Organization | Date | Title | Keywords |
---|---|---|---|
Council on Foreign Relations | 04.1.00 |
China, Nuclear Weapons, and Arms Control Robert A. Manning, Ronald Montaperto, Brad Roberts The U.S.-PRC bilateral agenda is loaded with many contentious issues, including trade relations, human rights, regional security, and nonproliferation. During the last year or two, another issue has emerged: the strategic military dimension of the... |
Arms Control, International Relations, Security, Nuclear Weapons |
Council on Foreign Relations | 03.1.00 |
The United States, Japan, and China: Setting the Course Neil E. Silver During the twentieth century, as the United States grew into a world power, Americans confronted two major powers in Asia: China and Japan. Asia expert Neil Silver argues that the United States never had good relations simultaneously with China and Japan... |
Foreign Policy, International Relations, Japan |
Landesa | 02.1.00 |
The Joint Stock Share System in China’s Nanhai County David J. Bledsoe and Roy L. Prosterman Between 1979 and 1983, China made the dramatic transition from a socialist agriculture dominated by large collective farms to a more market-oriented agriculture dominated by small family farms. This report describes the experiment’s background in light... |
Agriculture, Economic Reform, Nanhai |
Cato Institute | 07.19.99 |
Trade and the Transformation of China Dan Griswold, Ned Graham, Robert Kapp, and Nicholas Lardy Congress will soon consider whether to revoke normal trade relations (NTR) with China and then, possibly in the fall, whether to make NTR permanent as part of China’s anticipated entry into the World Trade Organization. The consequences of congressional... |
Trade, Economic Reform, U.S.-China Relations |
Council on Foreign Relations | 04.1.97 |
Shaping U.S.-China Relations Elizabeth C. Economy An increasingly contentious debate has erupted in the United States over how to respond to the rise of China. Figuring out a successful policy toward China is no easy task, but any sound strategy must be rooted in a sense of history. A sure recipe for a... |
|
Cato Institute | 01.23.96 |
The Sweet-and-Sour Sino-American Relationship Leon T. Hadar Relations between the United States and China are becoming frayed, with serious risks for both countries. Although the Clinton administration has wisely resisted the most reckless proposals, its policies have been inconsistent and sometimes inept.... |
U.S.-China Relations, Regional Politics, Economic Integration |
Cato Institute | 12.1.87 |
Modernizings Market in Post-Mao China David L. Prychitko Is the post-Mao era truly a transition toward free-market capitalism, or is it yet another nominal “rightward” shift in the swinging pendulum of the Chinese Communist Party, to be offset in the future by more drastic elements of plunder by the radical... |
Reform and Opening-Up, Economic Growth, Deng Xiaoping |