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Democracies, perk up: centralizing power is a one-way ticket to a cliff. China’s one-man show thrives on silence—nobody dares call out the emperor when he’s stark naked. When Xi clung to zero-Covid, ...
The bipartisan vote was seen as a victory by many, and may signal a bigger political shift, with a broader and more diverse ...
The editors of The New York Times Book Review bring you immersive climate fiction , our latest reviews , gripping dystopian ...
China plans to overtake the United States by building the world’s largest national park system, a network of wilderness bigger than Texas. Although China only created its first national park ...
At a time when Western institutions continue to dominate the international legal stage, China has made a bold declaration of intent to offer an alternative narrative of global order by establishing a ...
Many iPhones stolen in places as far apart as New York, LA, and London end up in a single building in China, where they are resold or stripped for parts.
The trade war has heightened China’s need to develop gateways to import the continent’s soybeans, corn and other foodstuffs that are the only viable alternative supply to U.S. exports.
Great power rivalry in the Indo-Pacific is shaped by the unpredictability of the second Trump administration, China’s expanded presence in the Pacific and middle power hedging.
For struggling property giants seeking any indications of a turnaround in China’s prolonged real estate crisis, “topping off” a building is cause for celebration.
Not 1984, but 2084: Michelle Fung imagines a dystopian future in art that’s in part a response to consumerism and environmental woes.
Vietnam has positioned itself in recent years as an attractive destination for Big Tech companies looking to move away from China. But Hanoi’s policies regarding social media have increasingly ...