The sound development of globalization depends on people. CCG focuses on the cultivation of international talent from a long-term perspective and participates in reshaping the international education environment in the era of globalization through in-depth research on global trends in international student mobility, study abroad, study in China, international schools, education for international understanding, China-foreign cooperative education, and international education philosophy and policies, so as to promote China’s open education and global educational exchange and cooperation.
CCG maintains long-time and stable relationships with renowned universities and international schools at home and abroad, as well as education administrations, international organizations, private organizations and enterprises. The series of blue books named Blue Book of Global Talent: Annual Report on the Development of Chinese Students Studying Abroad, published since 2012, and the Blue Book of China International Schools, published since 2016, have been well-received by the public.
CCG also has published a series of research reports, such as Building a New World Cultural Landscape under Global Governance and Education for International Understanding in China: Past, Present and Future, which are closely linked to the pulse of the times, providing timely and relevant recommendations to education-related governmental departments to tackle the opportunities and challenges in educational opening-up. CCG also organizes regular seminars on international education topics, both online and offline, to provide a platform for Chinese and foreign education experts to exchange ideas and provide the public with information of the latest developments in international education.
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Mabel Lu MIAO: It is vital to engage in dialogue and exchange ideas
The US video communications software Zoom has announced it will stop direct sales in China starting on August 23 and change to an agency cooperation model. Although it promises not to affect corporate users within the next three years, these changes will still affect international conference arrangements that rely on network connections. How does this change affect international institutions in China?
August 25 , 2020 -
Harvey Dzodin: Trump, Biden and China
By Harvey Dzodin,a senior research fellow at the Center for China and Globalization(CCG).
August 17 , 2020 -
Laurence Brahm: ‘Decoupling’ means one planet, two worlds
Twenty years ago, the ritzy five-star hotels of Beijing were hosting conferences every week on globalization, holding out a promise it could bring us all together and that barriers on trade and investment would be coming down. Businessmen, accountants, investment bankers and lawyers crowded during coffee breaks, and we all felt the buzz of something bigger than us that would somehow make the world more integrated and whole.
August 11 , 2020 -
Wang Huiyao: Canada should drop Meng Wanzhou case, shaking free of US coattails
In October 1970, Canadian prime minister Pierre Trudeau took a momentous step to establish relations with the People’s Republic of China. It was a bold move – Nixon’s famous visit to China was still two years off, and only a handful of Western countries had embassies in Beijing at the time.
August 05 , 2020 -
Harvey Dzodin: NGOs play crucial role in China-US cooperation
With the number of COVID-19 cases continuing to accelerate across the globe, you may think there is no choice but to throw in the proverbial towel. However, there is a glimmer of hope that NGOs on both sides of the bilateral divide could unite in combating and containing the novel coronavirus. Why are NGOs important? While governments tend to operate on a macro level, NGOs usually operate on a micro level. They tend to move quickly to analyze a situation and take action at the earliest possible moment. They can also operate in matters where governments may have to exercise caution or be constrained from engaging.
July 29 , 2020