I. *.-" . " . S Wednesday, January 16, 2008 - The Michigan Daily last year, the IMF's World Economic outlook projected that China's global economic growth would surpass that of the United States in 2008 - some- thing no country has done since the 1930s. Accompanying rapid economic growth, though, has been increased environmental destruction across China, as well as marked deterioration in the protection of basic human rights and fair labor practices for Chinese citizens. Last year, China surpassed the U.S. as the leading producer of carbon dioxide. And according to the Worldwatch Institute, an international environmental monitoring group, 16 of the 20 most polluted cities in the world are located in China. Many, including China Labor Watch, a New York-based labor rights group, think China's gov- ernment-controlled "union" is a farce and doesn't aim to improve the work- ing conditions of Chinese laborers. But despite the questions surround- ing China's destructive environmental policy and human rights issues - all. byproducts of an economic growth the likes of which the world has never seen - University President Mary Sue Cole- man thinks China is much too influen- tial of a country not to connect with. "China is going to be a major force in the 21st century and so I think it's very important for our students to be exposed and to understand the culture and the politics and the current issues in China," Coleman said in an Octo- ber interview. "It doesn't mean that we endorse everything that happens there, but I've found that ignoring a certain part of the world isn't going to help us understand it." Political Science Prof. Kenneth Lieberthal, one of the nation's leading experts on Chinese foreign policy and political economy, said the goal of Uni- versity initiatives directly engaging China, like the theme year and Chi- nese educational exchange programs, is to gain a deeper understanding of China's culture, economy and global impact. "You don't get those understand- ings sitting in the Rackham library and reading," said Lieberthal, who is a former special assistant to President Bill Clinton and senior director for Asia Affairs for the National Security Council. What's more, Lieberthal said, the University views the China theme year not as a one-off occurrence but rather as a catalyst for continually increasing the study of China on cam- pus. Throughout this academic year, a University taskforce, commissioned by Coleman, has been meeting to dis- cuss how to best apply the University's resources to understanding China beyond this year. In addition to con- tinuingto offerChinese-themed cours- es and bringiin in 'fluential speakers, said Lieberthal, a member of the task force, the group has been studying how other universit es both American and international study China on their campuses. Although Lieberthal said the group, expected to report back to Coleman at the end of the semester, hadn't reached any definite ,cotciu- sions yet, he said he hopes the m will be able to recommend vwas tat the University can trackClhia's dl- opments and worldwide impact. SHAY SPANIOLA/Daily A man protests outside Rackham Amphitheare before a Nov.12 lecture by Zhou Wenzhong, China's ambassador tothe United States. In his speech, Zhou said China was committed to monitoring manufacturing after toys made there were found to contain toxins. Apart from exposing its students to region's mandated minimum wage. Chinese culture, history and language, Meanwhile, a report issued in Novem- the University has more immediate ber by China Labor Watch said that goals for expanding its relationship Chinese factories producing apparel with China. The University plans for Adidas, the University's new exclu- to emphasize its China programs in sive athletics apparel provider, refused 2010 when it undergoes review for re- employees even basic living condi- accreditation by the Higher Learning tions. On top of working excessive Commission, a Chicago-based inde- hours and receiving unconscionably pendent corporation that oversees the low wages, the report said employees accreditation process lived in "primitive" for degree-granting and "filthy" company universities. On the dormitories with only University's website, Increased old sheets or plastic one of the focal points dividing the buildings' of its accreditation investment mold ridden interiors preparations is the , into private spaces "internationaliza- means ethical But many at the tion" of the University, University say these including China-relat- implications human rights issues ed initiatives like the are not unique to theme year and Presi- China and therefore dent Coleman's plan to not worth risking sev- double the amount of ered ties. University students studying abroad "Now there is the concern that by 2017. (China's) human rights are lacking, but Still, as the University's relationship that's true of a lot of places that we're with China becomes more complex, friends with. and indeed it's actually China's dismal hune '"ts record a lot worse in many oter places," said and disregard for fair Iaor lassws beg Alan Dear corf, an ecnomics and to be acknowledged. As recently as public policy professor. last semester, the University was And although the rate of change for implicated in an egregious instasccof Cliii a's economy vsitout paces its labor violations in Chi. A D'cctmilc ,oitic, uiitngi D r ',tf s tI tliact cc, istii lst he Na iii I L. dsot t'on s iiiT- do sn m'-: iic.in i _. a I ' c isn't et -n rdi lii Icsity 5_ cc rin : a i iC h i sen Cinev sicis nit iedallii s ato sir itfacoe y iscnm its outla-c. Ise sI- iii I i "Very slowly, politically, they're moving in the right direction," Dear- dorff said. "And I don't think there's any reason to try to be removed from them." University professors don't turn a blind eye to China's pitfalls in the classroom, though. More than ever, critical studies of past and present-day China are avail- able on campus. Lieberthal's under- graduate seminar, "Understanding China's International Impact," not only presents students with a picture of how China's growing globalized economy reverberates throughout the world, but also shows the consequenc- es of that growth. In several of her courses, Political Science Asst. Prof. Mary Gallagher said she examines, among other topics, the political ramifications of China's rapid growth in the last 30 years. Her courses, Gallagher said, "give students a sense of what certain things China's political system doesn't do so well, like monitor the environment or protect labor rights." Aside from concerns about envi- ronmental and human rights issues in China, another perspective puts into question the ethics - or at least the advisability - of the University's growing relationship with China. With the affects of a globalizing econ- omy felt throughout United States job fields, some people feel the Uni- versity's increased efforts to educate exchange students from China equates to American academia shooting itself in the foot. As part of the Shanghai Jiao Tong University Joint Institute summer program, the University also offers graduate degrees in engineering to Chinese students in Shanghai. It is one of the first non-Chinese academic institutions to do so. But many people ask whether a University of Michigan education should be provided to people from a country that has lured jobs and companies from the United States. To Gallagher, though, the question bor- ders on xenophobia. "To deny Chinese students the chance to study here would be so self- defeating," she said. "Students who spend time in the U.S., if anything, are more likely to favor the American sys- tem, simply' ecause education is one of our biggest assets." Building on the success of the Shanghai Jiao Tong University Joint Institute program and the growing popularity of several other less-official exchange programs in the social sci- ences and chemistry, the University plans to expand its exchange programs with China to other disciplines like medicine, pharmacy and business. But if the University continues to develop exchange programs research collaborations aid shared degree opport-ttiles vich Chinese insti- tutis lu vwill o b ble to claim conmplete removal feomthei ethical itmpicact itns vo ndtiag a coutry owhere so little atticin isgivenito tiphoiig humsoi i htpls act abce Z hou Wenzhong, the Chinese ambassador to the United States, stoodbefore a full-capac- ity crowd ate Rackham Amphitheatre on Nov. 12 and, with an almost casual air about him, explained China's plans to drastically improve the lives of its nearly 1.3abillion citizens by quadru- pling per capita income by the year 2024. Zhou, speaking perfect English, went on to say that China s a. commit- ted to preventing future health scares stemming from Chinese products aludiing to the icall of tens of oil tin if Clhirn'ye-mati products from Amer rry imanufacici is 'lstfall. And cviindig t crtitim cabout t evir etac ci ences of Ch' 'g itdstrial sector, hu sid hi unrv suh build "a resource-conserving a ment-friendly society" in, with its booming economy. A week after Zhou's visi of people streamed into a auditorium across campus ham to hear Wang Dan, leaders in the Chinese movementof the late1980s had spent years in Chinese lost many friends and Fe ists in the bloody Ti an n massacre of 1989, embode Chinese patriotism stark from the view cof Zhoi% I speaking isli obri( ig ie ici tic sotnd s cia t e intl isv 'i a ci nd environ- reforms proposed by t conjunction ernment - the ones Z . increase the per capit it, hundreds country's citizens - w Law School for the benefit of the p from Rack- "a license to openly st one of the property." He saidt democracy the government's cut .Wang,who reforms "has become prisons and for the Communist Pa sllow activ- reject freedom and det men Square While Zhou's and W d a spirit of differed drastically, ti ly different put together ade it Passioiracely lChia is a divisive, tu lsi, Wan that letters swrlsdwd tmpioitt by both its tiiarlieu Iec led thc rat ind tile stagat' eaitme of' hm i 'hits. standard he Chinese gov- negative interpretations of China's hou said would modern development makes the nation a income of the a dynamic subject for the University's 'ere, in fact, not theme year series. This year's pro- 'eople, but were gram, titled ChinaNow and coordinat- eal the people's ed by the College of Literature, Science the success of and the Arts and the Center of Chi- rrent economic nese Studies, offers an array of events, the best excuse activities and special courses meant rty of China to to enlighten students on the budding aocracy." world powrer. fang's ideologies But while ChiuaNow promotes a ie two lectures stronger link beteeti the tUtiversity perfectly c e: and Citie na, the qulestiont ricot:its uwhat multuous natio Chinar i n tus, andt whlebter the Cniser- e attcei iiii fr sity Inas a m1ioralc rspsIltibi\ty t ik onoie growiu-Nth a pubilic stand aat Iumn ights in or Ic luse' f a trocties -whih incleI, bu 'r nt Is foi its yeotple liited t: state-spoil r'el esrii l en1p51ti1 and it mei, supprissin iofI reius fe dom and repression of dissidents and protesters - occurring in a country with which it has a close relationship. The University's association with China, though likely stronger now than ever, extends back to the late 19th century, when then-University presi- dent .James Angell served as the Unit- ed States's minister to China. Since then, the University has continued to maintain and expand its relationship with China by establishing the Center for Chinese Studies in 1961, sending a Universit ldelegratioti to China in 1971 and ope oing a ifficial office - the University (f Michigan Office in C'i'na inthe Chitse icapital of Blijin i 200, l M tre et'y, current Unier- sity Itsdet M.s Sue Coleman led a she helped establish the Joint Institute with Shanghai Jiao Tong University, an engineering exchange program that allows for shared degree programs and research collaboration between the universities. What makes the University's ties with the China of the past so different from its present relations is the global power that today's China now wields. For one thing, the desire to foster bonds between the University and China has undoubtedly taken on more steam siice the latter became sn economic poweerhouse. In 2006, both the Wo rld it; tiandfi the Interniatiosl-: Misnsetaryt loud rantmkedt Ctiha's gircis diisi Itduct- ivei tt metse te iz f acountry's cOtty -It secind in thei worldI, ,hsits t Usitd 'tai -n