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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20160502T180000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20160502T200000
DTSTAMP:20260409T103457
CREATED:20160425T083048Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160425T083048Z
UID:4164-1462212000-1462219200@www.cemeas.de
SUMMARY:CeMEAS Lecture: AIRCRAFT\, SPACECRAFT\, STATECRAFT Specialist cultures and China-U.S. trade in sensitive technologies
DESCRIPTION:CeMEAS Lecture\nAircraft\, Spacecraft\, Statecraft: Specialist cultures and China-U.S. trade in sensitive technologies\nMonday\, May 2\, 2016\, 6 pm (c.t.) KWZ 0.610\nAlanna Krolikowski\, PhD\nVisiting Professor of Modern Chinese Society and Economy\, Georg-August-University Göttingen \nWhy are some sensitive\, strategic high-technology industries organized into transnational production networks while others are fragmented into national industrial bases? This project explores this general question through a comparison of China-U.S. trade in two strategic\, dual-use sectors: civil commercial aircraft and spacecraft manufacture. In the aircraft sector\, Chinese and U.S. firms have expanded their trade and industrial partnerships for the manufacture of sensitive items since the 1980s. In the space sector\, Chinese and U.S. firms traded in sensitive articles for a decade before policy changes severed these exchanges in 1999. This project explains these divergent outcomes\, drawing on data collected through extensive field research. \n  \nImage: PaoPao Wang PCPOP.COM\, kindly supplied by the lecturer\nDesign: CeMEAS \n 
URL:https://www.cemeas.de/event/cemeas-lecture-aircraft-spacecraft-statecraft-specialist-cultures-and-china-u-s-trade-in-sensitive-technologies/
LOCATION:Kulturwissenschaftliches Zentrum\, Heinrich- Düker Weg 14\, Göttingen
CATEGORIES:CeMEAS Lecture Series,Lecture
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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20160517T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20160517T180000
DTSTAMP:20260409T103457
CREATED:20160513T105111Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160513T105111Z
UID:4184-1463500800-1463508000@www.cemeas.de
SUMMARY:Global Food Research Colloquium - Fertilizer Use in China: Why Is It So High\, and What Can Be Done to Reduce It?
DESCRIPTION:Global Food Research Colloquium\nFertilizer Use in China: Why Is It So High\, and What Can Be Done to Reduce It?\n\nProfessor David Abler\, Ph.D.\, Agricultural\, Environmental and Regional Economics and Demography\, Penn State University\n\nTuesday\, 17.05.2016\, 16:15 to 17:45\nZHG 102\n\n\nOn Tuesday\,  May 17th  David Abler will present his research on fertilizer use in China in the Global Food Research Colloquium. The Colloquium has been organized by the Department of Agricultural Economics and Rural Development as a joint event with the Agricultural Economics Seminar.\n\n \n   \nChina’s rates of agricultural fertilizer use per hectare are among the highest in the world\, and fertilizer is a major contributor to water pollution\, air pollution\, and greenhouse gas emissions in China. Several explanations have been put forward for the high rates of fertilizer use in China\, most of which do not stand up to close scrutiny. A number of pilot programs offering farmers information\, technical assistance\, and/or incentives to reduce fertilizer use have been tried\, almost all of which have failed. This paper surveys these explanations and programs\, identifies key unanswered research questions about fertilizer use in China\, and offers programmatic suggestions for reducing fertilizer use based on the experience of other countries.\n\n\nFind out more about Göttingen University Global Agri-Food Systems program and events on http://www.uni-goettingen.de/de/191858.html
URL:https://www.cemeas.de/event/global-food-research-colloquium-fertilizer-use-in-china-why-is-it-so-high-and-what-can-be-done-to-reduce-it/
LOCATION:ZHG 102
CATEGORIES:CeMEAS Lecture Series,Lecture
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20160520T121500
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20160520T140000
DTSTAMP:20260409T103457
CREATED:20160425T083031Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160425T083031Z
UID:4167-1463746500-1463752800@www.cemeas.de
SUMMARY:CeMEAS Lecture: Beyond Modernity - Understanding Change in Qing China (1644 – 1911)
DESCRIPTION:CeMEAS Lecture\nBeyond Modernity: Understanding Change in Qing China (1644 – 1911)\nFriday\, May 20\, 2016\, 12:15 VG 2.101\nProf. Margherita Zanasi\nDirector of Asian Studies\, Department of History  at Louisiana State University \nThis lecture explores the limits of adopting a modernization approach to the study of economic change in Qing China. Recent works have successfully “decentered” developmental determinism by questioning both the uniqueness of the European experience and the imposition on non-Western countries of derivative chronologies of modernity. They have especially focused on tracing the existence in China of those elements that characterized the modernization experience in Europe\, above all the introduction of pro-market and pro-consumption policies. This approach\, however\, had the unintended consequence of keeping the historical narrative focused on the European experience\, overshadowing elements that played a uniquely important role in China\, such as population growth. \nIn the late-eighteenth and early-nineteenth centuries\, under mounting pressure from population growth\, pro-market and pro-consumption ideas and policies that had culminated in the reign of the Qianlong Emperor (1711 –1799) began to lose favor. This reversal marked the beginning of the uneasy relationship with the free market that came to characterize modern China. In China\, therefore\, the fortunes of laissez faire thought and policies followed a very different path than in Europe. They emerged almost a hundred year earlier and came later to be considered unsuitable to face newly emerging problems. In China\, modernity actually arrived in the form of an increasingly interventionist state. \n  \nImage: By tanakawho\, Behind the bars\,  CC BY-NC 2.0\,  https://flic.kr/p/dYqAgS\nDesign: CeMEAS\n  \n  \n  \n  \n  \n  \n 
URL:https://www.cemeas.de/event/cemeas-lecture-beyond-modernity-understanding-change-in-qing-china-1644-1911/
LOCATION:Verfügungsgebäude\, Platz der  Göttinger Sieben 7\, Göttingen
CATEGORIES:CeMEAS Lecture Series,Lecture
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