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Global Civil Society and China: Challenges and Prospects

Global Chinese Philanthropy Lecture

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In this talk, Anthony Spires (The University of Melbourne) presents on the unstable relationship between Global Civil Society (GCS) and China, analyzing the normative impacts GCS has had on China in recent decades and the possibilities created by Beijing's new “going out” policies for Chinese civil society groups.


Does Global Civil Society (GCS) matter for China, the world’s largest authoritarian state and the second largest economy? In this talk Dr. Spires interrogates the unstable relationship between GCS and China. Dr. Spires analyzes the normative impacts GCS has had on China in recent decades and the possibilities created by Beijing’s new “going out” policies for Chinese civil society groups. Examining the rhetoric and reality of GCS as an emancipatory project, Dr. Spires argues that “universal values” underpinned by principles of human rights and democracy have gained currency in China despite official resistance from the government. While the Chinese party-state is keen to continue to benefit from GCS engagement, the 2017 INGO Law and its implementation practices have shown that Beijing is also determined to minimize any impact outside groups might have on regime security. The talk will conclude with some observations about diasporic activism and the increasing internationalization of Chinese civil society.

Anthony J. Spires is Associate Professor at the Centre for Contemporary Chinese Studies and Deputy Associate Dean International (China) in the Faculty of Arts at the University of Melbourne. He was previously Associate Professor in the Department of Sociology and Director of the Centre for Social Innovation Studies at The Chinese University of Hong Kong. His research focuses on the development of civil society in China, including philanthropy, governmental regulation, and the cultures of non-profit organisations. He has published widely in leading journals, including The American Journal of Sociology, The China Journal, China Quarterly, and Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Quarterly. Anthony is the author of Global Civil Society and China (Cambridge University Press, 2024) and Everyday Democracy: Civil Society, Youth, and the Struggle against Authoritarian Culture in China (Columbia University Press, 2024. A graduate of Occidental College, Anthony holds three master’s degrees and a PhD in Sociology from Yale University.

This free public lecture is part of the Global Chinese Philanthropy Research and Training Program and made possible with the support of the Cyrus Tang Foundation.



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Kind: captions

Language: en

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Siyue Lena Wang - UCLA Asia Pacific Center:  

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Welcome. I'm just waiting for a couple more 

seconds, as folks are trickling in right now.

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Siyue Lena Wang - UCLA Asia Pacific Center: 

Alright, I think we can get started.

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Siyue Lena Wang - UCLA Asia Pacific Center: 

Good afternoon and good evening from the East  

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coast and good morning from Asia. Welcome to 

the Ucla Asia Pacific Center. Global Chinese

00:01:13.396 --> 00:01:16.760

Siyue Lena Wang - UCLA Asia Pacific Center: 

philanthropy lecture on global civil Society and  

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China Challenges and Perspectives, by Professor 

Anthony Spires from the University of Melbourne,  

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Australia. My name is Siyue Lena Wang. I'm a 

graduate student researcher with the Ucla Asia  

00:01:29.200 --> 00:01:36.982

Pacific Center. Myself, I am a PhD Candidate 

at the School of Education here at Ucla.

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Siyue Lena Wang - UCLA Asia 

Pacific Center: Before we  

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start I would like to say a few words 

about the Ucla Asia Pacific Center.

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Siyue Lena Wang - UCLA Asia Pacific Center: 

So can we go to the next slides? Yes,  

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thank you. Currently, The center is led by the 

interim Director Andrea Goldman. Our center  

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promotes greater knowledge and understanding 

of Asia and the Pacific region on campus and  

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in the community through innovative research 

teaching public programs, such as the GCP  

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programs. I know many of you are in our programs 

today and the international collaborations

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Siyue Lena Wang - UCLA Asia Pacific Center: we 

focus on inter-asia and trans-pacific connections  

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from historical, contemporary and comparative 

perspectives. We encourage interdisciplinary  

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work on cross-border and supranational issues 

on language and culture, politics, economic  

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economy and society and the sustainability 

in the ongoing process of globalization.

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Siyue Lena Wang - UCLA Asia Pacific Center: 

Our center also runs Taiwan study program,  

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the program on Central Asia, the global 

Chinese philanthropy research and training  

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program which led to this today's lecture, and 

we also serve as a national resource center,  

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supported by the US. Department of 

Education, title 9, title 6. Grant.

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Siyue Lena Wang - UCLA Asia Pacific 

Center: Our center also administers  

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various fellowships and small grants, 

including US. Department of education,  

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title Vi. Foreign language and Area study 

Fellowships, Taiwan study fellowships and  

00:03:08.400 --> 00:03:14.080

research travel grants a few other awards 

on East Asian studies. I know some of you  

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are also our postdocs and awardees, who 

are also in the lecture today. So welcome.

00:03:20.836 --> 00:03:22.560

Siyue Lena Wang - UCLA Asia Pacific 

Center: And I want to give you a few,  

00:03:22.560 --> 00:03:26.716

a brief introduction about the GCP program.

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Siyue Lena Wang - UCLA Asia Pacific Center: 

Can we go to the next slide, please?

00:03:29.760 --> 00:03:32.760

Siyue Lena Wang - UCLA Asia Pacific Center: 

The global Chinese philanthropy research  

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and training program is led by 

the Ucla Asia Pacific Center,  

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and we receive generous support 

from Cyrus Tang Foundation.

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Siyue Lena Wang - UCLA Asia Pacific Center: And 

the program really aims to integrate networking  

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building, research and training to bridge 

intellectual inquiry and professional practice  

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in the field of Gcp. We have dedicated our program 

to fostering passion, interest and volunteerism,  

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stimulating innovative research ideas 

and sharing best practices in Gcp  

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through training programs, lectures and symposium.

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Siyue Lena Wang - UCLA Asia Pacific 

Center: And the program really focus  

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on 3 includes 3 components. The 1st 

one we maintain and expand our Gcp  

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network. I think many of you actually know 

about this lecture through the Gcp network  

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Listserv so welcome and thanks 

for continuing engaging with us.

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Siyue Lena Wang - UCLA Asia Pacific Center: and 

we also work alongside with our institutional  

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partners, who really help us sustain and expand 

the connection in Asia, but also globally.

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Siyue Lena Wang - UCLA Asia Pacific 

Center: The second part is, we organize  

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the public lecture series, and also the 

by Biannual international symposium. So

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Siyue Lena Wang - UCLA Asia 

Pacific Center: last year,

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Siyue Lena Wang - UCLA Asia Pacific Center: 

yeah, I think no. Actually, yeah. The year 2023,  

00:04:57.920 --> 00:05:04.120

the end of 2023, we organize a symposium 

at Jinan University, and this upcoming  

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spring. We'll have another symposium on 

Gcp. Hosted by the Zhejiang University.

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Siyue Lena Wang - UCLA Asia Pacific Center: 

Lastly, we also want to foster volunteerism and  

00:05:13.720 --> 00:05:22.000

provide professional trainings and trainings 

on research interests on Gcp. So we have a  

00:05:22.000 --> 00:05:29.160

training program affiliate with the initiative 

where we provide half-day training workshops  

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and also public lectures throughout the year. So 

welcome our student participants for the program.

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Siyue Lena Wang - UCLA Asia Pacific Center: 

Lastly, I want to thank Cyrus Tang foundation  

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for their generous support, and our staff, 

including Center administrator, Jeannie Chen,  

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deputy director, Aaron Miller, and 

our graduate student researcher,  

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Jerry Sun and undergraduate assistant, Joyce 

Lin for their hard work behind the scenes.

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Siyue Lena Wang - UCLA Asia Pacific Center: and 

it's now my pleasure to introduce today's speaker,  

00:06:00.440 --> 00:06:07.040

our Dr. Anthony Spiers, Dr. Spiers, is 

associate professor at the Center for  

00:06:07.760 --> 00:06:14.240

contemporary Chinese study and deputy Associate 

Dean International China in the Faculty of Arts,  

00:06:14.240 --> 00:06:18.320

and at the University of Melbourne. He 

was previously associate professor in  

00:06:18.320 --> 00:06:22.120

the Department of Sociology and 

the Director of the Center for  

00:06:22.120 --> 00:06:26.476

Social Innovation Studies at the 

Chinese University of Hong Kong.

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Siyue Lena Wang - UCLA Asia Pacific Center: 

His research focuses on the development of

00:06:29.160 --> 00:06:32.000

Siyue Lena Wang - UCLA Asia Pacific Center: 

civil society in China, including philanthropy,  

00:06:32.000 --> 00:06:37.480

governmental regulations, and the cultures of a 

nonprofit organization which is really relevant.  

00:06:37.480 --> 00:06:43.080

And I know many of you will be interested 

in today's topic. He has published widely  

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in leading journals, including the American 

Journal of Sociology, top Tier journals,  

00:06:48.400 --> 00:06:55.036

the China Journal, the China Quarterly and 

Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Quarterly.

00:06:55.036 --> 00:06:56.520

Siyue Lena Wang - UCLA Asia 

Pacific Center: Dr. Spire is  

00:06:56.520 --> 00:07:04.182

also the author of global civil society 

and China, and also everyday democracy.

00:07:04.182 --> 00:07:05.320

Siyue Lena Wang - UCLA Asia 

Pacific Center: civil society,  

00:07:05.320 --> 00:07:09.796

youth, and the struggle against 

authoritarian culture in China.

00:07:09.796 --> 00:07:13.400

Siyue Lena Wang - UCLA Asia Pacific Center: 

which is published pretty recent last year.  

00:07:13.400 --> 00:07:18.160

He is a graduate of Occidental 

College, actually in California,  

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and he has 3 master degrees, and he got 

his PhD in sociology from Yale University.

00:07:25.516 --> 00:07:27.120

Siyue Lena Wang - UCLA Asia Pacific 

Center: So in this lecture he will  

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present on global civil society and 

China challenges and perspectives.

00:07:32.476 --> 00:07:37.744

Siyue Lena Wang - UCLA Asia Pacific Center: 

So Dr. Spires the floor is yours and welcome.

00:07:37.744 --> 00:07:41.200

Anthony Spires: Thank you, Lena so much for 

that very generous introduction. I appreciate  

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it. Thank you all so much for joining us 

today. I recognize a few of the names in  

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the attendees list and a lot of new folks. 

So I'm happy to share with you what I can,  

00:07:52.800 --> 00:07:56.440

based on the work that I've done 

over the roughly past 20 years.

00:07:56.440 --> 00:08:02.880

Anthony Spires: let me let me get my slides going.

00:08:02.880 --> 00:08:07.920

Anthony Spires: See if this 

works hopefully, this works.

00:08:07.920 --> 00:08:09.824

Anthony Spires: So

00:08:09.824 --> 00:08:13.000

Anthony Spires: I'm probably too ambitious 

today. And what I want to talk to you about,  

00:08:13.000 --> 00:08:18.280

so I probably will push us right up against the 

time where we have very little time left for Q&A.  

00:08:18.280 --> 00:08:25.720

But I'll try to watch myself, and I ask Lena or 

Jeannie, or others to stop me if I go on too long.

00:08:25.720 --> 00:08:30.160

Anthony Spires: But this is a book that I 

published last year. It's a short book with  

00:08:30.160 --> 00:08:35.400

Cambridge University Press, and it's simply 

titled global civil society in China. What  

00:08:35.400 --> 00:08:39.240

I want to do today is talk about some of the 

content in the book, but also provide a bit,  

00:08:39.240 --> 00:08:45.840

maybe broader background for thinking about global 

civil society, its interactions and impacts on  

00:08:45.840 --> 00:08:51.120

China, and also thinking about prospects. So 

looking at the future where things are today,  

00:08:51.120 --> 00:08:56.240

and then where things are going which I think 

is a much more difficult thing to talk about.

00:08:56.240 --> 00:09:00.640

Anthony Spires: With all the changes in the 

world, the changes in the Us. Where many of  

00:09:00.640 --> 00:09:05.920

you are sitting, and the changes around us 

in this region here, where I am in Australia,  

00:09:05.920 --> 00:09:09.840

as well, predicting the future is impossible, 

but I think it's important to think about what  

00:09:09.840 --> 00:09:15.824

the future might hold. So I do want to talk 

about that a little bit towards the end.

00:09:15.824 --> 00:09:20.560

Anthony Spires: So let me move forward if 

I can. I hope everyone can see this. Okay,  

00:09:20.560 --> 00:09:22.920

what is global civil society?

00:09:22.920 --> 00:09:24.730

Anthony Spires: So

00:09:24.730 --> 00:09:31.560

Anthony Spires: I think in the broader literature 

and global civil society is is understood as 2  

00:09:31.560 --> 00:09:37.680

different sorts of things maybe related. But one 

is organizations. So international Ngos operating  

00:09:37.680 --> 00:09:43.800

programs making grants around the world, also 

included in that organizational kind of world  

00:09:43.800 --> 00:09:47.840

are pure grant makers, philanthropic 

foundations that are simply donors,  

00:09:47.840 --> 00:09:53.480

simply donors. I would say, who don't actually run 

programs on the ground. But who give away money.

00:09:53.480 --> 00:09:57.760

Anthony Spires: I realize a lot of you are coming 

from different backgrounds. So for some of you,  

00:09:57.760 --> 00:10:01.400

this may be ways too simple for some of you. It 

may be the 1st time you've heard it articulated  

00:10:01.400 --> 00:10:05.160

this way. So again I encourage you to raise 

questions in the chat, and the Q&A. If you  

00:10:05.160 --> 00:10:12.000

need to, if you like to. I would also say that 

the Gcs. If I can use that short term has been  

00:10:12.000 --> 00:10:16.920

conceptualized as a normative project by many 

of the people who've talked about it in the past

00:10:16.920 --> 00:10:23.040

Anthony Spires: as international Ngos as carriers 

of cosmopolitan values, including things like  

00:10:23.040 --> 00:10:31.320

democracy and human rights. Mary Kaldor, in 

the Uk. Has written a book talking about global  

00:10:31.320 --> 00:10:36.864

civil society as an antidote to war. So you can 

take from this. There's a lot of very idealistic

00:10:36.864 --> 00:10:41.160

Anthony Spires: visions of what global civil 

society is and what it can be and what it can  

00:10:41.160 --> 00:10:47.240

do. And I'm not so much a cynic. But I think these 

are insincere. I think this is, you know, these  

00:10:47.240 --> 00:10:55.920

these kind of goals. The values they represent 

are aspirational. And I think you know, it's it's  

00:10:55.920 --> 00:11:03.824

characteristics of what we can see when we look at 

many international Ngos around the world, anyway.

00:11:03.824 --> 00:11:11.640

Anthony Spires: So a little bit of background to 

Ingos and global society in China. Some of you  

00:11:11.640 --> 00:11:17.760

may know, after 1949, when the Communist 

party took power, most foreign supported  

00:11:17.760 --> 00:11:22.600

charities in China were shuttered, they were 

closed down. Essentially. The message was that  

00:11:22.600 --> 00:11:28.120

the party is here to help. The party is, 

you know, of the people for the people.

00:11:28.120 --> 00:11:33.840

Anthony Spires: and so most foreign charities, of 

which there were many, many Chinese universities,  

00:11:33.840 --> 00:11:40.640

many of Chinese colleges, many hospitals in 

China, medical schools were founded and funded  

00:11:40.640 --> 00:11:46.520

by overseas Chinese, and by foreigners, 

sometimes with religious affiliation,  

00:11:46.520 --> 00:11:51.944

sometimes not, but those were all shut 

down for the most part. After 1949.

00:11:51.944 --> 00:11:56.120

Anthony Spires: I'll skip ahead in history 

really quickly. 30 years or so after Mao Zedong  

00:11:56.120 --> 00:12:03.600

died in 1976, and Deng Xiaoping opened 

up China to the outside world. In 1979,  

00:12:03.600 --> 00:12:07.920

a lot of foreign philanthropic foundations 

and Ingos were invited into China by the  

00:12:07.920 --> 00:12:13.280

State itself. So at the highest levels of 

Chinese Government. There were invitations  

00:12:13.280 --> 00:12:20.000

to many different organizations in the 1980s 

to come in and establish an office in China.

00:12:20.000 --> 00:12:24.464

Anthony Spires: to assist in 

China's opening up to the world

00:12:24.464 --> 00:12:29.280

Anthony Spires: in many different realms, so 

that includes education. So my home discipline,  

00:12:29.280 --> 00:12:32.760

sociology was reestablished 

during this period of time,  

00:12:32.760 --> 00:12:36.800

and supported by organizations 

like the Ford Foundation and others

00:12:36.800 --> 00:12:41.520

Anthony Spires: as well as you know other 

things about environmental disaster,  

00:12:41.520 --> 00:12:45.320

relief, support, poverty, alleviation,  

00:12:45.320 --> 00:12:50.520

all the sorts of things that came to be on the 

Chinese kind of agenda, the official agenda.

00:12:50.520 --> 00:12:54.680

Anthony Spires: as well as integrating into the 

global economy and the development of different  

00:12:54.680 --> 00:12:59.240

kinds of laws and regulations that would help 

facilitate that. So I've given you a couple of  

00:12:59.240 --> 00:13:03.880

4 different examples of organizations that 

have been active in China for a very long  

00:13:03.880 --> 00:13:09.880

time that came in sometime after the 1979 

period. So the Ford foundation from the Us

00:13:09.880 --> 00:13:15.240

Anthony Spires: has as its mission. You 

can find this online. This is a slightly  

00:13:15.240 --> 00:13:20.560

older version of the mission statement, I think, 

but the ideas are still there to reduce poverty  

00:13:20.560 --> 00:13:24.304

and injustice to strengthen democratic 

values, promote international cooperation

00:13:24.304 --> 00:13:28.400

Anthony Spires: and advance human achievement. 

So in this one line from the Ford Foundation,  

00:13:28.400 --> 00:13:31.320

I think it's not representative of every ingo,  

00:13:31.320 --> 00:13:37.240

but I think it does touch on issues 

that many different INGOs have

00:13:37.240 --> 00:13:43.360

Anthony Spires: made a focus of their work 

and core to their own values. So injustice,  

00:13:43.360 --> 00:13:48.440

democracy, international cooperation, nice 

thing, advancing human achievement which can be  

00:13:48.440 --> 00:13:55.880

understood many ways. Education, for example, the 

Asia Foundation, which is also based in the Us.

00:13:55.880 --> 00:13:59.280

Anthony Spires: Has had a focus on good 

governance on women's empowerment, gender  

00:13:59.280 --> 00:14:03.560

equality. So again, those kinds of cosmopolitan 

values and kinds of things that we think about  

00:14:03.560 --> 00:14:09.640

when we think about progressing democracy 

and human rights globally right. This is  

00:14:09.640 --> 00:14:14.880

what the Asia foundation is looking to 

do. Oxfam from the Uk seeks to ensure  

00:14:14.880 --> 00:14:19.520

the representation of vulnerable people 

affected by marginalization and injustice

00:14:19.520 --> 00:14:23.000

Anthony Spires: and save the children, 

Uk, giving a powerful voice to children  

00:14:23.000 --> 00:14:26.760

and championing their rights. So 

you can see in just these short,  

00:14:26.760 --> 00:14:32.824

brief statements by these 4 different, 

rather large Ingos. There's a big focus on

00:14:32.824 --> 00:14:39.000

Anthony Spires: particular kinds of values and 

governance principles, right? So inclusivity,  

00:14:39.000 --> 00:14:47.000

gender equality, rights. As a few of 

those key touchstone words, I would say.

00:14:47.000 --> 00:14:51.280

Anthony Spires: but I will go back and just say 

that these are not unique to global civil society.  

00:14:51.280 --> 00:15:00.299

For sure, after the party was established before 

the party was, you know, had taken power in 1949,

00:15:00.299 --> 00:15:03.680

Anthony Spires: even an early period of 

Republican China, things like democracy,  

00:15:03.680 --> 00:15:08.600

rights, liberty, equality. These were, you 

know, catchphrases of the intelligentsia  

00:15:08.600 --> 00:15:11.960

leading up to the Republican revolution 

overthrowing the Qing dynasty. So these  

00:15:11.960 --> 00:15:17.280

ideas have been floating around China for 

a very, very long time in today in China,  

00:15:17.280 --> 00:15:23.640

you can see, as I showed you this picture of a 

street sign in Kunming that I took in 2014 core  

00:15:23.640 --> 00:15:29.040

Socialist values in today's China include these 

sorts of things. So these would not be unknown.

00:15:29.040 --> 00:15:34.080

Anthony Spires: They're not unfamiliar, 

I would say, within the Chinese context,  

00:15:34.080 --> 00:15:38.880

although some people may be skeptical of 

what these things actually mean and how  

00:15:38.880 --> 00:15:43.640

they're taught in Chinese schools which they 

are taught now from kindergarten on up, and  

00:15:43.640 --> 00:15:50.080

how people interpret what they mean. My impression 

is that although they are widely taught in school.

00:15:50.080 --> 00:15:55.040

Anthony Spires: the teaching is often down 

to memorization. So children have to learn  

00:15:55.040 --> 00:15:57.920

to repeat these things, and there 

are little songs that kindergartners  

00:15:57.920 --> 00:16:01.680

can sing now they're quite cute. But 

you know these are big words even for  

00:16:01.680 --> 00:16:06.280

grownups. These are really big words. 

So for kids growing up in China today.

00:16:06.280 --> 00:16:09.600

Anthony Spires: you know, they'll be 

hearing these sorts of things a lot.  

00:16:09.600 --> 00:16:14.400

But what they mean and what they mean 

in practice are different questions.

00:16:14.400 --> 00:16:22.800

Anthony Spires: I think we can't talk about global 

civil society unless we talk about grassroots,  

00:16:22.800 --> 00:16:28.000

domestic civil society within China. So 

I want to focus quickly, briefly, maybe,  

00:16:28.000 --> 00:16:33.320

on grassroots Ngos, and very explicitly, 

government fears of grassroots, Ngos,  

00:16:33.320 --> 00:16:36.480

which I've studied grassroots Ngos 

in China for a couple of decades  

00:16:36.480 --> 00:16:40.144

now. And I think it's a part of the story, an 

important part of the story for understanding

00:16:40.144 --> 00:16:41.440

Anthony Spires: global philanthropy to China,  

00:16:41.440 --> 00:16:48.240

and also the Chinese Government's efforts 

to shape civil society internally and also  

00:16:48.240 --> 00:16:51.944

shape the activities of Chinese 

groups when they move overseas.

00:16:51.944 --> 00:16:56.680

Anthony Spires: So there's clearly a strand 

within the party a group within the party,  

00:16:56.680 --> 00:17:02.400

a way of thinking within the party that says that 

grassroots Ngos, are something dangerous that we  

00:17:02.400 --> 00:17:08.600

need to be aware of. We need to take control 

of. There's a fear that grassroots groups are  

00:17:08.600 --> 00:17:15.000

anti-government anti-party, or maybe forming an 

alternative party to the Communist Party itself.

00:17:15.000 --> 00:17:18.200

Anthony Spires: and I would just briefly state 

here that you know again, in 20 years of working  

00:17:18.200 --> 00:17:22.720

with grassroots Ngos, and doing research in this 

area. I don't think there is any alternative  

00:17:22.720 --> 00:17:29.920

party organization in existence in China today. I 

don't think there's any group identifiable group.  

00:17:29.920 --> 00:17:37.960

At least that is cohesive enough to challenge 

the party, but that fear remains quite strong.

00:17:37.960 --> 00:17:44.520

Anthony Spires: There's a fear that Ngos in 

China may link up, and this is an understandable  

00:17:44.520 --> 00:17:51.320

fear. The party itself, when it was trying to get 

established and overthrow the well and win power,  

00:17:51.320 --> 00:17:56.120

I should say, in the 1940s, and prior to 

that the party itself operated in ways  

00:17:56.120 --> 00:18:01.824

that different groups of activists or Communist 

party cells around the country would link up.

00:18:01.824 --> 00:18:04.440

Anthony Spires: They're very aware of their own 

history of doing that. And they're concerned that  

00:18:04.440 --> 00:18:10.520

Ngos can do this. What this means in practice 

is that in real life is that Ngos today in  

00:18:10.520 --> 00:18:16.360

China have a hard time getting together inside 

China. There's been lots of events that I've  

00:18:16.360 --> 00:18:20.480

been sort of planning to go to, or others have 

told me about, that. They were going to happen

00:18:20.480 --> 00:18:23.400

Anthony Spires: that in the end got canceled 

because the Government stepped in and said, No,  

00:18:23.400 --> 00:18:26.960

no, no, you can't meet in this hotel, 

or you can't meet in this university,  

00:18:26.960 --> 00:18:28.920

or you cannot do this, or you cannot do that,  

00:18:28.920 --> 00:18:36.560

or their travel arrangements were canceled 

for them. So it remains a concern and a fear.

00:18:36.560 --> 00:18:39.184

Anthony Spires: There's also, I think, which is

00:18:39.184 --> 00:18:43.800

Anthony Spires: pretty relevant for today's topic, 

the fear that grassroots Ngos may actually simply  

00:18:43.800 --> 00:18:49.240

be covers for foreign organizations, that 

they're acting as foreign agents for the CIA  

00:18:49.240 --> 00:18:55.120

in the Us. Or that foreign foundations like 

the Ford Foundation or others, may actually  

00:18:55.120 --> 00:19:02.520

just be working to promote color revolutions, 

which is the narrative that's used to explain  

00:19:02.520 --> 00:19:07.760

what happened in Ukraine, also about 20 years 

ago in Georgia, Kyrgyzstan, a few other places

00:19:07.760 --> 00:19:13.880

Anthony Spires: in Eastern Central 

Europe, and on the border of China,  

00:19:13.880 --> 00:19:17.880

so I won't go into the background of all this. 

I'm happy to talk about it if it's not clear.  

00:19:17.880 --> 00:19:21.800

But I just want to raise that and say, look that 

the government is concerned about grassroots Ngos,  

00:19:21.800 --> 00:19:25.960

and what they can do in grassroots, 

civil society, and that is relevant. For

00:19:25.960 --> 00:19:29.600

Anthony Spires: for Ingo's in ways that 

will become more obvious in a minute.  

00:19:29.600 --> 00:19:32.280

But before I talk about that, I just want to say,  

00:19:32.280 --> 00:19:36.000

I want to flag some data. This is not data 

that I collected. This is Mary Kaldor,  

00:19:36.000 --> 00:19:42.384

and others that collected this data. Again, around 

2,003. I think most of the data was collected.

00:19:42.384 --> 00:19:47.640

Anthony Spires: But I just share this to show 

you how China was then. And I would argue still,  

00:19:47.640 --> 00:19:54.880

now largely is on the outskirts of global civil 

society. Although economically starting in the  

00:19:54.880 --> 00:19:58.640

early 2000, China is moving to the center very, 

very rapidly, the center of the global economy.

00:19:59.480 --> 00:20:02.920

Anthony Spires: When it comes to global 

civil society quite on the outskirts. So  

00:20:02.920 --> 00:20:07.720

you see this ingo memberships per 1 million 

population which allows us to compare across  

00:20:07.720 --> 00:20:13.624

countries. If the world average was 45.4 

higher than that in richer countries.

00:20:13.624 --> 00:20:20.040

Anthony Spires: 37.8 in middle income countries, 

and 17.7, China was the lowest of all this 1.9  

00:20:20.040 --> 00:20:24.320

memberships per 1 million of the population. 

This is a membership in, for example, Greenpeace,  

00:20:24.320 --> 00:20:28.280

you can go online, you can become a registered 

become a member of Greenpeace. And if you were  

00:20:28.280 --> 00:20:32.840

in China at the time when they're collecting this 

data with the way that they've they've conceived  

00:20:32.840 --> 00:20:40.864

it. If you were one individual that counts 

as one membership. But in this, in this world

00:20:40.864 --> 00:20:44.080

Anthony Spires: of Ingo memberships China is  

00:20:44.080 --> 00:20:48.000

definitely far at the periphery. 

I would say, not at the center

00:20:48.000 --> 00:20:52.280

Anthony Spires: which indicates, I think, 

to the extent to which China has been  

00:20:52.280 --> 00:20:56.800

fairly disengaged or fairly isolated 

from global civil society. For a very  

00:20:56.800 --> 00:21:03.280

long time. In other places in Africa 

and South America, parts of Southeast  

00:21:03.280 --> 00:21:09.160

Asia. Some places you'd find much higher 

numbers than 1.9 where China Falls here.

00:21:09.160 --> 00:21:14.360

Anthony Spires: Want to go back to this 

kind of concern that I mentioned earlier  

00:21:14.360 --> 00:21:20.560

the fears of grassroots Ngos, and the fears 

of foreign Ngos that are active in China,  

00:21:20.560 --> 00:21:24.840

and share with you a piece 

by Professor Zhao Liqing

00:21:24.840 --> 00:21:29.400

Anthony Spires: from again roughly 20 

years ago. But I think what he did at  

00:21:29.400 --> 00:21:33.840

the time he really captured the debate 

that was happening in China at the time,  

00:21:33.840 --> 00:21:39.240

and I would say the debate that has continued 

to some extent to today about whether it's  

00:21:39.240 --> 00:21:44.760

good or not to allow foreign Ngos into China 

to allow foreign organizations, whether they  

00:21:44.760 --> 00:21:49.720

be grant makers or ingo's operating programs 

to allow them to work inside mainland China.

00:21:50.840 --> 00:21:53.280

Anthony Spires: Zhao Liqing listed 

out several things he did. A. This  

00:21:53.280 --> 00:21:56.840

is published in the Study Times. I think it was

00:21:56.840 --> 00:21:58.680

Anthony Spires: he listed a number of different  

00:21:58.680 --> 00:22:04.344

things. Funding they bring in money. 

Obviously, that's a good thing, especially

00:22:04.344 --> 00:22:07.920

Anthony Spires: at that time when China didn't 

have so much money of its own experience,  

00:22:07.920 --> 00:22:11.440

information, personnel methods, how to 

do things so literally? How do you run  

00:22:11.440 --> 00:22:15.880

organizations? How do you deliver social 

services to people in need? How do you  

00:22:15.880 --> 00:22:21.344

think about reconstructing the education 

system to support internationalization?

00:22:21.344 --> 00:22:25.720

Anthony Spires: Right? These are all things 

that foreign Ngos had experience doing and  

00:22:25.720 --> 00:22:32.840

were sharing in China were doing in China just 

after China joined the Wto in 2,001 roughly,  

00:22:32.840 --> 00:22:37.280

social development, obviously a good thing, 

a counterpart to economic development.

00:22:37.280 --> 00:22:39.760

Anthony Spires: a new social system. I'm 

not quite sure what he meant by that. But  

00:22:39.760 --> 00:22:44.160

that's okay. And he also said that they're 

helping build public policy processes and  

00:22:44.160 --> 00:22:48.080

rule of law. And there are a great number 

of examples of this where this has happened,  

00:22:48.080 --> 00:22:52.680

and one I like to refer to, and some of you 

joining today have more experience with this  

00:22:52.680 --> 00:22:58.200

than I do on the ground experience, probably, 

of international Ngos, that, for example, had

00:22:58.200 --> 00:23:05.680

Anthony Spires: the round advise city governments 

on how to have a public consultation about  

00:23:05.680 --> 00:23:12.160

new laws, concerning the environment, or any 

matter, any number of different kind of matters,  

00:23:12.160 --> 00:23:17.920

but on the environment, for example, you know, 

in one particular city in northeastern China,  

00:23:17.920 --> 00:23:25.544

where Ingos were actually one Ngo 

was invited by the city government to

00:23:25.544 --> 00:23:30.240

Anthony Spires: tell them, I guess, sort of 

help them set up a kind of a Town Hall thing,  

00:23:30.240 --> 00:23:34.840

where people in the community could 

come together and discuss the draft  

00:23:34.840 --> 00:23:38.960

laws or the draft regulations 

that the city was proposing.

00:23:38.960 --> 00:23:43.920

Anthony Spires: and this was a fairly new thing 

at the time, and quite radical, I would say in  

00:23:43.920 --> 00:23:49.480

China it hasn't been extended. So if you look 

at the law and laws in China, the laws of the  

00:23:49.480 --> 00:23:55.440

law and legislation. How do you make laws? That 

kind of law? One of the results, I think of this  

00:23:55.440 --> 00:24:02.600

of this expansion of public policy processes 

and inputs is that now new laws in China.

00:24:02.600 --> 00:24:06.000

Anthony Spires: are, typically, 

they have to be posted online  

00:24:06.000 --> 00:24:11.400

one month in advance of for or for 

public consultation for 30 days. So

00:24:11.400 --> 00:24:17.400

Anthony Spires: a couple of the laws that I 

followed, like the law on the charity law and the  

00:24:17.400 --> 00:24:22.880

law on international Ngos or Overseas Ngos. They 

were both put online by the relevant government  

00:24:22.880 --> 00:24:28.360

agencies and invited, you know, invited people 

around the country and around the world to submit

00:24:28.360 --> 00:24:32.080

Anthony Spires: opinions or suggestions. 

For what could work? What could be a  

00:24:32.080 --> 00:24:35.280

problem with the law as it was drafted. 

So those are things that Zhao Li Qing,  

00:24:35.280 --> 00:24:41.400

and others around him saw as valuable, and 

they have had an impact in China for sure.

00:24:41.400 --> 00:24:48.600

Anthony Spires: He also recognized that national 

security is, there's a threat that Ngos can.  

00:24:48.600 --> 00:24:56.960

Foreign Ngos again, may bring to the country 

that they might cause political instability,  

00:24:56.960 --> 00:25:00.960

especially if they're trying to 

promote a color revolution. Like,  

00:25:00.960 --> 00:25:03.820

again, was the narrative in 

Eastern Europe and in Kyrgyzstan

00:25:03.820 --> 00:25:08.160

Anthony Spires: they might increase corruption 

because there's a lot of money flowing in. And I  

00:25:08.160 --> 00:25:12.640

have stories about that. I won't share them today. 

But I have heard stories of that. And I would say,  

00:25:12.640 --> 00:25:16.880

Yeah, that's a real problem. More money coming in, 

and who knows where the money's going? You know I  

00:25:16.880 --> 00:25:21.040

could point to different places where it shouldn't 

be going, and it seems to have landed there. So  

00:25:21.040 --> 00:25:25.160

he's aware of that stuff. And then foreign 

models pushed onto China, which I think is a

00:25:25.160 --> 00:25:30.240

Anthony Spires: a reasonable criticism. And 

that's also say it's a criticism that many  

00:25:30.240 --> 00:25:35.144

international Ngos have faced in many other 

parts of the world. So China is not unique

00:25:35.144 --> 00:25:40.320

Anthony Spires: in these concerns, probably, but 

I think Zhao Liqing kind of articulated them quite  

00:25:40.320 --> 00:25:45.720

well. At the end of this very short article. Where 

he does this he actually comes down, and saying  

00:25:45.720 --> 00:25:51.440

that on balance they're probably better for China 

than they are dangerous, for China on balance are  

00:25:51.440 --> 00:25:58.240

probably better than they are bad for China. So 

that was about 20 years ago. I'm not sure now

00:25:58.240 --> 00:26:03.440

Anthony Spires: where a similar analysis 

would come down, because in the last 20 years,  

00:26:03.440 --> 00:26:06.760

the last couple of decades there's 

been a clear shift towards looking  

00:26:06.760 --> 00:26:12.800

at them as more of a threat than as 

a as a bonus, as a helpful thing,  

00:26:12.800 --> 00:26:17.840

and I can articulate that a bit 

better later. If you're interested.

00:26:17.840 --> 00:26:18.720

Anthony Spires: I wanna

00:26:18.720 --> 00:26:23.280

Anthony Spires: focus on a 4 different Us 

based grantmakers. Just to give an example  

00:26:23.280 --> 00:26:28.440

of the kinds of things that that grant makers and 

things because we're talking about philanthropy  

00:26:28.440 --> 00:26:34.520

today. Grant makers looking at 

China. Do or have said they do.

00:26:34.520 --> 00:26:39.440

Anthony Spires: And I'll explain why. Maybe 

I'll go back to this slide just very briefly.

00:26:39.440 --> 00:26:42.960

Anthony Spires: When Zhao Liqing article came 

out I was already on the ground in China,  

00:26:42.960 --> 00:26:47.280

doing field work, and before I went to 

China I was based in the Us. At Yale,  

00:26:47.280 --> 00:26:53.000

and I had met with a number of foundations in 

the Us. And New York, Boston and Washington,  

00:26:53.000 --> 00:26:57.680

a couple of other places that were working in 

China, and I asked them, you know, what do you  

00:26:57.680 --> 00:27:03.224

do? Why do you do what you do, and virtually 

all of them said. You know we support kind of

00:27:03.224 --> 00:27:07.200

Anthony Spires: grassroots groups. We support 

civil society development. We support, you know,  

00:27:07.200 --> 00:27:10.880

human rights. Quietly we support these sorts 

of things. We support development of civil  

00:27:10.880 --> 00:27:16.120

society in China. And I thought, okay. 

So then I went to the ground in China,  

00:27:16.120 --> 00:27:19.240

spent a lot of time, and mostly 

in Guangdong in the South.

00:27:19.240 --> 00:27:23.120

Anthony Spires: talking with people meeting 

with different groups, and I had that in my  

00:27:23.120 --> 00:27:29.520

mind right. And to give an example of what I had 

in my mind. These are quotes from 4 different  

00:27:29.520 --> 00:27:33.600

groups. This is part of their mission statement 

or their vision for what they do. The national  

00:27:33.600 --> 00:27:40.424

endowment for democracy which is in a Us. Based 

Washington based Ngo not registered nonprofit

00:27:40.424 --> 00:27:43.520

Anthony Spires: in 2,003, which is 

just before I started talking to  

00:27:43.520 --> 00:27:47.680

people about these issues, the Ned said 

it concentrated its resources in Asia,  

00:27:47.680 --> 00:27:52.000

on organizations meaning civil society 

groups, grassroots, groups working to pry  

00:27:52.000 --> 00:27:57.304

open dictatorial systems and broaden rights and 

political space in semi-authoritarian countries.

00:27:57.304 --> 00:28:01.080

Anthony Spires: and Nad did not classify 

China as semi-authoritarian. It was a  

00:28:01.080 --> 00:28:06.704

full-fledged authoritarian country, or perhaps 

dictatorship in the the rhetoric of the time.

00:28:06.704 --> 00:28:11.600

Anthony Spires: the Asia Foundation in China. 

It said that it supports civil organizations and  

00:28:11.600 --> 00:28:15.000

government institutions to enhance popular 

empowerment while increasing government  

00:28:15.000 --> 00:28:19.960

accountability. So this is about human rights 

and democracy stuff. Right? It's very explicit.

00:28:19.960 --> 00:28:24.680

Anthony Spires: the State Department, has 

a Bureau of democracy, human rights sorry,  

00:28:24.680 --> 00:28:28.400

and this is a typo and labor. Says that they  

00:28:28.400 --> 00:28:32.080

consult and partner closely with the many 

and dedicated and capable Ngos working on  

00:28:32.080 --> 00:28:37.360

human rights and democracy right around the 

world. But obviously, particularly in China.

00:28:37.360 --> 00:28:40.440

Anthony Spires: The Ford Foundation says 

explicitly, our goals are to strengthen  

00:28:40.440 --> 00:28:44.080

democratic values, reduce poverty and 

justice, promote international cooperation,  

00:28:44.080 --> 00:28:48.240

advance human achievement. So there's a lot 

of rhetoric here that you can understand would  

00:28:48.240 --> 00:28:52.520

worry the Conservatives within the party 

who are worried about color revolutions,  

00:28:52.520 --> 00:28:56.320

or worried about foreign organizations trying to

00:28:56.320 --> 00:29:02.040

Anthony Spires: harm the rule of the party, or 

to bring down the party and overthrow the State,  

00:29:02.040 --> 00:29:07.480

which is an expression here a lot. And 

in official circles about this. And I  

00:29:07.480 --> 00:29:09.640

would read this sort of stuff. And I 

talk to people. And I thought, Wow,  

00:29:09.640 --> 00:29:12.760

they're very explicit about what they want 

to do. How are they allowed to operate in  

00:29:12.760 --> 00:29:16.944

China? Why aren't they allowed to operate in 

China? If this is what they say they're doing.

00:29:16.944 --> 00:29:18.960

Anthony Spires: It seems like you just 

need to go on the website. I mean,  

00:29:18.960 --> 00:29:22.280

you could access these websites from China 

at the time they weren't blocked. Some of  

00:29:22.280 --> 00:29:24.960

them are probably blocked now. They 

weren't blocked. So it's not like,  

00:29:24.960 --> 00:29:30.360

you know, people in Beijing didn't couldn't 

know what they said that they were doing.

00:29:30.360 --> 00:29:35.320

Anthony Spires: And so yeah, I went on the ground

00:29:35.320 --> 00:29:37.720

Anthony Spires: back up and say, I went on the 

ground, and what I found with the grassroots.  

00:29:37.720 --> 00:29:43.960

Ngos, for the most part, was that they had 

very little contact with foreign foundations.  

00:29:43.960 --> 00:29:50.480

They had very little, very little or no contact 

with these kinds of Grant makers. And so there  

00:29:50.480 --> 00:29:54.720

was a big contrast between what I'd heard 

in interviews in the Us. As a researcher,  

00:29:54.720 --> 00:29:58.840

as a doctoral researcher, and then, on 

the ground from civil society groups in  

00:29:58.840 --> 00:30:03.184

China itself. So I went to try to 

figure out why this was the case.

00:30:03.184 --> 00:30:06.680

Anthony Spires: and what I did 

was, I collected lots of data,  

00:30:07.440 --> 00:30:11.640

used data from the foundation center based 

in New York to look at private foundations  

00:30:11.640 --> 00:30:15.360

and the grantees in China. And I went 

through all the foundations that made  

00:30:15.360 --> 00:30:21.224

grants in China from 2,002 to 2,009 that are 

captured in that foundation center database.

00:30:21.224 --> 00:30:26.040

Anthony Spires: There were quite a lot, and 

I classified all the grantees. And so this is  

00:30:26.040 --> 00:30:29.400

the I don't need you to read. You don't need to 

feel like you need to read all this, but I would  

00:30:29.400 --> 00:30:35.680

just shoot to the top 2 lines. Academic and 

research institutions and government agencies

00:30:35.680 --> 00:30:42.200

Anthony Spires: got the lion's share of funding 

from foreign grantees from us based foundations  

00:30:42.200 --> 00:30:48.000

at the time at least 44% of the money they sent 

to China during that time of 200 million dollars  

00:30:48.000 --> 00:30:52.440

effectively went to Chinese universities. 

Essentially right. Another quarter of it went  

00:30:52.440 --> 00:30:57.920

to government agencies and another 16% went to 

GONGOs. And then maybe 5% went to grassroots Ngos.

00:30:59.200 --> 00:31:02.400

Anthony Spires: International, other 

international Ngos and others got a big  

00:31:02.400 --> 00:31:07.680

chunk of the money. But over that period 

of 8 years I think it is. You can see,  

00:31:07.680 --> 00:31:12.480

the total amount of money was almost half a 

billion Us. Dollars. That's a lot of money. So  

00:31:12.480 --> 00:31:16.880

to go back to Zhao Liqing's worry, worry about 

corruption. You can easily imagine where some  

00:31:16.880 --> 00:31:23.064

of that money would get siphoned off right. 

But the bulk of the money going to academic

00:31:23.064 --> 00:31:25.520

Anthony Spires: research institutions, 

government agencies and Gongos,  

00:31:25.520 --> 00:31:28.640

which are government organized Ngos or 

government controlled organizations.  

00:31:28.640 --> 00:31:32.200

This was very different than what 

I expected in that period of time.  

00:31:32.200 --> 00:31:37.760

Only 188 grants that I could identify 

were directly made to grassroots Ngos

00:31:37.760 --> 00:31:42.640

Anthony Spires: And so that was quite puzzling 

for me. This is another way of looking at the  

00:31:42.640 --> 00:31:46.760

same data. If you look at who got the most 

money during that period of time the PRC  

00:31:46.760 --> 00:31:51.520

Ministry of Health got the biggest chunk of it. 

I think that comes from the Gates Foundation,  

00:31:51.520 --> 00:31:54.400

who who gave a lot of money 

during that period of time.

00:31:54.400 --> 00:31:58.080

Anthony Spires: The Academy of Agricultural 

Sciences. So you see number 3, number 4, Tsinghua  

00:31:58.080 --> 00:32:02.960

University, Beijing University, Number 5, 

the Ministry of Education. Essentially these  

00:32:02.960 --> 00:32:07.480

are all academic government controlled 

universities and research centers or  

00:32:07.480 --> 00:32:12.280

government agencies themselves, except for 

Number 6, which is a bit of an outlier here.

00:32:12.280 --> 00:32:15.440

Anthony Spires: But the short story is 

that the vast majority of money is not  

00:32:15.440 --> 00:32:19.280

going to grassroots groups is actually going 

to the government itself or the government  

00:32:19.280 --> 00:32:23.400

controlled entities. So that in part, I 

think, explains why the governments did  

00:32:23.400 --> 00:32:27.840

allow them for so long to do what they 

were doing despite their own rhetoric.

00:32:27.840 --> 00:32:29.760

Anthony Spires: And if you look at 

where the money in China is going,  

00:32:29.760 --> 00:32:34.360

70% of it was going to grantees based in 

Beijing. Other places dropped, you know,  

00:32:34.360 --> 00:32:38.120

far down the list, and Number 5 was Guangdong. 

This is where I was doing most of my field work  

00:32:38.120 --> 00:32:45.840

as a Phd student getting 2.2% of it right? 

But again, a large, the biggest chunk of  

00:32:45.840 --> 00:32:50.360

that would not be going to grassroots groups, 

but to government controlled organizations.

00:32:50.360 --> 00:32:54.400

Anthony Spires: I think it's an 

important part of the story. And I  

00:32:54.400 --> 00:32:57.840

think it's important part of the history 

that sets us up to where we are today.

00:32:58.920 --> 00:33:03.360

Anthony Spires: I can talk more about that 

later. But I do want to just move forward  

00:33:03.360 --> 00:33:08.280

just in the interest of time and talk about the 

situation for civil society broadly in China,  

00:33:08.280 --> 00:33:11.920

since Xi. Jinping has come to power, and I don't 

think it's terribly controversial to say that  

00:33:11.920 --> 00:33:22.184

there's been a lot of repression of civil society 

since 2012, prior to 2,012, just to flag that

00:33:22.184 --> 00:33:27.240

Anthony Spires: prior to the 2,008 Olympics there 

were a number of organizations were shut down,  

00:33:27.240 --> 00:33:31.200

China Development brief, which was a Beijing 

based kind of Clearinghouse for information  

00:33:31.200 --> 00:33:37.680

about civil society was shut down, it reopened, 

but it was shut down prior to that Minjian,  

00:33:37.680 --> 00:33:43.880

which is a magazine that was published out 

of Zhongshan University in Guangzhou by some  

00:33:43.880 --> 00:33:51.144

scholars there. It was shut down, and Minjian was 

a really interesting magazine, because it included

00:33:51.144 --> 00:33:57.320

Anthony Spires: articles, interviews, and articles 

by and with grassroots, activists, Chinese  

00:33:57.320 --> 00:34:03.160

civil society actors, as well as you know, like 

migrant workers who come from other parts of China  

00:34:03.160 --> 00:34:11.080

to Guangdong, or to other parts of the country, 

it included interviews with people advocating for  

00:34:11.080 --> 00:34:19.544

the rights of blind people. It included reports on 

organizations working with people affected by HIV

00:34:19.544 --> 00:34:22.280

Anthony Spires: on environmental 

activists, environmental issues  

00:34:22.280 --> 00:34:27.720

in China. So it's really broad kind of 

social problems, focused kind of magazine.

00:34:27.720 --> 00:34:32.040

Anthony Spires: And that was shut down as 

as were a number of HIV Aids. Groups were  

00:34:32.040 --> 00:34:36.864

working in Henan at the time. I could talk 

more about why, but but the you know the

00:34:36.864 --> 00:34:39.384

Anthony Spires: the sentiment 

at the time from Beijing

00:34:39.384 --> 00:34:42.160

Anthony Spires: seem to be that, 

you know. 2,008. The Olympics are  

00:34:42.160 --> 00:34:45.880

going to be a fantastic opportunity for 

China to showcase itself to the world.

00:34:45.880 --> 00:34:49.360

Anthony Spires: and it was, and they 

expected millions of people to come.  

00:34:49.360 --> 00:34:51.160

I don't know how many people 

came, but let's say a million,  

00:34:51.160 --> 00:34:55.320

maybe 2 million. I don't know. Maybe more come to 

China. They're expecting people to come to China,  

00:34:55.320 --> 00:35:00.080

and prior to the Olympics. They also announced 

that they would allow foreign journalists to  

00:35:00.080 --> 00:35:05.080

travel anywhere in China and interview people 

without constraint, right without restrictions,  

00:35:05.080 --> 00:35:09.640

which was very different from the norm at the 

time where foreign journalists had to apply  

00:35:09.640 --> 00:35:15.640

to go anywhere and get permission, and that 

sort of thing, and often followed, of course.

00:35:15.640 --> 00:35:18.440

Anthony Spires: So the idea was there'd be 

lots of foreigners running around China.  

00:35:18.440 --> 00:35:21.760

We don't want to see, we don't want them to 

just see the bad things about China. We don't  

00:35:21.760 --> 00:35:26.360

want them to see all the bad things if we can 

avoid that right. So you shut down these kinds  

00:35:26.360 --> 00:35:33.024

of organizations and these kinds of magazines in 

a way, as to, you know, protect the image right

00:35:33.024 --> 00:35:34.000

Anthony Spires: understandable from the standpoint  

00:35:34.000 --> 00:35:37.840

of people in Beijing. But that 

is the impact on civil society

00:35:37.840 --> 00:35:40.240

Anthony Spires: leading up to Hong Kong's occupy  

00:35:40.240 --> 00:35:44.320

central movement and the 

umbrella movement in 2014.

00:35:44.320 --> 00:35:49.840

Anthony Spires: A few other things. The 

term civil society was banned in Media,  

00:35:49.840 --> 00:35:53.480

and now it's banned in academia as 

well. Essentially, from what all  

00:35:53.480 --> 00:35:58.560

my Chinese colleagues tell me there was a 

nationwide investigation of foreign Ngos,  

00:35:58.560 --> 00:36:04.240

including the groups that I mentioned earlier 

in June and July of 2014 so occupy Central  

00:36:04.240 --> 00:36:11.160

and the umbrella movement started later 

that late that summer, early in the fall.

00:36:11.160 --> 00:36:12.440

Anthony Spires: And

00:36:12.440 --> 00:36:17.040

Anthony Spires: There was introduction 

of a new Ingo law that required formal  

00:36:17.040 --> 00:36:23.320

registration which came a bit later. But these 

are all things that happened in the lead up to  

00:36:23.320 --> 00:36:30.560

that or right after 2014. So in 2015, a number 

of lawyer activists were detained and arrested.

00:36:30.560 --> 00:36:34.000

Anthony Spires: And there's other things 

that we could talk about that happened  

00:36:34.000 --> 00:36:38.320

before that. And since then, of course, 

but I think that the overall picture  

00:36:38.320 --> 00:36:41.960

is that it's become much more difficult 

for grassroots groups to work in China,  

00:36:41.960 --> 00:36:46.120

and I would argue a lot more difficult 

for foreign Ngos to work in China as well.

00:36:46.120 --> 00:36:51.840

Anthony Spires: so this is just a great photo 

that I grabbed online before it was taken off,  

00:36:51.840 --> 00:36:57.840

published by a local city government, 

showing some of its officials getting  

00:36:57.840 --> 00:37:03.040

ready to go out and do an investigation 

of civil society groups and asking them  

00:37:03.040 --> 00:37:06.600

about all of their contacts with foreigners, 

all their contacts with international Ngos,  

00:37:06.600 --> 00:37:10.600

with foreign foundations, whether they got 

any money, what kind of programs they'd run,  

00:37:10.600 --> 00:37:15.904

etc, etc. So leading up to occupy 

Central in 2014. I think every

00:37:15.904 --> 00:37:19.640

Anthony Spires: grassroots Ngo that I knew in 

China at the time when I when I thought to ask  

00:37:19.640 --> 00:37:25.520

them. They all said they'd been visited by some 

people like these, and maybe visited by 3 or 4  

00:37:25.520 --> 00:37:29.640

different agencies asking the same kinds of 

questions. You know. What are your contacts  

00:37:29.640 --> 00:37:32.920

with foreigners? What have you been doing with 

them? Show us your bank accounts. Some groups  

00:37:32.920 --> 00:37:40.480

had their bank accounts frozen. It was, you 

know, a real signal that the State was worried.

00:37:40.480 --> 00:37:43.840

Anthony Spires: About Ingos. And why 

is this relevant to Hong Kong? Well,  

00:37:43.840 --> 00:37:48.360

because the fear at the time, and perhaps 

still, the fear of the time was that Hong  

00:37:48.360 --> 00:37:52.040

Kong activism in Hong Kong would spill 

over into mainland China that protests  

00:37:52.040 --> 00:37:56.304

in Hong Kong would spill over into 

mainland China, that Hong Kong based

00:37:56.304 --> 00:38:02.160

Anthony Spires: international Ngos that were 

doing work in China, would bring problems  

00:38:02.160 --> 00:38:08.080

to mainland China. Right? So if we look at 

that border as a as an international border?

00:38:08.080 --> 00:38:14.160

Anthony Spires: And so what we ended up 

with as a result of all that in 2017,  

00:38:14.720 --> 00:38:23.200

this 2016 and 2017, there was an ingo law 

that was passed. And this is some work  

00:38:23.200 --> 00:38:26.920

that I did on the Ingo law. I can talk more 

about that. But essentially I went around,  

00:38:26.920 --> 00:38:31.520

talked to lots of different people when the Ingo 

law was 1st proposed doing interviews, doing focus  

00:38:31.520 --> 00:38:37.704

groups, trying to talk to as many people as I 

could, and doing an online survey as well about

00:38:37.704 --> 00:38:41.160

Anthony Spires: what the ingo 

law as it was drafted would mean.

00:38:41.160 --> 00:38:45.760

Anthony Spires: And then afterwards, you 

know, continue to do this so for Ingos,  

00:38:46.840 --> 00:38:50.560

how do they survive prior to the Ingo law? 

It's something I want to briefly touch on,  

00:38:50.560 --> 00:38:56.520

and I will say it's not so dissimilar in the ways 

that many grassroots Ngos survived, although the  

00:38:56.520 --> 00:39:03.360

political situation is not terribly friendly, or 

there's always risk involved. Many Ngos learned  

00:39:03.360 --> 00:39:09.040

that they need to develop trust relationship with 

relationships with local government officials.

00:39:09.040 --> 00:39:13.600

Anthony Spires: that they could work 

collaboratively with some central  

00:39:13.600 --> 00:39:18.920

government ministries, some provincial government 

or local government ministries as well. Of course  

00:39:18.920 --> 00:39:23.760

they brought money, as Zhao Liqing said, 

and they brought money resources skills.  

00:39:24.520 --> 00:39:30.160

They worked with Gongos. Some of them worked 

the grassroots Ngos and many of them avoided  

00:39:30.160 --> 00:39:36.280

explicitly criticizing China's human rights 

practices and its efforts towards democracy.

00:39:36.280 --> 00:39:41.144

Anthony Spires: So prior to the 

law, the Ministry of Public Security

00:39:41.144 --> 00:39:44.920

Anthony Spires: estimated there were about 

7,000 Ingos active in China. I never have  

00:39:44.920 --> 00:39:49.160

seen that many Ingos active in China. 

I'm not sure where they got the number,  

00:39:49.880 --> 00:39:56.544

but that's the estimate that was floated by 

that branch of the government at the time.

00:39:56.544 --> 00:40:02.680

Anthony Spires: And so the Ingo law itself. What 

the upshot of it was that it required a lot more  

00:40:02.680 --> 00:40:09.400

regulation. It requires still to the day a lot 

more regulation and control of international Ngos,  

00:40:09.400 --> 00:40:13.840

and what they're doing in China. There 

you have to have a supervisor agency to  

00:40:13.840 --> 00:40:17.200

establish a representative office 

just like grassroots Ngos used to,  

00:40:17.200 --> 00:40:19.920

and still do have to do for the most part.

00:40:19.920 --> 00:40:21.000

Anthony Spires: It does allow,  

00:40:21.000 --> 00:40:25.760

pre approved one off activities without 

registering in an office which some

00:40:25.760 --> 00:40:29.200

Anthony Spires: some ingo's have 

taken that option. Since then.

00:40:29.200 --> 00:40:33.840

Anthony Spires: importantly, the INGO Law covers 

Hong Kong, Taiwan, and Macau. Taiwan's not such  

00:40:33.840 --> 00:40:39.120

a concern. Macau is not a huge concern, but 

the biggest concern, I think politically,  

00:40:39.120 --> 00:40:46.320

has always been Hong Kong, because the proximity, 

the easy access to Guangdong and the flow of  

00:40:46.320 --> 00:40:53.280

people and information and money across the 

border has meant that many international Ngos  

00:40:53.280 --> 00:40:58.584

have based themselves in Hong Kong for a very 

long time and then do work in mainland China.

00:40:58.584 --> 00:41:03.680

Anthony Spires: And so the law is not called 

the the Foreign Ngo law. In Chinese it's  

00:41:03.680 --> 00:41:09.240

referred to as the Jingwai Ngo law, Jingwai 

means outside the borders of mainland China,  

00:41:09.240 --> 00:41:13.240

so that way it allows them to 

include Hong Kong, Taiwan, and Macau

00:41:13.240 --> 00:41:16.480

Anthony Spires: and as a signal,  

00:41:16.480 --> 00:41:21.264

it puts the Ingo's under the supervision 

of the Ministry of Public Security.

00:41:21.264 --> 00:41:26.040

Anthony Spires: and I think Mark Seidel, who 

gave a talk in the same lecture series at Ucla  

00:41:26.040 --> 00:41:33.160

a couple of years ago, has written an article 

where he talks about the securitization of  

00:41:33.160 --> 00:41:37.680

Ingo's and civil society in China, and 

pointing to the way the law does this.

00:41:37.680 --> 00:41:43.280

Anthony Spires: I generally agree with 

this assessment in that regard. The law  

00:41:43.280 --> 00:41:47.440

prohibits religious and political activities, 

it specifies punishment. If you break the law,  

00:41:47.440 --> 00:41:50.320

this is what's going to happen to 

you, and I will say the earliest  

00:41:50.320 --> 00:41:56.184

drafts of the law were very punitive. 

The earliest draft of the law that I saw

00:41:56.184 --> 00:41:59.680

Anthony Spires: I want to say, like 80% of it 

don't quote me on this, but roughly, you know,  

00:41:59.680 --> 00:42:03.640

a huge chunk of it, anyway, was about 

how you'll be punished if you break the  

00:42:03.640 --> 00:42:08.920

law. It wasn't actually establishing 

any kind of supportive mechanisms,  

00:42:08.920 --> 00:42:15.120

at least in the reading that I had of, and many 

other people had of it. It was quite a severe law

00:42:15.120 --> 00:42:21.760

Anthony Spires: by 2023. This is the last stats I 

have here only less than 700 Ngos had registered  

00:42:21.760 --> 00:42:27.480

offices, and this is again compared to the 

7,000 Ingo's that the Ministry of Public  

00:42:27.480 --> 00:42:33.400

Security had estimated were operating in 

China. So if the goal of the law was to  

00:42:33.400 --> 00:42:39.440

restrict the activities of international Ngos in 

China. I think it's been extremely successful.

00:42:39.440 --> 00:42:41.840

Anthony Spires: Okay, just 

if you look at these numbers.

00:42:41.840 --> 00:42:45.720

Anthony Spires: I've talked 

with a lot of foundation folks,  

00:42:45.720 --> 00:42:49.840

a lot of international Ngo folks 

in the past couple of years

00:42:49.840 --> 00:42:53.440

Anthony Spires: who are still trying to work 

in China, and it is very difficult for them  

00:42:53.440 --> 00:42:58.960

much more difficult than it was 5 or 10 years 

ago. And there's a lot of frustration yeah,  

00:42:58.960 --> 00:43:04.280

in the field as well, and a lot of doubt as to 

whether they should stay or whether they can stay.

00:43:04.280 --> 00:43:11.480

Anthony Spires: And I will say to shift gears 

and talk about a different aspect of global  

00:43:11.480 --> 00:43:16.240

civil society in China. I think the story is 

not simply about as I've really focused today  

00:43:16.240 --> 00:43:20.160

on the impacts on China, what's happening 

within China itself and some of China's  

00:43:20.160 --> 00:43:23.760

responses to that. The Government's 

responses, at least. But I think a big  

00:43:23.760 --> 00:43:30.224

part of the story which is only unfolding 

right now is what the future holds. And I.

00:43:30.224 --> 00:43:34.120

Anthony Spires: There's many pieces 

of this one thing I would point to  

00:43:34.120 --> 00:43:38.080

that. I'm interested in myself, and some 

colleagues of mine are as well. Of course,  

00:43:38.080 --> 00:43:43.280

the 1 million plus PRC students that 

are studying overseas every year now,  

00:43:43.280 --> 00:43:47.160

and the kind of activism that some 

of them are getting engaged in.

00:43:47.160 --> 00:43:49.880

Anthony Spires: it's not easily controlled.  

00:43:49.880 --> 00:43:54.160

Of course this diaspora activism is not 

something the State can easily control,  

00:43:54.160 --> 00:43:59.280

but it is subject to a lot of transnational 

repression and surveillance. These are some  

00:43:59.280 --> 00:44:07.240

flyers that appeared at my university here in 

Melbourne almost overnight a few years ago.

00:44:07.240 --> 00:44:11.200

Anthony Spires: after the Sitong Bridge incident,  

00:44:11.200 --> 00:44:16.880

where someone climbed on the bridge and 

held out a banner, calling for Xi. Jinping  

00:44:16.880 --> 00:44:21.944

to step down and and calling for the end 

to covid test and voting for dictatorship.

00:44:21.944 --> 00:44:25.920

Anthony Spires: claiming, you know, we want to 

be citizens, not slaves. This sort of stuff.

00:44:25.920 --> 00:44:32.960

Anthony Spires: And here are some others, 

you know, quoting the the that person on  

00:44:32.960 --> 00:44:37.080

the bridge. And there's a photograph of 

the banner that was up there at the time.

00:44:37.080 --> 00:44:42.320

Anthony Spires: This is a bridge in Beijing, 

and for those of you who were who were inside  

00:44:42.320 --> 00:44:45.640

mainland China at the time. Maybe you 

heard or didn't hear about this. If you  

00:44:45.640 --> 00:44:48.480

were outside of China at the time, you 

probably did hear about it if you were  

00:44:48.480 --> 00:44:54.664

paying attention to the international 

media and even to the Chinese kind of

00:44:54.664 --> 00:45:00.360

Anthony Spires: social media sphere. At the 

time this was quite visible. These are only  

00:45:00.360 --> 00:45:03.320

a few examples of the kinds of things 

that people are doing. And this is,  

00:45:03.320 --> 00:45:10.544

you know, the more radical end. Of course, right? 

There's also a lot of activism on in other areas

00:45:10.544 --> 00:45:13.040

Anthony Spires: that Chinese students have 

gotten involved in and Chinese young people  

00:45:13.040 --> 00:45:16.800

who've left China and as well as other 

people who've left China in recent years,  

00:45:16.800 --> 00:45:23.400

migrants to Australia, to the Uk, to the Us. 

To Canada, to other parts of Europe that have  

00:45:23.400 --> 00:45:27.160

somehow found themselves interested 

in different kinds of social issues.

00:45:27.160 --> 00:45:31.720

Anthony Spires: And are wondering 

what they can do about those issues.

00:45:31.720 --> 00:45:36.720

Anthony Spires: At the same time, within 

China. Since Xi Jinping came to power.

00:45:36.720 --> 00:45:40.480

Anthony Spires: part of the bri. 

The Belt Road initiative is not  

00:45:40.480 --> 00:45:44.960

just only going out economically, 

but also going out in terms of aid,  

00:45:44.960 --> 00:45:51.280

foreign aid and development assistance to 

other countries. Building goodwill for China.

00:45:51.280 --> 00:45:55.440

Anthony Spires: The Government has passed in 

the in less than 10 years. They passed about  

00:45:55.440 --> 00:46:02.424

12 a dozen national level different kinds 

of policies, to coordinate and facilitate

00:46:02.424 --> 00:46:05.000

Anthony Spires: Chinese foreign 

aid to go overseas. And this was  

00:46:05.000 --> 00:46:08.000

done with the Taxation Administration 

with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs,  

00:46:08.000 --> 00:46:10.880

the Ministry of Commerce, the 

Ministry of Civil Affairs.

00:46:10.880 --> 00:46:15.320

Anthony Spires: all the the important 

key Government agencies that need to  

00:46:15.320 --> 00:46:18.440

coordinate to work together 

to make sure that Chinese

00:46:18.440 --> 00:46:23.400

Anthony Spires: aid can go overseas 

and the Chinese donation. So now it's  

00:46:23.400 --> 00:46:27.080

legally possible to donate to an 

organization in China as a Chinese  

00:46:27.080 --> 00:46:32.440

person and expect that that money will go 

to help someone in Africa or to work on an  

00:46:32.440 --> 00:46:39.360

environmental project in Southeast Asia, 

or that will go to places of need right?  

00:46:39.360 --> 00:46:46.360

And you that did. That was not the legally the 

legal structures, for it weren't very developed

00:46:46.360 --> 00:46:50.000

Anthony Spires: 15 years ago before Xi 

Jinping became to office. But over the  

00:46:50.000 --> 00:46:53.080

last 10 years or so it's gotten 

a lot more complex and a lot more  

00:46:53.080 --> 00:46:56.960

sophisticated. And it's possible. Now 

there's a lot of funds have been set up  

00:46:56.960 --> 00:47:03.440

to support going out. So there's a South South 

Fund. There's a couple of other other agencies  

00:47:03.440 --> 00:47:09.000

that have been established by the Government to 

facilitate again the going out of Chinese Ngos

00:47:09.000 --> 00:47:12.880

Anthony Spires: and it provides political 

legitimacy for grassroots, groups who are looking  

00:47:12.880 --> 00:47:17.320

to expand abroad. Some groups have been working 

overseas. Already, even in the absence of these  

00:47:17.320 --> 00:47:22.104

kinds of things, some, some Chinese groups have 

been able to do this and want to, and have been.

00:47:22.104 --> 00:47:25.560

Anthony Spires: I think, making their 

contributions overseas. But who will  

00:47:25.560 --> 00:47:30.640

benefit the most from, I think, these kinds of 

policies? It's not quite clear grassroots groups,  

00:47:30.640 --> 00:47:35.360

I would say probably less so. But I think a lot 

of the money that's going to be collected and  

00:47:35.360 --> 00:47:40.840

that can flow now will go through. Gongos will 

go through government organized Ngos, you know.

00:47:40.840 --> 00:47:45.720

Anthony Spires: waving the Chinese 

flag and supporting policy goals  

00:47:45.720 --> 00:47:51.800

of the State. But perhaps also, you know, 

learning about conditions in other places,  

00:47:51.800 --> 00:47:57.200

and and bringing in what they learn 

from interactions with international  

00:47:57.200 --> 00:48:01.280

Ngos that work in other areas of the world 

as well. There's just a few examples here.

00:48:01.280 --> 00:48:04.840

Anthony Spires: I won't go into 

too much detail given the time.  

00:48:04.840 --> 00:48:06.960

But there's a group called 

the Peaceland Foundation,  

00:48:06.960 --> 00:48:12.360

which I think is interesting to look at people 

of Asia for climate solutions which is founded  

00:48:12.360 --> 00:48:18.344

and co-founded by Chinese people who left 

mainland China and went to the Philippines.

00:48:18.344 --> 00:48:20.160

Anthony Spires: And now they work. 

They're based in the Philippines,  

00:48:20.160 --> 00:48:24.200

and they do work in the region here, close 

to where I am. The Australian New Zealand  

00:48:24.200 --> 00:48:30.600

Rainbow Association advocates for queer 

rights and supports the queer Chinese  

00:48:30.600 --> 00:48:35.640

speaking community in Australia, which is 

very large. Again, remembering that we have  

00:48:35.640 --> 00:48:39.440

literally hundreds of thousands of Chinese 

students studying in Australia every year,  

00:48:39.440 --> 00:48:46.480

and some of them are queer groups like 

Antra are working to basically help them

00:48:46.480 --> 00:48:50.000

Anthony Spires: understand what it means to be 

queer living in Australia. So there's all kinds  

00:48:50.000 --> 00:48:55.080

of different ways in which activism is taking 

place outside the borders of mainland China,  

00:48:55.080 --> 00:49:01.640

and which that involves the State in some cases, 

and in some cases doesn't. It involves the people  

00:49:01.640 --> 00:49:07.080

themselves. All these things are happening. 

I think they all deserve our attention.

00:49:07.080 --> 00:49:10.480

Anthony Spires: And I would say 

that the the last thing that I

00:49:10.480 --> 00:49:17.280

Anthony Spires: I think it's unfolding at 

the moment in the Us. With Trump's new,  

00:49:17.280 --> 00:49:23.360

his administration's new Administration's 

policies, putting a pause on all foreign aid,  

00:49:23.360 --> 00:49:26.720

pulling the drug out from under Usaid 

and a number of other organizations  

00:49:27.280 --> 00:49:33.920

that have supported human rights. 

Democratization groups, overseas

00:49:33.920 --> 00:49:36.840

Anthony Spires: as well as many, 

you know, medical care, education,  

00:49:36.840 --> 00:49:40.880

other kinds of things overseas. I think it 

really does offer an opportunity for Chinese  

00:49:40.880 --> 00:49:48.640

organizations to step in. That's not necessarily 

a bad thing, because people in need are in need.

00:49:48.640 --> 00:49:50.760

Anthony Spires: But I think that you know

00:49:50.760 --> 00:49:56.640

Anthony Spires: where the Chinese moneys will go. 

Assuming that does start happening really soon  

00:49:57.760 --> 00:50:00.040

is kind of predictable. I think we could see it  

00:50:00.040 --> 00:50:05.659

going to basic education. We can see 

it going to healthcare in some cases

00:50:05.659 --> 00:50:07.840

Anthony Spires: that we should not expect 

that's going to go to supporting human  

00:50:07.840 --> 00:50:13.760

rights and democracy movements overseas. 

Like much of us money has done in the past  

00:50:13.760 --> 00:50:19.240

several decades. So that's a new thing to pay 

attention to, and I will stop there and say,  

00:50:19.240 --> 00:50:22.640

Thank you for your time. I invite any 

and all questions and comments. Happy  

00:50:22.640 --> 00:50:26.640

to have a conversation today or later 

on. If you need to do it that way.

00:50:26.640 --> 00:50:30.644

Anthony Spires: I'll stop sharing here as well.

00:50:30.644 --> 00:50:33.320

Jeannie Chen - Asia Pacific Center: 

Thank you so much. Dr. Spires, yeah,  

00:50:33.320 --> 00:50:38.164

a lot of food for thought, and and 

thank you for sharing your insights.

00:50:38.164 --> 00:50:41.400

Jeannie Chen - Asia Pacific Center: And as you 

were speaking. There's a lot of questions coming  

00:50:41.400 --> 00:50:49.320

in, so we'll cover them as many as we can. 

We have. One just came in. The 1st one is,  

00:50:49.320 --> 00:50:53.920

why are foreign charities only from the Us. Or Uk  

00:50:53.920 --> 00:51:00.704

instead of European countries or East 

Asian countries? For example, Japan.

00:51:00.704 --> 00:51:04.160

Anthony Spires: Yeah. So that's a really 

good question. Before I started launching  

00:51:04.160 --> 00:51:08.920

into sort of my second wave of research 

on on international Ngos in China actually  

00:51:08.920 --> 00:51:13.200

tried to do a desktop study to find out where 

people are working, where they're coming from,  

00:51:13.200 --> 00:51:21.040

and the top 3 bases for international Ngos 

working in China were the Us. The Uk and Hong Kong

00:51:21.040 --> 00:51:25.920

Anthony Spires: other European countries are 

active for sure. Some Japanese funds are also  

00:51:25.920 --> 00:51:30.280

have also been active in China, for sure. 

So they're there. But in terms of numbers,  

00:51:30.280 --> 00:51:34.584

I think they've always been smaller. Yeah.

00:51:34.584 --> 00:51:37.520

Anthony Spires: and also sorry to go 

back to the philanthropy aspect of this  

00:51:37.520 --> 00:51:44.760

as well. The Us. Has a much greater culture 

of philanthropy than many other countries do,  

00:51:44.760 --> 00:51:48.600

so there's a lot of private wealth 

in private foundations in the Us. If  

00:51:48.600 --> 00:51:54.160

money is coming from many European countries, 

typically it comes through kind of government,  

00:51:54.160 --> 00:51:58.640

government organized Ngos within within our 

government foundations some private foundations,  

00:51:58.640 --> 00:52:04.604

some corporate foundations. But in the Us. A 

lot of it's going to be private philanthropy.

00:52:04.604 --> 00:52:09.400

Jeannie Chen - Asia Pacific Center: Wonderful. 

Thank you. Yeah, we have a second question that  

00:52:09.400 --> 00:52:16.200

came in. So is there any evidence to show 

that the umbrella movement in Hong Kong is  

00:52:16.200 --> 00:52:23.904

connected with national investigation on 

Ingos, and are there any other reasons.

00:52:23.904 --> 00:52:29.120

Anthony Spires: Yeah. So the investigation 

at the time in 2014. The only evidence I  

00:52:29.120 --> 00:52:33.080

can give you is that people told 

me it was. Government people,  

00:52:33.080 --> 00:52:37.824

government officials in China, 

academics in China who were involved in

00:52:37.824 --> 00:52:41.320

Anthony Spires: in launching that investigation. 

They all said this, yes, this is what's happening.  

00:52:41.320 --> 00:52:45.640

And the civil society groups that had their doors 

knocked on and were asked about their connections  

00:52:45.640 --> 00:52:50.720

to international Ngos as well as international 

Ngos that I spoke with at the time everybody  

00:52:50.720 --> 00:52:54.360

was saying the same thing that this is because 

of what's happening. What's going to happen in  

00:52:54.360 --> 00:52:58.624

Hong Kong. Because the Hong Kong protests 

were not spontaneous. They were planned

00:52:58.624 --> 00:53:03.120

Anthony Spires: by my colleagues and others 

in Hong Kong. They were actually so. They were  

00:53:03.120 --> 00:53:08.240

planning them publicly. So it was a known thing 

that was going to happen. And so the you know,  

00:53:08.240 --> 00:53:16.758

Beijing's response to this actually was quite 

rational, probably from a policy standpoint. Yeah.

00:53:16.758 --> 00:53:18.324

Jeannie Chen - Asia Pacific 

Center: Yeah, thank you.

00:53:18.324 --> 00:53:21.000

Jeannie Chen - Asia Pacific Center: 

Yeah. And then a related question,  

00:53:21.000 --> 00:53:26.760

it's a little bit long. So I'll also put 

it in the chat for you. But 3rd question  

00:53:26.760 --> 00:53:32.720

is under the greater Bay Area Development scheme. 

On the one hand, the Government encouraged more  

00:53:32.720 --> 00:53:38.684

frequent communications or collaborations 

between mainland China and Hong Kong and Macau

00:53:38.684 --> 00:53:40.320

Jeannie Chen - Asia Pacific 

Center: by promulgating relevant  

00:53:40.320 --> 00:53:44.640

policies and organizing different 

activities. On the other hand,  

00:53:44.640 --> 00:53:51.084

the Government still relies on strict 

regulation or policies to manage Ingos.

00:53:51.084 --> 00:53:52.240

Jeannie Chen - Asia Pacific 

Center: how do you think of  

00:53:52.240 --> 00:53:56.440

this? And how could we balance the situation.

00:53:57.840 --> 00:54:00.400

Anthony Spires: Yeah, I I think.

00:54:00.400 --> 00:54:06.240

Anthony Spires: I think there's 2 aspects of 

this, right? So there's the political aspect which  

00:54:06.240 --> 00:54:11.520

I mentioned earlier about the party's fears of 

grassroots Ngos, and suspicions of foreign Ngos,  

00:54:12.720 --> 00:54:16.560

the political element within the party leadership 

itself, or within certain elements of the party.  

00:54:16.560 --> 00:54:19.720

And then there's the practical parts of it, 

you know. What do we need? Why do we need  

00:54:19.720 --> 00:54:24.560

foreigners to bring in their money? Why do we need 

foreigners to come in and do programs in China.

00:54:25.120 --> 00:54:32.120

Anthony Spires: Then there's a Pr 

element to this right. Xi. Jinping  

00:54:32.120 --> 00:54:36.640

went to. When the INGO law was being 

debated, Xi. Jinping visited the Us.  

00:54:36.640 --> 00:54:40.600

He went to Seattle and was hosted by the 

National Committee on Us. China Relations,  

00:54:40.600 --> 00:54:45.480

of which I'm a member at a dinner, and at 

that dinner, he said. We welcome foreign  

00:54:45.480 --> 00:54:50.584

Ngos to come into China. We welcome everybody 

to come in as long as they abide by the laws.

00:54:50.584 --> 00:54:52.920

Anthony Spires: Right? So this is the question,  

00:54:52.920 --> 00:54:56.440

what does it mean to abide by the 

laws, and what are you allowed to do  

00:54:56.440 --> 00:55:02.080

when you come in and you register? How do you 

operate within the Chinese legal structure?

00:55:02.080 --> 00:55:09.520

Anthony Spires: I think you know Mark Seidel 

again a couple of years ago. Here I watched  

00:55:09.520 --> 00:55:14.480

his recording before I joined today. And he 

was saying that you know China welcomes all  

00:55:14.480 --> 00:55:17.440

these groups. They want them to stay. 

They don't want them to leave. I'm not  

00:55:17.440 --> 00:55:21.280

quite sure that I would say the same thing 

may be true today. I think the message that  

00:55:21.280 --> 00:55:25.840

many Ngos are getting is that we're making 

it very difficult for you to work here,  

00:55:25.840 --> 00:55:30.224

and you make of that what you want 

to. Right? You're welcome to stay.

00:55:30.224 --> 00:55:31.760

Anthony Spires: But staying doesn't mean it's  

00:55:31.760 --> 00:55:36.064

going to be easy. So I think there's 

there's probably a debate happening.

00:55:36.064 --> 00:55:38.840

Anthony Spires: or some different 

points of view in in Beijing about  

00:55:38.840 --> 00:55:42.840

whether having these groups in China is 

is a good thing or a bad thing. Still,  

00:55:42.840 --> 00:55:47.960

that debate continues, although largely it's 

shifted towards. It's probably a bad thing.

00:55:47.960 --> 00:55:51.840

Anthony Spires: So yes, cooperation 

is important. Cooperation is nice, but

00:55:51.840 --> 00:55:56.360

Anthony Spires: only on our terms. Yeah, 

which is understandable. Again, you know,  

00:55:56.360 --> 00:56:01.164

many countries have similar kinds of approaches.

00:56:01.164 --> 00:56:01.204

Jeannie Chen - Asia Pacific Center: Hmm.

00:56:01.204 --> 00:56:04.880

Jeannie Chen - Asia Pacific Center: yeah. 

And another interesting question came in,  

00:56:04.880 --> 00:56:10.600

and I also put it in the chat for you, so 

you can have it in front of you. It says,  

00:56:10.600 --> 00:56:16.520

how have you done any research on the role of 

Chinese Ngos Internationally, I've heard of  

00:56:16.520 --> 00:56:24.804

some being accused of being shills for the Chinese 

government, and thus not quote unquote real Ngos

00:56:24.804 --> 00:56:31.480

Jeannie Chen - Asia Pacific Center: in the 

UN context. So to continue. This person has  

00:56:31.480 --> 00:56:37.720

also heard of Chinese green Ngos, getting pressure 

from the Chinese State to serve as agents of quote  

00:56:37.720 --> 00:56:44.744

unquote civil diplomacy, or Minjian waijiao, and 

welcome to share what you've seen in these areas.

00:56:44.744 --> 00:56:49.800

Anthony Spires: Yeah. Yeah. So I would say, 

I've heard the same sorts of things that  

00:56:50.480 --> 00:56:54.800

there's pressure on grassroots. Ngos, going 

out. Wave the Chinese flag and let people  

00:56:54.800 --> 00:57:00.984

know they're coming with the goodwill of China, 

and that's not necessarily what they want to do.

00:57:00.984 --> 00:57:05.200

Anthony Spires: But some of them will. My 

research in this is very undeveloped. I'd  

00:57:05.200 --> 00:57:09.760

say it's very anecdotal at the moment, so 

I can't speak to everybody's experiences.  

00:57:09.760 --> 00:57:14.400

But I will say that people I've talked 

with, who've worked previously at Gongos,  

00:57:14.400 --> 00:57:18.384

who have gone. Chinese people who've 

gone with government, ordered Ngos

00:57:18.384 --> 00:57:22.520

Anthony Spires: to Africa or to other 

places, often left those experiences  

00:57:22.520 --> 00:57:26.640

quite critical of what they had done 

and what they had seen, and wondering  

00:57:26.640 --> 00:57:29.760

kind of what they were doing. 

Having said that, I think

00:57:29.760 --> 00:57:35.280

Anthony Spires: Chinese Gongos overseas can do a 

lot of good, and maybe are doing a lot of good,  

00:57:35.280 --> 00:57:39.464

so I don't want to. I don't want to be too 

namby Pammy. On this. I think, you know, there's

00:57:39.464 --> 00:57:42.960

Anthony Spires: both things are possible. It's 

very possible that they can do great work. It's  

00:57:42.960 --> 00:57:48.760

also very possible that any grassroots Ngos, are 

doing this kind of they want to engage in. This  

00:57:48.760 --> 00:57:52.560

kind of work will come under a lot of pressure 

to toe a particular political line. But this  

00:57:52.560 --> 00:57:56.840

is an open area for research. I think it's really 

about the future. So going back to the prospects,  

00:57:56.840 --> 00:58:03.784

part of this top title that's up for all of you to 

go and explore, and I encourage people to get out.

00:58:03.784 --> 00:58:08.440

Anthony Spires: Go into the field, talk to 

people as much as you can. The pandemic made  

00:58:08.440 --> 00:58:11.360

it difficult to do that. I was hoping 

to do more of that several years ago,  

00:58:11.360 --> 00:58:15.280

and the pandemic put a stop 

to much of our travel plans.

00:58:15.280 --> 00:58:19.240

Anthony Spires: But I think that things 

are. Things are open again. And with again,  

00:58:19.240 --> 00:58:23.578

with this opportunity that that 

trump's new policies have introduced.

00:58:23.578 --> 00:58:28.400

Anthony Spires: Yeah, who knows? I think it's a 

good question. It's 1 of many questions to ask. If  

00:58:28.400 --> 00:58:35.804

you go into the field and you're interacting with 

grassroots Ngos, and and with gongors from China.

00:58:35.804 --> 00:58:40.440

Jeannie Chen - Asia Pacific Center: Yeah, I think 

we have time for one more question. So I'll go  

00:58:40.440 --> 00:58:46.760

ahead and put this in our chat. And I think this 

brings it back to focus. But the question asks,  

00:58:46.760 --> 00:58:51.520

when you did research in China, did you have 

a chance to talk to the ordinary people about  

00:58:51.520 --> 00:59:00.464

their views on Ingos. Do you know if there's a 

change in those views after the 2,017 Ingo law?

00:59:00.464 --> 00:59:03.640

Anthony Spires: Yeah, yeah, it's a good 

question. I don't know who ordinary people  

00:59:03.640 --> 00:59:09.880

are. I will say in China, I think there's too 

many of them. Of course I did. I mean I I would  

00:59:09.880 --> 00:59:14.960

chat to people about my work. You know, random 

people that I'd meet in different scenarios.

00:59:14.960 --> 00:59:22.760

Anthony Spires: and we talk about these sorts 

of things. Of course, I got a mixed picture from  

00:59:22.760 --> 00:59:27.440

those very, very anecdotal kind of conversations. 

Yeah, some people were very suspicious. Some  

00:59:27.440 --> 00:59:31.080

people thought it was a good thing that foreigners 

were helping China. They were very idealistic,  

00:59:31.080 --> 00:59:34.240

they thought, oh, this means the people of the 

world can all come together and be friends,  

00:59:34.240 --> 00:59:39.040

which is very lovely. But then other 

people were much more suspicious after  

00:59:39.040 --> 00:59:43.240

2017. I can't really speak to that again, 

because in part because of the pandemic

00:59:43.240 --> 00:59:48.320

Anthony Spires: cut off travel. In part, the 

situation has just changed in China a lot. But  

00:59:48.320 --> 00:59:52.400

but again, I think that actually is a great 

research topic for anybody who wants to do  

00:59:52.400 --> 00:59:58.200

a survey. A set of interviews, you know, find 

ordinary people. However, you define them, and

00:59:58.200 --> 01:00:01.000

Anthony Spires: and and pursue it 

because it does have implications  

01:00:01.000 --> 01:00:06.120

for the way people understand China's role 

in the world and the possibilities that are  

01:00:06.120 --> 01:00:12.244

out there for China and the outside world to 

interact. That's a really important question.

01:00:12.244 --> 01:00:15.440

Jeannie Chen - Asia Pacific Center: 

Great. Thank you so much. So we have like,  

01:00:15.440 --> 01:00:22.080

probably like 4 or 5 more questions pending. 

But of course, if you're willing, and some of  

01:00:22.080 --> 01:00:29.520

our audience members may reach out to you. Maybe 

follow up, or maybe engage in more discussion. So.

01:00:29.520 --> 01:00:31.004

Anthony Spires: Yeah, please, do, yeah.

01:00:31.004 --> 01:00:34.640

Jeannie Chen - Asia Pacific Center: Thank you 

so much. And so we've reached the end of our  

01:00:34.640 --> 01:00:42.920

presentation today. But we welcome everyone 

to follow the Asia Pacific Center. And also,  

01:00:42.920 --> 01:00:48.920

you know, engage with Dr. Spires work, and we 

really appreciate you for coming today. So.

01:00:48.920 --> 01:00:52.520

Anthony Spires: Thank you for the invitation. 

Thank you for the invitation. The opportunity.  

01:00:52.520 --> 01:00:55.920

I Gary, reach out. If you're interested, 

you want to talk about more. Be happy to.

01:00:55.920 --> 01:00:59.240

Jeannie Chen - Asia Pacific Center: Great. 

And thank you so much, Lena, for chairing  

01:00:59.240 --> 01:01:07.424

today's talk. So have a great morning evening 

afternoon, wherever you are. Thank you so much.

01:01:07.424 --> 01:01:09.960

Anthony Spires: Thank you 

all. Thank you, Lena, as well.