Research Facet Area of Focus - Research Christopher J. Ruhm Craig Volden Bala Mulloth Eileen Chou Benjamin Castleman Sarah Turner Edgar O. Olsen Sophie Trawalter Benjamin Converse Christine Mahoney Timothy Wilson Adam Leive James H. Wyckoff William Shobe Charles Holt Daniel W. Player Daphna Bassok Jay Shimshack Jeanine Braithwaite John Pepper Richard Bonnie David Leblang John Holbein Leora Friedberg Molly Lipscomb James Savage Sebastian Tello Trillo Frederick P. Hitz Gabrielle Adams Gerald Warburg Isaac Mbiti Paul S. Martin Raymond C. Scheppach Ruth Gaare Bernheim Andrew S. Pennock Gerald Higginbotham Jazmin Brown-Iannuzzi Jennifer Lawless Michele Claibourn Noah Myung Philip Potter (-) Harry Harding Facet People - Research Facet UVA Partner - Research Published Research A View from the United States Authors: Harry Harding Since early June, Hong Kong has been experiencing one of the most serious political crises in its history, arguably the worst since the Maoist-inspired demonstrations against British colonial rule in 1967. The city has been wracked by near-continuous mass protests, some peaceful, some violent. Learn more Published Research Has U.S. China Policy Failed? Authors: Harry Harding The United States is immersed in its most intense China policy debate in decades, which will almost certainly get more heated and public in 2016. For a variety of reasons, reviewed here, dissatisfaction with China’s domestic and international evolution has become widespread as has pessimism about the future of U.S.–China relations, leading to a growing debate over three broad ways to revise U.S. policy. Learn more Published Research The Halting Advance of Pluralism Authors: Harry Harding Reprinted in Andrew J. Nathan and Marc F. Plattner (eds.), Will China Democratize? (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2013), pp. 44-50. Learn more Published Research American Visions of the Future of U.S.-China Relations: Competition, Cooperation, and Conflict Authors: Harry Harding, David Shambaugh (ed.) Learn more Published Research How the Past Shapes the Present: Five Ways in Which History Affects China’s Contemporary Foreign Relations Authors: Harry Harding Learn more
Published Research A View from the United States Authors: Harry Harding Since early June, Hong Kong has been experiencing one of the most serious political crises in its history, arguably the worst since the Maoist-inspired demonstrations against British colonial rule in 1967. The city has been wracked by near-continuous mass protests, some peaceful, some violent. Learn more
Published Research Has U.S. China Policy Failed? Authors: Harry Harding The United States is immersed in its most intense China policy debate in decades, which will almost certainly get more heated and public in 2016. For a variety of reasons, reviewed here, dissatisfaction with China’s domestic and international evolution has become widespread as has pessimism about the future of U.S.–China relations, leading to a growing debate over three broad ways to revise U.S. policy. Learn more
Published Research The Halting Advance of Pluralism Authors: Harry Harding Reprinted in Andrew J. Nathan and Marc F. Plattner (eds.), Will China Democratize? (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2013), pp. 44-50. Learn more
Published Research American Visions of the Future of U.S.-China Relations: Competition, Cooperation, and Conflict Authors: Harry Harding, David Shambaugh (ed.) Learn more
Published Research How the Past Shapes the Present: Five Ways in Which History Affects China’s Contemporary Foreign Relations Authors: Harry Harding Learn more