Assessing the impact of China on global governance in the age of power diffusion

Global China

Assessing the impact of China on global governance in the age of power diffusion

Anticipating a new nuclear deal: Chinese and Iranian experts analyze the Iran-China-Russia meeting in Beijing

Global China Research & Policy Papers

Giorgia Facchini and Veronica Turrini (ChinaMed, T.wai) are authors of the issue of the ChinaMed Observer "Anticipating a new nuclear deal: Chinese and Iranian experts analyze the Iran-China-Russia meeting in Beijing".

Apr 3, 2025

China in the Shadow of October 7

Global China Research & Policy Papers

In 2024, Israeli media coverage of China remained predominantly negative, continuing the trend established the previous year. Driven initially by Beijing’s perceived "pro-Palestinian" stance following the October 7 attack, disillusionment among Israel’s China experts has only deepened throughout the duration of the war in Gaza.

Mar 21, 2025

Rai Radio 3 – 10 marzo 2025

Global China In the media

[IT] Simone Dossi (T.wai & Università degli Studi di Milano) è intervistato nella puntata "I flussi globali di armi | La muraglia d'acciaio | Il Congresso nazionale del popolo" della trasmissione “Radio3 Mondo” su Rai Radio 3.

Mar 11, 2025

Chinese experts discuss Trump’s Gaza Plan and the ceasefire

Global China Research & Policy Papers

Miriam Verzellino is author of the issue of the ChinaMed Observer "Chinese experts discuss Trump’s Gaza Plan and the ceasefire".

Mar 6, 2025

Blowback: when China’s Belt and Road Initiative meets democratic institutions

Global China Research & Policy Papers

Andrea Ghiselli (ChinaMed, T.wai & University of Exeter) and Pippa Morgan (Duke Kunshan University) are authors of the article "Blowback: when China’s Belt and Road Initiative meets democratic institutions" published in the International Studies Quarterly (Volume 69, Issue 1, March 2025).

Mar 6, 2025
  • Global China Events

    Global China in the Media

    • Head of Project

      18 May 2025

      Il problema non è la guerra commerciale, ma il modello economico della Cina. La radice degli squilibri globali non sta nella guerra commerciale in sé, ma nelle dinamiche interne all’economia cinese. Pechino continua a produrre più di quanto consumi o investa, e questo la spinge inevitabilmente a esportare in eccesso.

      Anche se l’accordo di Ginevra prevede la riduzione di alcuni dazi e la rimozione di barriere non tariffarie, si tratta di misure insufficienti a riequilibrare un sistema che resta asimmetrico alla radice. Il vero nodo è la debolezza della domanda interna cinese, che non permette un riequilibrio spontaneo del commercio.”

      READ MORE

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