This is the second of three episodes in the Asia Insight podcast miniseries China’s Strategic Approach to the Digital Revolution examining the findings of the NBR report “China’s Digital Ambitions: A Global Strategy to Supplant the Liberal Order.” NBR nonresident fellow Emily de La Bruyère, the project’s principal investigator, is joined by two of the report’s authors—Greg Levesque and Matt Turpin—to discuss the security implications of China’s digital rise and potential policy responses for liberal democracies to more effectively mitigate the associated risks and counter China’s ambitions.
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Enhancing U.S.-Japan Energy System Resilience amid Shifting Geopolitical Tensions
Myanmar and China’s Fluid Frontier
Assessing U.S. Objectives for APEC 2023
Quad Geopolitics: Critical Minerals Competition
Japan’s Digital Transformation: Industry Advancements and Government Goals
”Security” and ”Struggle”: Unpacking China’s 20th Party Congress, Leadership Dynamics, and Strategic Priorities
Aaron Friedberg on His Book Getting China Wrong
Shinzo Abe’s Political Legacy and Influence on Japan’s Geostrategic Role
The Evolution of the Quad amid the War in Ukraine: Perspectives from the Four Partners
Under New Management: Hong Kong’s Future under Chief Executive John Lee
U.S. Trade Strategy and the Indo-Pacific Economic Framework
China’s Digital Strategy in Action
Understanding China’s Digital Strategy
Rethinking U.S.-Japan Relations through Policies on Decarbonization
Strategic Asia: Marcin Kaczmarski and Elizabeth Wishnick on Russia’s Invasion of Ukraine
Robert Sutter on ”Axis of Authoritarians: Implications of China-Russia Cooperation”
Navigating Tumultuous Times in the Indo-Pacific
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