The PRC is widely recognized as a destination market for many women trafficked in Asia, particularly from Vietnam. Trafficking in women in China is a sensitive and complex issue that threatens public health, security, gender equity and sustainable development.
This article argues that a peculiar pattern of dependent asymmetry – ‘dual dependence’, i.e. a combination of internal and external dependence – has come to characterize the structure of China-Myanmar relations since the late 1980s.
Giuseppe Gabusi (T.wai & University of Turin) is author of the chapter "The politics of the developmental state" of the Handbook on the Politics of International Development (Elgar Handbooks in Development, 2022).
[IT] Raimondo Neironi (T.wai & Università di Torino) interviene nella puntata di Asiatica "Filippine: il ritorno al potere della dinastia dei Marcos" su Radio Radicale.
[IT] Il Sud-Est asiatico è una delle regioni del pianeta più vulnerabili al cambiamento climatico. Eventi naturali quali precipitazioni, inondazioni, cicloni tropicali e siccità si sono intensificati nel corso degli ultimi vent’anni, provocando danni incalcolabili all’ecosistema e alla già di per sé precaria rete infrastrutturale, soprattutto negli Stati insulari e…
“Pechino nei confronti degli Usa ha argomenti di forte pressione. La Cina non è solo la fabbrica del mondo, ma detiene quasi il completo monopolio dell’estrazione, al 70%, e della lavorazione, al 90%, delle terre rare e dei minerali criticI. Questi materiali, pur non essendo rari in assoluto, richiedono processi di estrazione complessi, costosissimi e altamente inquinanti che l’Occidente ha delegato alla Cina per decenni.”
Anna Caffarena is Full Professor of International Relations at the University of Torino and the Director of its Department of Cultures, Politics and Society. She has served as the first President of the Torino World Affairs Institute.
Prof. Giuseppe Gabusi is Associate Professor of International Political Economy and Political Economy of East Asia at the Department of Cultures, Politics and Society of the University of Turin. He is Head of T.wai's Indo-Pacific Program.
Pietro Masina is a non-resident Research Fellow at T.wai and a Full Professor of International Political Economy, History and Institutions of East Asia at the University of Naples “L'Orientale”.
Prof. Giorgio Prodi is Associate Professor of Applied Economics at the University of Modena and Reggio Emilia. He serves as Vice President of T.wai, the Torino World Affairs Institute.