In Washington, a consensus is emerging that the time has come to choose security over economics — to “de-risk” the economic relationship with China
derisking
Beijing Anger-ometer, March 2024: Car Wars and Coast Guard Clashes as Biden Boosts Allies
Planes, trains and automobiles: Transport is at the forefront of China President Xi Jinping’s mind as he doubles down on “new industrialization” and
China’s Chip Industry Is Gaining Momentum. It Could Alter the Global Economic and Security Landscape
Robyn Klingler-Vidra, King's College London and Steven Hai, King's College London China’s national champions for computer chip — or semiconductor —
The United States and China’s Complex Cooperation and Rivalry Continue
The world has witnessed a complex tapestry of economic and technological dynamics between the United States and China, with 2023 marking a period of
Beijing Anger-ometer, January 2023: A Swarm of Elections Stings China’s Dictatorship
China, a dictatorship drowning in a sea of democracies, started 2024, the year in which over a billion people are registered to participate in
Why America’s Chip Sanctions Against China Could Backfire
Shaun Narine, St. Thomas University (Canada) The technological war waged by the United States against China has the potential to backfire,
COP28: China, the Climate North Korea, Has Its Finger on the Weather Bomb
As the petrostate-presided United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change’s 28th Conference of Parties (COP28) quarrels its way to a close for
Missed Opportunity: Taiwan’s Election Left Behind on Climate Issues (Again)
Over the course of Taiwan’s presidential election campaign, environmental policy, like many other issues, has struggled to take center stage ahead of







