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DUAL - USE TECHNOLOGY (2) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   124770


Beyond the arms embargo: EU transfers of defense and dual-use technologies to China / Brauner, Oliver   Journal Article
Brauner, Oliver Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract China has largely been cut off from direct transfers of military systems and technologies since the announcement of the EU arms embargo in 1989. Nevertheless, the EU and its member states remain a major source of high technologies for China, namely, by means of trade, investment, and scientific cooperation. This is mainly because the EU-China relationship continues to be dominated by the economic interests of individual member states, both in trade and increasingly in investments. Furthermore, due to a lack of direct security interests in the Asia-Pacific, Europeans do not generally see China as a security threat or a strategic competitor. Therefore, the EU has so far failed to develop a strategic approach toward the potential security implications of transfers of European militarily sensitive technologies that goes beyond the existing arms embargo and currently lacks effective mechanisms to control the flow of such technologies to China.
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2
ID:   124771


Japan's high-technology trade with China and its export control / Marukawa, Tomoo   Journal Article
Marukawa, Tomoo Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract While Japanese business interests support the export of high-technology items and the transfer of technology from Japan to China, these economically motivated actions may have direct and indirect impacts on Japan's national security. First, the transfer of dual-use technology to China may directly help China's military buildup. Second, high-tech exports and technology transfers may have an indirect effect by eroding Japan's technological advantages vis-à-vis China. In this article I place these concerns into a historical context and analyze the current challenges to Japan's export control policies. I offer an overview of the Japan- China trade relationship, with a special focus on high-tech trade. I then discuss changes in Japan's export controls regarding China, based on heightened security concerns. Evidence indicates that the Japanese government is ill equipped to deal with "technology leakage," which is accelerating the erosion of Japan's technological supremacy and is not covered by its current export control regime.
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