Funding CDI




No Issue Available





   Google
Search CDI domain
Search the Internet

Click here for
Advanced Site Search

Search this Program

Click here for Advanced
Program Search







  Next (2)
September 4, 2007  
Chinese scholars and experts analyze the many facets of the burgeoning relationship between Africa and China: the good and the bad, the challenges and opportunities, in the Summer 2007 China Security journal produced by the World Security Institute.
 
July 25, 2007  
Roughly six years after President George W. Bush first proposed an arms sale to Taiwan, the country’s legislature has finally – as of June 15 of this year – allocated the funds to purchase part of the package. In this analysis, CDI Research Assistant Sam Black analyzes the recent decision, how it has been interpreted in the United States and in China, and what it could mean for the future of this three-way relationship.
Author(s): Sam Black
 
May 16, 2007  
In this current issue, China Security explores a number of issues critical to China's stability. These include the rise of social conflict in China's vast rural populace, the aging of China's population and the grave situation of China's coal mining safety and the social and political implications it has for the poorest peasants who work in them.
Author(s): Whitney Parker
 
April 10, 2007  
The Second Symposium of the Carnegie Corporation of New York Financial Services Volunteer Corps Project, held in New Delhi, India, Jan. 26-28, 2007, released a summary report of discussion. The experts represented the financial, energy, and security fields and came from both the public and private sectors in the United States, Russia and China. The symposium, as those before it, addressed the interaction of the three core countries’ interests and provided a forum for policy discussions. The interaction of India’s interests with those of the other countries was also addressed. Read the report here.
 
February 7, 2007  
Deterrence Revisited: Outer Space • U.S.-Sino Relations in Space: From “War of Words” to Cold War in Space? • China’s ASAT Test: Strategic Response • Nuclear Challenges and China’s Choices • U.S. Nuclear Primacy and the Future of the Chinese Deterrent • Crisis Management in China
 
December 21, 2006  
With Russia and China steering its agenda, the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) is repeatedly inconsonant with U.S. foreign policy. CDI Research Assistant Tim Murphy explains in his analysis that concerted opposition, especially to its missile defense ambitions, alliance with Taiwan, and military interests in Afghanistan, should increase U.S. wariness of the SCO – and Russo-Sino influences therein.
Author(s): Tim Murphy
 
September 26, 2005  
CDI research assistant reports on the growing influence of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization. Its significance, and ability to oppose U.S. interest in Central Asia, is likely to increase with time, making it an important group for the United States to watch.
Author(s): Benjamin Goldsmith
 
August 18, 2005  
The WSI China Program is pleased to announce the inaugural issue of "China Security," a policy brief bringing diverse Chinese perspectives to Washington on vital security issues that impact China's strategic development and its relations with the United States. The first issue, "Opening the Debate on U.S.-China Nuclear Releations," examines the future of China's nuclear strategy.
Author(s): Eric Hagt
 
January 5, 2005  
On Dec. 11, the pan-green coalition failed to secure a majority in Taiwan's Legislative Yuan. The hope that this setback for Chen Shui-bian and his Democratic Progressive Party would lead to a relaxation of relations between China and Taiwan did not last long. Within a week, Beijing's own legislative body, the National People's Congress, leaked the introduction of an "anti-secession law" that would mandate forceful reunification of any part of China, including Taiwan, should it declare independence. From the Jamestown Foundation.
Author(s): Yali ChenEric Hagt
 
August 13, 2004  
In October 2003, China sent its first astronaut into space. With Yang Liwei's 14 orbits around Earth, China became only the third country in the world to have sent a man into space. In what U.S. officials claim was an unconnected move, four months later, President George W. Bush announced a new U.S. space policy; its goals include putting a man on the moon. Again.
Author(s): Victoria Samson