All Articles

Economy

Challenges of Dispatch Work in China

Thursday 21st March 2019

As China embraces the digital economy, subcontracting—the practice of using intermediaries to contract workers, whether through agencies or other multilayered contracting—is raising new challenges over legal protections and corporate responsibility, as well as labor unrest.

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Security

Progress on a Nuclear-Free North Korea Stalled, Not Halted

Thursday 14th March 2019

As the dust settles on the Hanoi summit, critics argue that the absence of an agreement between Trump and Kim is a sign that diplomacy between the U.S. and North Korea has failed. But even without a roadmap to denuclearization, the summit promotes important goals in these early stages: dialogue, a continued freeze on nuclear testing, and hope for a gradual lifting of economic sanctions.

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Geopolitics

What Is Xi Jinping’s Major Power Diplomacy?

Thursday 7th March 2019

Since Xi Jinping ascended to the presidency, he has spearheaded a reorientation of China’s major power diplomacy. With China’s foreign policy in the spotlight during the annual meeting of its legislature, Yoshikazu Kato of the Asia Global Institute outlines his thoughts on what this diplomacy is and how it came about.

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Population & Society

Reckoning with Graying Asia

Thursday 28th February 2019

The Asia-Pacific population has been undergoing dramatic aging, which is transforming the region’s demographic landscape beyond recognition. The region is currently ill-equipped to meet this critical challenge, particularly due to a lack of sound and efficient pension systems.

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Politics

Allies Not Out of America's Line of Fire

Thursday 21st February 2019

With the U.S.-China trade conflict worsening by the week, Australia, Japan, and India may see security ties as a chance to boost their status in Washington. But the Trump administration’s crusade on trade could very well engulf them, too.

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Money

Waiting, and Waiting, for the Global Renminbi

Thursday 14th February 2019

Just a few years ago, the renminbi seemed destined to become one of the world’s most significant currencies. However, its attractiveness has plunged as international investors seek currencies with legal security, ease of use and, critically, unrestricted convertibility.

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Security

The Philippines’ Maritime Conundrum

Thursday 31st January 2019

The Philippines, a major maritime nation, must better protect its resources and exclusive sovereign rights. The South China Sea disputes, where China has exerted increasing dominance over one of the planet’s vital waterways, have been a sorely-needed wakeup call.

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Geopolitics

China and the Rise of Africa

Thursday 24th January 2019

Chinese investment in Africa supports the continent’s growth, but as concerns of a “new colonialism” arise, what will define the future of China-Africa relations?

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Population & Society

DNA and the Globalization of Humanity

Thursday 17th January 2019

Two questions that have occupied the human mind since the beginning of civilization are “Who am I?” and “Where did I come from?” Today, with just a swab of saliva, millions of people worldwide have been able to take a peek into their genetic past, thanks to DNA testing. In most cases, such testing reveals a complex global and regional circulation of bloodlines.

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Environment

Why the “Anthropocene” Is Not “Climate Change” and Why It Matters

Thursday 10th January 2019

Humans have altered the planet to such an extent that it has entered a new age. The Anthropocene requires a new way to think about how humans relate to the planet.

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Economy

Personal Business: Why Nigerian Traders Travel to China

Thursday 3rd January 2019

The internet has taken much of the human interaction out of international trade. But many commercial buyers continue to emphasize face-to-face communication with sellers.

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Inclusiveness

More Women in Boardrooms Means Greener, Better Business

Thursday 20th December 2018

Growing media and societal attention on environmental issues has prompted researchers to examine factors that contribute to making companies greener. New research has found that corporations with more women in their leadership teams are less likely to be accused of breaching environmental law.

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Health

Mind Games: The Effects of Air Pollution on Cognition

Thursday 13th December 2018

Air pollution has countless victims—nearly nine out of ten people across the globe breathe polluted air, according to the World Health Organization. New research suggests that it even reaches the unborn, moving from a mother’s lungs to the placenta and fetus. Not only does it cause health and economic ill-effects, but it also impacts human cognition.

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Geopolitics

China in Africa: Practicing Diplomacy as a Great Power

Thursday 6th December 2018

China’s strategic approach to foreign policy has changed, and governments need to reorient to this new reality. A look at its actions in Africa reveals how China is employing its status as a great power on the diplomatic stage.

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Economy

A Fair Society or a Fare Society?

Thursday 29th November 2018

The global economy is currently organized in an environmentally damaging way: goods are produced, used, and discarded. The shared economy and the platform economy offer alternatives, but not solutions. The key to a more sustainable economy could lie in the combination of the two.

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Politics

When Public and Private Merge: South Korea and the Chaebol

Thursday 22nd November 2018

The impeachment and subsequent removal from office of South Korean President Park Geun-hye have revealed the extent of state-business collusion in the country

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Technology

How to Regulate Internet Platforms Without Breaking Them

Wednesday 14th November 2018

Authorities must find a balance between regulation and fostering an open, healthy environment for the internet-enabled economy to thrive.

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Environment

Together We Fall? Southeast Asia and Transboundary Haze

Thursday 8th November 2018

Many parts of Asia are affected by high levels of air pollution. The continent is home to some of the most polluted megacities in the world, including Beijing and Shanghai in China, and Delhi and Kolkata in India. While these places suffer all year round, several countries in Southeast Asia face a unique air pollution problem that is seasonal, but no less dire.

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