CityU and the US Congress were linked this week through video conferencing facilities as the University played host to the first American Studies Institute in Asia (ASIA) seminar.
Professor James Nathan, Professor of Political Science and Khaled bin Sultan Eminent Scholar at
Auburn University-Montgomery, and
Professor Charles Tien Associate Professor in the Department of Political Science at
Hunter College,
City University of New York, led the event, organized by CityU and the
Hong Kong-America Center, and sponsored by the
US State Department and
Hutchison Whampoa Ltd. The theme of the seminar was "The Role of Congress if American Foreign Policy".
The week-long event attracted some 25 academics, officials and journalists from throughout
Asia. On the mornings of
6 to 9 of August, the seminar was linked with
Washington, DC for interviews with key Congressmen, Congressional staffers, lobbyists and academics. The guests in
Washington included: Congressman
James Leach of the First District of Iowa,
Mr Brian McKeon, Democratic Chief Counsel of the
Senate Foreign Relations Committee, and
Gregory Treverton, Senior Fellow at the
Pacific Council on International Policy in
Los Angeles.
"In communities in
Asia and across the globe, the fates of individuals are often directly or indirectly affected by decisions taken in
America," said
Professor Y S Wong, Vice-President for Institutional Advancement in his welcoming speech on 5 August. "It is therefore entirely appropriate that the first meeting of the American Studies Institute in Asia focus on the making of American foreign policy, and in particular on the role of Congress."
Indeed, the seminar focused on two key questions: "What does Congress do in the making of
US foreign policy?" And "Why does Congress do what it does?" At the 9 August teleconference with
Washington, the guests at CityU included
Mr James Keith, the
US Consul General for Hong Kong and Macau who assumed duty on 1 August, who thanked CityU and the Hong Kong-America Center for organizing the seminar."I can't think of a more appropriate presenter than Congressman Leach on this issue," said Mr Keith.
In his presentation, Congressman Leach, speaking from
Washington, explained that the answers to the questions posed by the seminar are not simple. "It's hard to speak of Congress as a whole with 435 members representing a wide array of public opinion," he said. "You have a lot of individuals and ebbs of flows of judgment that can be applied institutionally."