Notice of Webinar with guest speaker Mark Kruger

January 18th, 2021  |  Published in Event, Zoom Webinar by admin


Mark Kruger, Yicai Global in Shanghai

China’s 14th Five Year Plan: New Policy Directions

Tuesday, March 30th, 2021 at 8:00 p.m.
(Eastern Time)

Patrons
Honourable Sheila Copps
Ambassador Robert Wright

This year China is embarking on its 14th Five Year Plan. Having successfully built a “moderately prosperous society”, policymakers are now developing an agenda which includes developing technological strength and reducing carbon emissions. Join us on March 30, at 8 PM for a talk by Mark Kruger, who will explain what a shift to a greener and more innovative China entails.

Mark Kruger is the Opinion Editor at Yicai Global. He holds Senior Fellow appointments at the Yicai Research Institute, the Centre for International Governance Innovation and University of Alberta’s China Institute. Mark was formerly a Senior Policy Director in the Bank of Canada’s International Department, a Senior Advisor to the Canadian Executive Director at the IMF and head of the Economic and Financial Section in the Canadian Embassy in Beijing. Mark began his career at the Alberta Petroleum Marketing Commission. You can find Mark’s short, data-driven insights into China’s economy here: Columnist Mark.kruger .

PDF –> Event Invitation poster



Presentation Slides PDF

Tuesday, March 30, 2021 at 8 p.m.

All are welcome.  Q & A will follow the presentation.

Registration is required for this free Zoom webinar event. 

If you prefer to send in questions for the Q&A session prior to the event, please send them to contact.ccfso@gmail.com.  For more information, please visit www.ccfso.org, or email contact.ccfso@gmail.com.      

November 11th, 2020  |  Published in Event, Zoom Webinar by admin


China as a Global Neighbor: Towards a Rethinking of Canada-China Relations

Senator Yuen Pau Woo

Tuesday, November 24, 2020 at 7:30 p.m.
(Eastern Time)

For a video recording including the Question and Answer session please follow this link https://youtu.be/1Esrq1B1VG8

Patrons
Honourable Sheila Copps
Ambassador Robert Wright

Appointed to the Senate of Canada in November 2016, the Honourable Yuen Pau Woo sits as an independent representing British Columbia. He has been the elected Facilitator of the Independent Senators Group since 2017.

Senator Woo has worked on public policy issues related to Canada’s relations with Asian countries for more than 30 years. From 2005-2014, he was President and CEO of the Asia Pacific Foundation of Canada, where he continues to serve as Distinguished East Asia Fellow. He is also Senior Fellow at Simon Fraser University’s Graduate School of Business, and at the School of Public Policy and Global Affairs at the University of British Columbia. He is a member of the Trilateral Commission and of the board of the Vancouver Academy of Music. He also serves on the Advisory Boards of the Mosaic Institute, the Canadian Ditchley Foundation, and the York Centre for Asian Research.

Relations with China will be Canada’s biggest foreign policy challenge for the foreseeable future. For the past 50 years, Canadian policy towards China has been largely transactional, with “the China question” seen as a residual of other international policy priorities. This is evident in the decades-long debate around “diversification” of Canadian trade and investment away from dependence on the United States. China today is much more than a “diversification” issue. As an increasingly assertive global power, China’s presence is felt anywhere and everywhere — for better or worse. China has become a global neighbor that we need to get to know much better, and at varying times confront, cajole, or cooperate with. We need to rethink Canada-China relations in a way that respects Canadian values, recognizes China’s place in the world, protects our interests domestically and abroad, and enhances the independence of our international policy. In recent years, Canada-China relations have been unduly shaped by US-China strategic competition, resulting in Ottawa having conflicts with Beijing that have more to do with great power rivalry than with our national interest. Sleeping with one elephant is difficult enough; sleeping with two should keep us awake constantly.

Tuesday, November 24, 2020 at 7:30 p.m. (Eastern time)

Q&A will follow the presentation.

 

Registration is required for this free Zoom webinar event. Please register by November 23 at this link:
Zoom Webinar Registration Link


After successful registration, you will receive a link and a password to the webinar. Please retain the information for your access to the webinar and do not share it with others.

If you prefer to send in questions for the Q&A session prior to the event, please send them to contact.ccfso@gmail.com.  For more information, please visit www.ccfso.org, or email contact.ccfso@gmail.com.      

August 14th, 2020  |  Published in CCFSO, Event, Past Event, Zoom Webinar by admin


CCFS Webinar with His Excellency CONG Peiwu,
Ambassador of the People’s Republic of China
on China-Canada Relations


Thursday, September 10, 2020 at 7:30 p.m. (Eastern Time)

Many thanks to H.E. Cong Peiwu, Ambassador of the People’s Republic of China, for joining us as our distinguished guest speaker at our September 10, 2020 webinar.  We greatly appreciate the opportunity to have heard first hand from H.E. Cong on such a wide range of crucial topics on Canada-China relations.  Thanks also to all the attendees for your active participation by sending in so many candid questions, both prior to and during the webinar.  And thank you for your very positive feedback.

Please find here the full text of Ambassador Cong’s keynote speech at the webinar:

http://ca.china-embassy.org/eng/sgxw/t1814885.htm

Due to the popular demand and requests from our attendees, we have transcribed the entire Q&A session which can be accessed here:

Q&A Transcript PDF file 

Mr. CONG became Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the People’s Republic of China to Canada in 2019.  This was his second appointment in Canada.  From 2000 to 2003, he was Second Secretary, then First Secretary, at the Embassy of the People’s Republic of China here.  From 2009 to 2014, Mr. CONG served as Minister-Counsellor, then Minister, at the Embassy of the People’s Republic of China in the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland.  During the intervening years from 1992 to 2019, Mr. CONG had various positions in the Department of North American and Oceanian Affairs in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.  He was Director-General of that department from 2014 to 2019.  Ambassador CONG graduated from China Foreign Affairs University.

 

Thursday, September 10, 2020 at 7:30 p.m. (Eastern Time)

Q&A will follow the presentation

Registration is required for this Zoom webinar event at this link: https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_6OTX5BQfT6iqyt73CPkyJQ

Please register early to avoid disappointment, as there is a limited number of spaces for this event.

If you prefer to send in questions for the Q&A session prior to the event, please send them to contact.ccfso@gmail.com.  For more information, please visit www.ccfso.org, email contact.ccfso@gmail.com or call 613-729-3660. 

PDF VERSION

May 20th, 2020  |  Published in CCFSO, Event, Past Event, Zoom Webinar by admin


What does it mean to be a friend of China?

Professor Paul Evans, U.B.C.

Monday, June 15, 2020 at 7:30 p.m.
(Eastern Time)

The idea of friendship is a complicated one in international relations.  It is especially complicated in an era of heightened political tensions and raw emotions in interactions between Western countries and China in the context of complex differences in history, values and institutions.  

The presentation will draw on the experiences and ideas of three individuals –John Fairbank, Pierre Trudeau, and Kevin Rudd–who in different periods and in different ways have advocated deeper contact with China even while holding deep reservations about major elements of China’s domestic and foreign policy actions.  What are the moral dimensions and practical implications of being characterized as a friend of China?  What can we learn from the three about navigating the darkest period in Canada-China relations since the establishment of diplomatic relations?  

Paul Evans is a Professor in the School of Public Policy and Global Affairs at the University of British Columbia.  A specialist in trans-Pacific international relations, he has written on issues in Canada-China and US-China relations and Asia Pacific security matters.  His first book in 1988 was John Fairbank and the American Understanding of Modern China and his most recent Engaging China: Myth, Strategy and Aspiration in Canadian Policy from Trudeau to Harper (2014) that in its forthcoming Chinese translation has been updated through the first Justin Trudeau government.

Monday, June 15, 2020 at 7:30 p.m. (Eastern time)

Q&A will follow the presentation.

Registration is required for this Zoom webinar event. Please register at this link: https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_b3HKme1PQvSDfn4Epn0GlA

After successful registration, you will receive a link and a password to the webinar. Please retain the information for your access to the webinar and do not share it with others.

Registration is limited to 100 people. Please register early to avoid disappointment.

You are welcome to raise questions during the webinar through Zoom’s Q&A function. If you prefer to send in questions before the event, please send them to contact.ccfso@gmail.com.

For more information please visit www.ccfso.org, or email contact.ccfso@gmail.com.

Topic: CCFS Webinar: Prof. Paul Evans, U.B.C.: What Does It Mean to Be A Friend of China?
Start Time : Jun 15, 2020 07:14 PM

Meeting Recording:
https://us02web.zoom.us/rec/share/wM1aH77s00ZIabPsr2LWVbUGLoW6aaa8hiEY__VcmUZJsEzyGRO0a9uzYLocaXNO