China’s Rise :
Consequences for China and the World
A
two-day conference organized by the Centre d’Études de l’Asie de l’Est of the
Université de Montréal, la Chaire de recherche du Canada en droit chinois et
mondialisation (UQAM), and the Department of Political Science of Concordia
University, with additional financing from the Ministère des Relations
Internationales et la Francophonie (Québec), will examine the consequences of
China’s rise to great power status on China and the world.
Day 1, Saturday, December 3. Venue :
UQAM, room D-200; Time :
10 :00 – 17 :00
Morning
session, 10 :00-12 :15.
Discussion of the impact of China’s rise on Chinese liberalism, by Carl
Déry (Université de Montréal) and David Ownby (Université de Montréal)
Afternoon
session, 14 :00-17 :00.
Timothy Cheek (University of British Columbia), « China’s Directed
Public Sphere », Qin Hui (Tsinghua University) « Liberalism’s
Decline? Socialism’s Decline? Or Freedom’s Decline ?», David Kelly,
« The Seven Chinas ».
Day 2, Sunday, December 4. Venue :
Concordia University, Hall 1220; Time 13 :00-17 :00.
Hélène
Piquet (UQAM) and André Laliberté (Université d’Ottawa), « Perspectives on
Legal Reforms and the future of Ngo’s in China; Qin Hui, « Reflections on
the Post Cold-War World ».
For
further information, please contact david.ownby (at) umontreal.ca