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DTSTART:20251102T020000
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DESCRIPTION:Moynihan Institute’s program for the Study of Global Politics w
 elcomes Jessica Chen Weiss from Johns Hopkins University School of Advance
 d International Studies.Beneath Xi Jinping’s grand slogans of a “Chinese d
 ream” and a “shared future for humankind\,” there are internal tensions\, 
 debates and competing interests that continue to shape China’s approach to
  the world. Through the lens of domestic politics\, nationalism and regime
  insecurity in China\, Weiss will examine the evolving and contested lands
 cape of what “China” wants. The talk will conclude with policy implication
 s for the United States\, prospects for peaceful coexistence\, and the fut
 ure of international order.&nbsp\;Jessica Chen Weiss is the David M. Lampt
 on Professor of China Studies at Johns Hopkins School of Advanced Internat
 ional Studies in Washington\, D.C.\, and a nonresident senior fellow at th
 e Asia Society Policy Institute Center for China Analysis. From 2021 to 20
 22\, she served as a senior advisor on the U.S. Department of State's poli
 cy planning staff through a Council on Foreign Relations International Aff
 airs Fellowship. She previously held academic positions at Cornell Univers
 ity and Yale University.Weiss's acclaimed first book\, “Powerful Patriots:
  Nationalist Protest in China's Foreign Relations” (Oxford University Pres
 s\, 2014)\, explored the Chinese Communist Party's management of nationali
 st protests as a tool for balancing domestic control and foreign policy. H
 er forthcoming book\, “A World Safe for Autocracy? The Domestic Politics o
 f China's Foreign Policy” (Oxford University Press)\, examines how interna
 l politics and regime insecurity shape China's global ambitions and its ro
 le in the international order.
DTEND:20250117T183000Z
DTSTAMP:20260418T202149Z
DTSTART:20250117T170000Z
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SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:A World Safe for Autocracy? The Domestic Politics of Chinese Foreig
 n Policy
UID:RFCALITEM639121261091449330
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<p>Moynihan Institute’s program for the Study 
 of Global Politics welcomes<strong> </strong>Jessica Chen Weiss from Johns
  Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies.</p><p>Beneat
 h Xi Jinping’s grand slogans of a “Chinese dream” and a “shared future for
  humankind\,” there are internal tensions\, debates and competing interest
 s that continue to shape China’s approach to the world. Through the lens o
 f domestic politics\, nationalism and regime insecurity in China\, Weiss w
 ill examine the evolving and contested landscape of what “China” wants. Th
 e talk will conclude with policy implications for the United States\, pros
 pects for peaceful coexistence\, and the future of international order.&nb
 sp\;</p><p><strong>Jessica Chen Weiss</strong> is the David M. Lampton Pro
 fessor of China Studies at Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International 
 Studies in Washington\, D.C.\, and a nonresident senior fellow at the Asia
  Society Policy Institute Center for China Analysis. From 2021 to 2022\, s
 he served as a senior advisor on the U.S. Department of State's policy pla
 nning staff through a Council on Foreign Relations International Affairs F
 ellowship. She previously held academic positions at Cornell University an
 d Yale University.</p><p><span style="background-color: rgba(0\, 0\, 0\, 0
 )\; color: inherit\; font-family: inherit\; font-size: inherit\; text-alig
 n: inherit\; text-transform: inherit\; word-spacing: normal\; caret-color:
  auto\; white-space: inherit">Weiss's acclaimed first book\, “</span>Power
 ful Patriots: Nationalist Protest in China's Foreign Relations”<span style
 ="background-color: rgba(0\, 0\, 0\, 0)\; color: inherit\; font-family: in
 herit\; font-size: inherit\; text-align: inherit\; text-transform: inherit
 \; word-spacing: normal\; caret-color: auto\; white-space: inherit"> (Oxfo
 rd University Press\, 2014)\, explored the Chinese Communist Party's manag
 ement of nationalist protests as a tool for balancing domestic control and
  foreign policy. Her forthcoming book\, “</span>A World Safe for Autocracy
 ? The Domestic Politics of China's Foreign Policy”<span style="background-
 color: rgba(0\, 0\, 0\, 0)\; color: inherit\; font-family: inherit\; font-
 size: inherit\; text-align: inherit\; text-transform: inherit\; word-spaci
 ng: normal\; caret-color: auto\; white-space: inherit"> (Oxford University
  Press)\, examines how internal politics and regime insecurity shape China
 's global ambitions and its role in the international order.</span></p>
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