Français 简体中文 About Us

 

 

Home | China Report | Africa Report | Business | Lifestyle | Services
Moving Africa Forward
A new breed of young African entrepreneurs seek to control their own destinies
Current Issue
Cover Story
Table of Contents
Through My Eyes

 

Subscribe Now
From the Editor
Letters
Newsmakers
Media Watch
Pros and Cons
China Report
Africa Report
Exclusives
Nation in Focus
News Roundup
Business
Business Briefs
Business Ease
China Econometer
Company Profile
Lifestyle
Double Take
Spotlight
Science and Technology
Services
Living in China
Fairs&Exhibitions
Learning Chinese
Universities
Measures and Regulations

 

 

 

Media Links
Beijing Review
China.org.cn
China Pictorial
China Today
People's Daily Online
Women of China
Xinhua News Agency
China Daily
China Radio International
CCTV
 
 
 
 
 

 

Think Tanks Forum

 

E-mail
Newsletter
  Mobile
News
  Subscribe
Now
 
VOL.3 October 2011
Venturing Forward
African think tanks are looking for platforms to exchange ideas with Chinese counterparts
by Liu Jian

Ever since the Forum on China-Africa Cooperation (FOCAC) held its first meeting in 2000, exchanges between China and Africa have grown tremendously. But compared to the increase of inter-government relationships and at the business level, exchanges between Chinese and African academics still remain limited.

Last year, the China-Africa Joint Research and Exchange Program was launched in Beijing to provide an exchange platform for scholars on both sides. A year later, representatives from over 50 African research institutes gathered at another conference in Nairobi to discuss new ways of facilitating effective participation in joint programs with their Chinese counterparts.

Major players at conferences like this one include government-supported policy-oriented think tanks like the Nigerian Institute of International Affairs and the Ethiopian International Institute for Peace and Development. Independent, non-governmental organizations like the South African Institute of International Affairs (SAIIA), and Fahamu, the pan-African social justice organization responsible for the Emerging Powers in Africa Program, also have a presence in the think tank community. And South Africa's universities are participating, too, from China-focused research centers and projects like the Center for Chinese Studies at Stellenbosch University, to the East Asia Project at the University of the Witwatersrand and the Asia Network at the Gordon Institute of Business Science, University of Pretoria.

A number of Confucius Institutes attached to different universities across Africa are also developing programs. "This is a sign that Chinese studies is expanding, though their focus initially is on language training," says Chris Alden, Head of SAIIA's China in Africa Project.

Although China-focused think tanks currently in Africa aren't ubiquitous, African scholars interested in the growing relations between their continent and China are growing in number. With the First China-Africa Think Tanks Forum (CATTF) being held this October on the Chinese mainland, some leading African scholars recently shared their views with ChinAfrica on the future of think-tank exchanges. Their edited opinions follow:

1   2   3   4   5   Next  

 

 

 

 

 

 

Double Take
 
Science and Technology
-The Next Generation of Rice
-A Brain in Love
-Emerging Epidemics
-Mutating in Space
 
Spotlight
-Chasing the Chinese Dream
-Molding Clay in Maseru
-The Sound of Music
-Beyond the Books in Nigeria

 

 

 

Useful Africa Links: Africa Investor | Africa Updates | AllAfrica | Africa Business | ChinaAfrica News | AfricaAsia Business | Irin News |
News From Africa | Africa Science | African Union | People of Africa | African Culture | Fahamu
| About Us | Rss Feeds | Contact Us | Advertising | Subscribe | Make ChinAfrica Your Homepage |
Copyright Chinafrica All right reserved 京ICP备08005356号