Tag Archive for: General

How gender factors affect work to counter violent extremism

To improve its programs for countering violent extremism (CVE), the Australian government must better understand the gendered characteristics of extremism. And it needs to apply that knowledge to enhance the existing practices of CVE professionals who work with radicalised men.

While it is well established that a significant proportion of violent extremists are men, the underlying gendered factors driving male radicalisation remain poorly understood. This hampers the government’s ability to craft effective strategies in CVE.

Historically, CVE efforts have concentrated on individual risk assessments and community surveillance.  While this is important work, by overlooking the critical role of gender in radicalisation processes we are potentially missing ways to improve the effectiveness of CVE. Yet, gender-sensitising CVE efforts is no easy task.

In our 2021 research we interviewed Australian CVE practitioners, exploring how conventional understandings of masculinity—particularly hegemonic masculinity, which normalises men’s dominance over women and puts high value on traits like strength and control—played a pivotal role in shaping the self-identities and views of men susceptible to extremist ideologies. Many of their clients aligned themselves with notions of masculinity that endorse violence and superiority, especially when they perceived these ideals as being under threat.

Our research reveals new insights about the influence of gender in CVE intervention. CVE practitioners, often on the frontline of deradicalisation, spend much time building relationships with such men. Through discussions with a diverse range of Australian practitioners, we uncovered a complex interplay between masculine identity and the effectiveness of interventions. We discovered that the process of deradicalisation was deeply influenced by the client’s views on gender roles as well as the gender dynamics between practitioner and client.

Many practitioners reported that male clients expressed rigid views on gender roles, which could affect their behaviour and responses to treatment. These views had to be carefully negotiated. For instance, one practitioner noted that a client struggled with feelings of inadequacy regarding his masculinity, making interactions with traditional authority figures—such as police officers—particularly challenging.

Interestingly, several practitioners observed that male clients with misogynistic views often engaged more positively with female practitioners than with their male counterparts. This challenges the stereotype that strong traditionalist beliefs would preclude men from seeking advice and mentorship from women.

The interpersonal relationships developed in CVE settings are crucial staging grounds for different ways of defining and developing masculinity. Here, masculine identities are enacted and shaped by both clients and practitioners, often reflecting broader societal norms and expectations. While some practitioners use traits associated with hegemonic masculinity to build trust and rapport, this approach risks reinforcing the very stereotypes that contribute to radicalisation.

We believe such insights are vital for refining CVE practices. There is an urgent need for practitioners to reflect critically on whether they are challenging harmful gender stereotypes or inadvertently perpetuating them.

The complexity of CVE work necessitates a nuanced approach that accounts for the multifaceted nature of gendered power dynamics. Practitioners must consider gender dynamics not only between men and women but also among men, women, boys and girls. This level of introspection is essential, as it encourages practitioners to question their assumptions and adapt their strategies accordingly.

To make CVE initiatives more effective, the government must urge practitioners to engage with diverse theories and understandings of gender and masculinity. Once they recognise that gender identities are socially and culturally constructed, they may have a more comprehensive understanding of how these identities influence the behaviours and interactions of young men. Then they can foster a reflective practice that interrogates gender norms, and create more inclusive and effective interventions that truly address the roots of radicalisation.

To this end, training and professional development should focus on gender sensitivity and awareness, so that practitioners are equipped with the tools to navigate these complex dynamics. By creating spaces for dialogue about masculinity and radicalisation, the government can empower practitioners to share experiences and strategies, fostering a collaborative approach to CVE.

As the field of CVE evolves, it is crucial for practitioners to incorporate gender analysis into their work. This involves not only recognising diverse expressions of masculinity but also understanding how these expressions can affect relationships with clients. They can develop strategies that both deradicalise individuals and dismantle the harmful stereotypes that contribute to violent extremism.

Ultimately, a comprehensive approach to CVE that embraces a nuanced understanding of gender dynamics will help build more resilient communities that are better equipped to prevent various forms of radicalisation in the first place.

Exclusive: Inside Beijing’s app collecting information from Belt and Road companies

China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs operates a secure digital platform that connects it directly with Chinese companies operating abroad, requiring participating companies to submit regular reports about their activities and local security conditions to the government, internal documents reveal.

The documents obtained and verified by ASPI’s China Investigations and Analysis team show how the platform, called Safe Silk Road (平安丝路), collects information from companies participating in the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), Chinese leader Xi Jinping’s signature foreign policy initiative. The BRI has facilitated Chinese infrastructure projects and other investment in more than 100 countries, particularly developing regions. The Safe Silk Road platform was initially launched in 2017 and is now used by at least dozens of Chinese companies across several continents.

By tapping into the extensive network of Chinese companies engaged in projects around the world, the platform demonstrates how Beijing is finding new ways of improving its global information and intelligence collection to better assess risks, and ultimately protect its interests and its citizens, even in the most remote corners of the world. The Safe Silk Road platform is one more building block in the growing global infrastructure that seeks to place the Chinese government at the center of the Chinese experience abroad, and that replicates some of the structures of information collection and surveillance that have now become ubiquitous within China.

The MFA’s External Security Affairs Department (涉外安全事务司), which operates the Safe Silk Road, has said the platform is a direct response to the difficulty of obtaining information relevant to Chinese companies abroad. The information the app collects feeds into the department’s assessments. The platform is also part of a trend across Chinese government ministries of creating apps to facilitate some of the work they were already doing.

ASPI is the first organisation to report on the Safe Silk Road platform. It is mentioned on some regional Chinese government websites but has not been covered by Chinese state media. The platform operates through a website and an associated mobile app that can only be accessed with registered accounts.

The platform is not available for download in app stores. The documents state that the platform is only intended for companies’ internal use, and that users are strictly prohibited from circulating information about it online. Companies can apply for an account through the MFA’s External Security Affairs Department or their local consulate and, once approved, designate an official contact person within the company, called a ‘company liaison officer’ (公司联络员), who is authorized to submit reports and use the app’s full functionality. The MFA provides companies with a QR code to download the app and requires companies to use the platform’s bespoke VPN with the app and desktop version.

 

 

Companies are asked to submit quarterly reports through the app. Those reports include basic information such as the name, national ID number and contact information of the owner, the region in which the company operates, its sector or industry, the amount of investment in US dollars, the number of Chinese and local employees, and whether it has registered with a local Chinese embassy or consulate, according to internal company documents viewed by ASPI analysts.

The app has a feature called ‘one-click report’ for ‘sudden incidents’ (突发事件) that allows users to report local security-related incidents directly to the MFA, according to the documents and other materials. The reporting feature includes the following categories: war/unrest, terrorist attack, conflict between Chinese and foreign workers, protest, kidnapping, gun shooting, production safety accident, contagion/epidemic, flood, earthquake, fire, tsunami, and other. The user can then provide more information including date, location and other details about the incident.

The reporting form also asks the company to provide information about its ‘overseas rights protection object’ (海外权益保护对象) and ‘police resources database object’ (警务资源库对象). An ‘overseas rights protection object’ may refer to patents, trademarks, and copyrights held by the company; the Chinese government has made protecting the intellectual property of Chinese companies a key focus in recent years. ‘Police resources database object’ is a vague term that may refer to security contractors, Chinese overseas police activity, or physical assets or company personnel that need protecting.

Users can subscribe to real-time security updates for their region and register to attend online safety training classes. There is even a video-conference feature within the app that allows embassy officials to call the app user directly. It is common for foreign ministries to create digital services that provide information and security alerts for their citizens abroad—such as Australia’s ‘Smartraveller’, the US Smart Traveler Enrollment Program (STEP), and China’s own ‘China Consul’ (中国领事).

The Safe Silk Road platform, however, is different. It is not public-facing, it is tailored specifically for BRI companies and, most importantly, it asks for detailed information from those companies about their own activities and local conditions, rather than just offering helpful information. For some companies, participation may even be compulsory.

ASPI’s analysis of the Safe Silk Road platform underscores Beijing’s determination to safeguard its global infrastructure and investment power play under the BRI. As China’s investment in developing regions has grown, so has Beijing’s emphasis on protecting its citizens, companies, and assets abroad.

As of December 2023, about 150 countries had joined the BRI. According to the official Belt and Road Portal, China has 346,000 workers dispatched overseas. BRI-affiliated companies often run projects in regions with underdeveloped infrastructure, high poverty, poor governance, lack of quality medical care, domestic political instability, violent crime, and terrorist attacks. Private security contracting companies are increasingly offering their services to Chinese companies abroad. The number of Chinese private security contractors has expanded dramatically in recent years as BRI companies have faced growing security challenges.

Several events over the past few years, including the pandemic and a string of attacks in Pakistan in 2021 targeting Chinese nationals supporting BRI projects, have underscored to Beijing the need for better security measures. At the third Belt and Road symposium in 2021, Xi Jinping said China needed ‘an all-weather early warning and comprehensive assessment service platform for overseas project risks’. The External Security Affairs Department said the same year that ‘the difficulty of obtaining security information is one of the major problems faced by companies who “go out”’, referring to Chinese companies that invest overseas. To address this concern, the department ‘launched the Safe Silk Road website and the related mobile app to gather information about security risks in Belt and Road countries to directly serve company personnel engaged in projects overseas’. The department said that in 2021 the app was used to disseminate 13,000 pieces of information, including more than 2,800 early warnings.

More broadly, the platform is illustrative as a digital tool to help Beijing protect its interests abroad. The External Security Affairs Department was established in 2004 in response to a perceived increase in kidnappings and terrorist attacks targeting Chinese nationals abroad, but its role in China’s security policy has expanded since then.

The department’s leading role in ‘protecting China’s interests abroad’ (中国海外利益保护) meets an objective increasingly found in official Chinese Communist Party documents and Chinese law. This objective appears in China’s National Security Strategy 2021–2025, the new Foreign Relations Law 2023, and new regulations on consular protection and assistance passed in 2023. The party’s ability and readiness to protect China’s interests abroad is considered one of the historic achievements of the party, according to a resolution it passed in 2021.

But the exact scope of China’s interests abroad is still a matter of debate in the public commentary among Chinese national security and foreign policy academics and analysts. Are China’s interests just the physical security of Chinese nationals and commercial or strategic assets in foreign countries? Or do they also include ‘intangible interests’ (无形利益), such as protecting China’s national image and reputation, and anything else that should be within China’s national interest as a major global power? How the Chinese government currently defines China’s interests abroad is probably somewhere in the middle, and may broaden.

China has a widely recognised deficiency: gaps in its overseas intelligence collection capabilities. Safe Silk Road is part of the toolbox that the External Security Affairs Department uses to extend the range and effectiveness of Beijing’s information-gathering and to better understand the situation on the ground everywhere that China has interests.

20 years since the Australian embassy bombing in Jakarta

Twenty years ago today, on a Thursday morning, an innocuous white delivery van stuttered towards the gate of the Australian embassy in Jakarta. Seconds later, an explosion shattered windows for blocks around and left 10 Indonesians dead, including embassy security staff and a mother waiting in the visa line with her young daughter. More than 200 Indonesians and Australians were injured, mainly by flying glass.

This was the first time an Australian embassy had been attacked, although other Australian missions in the region had previously been the subjects of terrorist planning.

At the van’s wheel was Heri Golun. Those who sent him on his suicide mission and made the 1-tonne bomb included notorious Malaysian terrorists Azahari Husin and Noordin Mohammed Top, who would both meet their ends at the hands of Indonesian police, in 2005 and 2009, respectively. Co-conspirator Rois would be sentenced to death. Accessories Irun Hidayat and Agus Ahmad were jailed.

The embassy attack came after the cataclysmic Bali bombings on the night of 12 October 2002 and the August 2003 bombing of Jakarta’s Marriott Hotel—both representing hitherto novel targeting of Westerners in Indonesia. It would be followed by a second attack in Bali in October 2005 and then the simultaneous bombings of Jakarta’s Marriott and Ritz-Carlton hotels in 2009. After that, the focus of terrorist attacks moved to Indonesian government targets, mainly law-enforcement officers.

What War on Terror?

Despite the extraordinary shock felt initially in Australia, the risk is that, 20 years on, it’s been largely forgotten, along with broader memories of the decades-long struggle against Islamist terrorism regionally. Similarly, a more recent anniversary, the highpoint of the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) ‘caliphate’—Mosul’s capture in June 2014—passed with little notice. Australia largely overlooked that anniversary even though a disproportionate number of its citizens had sought to join the ranks of ISIS (and 230 did so). Many others were citizens of Australia’s neighbours—including Indonesians, whose numbers are variously estimated between 689 and almost 1300.

Nor does the name ‘Marawi’ resonate now, despite it being the scene of a bloody, five-month-long battle between the Philippines military and ISIS affiliates only seven years ago in 2017. Australia’s role in supporting the Philippines to liberate the city and recover from the siege is little remembered.

Understanding this history is a reminder that, notwithstanding the recent raising of the terror threat level in Australia to ‘Probable’, Australians have historically been more at risk of being victims of terrorism overseas, and especially in Southeast Asia.

This community-wide amnesia reflects ephemeral contemporary culture but also the degree to which the counter-terrorism experience was not shared equally across Australian society. Maybe this forgetfulness is in some sense deliberate, perhaps as a form of national resilience by just moving on quickly from crises. Or maybe we just want to focus on the next threat.

There’s also a certain embarrassment associated with counter-terrorism ‘elsewhere’, following Kabul’s fall in 2021 to the Taliban and revelations in the Brereton inquiry into special forces operations in Afghanistan. And we can too easily forget that it was an Australian, motivated by extreme racist ideology, who visited terror on Christchurch, New Zealand in 2019.

And there’s also an understandable desire to nurture social cohesion by modulating rhetoric on religiously motivated terrorism.

But with all those reasons—time, other threats, missteps and social cohesion—the reality is that silence is a short-term facade that eventually leads to unnecessary surprise, increased tension and distrust not only within the community but in the very institutions whose role is to keep us safe. That’s why long-term national resilience requires risk management, not avoidance. And that means there’s a need for regular, informed messaging about the threats we face and our successes and mistakes, so that the public is brought along on the journey calmly and objectively, not just when confronted by a crisis.

One reason the public can be surprised by the realisation of a threat is that too often governments fail to learn from history or to unpack crisis moments after the hard yards of recovery, which means that the lessons to help avoid or at least mitigate the next crisis are not heeded. What’s more, our broader bureaucracies are often more adept at responding to crises, rather than preparing for or preventing them. Their structures prioritise established procedures and reactive measures over proactive planning and innovation. And, at the societal level, Australia frequently experiences success in managing one-off events but often fails to adequately reflect on the ongoing and cumulative nature of persistent threats, due to a tendency to focus on immediate, high-profile incidents rather than sustaining long-term, systematic risk-management and prevention strategies.

That the terrorism level was raised last month with limited public discussion or build-up, and therefore came as somewhat of a surprise, shows that it’s human nature to think that a one-off success (‘mission accomplished’) is forever lasting: killing bin Laden and dismantling al-Qaeda in the Middle East and the Taliban in Afghanistan were viewed as ends in themselves. And, subsequently, ‘defeating’ ISIS may have helped to temporarily lower the global and Australian terror level but was always going to be cyclical. The lesson should be clear: these threats do wax and wane, but they don’t disappear. As they adapt, so must we.

We can identify this tendency in other counter-terrorism examples from the recent past:

—Mosul, of course, was declared a ‘no-go’ zone by the Australian government in 2015, just the second such declared zone after al Raqqa in 2014, and after both had been taken over by ISIS. With that legislative power having come under review, there were questions as to whether it remained necessary, only to now have recent reports about the government considering the declaration of parts of Lebanon as being controlled by Hezbollah.

—While it took longer than it should have, Australia listed Hamas in its entirety as a terrorist organisation under the Criminal Code (rather than in part or just for counter-terrorism financing purposes) in February 2022—only eight months before Hamas attacked Israel with shocking acts that have destabilised the region and resulted in conflict. That conflict has, at least in part, added to growing tensions in Australia that resulted in the terror threat level being raised.

And, in reducing the terror threat level, the ASIO director-general was at pains to say that the change didn’t mean the threat was gone. But the perception at the policy level appears different. The counter-terrorism coordinator no longer sits in the same portfolio as ASIO and the Australian Federal Police (AFP), is also the designated Counter Foreign Interference Coordinator and no longer seems to be the prime minister’s principal adviser on terrorism.

A success story in Southeast Asia

A more positive explanation for this amnesia is the genuine operational success experienced in Southeast Asia, aided considerably by the close and resilient working relationship between the AFP and the Indonesian National Police. In July 2024, after continuous degradation of Jemaah Islamiyah (in 2021, Indonesian police said that almost 900 JI members had been arrested since 2000), senior members of its remnant announced it was disbanding. One of JI’s most prominent imitators, the East Indonesia Mujahideen (MIT) was literally obliterated: its last member was killed in September 2022. In the southern Philippines, the notorious bombers, beheaders and kidnappers of the Abu Sayyaf Group (ASG), lately affiliated with ISIS, suffered defeat in Marawi and the deaths of their principal leader and his ally. This year, the Philippines military claimed final victory over ASG.

While there is still ongoing violence regionally, including an IS-inspired attack on a Malaysian police station this year, the current situation is fundamentally different from that Thursday morning in 2004 outside the embassy. But dormant, dismantled and degraded don’t mean defeated permanently.

Indeed, Australia should exercise caution in declaring ultimate success against terrorism in Southeast Asia, as many of the underlying drivers of terrorism, such as socio-economic instability and regional conflicts, persist and could undermine longer term counter-terrorism efforts. For example, beyond Southeast Asia, we’re also seeing a familiar script play out in concerning reports about al-Qaeda and Islamic State—Khorasan Province (ISKP) growing in Taliban-led Afghanistan.

How to remember—and what to learn?

It’s also timely to ask: What was the ultimate meaning of those efforts? How should we commemorate sacrifices made by Australians in and out of uniform, by civilians who were the targets of terrorist atrocities and, not least, by the numerous brave police and soldiers (principally Indonesian and Filipino) who were the key to ‘victory’? And how should our reflections inform how Australia responds to future national security challenges?

While the former ASIO director general (and national security adviser) Duncan Lewis has provided a useful starting point with his ‘six lessons’, there’s much still to be drawn upon from the counter-terrorism age, especially in Southeast Asia.

From a narrowly operational perspective, the counter-terrorism age proved the value of:

—Setting clear objectives (and measures) in national security;

—Using intelligence to lead and enable public policy;

—Integrating national efforts across government, with collaboration actively prioritised and incentivised by ministers;

—Empowering and supporting those at the coalface, especially at the mission level overseas;

—Innovation—including intelligence fusion centres, new models of cooperation, and collaborative institutions, such as the Jakarta Centre for Law Enforcement Cooperation;

—Partnerships and (two-way) capacity building regionally—exemplified in the Indonesian Police’s Detachment 88 (DET 88), supported by Australia and the US;

—Traditional intelligence relationships, including as a broader framework for intelligence sharing and advanced capability development;

—Methodological advances in intelligence work, such as the development and mastery of targeting analysis; and

—Investment in the development of long-term interpersonal relationships between countries.

We can also learn at a strategic level:

—Terror and politically motivated violence (PMV) will always be with us, so long as they deliver political, spiritual and/or material benefits to terrorists. The real question is how they affect us and how we respond.

—We must appreciate the persistence and impact of disruptions and threats—see how Russia’s illegal war on Ukraine, the fighting in Gaza and Iran’s terrorist proxies of Hamas, Hezbollah and the Houthis have upended the best laid plans globally—especially given Beijing’s active encouragement and enablement of spot fires that weaken those it regards as adversaries.

—Proactivity in addressing potential threats is important—a stitch in time (especially in the Southeast Asian context)—while remembering that operational success is just one piece of the puzzle, for any strategy that fails to tackle the causes of terrorism and PMV is destined for long-term failure.

—Public support for counter-terrorism measures is essential for their successful implementation and effectiveness, as it encourages collaboration between communities and authorities. It’s equally important for the public to stay security-aware without succumbing to fear, as excessive anxiety can undermine societal cohesion and resilience. Transparency, trust in government and clear communication play critical roles in fostering that balance, ensuring that counter-terrorism efforts are understood and supported while mitigating the risk of unwarranted panic or misinformation.

Those lessons are applicable, given that the challenge now for Australia is an expanded version of ASIO’s own careful balancing of the risks of espionage and interference on the one hand and PMV on the other. And balance is indeed key.

That is, how should Australia most effectively calibrate future effort on the biggest big-picture threat—Chinese hegemony in our hemisphere—while still taking proactive steps (within our power, that we can contribute to meaningfully and not as a token) to mitigate other pressing national security disruptions? Disruptions that include domestically propelled security concerns (such as terrorism, people smuggling, crime and so on) as well as increasingly in cyberspace. All within the context of the inescapable realities of our strategic geography and accelerating technological and demographic trends.

While informed by the work of the National Intelligence Community (NIC), it will be Australia’s policy agencies (in the departments of defence, home affairs and foreign affairs and trade, and also in the central agencies of the Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet, Treasury and Department of Finance) that will need to step up to shape and sustain efforts to address this hydra-like challenge. They and the NIC would benefit from concerted and comprehensive research into the lessons outlined above.

The human story of Australian counter-terrorism

But, in addition to matters of statecraft and public policy, there’s also a human story upon which to reflect.

Australia’s counter-terrorism campaign extended out beyond Southeast Asia. In fact, it started in Australia itself, in the intensive preparations of police and intelligence agencies leading up to the Sydney Olympics in 2000. Although we’ve now entered a new age of ideologically diffuse terrorism by radicalised individuals, the previous incarnation supposedly finished in 2016 and 2017 in the deserts of northern Iraq and on Marawi’s streets.

During that decade and a half, terrible names, terms and acronyms haunted the nightmares and waking hours of many thousands of Australians—diplomats, intelligence officers, defence personnel, police and bureaucrats alike. ‘VBIEDs’, ‘building stand-off ranges’, ‘indirect fire’, ‘KFR’, ‘duty to warn’, ‘EOD’, ‘JAT’, ‘blast wave’, ‘AML’, ‘takfir’, ‘terrorist transit triangle’, ‘pocket litter’, ‘CVE’, ‘CTF’, ‘mass casualty’, ‘multi-modal attack’ and so on and so on.

And for some of your neighbours, siblings and friends, the night still isn’t peaceful.

Governments and agencies are now much more aware of the mental-health impacts of national-security service and are building that awareness into their future ways of working, although the evidence provided to the Royal Commission into Defence and Veteran Suicide suggests there’s much more to do.

Necessarily, mental (and physical) support is of primary importance but there is also a commemorative requirement. There could never be VP Day-style parades for Australia’s counter-terrorism veterans, but that’s no reason to not keep exploring more suitable opportunities for remembrance. Some of us have already written about how to better recognise intelligence service, but there’s a particular gap when it comes to honouring officials who served in Southeast Asia, outside of Defence deployments, or who worked to prevent terrorist outrages inside Australia itself.

But, first and foremost, today we should look back to the terrible atrocity committed 20 years ago, and to those it hurt so badly—but also to the indomitable response of Australians and Indonesians together. As then foreign minister Julie Bishop remarked on the 10th anniversary:

If the aim of the Jakarta embassy bombers was to fracture the relationship between Australia and Indonesia, they failed. If anything, they … helped draw our two countries even closer together and strengthened our resolve to work together against terrorism, and to address the risks of violent extremism in our region and beyond.

Australia’s climate ambitions have a modern slavery problem: examining the origins of our big batteries

Several big battery projects in Australia vital for storing renewable energy to meet the nation’s climate goals are highly likely to be using materials sourced through the forced labour of Uyghur and other Turkic ethnic groups in China, ASPI research has found.

ASPI has examined the supply chains for big battery projects across various Australian states and found that, even when the batteries are sourced from US-based companies, critical components are still obtained from Chinese suppliers. These suppliers carry well-documented risks of involvement in human rights abuses.

Australia needs big batteries because its renewable energy plans require storage for intermittent sources such as wind, solar and hydro. That’s why state and territory governments are pouring billions of dollars into battery energy storage systems (BESS), also known as big batteries.

However, most of the global battery supply is controlled by companies based in the People’s Republic of China and is dependent on raw materials mined and processed in Xinjiang Uyghur autonomous region (XUAR).  Two of the largest companies that supply batteries and lithium cells for batteries—Contemporary Amperex Technology Co. Ltd. (CATL) and EVE—are used in Australian projects in spite of having been reported to be implicated in grave human rights violations, notably forced labour of Uyghur and other Turkic ethnic groups in the manufacturing and processing of raw materials. In a damning 2022 report, the United Nations stated that such violations might constitute crimes against humanity.

Our findings indicate that a legislative or policy directive is required to ensure that the default for Australian companies and governments is to source batteries that are guaranteed not to involve forced labour. Only then can Australia reach its climate goals without that success coming at the expense of human rights.

This directive should compel Australian governments to act as model contractors and incentivise and require private sector partners to undertake appropriate due diligence. It would mean mandating that project owners and operators know the origins, sources and supply chains of the batteries and their materials and are able to confirm they do not carry the risk of human rights abuses. When dealing with countries known to engage in modern slavery, such as China, it cannot be sufficient to say there is no evidence of forced labour. Rather, the supply chain must be known to be free of these risks.

If this work does not provide complete confidence, then the battery suppliers should not be used.

Understanding Chinese battery supply chains is indeed notoriously difficult. Faced with scrutiny from foreign governments and non-government researchers, Chinese companies often obscure their supply chains through intricate webs of suppliers and corporate affiliations, creating significant challenges for consumers and regulators trying to trace the origins of materials and labour. But difficult doesn’t mean impossible. 

In June 2022, The New York Times uncovered that Xinjiang Nonferrous Metal Industry (Group), a Chinese state-owned enterprise, was directly exploiting forced Uyghur labour in the mining sector under the guise of a surplus labour transfer program. And in September 2023, the Washington Post detailed concerns about forced labour within the supply chains of several electric vehicle companies, including Tesla, Ford and Volkswagen. 

One of the supply chains examined by the Washington Post involved CATL (宁德时代新能源科技股份有限公司), the world’s largest EV battery maker, which has contracts with seven major global automakers.

CATL attracted the scrutiny of US lawmakers in February 2023 after it struck a deal with automaker Ford. The scrutiny prompted the battery company to ostensibly divest its ownership stake in Xinjiang Zhicun Lithium (新疆志存锂业有限公司), a company reported to be connected to forced labour practices in Xinjiang. Zhicun produces lithium carbonate, which is central to the manufacture of lithium-ion batteries, from its facilities in Xinjiang.

However, while CATL officially divested from Zhicun, it continued to exercise significant control or guidance over the company’s operations through a series of holding companies and by the appointment of Guan Chaoyu as a manager of Zhicun’s new shareholder company, Chendao Capital. Guan also holds positions in several companies where CATL has invested, according to two US House of Representatives’ Select Committees.

ASPI’s research now reveals that despite the official divestment, CATL and Zhicun also continue to collaborate through a joint subsidiary, Wanzai Shidai Zhicun New Energy Materials Co., Ltd. (万载时代志存新能源材料有限公司), established in July 2022 with a registered capital of 1 billion yuan (A$211 million). This company is jointly held by Yichun Shidai New Energy Resources Co., Ltd., which is fully owned by CATL, and Zhicun Lithium Industry, with shareholding ratios of 80 percent and 20 percent, respectively.

In August 2023, a group of Republican lawmakers called on the US Department of Homeland Security to add CATL and associated companies to the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act Entity List, citing their connections to coercive labour transfer programs in Xinjiang that were first outlined in a December 2022 report by Laura T. Murphy and others at Sheffield Hallam University. In June, lawmakers accused CATL and another Chinese firm Gotion of ‘state-sponsored slave labour’ and called for them to be added to a US import ban list.

While the spotlight on companies like CATL and their potential reliance on modern slavery has focused on the electric vehicle industry and the involvement of companies like Ford, Tesla and BYD, the overlap of supply chains means the same human rights risks extend to large-scale battery energy storage systems, such as those being constructed across Australia.

Despite what is publicly known, Australian governments and companies in almost all states are readily engaging with CATL, EVE and companies that use their products.

The responsibility for the projects and the selection of providers is complex. 

At Collie, in Western Australia, two major battery projects are being built.

One is being built by French company NEOEN using Tesla Megapack batteries. The project is split into stage 1 and stage 2—with the contracts for both awarded by the Australian Energy Market Operator (AEMO), which is jointly operated by the Commonwealth, state and territory governments, and industry. 

The second project is being developed by energy company Synergy, which is wholly owned by the WA government. In September 2023, the WA government announced it had awarded contracts exceeding $1 billion to CATL directly for the Synergy projects at Collie and another site, Kwinana. Both stages one and two of the Kwinana project use CATL batteries.

Meanwhile, in New South Wales, the most significant project is the 850-MWh Waratah Super Battery near Newcastle, supplied by Powin, a US-based company. Powin’s batteries are supplied with lithium cells made by CATL and EVE, another Chinese battery manufacturer. A quick Google search would have revealed that, earlier this year, Swedish research on human rights due diligence found that ‘through equity ownership, joint operations, and collaborations, EVE’s products are also linked to the oppression of ethnic Turkic groups in Xinjiang’. 

In Queensland, the government is building a 300MWh big battery through the publicly owned energy company Stanwell, in partnership with Tesla, near Rockhampton. These Tesla Megapack big batteries and EV batteries are made with lithium-ion cells that are made by CATL

CATL batteries have also been used in other renewable energy projects in Victoria, such as the Phillip Island Battery Energy Storage System, established in 2022, and the IKEA power project in South Australia, established in 2020. NEOEN also operates the Victorian Big Battery, the largest BESS in Victoria.

This raises the question of what requirements governments are putting on major battery suppliers such as Tesla and Powin, and the project owners and operators. There is ample public documentation to show that projects in WA, SA, NSW, VIC and QLD are using battery packs with lithium cells produced by CATL and EVE.  

Australia’s stance against human rights abuses and proclaimed global leadership in combating modern slavery should dictate that both governments and companies make it a condition of their contracts with suppliers—even US companies such as Tesla and Powin—that the battery packs provided to Australia are not sourced from any country that engages in these human rights violations. Yes, such goods made in North America and Europe may be more expensive, but that is in part because corporations from these regions have to abide by stricter labour laws and human rights protections. 

ASPI sought responses from a wide range of Australian and international entities responsible for the projects, including state governments, energy companies and the Australian Energy Market Operator.

The Victorian Department of Energy, Environment and Climate Action referred questions to NEOEN. The Clean Energy Finance Corporation, a federal government green bank that invests in clean energy and contributed $160 million in investment to the Victorian Big Battery, said it made risk-based assessments of the modern slavery risk associated with investments by conducting due diligence on relevant partners and supply chain participants. It said this included consideration of publicly available information such as academic and international reports including ASPI’s own research. It also queried suppliers about their modern slavery risk management practices.

NSW EnergyCo, the statutory authority responsible for the state’s renewable energy project planning, provided a background statement pointing to the Renewable Energy Sector Board plan that states project proponents are required to provide evidence that they have registered a modern slavery statement with the Australian Border Force and that their registered modern slavery statement is compliant with the Commonwealth Modern Slavery Act. (2018) It referred questions about batteries’ manufacturing to Powin.

The WA Department of Energy, Mines, Industry, Regulation and Safety referred questions to public company Synergy, which did not respond by the deadline, and to NEOEN. 

The Queensland Department of Energy and Climate referred questions to public company Stanwell, which pointed us to its modern slavery statement. The most recent statement, covering 2022-23, said that of their ‘tier two’ suppliers—that is, those that are one step removed from directly supplying Stanwell—70 percent had suppliers in countries considered high risk for slavery, but none of the key suppliers had self-reported any problems. However, Stanwell did not respond to our direct written questions about Tesla and CATL.

NEOEN declined to comment. Tesla and Powin did not respond to written questions.

AEMO said it could not comment on specific projects and referred questions to project owners for queries on investment and materials.

CATL provided a written statement saying that it has never bought any products from Xinjiang Zhicun. It said it had never owned any interest nor exercised control in its operations. It further said that based on its ‘investigation and fact-checking, Xinjiang Zhicun has never engaged in any forced labor activities’. It said it worked with Jiangxi Jinhui, a subsidiary of Xinjiang Zhicun’s parent company Jiangxi Zhicun, to process lepidolite, which is a lithium-bearing mineral, in Jiangxi Province. CATL’s emphatic response contradicts the substantial media reporting, academic research and investigations done by members of the US Congress, making it highly doubtful that Australian governments and companies should derive any confidence from it as a guide to the risks of these supply chains.

This is a known problem with a known solution. It requires Australian governments and their contracted suppliers to do adequate due diligence. When battery supply chains involve Chinese suppliers, there is a high risk of exposure to forced labour that is deliberately hidden through shell companies and obscured local ownership and shareholder arrangements. This necessitates a different approach to due diligence: not  a ‘tick-box’ approach to compliance but one that puts a burden of proof on suppliers and procurers to assure supply chains are verifiably free from modern slavery. If that can’t be done, these products should not be permitted in Australia. 

With China’s dominance of the battery supply chain, sourcing from other countries is difficult, though not impossible—at least not yet. Australia could introduce a procurement requirement that companies and governments building and operating big battery projects stipulate in contracts that their suppliers source all components through processes and from regions that are free from forced labour risks.

The Australian government and its partners—in particular the US, Japan and Korea, all of whom have some capacity in this area—should collaborate to reduce the near-monopoly level of Chinese control (which begins at the scientific research stage). This would be the only way the Australian government could achieve its stated objectives to ‘diversify global battery supply chains’ and ‘to ensure Australia builds sovereign capabilities’, while also ‘taking a global leadership role in combating modern slavery’.

In addition, given the known threat of economic coercion from Beijing, Australia should consider its reliance on Chinese battery suppliers as a strategic vulnerability, against our national interest. The nation’s climate goals necessitate robust energy storage solutions, but they cannot come at the expense of human rights. The documented use of forced Uyghur labour in Chinese battery supply chains, potentially constituting crimes against humanity, underscores the urgency for Australian companies and policymakers to prioritise trusted, reliable and secure sourcing. By prioritising alternatives to Chinese batteries, Australia can lead not only in renewable energy innovation but also in upholding global standards of human dignity and justice.

Critical technology tracker: two decades of data show rewards of long-term research investment

China and the United States have effectively switched places as the overwhelming leader in research in just two decades, ASPI’s latest Critical Technology Tracker results reveal.

The latest tracker findings, which can be found in a new report and on the website, show the stunning shift in research leadership over the past 21 years towards large economies in the Indo-Pacific, led by China’s exceptional gains. 

China led in just three of 64 technologies in the years from 2003 to 2007, but is the leading country in 57 of 64 technologies over the past five years from 2019 to 2023. This is an increase from last year’s Tech Tracker results, in which it was leading in 52 technologies. 

The US led in 60 of 64 technologies in the five years from 2003 to 2007, but in the most recent five year period, it was leading in just seven. 

Critical technologies have been on the agenda for US National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan’s visit to Beijing this week—the first visit by a US NSA since 2016. Meanwhile, dozens of countries are coming together in Australia for the third Sydney Dialogue on Monday to discuss issues around technology, security, cyber and global strategic competition.

Our results show India is also emerging as a key centre of global research innovation and excellence, establishing its position as a science and technology power. India now ranks in the top five countries for 45 of 64 technologies (an increase from 37 last year) and has displaced the US as the second-ranked country in two new technologies (biological manufacturing and distributed ledgers) to rank second in seven of 64 technologies. 

The latest Tech Tracker has updated results for 64 critical technologies from crucial fields spanning artificial intelligence, defence, space, energy, the environment, biotechnology, robotics, cyber, computing, advanced materials and quantum technology areas. The dataset has been expanded from five years of data (previously, 2018 to 2022) to 21 years of data (from 2003 to 2023).

The Tech Tracker is a data-driven website that reveals the countries and institutions—universities, national labs, companies and government agencies—leading scientific and research innovation in critical technologies. It does that by focusing on high-impact research—the top 10 percent of most highly cited papers. We focus on the top 10 percent because those publications have a higher impact on the full technology life cycle and are more likely to lead to patents, drive future research innovation and underpin technological breakthroughs.

Looking at the average share of annual global research across the 64 technologies (see Figure 1 below), shows us the astonishing inversion between the US and China in high impact research.

Figure 1: Average annual research share across the 64 technologies between 2003 and 2023.

 

China has made its new gains in quantum sensors, high-performance computing, gravitational sensors, space launch and advanced integrated circuit design and fabrication (semiconductor chip making). The US leads in quantum computing, vaccines and medical countermeasures, nuclear medicine and radiotherapy, small satellites, atomic clocks, genetic engineering and natural language processing. 

Another notable change involves the United Kingdom, which has dropped out of the top five country rankings in eight technologies, declining from 44 last year to 36 now. The technologies in which the UK has fallen out of the top five rankings are spread across a range of areas, but are mostly technologies related to advanced materials, sensing and space.

The European Union, as a whole, is a competitive technological player that can challenge the China-US duopoly. Like the US and China, the EU, when aggregating its member countries over the past five years, is in the top FIVE countries in all 64 technologies. With members of the EU aggregated over the past five years, we found that the EU leads in two technologies (gravitational force sensors and small satellites) and is ranked second in 30 technologies. 

Besides India and the UK, the performance of second-tier science and technology research powers (those countries ranked behind China and the US) in the top five rankings is largely unchanged: Germany is in the top five in 27 technologies, South Korea in 24, Italy in 15, Iran in 8, Japan also in 8 and Australia in 7.

In terms of institutions, US technology companies have leading or strong positions in AI, quantum and computing technologies. IBM now ranks first in quantum computing, Google ranks first in natural language processing and fourth in quantum computing, and Meta and Microsoft also place seventh and eighth in natural language processing respectively. The only non-US based companies that rank in the top 20 institutions for any technology are the UK division of Toshiba, which places 13th in quantum communications, and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, which places 20th in advanced integrated circuit design and fabrication.

Key government agencies and national labs also perform well, including the US National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), which excels in space and satellite technologies. The results also show that the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS)—thought to be the world’s largest science and technology institution—is by far the world’s highest performing institution in the Tech Tracker, with a global lead in 31 of 64 technologies—an increase from 29 last year. CAS is a ministerial-level institution that sits directly under the State Council, and has spearheaded the development of China’s indigenous science, technological and innovation capabilities, including in computing technologies, nuclear weapons and intercontinental ballistic missiles. CAS also specialises in commercialising its findings and creating new companies. According to CAS, by 2022, more than 2,000 companies had been founded from the commercialisation of its scientific research.

Our report also looks at the combined US-UK-Australia performance in AUKUS pillar two-relevant technologies. It finds that combining AUKUS efforts with those of closer partners Japan and South Korea helps to close the gap in research performance for some technologies. But for others such as autonomous underwater vehicles and hypersonic detecting and tracking, China’s high impact research lead is so pronounced that no combination of other countries can currently match it. 

The graph below shows the share of research across a range of AUKUS pillar two-relevant technologies. (Please click on the image to see it full screen.)

Figure 1: Research share across a range of AUKUS Pillar 2–relevant technologies

 

We have continued to measure the risk that any country will hold a monopoly in a technology capability in the future, based on the share of high impact research output and the number of leading institutions in the dominant country—noting that for all 64 technologies, only China or the US currently has the lead. The number of technologies classified as ‘high risk’ has jumped from 14 technologies last year to 24 now. China is the lead country in every one of the technologies newly classified as high risk—putting a total of 24 of 64 technologies at high risk of a Chinese monopoly. 

Worryingly, the technologies newly classified as high risk include many with defence applications, such as radar, advanced aircraft engines, drones, swarming and collaborative robots and satellite positioning and navigation. See the below table for a small selection of critical technologies currently classified as ‘high risk’.

The new historical dataset shows the points in time at which countries have gained, lost or are at risk of losing their global edge in scientific research and innovation. It  provides a new layer of depth and context, revealing the performance trajectory countries have taken, where the momentum lies and also where longer term dominance over the full two decades might reflect foundational expertise and capabilities that carry forward even when that leader has been edged out more recently by other countries. The results also help to shed light on the countries, and many of the institutions, from which we’re likely to see future innovations and breakthroughs emerge.

In advanced aircraft engines, for example, US government or government-affiliated institutions performed strongly from 2003 to 2007—with NASA and the US Air Force Research Laboratory ranking first and second respectively—reflecting this technology’s clear relevance to military and space capability. Today, these institutions occupy much lower positions in the new rankings and 10 out of 10 of the world’s top-performing institutions are in China. 

When looking further down the science and technology life cycle, at patent data for example, our research finds there is a closer and more recent competition between the US and China but the overall trends are similar.

China’s dominant high impact research performance across so many technologies doesn’t necessarily equate to the same dominance in actualising those technologies. At times, China is ahead in high impact research because it’s actually behind in the development and commercialisation of that technology and is making major investments to try to catch up to the advances made by other countries over previous decades.

But the fact that China has enhanced its lead since last year’s Critical Technology Tracker results, especially in defence technologies, points to its growing momentum in science and technology, which other countries would be wise to assume will continue.

For some technologies, this inversion in research leadership has occurred because the high impact research output of pioneering science and technology powers such as the US, Japan, the UK and Germany has flatlined, putting them in a position where they’re losing—or at risk of losing—some of the research and scientific strengths they have built over many decades. Some of these long-term changes can be seen, for example, in the dwindling numbers of globally recognised—and sometimes Nobel Prize winning— research and development laboratories based in electronics and telecommunications firms across Europe—Philips of the Netherlands— and the US—AT&T Bell Labs previously known as Lucent Technologies or Alcatel Lucent and now as Nokia (US).

With other technologies, however, the shift is instead being driven by an enormous surge in China’s research outputs over the past 21 years. China has executed a dramatic step-up in research performance that other countries simply haven’t been able to match.

The historical strong performance of the US and other advanced economies in high impact research, which can now be tracked closely, is reflected in their sustained vitality. For example, the US shows continued innovation and leadership in key technology areas amidst immense competition, especially in quantum computing, and vaccines and medical countermeasures. This reflects its long term strengths across the full spectrum of the technology ecosystem. Decades of research effort can lead to decades of payoff in the application and commercialisation of the knowledge and expertise that a country has built up.

Measuring high-impact research, by itself, doesn’t provide a full picture of a country’s current technological or innovation competitiveness of course. Actualising and commercialising research performance into technological gains can be a difficult, expensive and complicated process, no matter how impressive the initial breakthrough. A range of other inputs are needed, such as an efficient manufacturing base and ambitious policy implementation.

But the purpose of the Tech Tracker is not to assess the current state of play but to improve global understanding of countries’ strategic intent and potential future science and technology capability.

Some observers might argue that China’s ascendance into a research power—indeed the research power—doesn’t matter because other countries, the US in particular, remain ahead in commercialisation, design and manufacturing. That might be true for some technologies, but it represents a very short term attitude. China, too, is making enormous investments in its manufacturing capabilities, subsidising key industries and achieving technological breakthroughs that are catching the world by surprise.

Our results serve as a reminder to governments around the world that building technological capability takes a sustained investment in, and accumulation of, knowledge, innovative skill, talent and high performing institutions—none of which can be acquired through only short term investments. In a range of essential sectors, democratic nations risk losing hard-won, long term advantages in cutting edge science and research—the crucial ingredient that underpins much of the development and progress of the world’s most important technologies. There’s also a risk that retreats in some areas could mean that democratic nations aren’t well positioned to take advantage of new and emerging technologies, including those that don’t exist yet. Meanwhile, the longitudinal results in the Tech Tracker enable us to see how China’s enormous investments and decades of strategic planning are now paying off.

The sugar hit of immediate budget savings must be balanced against the cost of losing the advantage gained from decades of investment and strategic planning. Strategic investments are needed in technologies that are identified as important to a country’s national interest. Continuous investments in those technology areas must then follow. And, of course, that must take place alongside complementary efforts that help build capability across the science and technology life cycle: targeted policies on issues such as skilled migration, industry reform and incentives to boost innovation, manufacturing capability and commercialisation opportunities.

Given the extent to which strategic influence will be determined by technological primacy, even the US has demonstrated that it needs trusted partners in research, innovation and industry to maintain an edge over major competitors such as China.

The Tech Tracker results show that countries can benefit from co-operation on technology by pooling their efforts and finding complementary and tangible areas in which to collaborate in an era when science and technology expertise is becoming increasingly concentrated in one country. Without bigger changes to the status quo, the trajectory laid out in this research will continue to be consolidated. 

Partners and allies must plan, act and collaborate more strategically and more ambitiously—indeed, this might be the only way to stay collectively ahead.

‘Northern frontier culture’: How China is erasing ‘Mongolia’ from Mongolian culture

Chinese authorities have launched a campaign to change the term that people use to refer to Mongolian culture and to the cultural and historical heritage of the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region (IMAR) in a move aimed at eroding Mongolian identity and sense of homeland.

The Chinese Communist Party’s new official term, bei jiang wenhua, meaning ‘northern frontier culture’, eliminates reference to Mongolians, one of China’s 56 officially recognised ethnic groups. Since July 2023, Inner Mongolia state media articles, official websites, party statements, party-organised children’s activities, and official social media posts have widely promoted the phrase. The party’s regional propaganda office has also founded an academic journal dedicated to ‘northern frontier culture’, and Inner Mongolia’s premier state-run academic institute has opened a ‘northern frontier’ research centre.

The adoption of the term appears to be part of the CCP’s growing campaign to weaken Mongolian ethnic identity and instead push a Han-centric national identity through the elimination of Mongolian language education and other measures.

Under Chinese leader Xi Jinping, the party has increasingly equated the culture and language of the dominant Han ethnic group, which comprises more than 90 percent of the country’s population, with being a loyal member of the ‘Chinese nation’ (Zhonghua minzu). It has aggressively pursued assimilationist policies throughout the country, especially in nominally autonomous regions including Xinjiang and Tibet, where the party views strong ethnic identity as a threat to its rule.

The CCP once praised Mongolians as China’s ‘model minority’ due to their early support for communist rule in exchange for recognition of the country’s first ethnic autonomous region with the right to a degree of self-governance enshrined in law—though never fully upheld. Even so, Inner Mongolia—home to more than 4 million ethnic Mongolians—has at times been the theatre of ethnic clashes between indigenous populations and the Han during decades of colonial rule, just as in other frontier regions like Tibet and Xinjiang. Clashes have broken out over land dispossession, polluting practices and discriminatory economic policies.

But in the past decade, under Xi’s leadership, the party’s tolerance for cultural, ethnic, and linguistic diversity within China has shrunk dramatically. The party shifted its focus to forcibly assimilating local populations and erasing their sense of belonging to a different ‘nationality’ (minzu).

The CCP Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region Committee, the region’s top political body, launched the ‘northern frontier culture’ campaign in July 2023. The party committee called for ‘forging a strong sense of community for the Chinese nation’ by ‘establishing the “northern frontier culture” brand, according to a meeting communique released on July 6.

All sectors of society should ‘integrate’ the brand into ‘public cultural facilities, urban landmark buildings, tourist landscape displays, public landscape construction, and into the creation of cultural and artistic works’, Li Jiong, the party secretary of the local Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference in the regional capital Hohhot, said in September 2023.

Picture: The Northern Frontier Intangible Cultural Heritage Exhibition, 20 June 2024, Hohhot, Inner Mongolia, online

 

The purpose of the ‘northern frontier culture brand’ is to ‘educate and guide the people of all ethnic groups to firmly establish a correct view of the country, history, nation, culture, and religion’, Kang Jianguo, a researcher at the state-run Inner Mongolia Academy of Social Sciences, wrote in a 17 July 2023 article published in the region’s flagship party mouthpiece Inner Mongolia Daily.

‘Northern frontier culture’ was created through the ‘intermingling’ of different ethnic groups in Inner Mongolia, a process that ‘developed and consolidated the unity of the great motherland’, Kang wrote. Kang, who is Han Chinese, was appointed the director of the academy’s new Northern Frontier Research Center a few months later.

But what the party means by ethnic blending is the triumph of Han culture and the territorial claims of the Chinese state, experts say. The campaign is a clear message that the place where ethnic Mongolians live ‘is not the Mongolian homeland but rather an integral part of the People’s Republic of China, that this region has always been a multiethnic region fused together by the Han and the Mongols and other ethnic groups’, James Leibold, professor at La Trobe University and expert in China’s politics of ethnicity, race and national identity, told the Strategist. It’s ‘essentially erasing Mongol culture and history’.

By adopting bei jiang to refer to Mongolian culture, the party is repurposing an existing term. In the past, bei jiang has most frequently referred to northern Xinjiang, part of a formulation dating back at least as early as the Qing Dynasty to distinguish between the northern and southern portions of China’s westernmost region of Xinjiang. Prior to 2022, the year leading up to the official campaign launch, the use of bei jiang to refer to Inner Mongolia was relatively rare and bei jiang wenhua to refer to Mongolian culture virtually unknown. It’s ‘new terminology’ that is ‘completely made up’, Enghebatu Togochog, director of the New York-based Southern Mongolian Human Rights Information Center, told the Strategist.

‘This is part of the bigger overarching policy of inculcating a Chinese nationality common identity,’ Togochog, who is ethnic Mongolian, said. ‘To us, this is cultural genocide.’

The term has also recently appeared in Heilongjiang, a far northern province that borders Inner Mongolia and has a very small population of ethnic Mongolians and ethnic Manchu.

The campaign has swept through the region’s museums, universities, institutes, schools, and even art shops.

Picture: Tumuji Middle School in Zalantun, Inner Mongolia, launched the ‘Northern Frontier Children’s Hearts to the Party’ June 1 celebration event, in June 2022, online

 

In October 2023, Zheng Chengyan, vice director of the Inner Mongolia Museum, wrote in an essay posted to the Inner Mongolia culture and tourism department website that ‘northern frontier culture as a regional culture has been jointly created by all ethnic groups in the northern frontier region since ancient times and is an important part of Chinese culture’.

In addition to its new studies centre, the Inner Mongolia Academy of Social Sciences hosted an academic seminar on northern frontier studies in April 2024, requiring that all research papers submitted for the conference ‘adhere to the principle of forging the sense of shared community of the Chinese nation’. The same month, the party’s regional propaganda department sponsored the establishment of a new academic journal called ‘Northern Frontier Culture Research’.

Official websites and organizations have also changed their branding to align with the campaign. The banner atop the Inner Mongolia party committee organisation department’s website now reads ‘Northern Frontier Pioneer Net’. The name on the official media accounts of the state-run Inner Mongolia Women’s Federation is now ‘The Voice of Northern Frontier Women’.

In April 2024, a junior high school in Baotou, a city in central Inner Mongolia, held a northern frontier-themed reading activity, hosted by the local party committee and education department.

Shops selling traditional Mongolian art and handicrafts seem to be a target for the campaign as well. In July 2024, the owner of a shop in Baotou selling Mongolian silver jewelry told the People’s Daily: ‘I want to do the utmost to showcase these exquisite works to more people, allowing them to appreciate the allure of northern frontier culture.’

The Chinese government has recently adopted similar terminology shifts in Xinjiang and Tibet. Chinese state media and other official communications in both English and Chinese now often refer to people in Xinjiang as ‘Xinjiang people’ (Xinjiang ren), rather than referring to their specific ethnicity such as Uyghur, Kazakh, or Han. For example, this social media post by official newspaper the Global Times refers to Uyghur children as ‘Xinjiang kids’ and ‘children in China’s Xinjiang’ rather than calling them Uyghur.

Chinese authorities have also begun using the term ‘Xizang’ instead of ‘Tibet’ — Tibetans’ preferred name for their homeland — in English-language state media and other official communications, after an official white paper issued in November 2023 used the new formulation. ‘Xizang’ is the Chinese term for the region known in English and internationally as Tibet, which is not used in Chinese. Tibetan activists say the push is part of Beijing’s attempts to weaken international recognition of a separate Tibetan identity and further assert China’s sovereignty over the region.

So far, ‘northern frontier culture’ appears almost exclusively in Chinese, with only a handful of English-language references. That suggests it is, for now, aimed at shaping the attitudes of a domestic audience, rather than a foreign audience.

Ethnic Mongolians comprise about 18 percent of Inner Mongolia’s population, with Han Chinese making up about 79 percent. While 18 percent might seem comparatively small, it amounts to more than 4 million people, which is more than the entire population of the bordering independent country of Mongolia, which has 3.5 million people. Inner Mongolia is also the last region in which traditional Mongolian script is widely used and understood. The country of Mongolia adopted Cyrillic script in 1946.

Language is a core part of the campaign—and not just when it comes to terminology. The CCP began rolling back minority language education in Xinjiang and Tibet in the 2010s. Inner Mongolia did not change its education policies during that decade, and Mongolian remained the primary language of education in many schools for Mongolian students in the region. But in 2020, the CCP expanded the plan for ‘national unified Chinese textbooks’—meaning the mandatory adoption of Chinese-language textbooks—to all regions with large minority groups, including Inner Mongolia. The change was met with the largest protests Inner Mongolia had seen in decades, which the government swiftly subdued.

‘At the start, they [the government] said they would be switching from Mongolian to Chinese for only a few select subjects, but that turned out not to be true,’ says Togochog. ‘Mongolian language is now taught as a foreign language once a week, Mongolian students and children are barred from learning any subject in Mongolian anymore.’

The plan’s roll-out was completed in October 2023, just a few months after the launch of the ‘northern frontier culture’ campaign.

‘What’s happening in Inner Mongolia,’ James Leibold said, ‘is crucial to understanding the intention of the party in continuing to carry out its settler-colonial project in the borderlands.’

As technology distorts information, Pacific governments and media must cooperate

On 13 July, the Australian government announced a new Indo-Pacific Broadcasting Strategy designed to increase Pacific access to Australian content and foster engagement across the region, boosting capacity and capability through a variety of training and exchanges. Most of this training will rightly be led by media organisations for media organisations.

But Australia can’t forget about the important media-government exchange that is crucial for building trust in institutions. More time and effort need to be spent understanding how immense changes to media will affect societies in our region. In particular, the Pacific governments need to determine how they and media can best work with traditional and emerging forms of information platforms to build resilience across the landscape.

The future of news and communications is changing rapidly before us, and the problems can’t be solved through simply sharing more content. Artificial intelligence, social media innovation (or collapse), and a content-creation boom provide an array of opportunities and risks for consumers globally. In the Pacific, the risks are exacerbated by rapid improvements in internet connectivity and speed—and more information online is resulting in less trust. People have been given the power to find their own truths online, and they are looking far and wide for them, including turning to social media influencers.

Advances in technology are making it easier to manipulate audio and visual content to the extent that it is now cheap and easy to produce entirely fabricated deepfakes and artificial personas. While we haven’t had any Taylor Swift scale deepfakes in the region, we have seen the creation of multiple fake profiles of Pacific leaders, such as Papua New Guinea Prime Minister James Marape.

In Tonga, we have also heard fake audio of a Tongan parliamentarian cursing at another member during session; that hoax led to public outcry and unfair calls for the parliamentarian’s resignation. While the matter was resolved, partly by members who had been present verifying the true audio, there is still ongoing damage to the reputation of those involved. There’s every reason to expect these attempts at falsifying content from leaders will become more frequent and sophisticated as more people can access the technology.

Aside from fake content directly causing mistrust online, the mere existence of this technology also means that individuals have plausible deniability of wrongdoing if they are truly caught in an act.

In Fiji, two parliamentarians denied accusations made in January of adultery and drug use on an official trip to Australia, saying that the images and text messages leaked online on a blog website were fake. To be clear, we are not suggesting that these accusations are true or false. We don’t know, which is exactly the point. People in a position of power can easily blame ‘fake news’ and fake media to deny any wrongdoing, muddying the waters even further for the public at the risk of making people more jaded.

If we’re not careful in responsibly managing the information space, consumers of information online will end up trusting no one, or will misplace their trust in others who may have other agendas or lack resources and capability to provide the answer people are looking for.

This is why there needs to be stronger communications between governments and media across the Pacific.

Media Associations across the region report that they do not feel empowered to ask for and receive the right information from the government, often receiving invitations to sporadic press conferences at short notice with no prior information or context. On the other hand, governments are frustrated by lack of critical thinking from media professionals and a declining ability to ask relevant questions of ministers and state leaders. Both groups acknowledge that misinformation and disinformation online often negatively shape the limited number of engagements, distracting from the real matter at hand and forcing groups to ask, and answer, questions about swirling online rumours and accusations made with little or no evidence.

Government and media participants who attend the misinformation and disinformation training delivered in the region by ASPI and the Royal Oceania Institute—an independent think tank based in Tonga—consistently ask, ‘how does Australia handle press conferences and government-media communications?’ While Australia’s own approach is not perfect, and each country and government will find a solution that works for them, there is not enough training and supported exchange of ideas across the region to help build those solutions. Media professionals and government communications officials from across the region should be invited to Australia to learn more about our systems and to share their own processes.

Pacific governments should also be supported in developing and implementing strong legislation aimed at countering false information and manipulative behaviour online. Legislation around false information is particularly tricky. If the definitions used are too broad, it could cast a net that is too wide and ultimately suppresses freedom of speech. It could do so through direct pressure and threat of severe consequences, such as imprisonment, or through self-censorship by individuals in a region where that behaviour is sometimes embedded in their cultural systems. If definitions are too narrow, they may not capture information manipulation—acts that aren’t necessarily spreading lies but are no less deliberately harmful to societies through their exaggeration or skewing of perspective.

Because the information environment is changing so rapidly, governments need to keep open channels of communication with their partners across the region to discuss opportunities and challenges, both at the political and working-group level, and exchange stories and experiences in this space regularly. There will never be a clear-cut solution to these rapid changes in the information environment, nor will Instagram Reels, YouTube Shorts or TikTok be the last technologies to disrupt the media landscape. Ongoing dialogue, training and support will be crucial to maintaining resilience against online harms and ensuring that, in the long term, the public will always have someone to trust online.

Europe needs a democracy commissioner

When European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen took office in December 2019, she established a ‘new push for European democracy’ as one of her six policy priorities. After the European Parliament elections on June 6 to 9, one of the biggest threats to democracy still needs to be adequately addressed: the risks confronting Europe’s media sector.

To be sure, EU lawmakers have taken important steps that will help safeguard media. The Digital Markets Act, limiting the power of the largest digital platforms as gatekeepers, and the Digital Services Act, making them more transparent and accountable, entered into force in 2022. The Artificial Intelligence Act, focusing on the development of trustworthy AI, and the Media Freedom Act, designed to protect media from political or economic interference, have now also been passed.

But the challenges media face remain formidable. Business models were upended by the internet, causing publishers to slash the total number of journalists; for example, 60 percent of US newspaper jobs have vanished since 1990. At the same time, online media have not fully compensated for such cuts. With the advent of AI, this trend could go into overdrive, with most journalists outside of public broadcasting thrown out of work. Meanwhile, oligarchs rule over the media landscape in many countries, and disinformation spreads like wildfire.

Bold action to safeguard and strengthen free, independent media has become urgent. A strong media sector is a pillar of any democracy,as the EU’s Democracy Action Plan recognises. But, for the EU mandate in 2024–29, implementing enacted legislation is not enough. The rule of law and AI guidelines do not feed journalists. The EU’s leaders must signal that they take the sustainability of news media seriously. To this end, the next European Commission should mandate a media industrial policy and regroup related resources towards a directorate-general for democracy and media, overseen by a dedicated democracy commissioner.

Industrial policy does not equal state control, and it need not cost a lot. It should be viewed as the coordination of public-sector efforts to enable a strategic domain to transform itself. Europe has done this for many industries, often to great effect. A successful media industrial policy would emphasise five priorities.

First, it would foster regulation that maximises the impact of legislation. While the recent acts are crucial, and should be transposed into national laws, it is up to regulators, including telecommunications and competition authorities, to nurture an information ecosystem that reflects a better balance between media organisations and digital platforms.

For example, platforms should be forced to incorporate trustworthiness indicators into their algorithms, a step they agreed to, in principle, six years ago. This would slow the spread of fake news and boost audiences of quality content, in turn leading to higher advertising and subscription revenue for publishers and broadcasters.

Second, while research and development related to AI is relatively well-funded, the media industry will require targeted, creative thinking from all sides. The EU’s Media and Audiovisual Action Plan, still in the early stages of implementation, aims explicitly to foster more innovation in the industry. It includes the NEWS initiative, which bundles together EU actions to strengthen the news-media sector. Taking these efforts further would not necessarily cost more.

For example, the EU issues a yearly call for Journalism Partnerships, which are cross-border collaborations between news media organisations, focusing on innovative business models or newsroom transformations. But this program, which is significantly oversubscribed, receives just €6 million ($6.5 million) in annual funding. In the future, funding procedures in other European Commission directorates-general should include co-labelling all EU proposals relevant to news media “NEWS.”

Third, the media industry today relies essentially on ads and subscriptions. What we need is more diverse financing, including public support for innovation, but not subsidising  journalists’ salaries, which would distort media ethics.

In supporting the media sector’s transformation, public procurement, philanthropy, and new forms of investment also have a role to play. Public agencies should shift their advertising budgets towards quality media. Philanthropy can correct market failures and complement EU programs. As for investment, reducing the cost of capital via sovereign funds could attract impact investors and help safeguard media from oligarchs. The InvestEU program should include a dedicated NEWS track.

The fourth priority is structural transformation. Within the EU and beyond, a few large platforms dominate the information and advertising ecosystem. By comparison, news publishers, which tend to confine their operations to a single country or even locality, are tiny. An uncoordinated army of dwarfs battling an oligopoly is not sustainable.

A better approach would entail organisations sharing some costs, especially as they shift from variable costs (like printing and physical distribution) to fixed expenses (like editors’ salaries, IT, and product launches). This can be done through cooperation or even consolidation. While mergers within a national or local context can raise risks for pluralism and jobs, cross-border deals can strengthen all brands involved, preserve jobs, and reduce the influence of national governments. To facilitate this process, competition regulators could set targets related to pluralism (for example, preserving diverse brands as conditions for merger approvals) and encourage newsroom transformation (when allowing state aid).

Lastly, both individual and collective skills must be upgraded. Journalists must be able not only to deal with AI but also to make the most of innovations in information-technology and marketing. Cross-border cooperation also requires institutional skills, including expertise in crucial areas of change (not least AI). Since these imperatives lie at the crossroads of education and research, public support is appropriate.

During the next EU mandate, most independent media will die or shrink, one way or another. But, if EU leaders do their jobs right, plenty can be reborn in a more resilient form.

Universities Accord can promote inclusive development in northern Australia

Developing a Northern Australia that is resilient, economically and socially prosperous and prepared for our era of continuous and concurrent crises requires coordinated policies of governments at the federal, state, territory and local levels.

These policies must think big and implement bold actions, but must also be delivered in ways that are grounded in local realities (that is, place-based). As part of that, they must recognise that tertiary education and research in northern Australia is a key building block for success.

The Australian government is considering its response to the Universities Accord final report just as it is refreshing its Developing Northern Australia agenda. Connecting the two and delivering them in harmony offers an outstanding opportunity for inclusive and sustainable development in Northern Australia.

To facilitate cohesive delivery of both agendas, the three universities based in northern Australia—Charles Darwin University, CQUniversity and James Cook University—have entered into an enduring collaborative alliance, the Northern Australia Universities Alliance (NAUA).

The NAUA represents an innovative, place-based platform to deepen collaboration across the tertiary sector within northern Australia.

We see direct linkages between the future development of the north, our universities and the education sector. By working together, we can maximise outcomes. We acknowledge that northern Australia is part of the nation’s broader education and research framework, so partnering with southern universities, particularly in Western Australia, is critical.

The NAUA provides a simple way for governments, industries, communities and other universities to partner to promote the region’s growth and prosperity. Working together to help implement the Universities Accord will support northern Australia in retaining and building key skills and research capabilities that will underpin the region’s future development.

The NAUA commits us to operating beyond traditional academic pursuits. In it we make a pledge to the future of Northern Australia and envisioning new and more influential roles for our institutions.

A core driver for NAUA collaboration is the region’s demographics. It is vast and sparsely populated: 5.3 percent of Australia’s population inhabits 53 percent of the country’s land. Northern Australia has a young population, with a median age two years below that of the rest of the country. This means that education and skills development can have an even more significant impact than they would otherwise. However, long distances, the smallness of communities, and widespread disadvantages make it harder to engage those who can benefit the most. This pushes up the costs of delivering education locally.

We know that increasing accessibility of higher education for local students empowers individuals and fosters regional growth. Equally, retaining talented locals and attracting newcomers to live, study and work in the north is vital to sustaining population and economic growth.

Consequently, the Australian government has put human capital development at the heart of the northern Australia refresh, just as the Universities Accord has prioritised needs-based funding to lift engagement and attainment. Such funding can facilitate the sort of transformation the northern development agenda seeks, enabling northern universities to succeed in sparse markets. A better-targeted approach that empowers our universities to tailor initiatives to meet the evolving demands of northern Australia has the best prospects for success.

The north is critical to Australia’s success on the road to decarbonisation. Massive renewable energy investments are needed to power Australia and the wider Asia-Pacific. New mining ventures will supply the critical minerals needed globally. Investment in these new industries will drive the next phase of northern development.

As we decarbonise, we must also transform industry and northern communities relying on diesel, gas and coal-based energy. Working with commonwealth, state, territory and local governments, the NAUA members can act as the place-based institutions needed to help drive long-term innovation, research and workforce development. Consequently, the Developing Northern Australia agenda’s priority on decarbonisation and the accord’s recommendation for a new Solving Australia’s Challenges Fund for research provides a positive step. Investment in this place-focused work in partnership with industry and communities is crucial to the region.

Across all industry and service sectors, workforce limitations constrain the northern development agenda. We need to build strong workforce ecosystems, and universities within the region are required to help develop these. This is the core business of our institutions, with two providing vocational education as dual-sector institutions.

Current policies and limited resources have held us back, however. Developing a robust, skilled and adaptable northern workforce is key to linking people and education with workforce demands.

We look forward to working with industry and governments to identify future workforce needs, develop innovative educational pathways and increase the flow and success of local people and newcomers into these local education pathways.

It is also important for policymakers to understand that northern Australia is an Indigenous place, with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people accounting for 17.7 percent of the population and holding rights across 78 percent of the land. So, an essential step for northern development involves achieving self-determination; empowering Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people to create wealth and well-being across their traditional estates, communities, and businesses.

Nationally, NAUA universities have the largest proportion of Indigenous students. In 2021, 5.9 percent of NAUA students identified as Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander, reflecting the population we serve and our dedication to diversity and inclusivity. Indigenous students are also embedded in vocational education; at CDU and CQU, respectively, they were 26.4 percent and 9.7 percent of vocational students in 2021. These cohorts predominantly hail from regional and remote areas.

We have senior Indigenous leadership in our three institutions, all working to find Indigenous-led solutions and to build better and authentic pathways for economic engagement and success. NAUA stands firmly in support of the initiative for a First Nations-led review of higher education, but we can also act now to advance better pathways to self-determination and Indigenous ownership of the next phase of northern development.

As the Universities Accord final report sets the stage for transformative change in tertiary education, NAUA is ready to lead and shape its implementation. By working together and leveraging our collective expertise, our northern communities can realise the aspirations of both the accord and the Developing Northern Australia agenda. We also need the federal government’s support to ensure policy harmony in delivery. We can create a sustainable, resilient, and inclusive future for the north through a collaborative effort.

On World IP Day, let’s remember all the stolen innovation

As we celebrate World Intellectual Property Day today on 26 April, let’s remember all the innovation that has been stolen. 

While innovators have had their intellectual property stolen for centuries, in modern times they face an avalanche of cyber-enabled attempts at theft of their knowhow. Hacking groups, typically operating with consent from state authorities, exploit vulnerabilities in information and communication technology to grab copious amounts of trade secrets and other business information for commercial gain.  

These attacks are increasing in scale. Between 30 and 40 identified state-sponsored espionage campaigns affected or targeted private entities globally in 2021–22. They involve sectors of the economy across commercial value chains and industrial development priorities. And they’re affecting IP-intensive businesses in advanced economies and emerging economies alike. In 2020, 56 percent of cases struck economies in Southeast Asia, Middle East, Africa, South Asia and Latin America. 

State-sponsored theft of IP via cyber means—a practice known as economic cyber-espionage for commercial gain—is an international problem. It still lacks an adequate effort to halt it. 

When the leaders of the G20 met in Turkey in 2015, they agreed that no state would support or conduct the theft of IP via cyber means with the aim of providing local companies with a competitive advantage. A few years before, in 2013, all UN member countries had already agreed that international law applied to state conduct in cyberspace. 

Since then, international talks on cyber have progressed insofar as it has concerned international peace and stability. For instance, more detailed agreements were reached on the protection of critical information infrastructure and on understanding how and when international humanitarian law applied in cyber operations.  

But, if international law applies to state conduct in cyberspace, as the UN member states continue to affirm, then international trade law also should apply to state conduct in cyberspace. 

The existing trade regime—administered through World Trade Organisation (WTO) agreements as well as various World Intellectual Property Organisation (WIPO) conventions—requires states to adhere to non-discrimination. So entities should be able to freely conduct business without the risk of trade secrets and sensitive business information being stolen and leaving them without recourse to legal settlement. Under the TRIPS Agreement, states must maintain minimum standards of IP protection, and they have access to a dispute settlement mechanism. 

The problem today, however, is that some states operate in cyberspace with the intention to misappropriate trade secrets, innovations and technological knowhow from others, or to create an environment in which this is tolerated or encouraged. Existing trade law does not account for this state-sponsorship element nor for cyberspace as a conduit to engage in unfair competition.  

While trade law prohibits stealing of any kind, perpetrators of economic cyber-espionage are protected by the inability or unwillingness of their national authorities to investigate and prosecute cases. Current WTO IP protection rules have a territorial-centric focus. This means that malicious cyber activities conducted by one state against another, and with harms materialising on the victim’s territory, are not taken into account. So there’s no incentive for states to take cases of cyber-enabled theft of IP to the WTO. 

Counterintelligence and law enforcement authorities face other technical challenges, such as the establishment of evidence beyond reasonable doubt and the risk of revealing sources and methods. 

But these constraints should not be considered a reason for inaction by the international trade community. The foundations of international political and economic stability lie in respect for sovereignty and the principle of non-intervention. Yet the very notion of economic sovereignty is under attack by state and non-state actors misusing the cyber domain to gain unfair commercial advantages for economic and strategic gain. 

There is a growing apprehension among members of the international community of this threat. The Five Eyes countries, the EU, its member states, Japan and even China have all declared that their knowledge- and innovation-intensive industries are vulnerable to economic cyber-espionage by other states. 

Today, on World IP Day, we’re looking at the WTO and WIPO. What can these bodies do to strengthen international cooperation, and above all to strengthen IP protection in this digital age? 

First, the WTO and WIPO should require their member states to declare that they are not using cyber tools or proxies to gain an unfair competitive advantage. While this is implied in existing international agreements, the global cybersecurity and economic security environment warrant a more explicit commitment. Government leaders declaring that they are not involved in and do not support IP theft would be the first step in building accountability. 

Second, state-related issues of cybersecurity should get a firm place within WTO and WIPO forumsfor instance, in the council for trade-related aspects of IP rights. The WTO and WIPO should establish a specific group to facilitate dialogue between member states, provide opportunities for the sharing of good practices in building resilience and, most fundamentally, provide opportunities to raise, challenge and dispute cyber operations affecting their economies and fair competition.  

Finally, the WTO and WIPO should harness the UN secretary-general’s roadmap for digital cooperation. They should invest in building coalitions and operational collaboration between trade authorities, representatives of IP-intensive industries and the cybersecurity sector. This could also involve revisiting WIPO PROOF, a service that was established in 2020, but discontinued shortly thereafter, that provided assurances against tampering of digital files. 

Additionally, they should build repositories of governmental best practices in protecting IP-intensive industries from sophisticated cyber-attacks, thereby establishing a standard, and offer national regulators and policymakers access to data, resources, capacity building, tools and expert networks. Similar to the International Telecommunication Union, which hosts the Global Artificial Intelligence for Good summit, the WTO and WIPO could offer a regular platform for national experts on cybersecurity, international trade, IP and economic development to come together. 

The international trade regime was designed to enable states to compete fair and square, while allowing international collaboration and innovation to prosper. When gross violations of this responsible state behaviour remain unaddressed, then the very integrity of the international rules are at stake. States must intervene domestically to protect IP-intensive industries in a first line of defence, but the WTO, the WIPO and other regional trade bodies need to step in now, too, and address the cybersecurity-related shortcomings of the current IP protection regime.