HALLSWORTH CONFERENCE China and the Changing Global Order THURSDAY 23rd & FRIDAY 24th MARCH 2017 MANCHESTER MEETING PLACE UNIVERSITY OF MANCHESTER FINAL PROGRAMME 20/03/17 go.warwick.ac.uk/Hallsworth-China-Conference
HALLSWORTH CONFERENCEChina and the Changing Global Order
THURSDAY 23rd & FRIDAY 24th MARCH 2017MANCHESTER MEETING PLACEUNIVERSITY OF MANCHESTER
FINAL PROGRAMME20/03/17
go.warwick.ac.uk/Hallsworth-China-Conference
Information for Participants
ORGANIZATION TEAMShogo Suzuki (University of Manchester)Catherine Jones (University of Warwick)André Broome (University of Warwick)Matthias Kranke (University of Warwick)Pablo A. Rodríguez-Merino (University of Warwick)
CONFERENCE SUPPORTThe organizers wish to thank the Hallsworth Conference Fund andthe School of Social Sciences at the University of Manchester andthe Centre for the Study of Globalisation and Regionalisation at theUniversity of Warwick for providing administrative and financialsupport for this event.
GENERAL INFORMATION Conference website: http://warwick.ac.uk/hallsworth-china-conference For queries that are not addressed on the conference website, please contact: [email protected] Refreshments will be provided for registered delegates throughout the conference. Conference meals will include lunch on Thursday 23rd and Friday 24th March and the conference dinner on Thursday 23rd March.
GUIDANCE FOR PANEL CHAIRSSession chairs are welcome to spend two minutes following the presentations to briefly reflect on the core contributions of the papersbefore taking audience questions. Strict time management of the length of paper presentations (10 minutes per paper) will help to keepeach session on schedule and allow sufficient time for questions, discussion, and debate.
GUIDANCE FOR PAPER PRESENTERSEach presenter should talk for a maximum of 10 minutes outlining the main theoretical argument or empirical findings in their paper.PowerPoint facilities will be available. Presenters will not be able to use their own laptop computers and should bring their PowerPointor Adobe presentations on a flash drive. Presenters should load slides in the break before their panel session starts to avoid delays.
CONFERENCE PAPERS Please do not cite or circulate papers without the author’s permission. Paper archive: http://warwick.ac.uk/hallsworth-china-conference/paper-archive/access Access to the paper archive is limited to registered conference delegates only.
HALLSWORTH CHINA FORUM Following the conference, authors who wish their conference papers to be considered for publication in the Hallsworth China
Forum within the CSGR Working Paper Series should submit revised papers by the deadline of 1st May 2017. Hallsworth China Forum paper submission website: http://warwick.ac.uk/hallsworth-china-conference/forum
DIRECTIONS Map and transport information: http://warwick.ac.uk/hallsworth-china-conference/map.pdf All conference sessions are in the following location:
Rooms 4 & 5, Manchester Meeting PlaceThe University of Manchester, Sackville Street CampusManchester M1 3AL
Manchester Meeting Place is a 5 minute walk from Manchester Piccadilly Train Station.
TRAVEL AND ACCOMMODATION Conference presenters and non-presenting delegates are responsible for their own travel and accommodation expenses. Travel and accommodation expenses will be covered for conference plenary speakers and a limited number of PhD bursaries have
been provided to cover conference accommodation for selected PhD researchers.
Conference Programme
THURSDAY 23 MARCH
8.30 AM - 8.50 AM Conference registration The Hub, 2nd Floor, Manchester Meeting Place
8.50 AM - 9.00 AM Opening remarks Room 4/5, 3rd Floor, Manchester Meeting Place
9.00 AM - 10.30 AM Panel Session 1 Room 4/5, 3rd Floor, Manchester Meeting Place
10.30 AM - 11.00 AM Refreshments The Hub, 2nd Floor, Manchester Meeting Place
11.00 AM - 12.30 PM Panel Session 2 Room 4/5, 3rd Floor, Manchester Meeting Place
12.30 PM - 1.30 PM Lunch Mumford Restaurant, 1st Floor, Manchester Meeting Place
1.30 PM - 3.00 PM Panel Session 3 Room 4/5, 3rd Floor, Manchester Meeting Place
3.00 PM - 3.30 PM Refreshments The Hub, 2nd Floor, Manchester Meeting Place
3.30 PM - 5.00 PM Panel Session 4 Room 4/5, 3rd Floor, Manchester Meeting Place
5.15 PM - 6.30 PM Plenary Session I Room 4/5, 3rd Floor, Manchester Meeting Place
6.30 PM - 7.30 PM Drinks Reception The Hub, 2nd Floor, Manchester Meeting Place
8.00 PM - 9.30 PM Conference Dinner Red Chilli Restaurant, 70-72 Portland Street
FRIDAY 24 MARCH
8.30 AM - 9.00 AM Refreshments The Hub, 2nd Floor, Manchester Meeting Place
9.00 AM - 10.30 AM Panel Session 5 Room 4/5, 3rd Floor, Manchester Meeting Place
10.30 AM - 11.00 AM Refreshments The Hub, 2nd Floor, Manchester Meeting Place
11.00 AM - 12.30 PM Panel Session 6 Room 4/5, 3rd Floor, Manchester Meeting Place
12.30 PM - 1.30 PM Lunch Mumford Restaurant, 1st Floor, Manchester Meeting Place
1.30 PM - 3.00 PM Panel Session 7 Room 4/5, 3rd Floor, Manchester Meeting Place
3.00 PM - 3.30 PM Refreshments The Hub, 2nd Floor, Manchester Meeting Place
3.30 PM - 5.00 PM Panel Session 8 Room 4/5, 3rd Floor, Manchester Meeting Place
5.15 PM - 6.30 PM Plenary Session II Room 4/5, 3rd Floor, Manchester Meeting Place
Panel Session 1Thursday 9.00 AM - 10.30 AM
Security, Foreign Policy, and China’s Neighbourhood Relations
Chair Shogo Suzuki (University of Manchester)
Beyond Oil and the New Silk Road in the Middle East: China’sGeoeconomic Approach to Iran in the Post-Sanctions Era
June Park (National University of Singapore)
Beyond Censorship, Propaganda, and Control: Exploring thePositive Attitude of the Chinese Government’s Towards OnlinePublic Opinion
Zipeng Li (University of Edinburgh)
Old Counterrevolution, New Terrorism: Historicizing theConstruction of Political Violence in Xinjiang by the ChineseState
Pablo A. Rodríguez-Merino (University of Warwick)
The Political Economy of ‘Rebalancing’ in China: ‘The New SilkRoad Economic Belt and the 21st-Century Maritime Silk Road’Strategy
Chen Xie (University of York)
China Extends Westwards: One Belt One Road’s Impact on EastAfrica
Elizabeth Cobbett (University of East Anglia)
Panel Session 2Thursday 11.00 AM - 12.30 PM
Regionalism, Foreign Investment, and Economic Development
Chair John Ravenhill (Balsillie School of InternationalAffairs)
China’s Economic Rise: Opportunities and Threats for the EUSam Fry (University of Warwick)
China, South America and the Changing Relations ofDependency
Maria Eugenia Giraudo (University of Warwick)
Power Transitions and the Erosion of Export CreditGovernance
Kristen Hopewell (University of Edinburgh)
Contextualising the China Development Model in AfricanParadigms of Development: A Research Framework forAnalysing China-Africa Relations in a Changing Global Order
Franklyn Lisk (University of Warwick)
Monetary Hegemony in the Asia-Pacific Region: The Role ofChina
Karina Jedrzejowska (University of Warsaw)
Panel Session 3Thursday 1.30 PM - 3.00 PM
Great Power Status and Grand Strategy
Chair Edward Newman (University of Leeds)
Asymmetric Parity: U.S.-China Relations in a Multinodal WorldBrantly Womack (University of Virginia)
China’s Great Power Status and the North Korea QuestionElina Sinkkonen (The Finnish Institute of InternationalAffairs)
The United States and the Accommodation of Chinese Power:The Security-Values Nexus
Kingsley Edney (University of Leeds)
China’s Forum DiplomacyAlice Ekman (French Institute of International Relationsand Sciences Po, Paris)
China, the US, and Great Power ManagementDaniel Silva (University of Warwick)
Panel Session 4Thursday 3.30 PM - 5.00 PM
The Changing Landscape of Global Economic Governance
Chair Matthias Kranke (University of Warwick)
The AIIB and the World Bank: Competition, Cooperation, andCross-Pollination
Tamar Gutner (American University)
New Multilateral Lenders and the Purported Challenge toExisting MDBs: Institutional Design, Staffing and LendingPractices at the NDB and the AIIB
Omar Serrano (University of Geneva)
The Politics of Joining the Asian Infrastructure InvestmentBank
Jan Knoerich (King’s College London)Kaeshini Sivananthan (King’s College London)
Why Did China Establish the AIIB and Why Couldn’t the USPersuade Key Allies to Boycott It? A Rationalist Account
Lai-Ha Chan (University of Technology Sydney andPrinceton University)
Growing out of the Existing Regulatory RegionalismPeacefully: China and the Asian Development Bank
Jue Wang (Leiden University)
Plenary Session I: How Has the Global Order Changed?Thursday 5.15 PM - 6.30 PM
Chair Catherine Jones (University of Warwick)
Speaker Yongjin Zhang (University of Bristol)
Speaker Kerry Brown (King’s College London)
Speaker Edward Newman (University of Leeds)
Speaker Rosemary Foot (University of Oxford)
***
Yongjin Zhang is Professor of International Politics in the School of Sociology, Politics, and International Studies, University of Bristol.His research cuts across the disciplinary boundaries of International Relations theory and Chinese history, politics, economictransformation, and international relations. His most recent book publication is Constructing a Chinese School of InternationalRelations: Ongoing Debates and Sociological Realities (co-edited with Teng-chi Chang, Routledge, 2016).
Kerry Brown is Director of the Lau China Institute and Professor of Chinese Politics at King’s College London. His research focuses onChinese history post-1949, Chinese political economy, and Chinese International Relations. His most recent book publication is CEO,China: The Rise of Xi Jinping (I.B. Tauris, 2016).
Edward Newman is Professor of International Security in the School of Politics and International Studies, University of Leeds. Hisresearch focuses on theoretical security studies; intrastate armed conflict, civil war, intervention and political violence; internationalorganizations and multilateralism; and peacebuilding and reconstruction in conflict-prone and post-conflict societies. His most recentbook publication is Understanding Civil Wars: Continuity and Change in Intra-State Conflict (Routledge, 2014).
Rosemary Foot is Emeritus Fellow of St Antony’s College, University of Oxford. Her research focuses on security issues andinstitutional developments in the Asia-Pacific, human rights diplomacy, China’s regional policy, and US-China relations. Her mostrecent book publication is The Oxford Handbook of the International Relations of Asia (co-edited with Saadia M. Pekkanen and JohnRavenhill, Oxford University Press, 2014).
***
Panel Session 5Friday 9.00 AM - 10.30 AM
The Changing Dynamics of International Regimes
Chair Katherine Morton (University of Sheffield)
The Rise of China in the Global Governance of Climate Change:Discourse Analysis of China’s Positions on the 2009Copenhagen Summit and the 2015 Paris Negotiations
Sidan Wang (University of Exeter)
Chinese Normative Dilemmas in the Global Nuclear OrderUnder Xi Jinping
Nicola Leveringhaus (King’s College London)
Mapping Two-Way Recalibration of China and Japan’sApproach to Overseas Investment Projects: A Case Study ofJakarta-Bandung High-Speed Rail Project
Agatha Kratz (King’s College London)Dragan Pavlićević (Xi’an Jiaotong-Liverpool University)
An ‘International Order’ Perspective on the South China Sea:Are American and Chinese Maritime Orders Compatible?
Pak K. Lee (University of Kent)Anisa Heritage (University of Kent)
China and Multilateral InstitutionsPaul Bentall (Foreign and Commonwealth Office)
Panel Session 6Friday 11.00 AM - 12.30 PM
International Monetary and Financial Power
Chair André Broome (University of Warwick)
Currency Statecrafts in Conflict: Learning from the Renminbi’sChallenge to the Dollar
Benjamin J. Cohen (University of California, SantaBarbara)
Hong Kong, London, and the Offshore Renminbi: InternationalFinancial Centres and China’s Financial Transnationalization
Jeremy Green (University of Cambridge)Julian Gruin (University of Amsterdam)
The Domestic Foundations of a Global Currency: RMBInternationalization and the Welfare State
Randall Germain (Carleton University)
Re-stating or Rewriting the Global Finance Rulebook? China’sFinancial Bureaucracy meets the Post-Crisis RegulatoryReforms
Yu-wai Vic Li (Education University of Hong Kong)
China’s New Role in Global Financial GovernanceJörn-Carsten Gottwald (Ruhr University Bochum)Sebastian Bersick (Ruhr University Bochum)Niall Duggan (University College Cork)
Panel Session 7Friday 1.30 PM - 3.00 PM
Great Power Status and National Narratives of Global Reordering
Chair Shogo Suzuki (University of Manchester)
Theorising China's Foreign and Security Policy in an Era ofState Transformation
Lee Jones (Queen Mary, University of London)
Are Soft Power and Hard Power Inevitably Intertwined? ThePolitics of Harmony in China, the West, and Japan
Linus Hagström (Swedish Institute for International Affairsand Swedish Defence University)Astrid H.M. Nordin (Lancaster University)
Ending Perceived Great Power Status Denial: China’s New Longand Offensive March in Asia
Matthieu Grandpierron (Ecole Polytechique, UniversityParis-Saclay)
‘China’s Dream’: Transformation of Governance in China and aNew Vision of Global Order in the 21st Century
Yakun Yu (Swansea University)
World Order with Chinese Characteristics: The Development ofChinese IR and Implications for Chinese Foreign Policy
Stephen Smith (Carleton University)
Panel Session 8Friday 3.30 PM - 5.00 PM
Hegemonic Transition and Structural Power
Chair Catherine Jones (University of Warwick)
Understanding the Politics of Hegemonic TransitionTianruo Gao (University of York)
Coping with Power Transition in Historical East Asia: Chosŏn, Ryuku, and the Rise of Manchu Power in the 17th Century
Min Shu (Harvard-Yenching Institute and WasedaUniversity)
China, Global Governance and Hegemony: Neo-GramscianPerspective in World Order
Bo Peng (Aalborg University)
There’s a Dragon in the Backyard: Hegemonic Transitions inthe Caribbean?
Matthew L. Bishop (University of Sheffield)W. Andy Knight (University of Alberta)
The Chinese Way to the Establishment of a New Global OrderAnna Voloshina (The Institute of Far Eastern Studies ofthe Russian Academy of Sciences)
Plenary Session II: How will China Change the Global Order?Friday 5.15 PM - 6.30 PM
Chair Shogo Suzuki (University of Manchester)
Speaker John Ravenhill (Balsillie School of International Affairs)
Speaker Lai-Ha Chan (University of Technology Sydney and Princeton University)
Speaker Yang Jiang (Danish Institute for International Studies)
Speaker Katherine Morton (University of Sheffield)
***
John Ravenhill is the Director of the Balsillie School of International Affairs and Professor of Political Science at the University ofWaterloo. His research focuses on International Political Economy, production and trade, regionalism, and economics and security.His most recent book publication is the fifth edition of Global Political Economy (edited, Oxford University Press, 2016).
Lai-Ha Chan is Senior Lecturer in the Social and Political Sciences Programme, Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, University ofTechnology Sydney, and a Fung Global Fellow (2016-17) at the Princeton Institute for International and Regional Studies, PrincetonUniversity. Her research focuses on China’s International Relations and China’s participation in Global Governance, non-traditionalsecurity issues in China, China and global health, and China’s foreign aid. Her most recent book publication is China Engages GlobalGovernance: A New World Order in the Making (co-authored with Gerald Chan and Pak K. Lee, Routledge, 2012).
Yang Jiang is Senior Researcher at the Danish Institute for International Studies. Her research focuses on the contemporary politicaleconomy of China, including the domestic politics of economic reform, foreign economic policy, economic diplomacy, aid andoutward investment. Her most recent book publication is China’s Policymaking for Regional Economic Cooperation (Palgrave, 2013).
Katherine Morton is the Chair and Professor of China’s International Relations at the University of Sheffield. Her research addressesthe domestic and international motivations behind China’s changing role in the world and the implications for foreign policy and thestudy of International Relations. Her research spans global governance, transnational security, the environment and climate change,maritime security and the South China Sea. Her latest book publication is China Re-Orients the World: Global Governance in theMaking (forthcoming with Oxford University Press, 2017).
***
Index of Participants
Bentall, Paul
Bishop, Matthew L.
Broome, André
Brown, Kerry
Chan, Lai-Ha
Cobbett, Elizabeth
Cohen, Benjamin J.
Duggan, Niall
Edney, Kingsley
Ekman, Alice
Fafiyebi, Olaniyi Frank
Foot, Rosemary
Fry, Sam
Gao, Tianruo
Geng, Liyan
Germain, Randall
Giraudo, Maria Eugenia
Gottwald, Jörn-Carsten
Grandpierron, Matthieu
Gruin, Julian
Gutner, Tamar
Heritage, Anisa
Hopewell, Kristen
Jiang, Yang
Jedrzejowska, Karina
Jones, Catherine
Jones, Lee
Knoerich, Jan
Kranke, Matthias
Leveringhaus, Nicola
Lee, Pak K.
Li, Yu-wai Vic
Li, Zipeng
Lisk, Franklyn
Mandal, Shumit
Morton, Katherine
Newman, Edward
Panel 5
Panel 8
Panel 6
Plenary I
Panel 4, Plenary II
Panel 1
Panel 6
Panel 6
Panel 3
Panel 3
Observer
Plenary I
Panel 2
Panel 8
Observer
Panel 6
Panel 2
Panel 6
Panel 7
Panel 6
Panel 4
Panel 5
Panel 2
Plenary II
Panel 2
Plenary I, Panel 8
Panel 7
Panel 4
Panel 4
Panel 5
Panel 5
Panel 6
Panel 1
Panel 2
Observer
Panel 5, Plenary II
Panel 3, Plenary I
Nordin, Astrid
Park, June
Pavlicevic, Dragan
Peng, Bo
Petry, Johannes
Rodríguez-Merino, Pablo A.
Ravenhill, John
Serrano, Omar
Shu, Min
Silva, Daniel Rocha e
Sinkkonen, Elina
Smith, Stephen N.
Suzuki, Shogo
Tang, Wai Hong
Voloshina, Anna
Wang, Jue
Wang, Sidan
Womack, Brantly
Xie, Chen
Yu, Yakun
Zeng, Jia
Zhang, Chang
Zhang, Yongjin
Zhao, Haixia
Panel 7
Panel 1
Panel 5
Panel 8
Observer
Panel 1
Panel 2, Plenary II
Panel 4
Panel 8
Panel 3
Panel 3
Panel 7
Panel 1, Panel 7, Plenary II
Observer
Panel 8
Panel 4
Panel 5
Panel 3
Panel 1
Panel 7
Observer
Observer
Plenary I
Observer
Route InformationThe University takes its social responsibility and relations with the local community seriously and aims to reduce its impacts on the environment through its sustainability policies. Therefore, wherever feasible, you are encouraged to travel by sustainable means.
By RailPICCADILLY STATION:Head for the escalators to the left of the concourse, following the signs for Taxis/Fairfield Street. Immediately outside the station main entrance, turn right and cross London Road to the Bulls Head pub. Keeping the Bulls Head on your right walk down London Road & turn right again immediately after the railway viaduct, onto Altrincham Street. Continue straight ahead, and to your left you will see the Barnes Wallis Building; continue ahead for a short distance and you will see a set of stone steps on your left leading down to a landscaped lawn. Manchester Meeting Place is on the other side of the lawn, with the main entrance on the left of the building.
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VICTORIA STATION:Take the MetroLink Tram to Piccadilly Rail Station. Exit to the street at platform level following signs for ‘taxis’ and continue directions as for PICCADILLY STATION.
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BP
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Charles
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Oxford Road
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OXFORD ROAD A34
WHITWORTH STRE
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HIGHER CAMBRIDGE STREET
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*Part of The Chancellors C
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20/02/2014 10:54
The Gatehouse
RenoldBuilding
BarnesWallis/
Harwood
Pendulum Hotel
Red Chilli Restaurant
ManchesterMeeting Place
Date and time8.00PM – 9.30PMThursdayMarch 23rd, 2017
LocationRed Chilli Restaurant70-72 Portland StreetManchesterM1 4GU
HALLSWORTH CONFERENCE DINNERRed Chilli Restaurant, 70-72 Portland Street