英国研究中心讲座介绍–Richard Sanders 02
讲座题目:
“BREXIT: Implications for the EU, for Britain’s future trading relationships with the EU, the USA and China. Is there a threat to globalisation?”
时间: 2017年3月30日星期四, 下午3:30-5:30
地点:英语楼115会议室
讲座人
Dr Richard Sanders is Emeritus Professor of Contemporary Chinese Studies at the University of Northampton, UK, teaching and researching on political economy and Asian globalization. He got his PhD degree in 1998 writing a thesis entitled “Prospects for Sustainable Development in the Chinese Countryside: the Political Economy of Chinese Ecological Agriculture”. From 1991 to 1993 Prof. Sanders was employed by the British Council in Beijing to work as a foreign expert and lecturer in economics in the English Department of Beijing Foreign Studies University, contributing a great deal to the founding and the development of the British Studies MA programme here. He has published richly, including one authored book entitled Prospects for Sustainable Development in the Chinese Countryside: the Political Economy of Chinese Ecological Agriculture (Ashgate, 2000) and 2 edited books, one of which is entitled China’s Post-Reform Economy: Achieving Harmony, Sustaining Growth (Routledge, 2007). He has also published numerous articles in academic journals and chapters in edited books and has presented research papers at many conferences throughout the world.
讲座简介:
“BREXIT: Implications for the EU, for Britain’s future trading relationships with the EU, the USA and China. Is there a threat to globalisation?”
“On 23 June 2016, the British electorate made the fateful decision to leave the European Union and to disassociate itself from an organisation to which it has belonged for 44 years. There are, of course, considerable implications for the UK in so doing, but there are also significant implications for the EU itself, particularly given the uncertainties and instabilities it is currently facing with, on its western front, a nationalist Donald Trump in the White House who seems to be encouraging anti-EU parties and candidates to follow Britain’s Brexit example, and on its eastern front, Vladimir Putin in the Kremlin who is openly hostile to the status of the EU across Eastern Europe and wants to weaken the EU in any way possible.
“ The talk will cover the possible scenarios that the Brexit decision implies for the European Union, both in the short and medium term, and will discuss implications for Britain’s future trading and international relations generally with other countries, to include with the USA and with China.”