National security concerns could force Western universities to stop enrolling Chinese doctoral students in 鈥渟ensitive鈥 areas such as quantum computing and hypersonics, a vice-chancellor has warned.
Alex Zelinsky, who joined Australia鈥檚 University of Newcastle last November after six years as the country鈥檚 chief defence scientist, said higher education institutions were 鈥渦nrealistic鈥 if they thought they could work with any partner on any research topic.
He said advances in autonomous systems, cybersecurity and materials science had potential applications that 鈥渉aven鈥檛 even been imagined鈥, and universities must be 鈥渧ery careful鈥 about undertaking collaborative research with groups from some countries 鈥 including China 鈥 if there was a chance the results could be harnessed in military systems.
That could extend to accepting Chinese PhD students in such areas. 鈥淚t may come to that,鈥 Professor Zelinsky told 糖心Vlog. 鈥淭here are things we produce in universities鈥hat are truly world leading. They could be turned into a competitive disadvantage.鈥
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The debate is particularly sensitive in Australia, where universities are heavily reliant on China for student recruitment, including at postgraduate level, but where there is growing concern about potential theft of intellectual property and some Chinese researchers鈥 ties to the People鈥檚 Liberation Army.
US universities are also facing increasing pressure to monitor the activities of their Chinese researchers, and the Trump administration has reportedly considered restricting Chinese involvement in sensitive research areas on US campuses amid a mounting trade war with Beijing.
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In Australia, universities currently require permits to share and publish applied research in areas with military applications. In February, the government resisted a Department of Defence push to extend controls to a broader suite of research topics in fields such as artificial intelligence, nanotechnology and new materials.
Professor Zelinsky said the government had 鈥渄one the right thing鈥 and named the topics of potential concern in its 2016 defence . The document highlighted quantum computing, innovative manufacturing, hypersonics and unmanned systems among the areas likely to spawn new weapons in the region.
But he said technology was a 鈥渕oving feast鈥 and the export controls might need revisiting. 鈥淲e鈥檙e world leading in certain aspects of areas such as quantum [computing], hypersonics, cybersecurity and autonomous systems,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e have to realise that other players, because they can鈥檛 buy it or build it themselves, will seek to acquire it through any means they can.鈥
Universities wanting to recruit PhD candidates in sensitive areas would need to consider students鈥 plans afterwards, Professor Zelinsky said. 鈥淚f they just want to come here, learn, go back to their country and implement something that could be used against us, you鈥檝e got to be very careful about that,鈥 he said.
James Laurenceson, acting director of the Australia-China Relations Institute at the University of Technology Sydney, questioned Professor Zelinsky鈥檚 intervention, highlighting that a fundamental characteristic of doctoral study was that it created new knowledge.
鈥淚t鈥檚 hard to steal something that doesn鈥檛 yet exist, or that once it does exist is available to all researchers,鈥 he said.
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鈥淭here are plenty of areas of science and technology where Chinese researchers are at the frontier. If there鈥檚 something to steal, it would make just as much sense to argue that we might be the thieves.鈥
Professor Laurenceson also argued against bans in fields such as quantum computing and artificial intelligence. 鈥淭hese are incredibly broad labels, often encompassing cross-disciplinary elements, and it鈥檚 hard to see where you could meaningfully draw a line,鈥 he said.
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鈥淚t鈥檚 not hard to imagine hawkish national security types pushing for extremely broad interpretations.鈥 This could inadvertently undermine Western countries鈥 ability to stay at the knowledge frontier, Professor Laurenceson said.
But Alex Joske, a researcher with the Australian Strategic Policy Institute in Canberra, said Western universities took a 鈥渟implistic鈥 approach to engagement with Chinese partners. 鈥淚n many cases, they haven鈥檛 thought through the implications,鈥 he said.
鈥淚t鈥檚 getting harder to draw clear lines between military and civilian research in China. There鈥檚 a deliberate effort by the Chinese government to better take advantage of civilian resources, and that applies to universities.鈥
Professor Zelinsky said that, if collaborative research was thwarted, politicians should provide more research funding as a quid pro quo. 鈥淭he worst case would be for the government to say we won鈥檛 support you, but you can鈥檛 work with anyone else.鈥
He also said that caution was warranted in decisions about allowing Chinese telecommunications giant Huawei to provide critical infrastructure. But universities should have few qualms about using the company鈥檚 products, and fewer about accepting Huawei grants for research in non-sensitive areas, Professor Zelinsky argued.
鈥淭hey were the first to really invest in R&D in 5G. They got ahead while the West was sitting on its hands. If our researchers have a better understanding of where the cutting-edge commercial systems are going, that鈥檚 good for Australia,鈥 he said.
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POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline: West 鈥榤ay need to bar鈥 Chinese from some fields
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