This third session is titled, "Chinese Investments in the EU: Threat or Opportunity?" and will feature Ash Center Research Associate Philippe LeCorre.
China Study Student Group: Voices and Analysis from the Field
This study group, held on six Fridays 11am-12pm to accommodate the widest range of time zones globally, engages HKS degree students to understand China’s rise and its role in the world...
This second session is titled, "Chinese Corporations in the US: Bridging Divides" and will feature Ash Center Research Fellow Wenchi Yu.
China Study Student Group: Voices and Analysis from the Field
This study group, held on six Fridays 11am-12pm to accommodate the widest range of time zones globally, engages HKS degree students to understand China’s rise and its role in the world moving forward. Led by Professors Tony...
This first session will serve as an introduction to the group and feature Professors Tony Saich and Edward Cunningham.
China Study Student Group: Voices and Analysis from the Field
This study group, held on six Fridays 11am-12pm to accommodate the widest range of time zones globally, engages HKS degree students to understand China’s rise and its role in the world moving forward. Led by Professors Tony Saich and Edward Cunningham, who leverage a combined 75 years of experience working in and with China, the program will...
Join the Ash Center for a virtual conversation about trends in contemporary Chinese philanthropy with the China Philanthropy Project team Edward Cunningham, Director of Ash Center China Programs, Adjunct Lecturer in Public Policy, Harvard Kennedy School; and Yunxin Li, Research and Data Analyst, Ash Center China Programs. Wenchi Yu, Ash Center Nonresident Research Fellow, Head of Global Public Policy at VIPKid, will moderate.... Read more about China's Most Generous: Examining Trends in Contemporary Chinese Philanthropy
Join Ash Center China Public Policy Postdoctoral Fellow Yinxian Zhang for a discussion entitled "A Turbulent Decade: Public Perceptions of Democracy in China." The past decade is seen by many as a time of polarization, disruption, and backlash to democracy and globalization. Yet China, a country that has a long history of pursuing democracy, is now believed to have moved even further away from it. How does the Chinese public understand the direction that they are moving in? What does the term "democracy" mean to them? And what has been changed in the 2010s? This talk...
You are invited to a discussion with Lucy Hornby on "China’s Belt and Road: A New Colonialism?" Ash Center Director Tony Saich will moderate. Lunch will be served. Hornby, a 2020 Nieman Fellow, has lived in China for 20 years and most recently served as deputy bureau chief in Beijing for the Financial Times.
S010, Tsai Auditorium, CGIS South, 1730 Cambridge St., Cambridge, MA
Barry Bloom, Joan L. and Julius H. Jacobson Research Professor of Public Health, Harvard Chan School of Public Health
Yanzhong Huang, Senior Fellow for Global Health, Council on Foreign Relations; Professor, Seton Hall University School of Diplomacy and International Relations
David S. Jones, A. Bernard Ackerman Professor of the Culture of Medicine, Harvard University
Elanah Uretsky, Assistant Professor, International and Global Studies, Brandeis University
Ash Center foyer, 124 Mt Auburn Street, Suite 200N
Join Megha Rajagopalan, international correspondent and former China bureau chief for Buzzfeed News for a discussion on China and the rise of artificial intelligence and mass surveillance technology. David Eaves, Lecturer in Public Policy at HKS will moderate.
Megha Rajagopalan is an award-winning international correspondent for BuzzFeed News, based in London. Previously, she was BuzzFeed News' China bureau chief and a political correspondent for Reuters in Beijing. In August 2018, she was forced to leave China by the...
Taylor Seminar Room, Lippmann House, 1 Francis Ave., Cambridge
Long before she was Beijing bureau chief for The New York Times, Jane Perlez was an accidental tourist at the peak of China's Cultural Revolution. Join the Nieman Foundation for Journalism at Harvard as she screens rare footage and talks about her impressions of a 1967 trip to Shanghai and cities around China, when Red Guards turned China upside down. The event will be moderated by Lucy Hornby, a 2020 Nieman Fellow at Harvard