The growing Chinese presence in Japan - What impact on the bilateral relationship?

Practical information
Seminar with Reinhard Drifte, Emeritus Professor at the Newcastle University, UK. Chair: Céline Pajon, Research Fellow, Ifri Center for Asian Studies.
Reinhard Drifteis Emeritus Professor at the Newcastle University, Visiting Professor at Ritsumeikan University in Kyoto and at Universite de Pau (IAE). His main topics of research are Japanese foreign policy and security issues in Northeast Asia. He is currently working on Sino-Japanese relations and territorial conflicts. He is the author of numerous books and articles, among those: Japan"s Security Relations with China since 1989: From Balancing to Bandwagoning ?, London, Routledge Curzon, 2003 ; Japan"s quest for a permanent UN Security Council Seat : A matter of pride or justice ? Basingstoke : Macmillan Press, 2000.
China has become Japan"s biggest trading partner and the number of Chinese in Japan is now higher than that of the Koreans, which had constituted the largest foreign community since 1945. Large Chinese enterprises are increasingly buying up ailing Japanese small and medium-sized companies. Chinese are becoming a major feature in Japan"s tourism industry. Chinese professors at Japanese universities can be found in increasing numbers, teaching Japanese students about China. The reactions of the Japanese to these developments range from opposition to welcome, reactions which play out against a background of increasing political and economic rivalry, territorial problems and a host of other bilateral irritants. This presentation will examine whether the growing Chinese presence in Japan will be helpful in addressing these irritants or whether it will further deteriorate the bilateral climate. The subject is of interest to Europe both as Japan"s biggest trading partner, and because of the growing Chinese presence in this region as well.
The seminar will be held in English.
Speakers
Other events

Assessing the Balance of Power between Europe and Russia
The evolving U.S. strategic posture and the intensification of the war in Ukraine are reshaping the security landscape in Europe. This context calls for a clear assessment of the balance of power between Europe and Russia.

Europe in turbulence: navigating a new world order without the United States?
The foundations of the post-1945 international order, long anchored by U.S. leadership, are shifting. Amid intensifying geopolitical rivalry, democratic backsliding, and strategic fatigue in Washington, the question arises: what if the United States no longer plays its pivotal role in international security? Simultaneously, the Global South is asserting new political and economic agency, complicating the old binaries of West vs. Rest. For Europe, this landscape is both a challenge and an inflection point.

The future of space cooperation in the new strategic context
The policy orientations of the Trump II administration profoundly challenge the foundations of international cooperation in space science and exploration. This shift reflects a broader trend of strategic disengagement and weakening of multilateral mechanisms in the space domain.