On Thursday 15 March 2018, the Coalition for Peace & Ethics and the Foundation for Law and International Affairs will host the Conference: Rule of Law and Governance in China at Home and Abroad (国内与国外两个视角). We gratefully acknowledge the support of Penn State University (School of International Affairs/Law) which provided in-kind support for these events. The Conference runs from 1.00 - 5.30 P.M. and will be held in the Katz Building of Penn State Law/SIA Room 110.
It is the final part of its series, The Vanguard Acts: Focusing on China at the Dawn of its 'New Era.' The Conference Note may be accessed HERE. The PROGRAM follows.
Panel on Rule of Law in China at Home
Moderator: Zhu Shaoming
Sun Ping, The Key to Understand the “New Era:” The Reform of the Party-State Institutions
Since the 18th
National Congress of the CPC, a series of dramatic incidents and radical
reforms have baffled and confused the world. After the coming of a “New
Era” was announced by the 19th National Congress of the CPC, it seems
more difficult to see through the mists of the tedious, complex, and
from some point of view, even contradictory CPC report. The reform of
the Party-State institutions might be a key to these puzzles. The
party-state system as a whole is a counterpart of the actual government
in the western context. After more than 30-years Open-up and Reform,
several sub-systems formed inside the great party-state system, which
are like several parallels, separated but without check and balance.
This kind of separation of powers has caused serious dysfunctions. It
was target on these dysfunctions that several major measures have been
taken since 18th National Congress of the CPC, including to adjust Party
organizations and personnel, to check sub-systems through
anti-corruption movement, to strengthen the system by law and to adjust
the control of the civil society. In the New Era, the reform of the
party-state institutions, an ambitious plan of recentralization, is
unfolding. The direction and aims of the reform will decide the future
of the New Era, where is full of both opportunities and challenges.
Sapio, Flora, Regulation with
Socialist Characteristics in the New Era: The Role of Groups of the
Communist Party of China in Chinese MNC’s Corporate Social
Responsibility
The most important defining feature of
Socialism with Chinese Characteristics in the New Era is the notion of
Party leadership. This notion possesses important theoretical and
empirical dimensions and implications, deserving of further exploration
by the body of literature on CSR. Considered in their empirical
dimension, groups of the Communist Party of China are the institutions
that instantiate Party leadership over processes of governance and
corporate social responsibility in MNCs. This paper has the goal to pave
the way to a more solid grounding of analyses of CSR within their
domestic and global contexts. Part I analyzes the notion of social
responsibility (shehui zeren) against the backdrop of Chinese
Party-State Constitutionalism. Part II describes the institutional and
regulatory mechanisms used to monitor CSR compliance by MNCs. These
mechanisms consist of Party leadership over CSR, professional guidance
by the SASAC Guidance Committee on Central Enterprises’ Social
Responsibility, and by mechanisms of regulatory enforcement and
inspection. Part III describes the methods uses to assess CSR
compliance. Beyond the generic duty of disclosure, CSR compliance is
assessed through evaluation and ranking procedures, where big data has
already come to play a pivotal role.
Shi Xinzhong, tba.
Commentator: Shaoming ZhuBreak
Panel on Governance in China and Abroad
Moderator: Miaoqiang Dai
Backer, Larry, China’s One Belt One Road (OBOR) Initiative and the New Communist International.
The Third, Communist, International
(Comintern) lasted from 1919 when it was established by Lenin in Moscow,
through 1943 when it was dissolved by Stalin as a gesture toward his
allies against Axis powers. It produced a powerful template for the
internationalization of ideology and its discipline by a central
authority. This paper considers the echos of the Comintern in the
structures and operations of the OBOR Initiative. It explores the extent
to which OBOR might be considered the start of a 4th International, one
grounded not on politics and revolution, but on economics and markets
based coordinated power.
Gao Shan, Transnationalization of Socialist Law in Trade Institutions Outbound Chinese Constitutionalism
Roland, Nicholas, The Future of the State.
In this
presentation, the author reviews literature on the state in sociology
and international relations with special emphasis on state planning for
the future based on insights from the sociology of expectations and
management literature from futures studies. Guided by changes in
the Chinese Communist Party Congress and China’s broader engagement with
the world economy, the author considers the dynamics and implications
of future-oriented, aspirational, nation-level projects such as the One
Belt One Road Initiative.
Keren Wang, Sacrificial Personae Under Conditions of Digital Governmentality
Commentator: Nicholas SchultzClosing Remarks
Larry Catá Backer
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