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Panel Sessions l UC San Diego, East Villages 15th Floor, Room A 9:30 – 11:30 am Session I: Choosing New Leaders, and Post-election/Party Congress Political Landscape Chair: Richard MADSEN, Director of Fudan-UC Center on Contemporary China Sam POPKIN, Professor of Political Science, UC San Diego Gary JACOBSON, Distinguished Professor of Political Science, UC San Diego Susan SHIRK, Ho Miu Lam Professor of China and Pacific Relations, and Chair of 21st Century China Program, IR/PS, UC San Diego WU Xinbo, Professor and Vice Dean, School of International Relations and Pacific Affairs, Fudan University 1:00 – 2:45 pm Session II: Economic Dimensions of Leadership Change Chair: FAN Lizhu, Managing Associate Director of Fudan-UC Center on Contemporary China Peter COWHEY, Dean and Qualcomm Professor of Communications, IR/PS, UC San Diego Gordon HANSON, Professor of Economics and Director of Center on Emerging and Pacific Economies (EmPac), IR/PS, UC San Diego SONG Guoyou, Associate Professor, American Studies Center, Fudan University ZHANG Jun, Professor and Director of China Center for Economic Studies, Fudan University 2:45 – 3:00 pm Coffee break 3:00 – 4:30 pm Session III: Security Dimensions of Leadership Change Chair: Lei GUANG, Director of 21st Century China Program, and Associate Director of Fudan-UC Center on Contemporary China Tai Ming CHEUNG, Director of UC Institute on Global Conflict and Cooperation (IGCC), and Associate Professor, IR/PS, UC San Diego Zhongqi PAN, Professor or International Relations, Fudan University XIN Qiang, Professor and Associate Director of American Studies Center, Fudan University Stephan HAGGARD, Lawrence and Sallye Krause Professor of Korea-Pacific Studies, IR/PS, UC San Diego Evening Forum l UC San Diego, IR/PS, Robinson Auditorium 5:00 – 7:00 pm Balancing the Dimensions of the U.S.-China Relationship Chair: Richard MADSEN, Director of Fudan-UC Center on Contemporary China Jeff WASSERSTROM, Professor and Chair, History Department, UC Irvine Perry LINK, Distinguished Professor of Comparative Literature and Foreign Languages, UC Riverside Susan SHIRK, Ho Miu Lam Professor of China and Pacific Relations, and Chair of 21st Century China Program, IR/PS, UC San Diego WU Xinbo, Professor and Vice Dean, School of International Relations and Public Affairs MONDAY, DECEMBER 3, 2012 l Panels: 9:30 am - 4:30 pm; Forum: 5:00 - 7:00 pm This symposium will bring together leading scholars from China’s Fudan University and the University of California to assess the implications of American election and Chinese leadership transitions for U.S.-China Relations in the next four to five years. The panel sessions will analyze the process and outcome of the 18th Chinese Communist Party Congress and the 2012 U.S. election, the role U.S.-China Relations have played in them, and the economic and security relations between the U.S. and China. All sessions of the symposium will be open to the public. The concluding session in the evening will encourage an expanded participation from the greater San Diego community. Fudan-UC Center on Contemporary China & 21st Century China Program present U.S.-China Relations After the U.S. Election and the 18th CCP Congress Fudan - UC Center on Contemporary China | School of International Relations and Pacific Studies 9500 Gilman Drive, #0519 | La Jolla, CA 92093-0519 | (858) 534-2660 | irps.ucsd.edu
Transcript

Panel Sessions l UC San Diego, East Villages 15th Floor, Room A

9:30 – 11:30 am Session I: Choosing New Leaders, and Post-election/Party Congress Political Landscape Chair: Richard MADSEN, Director of Fudan-UC Center on Contemporary China

Sam POPKIN, Professor of Political Science, UC San Diego

Gary JACOBSON, Distinguished Professor of Political Science, UC San Diego

Susan SHIRK, Ho Miu Lam Professor of China and Pacific Relations, and Chair of 21st Century China Program, IR/PS, UC San Diego

WU Xinbo, Professor and Vice Dean, School of International Relations and Pacific Affairs, Fudan University

1:00 – 2:45 pm Session II: Economic Dimensions of Leadership Change Chair: FAN Lizhu, Managing Associate Director of Fudan-UC Center on Contemporary China

Peter COWHEY, Dean and Qualcomm Professor of Communications, IR/PS, UC San Diego

Gordon HANSON, Professor of Economics and Director of Center on Emerging and Pacific Economies (EmPac), IR/PS, UC San Diego

SONG Guoyou, Associate Professor, American Studies Center, Fudan University

ZHANG Jun, Professor and Director of China Center for Economic Studies, Fudan University

2:45 – 3:00 pm Coffee break

3:00 – 4:30 pm Session III: Security Dimensions of Leadership Change Chair: Lei GUANG, Director of 21st Century China Program, and Associate Director of Fudan-UC Center on Contemporary China

Tai Ming CHEUNG, Director of UC Institute on Global Conflict and Cooperation (IGCC), and Associate Professor, IR/PS, UC San Diego

Zhongqi PAN, Professor or International Relations, Fudan University

XIN Qiang, Professor and Associate Director of American Studies Center, Fudan University

Stephan HAGGARD, Lawrence and Sallye Krause Professor of Korea-Pacific Studies, IR/PS, UC San Diego

Evening Forum l UC San Diego, IR/PS, Robinson Auditorium5:00 – 7:00 pm Balancing the Dimensions of the U.S.-China Relationship Chair: Richard MADSEN, Director of Fudan-UC Center on Contemporary China

Jeff WASSERSTROM, Professor and Chair, History Department, UC Irvine

Perry LINK, Distinguished Professor of Comparative Literature and Foreign Languages, UC Riverside

Susan SHIRK, Ho Miu Lam Professor of China and Pacific Relations, and Chair of 21st Century China Program, IR/PS, UC San Diego

WU Xinbo, Professor and Vice Dean, School of International Relations and Public Affairs

MONDAY, DECEMBER 3, 2012 l Panels: 9:30 am - 4:30 pm; Forum: 5:00 - 7:00 pmThis symposium will bring together leading scholars from China’s Fudan University and the University of California to assess the implications of American election and Chinese leadership transitions for U.S.-China Relations in the next four to five years.

The panel sessions will analyze the process and outcome of the 18th Chinese Communist Party Congress and the 2012 U.S. election, the role U.S.-China Relations have played in them, and the economic and security relations between the U.S. and China. All sessions of the symposium will be open to the public. The concluding session in the evening will encourage an expanded participation from the greater San Diego community.

Fudan-UC Center on Contemporary China & 21st Century China Program present

U.S.-China Relations After the U.S. Election and the 18th CCP Congress

Fudan - UC Center on Contemporary China | School of International Relations and Pacific Studies 9500 Gilman Drive, #0519 | La Jolla, CA 92093-0519 | (858) 534-2660 | irps.ucsd.edu

Fudan-UC Center on Contemporary China & 21st Century China Program present

U.S.-China Relations After the U.S. Election and the 18th CCP Congress

Fudan - UC Center on Contemporary China | School of International Relations and Pacific Studies 9500 Gilman Drive, #0519 | La Jolla, CA 92093-0519 | (858) 534-2660 | irps.ucsd.edu

Speaker Biographies

Tai Ming CHEUNGDirector of UC Institute on Global Conflict and Cooperation, and Associate Professor, IR/PSProfessor Tai Ming Cheung is a Director of the UC Institute on Global Conflict and Cooperation (IGCC) and an Associate professor at IR/PS. Cheung was previously the correspondent of the Far Eastern Economic Review in Hong Kong and has written numerous books and articles and his latest book, Fortifying China: The Struggle to Build a Modern Defense Economy (2009), is considered a new pioneering academic fieldwork.

Peter COWHEYDean and Qualcomm Endowed Chair in Communications and Technology Policy, IR/PSDean Cowhey has extensive experience as a policy analyst and in the government, most recently serving as the Senior Counselor to Ambassador Kirk in the Office of the United States Trade Representative (USTR) under President Barack Obama in 2009. He serves on the bi-national experts group appointed by the U.S. and Chinese Governments on innovation policy. He also serves as the Chief Policy Officer for the Aspen Institute’s International Digital Economy Accords project to update policies involving the Internet and global information and communications markets.

Stephan HAGGARDLawrence and Sallye Krause Professor of Korea-Pacific Studies, IR/PSStephan Haggard works on the political economy of developing countries, with a particular interest in Asia and the Korean peninsula. His current research focuses on the relationship between inequality, democratization and authoritarianism in developing countries. Professor Haggard has also written extensively on the political economy of North Korea with Marcus Noland, including Famine in North Korea: Markets, Aid, and Reform and Witness to Transformation: Refugee Insights into North Korea.

FAN LizhuManaging Associate Director, Fudan-UC Center on Contemporary ChinaFAN Lizhu is Professor of Sociology, Fudan University. In the past 10 years, she has been actively involved in developing international programs at Fudan University. As a sociologist of religion, she has engaged in histori-cal and ethnographic studies of Chinese folk religious beliefs, sociological theories of religion, and the study of the trends of folk religious beliefs in modern Chinese society. She has published books and journal articles on religion both in Chinese and English.

Lei GUANGDirector of 21st Century China Program, and Associate Director of Fudan-UC Center Lei Guang is the founding Director of the 21st Century China Program. Prior to joining UC San Diego, he was Professor of Political Science at San Diego State University where he also directed the University’s Center for Asian and Pacific Studies from 2009-2011. He received his PhD in political science from the University of Minnesota-Twin Cities. He is currently working on projects that seek to understand the causes of social conflict in China (and India), and responses by the grassroots states.

Fudan-UC Center on Contemporary China & 21st Century China Program present

U.S.-China Relations After the U.S. Election and the 18th CCP Congress

Fudan - UC Center on Contemporary China | School of International Relations and Pacific Studies 9500 Gilman Drive, #0519 | La Jolla, CA 92093-0519 | (858) 534-2660 | irps.ucsd.edu

Richard MADSENDirector of Fudan-UC Center, and Distinguished Professor of Sociology, UC San DiegoHe is a distinguished Professor of Sociology at UC San Diego, and was a co-director of a Ford Foundation project to help revive the academic discipline of sociology in China. Professor Madsen is the author, or co-author of twelve books on Chinese culture, American culture, and international relations. He has also written scholarly articles on how to compare cultures and how to facilitate dialogue among them. Some of his books on China include Democracy’s Dharma: Religious Renaissance and Political Development in Taiwan, Chen Village under Mao and Deng, Morality and Power in a Chinese Village, and Unofficial China.

Perry LINKDistinguished Professor of Comparative Literature and Foreign Languages, UC RiversideProfessor Perry Link has a B.A. in philosophy, M.A. in East Asian Studies, and Ph.D. in Chinese history from Harvard University and has taught Chinese language and literature at Princeton University and UCLA. He has published in the fields of modern Chinese language, literature, popular culture, intellectual history, art and poli-tics. His current research is on rhythm, metaphor, and politics in contemporary Chinese language. His recent books are The Uses of Literature: Life in the Socialist Chinese Literary System; Two Kinds of Truth: Stories and Reportage from China; and Chinese Primer, an elementary Chinese textbook.

Gordon HANSONProfessor of Economics and Director of the Center of Emerging and Pacific Economies, IR/PSProfessor Hanson holds the Pacific Economic Cooperation Chair in International Economic Relations at UC San Diego, where he is director of EmPac and has faculty positions at IR/PS and the Department of Economics. Professor Hanson specializes in the economics of international trade, international migration, and foreign direct investment. His current research examines the international migration of skilled labor, border enforcement and illegal immigration, the impact of imports from China on the US labor market, and the determinants of comparative advantage.

Gary JACOBSONDistinguished Professor of Political Science, UC San DiegoProfessor Jacobson’s field of interest is American national politics, with a subfield focus on Congress and con-gressional elections. He is the author of Money in Congressional Elections; The Politics of Congressional Elec-tions (currently in its 6th edition); and The Electoral Origins of Divided Government; and co-author of Strategy and Choice in Congressional Elections, American Parties in Decline, and The Logic of American Politics. His current research is on the electoral basis of partisan polarization in Congress.

Zhongqi PANProfessor of International Relations, Fudan UniversityDr. Zhongqi PAN teaches international politics at both undergraduate and graduate levels and in both Chinese and English at Fudan University. His focus of research includes international relations theory, China and inter-national system, China’s foreign policy and strategy, China-US and China-EU relations, etc. He was seconded by China’s Foreign Ministry as a First Secretary at Mission of the People’s Republic of China to the European Communities in 2008-9. He will also be a Fulbright Visiting Research Scholar at IR/PS during 2012-2013.

Fudan-UC Center on Contemporary China & 21st Century China Program present

U.S.-China Relations After the U.S. Election and the 18th CCP Congress

Fudan - UC Center on Contemporary China | School of International Relations and Pacific Studies 9500 Gilman Drive, #0519 | La Jolla, CA 92093-0519 | (858) 534-2660 | irps.ucsd.edu

Sam POPKINProfessor of Political Science, UC San DiegoProfessor Popkin’s current research focuses on presidential campaigns and the relationship of public opinion to foreign policy. His most recent book is The Candidate: What it Takes to Win (and Hold) the White House. Popkin has also been a consulting analyst in presidential campaigns, serving as consultant to the Clinton campaign on polling and strategy, to the CBS News election units from 1983 to 1990 on survey design and analysis, and more recently to the Gore campaign. He has also served as consultant to political parties in Canada and Europe and to the Departments of State and Defense.

Susan SHIRKHo Miu Lam Professor of China & Pacific Relations, and Chair of 21st Century China ProgramProfessor Shirk served as Deputy Assistant Secretary of State (1997-2000), responsible for U.S. policy toward China, Taiwan, Hong Kong, and Mongolia. She founded leads the Northeast Asia Cooperation Dialogue, an unofficial forum for discussions of security issues. Shirk has authored many articles and books on Chinese education, economic policy-making, political leadership, and foreign policy. Her books, China: Fragile Super-power (2008), and Changing Media, Changing China (2011) have reached a wide audience in Japan, India, and Taiwan as well as the United States.

SONG GuoyouAssociate Professor, American Studies Center, Fudan UniversityDr. Song is an Associate professor at the Center for American Studies. He received his Ph.D and Master degree in international relations in 2006 and 2003 respectively from Fudan University, and BA in economy from Zhejiang University of Industry and Commerce. He has published a dozen of papers on theories of interna-tional relations, studies of East Asia as well as Sino-U.S relations in various national journals. His research field includes American economy, Sino-U.S. economic relations, and international finance.

Jeff WASSERSTROM, Professor and Chair, History Department, UC IrvineProfessor Wasserstrom is a specialist in Chinese history interested in a wide range of topics, ranging from the gendered symbolism of revolutions to patterns of student protest, and from the way that globalization affects urban life and popular culture to American images of Asia. He has written Student Protests in Twentieth-Century China: The View from Shanghai; Global Shanghai, 1850-2010; and China in the 21st Century: What Everyone Needs to Know.

WU XinboProfessor and Vice Dean, School of International Relations and Public Affairs, Fudan UniversityDr. Wu teaches China-U.S. relations, U.S. Asia-Pacific policy and writes widely about China’s foreign policy, Sino-American relations and Asia-Pacific issues. Professor Wu is the author of many books, including Dollar Diplomacy and Major Powers in China, 1909-1913; award-winning Turbulent Water: U.S. Asia-Pacific Secu-rity Strategy in the post-Cold War Era; Managing Crisis and Sustaining Peace between China and the United States, and The New Landscape in Sino-U.S. Relations in the early 21st Century.

Fudan-UC Center on Contemporary China & 21st Century China Program present

U.S.-China Relations After the U.S. Election and the 18th CCP Congress

Fudan - UC Center on Contemporary China | School of International Relations and Pacific Studies 9500 Gilman Drive, #0519 | La Jolla, CA 92093-0519 | (858) 534-2660 | irps.ucsd.edu

XIN QiangProfessor and Associate Director of American Studies Center, Fudan UniversityDr. Xin is Professor and Deputy Director of the Center for American Studies at Fudan University. His research mainly focuses on Sino-US relations, security studies, U.S. politics and Taiwan. Dr. Xin pursued a 15-month visiting scholarship in the Fairbank Center for Chinese Studies at Harvard University. A couple of his books are Interpreting U.S. Taiwan Policymaking: Perspective of Congress and “Semi-Self-Contained” Congress and Taiwan Issue: Models of U.S. Congress Diplomacy.

ZHANG JunProfessor and Director of China Center for Economic Studies, Fudan UniversityDr. Zhang is Chang-Jiang Chair Professor of Economics at Fudan University and Director of the China Center for Economic Studies. His areas of interests and research are China’s economic transformation and develop-ment, with special emphasis on the evolution of property rights and institutional change, capital accumulation, productivity, structural change and economic growth in China. Professor Zhang is one of the leading economists in China with many publications both in Chinese and English.

About the Fudan-UC Center on Contemporary China

The Fudan-UC Center is the first academic institution to be established by a major Chinese university in cooperation with a major North American University. It is based in the School of International Relations and Pacific Studies at the University of California, San Diego.

Under the directorship of Professor Richard Madsen, the Center serves to connect all ten campuses of the UC system with Fudan University in Shanghai. It will bring together leading research scholars from both universities for conferences and lectures, and it will facilitate cooperative research. The Center will promote deeper mutual under-standing between the United States and China.

Fudan University, which is host to the UC’s Education Abroad Program, is a top university in China, ranked 11 by academic reputation in the Quacquarelli Symonds (QS) 2012 Asia University Ranking.


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