China's Quest for Foreign Technology: Beyond Espionage

Front Cover
William C. Hannas, Didi Kirsten Tatlow
Routledge, Sep 22, 2020 - Political Science - 372 pages

This book analyzes China’s foreign technology acquisition activity and how this has helped its rapid rise to superpower status.

Since 1949, China has operated a vast and unique system of foreign technology spotting and transfer aimed at accelerating civilian and military development, reducing the cost of basic research, and shoring up its power domestically and abroad—without running the political risks borne by liberal societies as a basis for their creative developments. While discounted in some circles as derivative and consigned to perpetual catch-up mode, China’s "hybrid" system of legal, illegal, and extralegal import of foreign technology, combined with its indigenous efforts, is, the authors believe, enormously effective and must be taken seriously. Accordingly, in this volume, 17 international specialists combine their scholarship to portray the system’s structure and functioning in heretofore unseen detail, using primary Chinese sources to demonstrate the perniciousness of the problem in a manner not likely to be controverted. The book concludes with a series of recommendations culled from the authors’ interactions with experts worldwide.

This book will be of much interest to students of Chinese politics, US foreign policy, intelligence studies, science and technology studies, and International Relations in general.

 

Contents

List of figures
Chinese technology transfer an introduction
Serve the motherland while working overseas
Chinas talent programs
Foreign technology transfer through commerce
The myth of the stateless global society
Targeting defense technologies
a technology transfer mosaic
Chinas artificial intelligence
The impact of Chinas policies
The Peoples Liberation Army and foreign technology
Foreign technology and the surveillance state
The United Front and technology transfer
Chinese students scholarship and US innovation
Economic espionage and trade secret theft cases in the
Mitigation efforts to date

Kirsten Tatlow Hinnerk FeldwischDrentrup and Ryan Fedasiuk
Japan and South Korea
Sinoforeign research collaboration
Conclusion
Copyright

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About the author (2020)

William C. Hannas is Professor and Lead Analyst at the Center for Security and Emerging Technology (CSET), Georgetown University, Washington, DC, USA. Prior to this he was a member of the Central Intelligence Agency’s leadership cadre and a three-time recipient of its McCone Award.

Didi Kirsten Tatlow is Senior Fellow at the German Council on Foreign Relations in Berlin, Germany, and Senior Non-Resident Fellow at Project Sinopsis in Prague, Czech Republic.