Jennifer Lind and Daryl G. Press argue that China is employing strategic logic to improve the country’s energy security.
Economy
Anne Reinhardt’s “Navigating Semi-Colonialism” examines steam navigation—introduced by foreign powers to Chinese waters in the mid-nineteenth century—as a constitutive element of the treaty system to illuminate both conceptual and concrete aspects of this regime, arguing for the specificity of China’s experience, its continuities with colonialism in other contexts, and its links to global processes.
This edited volume explores the local and global influences of both China and India as they play out in the contemporary era.
Harvard Fairbank Center for Chinese Studies · Chinese Investment in Post-Brexit Europe, with Philippe Le Corre Europe’s post-2008 financial crises have provided opportunities for Chinese overseas investment in cash-strapped European …
Chinese Investment in Post-Brexit Europe, with Philippe Le Corre
Harvard Fairbank Center for Chinese Studies · Chinese Reformers, Western Economists, and "Unlikely Partners," with Julian Gewirtz China has a long and complex history of interacting with foreign thinkers. After …
Chinese Reformers, Western Economists, and “Unlikely Partners,” with Julian Gewirtz
Harvard Fairbank Center for Chinese Studies · China's Banking Transformation, with James Stent Pundits have been predicting the impending collapse of the Chinese banking system. The collapse has not happened, …
Harvard Fairbank Center for Chinese Studies · Corruption in China on the Eve of the 19th Party Congress, with Michael Forsythe Michael Forsythe is a New York Times journalist who …
Corruption in China on the Eve of the 19th Party Congress, with Michael Forsythe
Is heavy-handed state intervention killing entrepreneurship in China? William Kirby, Spangler Family Professor of Business Administration at Harvard Business School, T. M. Chang Professor of China Studies at Harvard University, and Chairman of the Harvard China Fund explains.
By analyzing the impact of the slump in silver prices, the Great Depression, and the process of recovery, this book examines the transformation of state–market relations in light of the linkages between the Chinese and the world economy.