www.wantchinatimes.com |
China's authoritarian government is gaining a foothold on American
campuses by funding dozens of institutes that project a rose-tinted view
of the Asian nation that compromises the academic integrity of U.S.
universities, a congressional hearing was told Thursday.
Scholars of China testified that these state-funded Confucius
Institutes teach nonpolitical subjects like Chinese language and culture
but suppress discussion on sensitive topics like Tibet and the 1989
Tiananmen crackdown on democracy protesters.
The hearing was chaired by House Republican Rep. Chris Smith, an arch
critic of Beijing, who questioned whether American education was "for
sale."
Students from China now make up 31 percent of all international
students in the United States. Last year, Chinese students in U.S.
colleges and universities contributed $8 billion to the U.S. economy,
according to the Commerce Department.
U.S. colleges such as New York University are also opening campuses
in China, hoping to tap into the country's enormous, growing pool of
students.
The Chinese Embassy did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Perry Link, a China expert and chancellorial chair at the University
of California at Riverside, said independent scholar-to-scholar
exchanges with China should be encouraged.
But he said the Communist Party of China opposes the exchanges and
prefers to negotiate campus-to-campus cooperation. He said inexperienced
U.S. academic administrators, eager for funding, reach protocols with
party officials that allow authorities in Beijing to choose teachers and
set curricula that provide a rosy "cameo" of China.
Thomas Cushman, a professor in social sciences at Wellesley College,
said the Chinese government's effort to forge ties with U.S institutions
is part of a more general "soft power" strategy toward the West.
There are now about 90 Confucius Institutes in the U.S., part of an expanding network of more than 400 worldwide.
There has been some push back from scholars and colleges in the U.S.
In June, the American Association of University Professors called on
universities to cancel their current agreements with Confucius
Institutes, and this fall the University of Chicago and Penn State ended
their relationships with the institute.
The Chinese state-funded outreach comes amid growing restrictions on
scholars at home as President Xi Jinping's government has tightened
controls over a wide range of society since he took power early last
year.
"For decades, the primary strategy of the CPC in censoring its own
people has been to induce self-censorship," Link said, referring to the
Communist Party of China. "Now the CPC, stronger and wealthier than
before, is looking to project these battle-tested methods onto the world
stage."
Cushman said U.S. scholars of China are careful what they say in
public so they can keep visiting. He said that leads to a "beautified"
version of China that avoids the realities of repression.
Link said he's been blacklisted since the mid-1990s and gets two or
three inquiries per month from younger scholars wanting to know what
they should avoid saying in order not to be barred.
Cushman also contended that professors on U.S. campuses may avoid
discussing sensitive tops about China in their classes out of fear of
negative evaluations by the growing number of Chinese students.
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