全球化(globalization)一词,是一种概念,也是一种人类社会发展的现象过程。全球化目前有诸多定义,通常意义上的全球化是指全球联系不断增强,人类生活在全球规模的基础上发展及全球意识的崛起。国与国之间在政治、经济贸易上互相依存。全球化亦可以解释为世界的压缩和视全球为一个整体。二十世纪九十年代后,随着全球化势力对人类社会影响层面的扩张,已逐渐引起各国政治、教育、社会及文化等学科领域的重视,引发大规模的研究热潮。对于“全球化”的观感是好是坏,目前仍是见仁见智,例如全球化对于本土文化来说就是一把双刃剑,它也会使得本土文化的内涵与自我更新能力逐渐模糊与丧失。
- CCG南方国际人才研究院
- CCG北方国际人才研究院
- CCG一带一路研究所
- CCG世界华商研究所
- CCG数字经济委员会
- CCG南方国际人才研究院图片
- CCG北方国际人才研究院图片
- CCG世界华商研究所图片
- CCG一带一路研究所图片
- CCG数字经济委员会图片
- 成为系列论坛会员
- 成为系列论坛会员联系
- 概况介绍
- 兼职研究员
- 未分类
- 概况
- 全球化
- 全球治理
- 美国
- 国际人才政策
- 中美贸易
- 国际教育理念与政策
- 中国开放指数
- 新闻动态
- CCG品牌论坛
- 中国与全球化论坛
- 学术委员会专家
- 主席/理事长
- 中文图书
- 品牌论坛
- 研究合作
- 重点支持智库研究与活动项目
- 概况视频
- 主任
- 香港委员会名誉主席
- 关于
- 团队
- 国际关系
- 国际组织
- 加拿大
- 华人华侨
- 国际贸易
- 来华留学
- 区域与城市
- 媒体报道
- 二轨外交
- 中国企业全球化论坛
- 高级研究员
- 资深副主席
- 英文图书
- 圆桌研讨
- 建言献策
- 概况手册
- 副主任
- 理事申请
- 香港委员会名誉副主席
- 顾问
- 研究
- 国际移民与人才流动
- 区域合作
- 欧洲
- 中国海归
- 来华投资
- 出国留学
- 大湾区
- 活动预告
- 名家演讲
- 中国全球智库创新年会
- 特邀高级研究员
- 副主席
- 杂志
- 名家演讲
- 媒体采访
- 年报
- 秘书长
- 企业理事
- 香港委员会主席
- 国际顾问
- 国际贸易与投资
- 一带一路
- 亚洲
- 留学生
- 对外投资
- 国际学校
- 动态
- 名家午餐会
- 中国人才50人论坛
- 特邀研究员
- 理事长
- 媒体采访
- 文章投稿
- 副秘书长
- 活动支持
- 香港委员会副主席
- 国际教育
- 非洲
- 数字贸易
- 活动
- 智库圆桌会
- 常务理事
- 智库访谈
- 国际合作
- 总监
- 中国留学人员创新创业论坛
- 研究员
- 研究支持
- 香港委员会常务理事
- 国内政策
- 拉美
- 专家
- 理事
- 直播
- 捐赠支持
- 主管
- 中国国际教育论坛
- 个人捐赠
- 前瞻研究
- 澳洲
- 咨询委员会
- 企业理事
- 其他
- 捐赠联系
- 中东
- 成为理事
- 研究报告
- 建言献策
- 出版物
- 理事申请联系
- 智库研究
- 音视频专区
- 联系我们
- 观点
- 捐赠
- 工作机会
- 香港委员会
-
苏格:2018 :世界变局与中国外交
苏格,CCG顾问,中国太平洋经济合作全国委员会主席
2019年1月29日 -
崔洪建:梅政府涉险过关,英国接下来会发生什么?
专家简介
2019年1月29日 -
He Weiwen: What is the solution to globalization imbalance?
By He Weiwen, a senior research fellow at the Center for China and Globalization(CCG).
2019年1月29日 -
庞中英:最好的全球化讨论不是为“全球化是大势所趋”进行辩护
庞中英,CCG特邀高级研究员,中国海洋大学海洋发展研究院院长
2019年1月28日 -
New Research Reveals China’s Rapidly Declining Birth Rate
A child receives a vaccination shot at a hospital in Huaibei in China’s eastern Anhui province on July 26, 2018. (-/AFP/Getty Images) Negative population growth is projected to commence in China in the year 2027, according to a new paper released by the state-run Chinese Academy of Social Sciences in early January. This follows recent comments by some experts pointing out that the birth rate in China has fallen sharply, while Chinese authorities are likely reporting fake data on local birth rates. A Jan. 16 Radio Free Asia (RFA) report revealed that, since early 2016, when China abolished its one-child policy to allow couples to have two children, Shandong Province became the region with the highest number of “second children” born—contributing to roughly a quarter of the country’s total second children newborns. But the latest data from China’s National Bureau of Statistics revealed that that is no longer the case. The number of births have dropped significantly in several cities in Shandong, including Qingdao, Liaocheng, Yantai, and Dezhou. In Qingdao, for example, between January and November 2018, births fell by 21.1 percent, and the births of second children fell by 29 percent, compared with the same period in 2017. In the RFA report, Liu Kaiming, director of the Institute of Contemporary Observation research institute in Shenzhen City, southern China, said that based on various data, birth rates across China have indeed fallen drastically. “In the past, the annual births were more than 20 million. Now it is only about 15 million,” Liu said. “Even though China now allows the second child, the birth rate is still declining. Shandong is a typical example. Live births in Zibo [a city in Shandong] dropped 26 percent last year.” After decades of harshly enforcing the one-child policy, the country’s gender ratios have been significantly skewed, with roughly 115.4 boys to 100 girls, according to the World Bank. Faced with the reality of an aging population and shrinking workforce, Chinese authorities have in recent years tried to switch gears completely and instead encourage more families to have children. According to Huang Wenzheng, a senior researcher at the Chinese think tank, Center for China and Globalization(CCG), China’s birth rate is roughly 1.2 (children born per woman), so—contrary to government estimates—the turning point into negative population growth will definitely come before 2027. Yi Fuxian, a senior scientist at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, along with an economist from the National Economic Research Center of Peking University in China, Su Jian, shared similar views. In a recent article they wrote jointly, Yi and Su predicted that China has already entered negative population growth either in 2018 or will do so in 2019. Yi told RFA that the paper published by Chinese Academy of Social Sciences is based on the assumption that China’s birth rate would continue to be 1.6—its current rate—or more in the following years. However, Yi believes this rate will not be sustained. Yi also added that the Chinese authorities have consistently fudged data in order to make China appear to have a stable birth rate. The 2000 census showed that China’s birth rate was 1.22, but the National Bureau of Statistics later changed it to 1.8, according to Yi. Had the Bureau not repeatedly reported false data, Yi believes the Chinese regime would have awoken to the dangers of the one-child policy earlier. “It’s time to hold them accountable,” he said. The decline in China’s birth rate is among the most drastic in the world. According to the Evergrande Research Institute of Tsinghua University, the birth rate in China fell from 6 to 1.6, compared to the United States, where it fell from 3.3 to 1.9 between 1950 to 2015, and Japan, where it fell from 3 to 1.4. From the epoch times,2019-1-21
2019年1月24日