Dr. Yves Tiberghien

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Dr. Yves Tiberghien

Professor, Department of Political Science, UBC; Faculty Associate, School of Public Policy and Global Affairs (SPPGA); Director Emeritus, Institute of Asian Research; Co-Director UBC Centre for Japanese Research; Vision20, Co Chair

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Profile

Yves Tiberghien (Ph.D. Stanford University, 2002; Harvard Academy Scholar 2006; Fulbright Scholar 1996) is a Professor of Political Science, Director Emeritus of the Institute of Asian Research, and Co-Director of the Center for Japanese Research at the University of British Columbia (UBC) in Vancouver, Canada.

Yves is also Distinguished Fellow at the Asia-Pacific Foundation of Canada and at the University of Alberta’s China Institute. He serves as the International Steering Committee Member representing Canada at Pacific Trade and Development Conference (PAFTAD). In November 2017, he was made a Chevalier de l’ordre national du mérite by the French President.

In 2014-2016, Yves served as Co-Director of the UBC Master of Public Policy and Global Affairs (MPPGA), which he founded as Chair of the UBC Public Policy Curriculum Committee in 2014. He is a regular visiting professor at Tokyo University and at Sciences Po Paris. He has held other visiting positions at National Chengchi University (NCCU, Taipei), GRIPS (Tokyo), and the Jakarta School of Public Policy.

Yves’ research specializes in East Asian comparative political economy, international political economy, and global economic and environmental governance, with an empirical focus on China, Japan, Korea, Southeast Asia, and Europe.

His books include Entrepreneurial States: Reforming Corporate Governance in France, Japan, and Korea (2007, Cornell University Press in the Political Economy Series directed by Peter Katzenstein); L’Asie et le futur du monde, Paris: Science Po Press, 2012; and Leadership in Global Institution-Building: Minerva’s Rule, edited volume, Palgrave McMillan, 2013. In 2020, he edited an online collection of papers on Japan’s leadership in the Liberal International Order. He has published many articles and book chapters on the political economy of Japan and China, global governance, global climate change politics, and the governance of agricultural biotechnology.

Dr. Tiberghien’s current research focuses on the ongoing transition in the global economic and environmental order, in the face of new systemic risks, a changing balance of power, and the rise of populist political forces. He is also currently working on articles on China’s role in global and regional governance and three books: Up for Grabs: Disruption, Competition, and the Remaking of the Global Economic Order; Navigating the Age of Disruption: Understanding Canada’s Options in a Shifting Global Order; and Geopolitics in East Asia: Response to COVID-19. Dr. Tiberghien founded the Vision 20 group in 2015, a new coalition of global scholars and policy-makers aiming at providing a long-term perspective on the challenges of global economic and environmental governance. The V20 held six summits (Hangzhou, 2016, Buenos Aires 2018, Tokyo 2018, and Washington DC, 2017, 2018, 2019: https://www.thevision20.org/)

 

Selected Publication

Books

  • 2020 (online edited policy book). Tiberghien, Yves, Editor. July. Japan’s Leadership in the Liberal International Order. Editor of online policy paper collection with 17 leading scholars
  • 2015 Tiberghien, Yves. 公民丛书 : 亚洲与世界未来 (Gong min cong shu : ya zhou yu shi jie wei lai ; Series of Citizen of the World : Asia and the Future of the World).Beijing: 社会科学文献出版社 (she hui ke xue wen xian chu ban she ; Social Sciences Academic Press China). Expanded Translation of 2012 Book (L’Asie et le Futur du Monde).
  • 2013 Tiberghien, Yves, ed. Leadership in Global Institution Building: Minerva’s Rule. Palgrave Studies in European Union Politics Series. London and New York: Palgrave McMillan.
  • 2012 L’Asie et le futur du Monde. Paris: Presses de Science Po. Collection Nouveaux Débats. 

Books in Progress

  1. Navigating the Age of Disruption: Understanding Canada’s Options in a Shifting Global Order (under review)
  2. Geopolitics in East Asia: Response to COVID-19 (November 2020)
  3. Up for Grabs: Disruption, Competition, and the Remaking of the Global Economic Order (Late 2020-early 2021)

Recent Analysis

Recent Articles

Recent Book Chapters

  • 2020 Tiberghien, Yves. “The Battle over GMOs in Korea and Japan” in Esarey, Ashley, Mary Alice Haddad, Stevan Harrell, and Joanna Lewis Ed. Eco-Developmentalism in East Asia. Seattle: University of Washington Press.

  • 2020 Tiberghien, Yves. “Asia’s Rise and the Transition to a Post-Western Global Order.” In Contending Views on the Decline of Western-Centric World and the Emerging Global Order in the 21st Century, edited by Yun-han Chu and Yongnian Zheng. London: Routledge. Pp. 357-378.

  • 2020 Tiberghien, Yves. « La nouvelle route de la soie, pivot des relations commerciales contemporaines ? » (the New Silk Road, anchor of contemporary global trade relations?), in Delas, Olivier ed. Relations commerciales internationales: l’Union Européenne et l’Amérique du nord à l’heure de la nouvelle route de la soie. Bruxelles : Larcier. Pp. 23-34.

  • 2020 Tiberghien, Yves. « Les relations Union Européenne -Chine » in Delas, Olivier ed. Relations commerciales internationales: l’Union Européenne et l’Amérique du nord à l’heure de la nouvelle route de la soie. Bruxelles : Larcier. Pp. 253-274.

  • 2020 Tiberghien, Yves. « Divergence and convergences des positions Chine- -Union Européenne - États-Unis dans les crises internationales » in Delas, Olivier ed. Relations commerciales internationales: l’Union Européenne et l’Amérique du nord à l’heure de la nouvelle route de la soie. Bruxelles : Larcier. Pp. 533-540.

  • 2018 Tiberghien, Yves. “Chinese Global Climate Change Leadership and Its Impact” in Amighini, Alessia. China: Champion of Which Globalization? Milan: Ledizioni LediPublishing (ISPI). May. Pp. 101-120. Available from: China: Champion of (Which) Globalisation?
  • 2016 Tiberghien, Yves. “Dealing with Rapid and Systemic Change: A Smart Canadian Approach to Global Institutions and Partnerships” in Paris, Roland, and Taylor Owen, eds. The World Won’t Wait: Why Canada Needs to Rethink Its International Policies. Toronto, Buffalo, London: University of Toronto Press. January. Pp. 162-174
  • 2015 Ohta Hiroshi and Yves Tiberghien, “Saving the Kyoto Protocol: what can we learn from the experience of Japan-EU cooperation?” in Bacon, Paul, Hartmut Mayer, and Hidetoshi Nakamura eds. 2015. The European Union and Japan: a New Chapter in Civilian Power Cooperation? Ashgate. April.
  • 2015 Lechevalier, Sebastien and Yves Tiberghien (50%). “Shihonshugi no taiyousei to shihonshugi no mirai he no Nihon kara no kyoukun” (The Diversity and Future of Capitalism: Lessons from Japan) in Sebastien Lechevalier and Toshimitsu Shinkawa, Ed. Nihon Shihonshugi no DaiTenKan (The Great Transformation of Japanese Capitalism). Tokyo: Iwanami Shouten. Pp. 21-68.

 

Research Interests

Yves’ research specializes in East Asian comparative political economy, international political economy, and global economic and environmental governance, with an empirical focus on China, Japan, Korea, Southeast Asia, and Europe

 

Teaching

The Transformation of Global Order in the 21st Century

The age of a stable US-dominated order is over. We have entered a period of great competition for global rules and norms, a battle between connectivity and fragmentation, and a confrontation between old powers and new rising powers.

We are also facing a perfect storm that combines globalization-induced dislocations and a democratic crisis in US and Europe; a climate change crisis challenging our entire economic model; the greatest pandemic since 1919; a powerful AI-centered/digital technological revolution; the greatest shift in the balance of power in over a century (over 20% of economic power shifting hands from advanced Western democracies to emerging countries between 2000 and 2018); the massive and threatening rise of China; and a US revolt against the global institutions it created (2016-2020). Asia (and soon Africa) are rising across the board in all sub-regions, recovering a voice that was lost since pre-colonial times, ushering a much more diverse and multipolar world. According to the IMF’s current forecasts, over 60% of world economic growth will take place in Asia between now and 2030. The two dominant powers, the US and China, are locked into an ever-worsening spiral of trade conflict and security competition, a process made worse by misperceptions and emotional reactions and threatening to engulf the world economy. Is the US intent on destroying the rules-based order it nurtured for decades, in order to stop the rise of China? Or is the US just seeking to adjust rules and the division of benefits? Is China intent on uprooting the Western liberal order, or is China just seeking to gain a bigger voice within existing economic and global institutions, while retaining its historically-derived governance? What is the role of other emerging powers and non state actors in the competition for the new world order?

This course unpacks this new dynamic period of world history when traditional institutions and norms cannot be taken for granted. Large states are engaging in a process of strategic interactions mediated by domestic historical frames, an interaction that will determine our future world. And power has been diffused to a larger number of non state actors.

The course begins with an overview of the theoretical dilemmas of global coordination and different approaches to global governance, including the dilemmas and obstacles involved in creating the post-war liberal order. The course also analyzes the growing role played by China in various dimensions of global governance, as well as the US-China tensions. The second part focuses on seven thematic arenas: global finance, global trade, development models, climate change and energy politics, global pandemic management (Covid-19), global digital/AI governance, and changing regional governance models.

The course will include a variety of activities, including lively lectures, movie excerpts, discussions, debates, and live discussions with global leaders and policy-makers. Lecture notes will be available by email, as well as additional resources. The instructor will be available for further discussion in person or by email. Students will get involved with participation in global summits through the Vision20 framework, within the constraints of the program.