Confucius Institutes are teaching and research centers located at colleges and universities, 
underwritten by the Chinese government. Since 2005, more than 100 Confucius Institutes (CIs) 
have opened in the United States; 103 remain in operation. 
These Institutes, many offering for-credit courses in Chinese language and culture, are largely 
staffed and funded by an agency of the Chinese government’s Ministry of Education—the Office of 
Chinese Languages Council International, better known as the Hanban. The Hanban also operates 
similarly organized Confucius Classrooms (CCs) at 501 primary and secondary schools in the United 
States. These 604 educational outposts comprise a plurality of China’s 1,579 Confucius Institutes 
and Classrooms worldwide. 
Confucius Institutes frequently attract scrutiny because of their close ties to the Chinese 
government. A stream of stories indicates that intellectual freedom, merit-based hiring policies, 
and other foundational principles of American higher education have received short shrift in 
Confucius Institutes. 
The Hanban has shrouded Confucius Institutes in secrecy. At most Institutes, the terms of 
agreement are hidden. China’s leaders have not assuaged worries that the Institutes may teach 
political lessons that unduly favor China. In 2009, Li Changchun, then the head of propaganda for 
the Chinese Communist Party and a member of the party’s Politburo Standing Committee, called 
Confucius Institutes “an important part of China’s overseas propaganda set-up.”1
We conducted case studies at twelve Confucius Institutes—two in New Jersey and ten in New 
York—and asked about hiring policies, funding arrangements, contracts between the Hanban 
and the university, pressure on affiliated faculty members, and more. This report is the result of 
that investigation.