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China Foreign Affairs University was founded in 1955 with the advice of then-Premier Zhou Enlai, and is affiliated with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (the university is not to be confused with the University of International Relations, also in Beijing). The predecessor of CFAU was the Department of Diplomacy of Renmin University of China.
North China Electric Power University: 华北电力大学: National (Direct) China Women's University: 中华女子学院: National (Other) Beijing Information Science and Technology University: 北京信息科技大学: Municipal China University of Mining and Technology (Beijing) 中国矿业大学(北京) National (Direct) China University ...
BFSU was affiliated with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs from its establishment in 1941 to the early 1980s. [4] BFSU has more than 3,000 international students from all over the world, more than 100 countries. [5] More than 70 years, over 90,000 people have graduated from the Beijing Foreign Studies University. [6] [non-primary source needed]
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The University of International Relations was founded in 1949 to train foreign affairs cadres for the newly created People's Republic of China. In 1961, the school merged with then Foreign Affairs College. [7] In 1964, then-Premier Zhou Enlai ordered the creation of colleges and university departments to focus on international affairs. [8]
After the fall of Northern Song, the university was re-founded in Hangzhou, the new capital, in 1142 with the student quota of 300, which grew to 1,000 in 1148. Throughout Southern Song, the students of the Imperial University, sometimes joined by the students of other capital schools, became one of the most visible and influential political ...
China University of Political Science and Law; China Youth College for Political Science; Chinese Academy of Social Science, the Department of Law; Chinese People's Public Security University; Chinese University for Nationalities, Faculty of Law; East China University of Politics and Law; Foreign Affairs Institute, the International Law Department
Qin is the editor-in-chief of Foreign Affairs Review as well as editorial board member of World Economics and Politics and Global Governance. Qin received his MA and PhD in Political Science at University of Missouri in 1987 and 1994. [5] [6] [4] He is a Fellow of the Royal Academy of Belgium. [7]