| |
Melinda
Tuhus, a freelance writer living in Hamden, writes regularly for
the Connecticut section of The New York Times.
|
|
Sticking With China
Summer
2001
by Melinda Tuhus
When
President Richard Levin began planning for his trip to China this
past May, he
knew he was breaking new ground (see "China
on my Mind"). Although Yale's links to the country go back
more than a century through missionaries and scholars, no sitting
President of the University had ever visited the Chinese mainland.
But Levin also appreciated the role Yale had played in maintaining
contacts with China despite decades of warfare, political upheavals,
and "incidents" like the one in April involving a U.S. spy plane
and the recent detention of Chinese-born American scholars. As he
sees it, nothing symbolizes the long interrelationship better than
the fact that a book that was banned by the rulers of China in 1730
and had apparently been lost to scholars since then was found in
1997 in the Sterling Memorial Library stacks by Jonathan Spence,
one of America's leading authorities on Chinese affairs and now
a Sterling Professor in Yale's
history department.
| |
Yale's
links to China go back nearly 150 years and have weathered
war, ideological conflict, and physical isolation. But few
could have predicted that the University would now be engaging
the Asian giant in almost every area of academic and professional
activity.
|
But the
relationship between Yale and China
extends well beyond the history department. Indeed, China is now
the subject of programs in the College, the Graduate School, and
most of Yale's professional schools. Yale
University Press is collaborating with a Chinese publisher on
a 75-volume project about Chinese culture and civilization. Nearly
500 students and researchers from the People's Republic are pursuing
their work on the Yale campus, representing what is the largest
single contingent from any foreign country. And the Yale-China
Association -- founded exactly a century ago by Protestant missionaries
-- now has links throughout the University. During his May trip,
Levin extended those ties with the announcement of a joint center
at Peking
University for the study of plant genetics and agro-biotechnology.
None of which surprises Jeffrey Garten, dean of the
School of Management. China is, he argues, "the second most
important country in the world."
That
conclusion has been a long time coming to New Haven. In 1854,
when a young Chinese student named Yung Wing became the first of
his countrymen to graduate from any American college or university,
China was almost as irrelevant to Yale as it was exotic. Not until
1901, after decades of occasional contacts, did Yale make a significant
commitment to China. In that year, a group of Yale graduates established
a mission in Changsha, the captal of Hunan Province, in south-central
China. The project was called Yale-in-China (renamed the Yale-China
Association in 1975). The program expanded steadily and its mission
quickly became more educational and medical than spiritual. But
the Changsha complex was heavily damaged during the Second World
War and was transferred to Chinese control after the Communist revolution
of 1949.
For the
next 30 years, Yale-China continued its mission in semi-exile in
Hong Kong, and only in 1980 were Americans allowed to return to
the mainland to resume educational work. Yale-China now links Yale
students and faculty with their counterparts thoughout China in
the fields of American studies, legal education, nursing, public
service, and English language instruction.
Nancy
Chapman '78, the organization's executive director, was a member
of the first group of teaching fellows to return to Changsha. "It
was unbelievable," she says of that experience. "There were very
few foreigners at the time, but there were lots of people who had
been taught by Yale-China teachers decades earlier, so we were welcomed
with open arms."
Chapman,
who accompanied Levin on the May trip, says the biggest change she's
noticed is "the huge expansion in personal space." In 1980, she
recalls, "China was just emerging from the Cultural Revolution,
when there was extreme isolation and very tight internal control.
The state still had the power to determine where people lived, studied,
worked, if and when they got married, and when they bore the one
child they were allowed to have. The freedom to make these personal
decisions has been the most striking development."
The history
department's Jonathan Spence has seen similar changes. Spence, who
did his dissertation at Yale on 17th- century China and covers the
four most recent centuries in one of the College's most popular
courses, was part of a University delegation that went to the People's
Republic in 1974, after President Richard Nixon's historic visit
there. Spence recalls that a political science professor in the
original delegation was denied a visa because Chinese leaders apparently
considered him too critical of their government. The same thing
could happen today, Spence adds. "The Chinese do keep watch over
people who are very critical of their regime. Some Americans still
are not allowed in." Nevertheless, Spence describes the differences
between the 1970s and the present as "immense," with "remarkable,
amazing opportunities for scholarship" now possible. He says academics
have much freer access to archives, foreign students can move more
freely around the country, and Chinese scholars can travel to and
from the West and speak more frankly.
Such
expanded access is especially encouraging to Paul Gewirtz, the Potter
Stewart Professor of Constitutional Law at the Law School. Last
year, after returning from a stint in the Clinton administration
working on issues of Chinese law, Gewirtz made what he calls "a
fascinating and extremely challenging" career shift to become founding
director of Yale's
China Law Center. The Center has two goals: to enhance Americans'
understanding of the Chinese legal system and legal reform, and
to actually help move that reform along through collaboration with
Chinese legal scholars and government officials. For example, the
Center is working with the Chinese legislature on reform of criminal
procedure and China's first criminal evidence law; with the executive
arm of China's government on regulatory reform; and with the judiciary
on increasing its independence. Other issues being addressed are
legal education and legal aid for the poor. Several of these arenas
overlap with human rights, but Gewirtz says the focus is on institutions,
not individuals. "Courts, law schools, the legal profession -- the
premise is if you can improve these institutions and make bureaucracies
more lawful and open, it will be better for businesses and individuals."
The
work obviously has the blessing of the Chinese government, but it
is not easy. As Gewirtz notes, "While there are many reformers
in China, there are also many who are opposed to certain reforms
and are very cautious." He adds that despite notable progress, freedom
of speech in China presents "a very mixed picture. Informally, in
social situations, people say pretty much anything. If it's an academic
publication, a very broad range of things is allowed. In print or
in a more public setting, people are constrained."
The Center
is striving quietly to broaden the range even further. Throughout
the year, visiting scholars from China come to Yale under the Center's
auspices. Last fall Chen Zexian, who works with a law institute
affiliated with the People's Congress, was on campus during the
drawn-out U.S. national election of George
W. Bush as president. He is researching judicial reform in China
and the U.S., and commented on the "critical impact" of the courts
on the election. The visitor's conclusion: "The most valuable thing
[about the election process] is the rule of law in the U.S. -- that
Al Gore respected that."
Attempts
to reform the legal system in China address the underlying structure
of the nation's society, and are likely to take place only gradually.
Far speedier progress is being made in the world of business and
finance. Not surprisingly, the School of Management is concentrating
on that aspect of the growing Yale-China relationship. For instance,
Zhiwu Chen, a professor of finance at the School, is helping to
strengthen the fledgling Chinese stock market. Chen will soon become
an adviser and commentator on a 30-part Chinese television series
about stock market and investment issues.
When
Garten arrived at Yale in 1995, he brought substantial expertise
of his own on China. As undersecretary of commerce for international
trade in the first Clinton administration, he helped American firms
break into the China market. Since then, Garten has published an
influential book, The Big Ten: The Big Emerging Markets and How
They Will Change Our Lives. China heads the list. Regarding
the country's transformation to a market economy, Garten says, "China
has a long way to go, but it has already made dramatic strides."
The difficulty in doing so is perhaps best illustrated by the current
attempts to describe the results. "Officially, of course, China's
not a capitalist economy," Chen says. "There is an ongoing debate
over what to call it, because politically it's still communist.
The government uses a name that translates into English as 'socialist
private ownership.'"
One of
the most pressing issues in China's progress at the economic level
has been the impact of that progress on the environment. The country's
industry still relies heavily on outdated technology, and the government
has been reluctant to adopt the spirit of environmental restrictions
common in the West lest they slow the current momentum at home.
Although not officially coordinated with activities in the Schools
of Law and Management, initiatives undertaken by the School of Forestry
and Environmental Studies (FES) have brought Yale into the China
relationship through another channel. "The Chinese people and government
recognize that there are huge costs to environmental degradation
and pollution," says Alan Brewster, associate dean of the School.
"For example, the immense loss of life and destruction due to flooding
on the Yangtze River a few years ago was caused, in part, by deforestation
of the headwaters of the river. They have made a conscious decision
that they must reforest."
Spurred
by such concerns, FES is now involved in several public and private
partnerships to promote sustainable development in China. These
efforts have blossomed in the past decade, but they have their roots
in the early part of the 20th century, when the School's first Chinese
student, who graduated in 1911, returned home to become China's
forestry chief. After the restoration of relations with China in1979,
former FES dean John Gordon was tapped to join the first official
U.S. Forest Service delegation to China. The School's current dean,
James Speth, is currently
a board member of the China-U.S.
Center for Sustainable Development.
This
expanded contact with China reflects the School's aspiration to
be the first truly global school of the environment. In support
of that mission, FES this year received a $1.2 million grant from
the Luce Foundation to work on industrial ecology in Asia, primarily
China. (The foundation's namesake, Henry Luce '20, the founder of
Time, Inc., was the son of missionaries, and maintained a lifelong
interest in all things Chinese.) Marian Chertow, the director of
the School's Industrial Environmental
Management Program, has just begun work on the project. "Eighty
percent of the infrastructure in China that will exist in 2020 hasn't
been built yet," she says. "If we can act now there is a once-in-a-lifetime
opportunity to shape the new infrastructure in terms of materials
and energy use and build an economy that is based on sustainability."
A related
FES project is the Sustainable Leadership Development Program, funded
by a grant from a Canadian company that owns and manages a large
forest in China. With faculty provided by Yale, Nanjing
Forestry University hosted the first courses last October in
sustainable development for leaders in business, government, and
the nonprofit sector. Yajie Song, who coordinates the program, says
that while human rights issues can be divisive, environmental ones
tend to produce more agreement. "Environmental issues are not particularly
sensitive ones between U.S. and Chinese officials," he says. "Pollution
control and natural resource management are easy subjects between
the two nations."
Inseparable
from any discussion that involves pollution, of course, is the impact
on health. And there, too, links are emerging with Yale, specifically
with the department of epidemiology and public health (EPH) and
the School of Nursing.
EPH associate
professor Tongzhang
Zheng has been working for years on China-related projects,
including studies on breast, stomach, and esophageal cancers, and
childhood asthma. (Zheng was co-author of a recent study of Chinese
women that showed that extending the period of breast- feeding reduces
the risk of breast cancer.) He serves as deputy director of a collaborative
project between Yale and the Union School of Public Health in Beijing,
to which Yale provides faculty training and curriculum development.
"The Chinese are very knowledgeable and very hard-working," Zheng
says. "The biggest problem in working collaboratively is finding
enough resources and putting all the projects together."
| |
"You
are faced with all the problems of the developing world,
but the country is also beginning to manifest the diseases
of the developed world. The challenge is to respond to the
old problems but also apply some of what we've learned in
the developed world to help forestall some of the new ones."
|
Ann
Williams, a professor in the School of Nursing and a board member
of Yale-China, has discovered another problem: denial. Williams
made her first trip to China ten years ago, and along with several
other instructors, she developed a training program for nurses in
China focusing on HIV and AIDS. The program is now in its fourth
year; 100 Chinese nurses have participated and have gone on to train
thousands of others. But the early stages were difficult. "When
we came to Changsha, the Chinese nurses were convinced there were
no people with AIDS there," Williams says. "But when one was identified,
two of the nurses we had trained went to the director of the hospital
and asked to be assigned to him. It took courage to be so outspoken.
But their request was denied, and the patient was released, went
home, and killed himself."
In China,
Williams explains, "you are faced with all the problems of the developing
world, but the country is also beginning to manifest the diseases
of the developed world. The challenge is to respond to the old problems
but also apply some of what we've learned in the developed world
to help forestall some of the new ones."
A similar
impulse motivates Alan Plattus, whose advanced studio course in
the School of Architecture is intended to address some of the overwhelming
physical planning issues confronting the Chinese. The challenge
for his class last semester was to develop a new role for Suzhou
Creek in Shanghai. A victim of the industrial age, the waterway
is lined with factories and wharves and contained by culverts. The
Chinese government is engaged in a massive clean-up effort of the
river, and the task of the students -- working with their counterparts
at Hong Kong University and Tongji
University in Shanghai -- was to propose strategies for urban
redevelopment and revitalization, while maintaining the creek's
role as a working river. Plattus says the studio provides "a way
for our students to have a sense of the global phenomenon of urbanization
and how it's the same and different in different parts of the world."
Those
differences lie beneath virtually every initiative now linking Yale
and China. "It's easy to underestimate the continuing importance
of the cultural differences between Chinese and American society,"
says Chapman. "We Americans are perhaps more inclined to overlook
them since our Chinese colleagues usually meet us more than halfway.
Most have studied English and even spent time in the U.S., and they
are adept at accommodating American ways. Just about every project
runs into snags, however, and more often than not, they are rooted
in diverging expectations and cultural responses."
In February,
President Levin, who is also the Frederick William Beinecke Professor
of Economics, spoke in Battell Chapel on "Democracy and the Market"
as part of Yale's Tercentennial
DeVane lecture series. While not referring directly to China,
Levin argued that, "As a logical proposition, markets do not require
democratic governments, only a stable and predictable rule of law,
which, in theory, can exist in an authoritarian regime." He went
on to say, however, that "the relationship between the market economy
and political freedom is entirely symbiotic; the health of one promotes
the health of the other."
Levin
did not touch on those themes while in China, concentrating instead
on the potential of educational institutions to contribute to the
same goal. But he did not entirely avoid the delicate issues involved
in such exchanges. In a speech at Peking University, Levin noted
that the sort of academic collaborations on which Yale and China
have already embarked "exemplify the future of scholarship and service
in the global university." But, he added, "They will flourish best
if scholars are free to ask questions, collect information, and
conduct research."
|
|