22 research outputs found

    Anthropology and the Chinese century

    Get PDF
    Asian Studie

    Antropologie en de Chinese eeuw

    Get PDF
    Asian Studie

    China's Immigrant Population

    Get PDF
    Asian Studie

    Europe's engagement with China: Shifting Chinese Views of the EU and the EU-China Relationship

    Get PDF
    This article discusses the dramatic recent shifts in Chinese policy perspectives on the European Union (EU) and EU-China relations. Whereas for more than a decade, policy makers and Europe specialists in China had regarded the EU as an exemplar of regional integration and as a promising new ‘pole’ in the global order, a recent survey shows that today, in the wake of the Eurozone crisis, the refugee crisis, and the ‘Brexit’ referendum, many perceive the EU as a troubled actor unfit to deal with the existential challenges confronting it, let alone play a credible leadership role beyond its own borders. Despite this, Beijing’s ambitious international agenda at a time of global uncertainty guarantees China’s ever-growing stake in building a reliable, long-term partnership with the EU, even though recent Chinese diplomatic and economic initiatives are gravitating towards the Union’s periphery, targeting subregional groupings of Member States along Europe’s re-emerging, traditional fault lines. Based on the research findings presented in this paper, the authors argue that the EU and the Member States need to rethink the basic assumptions underlying their China policies in the so called ‘New Era’ and explore new approaches of engagement that match these shifting perceptions, policies and political realities.Asian Studie

    Het één-Chinabeleid en Taiwan

    Get PDF
    Asian Studie

    Dutch higher education and Chinese students in the Netherlands

    Get PDF
    The number of Chinese students in the Dutch higher education sector has grown rapidly. In 2014 the number of Chinese BA and MA students reached 4638, or about 7 percent of the population of international students in the Netherlands. The number of formally employed PhD students in that year was 427. After the Germans, the Chinese have become the second largest group of international students. Dutch HBO schools (‘universities of applied sciences’) used to attract about half of all Chinese students in the Netherlands, but their share has been dropping perceptibly in recent years. The presence of Chinese students has become a structural aspect of the Dutch higher education sector. In the competition for student talent from China, the Netherlands lose out to top-ranked universities in the English-speaking world. Nevertheless, the Netherlands has proven to be quite successful as one of the most English of all non-English-speaking countries with a very wide range of study programmes in English. When looking at the relative costs of studying abroad the Netherlands occupies a middle position. As a result, Chinese students often come to the Netherlands as an excellent second-best choice. Self-development and exposure to foreign cultures are the most important reasons to study abroad. Another consideration is the hope of gaining a competitive advantage in the Chinese job market upon return. Students view the Netherlands as safe, egalitarian, and open to different cultures. This appreciation of certain aspects of Dutch society is also a reflection on satisfaction with some social changes inherent to China’s rapid modernization. Students appreciate the fact that Dutch education puts more emphasis on skills and the use of knowledge. Contacts with international students is an important aspect of positive experiences of Chinese students. Relations with Dutch students seems to be less common. Students encounter problems with a language, different customs, integration, and even prejudice in Dutch society. Many students also report being uncomfortable being exposed by questions and criticisms of Chinese politics. These tensions could potentially harm the image of the Netherlands in China and affect student inflow. Chinese bachelor’s students perform relatively well in comparison with Dutch and many other international students. A relatively high percentage successfully completes their education and mostly within the nominal study time. In comparison with students from other non-EEA countries the stay rate for employment reasons after graduation is relatively low and continues to drop. Most Chinese students are enrolled in programmes in the field of business, science, and engineering. As a result, most of the graduates who stay find work in financial services, trade, business, communication and hospitality. Only students in technology and science stay relatively less often for employment after graduation.Asian Studie

    Contemporary China Studies in the Netherlands

    No full text
    Asian Studie

    Party Spirit: Producing a Communist Civil Religion in Contemporary China

    No full text
    The Chinese Communist Party is confronted with a growing gap that separates the rhetoric about socialism and party rule from the individualism and materialism caused by capitalism and opening up to the outside world. In response, the Party has developed strategies that draw on an understanding of the dedication to the Party that is specifically religious, yet does not require belief, conviction or faith in a doctrine. These strategies revolve around the Leninist concept of ‘Party spirit’ that, paradoxically, has been turned into a commodity that can be produced, supplied and consumed. Drawing on insights from the anthropology of pilgrimage, tourism and religion, these strategies will be discussed in the context of party cadre education and so-called ‘red tourism.’ The article concludes that the Party is shaping its evolution from an infallible bearer of ideological dogma to a sacred object of worship as part of a new ‘communist civil religion.’Asian Studie

    Antropologie en de Chinese eeuw

    No full text

    Anthropology and the Chinese century

    No full text
    corecore