QEH; Dr. Richard Smith, All Souls College; Professor E.A. Wrigley, All Souls College; and Professor Wu Jinglian, Development Research Centre, Beijing.
V. ACADEMIC VISITORS
A major objective of the Centre is to enable scholars from China, Hong Kong, Taiwan and other parts of the world to come to Oxford to meet and exchange ideas with prominent scholars in their respective fields, and to make use of the research resources of the University.
A. Visiting Fellows
The Visiting Fellowship programme is for academic visitors coming for periods of research ranging from one term to a full academic year. Visiting Fellows of the Centre since 1987 were:
Mr. Guo Shuqing (1986-1987), Chinese Academy of Social Sciences: to engage in research on Western economic theory and East European reforms. Dr. Agnes Matits (1988-1989), Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest: to research comparisons of Chinese and Hungarian state enterprises. Professor Su Shaozhi (Trinity, 1988), Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, formerly Director of Institute of Marxist Leninism and Mao Tse-tung Thought: writing a book on Reconsidering Socialism.
Dr. C.C. Liu (1988-1989), University of Hong Kong: worked on Western influence on modern Chinese music.
Professor Liu Guoguang (1988-1989), Vice-President of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.
Dr. Zhang Zhichao (1988-1989), Director, Research Department, Shanghai Research Centre of International Affairs; Associate Professor, Department of Economics, East China Normal University: writing a book on exchange rates and foreign debt management in China.
Professor Wu Jinglian (Trinity, 1990), Senior Research Fellow of Development Research Centre, Beijing: writing a book on Chinese reforms during the 1980s.
Professor Qiu Renzhong (Trinity, 1990), Institute of Philosophy, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences: writing a book on Western philosophy.
B. Short-term Visitors
Professor James Winship of the Johns Hopkins University - Nanjing University Centre for Chinese and American Studies is our first Visiting Scholar. Professor Winship spent July 1990 at the Centre researching into the Sino-British negotiations over the future of Hong Kong (1982-84).
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