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This page displays all Asia Society Policy Institute (ASPI) publications. Reports and commentary related to ASPI’s policy dialogues and study projects are featured in reverse chronological order.
Johanna Costigan and Lery Hiciano write in Nikkei Asia about Japan's ties with Taiwan and the securitization of the country's economic approach to China.
Jing Qian and Haolan Wang trace the most significant shifts and probable outcomes of this year's Two Sessions (两会) and why they matter for policy-making in China.
Philipp Ivanov writes in the Financial Review that China and the United States are the only powers outside Russia and Ukraine that can change the course of the conflict.
Taylah Bland writes about how China has capitalized on discounted coal from Russia as a consequence of the invasion of Ukraine and how it affects China's commitments to decarbonization.
In this timely paper, Andrew Chubb writes about the Taiwan Strait crisis and the more likely contingencies of China seizing one of Taiwan's outlying islands.
Kevin Rudd talks about China's competing ideological and economic objectives in 2023 in his inaugural China Matters Oration co-hosted with the University of Queensland
In his most recent paper, Lyle J. Morris compares and contrasts the approach to China employed by the NSS and NDS of the Trump and Biden administrations.
Bates Gill and Evan Medeiros write in South China Morning Post about how the visit by U.S. Secretary Anthony Blinken to China can bring stability to the relationship between the two countries.
In this first paper of the paper series, Reading China's Digital Dream, Johanna Costigan writes about what values inform China and the United States’ approach to regulating and shaping the internet.
In his third paper of The 19 Percent paper series, Barclay Bram traces the reasons and repercussions behind Chinese individuals' reluctance to become parents.