BCCN-YCW Berlin Mentorship Program: Call for Mentees

The Berlin Contemporary China Network and the Young China Watchers Berlin chapter are pleased to launch the BCCN-YCW Berlin mentorship program. The program is aimed at young scholars of China interested in exploring career paths beyond academia.

Each mentee will be connected with their own mentor based on their career interests. Our mentors are drawn from the Berlin community of experienced China-focused professionals who work in different areas: international academic collaboration, journalism, think-tanks, business, and the arts.

Applicants should expect to be available for about half a dozen in-person networking events including one-on-one meetings with their mentor and group events with the wider cohort including public events featuring the mentors. These events will take place throughout the first half of 2025. Mentees will be expected to actively drive the relationship with their mentor.

We are seeking applications to join the program as a mentee, with the following criteria:

  • Based in Berlin
  • Excellent academic records and relevant initial professional experience (including experience acquired through internships)
  • Either a recent (2 years post-graduation) or current MA or PhD student
  • Demonstrable interest in and dedication to building a China-related career
  • Strong organizational and communication abilities

 

Please apply here.

 

Application deadline: December 13, 2024 at 23:59 CEST.

 

 

Our mentors

Dr. Isabelle Harbrecht has a long and distinguished career focused on China. She lived in China for ten years and has been working in international development and education cooperation since 2011. Among other things, she was Head of the North-East and Central Asia Department of the Hanns-Seidel-Foundation and Head of the International Office at the Potsdam University of Applied Sciences. At Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Harbrecht is responsible for the conception and implementation of measures of the China Competence Training Centre in the Research Service Center and advises the university on China cooperation. She received her Ph.D. in sinology from the Julius Maximilians University of Würzburg.

Ferdinand Schaff is Senior Manager Greater China at the Federation of German Industry (BDI) and Co-Head of the Young China Watchers (YCW) Berlin Chapter. He has a decade of experience in shaping and aligning diverging interests within Germany’s business community and with German civil society and government actors. In this role, he served as lead drafter of the 2019 BDI paper entitled “China – Partner and Systemic Competitor.” This position paper helped shape the EU Commission’s tripartite formulation of its relationship with the People’s Republic of China as a “partner, competitor, and systemic rival.” He previously worked as a research assistant at the Mercator Institute for China Studies (MERICS). He holds a masters degree from the London School of Economics and bachelor’s degree from the University of Cologne, both in China studies.

Ella Soesanto is Senior Programme Officer in the Asia Division of the Heinrich Böll Foundation and is responsible for the Northeast Asia region, with a focus on China and Korea. She has more than a decade of experience working in a political foundation and is therefore familiar with the interfaces between politics and civil society. In this context, she is committed, among other things, to integrating regional perspectives from East Asia more strongly into political debates in Germany. Most recently, she was closely involved in setting up the foundation's new office in Seoul. Soesanto studied East Asian Politics and Chinese Language at the Ruhr University Bochum and Eberhard Karls University Tübingen at the Sichuan University in Chengdu.

Dr. Angela Stanzel is a Senior Associate in the Asia Research Division at the German Institute for International and Security Affairs (SWP). Her research topics include China’s foreign and security policy, EU-China relations, as well as foreign and security policy developments in the Indo-Pacific region. Before joining SWP she was a Senior Policy Fellow in the Asia Program and the representative in Germany of Institut Montaigne. She was also the editor of the institute's quarterly publication, China Trends. Prior to that, Stanzel worked as Senior Policy Fellow and editor of China Analysis in the Asia Program at the European Council on Foreign Relations (ECFR) in Berlin. She earned her PhD in Sinology at the Free University Berlin in 2013. Her dissertation focused on China-Pakistan relations.

Xuedan Tang (Echo) is a Berlin-based film curator and cultural worker from Chengdu, China. She is the founder of CiLENS, a Berlin-based, non-profit film curation collective that engages audiences in an in-depth exploration of contemporary China and the Sinophone world through thematic screenings, panel discussions and more. She is also the founder and festival director of the Indie Chinese Cinema Week (ICCW) in Berlin, which is supported by the Berlin Senate Department for Culture and Europe for its second edition in 2023. In 2021, she received the German Chancellor Fellowship from the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation, and moved to Berlin from Beijing, where she worked as documentary producer. She studied in Shanghai, New York and London, with a bachelor's degree in political science and a master's degree in arts management.

Xifan Yang is a Foreign Affairs Correspondent for Germany's biggest weekly newspaper DIE ZEIT. She was born in Hengyang, China and grew up in Freiburg, Germany. She started her career in journalism as a freelance correspondent in Shanghai and reporter for the magazine of the Süddeutsche Zeitung. From 2018 to 2023, she was the China correspondent for DIE ZEIT based in Beijing. In 2024, Yang returned to Germany where she now covers international politics at DIE ZEIT. She is the author of the German-language memoir When the Carps Learned to Fly, an account of 80 years of recent Chinese history through the experience of her family. She is the recipient of numerous awards including the 2020 German Reporter Award in the category "best reporting" and the Egon Erwin Kisch Prize 2021 for her reporting on Chinese nurses in German senior citizen homes. She'a a graduate of the German School of Journalism in Munich.

A collaborative effort by:

The Berlin Contemporary China Network (BCCN) was founded in Spring 2021. It is a joint initiative by researchers at the Humboldt University of Berlin, the Freie Universität Berlin, the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science, the Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology, and the Technische Universität Berlin. The key objectives of the BCCN are to strengthen the links and exchange among Berlin-based scholars working on contemporary China at the participating institutions; engage in collaborative research and teaching projects; and provide a public platform for highlighting the collective China-related expertise available in Berlin.

Learn more: https://berlincontemporarychinanetwork.org/ 

Young China Watchers (YCW) is a dynamic group of China-focused young professionals. Through regular roundtables and talks with senior figures in the China academic, policy, and business communities, the organization provides a chance for engaged individuals to interact and discuss the most pressing issues emerging from China today. Through our growing global network, we seek to foster the next generation of China thought-leaders. YCW was first established in Beijing in the spring of 2010 and has steadily expanded its network to 10 chapters including Shanghai, Hong Kong, London, New York, San Francisco, Berlin, Singapore, Brussels and Washington DC with more than 5,000 members around the world.


Learn more: https://www.youngchinawatchers.com/

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