Events

Should the world fear China?

Hosted by the School of Public Policy

In-person and online public event (Wolfson Theatre, Cheng Kin Ku Building)

Speakers

Zhou Bo

Zhou Bo

Nigel Inkster

Nigel Inkster

Tian Shichen

Tian Shichen

Chair

Alexander Evans

Alexander Evans

The world of 2025 looks very different to the world of 1995. One central debate is the growing global role of China - and what this means for states and peoples around the world.

The relationship between the US and China meanwhile is a central dynamic in international affairs, with concern about competition turning into potential conflict. Is a win/win world possible - or should the world, and in particular democratic states, fear and seek to contain China's agenda? Join two leading Chinese thinkers and former director of operations and intelligence for the British Secret Intelligence Service to  discuss this theme.

Meet our speakers and chair

Zhou Bo is a senior fellow at the Center for International Security and Strategy Tsinghua University. He is internationally recognized as a leading voice of China on global security issues in international media.  He has served in the PLA for 41 years handling China’s mil-to-mil relations with foreign countries. 

Nigel Inkster is Senior Advisor to the International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS) and Director for Geopolitics and Intelligence at Enodo Economics. In IISS he worked first as Director for Transnational Threats and Political Risk then as Director for Cyber Security and Future Conflict. In the latter capacity he was involved in para-diplomatic dialogues on cybersecurity and military cyber stability with China and Russia. He also served from 2017 to 2019 as a Commissioner on the Global Commission on the Stability of Cyberspace. Prior to joining IISS he served for thirty-one years in the British Secret Intelligence Service. From 2004 to 2006 he was Assistant Chief and Director for Operations and Intelligence.

Tian Shichen is the Founder and President of the Global Governance Institution (GGI). He holds a PhD in Public International Law from Wuhan University and an LLM in Public International Law from the University of Nottingham, where he was a UK FCO Chevening Scholar. Dr Tian’s academic research focuses on maritime security and law, the international law of the sea, the law of armed conflict, and international human rights law. He has published extensively on these topics in recent years. Prior to his full retirement from the Chinese Ministry of National Defense (MND), Captain Tian served as Head of the Department of Crisis Management and Media Relations at the MND Information Office. Over the course of his career, he held a range of operational, legal, and academic positions within the PLA Army, Navy, and MND headquarters.

Alexander Evans (@aiaevansis Professor in Practice of Public Policy and Associate Dean of the School of Public Policy at the LSE. He is a former adviser to the Prime Minister in 10 Downing Street and Director Cyber at the Foreign Office where he was the U.K.’s chief international cyber policy negotiator. He served as a senior adviser in the U.S. Department of State during the first Obama Administration and led the U.N. Security Council expert group on Daesh, Al Qaida and the Taliban.

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