Courtney J. Fung

MEDIA

 

Mentioned in:

  • 27 November 2023: BBC Chinese

    “"The concept of 'community of shared future' is China's global governance vision, and this is compared to what Western countries support. ‘Rules-based international order’ or ‘liberal international order’.””

  • 5 November 2023: Barron’s

    “"China won't want to dwell on criticisms of its economic coercion or hostage diplomacy," Courtney Fung, scholar in residence with the Asia Society Australia, told AFP.”

  • 3 November 2023: The New York Times

    ““China’s power projection in the region is raising eyebrows and challenging its own image as a responsible power.”

  • 31 March 2023: Financial Times

    ““China is signalling to states that China can guide foreign policy solutions,” said Courtney Fung, an associate fellow at the Lowy Institute.”

  • 23 March 2023: Foreign Policy

    ““You have to think twice about being made an example of for the position you take” on issues that are sensitive to China, like Xinjiang and human rights, she said. “While I think money matters, I don’t think money is the sole issue. China’s made it clear that it is invested in protecting its position and fighting back against those that are going to fight against it.” The ins and outs of UNESCO lists—and UNESCO operations more broadly—are esoteric, but they can be just as political as any other U.N. body. “UNESCO is one of those odd places where a bunch of cross-cutting issues that you think aren’t that sensitive can end up becoming sensitive, like this question of cultural recognition,” Fung said. “They’ve been pushing and working very hard to have recognition in that space.” China is very proud that it is among the countries with the most UNESCO-recognized sites, Fung added...” 

  • 19 December 2022: Neue Zürcher Zeitung

    “Chinas Einfluss in der Uno nimmt zu – doch wie weit reicht er wirklich?” [China’s influence in the UN is increasing – but how far does it really reach?] , citing Lowy Institute Analysis.

  • 15 November 2022: The New York Times

    “But Mr. Xi’s reluctance to take a clearer stance on Ukraine, or to wade into the complicated task of seeking to stop the war, also showed the limits China faces should it seek to displace the United States as a global power broker, Ms. Fung said. Mr. Xi used the global platform of the G20 to promote a so-called Global Security Initiative, a vague proposal begun earlier this year to offer China’s solutions to international conflict and threats. The idea appears to be at least partly driven by the Chinese government’s sensitivity to criticisms that it failed to stand by its declared reverence for sovereignty when Russia invaded Ukraine. So far, the proposal was “an upgrade in China saying ‘I don’t like what the Americans have done,’ but it’s not entirely clear to me what Beijing is offering,” Ms. Fung said. “It’s still unclear to me what better answers they can offer to difficult questions.””

  • 8 November 2022: The Wall Street Journal

    “These leaders traveling to see Xi are reminders of China’s geopolitical heft, centering Beijing in international politics and enabling China to advance agendas legitimizing Xi’s diplomatic initiatives,” said Courtney J. Fung, an associate professor at Macquarie University in Australia and a nonresident fellow of the Lowy Institute, a public-policy think tank.

  • 10 October 2022: The Economist, Special Report: The world divided, The world China wants
    ”China often talks of being the second-largest donor to UN funds. When looking at “assessed contributions”, akin to a basic fee for membership, China is second-largest in nominal terms. But as a percentage of GDP, China’s contributions are about half as generous as those of Britain, France and Russia, a forthcoming Lowy Institute paper finds. China makes other, selective donations through trust funds that give it sway over specific projects.”

  • 20 June 2022: The Wire China
    Courtney Fung on China’s Role in Crafting Global Governance in Cyberspace: "In this lightly edited interview, she discussed China’s concept of cyber sovereignty and its growing influence in multilateral organizations such as the United Nations."

  • 26 May 2022: Financial Times
    ”The initiative also seeks to counter the fallout from China’s support for Russia. “GSI is also a corrective for China’s Ukraine response, which has left states questioning China’s espoused commitment to multilateralism and international order,” said Courtney Fung, an associate professor at Macquarie University.”

  • 25 April 2022: Foreign Policy
    ”For Courtney Fung, an associate professor at Macquarie University in Australia who studies the role of China in international organizations, the U.S. pressure campaign is part of a test. “In pushing for the FAO [chief] to issue a public condemnation of the Russian invasion, the Biden administration is probing how China operates in multilateral institutions, another arena of strategic competition,” she said. “Do [Chinese] officials heading U.N. agencies adhere to China’s line of a Ukraine ‘situation’ or do they join the international community deploring the Ukraine war and the fall-out of the Russian invasion?” “China emphasizes technocratic, depoliticized global governance leadership,” she said. From the perspective of the Chinese government, she added, “the FAO successfully addressing the emerging food crisis is best done by Qu avoiding high politics and focusing on his institution’s mission of defeating hunger.””

  • 16 March 2022: The Guardian
    ”Dr Courtney J Fung, an associate professor at Macquarie University and associate fellow at Chatham House, says China wants recognition as a responsible major country, but is applying this selectively when it comes to the invasion of Ukraine. “China focuses on second order issues that result from the Russian invasion – like humanitarian aid, civilian protection, evacuation – and while these are of course important concerns, China is sidestepping efforts for it to mediate or resolve the crisis itself.””

  • 11 March 2022: Podcast for the SCMP China Geopolitics series
    Comments on China's response to Russia-Ukraine War at the United Nations (Link)

  • 11 March 2022: SCMP
    ”Courtney Fung, an associate professor at Macquarie University in Australia specialising in China and international security issues, described “the Chinese official language regarding political solutions for the Ukraine crisis is aspirational and vague, suggesting that China wants to be consulted as a responsible major country, but not responsible for resolving the crisis”.”

  • 3 March 2022: Bloomberg
    ”The overwhelming condemnation from 141 states in opposition to China’s strategic partner, Russia, is a clear signal to China that other states are watching how a leading state, like China, responds to blatant abuse of Ukrainian sovereignty,” said Courtney Fung, an associate professor at Macquarie University and an associate fellow at Chatham House. “Rhetoric over ‘Cold War mentality’ is one thing, but condoning invasion is another.”

  • 2 March 2022: Financial Times
    ”Courtney Fung of Macquarie University said: “China’s relationship with Russia, growing overseas interests and concern for its international reputation make it a key actor for Ukraine to approach for mediation.” Fung noted that Beijing had helped mediate international disputes involving North Korea, Afghanistan and Syria. But it did not offer to play such a role when Russia annexed the Crimea from Ukraine in 2014 or when it invaded Georgia in 2008.”

  • 20 January 2022: Financial Times
    “China’s peacekeeping experience informs their evolving approach to broader foreign security engagement,” said Courtney Fung, an associate professor at Macquarie University … “China maintains a positive public record for its peacekeeping activities. However, China’s recent combat troop deployment experiences in Mali and South Sudan, where Chinese troops were attacked and killed, reinforce China’s view that contested consent and militarised, domestic quagmires are dangerous conditions for interventions.”

  • 11 February 2021: Foreign Policy
    “It’ll take skillful U.S. diplomacy to simultaneously reach out for PRC support over global issues like COVID and climate, while pushing China on … human rights and democratic values in Xinjiang, Tibet, Hong Kong,” said Courtney Fung, an assistant professor at the University of Hong Kong.

  • 26 November 2020: South China Morning Post
    “The Trump administration’s rejection of multilateralism has left a leadership and financial vacuum for other states, like China, to fill at the United Nations,” said Courtney Fung, assistant professor of international relations at the University of Hong Kong and an associate fellow at Chatham House.

  • 25 September 2020: Quartz
    “[T]he PRC is using the WIPO bureaucratic procedures as an opportunity to enforce the One China principle within and beyond the WIPO environment,” said Courtney Fung, assistant professor of international relations at the University of Hong Kong and an associate fellow at London-based think tank Chatham House, referring to the People’s Republic of China, which was represented “China” at the UN and all its agencies since 1971. “This is part of a consistent PRC approach to restrict Taiwan’s international space by utilizing the rules and procedures of multilateral institutions.”

  • 14 August 2020: Foreign Policy
    For years, Chinese nationals have been underrepresented at the U.N. In 2017, China had just over 1,100 staff working in the U.N. system, ranking the country 24th among all member states, and only about one-fifth of the number of American staffers. But in 2016, Xi vowed to strengthen “China’s pool of international bureaucrats to support China’s participation in global governance,” Courtney Fung and Shing-hon Lam, scholars at the University of Hong Kong, told Foreign Policy by email.

  • 7 May 2020: Wall Street Journal
    “This is all very dangerous,” said Courtney Fung, an assistant professor at the University of Hong Kong and an associate fellow at the Chatham House think tank. “There’s this frame now of, China has captured the system, it’s beholden to China, therefore we shouldn’t participate in it,” she said. “But by the U.S. not being there, it creates an empty space for somebody else to fill.”

  • 11 April 2020: Taipei Times
    The UN council’s membership includes countries where human rights abuses are known to have occurred, and the US and other nations have left the council in protest. The US this week threatened to cancel funding to the WHO, citing Chinese influence, but, as University of Hong Kong researchers Courtney Fung (馮康雲) and Lam Shing-hon have said, China will simply fill the vacuum left by countries that leave.

  • 7 April 2020: PassBlue
    Courtney Fung is an assistant professor at the University of Hong Kong and an associate fellow at Chatham House, a global think tank. In an email, she wrote: “China is already criticised for being slow and lacking transparency in addressing its domestic outbreak. China gains little from reinforcing such criticisms while leading [the Security Council].”

  • 5 March 2020: Quartz
    “China pursues its foreign policy interests and values through the multilateral system, and does this in a number of ways,” said Courtney Fung, assistant professor of international relations at the University of Hong Kong and an associate fellow at London-based think tank Chatham House. “In terms of foreign policy interests, China is pushing various UN agencies to explicitly reference, voice support for, or partner with projects under the Belt and Road Initiative. In terms of values, China emphasises state sovereignty as a principle guiding international politics.”

  • 2 March 2019: Bloomberg Quint
    Beijing has invested heavily to become an effective peacekeeping state, putting up seven percent of the UN peacekeeping budget—more than Canada and Spain, according to Courtney Fung, a University of Hong Kong political scientist who specialies in Chinese foreign policy. The Chinese are engaged not only at a policy level, debating and designing resolutions, but also, increasingly, in on-the-ground operations, sending ‘enabler’ units to provide the backbone and infrastructure for missions as well as ‘tip of the spear’ front-line forces in such locales as Haiti, Sudan, Liberia, and Afghanistan. Nothing is better for India's—or the world’s—security than an engaged China, assuming the responsibilities of global leadership.

 

TALKS

 
  • 19 JUN 2019: Interview with Ms. Bonnie Glaser, CSIS ChinaPower Podcast Series 'China’s Evolving Role in the United Nations: A Conversation with Courtney Fung'

  • 6 June 2024:  UN Peace and Security Engagements in a Changing World Order, ETH Zurich

    Comments on Chinese Perspectives on Peace Operations

  • 14 May 2024: Protection of the Public Core of the Internet Conference, The Hague Program on International Cyber Security

    Chinese Perspectives on the protection of the public core of the internet norm

  • 25 April 2024: The Diversification of China’s International Development Instruments, India China Institute, The New School

    China’s Global Initiatives

  • 18 April 2024: China and the Challenges of Building International Peace and Security, Center for International Development and Conflict Management, University of Maryland

    China’s Global Initiatives

  • 3 - 6 April 2024: International Studies Association Annual Meeting

    Mapping Cyber-Sovereignties

  • 14 February 2024: China Capable Public Sector Series, New Zealand Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade/University of Wellington

    China’s Evolving Role at the United Nations

  • 7 and 8 November 2023: The Hague 2023 Conference on International Cyber Security, The Hague Program on International Cyber Security

    Mapping Cyber-Sovereignties

  • 12 - 14 July 2023: World Politics and United Nations Peace Missions/10th European Workshops in International Studies, EISA

  • 27 March 2023: Annual Cling Conference China Enters the Post-Reform Era, School of Foreign Service, Georgetown University

    Comments on China and Global Politics

  • 18 March 2023: International Studies Association Annual Meeting

    Creative Resistance: China's Use of Rhetorical Adaptation in

    Development of a Global Cyber Order

  • 17 March 2023: International Studies Association Annual Meeting

    UN Security Sector Governance Norms According to China

  • 16 March 2023: International Studies Association Annual Meeting

    Does Adaptive Peace offer an Alternative to Increasingly Contested

    but also Co-constituive Liberal and Authoritarian Approaches to

    Global Governance? (comments)

  • 28 February 2023: The China and the World Program, School of International & Public Affairs, Columbia University

    China's Contributions to the United Nations

  • 27 February 2023: China Conference, The China and the World Program, School of International & Public Affairs, Columbia University

    Comments on Global Governance

  • 13 February 2023: Asia Society Australia

    An Evening with Kevin Rudd (moderator)

  • 13 January 2023: The Permanent Mission of Australia to the United Nations

    China and the United Nations

  • 9 December 2022: International Crisis Group/European Commission

    Grappling with China’s Future Role in Conflicts (comments on global governance)

  • 24 and 25 November 2022: Power Shifts and International Organisations - China at the United Nations
    Sending talent to international organisations: a case study of China

  • 22 November 2022: China Forum, Australian Centre on China in the World, The Australian National University
    China as a 'Strategic Challenge' (comments on global governance)

  • 14 November 2022: Stimson Center

    Military Operations Other Than War in China’s Foreign Policy (comments on global governance)

  • 21 October 2022: National Foundation for Australia-China Relations
    China and Global Security

  • 20 October 2022: Asia Briefing Live (Asia Society/Bloomberg)
    China's Next Move (comments on global governance)

  • 13 October 2022: National Security College, The Australian National University
    China in the Multilateral System

  • 28 June 2022: Asia Society Australia
    Holding the Party Line: Xi Jinping and the Limits of Power (comments on global governance)

  • 25 June 2022: Academic Council on the UN System Annual Meeting, Geneva
    Book roundtable on New Paths and Policies towards Conflict Prevention: Chinese and Swiss Perspectives

  • 14 June 2022: Australian War College/National Security College, ANU
    China and the United Nations: A New Emerging Order?

  • 7 June 2022: Australian Institute of International Affairs NSW
    China and the United Nations: A New Emerging Order?

  • 1 June 2022: National Security College, The Australian National University
    China in the Multilateral System

  • 20 May 2022: China Seminar Series, China Strategic Section, Department of Foreign Affairs & Trade
    China's Approach to Multilateralism

  • 28 April 2022: Rising Powers & the Liberal World Order speakers series at The Institute of East Asian Studies (IN-EAST) at the University in Duisburg-Essen/the Free University of Berlin (online)
    Looking to Lead? China and UN Peacekeeping

  • 8 April 2022: “China and the World” Conference, Princeton-Harvard China and the World Program/Hamilton Lugar School of Global & International Studies at Indiana University, Bloomington
    Comments on China and global governance

  • 28 March 2022: International Studies Association Annual Meeting (online)
    China’s Use of Rhetorical Adaptation in Development of a Global Cyber Order: a case study of the norm of the protection of the public core of the internet

  • 25 March 2022: Executive Briefing with Kevin Rudd on the War in Ukraine – Beijing’s Position and Washington’s Reaction, Asia Society Australia (online, moderator)

  • 24 March 2022: Russia-Ukraine War: security implications for the Indo-Pacific, Macquarie University/Curtin University (online)
    Comments on China's response to Russia-Ukraine War at the United Nations

  • 24 March 2022: Security Studies & Criminology Research Seminar Series, Department of Security Studies & Criminology, Macquarie University
    China’s Use of Rhetorical Adaptation in Development of a Global Cyber Order: a case study of the norm of the protection of the public core of the internet

  • 10 March 2022: Keynote, Pacific Basin Research Center, Soka University of America (online)
    China and the United Nations: A New Emerging Order?

  • 8 March 2022: China Protecting Its Overseas Interests Workshop, China Programme, RSIS, Nanyang Technological University (online)
    Taking Responsibility? MOOTW and China’s evolving approach to global governance

  • 1 March 2022: China Executive Briefing on The Future of Australian Agriculture in China, Asia Society Australia (online, moderator)

  • 19-21 November 2021: IR Theory and China-India Relations, The Center for China-US Cooperation, Korbel School of International Studies, University of Denver and The Centre on Asia and Globalisation, Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy, National University of Singapore (online)
    Rising Powers as Norm Agents: China, India and the Responsibility to Protect

  • 9-11 November 2021: Governing through Crisis: Conflict, Crises and the Politics of Cyberspace, The Hague Programme for Cyber Norms, University of Leiden (online)
    China’s Use of Rhetorical Adaptation in Development of a Global Cyber Order: A case study of the norm of the protection of the public core of the internet

  • 24-26 June 2021: Multistakeholder Diplomacy and Cybersecurity Symposium, Center for International Law and Governance, The Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts University (online)

  • 21 June 2021: IR Theory and China-India Relations, Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy, National University of Singapore (online)
    Rising Powers as Norm Agents: China, India and the Responsibility to Protect

  • 16 June 2021: Women in Asia-Pacific Security Research Series, Australian National University
    China and the United Nations (online)

  • 2 June 2021: China and MENA: New Interests and New Approaches, Chatham House and the King Faisal Center for Research and Islamic Studies (online)

  • 26-28 May 2021: Workshop on Action for Peacekeeping? Middle Powers, Liberal Internationalism, and the Future of UN Peace Operations, Centre for International Policy Studies, the University of Ottawa (online)

  • 20-21 May 2021: Transnational and Transdisciplinary Lessons from the Covid-19 Pandemic, Hong Kong Baptist University
    Executive Leadership and State Influence: The Case of China in the United Nations System, with Shing-hon Lam

  • 8 May 2021: Myanmar and the UN Security Council, The University of Hong Kong
    UN Security Council and Myanmar (discussant)

  • 20 April 2021: University of Denver Workshop on Conceptualising and Measuring China’s International Influence, HKU-Center for China-US Cooperation
    The Evolution of Chinese International Influence: Intentionality, Intermediaries, and Institutions, with Enze Han, Kai Quek, and Austin Strange (online)

  • 7 April 2021: International Studies Association Annual Meeting
    Knowing Your Principals: China’s Leadership and Semantic Influence at the United Nations, with Shing-hon Lam (online)

  • 16 December 2020: Peace Research Colloquium, University of Basel/swisspeace
    China and Intervention at the UN Security Council: Reconciling Status (online)

  • 7–10 December 2020: OCIS Biennial Conference, Australian National University
    China's role in shaping a global information order: Cyber-sovereignty, norms and information technology​

  • 1 December 2020: The Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts University
    China’s Role at the United Nations (online)

  • 22 October 2020: China Seminar Series, Lau China Institute, King's College London
    ​China and Intervention at the UN Security Council: Reconciling Status (online)

  • 15 - 16 October 2020: “A Strategic Roadmap for Reentry 2021 and Beyond: Advancing Institutional Commitments in a New Geostrategic Environment, ”Perry World House, University of Pennsylvania and the Brookings Institution
    China's Role in the United Nations (online)

  • 22 September 2020: Public webinar for Chatham House/Royal Institute for International Affairs
    China’s Role in the United Nations (with Prof. Rosemary Foot and Dr. Champa Patel)

  • 21 September 2020: Podcast for the Australian Strategic Policy Institute
    Special Episode: 75th United Nations General Assembly (link)

  • 11 September 2020: American Political Science Association Meeting, San Francisco
    Mapping China’s Influence at Multilateral Institutions (online)

  • 13–16 August 2020: 2020 Nobel Symposium, The Norwegian Nobel Institute
    Supplanting the West? The evolution of China’s UN Strategy​ (postponed)

  • 6–7 August 2020: “IR Theory and China-India Relations” Workshop, National University of Singapore
    Rising Powers as Norm Agents: China, India and the Responsibility to Protect (postponed)

  • 26–27 June 2020: Nuremberg Security Conference
    China’s Role at the United Nations (online)

  • 8 May 2020: China Studies Series, Oxford University
    China and Intervention at the UN Security Council: Reconciling Status (postponed)

  • 6–7 April 2020: Institute for China Studies, Seoul National University
    China's role in shaping a global information order: Cyber-sovereignty, norms and information technology (postponed)

  • 31 March – 2 April 2020: "Advancing Global Liberalism" Workshop, Berggruen Institute, Singapore Management University
    Comments on Global Liberalism (postponed)

  • 13 December 2019: Australian Strategic Policy Institute Roundtable
    China and Intervention at the UN Security Council: Reconciling Status

  • 11 December 2019: China Studies Centre & the Department of Government and International Relations, The University of Sydney
    China and Intervention at the UN Security Council: Reconciling Status​

  • 5 December 2019: Intersessional for the UN Open-Ended Working Group on developments in the field of information and telecommunications in the context of international security
    Intervention on Normative Contestation

  • 17 October 2019: The Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts University
    China and Intervention at the UN Security Council: Reconciling Status

  • 15 October 2019: Global Governance Speakers Series​
    Providing For Global Security: Implications Of China’s Combat Troop Deployment To UN Peacekeeping

  • 15 October 2019: The Ralph Bunche Institute for International Studies, The Graduate Center, City University of New York​
    China and Intervention at the UN Security Council: Reconciling Status

  • 14 October 2019: Columbia-Harvard China and the World Program, Columbia University
    Providing For Global Security: Implications Of China’s Combat Troop Deployment To UN Peacekeeping

  • 11 October 2019: Fairbank Center for Chinese Studies
    China and Intervention at the UN Security Council: Reconciling Status

  • 3 September 2019: Complex Governance Research Cluster, School of International Service, American University
    China and Intervention at the UN Security Council: Reconciling Status

  • 3 September 2019: China Program, United States Institute of Peace
    China and Intervention at the UN Security Council: Reconciling Status

  • 29 August 2019: American Political Science Association Meeting, Washington DC
    The Evolution of an International Order? Rising Powers, Norm Begrudgers and the Responsibility to Protect

  • 8 JULY 2019: School of Social Sciences, Singapore Management University, Singapore
    China and Intervention at the UN Security Council: Reconciling Status

  • 6 JULY 2019: International Studies Association Asia-Pacific Meeting, Singapore
    The Evolution of an International Order? Rising Powers, Norm Begrudgers and the Responsibility to Protect

  • 5 JULY 2019: International Studies Association Asia-Pacific Meeting, Singapore
    Theorising ‘Global Security Providers’

  • 5 JULY 2019: Yale NUS College and Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy, NUS, Singapore
    China and Intervention at the UN Security Council: Reconciling Status

  • 27 March 2019: International Studies Association Annual Meeting, Toronto
    The Evolution of an International Order? Rising Powers, Norm Begrudgers and the Responsibility to Protect

  • 4 March 2019: Paul and Marcia Wythes Center on Contemporary China, Princeton University
    Just Not In Our Neighborhood: China’s Views on the Application of the Responsibility to Protect in the Case of the DPRK

  • 28 February 2019: Columbia-Harvard China and the World Program Annual Workshop, Columbia University
    China and Intervention at the UN Security Council: Reconciling Status

  • 14 February 2019: Managing Future Global Challenges: The Role of Emerging Powers​, Wilton Park
    Future of Peacekeeping

  • 24 January 2019: Department of Government and Public Administration, University of Macau
    Just Not In Our Neighborhood: China’s Views on the Application of the Responsibility to Protect in the Case of the DPRK

  • 14 December 2018: Showcasing Teaching and Learning Excellence ​Symposium, The University of Hong Kong
    The Research-Teaching Nexus: Insights from Negotiations Simulations in the Classroom

  • 8 November 2018: Global China Research Working Seminar, Chinese University of Hong Kong
    Just Not In Our Neighborhood: China’s Views on the Application of the Responsibility to Protect in the Case of the DPRK

  • 10 October 2018: Institute of Political Studies, Seoul National University
    Just Not In Our Neighborhood: China’s Views on the Application of the Responsibility to Protect in the Case of the DPRK

  • 7 May 2018: University of Nottingham-Ningbo
    China and Intervention at the UN Security Council: Reconciling Status

  • 25 April 2018: NYU-Shanghai
    China and Intervention at the UN Security Council: Reconciling Status

 
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