The to frame Australian university research collaboration with China as a聽national security threat is .
Fears around research security are not made up. In 2023, the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation disclosed a plot by China鈥檚 intelligence services to 鈥溾.
Still, this does not change the broader reality: greater threats to Australia鈥檚 national security are posed by inflated views of the country鈥檚 scientific and technological standing and by exaggerating the risks of collaboration with China relative to the costs of curbing聽it.
Featured prominently in recent and is an by US 鈥淎I-led intelligence company鈥 Strider Technologies. It claims to show how research partnerships with Australian universities are being used by China 鈥渢o access sensitive dual-use research, recruit talent, and advance the technological capabilities of the PLA [People鈥檚 Liberation Army]鈥.
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It shows nothing of the sort. Rather than demonstrating technology transfer or espionage, the report simply identifies academic publications co-authored by researchers affiliated with Australian institutions and those working at what it calls 鈥淧LA-affiliated research institutions鈥.
Unspecified publications are claimed to advance China鈥檚 expertise in 鈥渃overt communication鈥 and 鈥渢arget-tracking techniques for unmanned underwater vehicles鈥. But the logic is hard to sustain: after illicitly acquiring sensitive technology, a Chinese intelligence asset supposedly publishes it in English for a global audience 鈥 while crediting their Australian victim.
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An overwhelming majority of the supposedly problematic collaborations are not with entities directly tied to the PLA or the Chinese Communist Party鈥檚 Central Military Commission, such as the National University of Defense Technology. Instead, they involve institutions such as the Harbin Institute of Technology and the Beijing Institute of Technology.
Yes, these are part of China鈥檚 鈥淪even Sons of National Defence鈥 university grouping, overseen by the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, and so warrant scrutiny. But they are also large, comprehensive public universities, producing fundamental STEM research at least as good as that generated by the best Australian institutions 鈥 which themselves are .
The broader data tell a different story. Clarivate鈥檚 Incites database indicates that researchers affiliated with Chinese institutions have appeared on 55聽per cent of the world鈥檚 top 10聽per cent most-cited STEM publications since 2020 鈥 more than triple the US share (17聽per cent) and 11聽times Australia鈥檚 (5聽per聽cent).
Of Australia鈥檚 share of these top-tier publications, collaborations with China-affiliated researchers appear on 52聽per cent 鈥 three times more frequently than collaborations with US researchers.
This is not evidence of a vast Chinese espionage effort. It reflects Australian researchers seeking to collaborate with the world鈥檚 leading scientific communities.
By contrast, Australia-affiliated researchers appear on just 4聽per cent of China鈥檚 top-tier output. Restricting collaboration would therefore do little to slow China鈥檚 technological progress, but it would directly weaken Australia鈥檚 access to the global STEM frontier 鈥 undermining, rather than strengthening, national security.
It is also important to note that Australia鈥檚 STEM success owes much to Chinese-background researchers at Australian institutions. In 2025, of the 300-odd recipients of the affiliated with Australian institutions, one-quarter were of Chinese background.
Since 2020, 13 researchers of Chinese background have also been inducted . Many of the most senior and productive among them are Australian citizens or permanent residents who have called the country home for decades.
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In our in-depth interviews with them, they contend that what is unfolding is not a sensible accounting for risk, but rather over-securitisation. And that process is taking a personal toll. , some have been targeted with slurs of disloyalty for their work with colleagues in China, despite having broken no laws or regulations.
The fearmongering is also constraining research capacity and career incentives. We 鈥 researchers at the University of Technology Sydney鈥檚 Australia-China Relations Institute 鈥 spoke recently with a senior researcher of Chinese background at a New South Wales university with promising ideas for breakthroughs in materials engineering; he lamented that assembling a capable team was becoming nearly impossible because local students are mostly unwilling to undertake a PhD in his research field, while well-qualified PhD candidates from China struggle to obtain visas.
Moreover, for every grant application he submits to the Australian Research Council (ARC) involving collaboration with China, he must specify how he will manage the risk of foreign interference. Yet despite extensive due diligence, his university has warned him that such collaboration may still jeopardise his chances of securing funding.
鈥淚 feel torn between the excitement of potential breakthroughs and a growing sense of futility,鈥 he said. 鈥淲hy bother? It鈥檚 just a聽job.鈥
Another expert in metallic materials, also based in New South Wales, warned that by limiting collaboration, Australia risks falling behind by cutting itself off from the world鈥檚 most advanced STEM ecosystem.
鈥淎ustralia is fairly competitive in basic research, but we often don鈥檛 have the capacity to translate ideas into applications,鈥 he said. 鈥淐hinese universities have both the teams and the resources. What might take us five years can be done there in one. In many fields, China now leads Australia by years.鈥
This assessment was echoed across our interviews. One Adelaide-based marine scientist put it bluntly: 鈥淚f Australia and China collaborate, Australia has more to gain than China [does]. Chinese scientists work with us not out of necessity but because it enhances their professional standing.鈥
Many Chinese-Australian researchers expressed confusion at Australia鈥檚 apparent alignment with US policy settings. As one Queensland-based energy scientist put it: 鈥淭he US and China are competitors, and the US wants to contain China. That logic makes sense for them. But Australia is not the US, and China is already well ahead of us, so what do we gain by not working with them?鈥
We have also been told that some elite researchers 鈥 including several ARC-funded Laureate Professors 鈥 have left for positions in mainland China, Hong Kong and Europe.
National security is not strengthened by making Australia smaller, less connected and less attractive to scientific talent. The greater danger is聽not that Australia collaborates too much with China but that it retreats from global science 鈥 and convinces itself that it can thrive while doing so.
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and are, respectively, director and deputy director of the Australia-China Relations Institute at the University of Technology Sydney.
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