China’s long march to research and innovation: recent progress and some contemporary challenges

Tue 4 Feb 2014, 18:00 - 19:15

Venue
The British Academy, 10-11 Carlton House Terrace, London SW1Y 5AH



 


We have become accustomed to appreciating the growing weight of China in global economics and politics. In the last decade, however, these advances have been accompanied by evidence of China’s new role in research and innovation.  Increasing expenditures on research and development, patent registrations and government policies to nurture technology-intensive companies have all been impressive.  The lecture seeks to explain the origins of these achievements; to assess the prospects for further Chinese progress; and consider the potential gains and challenges that such progress may offer to the rest of the world.  We need to know whether we can all gain from China’s technological rise and whether  the newly evolving British and European innovation systems have the strength to play a significant role in this new world scene.


Speakers:
Professor Christopher Howe FBA
Professor Emeritus of Chinese Business Management and Teaching Fellow at the School of Oriental and African Studies


About the speaker:
Christopher Howe is currently Professor Emeritus of Chinese Business Management and Teaching Fellow at the School of Oriental and African Studies. His current research interests are the experiences of research and development in the Peoples Republic of China, Hong Kong, and Taiwan.


Chaired by Professor Carole Hillenbrand FBA, University of Edinburgh



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