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Event 20. marts 2026, 13:00 - 15:00

In­vi­ta­tion for PhD De­fen­ce - Mi­ha­ela Gag­li­o­ti-Ver­lan

In­vi­ta­tion for PhD De­fen­ce

PhD De­fen­ce

Tid
20. marts 2026, 13:00 - 15:00
Lokation
Lo­ca­tion: Ki­len, Kile­vej 14A, 2000 Fre­de­riks­berg
Room: Ks54 (gro­und floor)
Re­cep­tion: Kit­chen area of IOA (4th floor)
*The CBS PhD School will host a re­cep­tion, which will take pla­ce im­me­di­a­te­ly af­ter the de­fen­ce.
Sprog
Eng­lish
Emner
Kina Geopolitik


In order to obtain the PhD degree, Mihaela Gaglioti-Verlan has submitted her thesis entitled:

 

Rethinking extractive industries through rare earths

China's industrial policy for upgrading, coordination power and geopolitical leverage

 

The criticality of minerals (CRMs) is on a constant rise. This relates to the heavy geographical polarization of their production, significantly dependent on sectoral-specific knowledge, skills, and infrastructure. Rethinking extractive industries is therefore of the utmost importance, now that certain materials constitute vital inputs for strategic industries, such as those related to the green transition. Through the case study of rare earths – in particular, by investigating China’s state vision and industrial policy for upgrading, coordination power, and geopolitical leverage – this thesis provides a contribution in this direction.

This research advances and integrates three original analytical frameworks that allow for a new understanding of extractive industries. Transition-driven Windows of Opportunity (TWOs), State-Integrated Networks (SINs) and Geoeconomic valorization are the conceptual lenses used to engage with the following research question: How did China achieve industrial upgrading and coordination power through the rare earths industry?

Grounded in a timely debate, with global policy and socio-technical shifts taking place, reconceptualizing the importance of extractive industries can potentially provide strategic assets for economic growth and geopolitical competition. State vision and capacity for planning reframe the story around the importance of owning critical minerals endowments into one about the development of indigenous capabilities and capacity through technological upgrading and a holistic industrial policy approach for strategic innovation.

 

The thesis will be available from research.cbs.dk

 

Primary Supervisor

Associate Professor Stine Haakonsson
Department of Organization
Copenhagen Business School

Secondary Supervisor:

Professor Wang Haiyan
School of Public Policy and Management
University of Chinese Academy of Science

Assessment Committee:

Associate Professor Cornel Ban (chair)
Department of Organization
Copenhagen Business School

Professor Roberta Rabellotti
Department of Political and Social Sciences
Università di Pavia

Senior Lecturer Rory Horner
Global Development Institute
University of Manchester