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Yuen Yuen Ang on how China can turn ‘polycrisis' into ‘polytunity'
Yuen Yuen Ang on how China can turn ‘polycrisis' into ‘polytunity'

South China Morning Post

time2 days ago

  • Business
  • South China Morning Post

Yuen Yuen Ang on how China can turn ‘polycrisis' into ‘polytunity'

Yuen Yuen Ang is the Alfred Chandler Chair Professor of political economy at Johns Hopkins University. She is an influential scholar, writing extensively on China's political and economic trajectory, its international relations and its adaptive development in a fragmented, unpredictable world. Originally from Singapore, her award-winning work includes the books How China Escaped the Poverty Trap and China's Gilded Age. Advertisement This interview first appeared in SCMP Plus . For other interviews in the Open Questions series, click here As a professor based in the United States, do you think there is a general decline in knowledge about China there? Can that be attributed to the sharp drop in Americans studying in China? To put things in historical context, I would point to my 'grand teacher' Michel Oksenberg. He served in the administration of US President Jimmy Carter, and was the expert behind the normalisation of relations between the US and China. In addition to his policy work, he was a passionate educator who nurtured generations of China experts. A majority of leading China scholars today are his disciples or grand-disciples – including myself. Advertisement I'm sharing this story to remind us of how deeply and purposefully the pioneers of US-China engagement had invested in helping American policymakers and the public understand China. They went to great lengths to build up a community of expertise.

Innovation changes the game for China, US, the world, says Ang
Innovation changes the game for China, US, the world, says Ang

South China Morning Post

time6 days ago

  • Business
  • South China Morning Post

Innovation changes the game for China, US, the world, says Ang

Yuen Yuen Ang is the Alfred Chandler Chair Professor of political economy at Johns Hopkins University. She is an influential scholar, writing extensively on China's political and economic trajectory, its international relations and its adaptive development in a fragmented, unpredictable world. Originally from Singapore, her award-winning work includes the books How China Escaped the Poverty Trap and China's Gilded Age. Advertisement SCMP Plus readers get early access to articles in the Open Questions series . This article will be available to regular SCMP subscribers next week. As a professor based in the United States, do you think there is a general decline in knowledge about China there? Can that be attributed to the sharp drop in Americans studying in China? To put things in historical context, I would point to my 'grand teacher' Michel Oksenberg. He served in the administration of US President Jimmy Carter, and was the expert behind the normalisation of relations between the US and China. In addition to his policy work, he was a passionate educator who nurtured generations of China experts. A majority of leading China scholars today are his disciples or grand-disciples – including myself. Advertisement I'm sharing this story to remind us of how deeply and purposefully the pioneers of US-China engagement had invested in helping American policymakers and the public understand China. They went to great lengths to build up a community of expertise.

Zelensky names new ambassadors during Ukraine political shakeup
Zelensky names new ambassadors during Ukraine political shakeup

Arab News

time21-07-2025

  • Politics
  • Arab News

Zelensky names new ambassadors during Ukraine political shakeup

MOSCOW: Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky appointed over a dozen new ambassadors on Monday, during a big shakeup that has seen him replace top cabinet officials and envoys to shore up relations with Washington and isolate Russia internationally. The new envoys named on Monday include ambassadors to NATO members Belgium, Canada, Estonia and Spain, as well as major donor Japan and regional heavyweights South Africa and the United Arab Emirates. Zelensky launched a major government reshuffle last week, promoting Yulia Svyrydenko, 39, who had served as economy minister and is well known in Washington, to head the cabinet as prime minister. Deputy Prime Minister Olha Stefanishyna is set to become Ukraine's new envoy to the United States, as Ukraine seeks to mend ties with the Trump administration. In remarks to the diplomatic corps released by his office, Zelensky said envoys needed to support 'everything that causes Russia pain for its war.' 'While the content of our relationship with America has transformed following the change in administration, the goal remains unchanged: Ukraine must withstand Russia's strikes,' Zelensky said.

Why Europe needs to realise the truth about America
Why Europe needs to realise the truth about America

Irish Times

time09-06-2025

  • Politics
  • Irish Times

Why Europe needs to realise the truth about America

Where does Europe fit into the 21st century? Political scientist Professor Helen Thompson returns to the podcast to talk about the big picture for the global economy and international relations in the age of Trump's second term, China's rise and Europe's relative decline. She talks to Hugh Linehan about the real significance of America's debt pile, Silicon Valley's shift to Trump, the future of NATO, the growing interest in controlling the Arctic and China's economic and technological rise. She argues that to build its own secure future, Europe needs to realise just how different a place America is - and always has been.

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