Kerry Brown: Will Britain’s New Prime Minister Move Closer to China?
Unlike May, Johnson has only a few months to prove he is about more than just empty rhetoric.
Unlike May, Johnson has only a few months to prove he is about more than just empty rhetoric.
Global survey shows more people keen on Chinese solutions to international issues
People like to point to Samuel Huntington when discussing civilization. But we didn’t expect this much frowned-upon ivory-tower analysis to find its way into a U.S. high-level apparatus until Kiron Skinner, Director of Policy Planning for the U.S. State Department, reignited the civilization debate recently. According to her, while the Cold War constituted “a fight within the Western family,” the competition with China “is a fight with a really different civilization,” and she added that “the United States hasn’t had that before.” Well, she does have a point: China is different. Interestingly, Skinner’s remarks came only a few days before China hosted the Conference on Dialogue of Asian Civilizations. So are civilizations bound to clash? Let’s take a look inside the conference. More than 2,000 participants from 47 Asian countries and other regions gathered in Beijing to celebrate cultural diversity, enhance cultural bonds and foster a community with a shared future for humanity. Click the video for more.
Experts say China and India should cooperate more to realize the anticipation
A combination of modern agriculture and tourism creates wonders in disadvantaged areas
White paper outlines how Xinjiang has always been an integral part of the nation