Transforming Asia: What impact of international politics and grand strategies on regional stability?
Practical information
Registration for this event is now closed.
As the regional balance of power in East Asia continues to evolve and tensions in a number of hot spots - from the East and South China Seas to the Korean Peninsula and the Taiwan Strait - either simmer or intensify, the future of regional stability is increasingly uncertain. Within this context, the region's major players - in particular China and the United States - have in recent years developed grand strategies that could either prove sources of greater stability, or of division and further tension. This conference will call upon experts from throughout East Asia to offer their analyses on the risks and the ways forward. Furthermore, it will look at how France and Europe more broadly define and seek to promote their interests in an increasingly tumultuous region.
How international politics and grand strategies can impact on regional stability?
This question was asked to four of the speakers who participated in the annual conference of the Ifri's Center for Asian Studies.
- Renato C. de CASTRO's point of view (Professor and Charles Lui Chi Keung Chair in China Studies, De La Salle University, Manila, Philippines).
- Shingo YAMAGAMI's point of view (Director General (Acting), Japan Institute of International Affairs (JIIA), Tokyo, Japan).
- Renwei HUANG's point of view (Vice President and Research Professor, Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences, Shanghai, China).
- Kao-cheng WANG's point of view (Professor, Graduate Institute of International Affairs and Strategic Studies, and Dean, School of International Studies, Tamkang University, Taipei, Taiwan).
Welcoming Remarks:
09:45-10:15
- Thomas GOMART, Director of Ifri
- Alain RICHARD, Senator, Val-d’Oise (Ile-de-France), former Minister of Defense of France
- Ming-zhong ZHANG, Representative, Taipei Representative Office in France
Morning Session
Discussion on key developments in Asian regional affairs and geopolitics
10:15-12:15
-
Renato C. de CASTRO, Professor and Charles Lui Chi Keung Chair in China Studies, De La Salle University, Manila
-
Renwei HUANG, Vice President and Research Professor, Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences, Shanghai
-
Heungho MOON, Dean of the Graduate School of International Studies, and Director of Institute of Chinese Studies, Hanyang University, Seoul
-
Kao-cheng WANG, Professor, Graduate Institute of International Affairs and Strategic Studies, and Dean, School of International Studies, Tamkang University, Taipei
-
Shingo YAMAGAMI, Director General (Acting), Japan Institute of International Affairs (JIIA), Tokyo
Interactive discussion led by François PICARD, Host/Presenter of The Debate for France 24
Lunch break
12:15-13:45
Afternoon sessions
chaired by Françoise Nicolas, Director, Center for Asian Studies, Ifri
Panel 1. Europe and Asia’s stability
13:45-15:15
Discussion on competing grand strategies in Asia and how France and Europe formulate diplomacy towards the region in a context of rising tension, instability and a shifting regional balance of power
-
Gudrun WACKER, Senior Fellow, Asia Research Division, German Institute of International and Security Affairs (SWP)
-
Frédéric LAPLANCHE, Counselor for Asia and the Americas to the Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Development, France
-
Michael REITERER, Senior Advisor, Asia-Pacific Department, European External Action Service (EEAS)
Panel 2. Taiwan after the elections – Cross-strait and regional impacts
15:30-17:00
-
Alice EKMAN, Research Fellow, Head of China Research, Center for Asian Studies, Ifri
-
Kao-cheng WANG, Professor, Graduate Institute of International Affairs and Strategic Studies, and Dean, School of International Studies, Tamkang University
-
Chih-chung WU, Professor, Department of Political Science, Taiwan Soochow University
Other events
Navigating War, Reforms, and Secure Future: Ukraine’s EU and NATO Accession Path
Exclusive conve
Lunch debate with Winston Peters, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs of New Zealand
Discussion co-chaired by Thierry de Montbrial, Executive Chairman of Ifri, member of the Academy of Moral and Political Sciences, and Marc Hecker, Deputy Director of Ifri (in English without translation).
Shaping Europe’s Technological Sovereignty
In the wake of Donald Trump's re-election in the United States, Europeans face a crucial imperative: rethinking their sovereigny, especially in the technological realm. What will be the strategic priorities and action levers of the new European Commission on this issue? What assessment can we make of the previous Commission’s achievements and challenges in navigating Sino-American technological competition, transatlantic dependencies, and emerging global partnerships?