The Martyrdom of Liu Xiaobo
China’s dissident writer was an exemplar of iconoclastic intellectual spirit, pursuing a more humane society despite state repression. A new biography draws the arc of his rebellion and untimely death.
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China’s dissident writer was an exemplar of iconoclastic intellectual spirit, pursuing a more humane society despite state repression. A new biography draws the arc of his rebellion and untimely death.
Taiwan and the semiconductor industry are intertwined. In a time of Chinese aggression, keeping them both secure calls for partnerships and preparedness.
Hoover Institution fellow Larry Diamond and Orville Schell discuss the book they co-authored with James Ellis titled Silicon Triangle: The United States, Taiwan, China, and Global Semiconductor Security
The Hoover Institution, in partnership with the Asia Society’s Center on U.S.-China Relations, has released Silicon Triangle: The United States, Taiwan, China, and Global Semiconductor Security, a groundbreaking new report.
A working group of industry and policy experts contemplate the role of semiconductors on the future security, economic prosperity, and technological competitiveness of the United States, Taiwan, and China.
The Asia Society’s Center on U.S.-China Relations and the Hoover Institution’s project on China’s Global Sharp Power launch their new joint report, “The CCP Absorbs China’s Private Sector: Capitalism with Party Characteristics.”
Is Xi Jinping deterrable with regard to Taiwan? How can American semiconductor policy reclaim some of its domestic manufacturing capabilities while remaining trading partners with Taiwan in good standing? Orville Schell discusses the recommendations in the new Silicon Triangle report.
The United States, Taiwan, and China are bound within a “Silicon Triangle” that links our geopolitics, ongoing economic prosperity, and technological competitiveness. The more than two dozen participants in this working group have worked together for eighteen months to better understand this strategic triangle.
The Hoover Institution, in partnership with the Asia Society, launched the groundbreaking new publication Silicon Triangle: The United States, Taiwan, China, and Global Semiconductor Security before an audience of policy leaders, media, and the business community at Hoover’s Washington, DC, center on Tuesday, July 18.
A joint report of the Hoover Institution and the Asia Society Center on U.S.-China Relations. Silicon Triangle draws on the deliberations of a multidisciplinary expert working group to contemplate the dynamic global supply chain in semiconductors—one in which US industry faces growing vulnerabilities, China aggressively promotes home-grown semiconductor mastery, and Taiwan finds itself with a crucial monopoly on high-end logic chips sought by buyers globally.
[Subscription Required] A deteriorating Sino-American relationship threatens both Taiwan, but also a global semiconductor ecosystem. Building strong partnerships and resilient supply chains will help protect Taiwan and the semiconductor industry.
China has lately been infiltrating a wide range of US institutions – from universities and think tanks to the mass media and state and local governments – as well as the Chinese-American community. The only way to stop it is with a strategy of "constructive vigilance."
While Americans are generally aware of China’s ambitions as a global economic and military superpower, few understand just how deeply and assertively that country has already sought to influence American society.
Beijing has declared war—an information war. A team of Hoover researchers sounds the alarm.
[Subscription Required] President Donald Trump insists that China has been ripping off America for decades, but even if the two countries manage to negotiate—and honor—new terms for trade, basic reciprocity will still be sorely lacking elsewhere in the relationship and will continue to create tensions.
This report, written and endorsed by a group of this country’s leading China specialists and students of one-party systems is the result of more than a year of research and represents an attempt to document the extent of China’s expanding influence operations inside the United States. While there have been many excellent reports documenting specific examples of Chinese influence seeking, this effort attempts to come to grips with the issue as a whole and features an overview of the Chinese party-state United Front apparatus responsible for guiding overseas influence activities.
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