also mark the Mid-Autumn festival with both traditional and contemporary performances taking place.

在新中國的第60個中秋夜, 讓我門在愛丁堡共同慶祝祖國的60歲生日。表演將向我們打開歷史的畫卷,在這月圓之夜讓我門在異地他鄉,同世界各地的朋友一同載歌載舞!超女歌曲演唱 、街舞、古典音樂等節目使晚會雅俗共賞。之後還將會有After-party,讓我們盡情狂歡,結識更多的朋友。

Tickets are priced at £5/£4 for students and can be reserved by email to eacssa@googlemail.com

Venue: James Watt Centre 1, Heriot-Watt University. Riccarton Campus, Edinburgh, EH14 4AS.

Transport: Lothian Bus Nos 25 and 34 go directly to Riccarton Campus.

The PRC at 60: Lecture Series – October & November 2009

This commemorative lecture series marks the 60th Anniversary of the founding of the PRC. Each lecture will examine a different aspect of China. This is part of a wider programme of activities marking this anniversary.

`How China`s Wartime Past is Changing its Present – and Future`

Wed 7th October: Professor Rana Mitter, University of Oxford:

“China has always drawn on its past to draw lessons for the contemporary political scene. We`ve been transfixed by the Olympics, but China is changing and opening to the world in a whole variety of other new and often unexpected ways.

What does the new interest in wartime history in China mean for its new status as a global power? Using a combination of historical analysis of wartime China and an assessment of China`s future goals in domestic and foreign policy, the talk will give a new insight into ways to rethink how China operates as a global power in the 21st century.”

Rana Mitter, Professor of the History and Politics of Modern China at Oxford University. His most recent book is Modern China: A Very Short Introduction (OUP, 2008). He also regularly presents the arts and ideas show ‘Night Waves’ on Radio 3, and his writing and reviews have appeared in publications including the Financial Times, London Review of Books, and History Today.

To book this lecture click here

“The 1950s in China: New Wine in Old Bottles?”

Wed 14th October, Professor Paul Bailey, University of Edinburgh

This talk will explore the nature of the early People`s Republic, and the Chinese Communist Party`s attempt to `remake` Chinese society. At the same time, it will ask to what extent political, economic and cultural developments in the early 1950s represented a continuation of long-term trends first observed during the period of Nationalist (Guomindang) rule before 1949.

Paul Bailey is Professor of Modern Chinese History in the School of History, Classics and Archaeology in the School of History, Classics and Archaeology at the University of Edinburgh. His current research interests are in the fields of gender, educational and social history of modern China. His latest book, Gender and Education in China (RoutledgeCurzon, 2007), explores the beginnings of public schooling for girls in early twentieth century China. He is currently writing a study of Chinese workers in France during World War One, entitled The Sino-French Connection: A Sociocultural History of Chinese Labour in WW1 France. He has also begun a new research project on crime, gender and modern state-building in twentieth-century China, while future writing projects include two narrative and analytical histories: Women and Gender in Twentieth Century China and A History of Vietnam.

To book this lecture click here

“Opening Pandora`s Box: the Cultural Revolution and its repercussions on the ‘Reform and Opening Period’ of the 1980s”.

Wed 21st October, Professor Natascha Gentz, University of Edinburgh

The Cultural Revolution (1966-76) has been described as a period of `ten chaotic years`. All governmental efforts after the death of Mao Zedong aimed at reuniting society and encouraging contribution to the new opening and reform policy. The lecture will discuss the intricacies involved in this process and why the Cultural Revolution still poses problems for Chinese society today.

Natascha Gentz is Professor of Chinese Studies in the School of Languages, Literatures and Cultures at the University of Edinburgh and Director of the Confucius Institute for Scotland in the University of Edinburgh. Her publications include a monograph on the history Chinese journalism and two edited volumes, on transcultural knowledge transfer in Late Qing China, and on how global media are shaping cultural identities. She has also published a book on contemporary Chinese historical drama as well as dozens of articles on Late Qing and contemporary Chinese drama, literature and media. She has also translated a novel and two volumes of short stories by the Chinese nobel laureate Gao Xingjian.

To book this lecture click here

“The China Challenge: Models, Visions and Global Futures”

Thurs 29th October,Professor Jane Duckett, University of Glasgow

China`s economic power and global influence have led commentators to suggest that it has a model of development and modernity that will challenge the West`s. This lecture looks at the models that China has embraced since 1949 and considers both their origins and very different economic and social outcomes. It argues that having rejected both Maoism and neoliberalism, China may now be at an important crossroads. As it reconsiders its development strategy its government has the opportunity to forge a new model. But will it have the vision and will to overcome formidable opposition?

Jane Duckett is Professor of Chinese and Comparative Politics in the Department of Politics at the University of Glasgow. She studied modern Chinese at Leeds University in the 1980s, and Chinese politics at SOAS, University of London, in the early 1990s. She first lived in China in 1984 and has travelled widely there. Her early work on the Chinese state under market reform included a book-length study, The Entrepreneurial State in China (Routledge 1998). Jane also (with Bill Miller) made a comparative study of public attitudes to economic openness in East Asia and Eastern Europe, published as The Open Economy and its Enemies (Cambridge, 2006). Her current research is concerned with China’s social and health policy and politics. She is now completing two books, The Chinese State`s Retreat from Health, and (with Beatriz Carrillo) China`s Changing Welfare Mix.

To book this lecture click here .

“China’s Rise in Africa”.

Wed 4th November, Professor Ian Taylor, University of St Andrews

China`s rise in Africa is arguably the most momentous development on the continent since the end of the Cold War. China is now Africa’s second most important bilateral trading partner, behind only the United States, with Sino-African trade hitting over $100 billion in 2008 (up from $5 billion in 1997). Yet this rise has been met with some criticism in the West and in Africa. This lecture seeks to discuss whether such scepticism is wholly justified.

Ian Taylor is Professor in International Relations at the University of St. Andrews’ School of International Relations and a Professor Extraordinary in Political Science at the University of Stellenbosch, South Africa. He is also Honorary Professor in the Institute of African Studies, Zhejiang Normal University, China and Joint Professor in the Centre for European Studies, Renmin University of China. He is interested primarily in Africa`s political economy and its international relations and in Chinese foreign policy. These two strands come together in an extensive body of work, conducted since 1994, on China`s emerging relationships with Africa. Ian Taylor’s most recent books include China’s New Role in Africa (2009) and China and Africa: Engagement and Compromise (London Routledge, 2006).

To book this lecture click here 

“Understanding China’s Economic Transformation”.

Wed 11th November, Dr Felix Boecking, University of Edinburgh

In the last three decades, the People’s Republic of China has experienced a successful market transition with impressively high GDP growth rates. As average incomes have risen dramatically, hundreds of millions of Chinese people have been lifted out of poverty. Equally important is China’s new position as a key player in today’s world economy. However, the increased social inequality and environmental depredation associated with economic reforms in the PRC raise the question of their sustainability. In this talk, Dr Boecking will trace some of the key features of China’s economic development since 1978, and consider the question of China’s economic future.

Felix Boecking is Lecturer in Modern Chinese Economic and Political History in the School of History, Classics and Archaeology at the University of Edinburgh. His research interests focus on China’s political economy in its historical context, as well as material culture and consumption in 20th-century China. Felix’s PhD thesis “Tariffs, Power, Nationalism and Modernity: Fiscal Policy in Guomindang-Controlled China 1927-1941” fundamentally challenged the widespread idea that the key to the Communist seizure of power in China lies in the incompetence of the Nationalist Government of Chiang Kai-shek (1927-1949) by demonstrating the strength of Nationalist state-building in the crucial area of taxation and fiscal policy.

To book this lecture click here 

VENUE: Raeburn Room, Old College, University of Edinburgh, South Bridge, Edinburgh, EH8 9YL

TIMING: 6pm-7.30pm followed by drinks reception

BOOKING: There is no charge for admission but places must be booked in advance. Please use the online booking system to request places. A confirmation email will be sent to acknowledge your booking.