On Thursday, February 26th, 2026 at 12:00 PM (CET), we are hosting the CAS SEE Seminar with Zhou Xuan and Mo Langgee on “Computational Frame Analysis of China-Related Climate Issues in France and Japan“ in conversation with the RECAS Fellow Jing Wu.

Mo Langge
Mo Langge is a third-year graduate student at the School of Journalism and Communication, Nanjing Normal University. His research interests lie in comic art, popular culture, and international communication. Mo has made significant academic contributions, including research published in the journal Journalism Studies.

Zhou Xuan
Zhou Xuan is a Ph.D candidate at the School of Journalism and Communication, Nanjing Normal University. Her research interests lie at the intersection of international communication, social media, and health communication, with a specific focus on French news media and computational methods.
Currently, she leads a Jiangsu Provincial Research Project titled “A Study on the Framework and Discourse of French Mainstream Media in Promoting Climate Governance and Climate Diplomacy.” Additionally, she has played a key role in the Chinese National Social Science Fund Project, “Research on the Construction of International Communication Capacity for Enhancing China’s Discourse Power on Climate Issues,” under the supervision of her advisor.
Zhou has published research in prominent SSCI journals, including Healthcare and Journalism Studies. Her work has also been accepted for presentation at leading international conferences, such as the International Communication Association (ICA).
About the seminar
This seminar examines the “hetero-construction” of China’s climate narrative across two distinct geopolitical landscapes: European intellectual circles and East Asian media. Drawing on discourse from representative French think tanks and Japan’s The Asahi Shimbun, the presentations utilize thematic model network analysis and textual analysis to decode the cognitive frameworks applied to China’s energy transition and climate diplomacy.
The research reveals a complex dynamic of scrutiny and interdependence. In the French context, the discourse balances global and local dimensions, exhibiting an attitude characterized by both affirmation of China’s policies and lingering concern. In contrast, the Japanese perspective is shaped by the “divergence amidst complementarity” of close neighbors, where climate cooperation is navigated within a framework of strategic competition. Together, these studies offer a lens through which to examine the mechanisms of international communication and the challenges of elevating discourse power in a fragmented global order.
Join Zoom meeting
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/88989643663?pwd=VnZTOWRmdnl0WEZIdTczc1paZWtkdz09
Meeting ID: 889 8964 3663
Passcode: 328897
RECAS Fellowships
RECAS Fellowships
Fellowships are supported by OSF Western Balkans, ERSTE Foundation and Rockefeller Brothers Fund.
