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KURLANTZICK, JOSHUA (19) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   101667


Asian century: not quite yet / Kurlantzick, Joshua   Journal Article
Kurlantzick, Joshua Journal Article
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Publication 2011.
Key Words ASian Security  America  Border  Obama  Weak Spots  Economic Condition 
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2
ID:   190567


Beijing's global media offensive: China's uneven campaign to influence Asia and the world / Kurlantzick, Joshua 2023  Book
Kurlantzick, Joshua Book
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Publication New York, Oxford University Press, 2023.
Description x, 535p.hbk
Standard Number 9780197744659
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Copies: C:1/I:0,R:0,Q:0
Circulation
Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
060380302.230951/KUR 060380MainOn ShelfGeneral 
3
ID:   079290


Charm offensive: how China's soft power is transforming the world / Kurlantzick, Joshua 2007  Book
Kurlantzick, Joshua Book
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Publication New Haven, Yale University Press, 2007.
Description xiv, 306p.Hbk
Standard Number 9780300117035
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Copies: C:1/I:0,R:0,Q:0
Circulation
Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
052695303.48251/KUR 052695MainOn ShelfGeneral 
4
ID:   069412


China's Africa strategy / Eisenman, Joshua; Kurlantzick, Joshua   Journal Article
Kurlantzick, Joshua Journal Article
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Publication 2006.
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5
ID:   073496


China's charm offensive in Southeast Asia / Kurlantzick, Joshua   Journal Article
Kurlantzick, Joshua Journal Article
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Publication 2006.
Summary/Abstract Many Southeast Asians now regard China as a benign presence to be emulated-a sharp contrast with current regional views of the United States."
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6
ID:   075421


China's Latin leap forward / Kurlantzick, Joshua   Journal Article
Kurlantzick, Joshua Journal Article
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Publication 2006.
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7
ID:   067029


Decline of American soft power / Kurlantzick, Joshua 2005  Journal Article
Kurlantzick, Joshua Journal Article
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Publication 2005.
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8
ID:   147251


Democratic backsliding and the reach of isis in Southeast Asia / Kurlantzick, Joshua   Journal Article
Kurlantzick, Joshua Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Governments in Southeast Asia have adopted policies that are fueling militancy by restricting freedoms and fostering authoritarianism
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9
ID:   051413


Gloomy Burmese days / Kurlantzick, Joshua   Journal Article
Kurlantzick, Joshua Journal Article
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Publication April 2004.
Summary/Abstract The optimism surrounding the possibility of a democratic thaw in 2002 " was a mirage, a blip distracting attention from a more depressing long-term trend urma's Asian neighbors, including democracies India and Thailand, increasingly are giving the junta free to dominate politics and abuse the citizenry"
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10
ID:   060664


Laos still communist after all these years / Kurlantzick, Joshua Mar 2005  Journal Article
Kurlantzick, Joshua Journal Article
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Publication Mar 2005.
Key Words Southeast Asia  Laos 
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11
ID:   106727


Myanmar: the next failed state? / Kurlantzick, Joshua   Journal Article
Kurlantzick, Joshua Journal Article
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Publication 2011.
Summary/Abstract China, other Asian nations, and the United States remain unprepared for Myanmar to spark a refugee crisis, a large-scale conflict along its borders-or even a nuclear breakout.
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12
ID:   093210


New Schizophrenia: Asia between integration and isolation / Kurlantzick, Joshua   Journal Article
Kurlantzick, Joshua Journal Article
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Publication 2010.
Summary/Abstract Many cultural, economic, and political trends suggest that Asian nations are becoming more integrated and even developing a regional consciousness. . . . Concurrently, however, other trends have led to rising nationalist sentiment in the region.
Key Words European Union  Japan  Taiwan  China  South Korea  Asia 
Beijing  New Schizophrenia 
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13
ID:   173730


Pandemic and Southeast Asia’s Democratic Struggles / Kurlantzick, Joshua   Journal Article
Kurlantzick, Joshua Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Southeast Asia was one of the first regions hit by the spread of COVID-19. The region’s public health response varied, with some states like Vietnam proving models for the world, while others, like Indonesia and the Philippines, faltered badly. However, they have generally taken a common approach in one area: nearly all have used the pandemic to crack down on political freedoms and civil liberties.
Key Words Authoritarianism  Democracy  Southeast Asia  Pandemic  COVID-19 
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14
ID:   076849


Pax Asia-Pacifica? East Asian integration and its implications / Kurlantzick, Joshua   Journal Article
Kurlantzick, Joshua Journal Article
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Publication 2007.
Summary/Abstract Most days, the street outside the Thai embassy in Phnom Penh fills early with pedicab drivers shuttling old women to market. One winter day in 2003, however, a far different crowd gathered outside the Thai mission. Cambodian newspapers had misquoted a Thai television pop star as calling Cambodians "worms" and questioning whether Angkor Wat, Cambodia's ancient temple complex, should be returned to Thailand. Stoked by the report, mobs attacked Thai-owned businesses across Phnom Penh, causing millions of dollars worth of damage. A decade ago, a conflict between two East Asian nations would have been resolved by the region's only major power, the United States, which had dominated trade, diplomacy, and culture in East Asia since World War II. In this case, Cambodia and Thailand sought out China to serve as an informal mediator. After the Chinese ambassador in Cambodia and Thailand to resolve their dispute, Chinese vice foreign minister Wang Yi helped the Thai and Cambodian representatives lay out their grievances. Chastened, the two sides began to resolve their dispute. The Cambodian-Thai case is hardly unique. Over the past decade and particularly since the Asian financial crisis of the late 1990s, East Asia has begun to integrate, forming the beginnings of a true regional community and looking to actors within the region such as China, rather than the United States, to resolve security and economic disputes. Across East Asia, governments and leaders are developing their own institutions and intraregional trade patterns. They even have begun holding their first truly regional meeting, the annual East Asia Summit (EAS), which first convened in December 2005. Outside government, average people have developed a growing pan-Asian consciousness, the result of closer commercial links, the rise of an East Asian middle class, and the penetration of Asian pop culture products into households. In subtle ways, people across East Asia, like Europeans after World War II, are beginning to think of themselves as citizens of a region. In recent years, as East Asia has been building regional ties and nascent institutions, the United States often has been absent from the region. By undervaluing East Asian integration, Washington has created the impression that it views East Asian regionalism as a threat to U.S. power. Yet, Asia's new identity and institutions need not be a challenge to the United States, and Washington must remain engaged with the region, which is now the engine of global economic growth and potentially the world's most dangerous security environment. If the United States can revamp its East Asia policy to capitalize on the benefits of pan-Asian institutions, it can remain vital in an era of Pax Asia-Pacifica.
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15
ID:   076833


Raising the stakes / Kurlantzick, Joshua   Journal Article
Kurlantzick, Joshua Journal Article
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Publication 2007.
Key Words Globalization  Multinationalism 
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16
ID:   053499


Repression and Revolt in China's wild west / Kurlantzick, Joshua Sep 2004  Journal Article
Kurlantzick, Joshua Journal Article
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Publication Sep 2004.
Key Words Internal Politics-China  China  Xinjiang  Autonomy 
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17
ID:   051881


Taking multinationals to court how the alien tort act promotes / Kurlantzick, Joshua Spring 2004  Journal Article
Kurlantzick, Joshua Journal Article
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Publication Spring 2004.
Key Words NGOs  Human right  Multinationals 
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18
ID:   118064


Two steps back: democracy is in retreat, and there's a surprising culprit / Kurlantzick, Joshua   Journal Article
Kurlantzick, Joshua Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
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19
ID:   064986


Viva Macao? / Kurlantzick, Joshua Sep 2005  Journal Article
Kurlantzick, Joshua Journal Article
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Publication Sep 2005.
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