Beijing moves to strengthen grip over disputed South China Sea
Beijing has moved to tighten its grip over the South China Sea by setting up new administrative structures in the disputed waters. The two new districts will be under the authority of the local government in Sansha, a city in the southern island of Hainan.The new districts will govern the Paracels and Macclesfield Bank – an area claimed by Vietnam and Taiwan – as well as the Spratly Islands and their adjacent waters, where there are multiple overlapping claims.
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The World Needs to Prevent Post-Pandemic Economic Conflicts
While the world is preoccupied coping with the human toll wrecked by the coronavirus pandemic, the stage is rapidly being set for profound global economic conflicts in the months ahead. Necessary immediate economic measures now underway, coupled with further inevitable recovery initiatives, are bound to aggravate long-festering policy differences between China, Europe, Japan, and the United States.
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India can collaborate with the US and Germany in moulding a new world order
One hundred years ago, there were no visas and passports for people to travel in Europe, America and their colonies. Then came World War I and things changed — national boundaries became rigid. Economic stagnation, and recession followed. Nationalism turned into ultra-nationalism, leading to another world war. After World War II, we created an interconnected and institutionalised global order. |
US tightens restrictions on technology exports to China, Russia and Venezuela
The Trump Administration announced new export control actions to prevent efforts by entities in China, Russia, and Venezuela to acquire American technology that could be used for development of weapons, military aircraft, surveillance through civilian supply chains. "It is important to consider the ramifications of doing business with countries that have histories of diverting goods purchased from US companies for military applications," said Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross on April 27th, 2020. |
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Beyond coronavirus: The path to the next normal
In a webinar organised by Confederation of Indian Industry on April 27th 2020, a roadmap for public, private and social sector leaders to navigate through the Covid-19 pandemic and adapt to the next normal was provided by Shubham Singhal, global leader of McKinsey’s Healthcare Systems & Services Practice. It was based on his co-authored article titled ‘’Beyond coronavirus: The path to the next normal’’ published by McKinsey. |
The Intricate Dance of Politics and Power During a Pandemic
A commonplace adage of the post-Cold War era of globalisation used to be that while ‘all economics is global, all politics is local’. The implication was that a country’s economics and politics danced to different tunes. There was one problem with this formulation. All economics is also political and since all politics is local, all economics in the end is also local.
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How coronavirus exposed the collapse of global leadership
As car crash interviews go, Bruce Aylward's was excruciating and revealing in equal measure. In late March, Alyward, a Canadian epidemiologist and adviser to the World Health Organization, was asked by Radio Television Hong Kong reporter Yvonne Tong whether Taiwan would continue to be denied WHO membership, given longstanding objections from China. |
The Architecture of International Relations After COVID-19: A Return to the ‘New Normal’
The international crisis triggered by the COVID-19 coronavirus pandemic has sparked a wave of predictions about a new world order. Many prominent politicians and scholars, including Henry Kissinger, believe that the pandemic will result in a global economic downturn, the worst since the Great Depression, which in turn will affect the system of international relations that developed after the end of the Cold War. |
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