Programme 2.30 p.m Arrival of Guest and Registration 2.50 p.m. Welcoming Remarks by Professor Dr Danny Wong Tze Ken Director, Institute of China Studies University of Malaya 3.00 p.m. Public Lecture “China’s Rise, America’s Dilemma” 3:45 p.m. Q & A session 4:15 p.m. Presentation of Souvenir & Group Photo 4:30 p.m. Refreshments 5:00 p.m. End of Programme Public Lecture China’s Rise, America’s Dilemma by Professor Lowell Dittmer Abstract The rise of the People's Republic of China, dramatically accelerated since Deng Xiaoping introduced "reform and opening" in late 1978, has been one of the most successful modernization programs in the world. In 1978, China was one of the poorest countries on earth. The real per capita GDP in China was only one-fortieth of the U.S. level and one-tenth the Brazilian level. Since 2014, according to the IMF figures using PPP measures, China has the largest aggregate economy in the world. Since the historic visit to China by President Richard Nixon in 1972, the United States has taken a supportive view of China's rise, at first for strategic reasons, later based on a mixture of trade complementarity and shared interests. But since around 2008, China-America relations have cooled. Why is this happening? What does Beijing want, what does Washington want, where are the points of friction, and how might they be reconciled? About the Speaker Professor Dittmer received his Ph.D. from The University of Chicago in 1971. His scholarly expertise is the study of contemporary China. He teaches courses on contemporary China, Northeast Asia, and the Pacific Rim. His current research interests include a study of the impact of reform on Chinese Communist authority, a survey of patterns of informal politics in East Asia, and a project on the ChinaTaiwan-US triangle in the context of East Asian regional politics. Professor Dittmer's recently published books and monographs include Sino-Soviet Normalization and Its International Implications (University of Washington Press, 1992), China's Quest for National Identity (with Samuel Kim, Cornell University Press, 1993), China Under Modernization (Westview Press, 1994), and South Asia's Nuclear Crisis (M. E. Sharpe, 2005). Professor Dittmer is a Professor in the Department of Political Science, University of California(Berkeley). He is also the Editor of Asian Survey, a widely respected journal on contemporary political developments in Asia. He is now in the Institute of China Studies,University of Malaya as an Academic Icon for the first half of 2015. ALL ARE WELCOME * Please do not hesitate to contact us for inquiry and to confirm your attendance: 03-79565663, 03-79561695 or 03-79588173.
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