Get the inside story from a Chinese journalist/consultant about China's business and politics. This revised volume gives an insider's analysis on what's behind China's surge and its implications to the world, covering manufacturing & job transfers, Chinese multinationals, changing production and trade, and international relations.
Given the longstanding presence of numerous other foreign military bases in the country, nor is the arrival of Chinese troops ... Chinese authorities routinely deny any direct linkage between the MSR and the increasingly global reach of ...
China's Global Presence: Economics, Politics, and Security
Global China: Assessing China’s Growing Role in the World provides the most current, broad-scope, and fact-based assessment of the implications of China’s rise for the United States and the rest of the world.
... Thilo Hanemann, Lonnie Henley, Ingrid d'Hooghe, Alastair Iain Johnston, David M. Lampton, Nicholas Lardy, Jim Laurie, Kristin Lord, Mary Kay Magistad, James Miles, Katherine Morton, Henry Nau, Peter Nolan, Joseph Nye, John Pomfret, ...
This book examines the current and future issues impinging on that strategic evolution, in order to facilitate an understanding of the military-strategic basis for, and future trajectory of, a rising China.
To wit, in late 2007 a Taiwanese military source reported that China was developing a larger 500-ton fast-attack craft based on the Type 022 hull.156 Such a ship might carry more weapons, or feature a modular design that would allow the ...
83 Carl Mosk ( 2001), Japanese Industrial History: Technology, Urbanization, and Economic Growth ( Armonk); Brian Ike, “ The Japanese Textile Industry: Structural Adjustment and Government Policy”, Asian Survey 20.5, pp. 532–551.
From 30 January to 1 February 2019 the Daniel K. Inouye Asia-Pacific Center forSecurity Studies hosted a Department of Defense Regional Center collaborationtitled "China's Global Reach: A Security Assessment.
In China's Western Horizon, Daniel S. Markey previews how China's efforts are likely to play out along its "western horizon:" across the swath of Eurasia that includes South Asia, Central Asia, and the Middle East.
Chinese leaders now want to harness this power to become the world's dominant country, replacing the US as the global superpower. In How China Loses, Luke Patey argues that despite all its strengths, China cannot simply get what it wants.