How normative should Europe’s China policy be?
A controversial conversation between: Miguel Otero (Elcano) and Tim Rühlig (German Council on Foreign Relations)
Shared starting point: Europe’s more principled China approach In recent years, Europe’s China policy got tougher if not more hawkish. Oftentimes, Europeans refer to political
AN INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL MATERIALS EMERGED FOR CONTEMPORARY CHINA STUDIES
CHERN Training School blog
By: Junhua Zhu (Centre for East Asian Studies, University of Turku – doctoral researcher)
This blog is based on Eric Zhang’s webinar “Contemporary Chinese Digital Materials in the Big-data Era” which was arranged by CHERN, the Nordic Institute for
IS AI IN WORSE OR BETTER HANDS IN CHINA?
CHERN Training School blog
By: Junhua Zhu (Centre for East Asian Studies, University of Turku – doctoral researcher)
This blog is inspired by Joanne Kuai’s webinar “Media innovation in China and its implication on contemporary China research” which was arranged by the China
CHINESE STATE CAPITAL IN EURASIA:
Theory and practice
By: Oyuna Baldakova (CHERN STSM Grantee)
My engagement with the two members of CHERN WG3 was very fruitful. As a young researcher, I am grateful for this opportunity to interact with
SHOULD THE EU BE CONCERNED ABOUT HIGH-TECH RESEARCH COLLABORATION WITH CHINA?
Lessons from the case of semiconductors
By: Tim Rühlig (CHERN STSM Host) & Jan-Peter Kleinhans (CHERN STSM Grantee)
All transformational technological progress is the result of research conducted in not just one country, but globally. Recently, China has been rapidly advancing to a
CONDEMNED TO ONE ANOTHER:
Why the EU and China’s foreign direct investment is crucial to economic recovery in the post-pandemic era
By: Yue Wang (CHERN STSM Grantee)
EU-China Investments Source: Photo Veterok on Shutterstock Some of the discussions around COP26 that western powers need to counteract China’s environmentally damaging Belt and Road