<![CDATA[Newsroom University of Manchester]]> /about/news/ en Sun, 29 Dec 2024 11:09:16 +0100 Tue, 29 Oct 2024 14:58:56 +0100 <![CDATA[Newsroom University of Manchester]]> https://content.presspage.com/clients/150_1369.jpg /about/news/ 144 Manchester China Institute hosts second UK-China Diplomatic Dialogue /about/news/manchester-china-institute-hosts-second-uk-china-diplomatic-dialogue/ /about/news/manchester-china-institute-hosts-second-uk-china-diplomatic-dialogue/676420Sixteen British and Chinese diplomats met in Manchester on 10-11 October 2024 for a dialogue seeking to improve mutual understanding in UK-China relations.The eight British diplomats all came from the (FCDO) in London, while the eight Chinese diplomats came from the and the Chinese Consulates in Manchester, Edinburgh, and Belfast.

The diplomats stayed at the Didsbury House Hotel, where they engaged in three private group discussions. A fourth was held on campus at the in the Lee Kai Hung building.

Professor of Politics, Peter Gries, founding Director of the Manchester China Institute (MCI), started the Dialogue in 2019 with an eye towards fostering mutual trust in UK-China relations. He said:

The retreat also included a public lunch on campus for Manchester students to meet with the diplomats. President Duncan Ivison attended and was the first to speak. Manchester boasts nearly 9,000 Chinese students, and President Ivison pointed to the as an example of the work the University does to support the student experience in general, and for Chinese students in particular.

Other speakers at the lunch with students included Tang Rui, the Chinese Consul General to Manchester, Ben Leibowitz representing the FCDO delegation, and Jiang Zhouteng representing the Chinese Embassy.

After the lunch, BA English Literature and Chinese student, Julia Zelazo, said: 

Similarly, Vivian Wang, who recently graduated from UoM with an MA in International Education added: 

Manchester is the first British university to set social responsibility as a core goal. Demonstrating this commitment, Nalin Thakkar, UoM Vice-President for Social Responsibility; Fiona Devine, Dean of the Faculty of Humanities; Claire Alexander, Head of the School of Social Sciences, and Richard Cotton, Director of International Development, also attended the lunch.

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Tue, 29 Oct 2024 13:56:43 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/eb66b486-9a55-485c-820f-71a1f7e12f1b/500_professorgriesjoinedthe16diplomatsforoutsidetheoldquadrangleon11october.jpg?67056 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/eb66b486-9a55-485c-820f-71a1f7e12f1b/professorgriesjoinedthe16diplomatsforoutsidetheoldquadrangleon11october.jpg?67056
New MCI Postdoc to Explore Chinese Activism in 20th Century Britain /about/news/new-mci-postdoc-to-explore-chinese-activism-in-20th-century-britain/ /about/news/new-mci-postdoc-to-explore-chinese-activism-in-20th-century-britain/663505A new MCI postdoc will conduct a two-year study of Chinese political activism in 20th century Britain.

Dr Sha Zhou received her BA and MA in English Language and Literature in China, and a MRes in Historical Research at the Institute of Historical Research, University of London.

She then obtained a PhD in Contemporary British History from King’s College London in 2021, with a thesis on the migration of ethnic Chinese women to post-war Britain. 

Most recently, she worked at the School of International Studies/Academy of Overseas Chinese Studies at Jinan University. 

Sha’s research at MCI will look at grassroots Chinese activism in twentieth-century urban Britain.

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Fri, 04 Oct 2024 16:10:03 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/969bbf26-8198-4d59-8989-0b58c59830ac/500_drshazhou.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/969bbf26-8198-4d59-8989-0b58c59830ac/drshazhou.jpg?10000
MCI Funds Civic Engagement with Local Chinese Communities Project /about/news/mci-funds-civic-engagement-with-local-chinese-communities-project/ /about/news/mci-funds-civic-engagement-with-local-chinese-communities-project/655481

has partnered with the Humanities Vice-Dean for Social Responsibility to fund , Senior Lecturer (Associate Professor) in Medical Sociology and Social Gerontology in the to lead a project on civic engagement with local Chinese communities.

Greater Manchester is home to one of the largest Chinese communities in the UK. The project will focus on older Chinese adults and Hong Kong migrants who have recently come to the UK.

The project will support various social and cultural activities aimed at understanding the challenges and barriers related to life adjustment to migration and maintaining family ties and care relations across borders. It will add much-needed evidence to the literature on ageing, care, and transnational migration by focusing on the Chinese diaspora in Greater Manchester. 

The project will bring together leading scholars from the University of Manchester specialising in ageing, health, well-being, digital technology, and China to establish a strong civic network with local Chinese communities, NGOs, community organisations, and local authorities in Greater Manchester. The civic engagement activities will make a positive difference to local Chinese communities in Greater Manchester and beyond.

Dr Nan Zhang and her colleagues aim to develop a review paper on ageing, transnational care and digital technology, as well as a major grant proposal in this area. The researchers will organise public lectures on ageing, family, and filial piety in Chinese society, coinciding with traditional Chinese festivals throughout 2024/2025. 

Inspired by the MCI’s successful , they will also launch an amateur photo competition featuring ageing, care and filial piety among Chinese families in Greater Manchester.

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Mon, 19 Aug 2024 14:00:00 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/a7f6e954-77e3-44cb-a2df-ecc98edaaf5f/500_drnanzhang.jpg?66684 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/a7f6e954-77e3-44cb-a2df-ecc98edaaf5f/drnanzhang.jpg?66684
New Manager to progress Manchester China Institute /about/news/new-manager-to-progress-manchester-china-institute/ /about/news/new-manager-to-progress-manchester-china-institute/654567Yannan Yu joins the Manchester China Institute (MCI) after 15 years working in the UK Higher Education (HE) sector.Yannan received her MBA with distinction from the University College London (UCL) in 2023, and has bilingual proficiency in both English and Mandarin Chinese. 

She has extensive experience in HE, including in research and partnership development, stakeholder engagement, budgeting and events management. Before joining MCI, Yannan worked at the Institute of Education (IOE) at UCL for over five years. 

As a Research Centre Manager, she worked alongside the Centre Director to set up a Centre for Teacher and Early Years Education. This research centre was founded through a philanthropic donation and worked to contribute to the improving of the quality of early years education in China through research collaboration between IOE and partner universities in China.

During her time at UCL, Yannan was seconded to the IOE Research Development as the Research Development Manager. She contributed significantly to the institution’s five-year Research Strategy Delivery Plan to grow its research impact. 

To widen her experience, Yannan also worked at IOE Marketing and Communications as the Faculty Events Manager, running flagship recruitment events across PGT/PGR, UG and Initial Teacher Education and public facing events.

Prior to UCL, Yannan worked at London South Bank University’s Confucius Institute for nearly nine years. She held senior positions including Deputy Director, in developing, communicating and implementing the Institute’s strategy. Before coming to London, Yannan served as a lecturer in Business English at Shanghai University of International Business and Economics.

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Thu, 08 Aug 2024 13:47:54 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/1f070a6b-92ae-480a-98aa-b1bbe373a086/500_yannanyujoinsthemanchesterchinainstitutemci..png?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/1f070a6b-92ae-480a-98aa-b1bbe373a086/yannanyujoinsthemanchesterchinainstitutemci..png?10000
People’s Choice Winners in 2024 Photography Competition Celebrate Food and Drink /about/news/peoples-choice-winners-in-2024-photography-competition-celebrate-food-and-drink/ /about/news/peoples-choice-winners-in-2024-photography-competition-celebrate-food-and-drink/651751The People’s Choice Award winners of the 2024 UK-China Photography Competition have been announced.

The votes have been counted. The People’s Choice Award winners of the 2024 UK-China Photography Competition are Chih-Yu Chuang’s photo ‘My Morning Ritual of the Day’, and Muhammad Sajeer Parambath’s entry ‘Brewing Bonds: Jing’s Overflowing Coffee’. Each winner claims a prize of ?100 in cash.

Coincidentally, both images focused on the theme of food and drink. 

Chuang commented of the winning photo: 

“Starting my day means embarking on a daily breakfast adventure, a joy I find even when travelling.” 

And Muhammed said of his image: 

“Jing’s morning ritual of crafting coffee for his colleagues brims with warmth and care, fostering heartwarming moments and laughter among the group.”


Run by the (MCI) and at 糖心Vlog官方, the theme of this year’s competition was 'Daily Rituals’. The top 30 finalists and winning photos were shortlisted out of hundreds of submissions received from China and the UK.

Each entry demonstrated how a thoughtful photograph can transcend cultural and linguistic divides, reveal our common humanity, and enhance mutual understanding between China and the UK. The votes were registered in person at this year’s Photo Exhibition at Alliance Manchester Business School, at the , and online via Google and WeChat.

MCI Director, , said: 

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Wed, 10 Jul 2024 13:15:37 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/ac5566de-ec86-4645-8cec-ef6676e49c6b/500_mci1.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/ac5566de-ec86-4645-8cec-ef6676e49c6b/mci1.jpg?10000
Nick McGee awarded Leverhulme Early Career Fellowship /about/news/nick-mcgee-awarded-leverhulme-early-career-fellowship/ /about/news/nick-mcgee-awarded-leverhulme-early-career-fellowship/595449MCI scholar in residence Dr Nicholas McGee has been awarded a prestigious three-year Leverhulme Early Career Fellowship for a research project on “Chinese Indenture in the Transvaal and Modern China’s Encounter with Africa”.

It will explore the birth of modern Sino-African relations, when the Qing Chinese government agreed to a deal with Britain to transport some sixty-thousand Chinese workers to labour in gold mines in South Africa’s Transvaal colony between 1903-1910.

Through multilingual archival work, Nick will examine how this contested transimperial venture functioned to introduce and shape conceptions of Africa and its peoples in China—and how these conceptions influenced the emergence of Chinese modernity. 

In this way, the project hopes to offer a ground-breaking contribution to understudied histories of the globally significant present-day relationship between China and the African continent.

The Early Career Fellowship is a highly competitive research grant awarded annually by the Leverhulme Trust to support the work of early career scholars. 

The award supports 36 months of full-time research and includes funding for research expenses. The research will be undertaken at Durham University under the mentorship of Dr. Chris Courtney. But Nick will remain a Scholar in Residence at MCI.

Nicholas McGee has been involved with the Manchester China Institute since 2019, and has most recently been working as a Lecturer in Chinese History at Durham University. His work explores questions of migration, nationality, and empire in 18th, 19th and 20th-century China. He is currently developing a book manuscript on the origins of the modern relationship between the Chinese state and the Chinese diaspora.

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Fri, 06 Oct 2023 11:54:25 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/2160d417-5f2d-4b30-9c91-d3fd2a7cfd12/500_mcischolarinresidencedrnicholasmcgee.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/2160d417-5f2d-4b30-9c91-d3fd2a7cfd12/mcischolarinresidencedrnicholasmcgee.jpg?10000
Aoife Cantrill wins Best Doctoral Thesis Award /about/news/aoife-cantrill-wins-best-doctoral-thesis-award/ /about/news/aoife-cantrill-wins-best-doctoral-thesis-award/591125The British Association for Chinese Studies (BACS) has awarded Manchester China Institute (MCI) research associate the .

Aoife’s thesis, titled “Translating Kōminka: Shaping Narratives of Japanese Rule in Taiwan Through Translation Post-1975”, explores how literary translators have engaged with historical, political and cultural narratives of Japanese colonial rule in Taiwan (1895-1945). It focuses on the translation history of a corpus of Japanese-language texts written by Taiwanese women during the final decade of colonial rule, arguing that their translations contain commentary on linguistic politics in colonial society, as well as Taiwanese femininity and its history. This research demonstrates the importance of considering the linguistic legacies of the Japanese colonial project after the end of empire, showing how works written in its throes possess a cultural influence beyond 1945.

The thesis was assessed by a panel of three academic judges, who commended it as ‘a courageous, incisive and beautifully written study of short texts produced by hitherto little-known women writers during the Japanese occupation 1934-1945. [Cantrill’s] analysis offers a sensitive and nuanced approach to a topic that continues to generate strident nationalist and patriotic passions.’ In addition, they noted that the thesis’ ‘conceptual reach will make it an exciting intervention in debates about the place of text and translation in mediating the political relationships between Taiwan, Japan and the PRC’. The award was made at the BACS annual conference held at King’s College London on 7-8 September 2023.

As a research associate at the MCI, Aoife is working on a postdoctoral project looking at the cultural politics of textile production in Japanese-occupied areas of China from 1931 onwards. In addition, for the academic year 2023-24 Aoife is a lecturer in Chinese Studies at the School of Arts, Languages and Cultures, University of Manchester.

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Mon, 18 Sep 2023 16:50:18 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/1a653ae3-4b5b-40e0-b04e-3988c76729af/500_mciresearchassociatedraoifecantrill.jpg?51434 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/1a653ae3-4b5b-40e0-b04e-3988c76729af/mciresearchassociatedraoifecantrill.jpg?51434
Celebrating 15 Years: 糖心Vlog官方 China Centre Shines in Shanghai /about/news/celebrating-15-years-the-university-of-manchester-china-centre-shines-in-shanghai/ /about/news/celebrating-15-years-the-university-of-manchester-china-centre-shines-in-shanghai/605857Professor Dame Nancy Rothwell, President and Vice-Chancellor of 糖心Vlog官方 visited China, including Beijing and Shanghai, 11 to 13 September 2023.

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Professor Dame Nancy Rothwell, President and Vice-Chancellor of 糖心Vlog官方 visited China, including Beijing and Shanghai, 11 to 13 September 2023. This is the President’s first China visit since the hiatus in face-to-face activity owing to the global COVID-19 pandemic and subsequent travel restrictions, and recognises the long and close relationship between 糖心Vlog官方 and China.

China visit strengthens research and educational collaborations

On her first stop in Beijing, from 11–12 September, Professor Dame Nancy Rothwell and her delegation met with key partners and institutions, including Peking University Health Science Center, China Scholarship Council and the National Natural Science Foundation Council, to enhance the significant collaborations in research and teaching in China. She looks forward to strengthening academic and research collaboration in the future. Professor Rothwell also delivered a speech on the theme of ‘A Life in Science’ during her visit to Peking University.

On the evening of 11 September, an alumni reception in Beijing was hosted by the President for over 200 alumni, where Nancy shared the university’s latest achievements. Nancy mentioned that earlier this year, the UK government announced a new prize for artificial intelligence named after 糖心Vlog官方’s invention of the first stored program computer in 1948. It will be known as ‘The Manchester Prize.’

Celebrating the 15th anniversary of the China Centre

On 13 September, Professor Rothwell toured the new premises of 糖心Vlog官方 China Centre in Shanghai. Ms. Sherry Fu, Founding Director of the China Centre, hosted the visit and introduced the Centre’s low-carbon office project, support for the delivery of the Global MBA and online blended Masters courses, such as MA Education Leadership in Practice and Msc Financial Management, and the Centre’s cultural activities and social impact to the President and her delegation. Professor Rothwell said how impressed she is by the ambition and growth of the China Centre in the past 15 years. She also appreciated the support from the China Centre to ensure the best experience for all University students and alumni, and to contribute to a broader landscape of transnational education.

While in Shanghai, Professor Rothwell also met with the leadership team of Shanghai Jiao Tong University and exchanged thoughts on collaboration opportunities between the two universities in the future.

Professor Rothwell also hosted an Alumni Gala Dinner on the evening of 13 September for over 300 alumni across the country and distinguished guests to celebrate the 15th anniversary of 糖心Vlog官方 China Centre. 

Professor Rothwell especially mentioned the upcoming University’s bicentenary celebration and welcomed alumni in China to celebrate this significant milestone for the University in 2024.

“It was wonderful to meet our alumni in Beijing and Shanghai. At 糖心Vlog官方, our alumni continue to be a part of our community, long after graduation. And we’re always proud to see Chinese alumni shining in their fields after their graduation, in China, the UK, and other places in the world,” said Professor Rothwell.

Looking ahead – a bright future

Commenting on her trip, Professor Rothwell said: “I am delighted to have had the opportunity to visit China again to reconnect with our partners and to celebrate with our esteemed alumni. 糖心Vlog官方 prides itself on being a truly international university.”

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Wed, 13 Sep 2023 14:30:00 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/5192c31d-f79f-40a2-9ce3-507f2af7d95c/500_shanghaialumnidinner.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/5192c31d-f79f-40a2-9ce3-507f2af7d95c/shanghaialumnidinner.jpg?10000
New Manager to Grow the Manchester China Institute /about/news/new-manager-to-grow-the-manchester-china-institute/ /about/news/new-manager-to-grow-the-manchester-china-institute/587891The Manchester China Institute (MCI) has appointed Charlotte Shi as its new Manager.Charlotte is bilingual in English and Mandarin, and holds a PhD from the University of Manchester. Her academic career started as a Lecturer in Fashion Marketing and Branding at Nottingham Trent University. Charlotte later worked in various commercial roles in the retail and aviation industries. 

Before joining the Institute, she worked as a General Manager for Northeast Asia at eComplete, an eCommerce agency that helps brands expand internationally. Before that, Charlotte led various initiatives at the Manchester Airports Group (MAG). Her work cemented MAG’s role as the Gateway of the North as MAG was going through a ?1bn transformation, including expanding its links with Asia.

Charlotte joins MCI as students return to campus for the new academic year. It is a busy time with the Institute preparing research talks and webinars on China studies, as well as growing its two signature programmes, the and the .

Prof. Peter Gries, MCI Director, said:

Dr. Charlotte Shi, MCI Institute Manager, said:

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Fri, 01 Sep 2023 09:45:00 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/7c3d75e2-2bb9-4091-80ca-02f43770db4d/500_charlotteshi.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/7c3d75e2-2bb9-4091-80ca-02f43770db4d/charlotteshi.jpg?10000
Yunnan Arts University Student Wins the People’s Choice Award at the 2023 UK-China International Photography Competition /about/news/huang-bingyau-wins-the-peoples-choice-award-at-the-2023-uk-china-international-photography-competition/ /about/news/huang-bingyau-wins-the-peoples-choice-award-at-the-2023-uk-china-international-photography-competition/578768Huang Bingyao has been crowned the People’s Choice winner at the fifth annual edition of the UK-China International Photography Competition, receiving a ?500 cash prize for his entry ‘Grandpa’s Hookah’.Run by the (MCI) and at 糖心Vlog官方, the competition uses amateur photography as a visual way of overcoming linguistic divides and highlighting the common humanity of China and the UK. Members of the public across China and the UK were invited to vote for their favourite entry to determine the People’s Choice winner. 

The category received a record 20,000 votes, registered in person at this year’s Photo Exhibition at Alliance Manchester Business School, at the University’s Community Festival, and online via Google and WeChat.

Huang Bingyao’s entry depicts his grandfather as the main character of his picture, sitting outside with a bowler hat on his head and the family treasure, the Yunnan hookah, in his hands. Commenting on his submission, the photographer said:

MCI Director, , said:

, Head of the School of Arts, Languages, and Culture at the University of Manchester, added:

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Tue, 27 Jun 2023 10:37:12 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/6d191453-43f0-48c2-89b8-2c18382d7b29/500_huangbingyau-lsquograndparsquoshookahrsquo.png?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/6d191453-43f0-48c2-89b8-2c18382d7b29/huangbingyau-lsquograndparsquoshookahrsquo.png?10000
Professor Gries co-hosts dialogue between American and Chinese diplomats /about/news/university-professor-co-hosts-dialogue-between-american-and-chinese-diplomats/ /about/news/university-professor-co-hosts-dialogue-between-american-and-chinese-diplomats/576887Manchester China Institute Director Peter Gries co-hosted the 13th US-China Young Diplomats Dialogue.On June 5-6, 15 Chinese and American diplomats met in La Jolla, California for the 13th annual , co-hosted by Professor Peter Gries of the Manchester China Institute.

The retreat involved formal sit-down discussions of topics including the sources of trust and mistrust in U.S.-China relations, and confidence building and other measures to improve U.S.-China Relations. It also included informal activities for the diplomats, including hiking in Torrey Pines Reserve along the Pacific coast, and attending a Padres (San Diego) vs Cubs (Chicago) baseball game, which the Padres won. These activities gave the Chinese and American diplomats ample opportunity to get to know one another better, and further discuss bilateral issues.

Professor Peter Gries established the US-China Young Diplomats Dialogue in 2007 to generate mutual trust and improve U.S.-China relations, and cohosts it annually with Fudan University Professor WU Xinbo. It does this by creating an informal retreat-like atmosphere in which participating diplomats can establish personal relationships while frankly exchanging their views on bilateral relations. 

The 13th Dialogue was held in La Jolla, California, generously and expertly hosted by the 21st Century China Center at the University of California at San Diego. 

The participating American diplomats were Nick Snyder, Gareth Collins, Kim Fassler, Eric Bigelow, Paul Prokop, Emily Abraham, and Ashley Wood. The Chinese diplomats were LI Xiang (李想), WEN Zhirong (温志荣), HA Lisi (哈丽思), and PENG Yutian (彭宇田), all from the Chinese Embassy in Washington, and ZHU Shaoding (朱韶鼎), KANG Ning (康宁), ZHANG Jingcheng (张景铖), and HOU Jieying (侯洁莹) from the Chinese Consulates in New York, Chicago, San Francisco, and Los Angeles respectively.

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Fri, 09 Jun 2023 12:26:38 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/e6e7a6d2-2116-40c0-882f-81ea15072289/500_professorsgrieswhiteshirtandwuroyalblueblazerwiththe15chineseandamericandiplomatsinlajollacaliforniajune62023..jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/e6e7a6d2-2116-40c0-882f-81ea15072289/professorsgrieswhiteshirtandwuroyalblueblazerwiththe15chineseandamericandiplomatsinlajollacaliforniajune62023..jpg?10000
2023中英国际摄影大赛获奖作品于展览启动仪式上揭晓 /about/news/2023%E4%B8%AD%E8%8B%B1%E5%9B%BD%E9%99%85%E6%91%84%E5%BD%B1%E5%A4%A7%E8%B5%9B%E8%8E%B7%E5%A5%96%E4%BD%9C%E5%93%81%E4%BA%8E%E5%B1%95%E8%A7%88%E5%90%AF%E5%8A%A8%E4%BB%AA%E5%BC%8F%E4%B8%8A%E6%8F%AD%E6%99%93/ /about/news/2023%E4%B8%AD%E8%8B%B1%E5%9B%BD%E9%99%85%E6%91%84%E5%BD%B1%E5%A4%A7%E8%B5%9B%E8%8E%B7%E5%A5%96%E4%BD%9C%E5%93%81%E4%BA%8E%E5%B1%95%E8%A7%88%E5%90%AF%E5%8A%A8%E4%BB%AA%E5%BC%8F%E4%B8%8A%E6%8F%AD%E6%99%93/573581(惭颁滨)和于5月3日星期叁在曼彻斯特联盟商学院(础惭叠厂)启动了2023中英国际摄影大赛的展览。展览展示了由参赛者们用智能手机拍摄的照片,并附有以“传家宝”为主题的双语短篇故事,跨越语言的界限,关注我们共同的人性,促进中英文化的相互理解。

本次展览所展示的作品是今年中英国际摄影大赛的前30个作品,从数百个国际投稿中选出。参展作品和最终获奖作品由Michael Wood教授(曼彻斯特大学)、张海博士(云南大学)、朱晓闻(东南亚当代艺术中心)和孟冰纯博士(伦敦政治经济学院)组成的评审团选出。

获奖作品由大曼彻斯特郡长Gerry Yeung,曼彻斯特博物馆馆长Esme Ward,Creative Manchester负责人John McAuliffe和曼彻斯特大学DDAR负责人Kate Cambden在AMBS上公布。

The four main winners announced were:

宣布的四个大奖获奖者和作品分别是:

  • 英国获奖者:Corina Andrisan 《艺术是我的宝贝》
  • 中国冠军:周琤 《厨房 妈妈》
  • 英国亚军:Olivia Parsonage 《麦卡的祖母帽子》
  • 中国亚军:KAZ 《剃毛头》

出席的特别嘉宾包括连续五年担任大赛评委的Michael Wood教授,以及首次加入评审团的张海博士。两位评委朗读了中英两国获奖选手真挚的双语来信,讲述他们作品的美好故事。曼彻斯特大学艺术、语言和文化学院院长Thomas Schmidt和MCI院长Peter Gries也在颁奖典礼上致辞,Gries教授强调了本次摄影大赛的内核:

本次大赛优秀作品展览将于5月31日结束,期待大家亲自到场观看展览并进行现场投票,也可以在网络上投票选出最喜欢的照片。获得投票最多的作品将获得500英镑的奖金和“人民选择奖”的荣誉。在投票给您最喜欢的照片。

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Wed, 10 May 2023 16:09:00 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/ae9d266b-5f65-488b-af15-c9a443945f64/500_2023uk-chinainternationalphotographywinnersannouncedatexhibitionlaunchandawardsceremony.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/ae9d266b-5f65-488b-af15-c9a443945f64/2023uk-chinainternationalphotographywinnersannouncedatexhibitionlaunchandawardsceremony.jpg?10000
2023 UK-China International Photography Winners Announced at Exhibition Launch and Awards Ceremony /about/news/2023-uk-china-international-photography-winners-announced-at-exhibition-launch-and-awards-ceremony/ /about/news/2023-uk-china-international-photography-winners-announced-at-exhibition-launch-and-awards-ceremony/572879A new photography exhibition has opened at the Alliance Manchester Business School (AMBS) promoting mutual understanding in UK-China relations through focusing on our common humanity.

The (MCI), in partnership with , launched the exhibition on Wednesday 3 May in recognition of the entries from the .

Displayed throughout the entrance at AMBS is a collection of the top 30 entries, accompanied by the bilingual short stories all focused on the theme of ‘family treasures.’

The competition welcomed several hundred smartphone entries from residents of both the UK and China. The finalists and winners were selected by a judging panel comprised of Prof Michael Wood (University of Manchester), Dr Zhang Hai (Yunnan University), Xiaowen Zhu (ESEA Director), and Dr Bingchun Meng (LSE).

The winning photos were unveiled at the launch event by Greater Manchester High Sheriff, Gerry Yeung, Manchester Museum Director, Esme Ward, Creative Manchester Director, John McAuliffe, and Head of Development and Alumni Relations at the University of Manchester, Kate Cambden.

The four main winners announced were:

  • UK Winner (?1000): Corina Andrisan with ‘Art is my Treasure
  • China Winner (?8,888): Zhou Zheng with ‘Kitchen Mother
  • UK Runner-up (?300): Olivia Parsonage with ‘Maika’s Ba’s Hat
  • China Runner-up (?2,888): Kaz with ‘Hair Shave

Amongst the special guests attending were broadcaster and author, Professor Michael Wood, returning as a judge for the 5th consecutive year, and Dr Zhang Hai, who joined this year’s judging panel for the first time. The two judges expertly read heartfelt bilingual letters sent by the UK and China winners, giving voice to their beautiful stories. Head of the School of Arts, Languages, and Cultures at the University of Manchester Thomas Schmidt, and MCI Director, Peter Gries also spoke at the ceremony, with Professor Peter Gries emphasising the heart of the contest:

The exhibition is open to visitors at AMBS until May 31. It encourages people to vote for their favourite photo, either in-person or online. The photo receiving the highest number of votes will receive a ?500 prize alongside the People’s Choice Award accolade. To view the photos and to vote online, visit the link .

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Wed, 10 May 2023 14:09:00 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/ae9d266b-5f65-488b-af15-c9a443945f64/500_2023uk-chinainternationalphotographywinnersannouncedatexhibitionlaunchandawardsceremony.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/ae9d266b-5f65-488b-af15-c9a443945f64/2023uk-chinainternationalphotographywinnersannouncedatexhibitionlaunchandawardsceremony.jpg?10000
Celebrating the Lee Kai Hung Chinese Culture Gallery opening /about/news/celebrating-the-lee-kai-hung-chinese-culture-gallery-opening/ /about/news/celebrating-the-lee-kai-hung-chinese-culture-gallery-opening/572324On Thursday, 27 April 2023 a special event was held at the Manchester Museum to mark the opening with sponsor Dr Lee Kai Hung and invited guests.The Lee Kai Hung Chinese Culture Gallery is the first permanent gallery devoted to Chinese culture in the history of Manchester Museum. Its aim is to promote empathy and understanding between the people of the UK and China.

The celebration event gathered together contributors, staff and members of the city’s Chinese communities to mark Dr Lee’s formal opening of the Lee Kai Hung Chinese Culture gallery. Following a ribbon-cutting ceremony, there were speeches by our President and Vice-Chancellor Professor Nancy Rothwell, former City of Manchester Deputy Lieutenant Gerry Young (speaking on behalf of Dr Lee) and Manchester Museum Director Esme Ward. 

The speakers highlighted the importance of empathy in promoting intercultural understanding, especially at a time of rising geopolitical tensions. The assistance and guidance provided by the Manchester China Institute and its director Professor Peter Gries have been crucial. This institution is also funded by Dr Lee.

At a special dinner, guests toasted Dr Lee’s generosity and vision. Dr Lee was presented with a model of the moon gate which greets visitors to the Gallery, and includes Dr Lee’s poignant quote:
 

More about the Lee Kai Hung Chinese Cultural Gallery

Showcasing rarely seen collections, and drawing on powerful personal narratives, this exciting new Gallery explores the rich legacy of the relationship and enduring links between Manchester and China. It has been informed by the research of our academics and international collaborations, and it offers a nuanced understanding of Chinese culture that includes natural history as well as the humanities.

Outstanding objects include a milu deer or si bu xiang (“four not alike”), a species rescued from the brink of extinction thanks to international collaboration. And loans from the Whitworth Art Gallery, Manchester Art Gallery and the John Rylands library include beautifully embroidered textiles, exquisitely carved jade artefacts, porcelain vases and an astonishing 20-metre-long scroll. 

The result is a visually stunning experience further enhanced by designers Imagemakers‘ sympathetic colour scheme. The Gallery highlights personal stories of migration, friendships and collaboration to inspire empathy and build understanding.

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Thu, 04 May 2023 17:31:01 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/d92f9264-cd5d-4b1c-964e-dfbebf68ab0d/500_drleersquosformalopeningoftheleekaihungchineseculturegallery.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/d92f9264-cd5d-4b1c-964e-dfbebf68ab0d/drleersquosformalopeningoftheleekaihungchineseculturegallery.jpg?10000
Manchester-China Friendship Programme students meet the Lord Mayor of Manchester /about/news/manchester-china-friendship-programme-students-meet-the-lord-mayor-of-manchester/ /about/news/manchester-china-friendship-programme-students-meet-the-lord-mayor-of-manchester/570168On April 17, the Lord Mayor of Manchester, Councillor Donna Ludford, hosted a fruitful discussion with our students and organisers at Manchester’s Central Library. The event was an opportunity for MCFP students to share their experiences in the scheme and ask direct questions to the Lord Mayor, while enjoying an afternoon tea together.

The MCFP was launched in 2021 by Manchester China Institute (MCI) and Manchester China Forum (MCF), with support from the University of Manchester, aiming to help integrate new Chinese students into campus life, while simultaneously enriching the campus experience for local students. Now in its second edition, the scheme includes 40 UK-based “host” students and 60 newly-arrived Chinese students that engage in regular exciting events, seeking to break cultural barriers and develop mutual understanding between British and Chinese students.

Meeting the Lord Mayor was a chance to address the challenges faced by Chinese students across Manchester, and to spark a larger conversation about further positive Sino-British cultural exchanges. The Lord Mayor was highly receptive to the student’s concerns and proposals, as the MCFP looks to initiate a potential mentorship scheme between MCFP participants and school students across Greater Manchester. Seeing the programme’s achievements recognised on an administrative level is particularly important at a time when anti-Asian prejudice and discrimination has increased in the UK and around the world.

UoM Politics & Chinese student and Senior Host with the MCFP, Sol Stappard, emphasised the importance of the scheme at the event.

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Wed, 19 Apr 2023 12:13:09 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/8fc24cd1-3cbe-4f6d-bbd4-3420ed993a74/500_manchester-chinafriendshipprogrammestudentsmeetthelordmayorofmanchester.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/8fc24cd1-3cbe-4f6d-bbd4-3420ed993a74/manchester-chinafriendshipprogrammestudentsmeetthelordmayorofmanchester.jpg?10000
MCI hire new Engagement and External Relations Officer /about/news/mci-hire-new-engagement-and-external-relations-officer/ /about/news/mci-hire-new-engagement-and-external-relations-officer/565437

The MCI have appointed Lorelei Baciu, a Politics and Sociology graduate from the University of Manchester, with a wide expertise in the public relations and marketing sectors as their new Engagement and External Relations Officer.

Lorelei worked as as intern with the Manchester China Institute in February 2022, where she had the opportunity to coordinate the (MCFP), an integration scheme that brings together Manchester-based ‘host’ students and newly-arrived Chinese students, with the aim of fostering intercultural friendships. 

In her new role at the MCI, Lorelei will assist with the organisation and delivery of weekly seminars and research talks as well as continuing to coordinate on the MCFP and other . Lorelei will also focus on expanding MCI’s online presence by further developing its social media accounts and .
 

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Tue, 21 Mar 2023 14:02:20 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/45001005-8fda-4342-b484-42b34f0b5d08/500_loreleibaciu.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/45001005-8fda-4342-b484-42b34f0b5d08/loreleibaciu.jpg?10000
The MCI and Creative Manchester Launch their fifth UK-China International Photography Competition /about/news/the-mci-and-creative-manchester-launch-their-fifth-uk-china-international-photography-competition/ /about/news/the-mci-and-creative-manchester-launch-their-fifth-uk-china-international-photography-competition/563698

The is now open, with smartphone owners in the UK or China invited to submit photos on the theme of ‘family treasures’ by the evening of Wednesday 12 April.

An expert panel of judges will name the winners for the best UK, China, and Under-16 entries, with a special prize for the ‘People’s Choice’ winner, decided by the public. Winners and runners-up will receive prizes of up to ?1,000 each.

The winning entries will be unveiled at an awards ceremony this summer and showcased alongside shortlisted entries at a dedicated exhibition on the University’s Oxford Road main campus. A selection of the winning images will also be displayed at Manchester Museum, after it was recently reopened following a ?15m redevelopment.

For half a decade, the Competition has been a vital building block in increasing engagement, friendship, and mutual understanding between the UK and China. More than 2,000 entries have been submitted over the years, and in 2022 the ‘People’s Choice’ category received more than 30,000 votes from across the UK and China.

Professor Peter Gries, Lee Kai Hung Chair and Founding Director of the Manchester China Institute said: “The visual medium of the photograph can overcome linguistic divides, revealing our common humanity, and promoting mutual understanding in UK-China relations.”

“The Competition theme this year is ‘family treasures’, which seeks to capture personal experiences of what it feels like to cherish something associated with family.”

“Whether it’s an object with special significance, a talent that’s been passed down for generations, or a newly discovered treasure, we’re looking for visual stories that convey the special connections people form within their families.”

“No matter how small, or what it is, it’s all about what’s treasured in the eye of the beholder – whether they are in Beijing or Birmingham.”

Professor Thomas Schmidt, Head of the School of Arts, Languages and Cultures at the University, added: “The UK-China photography competition is a true showcase of creativity and an important milestone in the annual creative calendar in the north-west of England.”

“The launch comes at an exciting time for east and south-east Asian art and culture in Manchester. It follows the opening of the Chinese Culture Gallery in the recently refurbished Manchester Museum and the launch of the esea contemporary, an art gallery dedicated to east and south-east Asian art. We’re proud to have Xiaowen Zhu, Director of esea contemporary, as one of this year’s judges.”

“Entries from the last four editions have been truly exceptional, and we look forward to receiving many beautiful photos with their stories this year.”

Joining Xiaowen Zhu on the judging panel are Michael Wood, Professor of Public History at 糖心Vlog官方; Dr Zhang Hai, Director of the Research Center for Visual Anthropology, School of Ethnology and Sociology at Yunnan University; and Bingchun Meng, Professor in Media and Communications at LSE.

To find out more and to submit entries, visit the UK-China International Photography Competition page at .

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Mon, 06 Mar 2023 14:10:42 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/4e055833-203e-4daa-bf26-400027fceaff/500_uk-chinainternationalphotographycompetition.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/4e055833-203e-4daa-bf26-400027fceaff/uk-chinainternationalphotographycompetition.jpg?10000
MCI Fund supports academic exchanges between the UK and Greater China /about/news/mci-fund-supports-academic-exchanges-between-the-uk-and-greater-china/ /about/news/mci-fund-supports-academic-exchanges-between-the-uk-and-greater-china/540853The MCI are delighted to announce that our UK-China Travel Fund has supported nine UoM students to travel to the Chinese-speaking world this academic year. The same fund will also enable several visiting scholars to be based at the MCI over the coming year each received ?1000 after applying for our Travel Fund grant in September 2022. The students will all be studying the Chinese language.

The awards were made possible by MCI benefactor, Dr. Lee Kai Hung. In 2020, Dr. Lee generously committed ?100,000 to match any other charitable gifts made towards the same travel fund, supporting UoM students and staff to study Chinese and conduct research on Greater China. Last year, ex-UMIST student and now one of China’s top electrical engineers, Li Ruomei, gifted ?30,000 to be paid over three years, which has been since matched by Dr. Lee’s donation. 

“I’m Keisha and I was born and raised in London. I’m currently studying Modern Language and Business & Management (Chinese) at the University of Manchester. As part of my degree, I have the opportunity to study in Taiwan where I will be able to focus on improving my Chinese at the National Taiwan University in Taipei. I believe that learning Chinese is a very useful skill and will be valuable in my future as I hope to be involved in international organisations or work in communications related roles”. - Keisha Lam, 2022-2023 Travel Fund Awardee

Aside from sending students to research in the Chinese-speaking world, the gift has enabled the MCI to fund the arrival of world class researchers to be scholars in residence at the institute. The fund will be used to cover “bench fees” at the university, allowing the MCI to host at least four multi-disciplinary scholars in China studies in the 2022-2023 year.

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Wed, 26 Oct 2022 00:21:00 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_mcifunding.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/mcifunding.jpg?10000
MCI Director Gries on BBC World Business Report /about/news/mci-director-gries-on-bbc-world-business-report/ /about/news/mci-director-gries-on-bbc-world-business-report/539865Professor Gries discusses the economic challenges China faces as Xi Jinping heads into his third five-year term.

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Tue, 18 Oct 2022 16:41:45 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_screenshot2022-10-18at17.53.42.png?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/screenshot2022-10-18at17.53.42.png?10000
MCI researcher Dr Tao Wang awarded 3-year Hallsworth funding /about/news/mci-researcher-dr-tao-wang-awarded-3-year-hallsworth-funding/ /about/news/mci-researcher-dr-tao-wang-awarded-3-year-hallsworth-funding/536178The Manchester China Institute is delighted to announce that former MCI postdoc, Tao Wang, has been awarded the prestigious funding award for a period of three years.

Dr Wang obtained his Ph.D. in Politics from the University of Manchester in 2021 with his doctoral research focusing on how the informal rule of guanxi affects political representation in Taiwan. After completing his Ph.D. in the 2021-2022 academic year, Dr Wang worked at the MCI as a Research Associate on several projects about both Taiwanese and Chinese public opinion, where he collaborated widely with a global network of scholars. Dr. Wang also initiated the highly successful talks series at the MCI, enabling many young scholars to present their research to a multidisciplinary group of peers.

As a Hallsworth Research Fellow, Dr. Wang is formulating a new project about Chinese views of cross-strait relations. The study will examine the increasingly bellicose rhetoric about cross-strait relations in Chinese public opinion and explore the driving forces behind it.

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It was my great honour to receive the Hallsworth Research Fellowship. It offers me a timely and unique opportunity to explore the exciting field of authoritarian public opinion. I am looking forward to working alongside my colleagues at MCI and beyond]]> Tue, 04 Oct 2022 09:58:00 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_taowang.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/taowang.jpg?10000
People’s Choice Award Winner Revealed for 2022 UK-China International Photography Competition /about/news/peoples-choice-award-winner-revealed-for-2022-uk-china-international-photography-competition/ /about/news/peoples-choice-award-winner-revealed-for-2022-uk-china-international-photography-competition/517998The theme of this year’s photography competition was ‘The Feeling of Home’, with the contest running from March to May 2022.

MANCHESTER 6 July 2022 – A tender moment between an older couple captured the hearts of voters for this year’s People’s Choice Award for the UK-China International Photography Competition.

After whittling down several hundred entries, the top 30 submissions were exhibited at The Alliance Manchester Business School from 30 May to 1 July 2022, with the two main winners from the UK and China already selected by the contest’s expert judging panel during the opening ceremony. 

The  left the selection up to the public, opening the votes both online and in-person at the exhibition. In total, almost 30,000 votes were cast through a combination of WeChat, Facebook, and the exhibit ballot box.

This third Award came with a prize of ?500/?4,500, and the clear winner was a fantastic submission from 王淑云 (Shuyun Wang). Her entry ‘The Older Couple’ (老来夫妻) depicted the affection still clearly visible between an elderly duo, as the husband spooned his wife the New Year treat of Tangyuan (sweet glutinous rice balls). The charming photograph was taken in rural Licheng County, Shanxi Province.

The MCI and Creative Manchester wish to congratulate all three winners once again on their wonderful entries.

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Wed, 06 Jul 2022 22:37:29 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_67china.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/67china.jpg?10000
Manchester Museum’s landmark ‘Golden Mummies of Egypt’ exhibition to open in Shenzhen /about/news/golden-mummies-of-egypt/ /about/news/golden-mummies-of-egypt/515177Golden Mummies of Egypt - Manchester Museum’s first ever international touring exhibition - will open at Nanshan Museum in Shenzhen on Friday 24 June.

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Golden Mummies of Egypt - Manchester Museum’s first ever international touring exhibition - will open at Nanshan Museum in Shenzhen on Friday 24 June.

Golden Mummies, developed and produced in partnership with Nomad Exhibitions, explores beliefs about the afterlife during an era when Egypt was part of the Greek and Roman worlds.

It offers unparalleled access to Manchester Museum’s Egypt and Sudan collections and features more than 100 objects and eight mummies.

The show has experienced huge success in Beijing and Shanghai already, attracting over quarter of a million visitors.

Following its time in Shenzhen, Golden Mummies will return to Manchester Museum, part of 糖心Vlog官方, taking centre stage in a brand new 420m2 Exhibition Hall from February 2023.

The Exhibition Hall is part of the museum’s ambitious ?15million transformation project. When the museum reopens to the public, ambitious shows will engage with big ideas, global challenges and local action.

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Tue, 21 Jun 2022 15:10:09 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_goldenmummies.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/goldenmummies.jpg?10000
Businesses benefiting from political connections harm China’s economic growth /about/news/businesses-benefitting-from-political-connections-could-harm-chinas-economic-growth/ /about/news/businesses-benefitting-from-political-connections-could-harm-chinas-economic-growth/503075Researchers from 糖心Vlog官方 and University of Navarra have examined the value of politically connected firm directors to the Chinese elite, in terms of getting preferential access to resources.

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Researchers from 糖心Vlog官方 and University of Navarra have examined the value of politically connected firm directors to the Chinese elite, in terms of getting preferential access to resources.

The study found that being connected to the political elite in China brings advantages to firms, despite the launch of the Anti-Corruption Campaign (ACC) by president Xi Jinping in 2012. According to the paper, recently , private firms benefit from higher subsidies if at least one director in the boardroom has ties with the ruling Communist Party’s Politburo. State-owned enterprises (SOE’s) that have at least one connected director also enjoy privileges, such as paying lower interest rates.

The findings differ between private and state owned firms, showing that connections have become more valuable for private firms following the anti-corruption campaign. According to the research, private firms face a more aggressive environment within the Chinese context, and often engage in corrupt practices as a mechanism to survive.

By contrast, corruption in state firms differs in nature, given that state firms already enjoy a privileged status within the Chinese economy and do not need to engage in corruption in order to survive. The value of connections in the state sector did not increase after the ACC, however, political connections remained important.

According to the study, in state owned firms the problem of corruption and personal connections lies in the politicisation of these companies. Whilst SOEs are tied to the Chinese Government, they can be used as a means for political interests. The researchers suggest that reducing connections between politicians and firms and introducing market rules within state companies would increase efficiency.

This research sheds light on a resource allocation mechanism that has become increasingly important in China since 2012, but which, according to the researchers, harms China’s economic growth in the long term.

Whilst the Anti-Corruption Campaign may have had some other positive effects, the researchers argue that improving market institutions in China and providing a more favourable environment for private companies requires deeper reforms.

 “We show that the value of connections in the private sector increased after the Anti-Corruption Campaign because they became a less risky alternative to pecuniary corruption. We also show that connected firms do not perform better than others, despite benefiting from advantages. The Chinese economy as a whole hence suffers due to these political economy mechanisms at play.” Said Dr , from 糖心Vlog官方.

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Thu, 21 Apr 2022 12:38:11 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_stock-photo-guiyang-china-skyline-at-jiaxiu-pavilion-on-the-nanming-river-245773270.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/stock-photo-guiyang-china-skyline-at-jiaxiu-pavilion-on-the-nanming-river-245773270.jpg?10000
Winners of international photography competition announced in China /about/news/winners-of-international-photography-competition/ /about/news/winners-of-international-photography-competition/461328 and  recently staged an awards ceremony in China for this year’s , which marked the 35th anniversary of Manchester’s twinning with the city of Wuhan.

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 and  recently staged an awards ceremony in China for this year’s , which marked the 35th anniversary of Manchester’s twinning with the city of Wuhan.

Hundreds of caring-themed submissions were received from both countries between March and May of this year, in a competition to promote mutual understanding between the UK and China.

The entries were whittled down to a shortlist of 30 – including two overall winners – by an esteemed judging panel including  (Historian, Broadcaster and Professor of Public History at 糖心Vlog官方). The 30 shortlisted photographs are now being exhibited at the , China, where the awards ceremony took place on 10 June.

The well-attended ceremony warranted coverage from Chinese news stations, with local dignitaries and representation from the Wuhan UK consulate adding prestige to the occasion. UK Ambassador to China, Caroline Wilson was in attendance and announced the two overall winners, with Professor Alessandro Schiesaro (Head of the School of Arts, Languages and Cultures) and Peter Gries (Director of the Manchester China Institute) giving remote speeches congratulating the winners.

Michael Wood also gave a remote speech, in which he stated “The photos coming in this, of all years, have really transported all of us – especially the Chinese photos back to the streets of China, and the joy and affability of the people.”

The award for the Best UK Submission went to NHS worker, Ruthie Clegg, whose photograph was taken in a hospital at the height of the pandemic. It shows the nonverbal ways that Ruthie and her colleagues cared for each other during an incredibly difficult period. In her pre-recorded acceptance speech, Ruthie told us how much it meant to receive the award, and stressed the need for caring amid tough times: “It was really important to be there for one another, as staff members, as nothing ever prepared us for what we were going to see in this past year”.

The UK's Ambassador to China, Caroline Wilson DCMG presented the award for the Best China Submission to Zhang Hongwei (张洪卫), whose image presented an amusing snapshot of life in rural Yunnan, showing a wife ably trimming her husband’s toenails. Zhang attended the Wuhan awards ceremony in person, travelling all the way from Yunnan (the equivalent journey of London to Rome!). Both overall winners received £1,000/8,888 RMB.

 A third award is still up for grabs, and the recipient is to be decided by the public. Voting for the People’s Choice Award, which comes with a prize of £500/¥4,500, is now open. Have your say by heading over to Creative Manchester’s Facebook page and ‘liking’ your favourite image in the album entitled .

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Fri, 11 Jun 2021 15:34:03 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_800-img-2503.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/800-img-2503.jpg?10000
MCI Director teams up with MERICS Experts on German perceptions of China podcast /about/news/mci-director-teams-up-with-merics-experts-on-german-perceptions-of-china-podcast/ /about/news/mci-director-teams-up-with-merics-experts-on-german-perceptions-of-china-podcast/373094How do Germans feel and think about China? Peter Hays Gries, MCI Director, talks with Kerstin Lohse-Friedrick to analyse the ideological drivers which shape the views of Germans on China.

The MERICS (Mercator Institute for China Studies) Experts podcast series analyses current affairs and developments in China, and regularly hosts guest speakers and China experts to participate in the discussion.

To listen to the podcast via Soundcloud, .

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Fri, 03 Jan 2020 09:14:00 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_mci-petegries500x298-676162.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/mci-petegries500x298-676162.jpg?10000
University expert co-hosts meeting of American and Chinese diplomats /about/news/american-and-chinese-diplomats/ /about/news/american-and-chinese-diplomats/359173A group of Chinese and American diplomats have met in the remote mountains of China's Anhui province for the 12th annual US-China Diplomatic Dialogue, co-hosted by Professor Peter Gries of the Manchester China Institute.

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A group of Chinese and American diplomats have met in the remote mountains of China's Anhui province for the 12th annual US-China Diplomatic Dialogue, co-hosted by Professor Peter Gries of the Manchester China Institute. 

The meeting involved formal discussions of the US-China trade dispute, security competition in the South China Sea, and the future of US-China relations. It also included informal activities like hiking in the Mingtang Mountains and touring local factories and farms, giving the Chinese and American diplomats ample opportunity to get to know one another better, and further discuss bilateral issues.

Yuexi, the town where the meeting took place, is the hometown of cohost Wu Xinbo, who Directs both the Shanghai and Fudan University Institutes of American Studies.

Professor Peter Gries established the US-China Diplomatic Dialogue in 2007 to generate mutual trust and improve U.S.-China relations. It does this by creating an informal retreat-like atmosphere in which participating diplomats can establish personal relationships while frankly exchanging their views on bilateral relations.

The Americans attendees came from the US Embassy in Beijing, and the five US Consulates scattered around China. The Chinese diplomats all came from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Beijing.

Americans and Chinese people grow up with very different ideologies and worldviews - in such a context, they can easily project their worst fears onto one another, increasing the likelihood of conflict. Professor Gries created the dialogue in the hopes that it would help each side better understand the others’ views, lessening the likelihood that misperceptions and fear would contribute to war.

Because of the working-level, informal, and intimate nature of the US-China Diplomatic Dialogue, it also allows young Chinese and American diplomats to form personal relationships that they can call upon in their future careers.

?The Chinese diplomats were Liu Jun (刘军, Counsellor, Department of North American Affairs), Shen Jie (沈杰, First Secretary, Information Department), Chi Wenyu (匙文宇, Second Secretary, Policy Planning), Zhou Yang (周洋, Second Secretary, Department of North American Affairs), Zhang Junjie (张俊杰, Third Secretary, Department of North American Affairs, Zhang Zhenliang (张振亮, Third Secretary, General Office), Li Xue (李雪, Attaché, Department of North American Affairs), Zhu Shuai (朱帅, Attaché, Personnel Department), and Xu Lang (徐浪, Department of North American Affairs).

The American diplomats were Pauline Anderson (Public Affairs, U.S. Embassy), Michael Brewer (Economic Officer, US CG in Shanghai), Andrew Duff (Economic Officer, U.S. CG in Guangzhou), Natasha Grokh (Economic Officer, U.S. CG in Shenyang), Scott Linton (Political Officer, U.S. CG in Shanghai), Mimi Lu (Trade Officer, Economic Section,), Tom Niblock (Political Officer, U.S. Embassy), and Chris Rains (Political Officer, U.S. CG in Chengdu).

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Tue, 24 Sep 2019 13:08:56 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_uschina-343016.jpeg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/uschina-343016.jpeg?10000
Peter Gries to discuss international relations and policy at Chinese University of Hong Kong /about/news/peter-gries-to-discuss-international-relations-and-policy-at-chinese-university-of-hong-kong/ /about/news/peter-gries-to-discuss-international-relations-and-policy-at-chinese-university-of-hong-kong/357674Professor s, Director of the Manchester China Institute, Lee Kai Hung chair and professor of Chinese politics, will be speaking at the Chinese University of Hong Kong next week on the subject of international relations.

In his presentation ‘Squeezed states: How diplomatic de/recognitions shape Taiwanese feelings and policy preferences towards China’, Peter will be tackling the effectiveness of moderators and mediators, policy implications for cross-Strait relations and how diplomatic de-recognitions impact Taiwan’s relationship with China.

The talk, which forms part of a luncheon seminar series, will take place at the Chinese University of Hong Kong on 17 September 2019 at 12 noon till 1pm, and the presentation will be carried out in English.

For more information, click here.

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Wed, 11 Sep 2019 11:38:25 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_mci-petegries500x298-676162.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/mci-petegries500x298-676162.jpg?10000
China’s Science and Technology Minister visits University of Manchester /about/news/chinas-science-and-technology-minister-visits-university-of-manchester/ /about/news/chinas-science-and-technology-minister-visits-university-of-manchester/345217China’s Minister of Science and Technology, Mr Wang Zhigang, got the full scope of 糖心Vlog官方’s advanced materials research capabilities and commercial opportunities during his visit to campus.

Accompanied by colleagues from the Chinese Embassy in the UK, Mr Zhigang was welcomed by the University’s President and Vice-Chancellor, Professor Dame Nancy Rothwell.

Mr Zhigang was also introduced to Professor Colette Fagan, Vice-President for Research and Nobel-prize winning physicist, Professor Sir André Geim, who was part of the scientific team to originally identify Graphene in 2004.

On arriving to the campus Mr Zhigang and his delegation visited the ), and the .

During that time he met James Baker the current CEO of Graphene@Manchester and emphasised the importance of adopting a long-term strategic view for scientific cooperation between Manchester and China.

The Minister also acknowledged how the University and some Chinese institutions are working collaboratively to find solutions to global challenges, such as ageing populations.

After visiting the campus, the delegation took in one of the University’s cultural assets, Jodrell Bank Observatory, which has recently joined the Great Barrier Reef, Taj Mahal, Grand Canyon National Park and Stonehenge on the prestigious UNESCO World Heritage List.

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Wed, 17 Jul 2019 09:49:01 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_petecarr-img-9653-125002.jpeg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/petecarr-img-9653-125002.jpeg?10000
Chinese Ambassador visits the University /about/news/chinese-ambassador-visits-the-university/ /about/news/chinese-ambassador-visits-the-university/313497His Excellency Liu Xiaoming, Chinese Ambassador to the United Kingdom, inspired the next generation of innovators during a keynote speech at , demonstrating the strong bond between the University and China and the benefits of partnership working.

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His Excellency Liu Xiaoming, Chinese Ambassador to the United Kingdom, inspired the next generation of innovators during a keynote speech at , demonstrating the strong bond between the University and China and the benefits of partnership working.

Concluding his tour of the University, Ambassador Liu said it was his third campus visit since 2015, the last time as part of President Xi’s state visit to Manchester. This visit was just as symbolic as it coincided with the 40th anniversary of the opening up of the Chinese economy to international markets.

In his speech, Ambassador Liu stated he was impressed by the University’s discipline and innovative spirit which complemented the UK’s research strengths in science, artificial intelligence, healthcare, ageing and green growth. There is also a link between the University and China’s expertise in urban transformation, engineering, technology, aerospace and nuclear energy. With this, the Ambassador commented he saw potential University-China partnerships around the regeneration of rust belt areas and building green, smart cities of the future.

He said: "I sincerely hope that the University of Manchester will continue to leverage its strengths, deepen cooperation with China on innovation in the spirit of “knowledge, wisdom and humanity”, and enhance exchanges in personnel training and technology. I am sure you will become a leading brand of China-UK cooperation on innovation."

The Ambassador, accompanied by Madam Huping Hua, was hosted by Professor Dame Nancy Rothwell, President and Vice-Chancellor of the University, and .

The Ambassador's full speech can be found on .

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Wed, 19 Dec 2018 13:43:22 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_petecarr-img-5721-326549.jpeg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/petecarr-img-5721-326549.jpeg?10000
University celebrates 10 years in China /about/news/university-celebrates-10-years-in-china/ /about/news/university-celebrates-10-years-in-china/303728糖心Vlog官方 has celebrated a key milestone with the 10 year anniversary of launching its China Centre in Shanghai.

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糖心Vlog官方 has celebrated a key milestone with the 10 year anniversary of launching its China Centre in Shanghai.

One of five global hubs and the largest of the University’s overseas Centres, the establishment of the China Centre was recognised by a charity event at the Sino-UK Creative Economy Business Forum, which focused on healthcare, education and art.

The event was attended by President and Vice-Chancellor, Professor Dame Nancy Rothwell, along with colleagues Professor Peter Gries Director of the Manchester China Institute, Professor Elaine Ferneley, Director, University of Manchester Worldwide, and Richard Cotton Director of Student Recruitment & International Development.

Acknowledging the University’s research strengths and its global reputation for innovation, Professor Dame Nancy Rothwell, said: “Manchester has long been a birthplace of creativity. The first computer was created in Manchester and more recently so was graphene. This year, the University launches Creative Manchester – a £3.3 million investment along with collaborative partnerships to support the creative sector.

“Our cultural institutes including the Whitworth, Manchester Museum, the John Rylands Library, the Centre for New Writing, the Institute for Cultural Practices, Multilingual Manchester and Digital Humanities demonstrate a long history of investment in the area.”

There are currently more than 17,500 University alumni in mainland China and more than 4,200 alumni in Hong Kong SAR.

A panel session exploring the creative economy and a souvenir sale which raised funds to support children from under-privileged backgrounds also took place. Entertainment was provided by a choir made up of the children of MBA graduates and their parents.

Professor Rothwell concluded: “In addition to continuously supporting Chinese students on campus and having established the China Centre a decade ago, the University’s engagement in China has enabled joint research and development initiatives with leading universities across China.

“The launch of and the partnerships with Chinese universities successfully illustrates our long-term commitment to China, along with its privilege, responsibility and ability in effectively bridging China and Britain in the field of education.”

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Fri, 05 Oct 2018 10:44:00 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_img-8640.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/img-8640.jpg?10000
曼彻斯特中国研究院:如何看中国创新-摩拜单车入驻曼彻斯特 /about/news/%E6%9B%BC%E5%BD%BB%E6%96%AF%E7%89%B9%E4%B8%AD%E5%9B%BD%E7%A0%94%E7%A9%B6%E9%99%A2-%E5%A6%82%E4%BD%95%E7%9C%8B%E4%B8%AD%E5%9B%BD%E5%88%9B%E6%96%B0-%E6%91%A9%E6%8B%9C%E5%8D%95%E8%BD%A6%E5%85%A5%E9%A9%BB%E6%9B%BC%E5%BD%BB%E6%96%AF%E7%89%B9simp/ /about/news/%E6%9B%BC%E5%BD%BB%E6%96%AF%E7%89%B9%E4%B8%AD%E5%9B%BD%E7%A0%94%E7%A9%B6%E9%99%A2-%E5%A6%82%E4%BD%95%E7%9C%8B%E4%B8%AD%E5%9B%BD%E5%88%9B%E6%96%B0-%E6%91%A9%E6%8B%9C%E5%8D%95%E8%BD%A6%E5%85%A5%E9%A9%BB%E6%9B%BC%E5%BD%BB%E6%96%AF%E7%89%B9simp/275236一直以来,人们都认为现代科技只能从西方传播到东方。然而,这次曼彻斯特中国研究院举办的圆桌论坛将目光聚集在了摩拜单车进驻英国的经历上,该活动聚集了各界精英学者和权威人士在曼彻斯特大学一起讨论&濒诲辩耻辞;中国创新&谤诲辩耻辞;的话题。

早在2001年,曼彻斯特大学经济学名誉教授吉姆&尘颈诲诲辞迟;奥尼尔阁下首次提出&濒诲辩耻辞;金砖四国叠搁滨颁&谤诲辩耻辞;理论,预测巴西、俄罗斯、印度和中国将成为未来经济强国。2015年,习近平主席访英开启了中英关系的&濒诲辩耻辞;黄金时代&谤诲辩耻辞;,曼彻斯特与中国的联系也愈发紧密、愈发频繁。

曼彻斯特大学最近成立的中国研究院,得到香港商人、慈善家和曼大名誉博士李启鸿先生的慷慨捐赠,该研究院由李启鸿博士和曼彻斯特大学校长南希爵士Dame Nancy Rothwell正式启动。这笔捐赠将继续致力于促进英中两国关系发展,以及两国人民的相互理解,着重在世界领先的科学研究、社区拓展活动以及在曼彻斯特和中国的公开讲座上。与此同时,该笔捐赠还将在全英最大的大学博物馆——曼彻斯特博物馆内建立一个全新的“李启鸿中国文化长廊”,展出古代青铜雕塑、玉雕以及丝织品等文物。

曼彻斯特中国研究院院长、曼彻斯特大学中国政治专业教授Peter Gries葛小伟表示:“感谢李启鸿博士的慷慨捐赠与他的远见,让曼彻斯特中国研究院能够将英中双方的学者、公司、政府与民众聚集在一起,充分发挥英中双边关系的潜力。此项捐赠也将会把曼彻斯特推向中国研究的最前沿。”

&濒诲辩耻辞;将摩拜单车作为我们第一次圆桌论坛的主题是具有代表意义的,它很好地展示了中国人民和英国人民是如何共同合作,并带来显着效益的。&谤诲辩耻辞;

圆桌会议由曼彻斯特大学商学院科学与技术政策管理高级讲师Andrew James博士主持,活动还邀请到了摩拜单车欧洲区发展总监Steve Pyer,曼彻斯特英中协会执行董事Rhys Whalley,以及曼彻斯特大学商学院银行业高级讲师、社会责任与参与专业负责人Ismail Ertürk。

活动参与者还欣赏了由曼大教授、诺贝尔奖获得者-诺沃肖洛爵士受中国与石墨烯启发创作的中国水彩画展。

曼彻斯特大学校长南希爵士还表示:&濒诲辩耻辞;摩拜单车进驻曼彻斯特、曼彻斯特中国研究院的建立都是这座城市以及大学和中国联系不断加强的一系列成果之一。2015年,我们在大学校园接待了习近平主席,今年年初我与英国首相特蕾莎&尘颈诲诲辞迟;梅访华团一起前往中国,这不仅彰显了曼彻斯特大学在研究和创新领域的全球领导地位,还认同了曼彻斯特大学在英中关系中发挥的长期作用。曼彻斯特中国研究院的开启标志着曼彻斯特与中国的关系进入了一个全新的阶段。&谤诲辩耻辞;

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Thu, 03 May 2018 10:00:00 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_10unveiling.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/10unveiling.jpg?10000
曼彻斯特中国研究院:如何看中国创新-摩拜单车入驻曼彻斯特 /about/news/%E6%9B%BC%E5%BE%B9%E6%96%AF%E7%89%B9%E4%B8%AD%E5%9C%8B%E7%A0%94%E7%A9%B6%E9%99%A2-%E5%A6%82%E4%BD%95%E7%9C%8B%E4%B8%AD%E5%9C%8B%E5%89%B5%E6%96%B0-%E6%91%A9%E6%8B%9C%E5%96%AE%E8%BB%8A%E5%85%A5%E9%A7%90%E6%9B%BC%E5%BE%B9%E6%96%AF%E7%89%B9/ /about/news/%E6%9B%BC%E5%BE%B9%E6%96%AF%E7%89%B9%E4%B8%AD%E5%9C%8B%E7%A0%94%E7%A9%B6%E9%99%A2-%E5%A6%82%E4%BD%95%E7%9C%8B%E4%B8%AD%E5%9C%8B%E5%89%B5%E6%96%B0-%E6%91%A9%E6%8B%9C%E5%96%AE%E8%BB%8A%E5%85%A5%E9%A7%90%E6%9B%BC%E5%BE%B9%E6%96%AF%E7%89%B9/275233 

 

一直以来,人们都认為现代科技只能从西方传播到东方。然而,这次曼彻斯特中国研究院举办的圆桌论坛将目光聚集在了摩拜单车进驻英国的经歷上,该活动聚集了各界精英学者和权威人士在曼彻斯特大学一起讨论&濒诲辩耻辞;中国创新&谤诲辩耻辞;的话题。

早在2001年,曼彻斯特大学经济学名誉教授吉姆&尘颈诲诲辞迟;奥尼尔阁下首次提出&濒诲辩耻辞;金砖四国BRIC&谤诲辩耻辞;理论,预测巴西、俄罗斯、印度和中国将成為未来经济强国。 2015年,习近平主席访英开啟了中英关係的&濒诲辩耻辞;黄金时代&谤诲辩耻辞;,曼彻斯特与中国的联繫也愈发紧密、愈发频繁。

曼彻斯特大学最近成立的中国研究院,得到香港商人、慈善家和曼大名誉博士李啟鸿先生的慷慨捐赠,该研究院由李啟鸿博士和曼彻斯特大学校长南希爵士Dame Nancy Rothwell正式啟动。这笔捐赠将继续致力於促进英中两国关係发展,以及两国人民的相互理解,着重在世界领先的科学研究、社区拓展活动以及在曼彻斯特和中国的公开讲座上。与此同时,该笔捐赠还将在全英最大的大学博物馆&尘诲补蝉丑;&尘诲补蝉丑;曼彻斯特博物馆内建立一个全新的&濒诲辩耻辞;李啟鸿中国文化长廊&谤诲辩耻辞;,展出古代青铜雕塑、玉雕以及丝织品等文物。

曼彻斯特中国研究院院长、曼彻斯特大学中国政治专业教授Peter Gries葛小伟表示:&濒诲辩耻辞;感谢李啟鸿博士的慷慨捐赠与他的远见,让曼彻斯特中国研究院能够将英中双方的学者、公司、政府与民眾聚集在一起,充分发挥英中双边关係的潜力。此项捐赠也将会把曼彻斯特推向中国研究的最前沿。&谤诲辩耻辞;

&濒诲辩耻辞;将摩拜单车作為我们第一次圆桌论坛的主题是具有代表意义的,它很好地展示了中国人民和英国人民是如何共同合作,并带来显着效益的。&谤诲辩耻辞;

圆桌会议由曼彻斯特大学商学院科学与技术政策管理高级讲师Andrew James博士主持,活动还邀请到了摩拜单车欧洲区发展总监Steve Pyer,曼彻斯特英中协会执行董事Rhys Whalley,以及曼彻斯特大学商学院银行业高级讲师、社会责任与参与专业负责人Ismail Ertürk

活动参与者还欣赏了由曼大教授、诺贝尔奖获得者-诺沃肖洛爵士受中国与石墨烯啟发创作的中国水彩画展。

曼彻斯特大学校长南希爵士还表示:&濒诲辩耻辞;摩拜单车进驻曼彻斯特、曼彻斯特中国研究院的建立都是这座城市以及大学和中国联繫不断加强的一系列成果之一。2015年,我们在大学校园接待了习近平主席,今年年初我与英国首相特蕾莎&尘颈诲诲辞迟;梅访华团一起前往中国,这不仅彰显了曼彻斯特大学在研究和创新领域的全球领导地位,还认同了曼彻斯特大学在英中关係中发挥的长期作用。曼彻斯特中国研究院的开啟标誌着曼彻斯特与中国的关係进入了一个全新的阶段。&谤诲辩耻辞;

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Thu, 03 May 2018 10:00:00 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_1drleekaihungandwifecutribbon.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/1drleekaihungandwifecutribbon.jpg?10000
University takes centre stage with Prime Minister and Chinese business leaders /about/news/university-prime-minister-chinese-business-leaders/ /about/news/university-prime-minister-chinese-business-leaders/256038Today at the UK China Business Forum in Shanghai, President and Vice-Chancellor, Professor Dame Nancy Rothwell and Nobel Laureate, Professor Sir Kostya Novoselov of 糖心Vlog官方 addressed a group of specially selected business leaders.

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Today at the UK China Business Forum in Shanghai, President and Vice-Chancellor, Professor Dame Nancy Rothwell and Nobel Laureate, Professor Sir Kostya Novoselov of 糖心Vlog官方 addressed a group of specially selected business leaders.

and shared the stage with two of China’s highest-profile business people – Jack Ma, founder and executive chairman of Alibaba Group and Li Shufu, chairman of Zhejiang Geely Holding Group Co Ltd and Volvo Cars, as well as Theresa May and Liam Fox.

Speaking at the event, the Prime Minister said: “I’m proud to have brought many inspirational women in my business delegation.

“Women like Nancy Rothwell, who spoke to you earlier and whose university, Manchester, has excellent links with Wuhan, the first stop on my visit, as well as across China.”

Dame Nancy and Sir Kostya were chosen as part of the current delegation in recognition of Manchester’s position as a global leader in research and innovation for example in the development of advanced materials, such as graphene, in business studies and in health innovation. It also recognises the longstanding role that Manchester and its university play in UK-China relations.

There are more than 4,800 Chinese students studying in Manchester and the University has had a centre in Shanghai since 2008 with more than 1,000 Global MBA students studying in China since it opened.

This relationship was cemented and its National Graphene Institute in 2015, where he met Dame Nancy, Sir Andre Geim and Sir Kostya and saw some of the latest developments and applications for the 2D material .

During the current trip Dame Nancy has visited Manchester’s twin city, Wuhan, alongside the Prime Minister and attended the new UK CEO Council in Beijing which took place in the Great Hall of the People. Dame Nancy is a member of the Council alongside about 20 other UK and 20 Chinese CEOs of major businesses.

This marks a new stage in the Manchester’s relationship with China and follows the recent , which was supported by a £5m donation from businessman, philanthropist and honorary graduate, Dr Lee Kai Hung.

The Institute is tasked with improving mutual understanding in UK-China relations, and the donation will also establish a new Chinese culture gallery at .

The University has also recently announced several new partnerships in China including:

  • The UK-China Infrastructure Academy commissioned by the Department of International Trade, led by , and with partners from leading UK and international businesses with a strong Northern presence. The Academy is a major initiative, backed by the UK Government, involving CEOs, presidents and other senior delegates from Chinese business and government. Two five-day modules, covering energy and rail specialisms, will establish deep understanding into the benefits of investing in UK infrastructure and opportunities for joint investment in third party countries.
  • The University has this week signed a memorandum of understanding with Peking University Health Science Centre to establish a Joint Technological Platform for ‘Omics Study covering genomics, proteomics/metabolomics and data science to support the Experimental Medicine Research links between the two institutions, and between 糖心Vlog官方 and other major hospitals in Beijing, such as the 301 Hospital.
  • A Tsinghua University collaboration, signed in January, which focuses on health research, materials and engineering.
  • Another MoU signed this week with Shanghai Jiao Tong University (SJTU) School of Medicine to establish a Clinical Research Methods Centre linking the at 糖心Vlog官方 and the Translational Medicine Centre at SJTU to support research interests at both institutions
  • Huazhong University of Science and Technology (HUST) Agreement – this will see the development of joint education and research initiatives between 糖心Vlog官方 and HUST, one of China’s top universities, in Wuhan.

Dame Nancy commented: “Manchester has a vibrant Chinese cultural and business community and the country’s links with the University are growing all of the time.

“It was therefore an honour to be chosen by the Prime Minister for this delegation, to join the UK-China CEO forum and to have the opportunity to speak to fellow universities and some of China’s major businesses about ways in which we can work together to solve some of the world’s most pressing issues.”

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“It was therefore an honour to be chosen by the Prime Minister for this delegation, to join the UK-China CEO forum and to have the opportunity to speak to fellow universities and some of China’s major businesses about ways in which we can work together to solve some of the world’s most pressing issues.”  ]]>
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曼彻斯特大学与英国首相及中国商界领袖共登中心舞台 /about/news/%E6%9B%BC%E5%BD%BB%E6%96%AF%E7%89%B9%E5%A4%A7%E5%AD%A6%E4%B8%8E%E8%8B%B1%E5%9B%BD%E9%A6%96%E7%9B%B8%E5%8F%8A%E4%B8%AD%E5%9B%BD%E5%95%86%E7%95%8C%E9%A2%86%E8%A2%96%E5%85%B1%E7%99%BB%E4%B8%AD%E5%BF%83%E8%88%9E%E5%8F%B0/ /about/news/%E6%9B%BC%E5%BD%BB%E6%96%AF%E7%89%B9%E5%A4%A7%E5%AD%A6%E4%B8%8E%E8%8B%B1%E5%9B%BD%E9%A6%96%E7%9B%B8%E5%8F%8A%E4%B8%AD%E5%9B%BD%E5%95%86%E7%95%8C%E9%A2%86%E8%A2%96%E5%85%B1%E7%99%BB%E4%B8%AD%E5%BF%83%E8%88%9E%E5%8F%B0/256052今日,在上海举行的中英商业论坛上,曼彻斯特大学校长南希&尘颈诲诲辞迟;罗瑟薇教授、女爵士和曼彻斯特大学教授、诺贝尔奖获得者科斯特亚&尘颈诲诲辞迟;诺沃肖洛夫爵士向来自中英两国的商界领袖致词。

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今日,在上海举行的中英商业论坛上,曼彻斯特大学校长南希&尘颈诲诲辞迟;罗瑟薇教授、女爵士和曼彻斯特大学教授、诺贝尔奖获得者科斯特亚&尘颈诲诲辞迟;诺沃肖洛夫爵士向来自中英两国的商界领袖致词。

南希女爵士和科斯特亚爵士与两位中国知名商界人士 ——阿里巴巴集团创始人兼董事局主席马云和浙江吉利控股集团有限公司董事长兼沃尔沃汽车集团董事长李书福,以及英国首相特蕾莎•梅、英国国际贸易大臣利亚姆·福克斯同台进行了演讲。

南希女爵士和科斯特亚爵士获选访华代表团成员,不仅彰显了曼彻斯特大学在研究和创新领域的全球领导地位,例如,石墨烯等先进材料的发展,商业研究和健康医疗等方面的创新;同时也认同了曼彻斯特大学在英中关系中发挥的长期作用。

曼彻斯特现有超过4800名中国留学生。2008年,曼彻斯特大学在上海设立了中国中心,迄今在中国培养了超过1000名工商管理硕士。

2015年习近平主席对曼彻斯特的访问更加巩固了曼彻斯特与中国的密切关系。习主席访问了曼彻斯特大学及下属的国家石墨烯研究院,会见了南希女爵士、安德烈&尘颈诲诲辞迟;盖姆爵士和科斯特亚爵士,并了解了二维材料石墨烯的最新发展和应用。

此次英国首相对中国的访问中,南希女爵士陪同梅总理一起访问了曼彻斯特的友好城市武汉,并出席了在北京人民大会堂举行的新一届英国首席执行官协会会议。 除南希女爵士之外,与会的还有40多位英中两国主要公司的首席执行官。

曼彻斯特大学最近成立的中国研究所,得到了着名商人、慈善家和名誉博士李启鸿先生慷慨捐赠的500万英镑。在此基础之上,南希校长和科斯特亚爵士此次随代表团访华标志着曼彻斯特与中国的关系进入了一个全新的阶段。

曼彻斯特中国研究所的任务是增进英中两国的相互了解。李博士的捐助同时也将帮助大学在曼彻斯特博物馆建立一个全新的中国文化长廊。

曼彻斯特大学最近还宣布了一批与中国开展的最新合作,包括:

  • 由曼彻斯特商学院领导、英国与世界知名公司支持、英国国际贸易部委托成立的英中基础设施学院。学院在英国政府的支持下,吸引中国公司和政府的首席执行官、总裁和其他高级代表的参与。两个各为期五天的课程模块包括了能源和铁路专项领域。它将帮助学员深入了解投资英国基础设施的益处以及联合投资第叁方国家的机遇。
  • 曼彻斯特大学本周与北京大学健康医疗科学中心签署了一项谅解备忘录&尘诲补蝉丑;&尘诲补蝉丑;建立一个涵盖基因组学、蛋白质组学/代谢组学和数据科学的联合组学技术平台,以增强两机构间以及曼彻斯特大学与北京其他大型医院(如解放军总医院)之间的实验医学研究联系。
  • 一月份签署的与清华大学合作开展研究的协议。研究项目包括医疗研究、材料和工程研究。
  • 本周与上海交通大学医学院签署的谅解备忘录&尘诲补蝉丑;&尘诲补蝉丑;建立一个临床研究方法中心,以联系曼彻斯特大学生物医学研究中心与上海交通大学转化医学中心,促进共同研究。
  • 与位于武汉的华中科技大学签订合作协议,将促进曼彻斯特大学与中国顶尖理工大学之一的华中科技大学之间的联合培养和研究项目的发展。

南希女爵士表示:&濒诲辩耻辞;曼彻斯特不仅拥有充满活力的中国文化和商业社区,曼彻斯特大学与中国的联系也在不断加强。&谤诲辩耻辞;

&濒诲辩耻辞;被首相选中参加访问代表团并参与英中颁贰翱论坛是我的荣幸。这使我们有机会与其他大学和中国的重要公司畅谈如何通过合作来解决我们共同面临的急迫难题。&谤诲辩耻辞;

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‘Graphene-like’ nanocomposite battery boost for smartphones, tablets and laptops /about/news/graphene-like-nanocomposite-battery-boost-for-smartphones-tablets-and-laptops/ /about/news/graphene-like-nanocomposite-battery-boost-for-smartphones-tablets-and-laptops/252147Scientists have a developed a new nanocomposite material that boosts battery life and improves the performance of everyday gadgets such as smartphones, tablets and laptops.

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Scientists have a developed a new nanocomposite material that boosts battery life and improves the performance of everyday gadgets such as smartphones, tablets and laptops.

Working with researchers from Henan Polytechnic University in China, scientists from 糖心Vlog官方’s have developed the nanocomposite which combines the chemical structure of Lithium ion batteries with MXene, a 2D material with a ‘graphene-like’ structure and other unique properties. The research is being published in .

Lithium ion batteries are the battery of choice for all major smartphone and tablet manufacturers such as Samsung, Apple and Sony. They are also used in many other gadgets ranging from digital cameras to wearable tech like Fitbits and smartwatches.

These kinds of batteries are popular with the manufacturers because they have higher power density, larger power output and a longer lifecycle when compared to previous battery technologies. But they do have some major disadvantages as well, such as poor electronic conductivity, which can impact on performance.

Dr Xuqing Liu, from the School of Materials, explains: ‘We have successfully prepared a novel hybrid nanocomposite which has an excellent electrochemical performance for lithium ion batteries.

‘This exceptional electrochemical performance can be attributed to the improvement of electronic conductivity by nano-size lithium particles in the composite. This means the developed nanocomposite has an excellent capability for energy capacity and retention.

‘Nanocomposites are used as building blocks to design and create new materials with unprecedented flexibility and other much improved physical properties and attributes.

‘Simply put, it delivers much better energy storage, capacity and performance than current lithium ion batteries.’

MXene is used for several different purposes beyond energy storage, including sticking atoms together – a process known as adsorption. The 2D material itself is just few atoms thick and made up of layers of metal carbides, nitrides or carbonitrides.

The isolation of graphene at Manchester led to the discovery of a whole family of 2D materials which can be combined with graphene to create new 'designer materials'. Combinations of these 2D materials are called heterostructures - tiny towers with different layers of different materials.

Any combination is possible which means new materials can be created from the ground up on an atomic level. Nanocomposites measure between 1 to 100 nanometres, which is just 0.0001 millimetres.

Dr Liu added: ‘Energy storage is one of MXene’s most promising areas and, due to its excellent electrical conductivity, it can be used as an additive in composite materials to decrease resistances and improve electron transfer in nanocomposites.

‘This could change the way our everyday gadgets are charged. Lithium ion batteries have already meant longer battery life, but this will be the next step in that technological evolution.’

 

The full paper, ‘The Novel Li4Ti5O12/Ti3C2Tx nanocomposite as a high rate anode material for lithium ion batteries’, will be published in  

Advanced materials

 is one of 糖心Vlog官方’s  - examples of pioneering discoveries, interdisciplinary collaboration and cross-sector partnerships that are tackling some of the biggest questions facing the planet. #ResearchBeacons

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Visionary gift endows new Manchester China Institute /about/news/visionary-gift-manchester-china-institute/ /about/news/visionary-gift-manchester-china-institute/251499A new £5m donation will allow 糖心Vlog官方 to establish a major centre for China studies. It will seek to improve mutual understanding in UK-China relations, and establish a new Chinese culture gallery at the Manchester Museum.

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A new £5m donation will allow 糖心Vlog官方 to establish . It will seek to improve mutual understanding in UK-China relations, and establish a new Chinese culture gallery at the Manchester Museum.

The donation, by retired Hong Kong businessman, philanthropist and Honorary Graduate of the University of Manchester, Dr Lee Kai Hung is a major investment which will promote world-leading research, community outreach activities, and public lectures in Manchester and China.

It will also create a new ‘Lee Kai Hung Chinese Culture Gallery’ at , the largest University museum in the UK, displaying artefacts such as ancient bronze sculptures, carved jade and textiles.

With growing links between Manchester and China, and the global significance of Chinese policies such as the ‘One Belt, One Road’ strategy, the Manchester China Institute is set to play a major role in improving understanding between the China and the UK.

The Centre’s new Director is Professor of Chinese Politics Peter Gries, who has worked extensively on China’s foreign relations.

He said: “The UK and China lie on opposite ends of the Eurasian landmass which is the focus of China’s ‘One Belt, One Road’ policy. Manchester, in particular, has a large Chinese community and historic ties with China which were only strengthened by to Manchester and the University in 2015.

“To realise the full potential of UK-China bilateral relations, however, greater mutual trust and understanding are urgently needed. We are therefore extremely grateful to Dr Lee for his generous gift, which is set to put Manchester at the forefront of China studies in the UK.”

As well as research, the Centre will have a particular emphasis on working with the local Chinese community and the thousands of Chinese students in the city. It will also seek to serve local businesses and promote peaceful UK-China relations.

Manchester has more academics engaged in China and China-related studies than almost any other UK university – working on everything from the arts and humanities to health and science.

It also has a which focuses on teaching Chinese. The new Manchester China Institute will be based in its own listed historic building, which will be named in honour of Dr Lee.

Dr Lee said: “The development of China-UK relations is a subject very close to my heart, so I am delighted to be able to help create this Institute at 糖心Vlog官方. China’s ties with this city, the university and the many Chinese staff and students make this an ideal place to locate the Institute and the China Gallery.”

Professor Dame Nancy Rothwell, President and Vice-Chancellor of 糖心Vlog官方 said: “We are very grateful to Dr Lee for this gift, which will greatly increase knowledge in a subject of global significance. Alongside the important research outputs, this gift will enable the greater promotion of understanding between the two countries, not least through the programme of outreach and the new gallery at the Manchester Museum.”

Find out more at or

 

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Thu, 14 Dec 2017 14:45:25 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_csfl3519.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/csfl3519.jpg?10000
有识之士慷慨捐赠 新曼彻斯特大学中国研究院踏上征程 /about/news/%E6%9C%89%E8%AF%86%E4%B9%8B%E5%A3%AB%E6%85%B7%E6%85%A8%E6%8D%90%E8%B5%A0-%E6%96%B0%E6%9B%BC%E5%BD%BB%E6%96%AF%E7%89%B9%E5%A4%A7%E5%AD%A6%E4%B8%AD%E5%9B%BD%E7%A0%94%E7%A9%B6%E9%99%A2%E8%B8%8F%E4%B8%8A%E5%BE%81%E7%A8%8B/ /about/news/%E6%9C%89%E8%AF%86%E4%B9%8B%E5%A3%AB%E6%85%B7%E6%85%A8%E6%8D%90%E8%B5%A0-%E6%96%B0%E6%9B%BC%E5%BD%BB%E6%96%AF%E7%89%B9%E5%A4%A7%E5%AD%A6%E4%B8%AD%E5%9B%BD%E7%A0%94%E7%A9%B6%E9%99%A2%E8%B8%8F%E4%B8%8A%E5%BE%81%E7%A8%8B/252322近日,一笔五百万英镑的捐款将促成曼彻斯特大学建立一所英国领先的中国研究院。此项捐款意在寻求增进英中双边的相互理解,并在曼彻斯特博物馆建成一条中华文化廊。

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近日,一笔五百万英镑的捐款将促成曼彻斯特大学建立一所英国领先的中国研究院。此项捐款意在寻求增进英中双边的相互理解,并在曼彻斯特博物馆建成一条中华文化廊。

此笔捐款是由前香港商人、慈善活动家、曼彻斯特大学荣誉毕业生李启鸿博士捐赠的。它将作为一项主要投资用于促进世界领先的科学研究、社团拓展相关活动以及在曼彻斯特和中国国内的公开讲座和报告。

此笔捐款也将用于在全英最大的大学博物馆&尘诲补蝉丑;曼彻斯特博物馆创建全新的&濒诲辩耻辞;李启鸿中华文化廊&谤诲辩耻辞;,&苍产蝉辫;展出中国古代的铜雕、玉雕以及纺织品等各种文物。

曼彻斯特和中国的联系日益加深,中国的&濒诲辩耻辞;一带一路&谤诲辩耻辞;等战略决策在全球范围内影响深远,在此形势下,曼彻斯特中国研究院必将在增进中英互信方面发挥重要作用。

该研究院的新任院长、中国政治教授葛小伟(Peter Gries)是中国国际问题研究的著名学者。他说:“英国和中国分别位于亚欧大陆的两端,是‘一带一路’政策的焦点所在。尤其是曼彻斯特这座城市,有庞大的华人聚居区,在历史上与中国就有密切联系。这一联系在2015年习近平主席访问曼彻斯特和曼彻斯特大学以后得到了进一步增强。然而,要充分发挥中英双边关系的巨大潜力,急需进一步的彼此信任和理解。因此我们非常感谢李启鸿博士的慷慨捐赠,此项捐赠将会把曼彻斯特大学推向中国研究的最前沿。”

除了科研方面,曼大中国研究院也将特别关注与曼彻斯特当地的华人社区以及成千上万的中国留学生之间的协作,并且寻求为当地工商业服务,促进英中友好关系的不断发展。

在曼彻斯特大学,致力于中国相关研究的学术人才的数量超过任何其他英国高校,这些学者活跃于艺术、人文、健康以及科学等各个领域。曼彻斯特大学也设有孔子学院,主要专注于汉语教学。新成立的曼彻斯特中国研究院将坐落于英国政府登记在册的历史保护建筑之内,新学院大楼将以李启鸿博士的名字命名。

李启鸿博士说:&濒诲辩耻辞;中英关系的发展是我一直关心的课题,因此我非常高兴能够帮助在曼彻斯特大学创建这所研究院。中国与曼彻斯特这座城市、曼彻斯特大学及其广大师生之间的纽带使得曼彻斯特成为设立中国研究院和中华文化廊的最理想的地点。&谤诲辩耻辞;

曼彻斯特大学校长、爵士南希·罗斯韦尔(Nancy Rothwell)教授说:“我们非常感谢李启鸿博士的馈赠,它将极大地推进我们对这门具有全球意义的学科的研究。伴随着重大科研成果的问世,特别是通过这个项目的进行以及曼彻斯特博物馆新的中华文化廊的建立,这笔捐赠将为进一步增进两国之间的相互理解提供无限可能。”

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Thu, 14 Dec 2017 00:00:00 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_csfl3519.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/csfl3519.jpg?10000
有識之士慷慨捐贈 新曼徹斯特大學中國研究院踏上征程 /about/news/%E6%9C%89%E8%AD%98%E4%B9%8B%E5%A3%AB%E6%85%B7%E6%85%A8%E6%8D%90%E8%B4%88-%E6%96%B0%E6%9B%BC%E5%BE%B9%E6%96%AF%E7%89%B9%E5%A4%A7%E5%AD%B8%E4%B8%AD%E5%9C%8B%E7%A0%94%E7%A9%B6%E9%99%A2%E8%B8%8F%E4%B8%8A%E5%BE%81%E7%A8%8B/ /about/news/%E6%9C%89%E8%AD%98%E4%B9%8B%E5%A3%AB%E6%85%B7%E6%85%A8%E6%8D%90%E8%B4%88-%E6%96%B0%E6%9B%BC%E5%BE%B9%E6%96%AF%E7%89%B9%E5%A4%A7%E5%AD%B8%E4%B8%AD%E5%9C%8B%E7%A0%94%E7%A9%B6%E9%99%A2%E8%B8%8F%E4%B8%8A%E5%BE%81%E7%A8%8B/252327

近日,一笔五百万英镑的捐款将促成曼彻斯特大学建立一所英国领先的中国研究院。此项捐款意在寻求增进英中双边的相互理解,并在曼彻斯特博物馆建成一条中华文化廊。

此笔捐款是由前香港商人、慈善活动家、曼彻斯特大学荣誉毕业生李啟鸿博士捐赠的。它将作為一项主要投资用於促进世界领先的科学研究、社团拓展相关活动以及在曼彻斯特和中国国内的公开讲座和报告。

此笔捐款也将用於在全英最大的大学博物馆&尘诲补蝉丑;曼彻斯特博物馆创建全新的&濒诲辩耻辞;李啟鸿中华文化廊&谤诲辩耻辞;,&苍产蝉辫;展出中国古代的铜雕、玉雕以及纺织品等各种文物。

曼彻斯特和中国的联繫日益加深,中国的&濒诲辩耻辞;一带一路&谤诲辩耻辞;等战略决策在全球范围内影响深远,在此形势下,曼彻斯特中国研究院必将在增进中英互信方面发挥重要作用。

該研究院的新任院長、中國政治教授葛小偉(Peter Gries)是中國國際問題研究的著名學者。他說:“英國和中國分別位於亞歐大陸的兩端,是‘一帶一路’政策的焦點所在。尤其是曼徹斯特這座城市,有龐大的華人聚居區,在歷史上與中國就有密切聯繫。這一聯繫在2015年習近平主席訪問曼徹斯特和曼徹斯特大學以後得到了進一步增強。然而,要充分發揮中英雙邊關係的巨大潛力,急需進一步的彼此信任和理解。因此我們非常感謝李啟鴻博士的慷慨捐贈,此項捐贈將會把曼徹斯特大學推向中國研究的最前沿。”

除了科研方面,曼大中国研究院也将特别关注与曼彻斯特当地的华人社区以及成千上万的中国留学生之间的协作,并且寻求為当地工商业服务,促进英中友好关係的不断发展。

在曼彻斯特大学,致力於中国相关研究的学术人才的数量超过任何其他英国高校,这些学者活跃于艺术、人文、健康以及科学等各个领域。曼彻斯特大学也设有孔子学院,主要专注於汉语教学。新成立的曼彻斯特中国研究院将坐落於英国政府登记在册的歷史保护建筑之内,新学院大楼将以李啟鸿博士的名字命名。

李啟鸿博士说:&濒诲辩耻辞;中英关係的发展是我一直关心的课题,因此我非常高兴能够帮助在曼彻斯特大学创建这所研究院。中国与曼彻斯特这座城市、曼彻斯特大学及其广大师生之间的纽带使得曼彻斯特成為设立中国研究院和中华文化廊的最理想的地点。&谤诲辩耻辞;

曼徹斯特大學校長、爵士南茜·羅茲韋爾(Nancy Rothwell)教授說:“我們非常感謝李啟鴻博士的饋贈,它將極大地推進我們對這門具有全球意義的學科的研究。伴隨著重大科研成果的問世,特別是通過這個項目的進行以及曼徹斯特博物館新的中華文化廊的建立,這筆捐贈將為進一步增進兩國之間的相互理解提供無限可能。”

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Thu, 14 Dec 2017 00:00:00 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_csfl3519.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/csfl3519.jpg?10000
Nanobots pass first stage in ‘fantastic voyage’ from fiction to fact /about/news/nanobots-pass-first-stage-in-fantastic-voyage-from-fiction-to-fact/ /about/news/nanobots-pass-first-stage-in-fantastic-voyage-from-fiction-to-fact/246986A team of scientists have created a new generation of tiny remote controlled nanorobots which could one day allow doctors to diagnose disease and deliver drugs from within the human body.

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A team of scientists have created a new generation of tiny remote controlled nanorobots which could one day allow doctors to diagnose disease and deliver drugs from within the human body.

The team led by Professor Li Zhang from the , including Professor from 糖心Vlog官方, have created the bots from a biodegradable material called spirulina algae.

The algae, sold today as a food substitute in health food shops, was a source of nourishment during the time of the Aztecs.

But it was rediscovered in the 1960s by Lake Texcoco in Mexico by French researchers.

A paper by the team, published in hails the bots’ biodegradability as a new concept, in which an iron magnetic coating helps fine-tune the rate which they degrade.

The nanorobots can be remotely controlled within complex biological fluids with high precision using magnetic fields.

The team also describes how the bots are able to release potent drug compounds that are able to attack cancer cells.

However more work still needs to be done on motion tracking, biocompatibility, biodegradation, and diagnostic and therapeutic effects before clinical trials can take place.

Professor Zhang said: “Rather than fabricate a functional microrobot from scratch using intricate laboratory techniques and processes, we set out to directly engineer smart materials in nature, which are endowed with favorable functionalities for medical applications owing to their intrinsic chemical composition. For instance, because these biohybrid bots have a naturally fluorescent biological interior and magnetic iron-oxide exterior, we can track and actuate a swarm of those agents inside the body quite easily using fluorescence imaging and magnetic resonance imaging.

“Our microrobots have the ability to sense changes in environments associated with the onset of illness and that makes them a promising probe for remote diagnostic sensing of diseases.

“We must now develop this technology further so we are able to fine tune this image–guided therapy and create a proof of concept for the engineering of multifunctional microrobotic and nanorobotic devices.”

Professor Kostarelos said: “Creating robotic systems which can be propelled and guided in the body has been and still is a holy-grail in the field of delivery system engineering.

“Our work takes advantage of some elements offered by nature such as fluorescence, degradability, shape.

“But we add engineered features such as magnetisation and biological activity to come up with a the proof-of-concept behind our bio-hybrid, magnetically propelled microrobots.

He added: “We are still in early days of development since any such robotic system would need to be either completely and safely degraded, or it will need to be removed or excreted from the body after it has finished its work.

“But nevertheless, our work provides the first ever example of how this could be possibly achieved by degradation.

“The potential of these bots for controlled navigation in hard-to-reach cavities of the human body makes them promising miniaturized robotic tools to diagnose and treat diseases which is minimally invasive.”

The research teram included the Chinese University of Hong Kong, The  University of Edinburgh and 糖心Vlog官方.

The paper ‘Multifunctional biohybrid magnetite microrobots for imaging-guided therapy’ is published in Science Robotics (DOI: 10.1126/scirobotics.aaq1155) on 22 November, 2017.

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Thu, 23 Nov 2017 05:00:00 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_infographicaaa.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/infographicaaa.jpg?10000
Web entrepreneurs get graduation alumni award at Manchester /about/news/web-entrepreneurs-get-graduation-alumni-award-at-manchester/ /about/news/web-entrepreneurs-get-graduation-alumni-award-at-manchester/205112Skyscanner co-founders, and University of Manchester alumni, Gareth Williams and Bonamy Grimes, have been honoured as Outstanding Alumni.

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Skyscanner co-founders, and University of Manchester alumni, Gareth Williams and Bonamy Grimes, have been honoured as Outstanding Alumni at the  graduation ceremony today (14th July).

The Computer Science graduates finished university in 1992 before creating Skyscanner in 2001 with the simple idea of making it easier to book flights online. Since then it has grown into one of the world’s leading travel websites, employing more than 800 staff in ten global offices. Last year it was sold for a massive £1.3 billion to China’s biggest online travel company, Ctrip.

Bonamy attended the ceremony to pick up the award on behalf of them both. On returning to the university 25 years after his original graduation, he said: ‘It was fantastic. I haven’t been back into the hall since my graduation and to see all those faces and think back to when I was in the audience and my big day – it was lovely to see so much optimism and ambition in that room. It was really fantastic.’

Bonamy and Gareth met in their first year at Manchester within hours of arriving at the University’s  accommodation in 1989 and have been friends ever since. Bonamy added: ‘We used to socialise together, we were involved in the University ski club together and we kept in touch, we developed a friendship. We kept that going, we kept in touch – and when we both found ourselves in London we used to meet up and that’s how we got the idea of “we need to create something that’s our own”. And that’s how it all started.’

From the humble beginnings of those idea sessions in London, Skyscanner now has approximately 60 million users each month with the company’s app also being downloaded more than 60 million times.

So what guidance would Bonamay give to any budding entrepreneurs graduating today? He said: 'The one piece of advice I’d have is that it’s not about the idea – it’s about the execution. The execution is so much easier if you’ve got people to help you and bounce the idea off and to help deliver and make that idea a reality. Use the contacts you made at university, keep in touch with your friends, take that critical feedback, give that critical feedback when it’s asked for and make something happen – don’t just have the idea.'

Since the company’s sale, Gareth has remained as its CEO whilst Bonamy has stepped down from day-to-day involvement and is now involved in several start-up businesses and a range of charity projects.

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Fri, 14 Jul 2017 16:53:43 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_bonamygrimes2.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/bonamygrimes2.jpg?10000
Chinese coaches head to Manchester to support nation’s World Cup dream /about/news/chinese-coaches-head-to-manchester-to-support-nations-world-cup-dream/ /about/news/chinese-coaches-head-to-manchester-to-support-nations-world-cup-dream/204795Although the footballing summer is now associated with English teams heading off on tours of the Far East, this year, coaches from China are in Manchester learning skills to support their country’s dream of winning the World Cup by 2030.

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Although the footballing summer is now associated with English teams heading off on tours of the Far East, this year, coaches from China are in Manchester learning skills to support their country’s dream of winning the World Cup by 2030.

Last year President Xi Jinping of China unveiled a plan that would see 50 million people playing football by 2020 in a bid to turn the country into a football superpower.

This will require a huge increase in the number of trained coaches, so the new programme run by 糖心Vlog官方 and is part of a high-level drive to learn from the rest of the world and achieve this dream.

Currently there are 57 senior level Chinese football coaches in the city, enrolled on the quality training and management programme for 12 weeks.

They will also be taking study trips to St George’s Park (the home of England’s 24 national football teams), the Manchester City and Manchester United training complexes and attending the FA Community Shield.

The group co-ordinator, Deng Shijun said: “It has been two weeks since we arrived at 糖心Vlog官方, and the students have adapted to life here. Thank you to the Manchester Football Association and 糖心Vlog官方 for providing us with good learning and living conditions. At the same time, we have had excellent lecturers for each class, and have benefited greatly from the general training.”

The course is one of three in the UK for Chinese coaches this year, supported by the Chinese Consulate, and stems from the University’s and city’s links with China.

These ties were exemplified by where he visited the National Graphene Institute and posed for a selfie with Manchester City striker Sergio Aguero at the Etihad.

, Vice-President for Teaching, Learning & Students at 糖心Vlog官方 said: “The University’s engagement with China has a long history and is extensive in its breadth. We value our Chinese students’ and staffs’ contributions to our campus, are continuing to build upon our research and business collaborations in China and are proud of our Confucius Institute based on our campus. Our support to the delivery of this football programme is another strand to further develop our strong relationship with China.”

Colin Bridgford, Chief Executive Officer, Manchester Football Association said: “We are delighted to be supporting coaches from China, over an intense period of 12 weeks will we be providing a coaching education programme with the key aim to make them ‘Better Coaches’.

“The coaches will be undertaking their FA International Intermediate and also their FA International Advanced qualifications. In addition to the qualifications Manchester FA will be providing a unique insight into English football from grassroots to the professional game.”

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Wed, 12 Jul 2017 10:37:24 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_img-0394.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/img-0394.jpg?10000
Chances of hypersonic travel heat up with new materials discovery /about/news/chances-of-hypersonic-travel-heat-up-with-new-materials-discovery/ /about/news/chances-of-hypersonic-travel-heat-up-with-new-materials-discovery/204234Researchers at 糖心Vlog官方 in collaboration with Central South University (CSU), China, have created a new kind of ceramic coating that could revolutionise hypersonic travel for air, space and defense purposes.

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Researchers at 糖心Vlog官方 in collaboration with Central South University (CSU), China, have created a new kind of ceramic coating that could revolutionise hypersonic travel for air, space and defense purposes.

Hypersonic travel means moving at Mach five or above, which is at least five times faster than the speed of sound. When moving at such velocity the heat generated by air and gas in the atmosphere is extremely hot and can have a serious impact on an aircraft or projectile’s structural integrity. That is because he temperatures hitting the aircraft can reach anywhere from 2,000 to 3,000 °C.

The structural problems are primarily caused by processes called oxidation and ablation. This is the when extremely hot air and gas remove surface layers from the metallic materials of the aircraft or object travelling at such high speeds. To combat the problem materials called ultra-high temperature ceramics (UHTCs) are needed in aero-engines and hypersonic vehicles such as rockets, re-entry spacecraft and defence projectiles.

But, at present, even conventional UHTCs can’t currently satisfy the associated ablation requirements of travelling at such extreme speeds and temperatures. However, the researchers at 糖心Vlog官方’s and the , in collaboration with the Central South University of China, have designed and fabricated a new carbide coating that is vastly superior in resisting temperatures up to 3,000 °C, when compared to existing UHTCs.

, Regius Professor from 糖心Vlog官方, says: “Future hypersonic aerospace vehicles offer the potential of a step jump in transit speeds. A hypersonic plane could fly from London to New York in just two hours and would revolutionise both commercial and commuter travel.

“But at present one of the biggest challenges is how to protect critical components such as leading edges, combustors and nose tips so that they survive the severe oxidation and extreme scouring of heat fluxes at such temperatures cause to excess during flight.”

So far, the carbide coating developed by teams in both University of Manchester and Central South University is proving to be 12 times better than the conventional UHTC, Zirconium carbide (ZrC). ZrC is an extremely hard refractory ceramic material commercially used in tool bits for cutting tools.

The much improved performance of the coating is due to its unique structural make-up and features manufactured at the Powder Metallurgy Institute, Central South University and studied in University of Manchester,. This includes extremely good heat resistance and massively improved oxidation resistance.

What makes this coating unique is it has been made using a process called reactive melt infiltration (RMI), which dramatically reduces the time needed to make such materials, and has been in reinforced with carbon–carbon composite (C/C composite). This makes it not only strong but extremely resistant to the usual surface degradation.

, Professor of Materials Science, who led the study in University of Manchester explains: “Current candidate UHTCs for use in extreme environments are limited and it is worthwhile exploring the potential of new single-phase ceramics in terms of reduced evaporation and better oxidation resistance. In addition, it has been shown that introducing such ceramics into carbon fibre- reinforced carbon matrix composites may be an effective way of improving thermal-shock resistance.”

 

Advanced Materials

 is one of 糖心Vlog官方’s - examples of pioneering discoveries, interdisciplinary collaboration and cross-sector partnerships that are tackling some of the biggest questions facing the planet.

Referecne: "Ablation-resistant carbide Zr0.8Ti0.2C0.74B0.26 for oxidizing environments up to 3,000 °C" Yi Zeng, Dini Wang, Xiang Xiong, Xun Zhang, Philip J. Withers, Wei Sun, Matthew Smith, Mingwen Bai & Ping Xiao

 

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Thu, 06 Jul 2017 12:02:59 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_plane-pic.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/plane-pic.jpg?10000
Ancient fossil reveals the evolution of bird legs for the first time /about/news/ancient-fossil-bird-legs/ /about/news/ancient-fossil-bird-legs/182394Researchers from the UK and China have found that living birds have a more crouched leg posture than their ancestors, who are generally thought to have moved with straighter limbs similar to those of humans. The study, published in Nature Communications, highlights how birds shifted towards this more crouched posture.

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Researchers from the UK and China have found that living birds have a more crouched leg posture than their ancestors, who are generally thought to have moved with straighter limbs similar to those of humans. The study, published in Nature Communications, highlights how birds shifted towards this more crouched posture.

Experts from 糖心Vlog官方, The Royal Veterinary College and China’s Nanjing University studied the lower leg of a Confuciusornis bird, which was fossilised in volcanic ash and lake sediments in China 125-145 million years ago.

They found that the fossil had amazingly well-preserved soft tissues around the ankle joint, including cartilage and ligaments. “These soft tissues were not just preserved as an ashen replacement of the former tissue, as sometimes happens - rather, the structure of the tissues was preserved at a microscopic level”, said Professor Baoyu Jiang, a co-author of the study from Nanjing University.

Imaging methods showed that the detailed anatomical preservation extended to the molecular level, with some of the original chemistry of the bird’s tissues remaining. In particular, the team found evidence of fragments of the collagen proteins that made up the leg ligaments, which matched the preservation at the microscopic tissue level of detail.

These findings tally with an expanding body of evidence that, under special conditions, some biological molecules - including even amino acids or partial proteins - can survive over millions of years in the fossil record.

“The new information we gained about the anatomy of the cartilages and tendons show that this early bird had an ankle whose form fit an intermediate function between that of early dinosaurs and modern birds,” said Professor John R. Hutchinson from the Royal Veterinary College, who led the study. “Overall, this reinforced other lines of evidence that the more crouched, zigzag limb posture of birds evolved gradually from early dinosaurs to birds, with even these early birds having limbs that were built and worked differently from those of living birds, but were approaching the modern condition.”

The research was funded by the National Science Foundation of China, Leverhulme Trust, and the UK’s Natural Environment Research Council. It was enabled by international collaboration between many scientists from fields as diverse as palaeontology and ornithology, biomechanics, geology and geochemistry, medical imaging and physics, and shows how a combination of sophisticated technologies with fast-paced discoveries of spectacular fossils is revealing new insights into how major changes in anatomy, physiology and behaviour took place in animals.

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Thu, 23 Mar 2017 09:18:52 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_confuciusornis.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/confuciusornis.jpg?10000
Turning off the protein tap – a new clue to neurodegenerative disease /about/news/protein-tap-clue-neurodegenerative-disease/ /about/news/protein-tap-clue-neurodegenerative-disease/168962Disabling a part of brain cells that acts as a tap to regulate the flow of proteins has been shown to cause neurodegeneration, a new study from 糖心Vlog官方 has found.

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Disabling a part of brain cells that acts as a tap to regulate the flow of proteins has been shown to cause neurodegeneration, a new study from 糖心Vlog官方 has found.

The research, which was carried out in mice, focused on the Golgi apparatus - a compartment inside all cells in the body that controls the processing and transport of proteins. It is fundamental for the growth of the cell membrane and also for the release of many types of proteins such as hormones, neurotransmitters and the proteins that make up our skeletons.

Working with Chinese colleagues, the Manchester researchers examined the role of the Golgi apparatus in neurons, or brain cells, and found that mice in which the apparatus was disabled suffered from developmental delay, severe ataxia, and postnatal death.

Ataxia is a term for a group of disorders that affect co-ordination, balance and speech. Any part of the body can be affected, but people with ataxia often have difficulties with balance and walking, speaking, swallowing, tasks such as writing and eating, and vision. It can be inherited, brought on through incidents such as a stroke, or through old age.

Although the function of the Golgi apparatus, named after its Italian discoverer, is well understood, it has not been previously been shown to have a role in neurodegeneration. With these results the scientists think they may have found a new avenue to explore in the search for the causes of some neurodegenerative diseases.

, the lead researcher, said: “Our results, combined with previous work, suggest that during the cellular changes that occur, loss of the Golgi function could be an important intermediary step that contributes to cell death.”

How much the Golgi apparatus contributes to the major neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s or Parkinson’s is something that is currently unclear, though other studies have made this link.

Professor Lowe added: “Together with other published work our findings suggest that in certain neurodegenerative diseases the loss of function of the Golgi apparatus may contribute to the pathology that is occurring.”

The paper, ‘’, was published in PNAS. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1608576114

The study was carried out by 糖心Vlog官方 and the Shilai Bao lab at in Beijing. Funding was provided by a joint grant between 糖心Vlog官方 and the Chinese Academy of Science at Beijing, as well as separate funding to both institutions, from and the .

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Wed, 08 Feb 2017 11:06:35 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_neuro2.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/neuro2.jpg?10000
Ten year anniversary of Confucius Institute marks Manchester’s commitment to Chinese learning and teaching /about/news/ten-year-anniversary-of-confucius-institute-marks-manchesters-commitment-to-chinese-learning-and-teaching/ /about/news/ten-year-anniversary-of-confucius-institute-marks-manchesters-commitment-to-chinese-learning-and-teaching/155444Key national and international figures from the Chinese community came together yesterday at 糖心Vlog官方 to celebrate the 10th anniversary of the Confucius Institute, an organisation which endorses Chinese language and culture.

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Key national and international figures from the Chinese community came together yesterday at 糖心Vlog官方 to celebrate the 10th anniversary of the Confucius Institute, an organisation which endorses Chinese language and culture.

The celebratory event was hosted by Professor Keith Brown, VP and Chair of Confucius Institute Board and included speeches from Professor Zhou Zuoyu, Vice President of Beijing Normal University and Professor Dame Nancy Rothwell who shared her vision of collaboration with China.

Professor Rana Mitter was joined by the University’s Professor of Public History and filmmaker, Michael Wood to host an open discussion on China’s representation in the media where Michael spoke about his recent BBC series, The Story of China. The programme received an overwhelmingly positive response from the public in both Britain and in China, setting out to counterbalance some mainstream western narratives of the nation by showing its real heroes – the people.

Guests were treated to poem recitals by University of Manchester student Chloe Haimes as well as musical and dance performances by students from Gelddings Preparatory School, Bolton Junior Boys and St Paul’s CE Primary School, all of which were composed by University students.

The Institute, which promotes a contemporary China to the people of the North West, encourages learning, teaching and testing, and maintains and improves education exchange and engagement with China itself. It has become a centre of excellence in Chinese language teaching thanks to joint efforts of Beijing Normal University and Hanban, the headquarters of Confucius Institute which seconds teaching staff and provides invaluable resources.

The Confucius Institute has led the nation’s largest student mobility project, Study China Programme, for the past ten years, enabling over 5000 UK students to visit the country, providing them with a unique opportunity to experience Chinese life, culture, language and business. The success and impact of the programme has seen it be extended over the next five years.

More details can be found on the .

Twitter: @ConfuciusMCR

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Wed, 09 Nov 2016 13:52:36 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_professordamenancyrothwellpresidentandvice-chancelloroftheuniversityofmanchesterwithprofessorzhouzuoyuvice-presidentofbeijingnormaluniversity.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/professordamenancyrothwellpresidentandvice-chancelloroftheuniversityofmanchesterwithprofessorzhouzuoyuvice-presidentofbeijingnormaluniversity.jpg?10000
Manchester scientists have helped to narrow search for a new ‘God particle’ /about/news/new-god-particle/ /about/news/new-god-particle/153454As part of one of the most ambitious quests in science a senior physicist at 糖心Vlog官方 has helped to narrow the search to find a ghost-like neutrino particle – its discovery promising to be even bigger than locating the Higgs boson.

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As part of one of the most ambitious quests in science a senior physicist at 糖心Vlog官方 has helped to narrow the search to find a ghost-like neutrino particle – its discovery promising to be even bigger than locating the Higgs boson.

Dr Justin Evans, senior lecturer in particle physics at 糖心Vlog官方, said the elusive ‘sterile’ neutrino, if proven to exist, has the potential to unlock the great mysteries of our Universe – even potentially explaining why we exist as we do. Researchers believe identifying this new particle would be even more significant than locating the original so-called ‘God particle’, the Higgs boson.

As part of an international collaboration Dr Evans has been the Physics Coordinator on the MINOS experiment, leading the experiment’s physics programme. As well as leading this part of the MINOS collaboration he also coordinated the research combination with another programme called Daya Bay.

- uses an intense beam of muon neutrinos that travels 735 km from the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory (Fermilab) in Chicago to the Soudan Underground Laboratory in northern Minnesota. MINOS has made world-leading measurements to study how these neutrinos disappear as they travel between the two detectors.

- The looks at electron antineutrinos coming from a nuclear power plant in the Guangdong province of China. The Daya Bay project measured, for the first time, one of the parameters governing neutrino oscillations.

The joint results from these two experiments have significantly shrunk the hiding space for a sterile neutrino to be found – inspiring researchers to continue their hunt.

“Finding a sterile neutrino would be an even bigger discovery than finding the Higgs boson,” explained Dr Evans. "The Higgs boson was a prediction of the Standard Model of particle physics - a system that attempts to describe the forces, components and reactions of the basic particles that make up matter - and therefore its discovery, although momentous, wasn’t a surprise."

“The sterile neutrino could explain the puzzle of why the neutrino is so much lighter - by orders of magnitude - than any other massive particle. It could help to explain why the universe contains more matter than antimatter, ie help to explain why we exist as we do. And, if the sterile neutrino is heavy enough, it could even be part of the solution for the dark matter puzzle.”

The possibility of doing this ground-breaking measurement with MINOS is Dr Evans’s brainchild – and now, alongside co-researcher Manchester PhD student Ashley Timmons, this milestone work has been recognised and published in the prestigious journal, Physical Review Letters.

糖心Vlog官方 researchers are delighted to have reached this stage in their analysis because they believe its puts them are on the threshold to eventually finding the sterile neutrino.

Dr Evans added: “When I’m asked how long until we discover the sterile neutrino I tempted to say, ‘how long is a piece of string?’ However, these new Manchester-led results have really narrowed down the region where the sterile neutrino could still be hiding - and we have much more MINOS and Daya Bay data waiting to be analysed; we should be able to make an even more definitive statement in the next couple of years."

“Furthermore, at Manchester, we are part of a new project called the MicroBooNE experiment – also based at Fermilab – that is a dedicated sterile neutrino search. This can really focus over the next few years on that small region that’s left and either find the light sterile neutrino or rule out its existence completely."

“I hope that five years from now we’ll have a firm answer on the existence of these light sterile neutrinos - but it’s always hard to make predictions about the future.”

Neutrinos only interact with matter through the feeblest of forces, the weak nuclear force and gravity, yet they play critical roles in an incredible range of phenomena. They influenced the formation of the early Universe and may be the reason why matter came to dominate over antimatter shortly after the Big Bang.

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Tue, 25 Oct 2016 16:07:47 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_minos-s.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/minos-s.jpg?10000
New Manchester-Beijing Healthcare Genomics postgraduate training course launched in China /about/news/new-manchester-beijing-healthcare-genomics-postgraduate-training-course-launched-in-china/ /about/news/new-manchester-beijing-healthcare-genomics-postgraduate-training-course-launched-in-china/152629A pioneering partnership between 糖心Vlog官方 and Peking University has resulted in the development of a formal post-graduate level training course in healthcare genomics for China-based doctors.

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  • Strategic collaboration between Manchester Academic Health Science Centre and Peking University Health Sciences Centre
  • Clinical genetics was only formally agreed as a specialist area of medicine this year in China
  • A pioneering partnership between 糖心Vlog官方 and Peking University has resulted in the development of a formal post-graduate level training course in healthcare genomics for China-based doctors.

    Genomic testing and precision medicine are playing increasingly important roles in diagnosing and treating conditions in clinical practice; however, the general level of knowledge of healthcare genomics is low among many medical practitioners – in the UK as well as China.

    In the UK, clinical genetics has been a recognised medical specialty for over three decades with a formal training and career pathway for doctors who diagnose and manage families with genetic disorders. However in China, clinical genetics was only formally agreed as a specialist area of medicine this year, creating a need for formal training for doctors, genetic counsellors and clinical scientists to equip them with the necessary knowledge and skills to deliver patient care in this rapidly expanding field.

    The course – a year-long study programme conducted both online and through intensive face-to-face teaching blocks in Beijing – is specifically designed for practicing doctors in China. It will be taught by leading genetic specialists from 糖心Vlog官方 led by Professors Graeme Black, Bill Newman, Lauren Kerzin-Storrar, and Dr Tao Wang, with contributions from our collaborators at Peking University, led by Professor Yuwu Jiang, The course aims to provide leading edge knowledge and skills for doctors delivering genomic healthcare to patients and families across China.

    The course is facilitated by the current strategic  between Manchester Academic Health Science Centre (MAHSC) and Peking University Health Sciences Centre (PUHSC). The collaboration focuses on rare inherited diseases and cancer genetics in the context of advances in genomic testing. PUHSC is one of the leading medical schools and research institutions in China.

    The collaboration with Peking University was strongly supported by Professor Dame Nancy Rothwell, President and Vice-Chancellor of 糖心Vlog官方, who has visited PUHSC and hosted a delegation here in Manchester led by Professor Weigang Fang, Vice President for PUHSC.

    “Several years ago we took the step to partner with Peking University to deliver the Centre of Excellence in Genomic Medicine. The news that it will be helping hundreds of doctors across China access the latest genomic healthcare advances is a testament to the far-reaching wisdom of our vision,” she said.

    The course comprises four modules: Human genetics and genomics; Common and rare inherited disease; Principles and practice of genetic counselling; and Workplace based genomic medicine practice.

    “We are delighted that the first cohort of 20 students includes paediatricians, obstetricians, oncologist, cardiologists, neurologists and clinical laboratory specialists from Beijing and across China, many of whom are senior clinicians and academics who will be able to transfer the knowledge and skills gained from the course to develop genomic services in their own hospitals,” said Course Director Professor Lauren Kerzin-Storrrar.

    Although this programme is brand new,  (MCGM) has over 30 years’ experience of delivering training in clinical genetics and genetic counselling in the UK and Europe. Students enrolled on the course in Beijing will be taught by clinical academics who themselves are experienced clinical geneticists, genetic counsellors, clinical and research scientists who also deliver clinical care in our internationally renowned integrated genomic medicine hospital service.

    For further information about the course or the wider collaboration with PUHSC, please contact the Project Manager, Dr Sarah George: sarah.george-2@manchester.ac.uk

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    Tue, 18 Oct 2016 16:08:46 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_may20201320rothwell2020fang20signing20memorandum20of20understan....jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/may20201320rothwell2020fang20signing20memorandum20of20understan....jpg?10000
    Live! EuroScience Open Forum: Day three /about/news/live-euroscience-open-forum-day-three/ /about/news/live-euroscience-open-forum-day-three/136974

    Welcome back to ESOF for our last live blog of the conference. It’s an eclectic day today with artificial brains, history and climate change all on the bill. That’s alongside a whole host of other stimulating sessions inside the venue and exciting events taking place outside.

    Today’s highlights:

    • 11.25: , with Professor Steve Furber
    • 11.25: , with Professor Alice Bowes-Larkin
    • 2.15: , with Professor Michael Wood

    There are more than 4,500 scientists, science fans and journalists in town for ESOF and outside the conference a full programme of events for the whole family to enjoy.

    So don’t forget to follow and to find out more about what’s happening.

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    Wed, 27 Jul 2016 08:00:00 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_m1642someesofweds27.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/m1642someesofweds27.jpg?10000
    Graphene partnership could deliver lighter planes /about/news/graphene-partnership-could-deliver-lighter-planes/ /about/news/graphene-partnership-could-deliver-lighter-planes/137420A major Chinese investment in graphene research plans to deliver lighter, better performing aircraft and high-speed trains.

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  • The strength, thinness and conductivity of graphene are of great potential to aviation
  • Long-term partnership could attract UK aviation firms
  • A major Chinese investment in graphene research plans to deliver lighter, better performing aircraft and high-speed trains.

    Beijing Institute of Aeronautical Materials (BIAM) and the National Graphene Institute (NGI) at 糖心Vlog官方 will carry out a five-year collaborative research project.

    Research will focus on composites with enhanced performance in the field of mechanical, electric conductive and thermal conductive behaviour, as well as the compatibility of graphene and the matrix materials. In aerospace this might lead to applications of graphene in different materials and components, with weight saving accompanied by better performance.

    As well as aircraft, the research could have an impact on high-speed trains and industrial equipment to replace traditional materials.

    The deal was announced today on the opening morning of the European Science Open Forum in Manchester by Prof Robert Young, who leads the research project at 糖心Vlog官方.

    Speaking at a session called ’Science and Aviation’, organised in partnership with Manchester Airport and Hainan Airlines, Professor Young outlined how graphene could revolutionise the planes and trains of the future.

    The announcement is being delivered in parallel to a senior delegation from Manchester – including one of the Nobel-prize winning scientists who isolated graphene – being in Beijing to promote the city and as world-leading destination for inward investment and tourism.

    Graphene has been included in the latest Chinese five-year plan and the country is starting to develop their domestic civil aerospace industry and expect to improve their expertise on materials.

    The project, which will run until 2020, will involve joint research on graphene projects, strengthening of the ties in graphene technology and the exchange of personnel between Beijing and Manchester.

    The partnership is an extension of a project started last year, which is looking at creating graphene composites with metals such as aluminium. The success of the partnership led to this much wider, extended project.

    It is also expected that other UK companies, particularly in aerospace, may become directly involved as the projects progress.

     

    Dr Shaojiu Yan, the principal investigator of graphene projects from BIAM, said: ”The relationship between BIAM and 糖心Vlog官方 warms up quickly.

    “We had a very good communication on the first collaborative project. Now a long term partnership would benefit us to broaden the research area on graphene materials, to enhance the collaborative research, as well as to exchange experience and expertise on graphene.”

    Professor Young said: “BIAM have a rapidly developing research programme on graphene composites and we are looking forward to pooling our expertise with them to facilitate the use of these materials in aerospace applications”.

    Sir Richard Leese, leader of Manchester City Council, said: "It is firmly established that Manchester has many distinctive strengths which make the city - and help make the North of England as a whole - competitive on the international stage.

    "This partnership with the Beijing Institute of Aeronautical Materials will not only go a long way towards finding hugely significant commercial applications for graphene research, it will further strengthen ties between Manchester and China - ties which are ever more important as China emerges as a key player in the global economy. It is another vote of confidence in Manchester.”

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    糖心Vlog官方 at ESOF: Wednesday 27 July /about/news/the-university-of-manchester-at-esof-wednesday-27-july/ /about/news/the-university-of-manchester-at-esof-wednesday-27-july/135408

    From flying cars to graphene and the environment and big data there’s plenty of University of Manchester knowledge for delegates to tap into at ESOF.

    You can see below for all of our events at the conference on Wednesday and don’t forget that outside of the event there’s also our huge for delegates and non-delegates alike to get involved in.

    • For more on 糖心Vlog官方 at ESOF, .
    • See the full ESOF programme .

    All week

    The event provides a great opportunity for early-stage career researchers to pose questions and share ideas on the direction of their research, careers and future paths and to have general science discussions – all in an informal atmosphere with a leading professor in their field of interest.

    Wednesday, 27 July

    8:30 - 9:45 am

    We will frame the climate change debate within its historical dimension, highlighting recurrences and elements of novelty from past to present.

    8:30 - 9:45 am

    By showcasing pan-European examples, we will take an up-close and personal look at the crossover between musical and citizen science experiments to explore how audience participation is shaping and impacting scientific research, musical expression, social connectivity and care.

    10:00 - 12:30 pm

    In this session international experts will describe how they see the state-of-the-art in building machines aimed at accelerating our understanding of brain function, and discuss with the audience prospects for future progress in this exciting scientific endeavour.

    11:25 - 12:40 pm

    The chances of climate impacts worsening as average global temperature rise exceeds 2°C – or even 4°C - by 2050, are increasing. In the face of the likelihood of high-end climate change, how can scientists and communicators of science be more than ‘narrators of doom’, instilling defeatism and negativity?

    11:25 - 12:40 pm

    Since its creation in 2007, the European Research Council (ERC) has spent more than €8 billion on 'frontier research', funding almost 5000 research projects across the EU and associated countries. How did the ERC come about? What are the premises of its success, and what are the lasting tensions with which it has to grapple? What is the outlook for this institution? And what has it really achieved?

    2:15 - 3:30 pm

    Following up his BBC 2 series on the history of China, Michael Wood will look at some of the current thinking about what historians have come to see as the Great Divergence, with special reference to the North-West and the city of Manchester itself, and to the role of science in the rise of the West - asking whether it is inevitable that the East will rise again to the position it held for much of pre-modern history.

    3:45 - 5:00 pm

    Big data is characterised by volume, velocity, variety and veracity. Data of this form arises at unprecedented rates, with increased recognition of its potential to dramatically change the environments we live in. Panel members are technical, academic and panellists from businesses and services, including health, smart, green, integrated transport and resource efficiency.

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