archive

Is China the new indispensable nation?

Baogang He (Deakin): Deliberative Culture and Politics: The Persistence of Authoritarian Deliberation in China. Reza Hasmath (Oxford): White Cat, Black Cat or Good Cat: The Beijing Consensus as an Alternative Philosophy for Policy Deliberation? The Case of China. Corruption and a changing China: The Chinese Communist Party is centralizing authority, broadcasting the self-criticisms of local officials and calling for a new morality in public life. Joseph Stiglitz on the Chinese Century: Without fanfare — indeed, with some misgivings about its new status — China has just overtaken the United States as the world’s largest economy; this is, and should be, a wake-up call, but not the kind most Americans might imagine. Is China the new indispensable nation? Steven Mufson wonders. From NYRB, will the Western democracies ever be able to accept China as it is, the better to deal with the host of new global problems that menace us all, like climate change, pandemics, terrorism, and nuclear proliferation? China's Island Factory: New islands are being made in the disputed South China Sea by the might of the Chinese state — but a group of marooned Filipinos on a rusting wreck is trying to stand in the way. China’s dangerous game: The country's intensifying efforts to redraw maritime borders have its neighbors, and the U.S., fearing war — but does the aggression reflect a government growing in power or one facing a crisis of legitimacy? Why China does not want to be the next Russia. From China to Jihad: Among the many recent stories concerning foreigners setting out to fight in Syria, the allegations about the Uighurs arrested in Songkhla stand out. Nick Holdstock on what we talk about when we talk about “the Uyghurs”. Ian Johnson on Remembrance, an unofficial journal published in Tiantongyuan, China’s brave underground journal.