Online Event on April 4: Chinese Companies Abroad and the Host Country's Laws: The Case of Dirty Industries in Serbia

Collage of Uni. Helsinki Finnish China Law Center & Chinese Studies logos and pic of Dusica Ristivojevic

Our colleagues at the University of Helsinki are organizing an interesting online seminar on April 4 with Dušica Ristivojević discussing Chinese companies' actions in Serbia.

On Tuesday 4 April, The University of Helsinki Chinese Studies and the Finnish China Law Center will hold an online seminar discussing Chinese companies’ activities abroad.

The activities of Chinese companies abroad are an integral part of the robust transformation of today’s economic, geopolitical, and sociocultural landscapes at the local, regional, and global levels.

The presence of Chinese capital abroad has been encountering and provoking a wide range of reactions among different political and social actors—from suspicion, reservation, and resistance to warm welcome and exceptional enthusiasm.

This talk will look at the ongoing situation in Serbia, a country governed by a regime that has been among the closest partners of the Chinese government and Chinese companies in Europe and beyond.

The talk will focus on the legal dynamics that enable and maintain the much acclaimed “iron-clad friendship” between the two countries and the energetic economic interactions between their governments and businesses.

The legal dynamics in question pertain to the Chinese companies that work in Serbia’s dirty industries, namely the production of tires, iron, and steel. Special attention will also be paid to the analysis of the legal aspects of China’s presence in Serbia’s copper and gold mining industry.

Speaker bio:

Dušica Ristivojević is a senior researcher in the Department of Cultures of the University of Helsinki. Dušica specializes in the longue-durée dynamics of China’s global interactions, print and digital media, and social organizing in and out of China. She is finalizing her book manuscript on the transnational links of China’s political movements and is observing the country’s presence in Europe’s Eastern peripheries with regard to dirty industry and digital technology.

This online event will be held on Tuesday 4 April from 14:00 to 15:30 Finnish time (GMT+2). The discussion will be moderated by Professor Chen Yu-Wen (Julie) from the University of Helsinki.

If you want to participate, please register by using this link before Friday 31 March! After registering, you will receive the link to the online seminar.