2013 ACYD Video Speakers

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The Hon Kim Beazley, AC

Australian Ambassador to United States of America

Mr Beazley was elected to the Federal Parliament in 1980 and represented the electorates of Swan (1980-96) and Brand (1996-2007).

Mr Beazley was a Minister in the Hawke and Keating Labor Governments (1983- 96) holding, at various times, the portfolios of Defence, Finance, Transport and Communications, Employment Education and Training, Aviation, and Special Minister of State. He was Deputy Prime Minister (1995-96) and Leader of the Australian Labor Party and Leader of the Opposition (1996-01 and 2005-06). Mr Beazley served on parliamentary committees, including the Joint Intelligence Committee and the Joint Foreign Affairs, Defence and Trade Committee.

After his retirement from politics in 2007, Mr Beazley was appointed Winthrop Professor in the Department of Politics and International Relations at the University of Western Australia. In July 2008 he was appointed Chancellor of the Australian National University, a position he held until December 2009. Mr Beazley took up his appointment as Ambassador to the United States of America in February 2010.

In 2009, Mr Beazley was awarded the Companion of the Order of Australia for service to the Parliament of Australia through contributions to the development of government policies in relation to defence and international relations, and as an advocate for Indigenous people, and to the community.

Mr Beazley was born in Perth. He completed a Bachelor of Arts and Master of Arts at the University of Western Australia. He was awarded the Rhodes Scholarship for Western Australia in 1973 and completed a Master of Philosophy at Oxford University. He is married and has three daughters.

For the video address by The Hon Kim Beazley, AC, please click here.


Michael Clifton

Senior Trade Commissioner (Shanghai), Austrade

Michael Clifton has enjoyed a diverse and varied career including trade and defence appointments in Hong Kong, Tokyo, Osaka and the Middle East. Fluent in Mandarin and Japanese, Michael’s career highlights include several postings to Hong Kong, three years at the Australian Embassy in Tokyo and four years as Senior Trade Commissioner and Consul General in Osaka. On his return from Osaka, he served as North East Asia adviser to the Minister for Trade, Simon Crean. Prior to his appointment as Austrade’s Senior Trade Commissioner in Shanghai and Country Manager (China), Michael served as Principal Adviser and Chief of Staff to Simon Crean, Minister for Regional Australia, Regional Development and Local Government.

Michael holds a Bachelor of Arts (Honours) from the University of New South Wales and is married with three children.

For the video address by Michael Clifton, please click here.


Keith Richburg

Spring Fellow, Harvard University’s Kennedy Institute of Politics; and former Washington Post journalist

Keith B. Richburg spent more than 20 years overseas for The Washington Post, serving as bureau chief in Beijing, Paris, Hong Kong, Jakarta, Nairobi and Manila as well as New York. He also was the Post’s foreign editor during 2005–2007. Richburg was Journalist-in-Residence at the East-West Center in Hawaii in 1990 and was president of the Hong Kong Foreign Correspondents Club in 1997, during the year of Hong Kong’s handover to China.

During his time at the Post, he reported on the invasion in Iraq, the fall of the Taliban in Afghanistan, the U.S. military intervention in Somalia, the genocide in Rwanda and the 1997 Hong Kong handover and Asian economic crisis. He has won several awards, including the George Polk Award, the Overseas Press Club Award, the National Association of Black Journalists Award and was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize. Richburg speaks English and French and has been learning Mandarin.

A native of Detroit, Richburg began working for the Post as a summer intern in 1978. He received a B.A. from the University of Michigan and a master’s degree in international relations from The London School of Economics.

He is a 2013 Spring Fellow at Harvard University’s Kennedy Institute of Politics and also a freelance writer. In addition, he is working on a book project.

Richburg is the author of the acclaimed book, Out of America: A Black Man Confronts Africa (Basic Books, 1997) that was described by USA TODAY as “the most honest book to emerge from Africa in a long time.”

His media appearances include MSNBC, CNN, The Washington Post, Al Jazeera, C-SPAN, Sky News and France 24. He has participated in forums and panels at the Overseas Press Club in New York, the East-West Center in Hawaii, Tsinghua University in Beijing as well as academic and professional panels in Washington, DC, New York, Indonesia, the Netherlands and Hong Kong.

Video coming soon.


Alistair Thornton

Co-Founder, Young China Watchers

Alistair Thornton is Co-Founder of Young China Watchers, a dynamic global community of China-focused young professionals. Alistair was previously a Beijing-based Senior China Economist at IHS, a macroeconomic research firm, where his work focused on monetary policy, the property market, regional growth dynamics and the inflation outlook in China. He has published a number of papers with the Lowy Institute for International Policy, has frequently appeared on BBC, Bloomberg, CNBC and CNN to comment on the Chinese economy, and has been regularly quoted in the Financial Times, New York Times, Wall Street Journal and The Economist. Alistair did his undergraduate studies at the University of Edinburgh, and has Masters degrees from the University of Sydney and the University of London. He speaks Mandarin. He was based in Beijing between 2008-2013 and is now based in California, at Stanford University Graduate School of Business.

For the video address by Alistair Thornton, please click here.


Media Session

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Session Coordinator: Natalie Cope

Engagement with ABC International 

As a unique activity in partnership with the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) International, the international arm to Australia’s national public broadcaster, delegates will visit the ABC Centre, receive an overview on the ABC International China engagement strategy, and learn about developments in the digital and online space that is being used to drive engagement with Chinese audiences.

Delegates will receive a fast track introduction on how to create creative and engaging content that can be used to connect with audiences and tell stories in an inspiring fashion. The expectation following this session will be that each delegate will produce interesting, engaging and creative user generated content to express themselves. They could be reflections, commentary, and musings. They could be informed by your interest in and knowledge of Australia and China. You could touch on universal themes or personal experiences which inform your perspective on life and interest in dialogue. Or you could simply be spirited and celebrate. This content which could involve writing a blog, creating a video or producing an article will be developed by each delegate after ACYD (deadlines TBC), however you are expected to consider before and during the ACYD what has shaped your involvement in forging closer ties between Australia and China and what the relationship means to you.

The ABC International will shortly release a smartphone App which will provide a unique platform to share this content with audiences in Australia and China. We will provide instructions of how to download the App once details become available

For more information, please check out the ABC International website: http://www.abc.net.au/international/

Video Address by Young China Watcher's Co-Founder Alistair Thornton for the 2013 ACYD

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In this video address for the 2013 Australia-China Youth Dialogue, Young China Watcher's co-founder Alistair Thornton talks about the importance of this year's delegates discussing the current structural changes underway in China's economy and the implications for countries like Australia. Young China Watcher's is a proud 'Supporter' of the Australia-China Youth Dialogue.

Special thanks goes to Will McCallum for editing this video.

For those in China, please click here for the YouKu (优酷) embedded version.

Applications for the 2013 Australia-China Youth Dialogue Are Now Closed

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Thanks to all those applicants who applied for this year's Australia-China Youth Dialogue to be held in Canberra and Melbourne. Applications for the 2013 ACYD are now closed. We are currently reviewing your applications, and will contact short-listed candidates by around mid-July. Please note that the Australia-China Youth Dialogue is staffed 100% by volunteers, so we are unable to provide specific feedback if your application is unsuccessful. If we are unable to offer you a place at this year's Dialogue, we strongly encourage you to apply for next year's ACYD in China and to get involved in the various ACYA group initiatives.

What do new Party rules mean for rule of law?

24/06/13

Late last month, just days before Xi Jinping departed for his first state visit to the Caribbean and the Americas, a full-page editorial appeared in Investor Journal dismissing the Chinese leader’s reformist credentials. Zhao Li, the journal’s editor-in-chief, boldly compared Weibo debates on “constitutionalism” to the Democracy Wall movement of 1979 and the Beijing student protests of 1989. For Zhao, the Party’s conservative response revealed Xi’s true colours: “he is not someone bringing a fresh approach, even less is he ‘cool.’” According to Zhao, Xi lacks the “wisdom and courage” to initiate real political and legal reform.

China’s constitution has attracted unprecedented interest in recent months. The often-ignored document has become a symbol of political reform and rule of law, particularly for liberals who see in it the promise of limited state power. Last month, when state-owned newspapers decried constitutional governance as “bourgeois” and incompatible with Chinese socialism, “constitutionalism” was trending on Weibo with nearly 6 million search results.

While Zhao doubts Xi’s commitment to reform, Xi’s speech last December marking the constitution’s thirtieth anniversary was undoubtedly a trigger for these debates. The speech capped a year in which the Party was rocked by the fall of Bo Xilai, a one-time rival infamous for, among other things, his extra-legal law enforcement campaign in the city-province of Chongqing. Five days after condemning official corruption in his “China Dream” speech, Xi delivered a full-throated defence of the constitution and rule of law.

Every social group and institution in China, Xi declared, “must take the constitution as the fundamental standard of their activities,” protect its integrity, and guarantee its implementation. “No group or individual,” he continued, “may have special privileges exceeding the constitution or the law”.

On Xi’s agenda: “Implement[ing] the fundamental strategy of administering the country in accordance with the law; [and] hasten[ing] the establishment of a socialist rule of law country,” including an “impartial judiciary.”

Moreover, while “maintaining the leadership of the Party” is paramount, Xi declared that “the Party must itself operate within the confines of the constitution and the law.”

In the months since this address, Xi has not been idle. In the same week that Zhao published his editorial, the Central Committee released new internal Party rules that – with the exception of a 1991 “interim” document – were said to be the first since 1921. While the new rules are primarily concerned with procedures for drafting and amending Party regulations, they also codify Xi’s campaign for more frugal officialdom and governance by rule of law. There is also a commitment to the “principle” of transparency: “not publicising” Party rules “should be the exception.”

While ostensibly clarifying Party rules and procedures, the main goal, say some analysts, is to strengthen central control over the Party’s various organs and regional bodies. Moreover, the new document highlights the fact that the Party does indeed operate under different rules to the rest of the population. All in all, whether Xi is willing or able to enact broader reforms, and enforce existing laws, remains an open question.

Joel Wing-Lun is Governance and Law Coordinator for the Australia-China Youth Dialogue

马丁帕金森博士(澳大利亚国库部秘书长)在2011年中澳青年对话

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马丁帕金森博士(Martin Parkinson)是澳大利亚国库部秘书长。在2011年中澳青年对话上的主旨发言中,他谈论了中澳两国未来领袖在处理两国之间关系时所面临的挑战,同时强调了在两国青年之间搭建交流平台、让两国青年互相学习各自的语言和文化的重要性.

澳文化合作集团总监Catherine Croll在2012中澳青年对话

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2012年10月21日在北京红门画廊,澳大利亚文化合作集团(Cultural Partnerships Australia)的创始人兼总监(founding director)凯瑟琳•克罗尔(Catherine Croll)女士在2012中澳青年对话上介绍了澳大利亚文化合作集团组织的多种音乐、美术方面的文化交流项目,取得的显著成果以及对促进中澳文化交流所做出的巨大贡献。

YouTube视频

澳新银行总裁迈克史密斯致词2012ACYD

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在这个特别的致2012年中澳青年对话的视频中,澳新银行总裁迈克史密斯(Mike Smith)讨论了中国在他个人以及职业生涯中扮演的角色。此外,他也阐释了中国在澳新银行企业战略中的重要地位以及对澳大利亚经济社会多个方面的重要影响。正是缘于此因,我们需要通过重要的机构和组织,在中澳两国“社会的各个层面建立长期的、扩大的对话和合作机制”,例如中澳青年对话。也是缘于此因,澳新银行很自豪的与中澳青年对话联手合作,举办今年的对话活动。

澳洲工业集团总裁英尼斯威洛克斯致词2012ACYD

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在这个特别的致2012年中澳青年对话的视频中,澳洲工业集团(Ai Group)执行总裁英尼斯 威洛克斯(Innes Willox)谈论了澳洲工业集团(AiGroup)在中国的业务。此外,他也评论了中澳青年对话和澳洲工业集团合作伙伴关系的重要意义。他进一步指出中澳青年对话的魅力在于它为中澳两国年轻的职业人士之间建立长期联系做出了贡献。