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How to Do Trusted Research: China-Specific Guidelines for European Stakeholders

Image Source: Gerd Altmann/Public Domain Pictures

By the middle of this century, China intends to become a technology superpower. In order to achieve this goal, China seeks to acquire foreign technologies to boost its own technological base and enable rapid domestic innovation.

This study, written by Ivana KaráskováVeronika Blablová and Filip Šebok from the Association for International Affairs (AMO), Czechia, looks at the state of knowledge protection in the EU and China’s approach to STI and its goals in Europe. The authors examine the scope of cooperation in STEM areas with China in three EU member states (AustriaCzech Republic and Slovakia), utilizing open-source data on scientific cooperation. 

Based on these findings, the paper formulates China-specific, evidence-based guidelines for European stakeholders, including higher education institutions (HEIs) and research centres in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) subjects. While the guidelines are informed by the findings in Central Europe, they are widely applicable in other member states and may contribute to initiating a more informed debate on knowledge security and trusted research at the level of the EU in general, and on the opportunities and risks of scientific collaboration with China in particular.

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How to Do Trusted Research: China-Specific Guidelines for European Stakeholders

December 2022
Filip Šebok, Ivana Karásková, Veronika Blablová

Written by

Association for International Affairs (AMO)

Association for International Affairs (AMO) is a non-governmental not–for–profit Prague-based organization founded in 1997. Its main aim is to promote research and education in the field of international relations. AMO facilitates expression and realization of ideas, thoughts, and projects in order to increase education, mutual understanding, and tolerance among people.