• The Latercomer’s Rise and the Globalization of Chinese Development Finance with Muyang Chen
    Oct 22 2024

    Muyang Chen joins Erik and Keren to talk all things Chinese development finance, including her recent book, The Latecomer's Rise: Policy Banks and the Globalization of China's Development Finance (2024).

    Muyang Chen is an Assistant Professor of International Development at Peking University's School of International Studies. Her research and teaching interests lie at the intersection of development, political economy, and international relations. She has been a visiting scholar at the Institute for International Economic Policy at George Washington University, a visiting scholar at Japan's National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies, and a pre-doctoral fellow at the Global Development Policy Center at Boston University.


    Recommendations:

    Muyang:

    • "Economic Backwardness in Historical Perspective" by Alexander Gerschenkron (1962)

    Keren:

    • "雍正王朝 The Era of Emperor Yongzheng" (drama series, can watch on YouTube)


    Erik:

    • Great Photo, Lovely Life (2023)


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    42 mins
  • China’s Complex Presence in Southeast Asia: Tourism, Organized Crime, Geopolitical Tensions
    Sep 19 2024

    Enze Han joins Juliet and Keren to discuss all things China in Southeast Asia, from migration to tourism to pig butchering scams, and much more.

    Enze Han is Associate Professor at the Department of Politics and Public Administration at the University of Hong Kong. His research interests include the international relations of East Asia, China's relations with Southeast Asia, Southeast Asian politics, and ethnic politics in China. Professor Han received a Ph.D in Political Science from the George Washington University. He is the author of The Ripple Effect: China's Complex Presence in Southeast Asia (2024).

    Recommendations:

    Enze:

    • Spice: The 16th-Century Contest that Shaped the Modern World by Roger Crowley (2024)


    Keren:

    • 米拉蒂 (Milati) by Yan Geling (2023).


    Juliet:

    • Global fertility has collapsed, with profound economic consequences. The Economist (2023).
    • Ezra Klein: The Deep Conflict Between Our Work and Parenting Ideals
    • You're Wrong About: The Tradwife Rises
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    53 mins
  • Infrastructure States and Cycling Along the China-Laos Railroad with Jess DiCarlo
    Jul 23 2024

    Jess DiCarlo joins Juliet and Keren for a dynamic discussion about China's identity as an infrastructural state, the myth of the debt trap narrative, cycling as method (and Jess's experience biking along the China-Laos train route), the impact of the BRI in Laos, and much more.

    Dr. Jess DiCarlo is an assistant professor in Geography, Environment, and Asian Studies at the University of Utah. She has been a Wilson China Fellow, a Public Intellectual Program Fellow of the National Committee on U.S.-China Relations, and the Chevalier Postdoctoral Research Fellow in Transportation and Development in China at the University of British Columbia's Institute of Asian Research in the School of Public Policy and Global Affairs. She holds a Ph.D. in geography from the University of Colorado Boulder and a masters in development studies from the University of California Berkeley.

    Her research focuses on China, its borderlands, infrastructure, issues at the environment-society nexus, and China's global integration. DiCarlo is on the editorial board of The People’s Map of Global China (the launch of which we covered on this show) and its related Global China Pulse journal, and the co-founder of the Second Cold War Observatory and co-host of its podcast, The Roundtable podcast.



    Recommendations:

    Jess:

    • Ecological States: Politics of Science and Nature in Urbanizing China by Jesse Rodenbiker


    Juliet:

    • The Three Body Problem series on Netflix, adapted from the trilogy by Cixin Liu


    Keren:

    • Peter Hessler's writings, specifically River Town, Oracle Bones, Country Driving
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    49 mins
  • Ocean Consciousness and the Maritime Silk Road with Tabitha Grace Mallory and Andrew Chubb
    May 30 2024

    Tabitha Grace Mallory and Andrew Chubb visit the Belt and Road Podcast to chat about China's ocean economy, maritime activities, and the role of concepts like ocean consciousness.

    Dr. Tabitha Grace Mallory is CEO of the consulting firm China Ocean Institute, and an affiliate faculty member of the Henry M. Jackson School of International Studies. Tabitha specializes in Chinese foreign and environmental policy and researches China and global ocean governance. She has consulted for the UN, WWF, the World Bank, and the OECD, she serves on the board of directors of the China Club of Seattle, and is a member of the National Committee on U.S.-China Relations and the Washington State China Relations Council.

    Andrew is a senior lecturer in the Department of Politics, Philosophy and Religion at Lancaster University. His work examines the linkages between Chinese domestic politics and international relations, and more broadly he looks at maritime and territorial disputes, strategic communication, political propaganda, and Chinese Communist Party history. Andrew is the author of Chinese Nationalism and the Gray Zone: Case Analyses of Public Opinion and PRC Foreign Policy and the PRC Overseas Political Activities: Risk, Reaction and the Case of Australia.

    Recommendations:

    Andrew:

    • Haver, Zoe; China Maritime Report No. 12: Sansha City in China's South China Sea Strategy: Building a System of Administrative Control (2021)

    Tabitha:

    • The Constitution of Knowledge: A Defense of Truth by Jonathan Rauch (2021)
    • The Institutional Foundation of Economic Development by Shiping Tang (2022)

    Erik:

    • Japan; specifically, record shopping in Japan
    • BM-01 record

    Juliet:

    • Rodenbiker, Jesse; Global China in the American heartland: Chinese investment, populist coalitions, and the new red scare (2024)



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    58 mins
  • Leland Lazarus on Triads, Taiwan, and China's Forum Diplomacy in Latin America and the Caribbean
    Apr 22 2024

    Leland Lazarus joins Juliet to talk about Chinese and Taiwanese engagement in Latin America and the Caribbean, from official diplomatic activities to BRI projects to transnational organized crime.

    Leland Lazarus is the Associate Director of National Security at Florida International University’s Jack D. Gordon Institute of Public Policy. He is an expert on China’s relations with Latin America and the Caribbean, and manages a team of researchers and interns that collect data and analysis on U.S. national security and governance in the region. Fluent in both Mandarin and Spanish, he holds an M.A. in U.S.-China Foreign Policy at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, and a B.A. in International Relations at Brown University. His past experience includes work in the U.S. Embassy for Barbados and the Eastern Caribbean, the U.S. Consulate General in Shenyang, China, and former work as an Associate Producer at China Central Television and as a Fulbright Scholar in Panama.


    Recommendations:

    Leland:

    • Earth League International's work, particularly that of Andrea Crosta, founder, executive director, and board member
    • Chinese Activities in LAC Dashboard (soon to release 2.0)
    • FIU flagship conference: Hemispheric Security Conference on May 9 and 10

    Juliet:

    • China in Global Capitalism: Building International Solidarity Against Imperial Rivalry by Eli Friedman, Kevin Lin, Rosa Liu, Ashley Smith (coming June 2024)
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    46 mins
  • Environmental Justice and Coal-Fired Power Plants in Indonesia with Bowen Gu
    Mar 8 2024

    Bowen Gu joins Juliet and Erik on the podcast to talk about environmental justice and China's coal investments in Indonesia, with a focus on Gu's recent paper: Black gold and green BRI: A grounded analysis of Chinese investment in coal-fired power plants in Indonesia (2024).

    Bowen Gu is a PhD student at the Institute of Environmental Science and Technology, Autonomous University of Barcelona (ICTA-UAB). Her research looks into coal-related environmental justice movements in China and broader regions under the Belt and Road Initiative.

    Recommendations:

    Erik:

    • Terror Capitalism: Uyghur Dispossession and Masculinity in a Chinese City by Darren Byler (2022)
    • The symphonies of Glenn Branca (especially no.10)


    Bowen:

    • Land, Water, Air, and Freedom: The Making of World Movements for Environmental Justice by Joan Martínez-Alier (2023)
    • Album of Indonesian music (name tk)


    Juliet:

    • The Railpolitik: Leadership and Agency in Sino-African Infrastructure Development by Yuan Wang (2023)
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    41 mins
  • An Anthropological Understanding of Chinese-financed Special Economic Zones in Nigeria with Omolade Adunbi
    Nov 9 2023

    Professor Omolade Adunbi joins Juliet and Erik on the podcast to talk about China's free trade zones in Nigeria. Adunbi is the Director of the African Studies Center, Professor of Anthropology and Afroamerican and African Studies, Professor of Law, and Faculty Associate in the Program in the Environment at the University of Michigan. His research explores issues related to governance, infrastructures of extraction, environmental politics and rights, power, violence, culture, transnational institutions, multinational corporations, and the postcolonial state.


    Recommendations:

    Omolade:

    • Music of Fela Kuti
    • Power, Knowledge, Land: Contested Ontologies of Land and its Governance in Africa by Laura German (2022)


    Erik:

    • Episode of the Sinica Podcast: Robert Daly of the Kissinger Institute on the morality of U.S. China policy
    • Laufey's music, specifically her new album Bewitched


    Juliet:

    • Cooperating for the Climate: Learning from International Partnerships in China's Clean Energy Sector by Joanna Lewis (2023)


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    45 mins
  • How China is Reshaping International Technical Standards with Tim Rühlig
    Sep 27 2023

    Juliet, Erik, and guest Tim Ruhlig discuss technical standards, China’s growth in technical industries and its increasing influence in leading and setting standards, and the new geopolitics of technical standardization and interdependence.

    Tim Ruhlig is a senior fellow at the German Council on Foreign Relations, where he researches Europe-China relations, German-China relations, Hong Kong politics, and Chinese foreign industrial policy, He is the founder of the Digital Power China (DPC) Research Consortium, which brings together European engineers and Chinese scholars to carry out policy-relevant research on the PRC’s growing digital technology footprint and its implications for Europe.


    Recommendations:

    Tim:

    • The Emperor’s New Road: China and the Project of the Century, Jonathan Hillman (2020)
    • U.S.-Taiwan Relations: Will China's Challenge Lead to a Crisis? Bonnie Glaser, Ryan Hass, Richard Bush (2023)
    • Film: “To Life” Zhang Yi Mou (1994)
    • Wildland: The Making of America's Fury, Evan Osnos (2021)

    Erik:

    • "Barbie Heimer"—Barbie (2023) and Oppenheimer (2023) movies on the same day (recommendation is Barbie is the better movie)

    Juliet:

    • “Even China Isn’t Convinced It Can Replace the U.S.” Jessia Chen Weiss (2023)
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    46 mins