jeudi 30 janvier 2020

Confucius Institutes

Harvard Arrest Puts Focus on Chinese Espionage and Propaganda Centers in U.S.
By Janet Lorin
They’re called Confucius Institutes, and for about 15 years these centers for Chinese language and cultural education have proliferated at U.S. universities, drawing students eager to learn about the country.
Now, the Chinese government-funded organizations face more scrutiny as U.S.-China tensions over intellectual property and espionage intensify.
The arrest this week of a Harvard University chemistry professor for lying about his ties to China is shedding renewed light on the institutes and ratcheting up pressure for colleges to close them.
“This is a blatant attempt by the Chinese to infiltrate and both steal American ideas and co-opt students, but also to monitor and influence the behavior of Chinese students who are studying here in America,” Massachusetts Representative Seth Moulton said in an interview Wednesday.
Confucius Closings
University of Missouri closed its center in January 2020
University of Massachusetts/Boston closed its center in January 2019.
University of Michigan closed its center in 2018
Texas A&M closed its center in 2018
Penn State closed its center in 2014
University of Chicago closed its center in 2014
Source: National Assn of Scholars, Bloomberg 

Moulton, a Democrat, plans to introduce legislation that he said would better protect U.S. technology from being stolen by researchers including academics who are being paid by China or other adversaries.
There are about 80 Confucius Institutes at U.S. colleges, including Stanford University and Savannah State University in Georgia, according to the National Association of Scholars, a non-partisan research group that has studied the centers and opposes them.
The institutes teach humanities classes in Chinese culture and language and steer clear of history, politics and current affairs, according to the Confucius Institute U.S. Center website. 
They are run by their host university faculty and administrators with assistance from faculty at their Chinese partner universities.

Chinese peril
Of the 550 Confucius Institutes around the world, the largest concentration is in the U.S.
, according to the Washington-based non-profit.
The Scholars association opposes them because their funding lacks transparency and topics sensitive to China are off limits.
“As it stands now, they’re more of a threat than they are a friend,”
said Chance Layton, a spokesman for the group.
Some schools shut the institutes after passage of the National Defense Authorization Act, legislation that partly seeks to police China on a range of matters. 
One provision prohibits the U.S. Defense Department from funding Chinese language programs at colleges with the institutes unless schools obtain a waiver.
More recently, universities have come under pressure from U.S. lawmakers. 
Senator Marco Rubio, a Florida Republican, has urged schools in his state to terminate their agreements with Confucius Institutes.
Moulton sent letters in 2018 to several schools demanding that they close their institutes or not allow them on campus. 
In his state, the University of Massachusetts/Boston closed its center in January 2019.

Aucun commentaire:

Enregistrer un commentaire