This last few days has seen a vibrant debate
surrounding the threat posed to academic freedom by Confucius Institutes in
North American universities has been sparked by a statement from the American
Association of University Professors (AAUP) which determined that “allowing any third-party control
of academic matters is inconsistent with principles of academic freedom, shared
governance, and the institutional autonomy of colleges and universities”.
Perhaps (definitely) the best discussion of this issue has snowballed
on the China File site (http://www.chinafile.com/Debate-Over-Confucius-Institutes)
which opened with a very reasoned defense of the establishment of CIs by Robert
Kapp. Arguing quite eloquently, Kapp
posits that the establishment of CIs in the US HE sector affords opportunities
to US students who would otherwise not, in many cases, be exposed to the
language, history and culture of this most fascinating country. Kapp’s position is one which I agree with more
or less entirely, and especially with the crucial caveat inserted by Kapp:
“such clear affirmations of academic freedom should be specified in
each school’s agreement with Hanban, the Chinese agency sponsoring Confucius
Institutes. If Hanban cannot accept such stipulations, then there should be no
agreement. The responsibility for determining that these commitments are being
upheld should reside solely in the hands of the host institution”.
Subsequent
contributions to the debate come from some of the most highly regarded China
scholars and China watchers around. Jeff
Wasserstrom (UC Irvine) provides some anecdotal evidence from a personal
experience giving a lecture at a CI which seems to challenge his healthy skepticism
about such partnerships, while Jerome Cohen (NYU) seems to agree with Perry
Link’s (UC San Diego) unabashed criticism of CI’s, before briefly recounting an
award he received from a CI “to recognize the importance of civil and political
rights for China”. Voices in support of
CIs are in the minority, with only Robert Kapp and David Schlesinger largely in
support. Firmly in the skeptics camp are
Isabel Hilton, Jonathan Mirsky, Steven I. Levine (Montana), Matteo Mecacci, David
Wertime, Winston Lord and, despite somewhat confusing supporting statements on
personal experiences of CIs, Jeff Wasserstrom and Jerome Cohen. Perry Link’s rebuttal and counter of Robert
Kapp’s argument is certainly persuasive and is cited by both Winston Lord (enthusiastically)and
Jerome Cohen (reluctantly) as pretty much infallible. Isabel Hilton draws attention to national
language and culture institutes such as the Goethe Institute, Alliance
Francaise and The British Council, commending their independence from academia
and their maintenance of some form of neutrality while fulfilling their soft
power roles. Yet, there remains, at the
heart of this discussion, a seemingly uncritical assumption that universities
are, and should be, politically neutral institutions, all the while advocating disengagement from China on the basis of a political principle.
The University as a Civil Society Institution
It is one of the
“facts” of the western world that universities exist on the basis of two core
principles: freedom of enquiry and institutional autonomy. Yet this view conveniently ignores the
context out of which universities initially emerged and serves to reinforce the
erroneous assumption that universities have always been created upon these two
fundamental values. European universities were established largely through
monarchical charters and often at the behest of the Papacy. This is true of most of the world’s oldest
institutions, including Bologna, Oxford, Cambridge, St Andrews, Padua, Uppsala,
Salamanca etc. They were created either
by the Holy Roman Empire, the Papal States or by Monarchs of states in which
they existed, with their political allegiances placing a question mark over any
claims to autonomy; Oxford, for example, remained vehemently Royalist during
the English Civil War.
US universities, which emerged from
this tradition, can be questioned in terms of their inter-relation with the
state. Following the USSRs success with
Sputnik, US HE went through a process not dissimilar to that which Chinese HE
is now undergoing in terms of the injection of resources into science and
technology research. National Science
Foundation congressional funding, for example, jumped by a factor of 15 in the
decade from 1959 to 1968 (from around $35m to $500m) with grants approved for research deemed to be of priority by the US government. Caltech, for example, grew dramatically in
the post-war and Cold War era; is famous as the home of NASA’s Jet Propulsion
Laboratory; is one of America’s many universities which have Reserve Officer
Training Corps to educate commissioned officers in the US military. It is, along with MIT, one of the world’s
most preeminent institutions for the furthering of scientific knowledge, yet
its evolution is rooted in close relationship to the state.
The point I am making here is that
universities can never be separated from the political entities in which they
exist. University autonomy and academic
freedom are noble values to which all universities should aspire to, but there
is not a single institution in the world which can lay claim to being entirely
autonomous or having total academic freedom.
This condition of the academy arises from the simple fact that
universities derive their defining characteristics from the contexts out of which they emerge and solely at the discretion of the
political entities which choose to bestow such liberties upon them and which
guarantee those freedoms to a greater or lesser extent. It seems to me that we all too often
uncritically accept the belief that our universities, and I include European,
UK, US and other advanced nations in this, can be or are autonomous from the
state. On the contrary, they are not
independent from the state, but are a civil society institution where consensus
to the prevailing normative world view is negotiated.
Chinese HE and State Relations
In China, all universities are under the jurisdiction of the Ministry of
Education or the Provinicial/Municipal Education Bureau. There are
approximately 115 national-level universities which report directly to the MoE
in Beijing, while the remaining 2190 higher education institutions are under the jurisdiction of
their provincial or municipal educations bureaus. Of the total 2305 HEIs, 1090 are involved in 4yr degree provision, with a smaller proportion approved for Masters and Dcotoral degrees, while the remaining 1215 provide 3 year vocational diploma education. None of these universities confer their own
degrees as all degrees in China are conferred by the Ministry of Education. Institutions receive their funding directly
from the MoE/education bureau for teaching, with the leading universities
competing for research funds from different government departments including
the Ministry of Science and Techonology (MoST), MoE and from other national
ministries and provincial governments.
All Chinese universities work to deliver research which contributes to
national, provincial and local development goals as laid out in the 5yr plans
at various different levels of government.
China has a much greater recognition
of the social function of the university and chooses not to cover up this fact,
but rather to emphasize the central importance of HE to national social,
economic, cultural and political development. Personally, I find this not to be insidious, but to be quite acutely and refreshingly realistic about the social function of the university and its relationship with the state. It might not reflect my thinking on how an HE sector should be, but as an academic I'm interested in understanding China's HE sector on its own terms, with the hope of being better able to understand how it will continue to transform. To criticise China's HE system for not adhering to the same principles of autonomy and (arguably) academic freedom would serve only to identify me as viewing China as a problem to be solved and that, I strongly argue, is an uncritical perspective which tells people more about my normative convictions than it does about the Chinese HE system.
When conducting my doctoral
research, I interviewed many Chinese university Presidents, Party Secretaries
and senior officials and academics (both formally and informally) which
revealed the scale of this industrial policy approach to the HE sector. One particular quote stood out in my mind
which serves to highlight the difference in attitudes towards higher education:
“our logic is not the same as their (western) logic…western logic
holds that the university wants to be the smartest group of people in the
world, right. If I have my opinion, if I
think we should educate students in certain subjects, this is completely the
right of the university (to decide). The
university’s right is paramount. But
Chinese universities…they have never been like this (its about) what
contribution can I make”.
At first, such a
statement appears to serve to highlight the differences between Chinese and
“western” HE. But I believe it is more
useful to jettison the assumption prevalent in the west that universities can
be autonomous (I emphasize here that I think we should strive for that,
but that it is not achievable). It is
here where I believe that Gramsci’s notion of the integral state, as a sum of
political society and civil society, is extremely useful in framing the
relationship between the state and HE, regardless of national context.
Gramsci defines
political society in a manner similar to Althusser’s coercive state apparatus:
the executive, judiciary, legislature, military, paramilitary, police force,
civil service etc. Yet Gramsci’s view on
civil society rejects widely held notions of a sphere of activity which exists
independently of the state to conceive of civil society as the terrain upon
which the negotiation of consensus to a political elite’s world vision is negotiated. Civil society institutions, after all, exist
to represent the interests of their members to political society; civil society
institutions such as trades unions, chambers of commerce, guilds, NGOs,
pressure groups are inextricably linked to political society otherwise they
would serve no purpose. In this sense,
universities are institutions for socialization; play a significant role in the
reproduction and transformation of social structures over time; are
institutions which see academics often crossing or straddling the line between
political and civil society to take-up government posts and appointments; are
intricately interwoven into the socio-political fabric of the nation state, and
which reflect (not determine) the widely-held values of the political entity in
which they exist.
Confucius Institutes as Soft Power
CIs form part of
the outward projection of Chinese soft power, forming one of half of a
two-pronged soft-power strategy known as “invite in, go global” (请进来,走出去). They are administered through the Hanban (国家汉办),
an institution charged with the provision of Chinese language training and proficiency
assessments which is affiliated to the Ministry of Education (MoE).
Confucius Institutes themselves are not merely agreements between
foreign universities and the Hanban.
Each Confucius Institute is led by a Chinese partner university. Staff selected for the Confucius Institutes
must come from the Chinese partner university and must be approved by the
Hanban for the appointment. This is a
central part of CI staffing arrangements, whereby the CI language staff are
selected and assigned, but the institutional agreements involve the foreign
university, the Chinese university and the Hanban.
To Engage or Withdraw: The Million Dollar Question
I find it confusing
why this debate is being limited to engagement with CIs, though I suspect that
wider discussion involving teaching and research collaborations with Chinese
universities, or the huge increases in Chinese students at US universities in
recent years, may make it inconvenient to extend the logic of the anti-CI
discourse to institutional and departmental partnerships and exchange programs. Surely the underlying principle on which this
skepticism of CIs is based would also lead to calls for US institutions to
sever ties with Chinese universities which are arguably even more closely
supervised by the state than Confucius institutes.
US
Universities have, over the past decades, been pioneers of engagement with
Chinese universities and the proposition that US universities should consider
severing ties with CIs places that commendable effort under a dark cloud. Johns Hopkins University has a long
established operation in Nanjing, the Hopkins-Nanjing Center, while UC
Berkeley’s Institute of East Asian Studies relocated its Inter-University
Program from Taiwan to China in 1997 where it exists to this day providing
world-class language training from its base on Tsinghua’s campus. Tsinghua itself was established by US missionaries after indemnity for the Boxer Rebellion was deemed excessive and Theodore Roosevelt secured congressional approval for scholarships to study in the US. More recently, NYU has opened its second
portal campus, NYU Shanghai, in partnership with East China Normal University;
Duke University continues to plan for the opening of Duke Kunshan University in
partnership with Wuhan University in the city of Kunshan near Shanghai and
Suzhou; Kean University has recently received final approval to enroll students
at Wenzhou Kean University in southern Zhejiang; Michigan has a long
established partnership with Shanghai Jiaotong at their Joint-Institute in
Shanghai. In addition, the US government
has launched an initiative called the 100k Strong Program which aims to have
100,000 US students taking some part of their undergraduate studies in China by
2015 which dovetails well with China’s plans to have 500,000 foreign students
studying in China by 2020, 150,000 of whom will be enrolled on degree seeking
programs at Chinese universities.
In terms of academic exchange, the great
tradition of study abroad which forms a major characteristic of elite US HE is
also developing rapidly in and across China.
The University of California Education Abroad Program has programs at
several national-level universities, including Peking University, Beijing
Normal University and Fudan University sending over 100 students per semester,
and more for short-term summer programs each year
Recent figures
suggest total Sino-Foreign collaborative education programs approved by the
Ministry of Education number over 1500 with many of these involving US
institutions. The number of research
tie-ups between China’s leading universities and universities in the US is
growing all the time, with institutional and departmental collaboration across
the full range of academic disciplines. This
is a phenonmenon which is now moving in the opposite direction to see Chinese
universities establishing overseas campuses in Malaysia and collaborative
research and teaching centers in foreign countries. Again at the
University of California, a major center was established, on-campus at UC San
Diego. The Fudan-UC Center aims to connect all institutions in the UC system
with Fudan University. The Center Director is Professor Richard
Marsden of UC San Diego who is joined by Chairman of the Executive Board Fudan
Vice President Li Shangli and Academic Board Co-Chairs Fudan Professor Peng Xizhe
and UC San Diego Professor Susan Shirk. In
attendance at a symposium held at the Fudan-UC Center in December 2012
following the 18th Party Congress and sitting on the discussion
panel were two contributors to the China File debate, Professor Jeff
Wasserstrom and Professor Perry Link. I
would be interested to know how concerns about self-censorship with regards to
Fudan-UC compare with the clear skepticism of CIs expressed by Professors Link
and Wasserstrom and what, if any, distinction could be made. Having said that, I think the Fudan-UC Center
is a great venture for reasons explained towards the end of this piece.
Self-Censorship
and Indoctrinating the Automatons
Concerns about self-censorship expressed
most clearly by Perry Link are obviously a major issue. But we must surely concede that
self-censorship happens for a variety of reasons, with fear of CCP retaliation
unlikely to be a factor on a US campus.
Its more likely that concerns about embarrassing the US university Snr
Mgt will lead US scholars to self-censor.
On a US campus, in a country which does guarantee freedom of expression
and academic freedom, the only condition required for such concerns to become
reality is for US scholars to fail to uphold their own principles. Robert Kapp is right in his assertion that
the responsibility rests with the home institution and, by extension, the
scholars at that institution.
One of the most obvious
issues I have to take with the argument against CIs on US campuses (or, indeed,
any other campuses) is the implicit argument that the Chinese government both
desires and is capable of indoctrinating US students with a pro-CCP political
opinion on US campuses through short-term language courses. I would have hoped that attitudes towards US
students from some of their leading China scholars would not be so quick to
assume that the thought patterns of America’s youth would be so easily
altered. As Raymond Williams once
commented:
“if
ideology were merely some abstract, imposed set of notions, if our social and
political and cultural ideas and assumptions and habits were merely the result
of specific manipulation, of a kind of overt training which might be simply
ended or withdrawn, then society would be very much easier to move and change
than in practice it has ever been or is”.
Raymond
Williams
Even more so, any
paranoia about the capability of CIs to indoctrinate young Americans enrolled
on language courses would logically also lead to calls for any and all US
undergraduates to avoid studying at China’s universities and not come to China
at all. Yang Dali of the University of
Chicago is quoted in the South China Morning Post as saying “We have free speech on campus, and to say these teachers are trying to
indoctrinate the 19-year-old, 20-year-old students at the University of Chicago
— I personally have found it to be ridiculous”. I
would extend that further to argue that the any experience of a foreign culture
is perhaps the most important experience a young person should have. It compels you to reflect on your own
beliefs; to develop compassion for other people and cultures different from
your own, and is a powerful catalyst for the development of critical thinking
abilities. Furthermore, universities and
the US government support US students to study in China at Study Abroad centers
and at Chinese universities, yet US scholars are increasingly concerned at
joint-institutions in their own backyard?
The China File
commentators have lived, studied, worked in China, many of them at points in
time where China was not as open as it is today. Several continue to travel regularly to China
to lecture, give talks and to provide commentary and analysis on China’s
continued transformation. Were they
subject to clumsy attempts at indoctrination when they lived in China (if so,
it didn’t appear to work)? Or did this
experience affect them in different ways, perhaps opening their mind, encouraging
them to reflect critically on their own culture, on their own normative
assumptions about how the world is, how it should be? Certainly, any educational experiences in the
PRC seem to have had very little effect on the values or dispositions of the
contributors. My own experience in China
and through Chinese society and culture has brought me to question a great many
of the underlying assumptions I possessed prior to living here. It has been the greatest experience of my
life, has helped me forge a career studying and teaching about a country I find
endlessly fascinating; has brought me into contact with some of the warmest and
most optimistic people I have ever met (including CCP members and officials, I
should add) and has enriched my life to the greatest possible extent. I’m pretty sure I haven’t become a CCP
ideologue, though I believe that the successes of the CCP and PRC government
over the past 35 years has undoubtedly and dramatically improved the lives of the overwhelming
majority of people in China. There are
regrettable and sometimes quite painful stories which emerge on an almost daily
basis, as there are emanating from the US, Europe, the Middle East and
elsewhere, but China is moving in the right direction and continued engagement
with this nation is absolutely necessary to ensure a better understanding and a
brighter future. Such engagement will
undoubtedly lead to both harmony and discord over certain issues, but to
withdraw from engagement through higher education would be a cataclysmic strike
on Sino-US relations and would simply serve to demonstrate that US universities
are as guided by ideology as those they seek to criticize; that US academics
are prepared to curtail their own students’ opportunities on the basis of a
political opinion, and that the US will not do business with anyone who doesn’t
conform to their view of how the world should be (which is not necessarily how
it chooses to behave itself).
We must continue to
resist temptations to use commitment principles as a reason to absolve ourselves of the responsibility to further mutual understanding and respect, while acknowledging that progress cannot be
achieved by self-imposed isolation or by refusal to engage. If China is willing to send half a million of
its brightest minds to overseas universities every single year, then we should
not be concerned about institutes which allow our own students to experience
China’s vibrant and rich culture. We
should embrace them.
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