September 2025 China Seminar

Event Canceled: China Seminar – Thursday, September 11, 2025

We regret to inform you that the China Seminar scheduled for Thursday, September 11, has been canceled due to unforeseen circumstances. We apologize for any inconvenience and appreciate your understanding.

Chinese Migration and America’s Souther Border

featuring
Mengyu Dong
East-West Center 2025 Melvin Goo Fellowship Recipient

Speaker’s summary:
In recent years, a growing number of Chinese migrants have been undertaking the overland route known as zouxian (“the walk route”) to the United States. Drawing on fieldwork in Latin America and along the U.S.-Mexico border, this talk explores how Chinese migrants navigate the long and dangerous journey. It traces the influence of social media on contemporary migration, as well as the informal infrastructures that emerge when official pathways narrow. The talk also examines how U.S. policy reverberates southward, reshaping choices, risks and alliances far from the border. Finally, it considers how recent policies have shaped migration and border dynamics.

Speaker’s Bio:
Mengyu Dong is a California-based journalist and researcher who writes about borders and migration. She is a recipient of East-West Center’s 2025 Melvin MS Goo Writing Fellowship and has reported from Panama, Colombia, Ecuador, Mexico and U.S. border regions, documenting the journeys of migrants from China, Venezuela, Russia, Afghanistan, and beyond. Her work has appeared in various news outlets including the BBC, Initium Media, and others. She is currently working on a nonfiction book about the experiences of immigrants who arrived in the United States after the COVID-19 pandemic. Mengyu is a Knight-Hennessy Scholar at Stanford University.


The views expressed are those of the speaker and do not necessarily reflect East-West Center policies or positions.

The China Seminar was founded by Dr. Daniel W.Y. Kwok in 1977. Under his guidance, it became a signature program of the Friends of the East-West Center (FEWC) in 2009. The program provides an informal venue for China experts, such as scholars, diplomats, and journalists, to present talks on aspects of China that interest the community and members of the Friends. Topics include politics, economics, social issues, history, culture, food, arts, and many other subjects.

May 2025 China Seminar

China Seminar – Thursday, May 8, 2025

Elegant Ladies or Women Warriors?
Female Intellectuals in 19th and 20th Century China

eaturing
Dr. Shana J. Brown
Director of the University Honors Program and Associate Professor of History
University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa

Speaker’s summary:
What were the contributions of women intellectuals in 19th and 20th century China? This talk explores the ways that we can retell the story of Chinese intellectual life in the 19th and early 20th centuries by including the work of women intellectuals, including writers, artists, collectors, and teachers. This talk focuses on the work of several women of the period, including a collector of Buddhist icons, a folklore specialist, and a young archaeologist, to better understand how the experiences and perspectives of female scholars can enrich our understanding of modern China and its cultural and academic life.

Speaker’s Bio:
Shana J. Brown is Director of the University Honors Program and Associate Professor of History at the University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa. Dr. Brown is a historian of science and culture in Asia, particularly modern China. Her research and teaching bring the sciences and humanities in conversation, foregrounding the importance of Asian culture and society to world history.


The views expressed are those of the speaker and do not necessarily reflect East-West Center policies or positions. Affairs

The China Seminar was founded by Dr. Daniel W.Y. Kwok in 1977. Under his guidance, it became a signature program of the Friends of the East-West Center (FEWC) in 2009. The program provides an informal venue for China experts, such as scholars, diplomats, and journalists, to present talks on aspects of China that interest the community and members of the Friends. Topics include politics, economics, social issues, history, culture, food, arts, and many other subjects.

April 2025 China Seminar

China Seminar – Thursday, April 10, 2025

The Troublemaker: 
How Jimmy Lai Became a Billionaire, Hong Kong’s Greatest Dissident, and China’s Most Feared Critic

featuring
Mark L. Clifford
President
Committee for Freedom in Hong Kong Foundation

Speaker’s summary:
Jimmy Lai, one of Hong Kong’s most prominent political prisoners, rose from poverty to become a self-made billionaire and an advocate for Hong Kong’s democracy. After escaping China as a boy, he built a fashion empire before founding Apple Daily and Next magazine—media that fearlessly criticized the Chinese Communist Party. A British citizen, he chose to stay in Hong Kong and fight for freedom, joining mass demonstrations and engaging world leaders. In 2020, after Hong Kong’s national security law was imposed, he was arrested. Since then, he has spent over 1,500 days behind bars—most in solitary confinement as a political prisoner—and now faces a potential life sentence. Join us, as Mark Clifford discusses Lai’s extraordinary journey and his new book, “The Troublemaker”.

Speaker’s Bio:
Mark L. Clifford is president of the Committee for Freedom in Hong Kong Foundation, an NGO dedicated to democracy, human rights, and the rule of law for the people of Hong Kong. Previously, he was executive director of the Hong Kong–based Asia Business Council, and a board director at Next Digital, the Hong Kong media giant founded and majority-owned by Jimmy Lai. During his twenty-eight years in Hong Kong, he served as editor-in-chief of both English-language newspapers, the South China Morning Post and The Standard, of which he was also publisher. He holds a PhD in Hong Kong history from the University of Hong Kong. Clifford has won numerous journalism, academic, and book awards, and is the author of Today Hong Kong, Tomorrow the World: What China’s Crackdown Reveals About Its Plans to End Freedom Everywhere.


The views expressed are those of the speaker and do not necessarily reflect East-West Center policies or positions. Affairs

The China Seminar was founded by Dr. Daniel W.Y. Kwok in 1977. Under his guidance, it became a signature program of the Friends of the East-West Center (FEWC) in 2009. The program provides an informal venue for China experts, such as scholars, diplomats, and journalists, to present talks on aspects of China that interest the community and members of the Friends. Topics include politics, economics, social issues, history, culture, food, arts, and many other subjects.