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CSI/CUNY News Release |
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For Immediate Release - Monday,
December 1, 2003 |
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International
conference on China's agricultural issues
focuses on world trade, urbanization and peasant population
Staten Island, NY - China's entry into the World Trade
Organization (WTO) in late 2001 has brought fundamental change to
the country by boosting its economic growth to become the fourth
largest trading body in the world, advancing the country’s legal and
governmental reforms, and creating a “floating population” class of
80 million migrant farmers.
Approximately 800-900 million people (70% of the country’s
population) live in rural China, many of whom are family farmers. By
bringing the country in line with WTO commitments to consolidate the
land and improve efficiency, many of these farmers are being forced
from their farms and into the cities.
Tackling the largest issue in the Chinese government today, The
Foundation for China in the 21st Century hosts a two-day,
two-borough conference that will examine the reforms and challenges
China faces from its WTO entry, and the crisis faced by the
country’s agriculture industry.
The first day of the conference will be held Friday, December 12,
2003 in the Presidential Conference Room of the Willowbrook
campus of the College of Staten Island, 2800 Victory Blvd., Staten
Island New York, from 9 a.m. – 5 p.m.
Morning sessions on Staten Island include a “Historic Review of
Modern China’s Agricultural Issues,” moderated by professor Ming Xia
(College of Staten Island) and “Institutional Problems and
Reconstruction in Rural China,” moderated by Mr. Song Yongyi
(Dickenson University).
Afternoon sessions include “Identity Issues of Chinese Peasants,”
moderated by Mr. Hu Ping (Editor-in-Chief, Beijing Spring magazine)
and “Reconstruction of China’s Rural Society,” moderated by
professor Hu Shaohua (Wagner College).
Many questions will be raised at this conference. For example:
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What is the essential reason for of China's miserable agricultural
issues and how is it traced back in history?
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What is the root cause of Chinese peasants' poverty and what are the
possibilities of resolving it by abolishing the discriminatory
residence laws against them on the basis of identity segregation?
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How can villages be autonomously ruled and property rights of the
farmland be settled?
Is it necessary to privatize the farmland and if so, how?
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What is the impact of China's WTO entrance on all of the above
agricultural issues?
Internationally recognized experts, scholars, and researchers from
China, Hong Kong, Macao, Japan, and the United States will address
these questions and present to the conference their points of view
from different angles and various social levels, and tell us how
they think about the past, evaluate the current, and project the
future of Chinese agricultural problems.
The second day of the conference will begin with public lectures at
12 noon in the auditorium of the Queens Borough Public Library.
The two-day conference is jointly sponsored by The Foundation for
China in the 21st Century, the City University of New York’s College
of Staten Island, and the Queens Borough Public Library.
EDITOR’S NOTE: You are invited to send a reporter and/or camera
crew. If you plan to attend or send a representative, please contact
Ken Bach at 718-982-2328 to make arrangements or for more
information. Participant names and photographs available upon
request.
The College of Staten Island (CSI) is a senior college of The City
University of New York (CUNY), the nation’s leading urban
university. CSI offers 35 academic programs, 15 graduate degree
programs, and challenging doctoral programs to 12,000 students.
The 204-acre landscaped campus of CSI, the largest in NYC, is fully
accessible and contains an advanced, networked infrastructure to
support technology-based teaching, learning, and research. For more
information, visit www.csi.cuny.edu
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