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China and Central Europe: Success or Failure?

Szerzők

Tamás Matura (szerk.)
Central and Eastern European Center for Asian Studies

Absztrakt

China did not play a significant role in Central Europe for decades following the transition from communism to capitalism in the region. The global financial crisis and the economic struggles of the European Union, however, have fundamentally changed the situation. China has gradually become an important economic and political partner to many countries of Central Europe since 2011 and the rise of Beijing’s influence has drawn European and American attention to the region once again. The present book offers an insight into bilateral relations between China and some of the most significant Central European countries and attempts to explain the motives and interests of the involved parties. The authors agree that China’s influence in the region is limited and concerns about its potentially malign intentions are exaggerated in most cases. Still, the Chinese presence in Central European countries is here to stay and it is of utmost importance to analyse and to understand the role it plays in the region.
The editor

Szerzői életrajzok

Tamás Matura, Central and Eastern European Center for Asian Studies

Tamás Matura is the founder of the Central and Eastern European Center for Asian Studies. He has been working on China for a decade, started his career as a research fellow of the Hungarian Institute of International Affairs. Recently he used to serve as an advisor on China to the Minister of National Economy, as an editor of the China Strategy of Hungary, and as an author of the BRICS Strategy of Hungary. Right now, he is an Assistant Professor at the Corvinus University of Budapest, lecturer at ESSCA School of Management Angers–Paris–Shanghai–Budapest, and the Hungarian member of the European Think Tank Network on China.

Waltraut Urban, Institute for International Economic Studies

Waltraut Urban graduated in Economics at the University of Vienna, she then became a Lecturer at the Institute of Economics of the Vienna University of Technology. With the beginning of the economic reforms and the rise of China in the 1980s, her focus of interest shifted there. She joined the Vienna Institute for International Economic Studies (wiiw) in 1995, where she specialised in the Chinese economy and industrial restructuring in the CEE region.

Anastasya Raditya-Ležaić, University of Ljubljana

Anastasya Raditya-Ležaić received an MA degree in European Studies from the Centre international de formation européene in Nice, France; and now is a PhD student at the Faculty of Social Sciences of the University of Ljubljana, Slovenia. She works as a Research Assistant at the Institute for Development and International Relations in Zagreb, Croatia.

Alice Rezková, AMO Research Center

Alice Rezková is a Research Fellow of AMO Research Center, Prague. Her research focuses on the economic policies of South, Southeast and East Asia.

Justyna Szczudlik, Polish Institute of International Affairs

Justyna Szczudlik, PhD is a Deputy Head of research, Head of Asia-Pacific Programme and a China analyst at the Polish Institute of International Affairs. She graduated from the Institute of Political Science, University of Wroclaw and the Chinese Studies Department, University of Warsaw. She studied Chinese language at the Beijing Language and Culture University. Her research in PISM focuses on China’s foreign policy, Sino–Polish relations, cross-strait relations, Chinese soft power and Chinese religious policy.

Andreea Brînză , RISAP

Andreea Brînză is a researcher and the Vice President of RISAP. Her interests are related to the geopolitics, geostrategy and geoeconomics of the Asia–Pacific region and especially China. Her research focuses on the Belt and Road Initiative.

Dragana Mitrović, University of Belgrade

Professor Dragana Mitrović, PhD is the Head of the Centre for Asian Studies, Faculty of Political Sciences, University of Belgrade.

Richard Q. Turcsányi, Mendel University

The author is an Assistant Professor at the Mendel University in Brno. Besides, he is the Program Director of the Central European Institute of Asian Studies (CEIAS), and a Senior Researcher at the Palacký University Olomouc.

Marjan Svetličič, University of Ljubljana

Professor Emeritus Marjan Svetličič, Centre of International Relations, Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Ljubljana.

Sergiy Gerasymchuk

Sergiy Gerasymchuk graduated from the Kyiv-Mohyla Academy as MA in Political Science and is a graduate of the Estonian School of Diplomacy. He is involved in political studies since 2001 and has the experience of working for the Secretariat of the Parliament of Ukraine, scientific research institutions under the President of Ukraine and under the Security and Defense Council of Ukraine. Besides, he was involved in the project implemented by national and international think tanks in Ukraine and in the area of Eastern Partnership.

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Letöltések

Megjelenés

2020.08.30