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Glenn Matsumura
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As a former engineering school
dean, I found one statistical chart particularly
captivating amid the torrent of recent newspaper and
magazine articles on the emergence of China as an economic
giant. It detailed the number of engineering bachelor’s
degrees conferred by institutions in different countries
in 1999. The United States conferred a very respectable
61,000 degrees that year. China conferred 195,000, far
outpacing every other nation.
Those numbers symbolize the great promise and challenge
China presents to the rest of the world this century.
The ramifications of China’s booming development—on
the world economy, the global workforce, the geopolitical
balance and the future of the environment—are
enormous. I believe that American universities should
play a dual role in helping to understand the implications
of China’s growing economic power and preparing
our students for collaboration between our two countries
in business, government and education.
I will travel to China this May to inaugurate our Stanford
in Beijing program and hold a series of meetings with
Chinese education officials and business leaders. This
trip underscores the growing importance of Stanford’s
relationship with the world’s most populous country.
The reasons for that increased focus are both philosophical
and practical. China will rapidly become a powerhouse
in information technology and biotechnology. Stanford
has much to offer and teach in these areas—and
we have much to gain in the long term. But it is clear
that the institutions that take a seat at the table
earliest will most influence this historic period.
Fortunately for Stanford, we have very deep roots in
China. The tradition of devoting intellectual resources
to East Asia dates back to the founding of the University.
And more recently, Stanford was one of the first institutions
to establish a mechanism for intellectual exchange with
scholars from the People’s Republic of China,
hosting its first group of Chinese scholars in 1978.
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The tradition of devoting
intellectual resources to East Asia dates back
to the founding of the University.
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Those exchanges were critical in Stanford’s further
development of East Asian scholarship, a tradition that
is now carried out more formally at the Stanford Institute
for International Studies and in such areas as the BA
and MA programs in East Asian Studies. As a result,
the University has been home to pathbreaking work in
numerous areas, such as sociologist Andrew Walder’s
work on political movements in China and political scientist
Jean Oi’s research on corporate governance and
fiscal reform.
Building on work he began as secretary of defense,
Professor William Perry, ’49, remains in the forefront
of strengthening “track two” diplomatic
relationships in both Russia and the People’s
Republic of China. In this work, he aims to develop
strategies, influence thinking among leaders in Russia
and China and organize resources that might help resolve
international conflicts. Research on China also exemplifies
Stanford’s growing multidisciplinary approach.
In that vein, Thomas Heller of the Law School, Michael
May of the Center for International Security and Cooperation
and David Victor of the Center for Environmental Science
and Policy have worked on issues related to Chinese
energy development.
Stanford is also home to a tremendous collection of
reference and source material about China. The University’s
East Asia Library Chinese collection contains approximately
262,000 titles in 350,000 volumes, plus another 28,300
reels of microfilm. In addition, the Hoover Institution’s
East Asia Archives and Collections of Special Materials
in Chinese and Japanese consist of original documents,
such as letters, diaries, journals, private and public
contracts, and business account books.
Stanford in Beijing is one small way that we are furthering
our desire to engage in an ongoing conversation and
deepen our understanding about China. Courses will be
taught in English and Chinese by local faculty members
of Peking University in areas such as philosophy, history
of science, political science, legal studies and literature.
Required Chinese language courses will also be offered
for Stanford credit.
Of course, Stanford already benefits tremendously from
the presence of more than 500 gifted Chinese students
at the Farm. This exchange is consistent with our view
that the best way to solve the world’s problems
is to have an open conversation among the best and brightest
of the next generation of scholars.
In all these ways, I believe Stanford is well positioned
to participate in China’s emergence onto the center
of the world stage in the 21st century. In that regard,
perhaps the best thing Stanford and other American universities
have to offer is the spirit of unfettered academic inquiry
and debate—the open competition of ideas—that
has helped build the American system of higher education
into one that is admired throughout the world.
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