Conferences

May 30-31, 2008 - CCUSC's 6th Annual International Symposium: “Washington Consensus” versus “Beijing Consensus”: Sustainability of China's Development Model. Co-sponsored by The Center for China Studies at National Taiwan University. The “Beijing consensus” is used to describe the model of development in which China has achieved a high level of economic growth without fundamental change in the communist one-party rule in contrast to the “Washington's consensus” (model) that demands a free market system going hand in hand with a liberal democratic reform. The conference explored the origins, evolutions, strengths and weaknesses of China's development model.
Conference Agenda
Conference Abstracts
Participant Biographies

Pictured above (in front middle left to right: Josef Korbel School Dean Tom Farer, University of Denver Chancellor Robert Coombe, Prof. Sam Zhao and Prof. S. Philip Hsu with the participants of the 6th Annual Conference

PAST CONFERENCES

2007
June 1-2, 2007 - 36th Taiwan-US Conference on Contemporary China : "The Challenge of a Rising China and US-China Competition/Cooperation in Asia Pacific" Co-sponsored by our China Center and the Institute of International Relations at National Chengchi University in Taipei
(Took place of the 5th Annual International Symposium)
Conference Agenda
Participant Biographies
Conference Abstracts

2006
April 28-29, 2006 - 4th Annual International Symposium: "United-States China Relations: New Challenges and Opportunities for Cooperation"

Conference Agenda
Participant Biographies
Abstracts

2005
May 13-14, 2005 - 3rd Annual CCUSC International Symposium:
“US-China-Taiwan Relations in the Second Bush and Chen Shui-bian Administrations”

Conference Agenda
Abstracts

September 29-October 1, 2005 - Western Conference of the Association of Asian Studies (WCAAS)
Agenda

2004
May 7-9, 2004: 2nd Annual CCUSC International Symposium: "US-China Relations Under the Bush and Hu Administrations"
Conference Agenda

2003
May 2-3, 2003 1st Annual International Symposium : “The United States, Taiwan, and China in a Changing World: Opportunities and Challenges for the 21st Century”
Paper Abstracts