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Contesting a Place in the Sun: On Ideologies in Foreign Markets and Liabilities of Origin – Ans Kolk and Louise Curran
This paper explores the role of ideology in attempts to influence public policy and in business representation in the EU–China solar panel anti-dumping dispute. It exposes the dynamics of international activity by emerging-economy multinationals, in this case from China, and their interactions in a developed-country context (the EU). Theoretically, the study also sheds light on…
Further prestigious award to POREEN research
The Paper “GOING GREEN: CHINESE OFDI IN THE EUROPEAN RENEWABLE ENERGY SECTOR”, by Ping Lv (School of Management, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, China) and Francesca Spigarelli (University of Macerata, Department of Law, Italy) was awarded with 2014 Emerald Best Paper Award, within the China Goes Global Conference (Chinese Globalization Association) held in Shanghai (August…
Dissemination | Events | NewsWorkshop on chinese NGOs engagement and public participation to climate governance, energy and environmental issues
Click for the pdf: POREEN Workshop 5th August 2015
5th Workshop on EU-Asian Energy & Climate Policy – Thu-Fri 10-11 March 2016 at Hong Kong Polytechnic University
Welcoming some 100 participants, this two day Workshop will translate theory into practice and provide hands on policy recommendations for business, government and civil society alike. Join us and use the plenaries to ask your questions to the authorities in the field, mingle with decision makers during elegant dinners, and profit from tea breaks to convince potential…
Double Impact: Why China Needs Coordinated Air Quality and Climate Strategies
Written by Valerie Karplus, an Assistant Professor in the Global Economics and Management Group at the MIT Sloan School of Management and the Director of the MIT-Tsinghua China Energy and Climate Project, this paper examines China’s current approach to tackling air pollution and carbon mitigation nationally and argues that more incentives are needed if China hopes to meet…
China’s GDP – 2015 Target and Outlook
China just released preliminary 2014 gross domestic product (GDP) results. At 7.4% they missed their annual target (7.5%) by a mere breath – not a huge deal practically, but significant symbolically. More important is the composition of this growth. Consumption is playing a bigger role, as investment falls from former growth rates. Services activity continues…


