In the Spring 2024 semester, the Fairbank Center for Chinese Studies’ Critical Issues Confronting China series hosted a slate of eight leading scholars and journalists. The series probed at a […]
Politics
Speakers:Dorinda Elliott, Newsweek, Fairbank Center for Chinese Studies Seth Faison, South China Morning Press, Brunswick Group China Hub Orville Schell, New York Review of Books, Asia Society Center on U.S.-China Relations Katherine Wilhelm, Associated Press, NYU
For the Fairbank Center’s 2024 Charles Neuhauser Memorial Lecture, we hosted Ambassador Robert E. Lighthizer, 18th U.S. Trade Representative (2017-2021), who argued that China’s goal to become the world’s number
Ambassador Robert E. Lighthizer, 18th U.S. Trade Representative (2017 – 2021), speaks with Mark Wu, Director of the Fairbank Center for Chinese Studies and Henry L. Stimson Professor of Law
On January 17th, the Fairbank Center hosted the third installment of our series on the Taiwan elections. Moderator Steven M. Goldstein, Director of the Center’s Taiwan Studies Workshop, opens the
Speaker: Glen S. Fukushima, Vice Chair, Securities Investor Protection Corporation; Former Deputy Assistant U.S. Trade Representative for Japan and China Glen S. Fukushima was nominated by President Joseph R. Biden
Fairbank Center experts weigh in: Michael A. Szonyi, Frank Wen-Hsiung Wu Memorial Professor of Chinese History, Harvard University; Steven M. Goldstein, Director, Taiwan Studies Workshop, Harvard University; Ya-Wen Lei, Professor
Precarious Ties, a new book by Meg Rithmire, F. Warren McFarlan Associate Professor of Business, Government, and International Economy at the Harvard Business School, examines business and the state in three
Speakers:Wenchi Yu, Nonresident Research Fellow and international affairs journalist with Taiwan-based TVBS televisionEric Huang, Former spokesperson for the opposition KMT party, Mid-Career Masters of Public Affairs student, Harvard Kennedy School
Ahead of Taiwan’s presidential election on Saturday, Jan. 13, Fairbank Center Visiting Fellow Po-Chang (Paul) Huang argues that the outcome will be determined by domestic issues—not Taiwan citizens’ views about