:2016年北方航道六国国际会议议程

来源:华师大国际关系与地区发展研究院

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会议主题

   The New Forms of Advanced Economic Cooperation in Eurasia and Asia Pacific Region and its Implications for the Development of Russia’s Siberia and Far East(欧亚大陆与亚太地区的先进经济合作形式以及其对俄罗斯西伯利亚地区发展的影响)

会议时间

   2016年9月27-28日

会议地点

   华东师范大学(中山北路校区),逸夫楼三楼多功能厅

会议议程

    Monday, 26 September 2016

   19:00 – 21:00 Welcome dinnerOpening Remarks by the ECNU Representatives, Professor Huang Jing and Professor Sergei A. Karaganov.

   Tuesday, 27 September 2016

   9:00 – 9:20 Welcome Remarks

   9:20 – 11:20

  Panel 1: International Cooperation in the Development of   Siberia and Far East Under the Conditions of Consolidating Multipolarity

   Global strategic balance as well as immediate geopolitical   conditions under which Russia attempts to carry out its reorientation to Asia   and accelerate the development of its Far East and Siberia continues to   change. The relations between major regional and global powers are in flux.   The strategic fissures between the United States and its European partners   appear to widen, whereas Russia’s relations with both the West and the developing   and emerging powers remain to be indeterminate. These trends herald the   consolidation of multipolarity and bring both challenges and opportunities   for Russia’s positioning itself as a responsible pole. This, in turn, can be   expected to have substantial impact on the development of Russia’s Far East   and Siberia. This panel will provide an overall strategic review of the   changing international milieu with particular emphasis on the   opportunities/challenges in the development of Pacific Russia. 

  Discussant/Chair:Feng Shaolei (Professor, School of Advanced International   and Area Studies, East China Normal University)

  Presenters   and presentation topics (3-4):

  1) Sergei   A. Karaganov (Dean and Professor, School of International Economics and Foreign Affairs National Research   University – Higher School of Economics (Moscow)): “Shifting Geostrategic and Geoeconomics   Landscape and the Movement towards Partnership of the Greater Eurasia.”

  2) Yuu Koizumi (Research Fellow at the Institute for Future Engineering): “Russian   Far Eastern Front: Russia’s Military Postures and Strategies in its Far East”

  3) Yang Cheng (Associate Professor of International   Relations, Deputy Director of Center for Russian Studies, School of Advanced   International and Area Studies, East China Normal University): “The emerging Greater Eurasia super-continental region and the Prospect   of Russian Far Eastern Development: the View from China”

  11:20 – 13:20

  Panel 2: Russia’s Economic Integration Into   Asia-Pacific and implications for the development of its Far East and Siberia   

  It has become a near-consensual that for the   successful development of its Eastern territories Russia needs more   comprehensive integration in Asia-Pacific economic space. An indispensable   step for Russia is to make the development of Siberia and Far East truly international and multilateral, which will help not only   diversify the sources of investments, labor, and technology, but also deepen   Russia’s integration into the global economy. It is even more so in the   context of plummeting oil prices. At the same time, new formats of regional   integration, such as Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) and Regional   Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP), are taking shape, which changes the   modes of economic relations and poses both challenges and opportunities for   the Russian exports diversification and participation of Russian firms in the   regional value chains. The aim of this session is to assess the impact of   these new forms of regional integration in APR on Russia’s Siberia and Far   East 

  Discussant/Chair:Masaya Sakuragawa (Professor, Faculty of Economics, Graduate School   of Economics, Keio University)

  Presenters   and presentation topics (3-4):

  1) Tatiana Flegontova (Director,   Russia-APEC Study Center): “Comprehensive Regional Integration and Global   Value-Added Chains: Russia’s Perspective”

  2) Hongyul Han   (Professor of Hanyang University, Chairman of Korea Consensus Institute): “Russia’s Far East Development: Challenges   and Prospects under the new World Economic Environment”

  3) Norio Horie (Professor of the University of Toyama, Vice-director of the Center for Far Eastern Studies):   “Economic and Societal Positionality Changes in the Russian Far East   Borderlands”

  13:20-13:30

  Group Photo

  13:30-14:30

  Lunch

  14:30-16:30

  Panel 3: Russia’s   Siberia and Far East and Cooperation in Greater Eurasia: New Transport   Routes, Logistics and Co-Development 

  China’s One Belt One Road project and Russia-led   Eurasian Economic Union have already become the key factors of regional   affairs. The joint declaration of Vladimir Putin and Xi Jinping on   cooperation in coordinating the development of these two megaprojects has confirmed   that there are no major contradictions between China and Russia in Central   Asia. This can form the basis for broader international cooperation in Greater   Eurasia and considerably change the character of international relations and   architecture of the regional security. At the same time, not all declarations   have been put into practice. This panel identifies the impact of these   processes on the development of Russia’s Far East and Siberia and proposes possible   ways and instruments of Russia’s participation (co-development in Central   Eurasia, transit China–Europe routes, transport projects in Primorye region,   creating new air hubs in Russia etc.). 

  Discussant/Chair: Liu   Jun (Professor and   Dean, School for Advanced International and Area Studies, East   China Normal University)

  Presenters   and presentation topics (3-4):

  1) Timofei V. Bordachev (Eurasian Program Director, Valdai Discussion   Club Foundation; Professor and Director of the Center for Comprehensive   European and International Studies at the National Research University –   Higher School of Economics (Moscow)): “Russia’s turn   to the East: transportation, politics and security cooperation in central   Eurasia”

  2) Victor   L. Larin (Director of the   Institute of History, Archaeology and Ethnography of the Peoples of the Far   East, Far Eastern Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences (Vladivostok)): “Pacific Russia and the “Greater Eurasia” Project”

  3) Yoko Hirose (Professor, Faculty of Policy Management,   Keio University): “International cooperation in the Arctic region following   the Ukrainian Crisis: The Search and Rescue and the Barents cooperation”

  16:30-16:40

 

  Coffee   break

  16:40-18:40

  Panel 4: Economic Instruments of Advanced Development: World Experience and Lessons   for Russia’s Far East and Siberia 

  The special advanced economic   zones (territories of rapid development, TRD) were launched at the beginning   of 2015. They were suggested to be an efficient instrument to concentrate and   mobilize domestic capital and attract foreign investment. In addition,   Vladivostok and other ports of Russian Far East got the porto franco status. This section is aimed at discussing the   first results of implementation of these instruments as well as at providing   ideas on how to make these instruments more effective based on the world   experience. 

  Discussant/Chair: Jae-Young Lee (Vice   President, Department of Europe, Americas and Eurasia, KIEP)

  Presenters   and presentation topics (3-4):

  1) Roman Vakulchuk (Senior   Research Fellow, Norwegian Institute of International Affairs (NUPI)): “Russia’s   New Asian Tilt: How Much Does Economy Matter?”

  2) Anna   Akparova (Assistant to the Deputy Prime-Minister) – tentative

  3) Huang   Renwei (Professor, Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences): (Topic TBD)

  19:00-21:00

  Dinner

Wednesday, 28 September 2016

  9:00-11:00Panel 5: Sectoral Priorities of   Development of Russia’s Far East and Siberia What   Russia can offer to its Asian partners is a key issue in analyzing prospects   of Russia’s economic integration into the Asia-Pacific region. The aim of   this section is to identify sectors where Russian companies can offer   competitive products to Asian consumers and to set potential priorities for   regional and industrial policies and for building a consistent dialogue with   Asia-Pacific partners. Discussant/Chair: Yang   Chengxu (Ambassador, China Institute of International   Studies)Presenters and presentation topics (3-4):1) Igor A. Makarov (Assistant   Professor, Director of the BA Program  in “International Economics” at National   Research University – Higher School of Economics (Moscow)): “Sino-Russian  Agricultural Cooperation: Expectations and Reality”2) Lee Dae Seob (Research Fellow, Korea Rural Economic Institute): “Korea’s Agricultural  Development in the Russian Far East”3) Shi Ze (Senior   Researcher, China Institute of International Studies): “A New Round of  Development in Eastern Russia and China Factors”

  11:00-11:20

  Coffee break

  11:20-13:20

  Panel   6: Natural Resources, Environment, and Financial Industries as Drivers for   Development of Russia’s Far East and Siberia 

  The   abundance of natural resources is the key competitive advantage of Russia’s   Far East and Siberia. The fall of oil prices together with sectoral sanctions   against Russia hit the prospects of some energy projects in the Asian part of   Russia. Anti-Russia sanctions also limit access to international financial   resources and institutions, which is necessary for international cooperation   in the development of Pacific Russia. At the same time Paris agreement on   climate change has delivered a new blow to coal use in leading Asian states   and provided, along with increasing pollution and resource overexploitation,   the additional incentive to outsource dirty production to other countries.   The objective of this section is to discuss how Russia can use its natural   resources and find necessary financial instruments for integration into APR   under changing conditions. 

  Discussant/Chair: Lee Kwon Hyung   (Head of the Middle East and Africa Team, Korea Institute for International   Economy Policy)

  Presenters   and presentation topics (3-4):

  1) Valeriy A. Kryukov (Deputy Director, Institute of Economics and   Industrial Engineering, Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences (Novosibirsk)):   “Approaches to the Implementation of Resource Development Projects on the   Basis of Mutual Benefit”

  2) Yang Jian (Senior Fellow, Vice President, Shanghai  Institutes for International Studies): “On Sino-Russian Energy and Shipping   Cooperation in Russian Arctic Region ”

  13:20-14:30

  Lunch   & Roundtable Discussion: Inputs From Business Community

  It is clear that development of Russia’s Far East   and Siberia can hardly be possible without active involvement of the   representatives of business community. The goal of this panel is to engage   CEOs or other managers of Russian, Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Norwegian, and   other companies with stakes in Russia’s Far East with an objective to solicit   direct feedback from the actual practitioners.

  18:00

  Huangpu River Cruise

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编辑/陈子越