
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Alex Yu-Ting Lin, Assistant Director and Senior Research Fellow at the University of Notre Dame’s International Security Center, explains how China’s concerns about status interact with smaller regional states and how that in turn helps shape the US-China rivalry. He examines how states use information warfare to delegitimize adversaries’ foreign policies and applies his analysis to US-China relations. He also discusses Euro-centric bias in international relations studies, China’s approach to flashpoints like the South China Sea and Taiwan, and whether China should be considered “revisionist,” among other topics.
Show Notes
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
4.4
8787 ratings
Alex Yu-Ting Lin, Assistant Director and Senior Research Fellow at the University of Notre Dame’s International Security Center, explains how China’s concerns about status interact with smaller regional states and how that in turn helps shape the US-China rivalry. He examines how states use information warfare to delegitimize adversaries’ foreign policies and applies his analysis to US-China relations. He also discusses Euro-centric bias in international relations studies, China’s approach to flashpoints like the South China Sea and Taiwan, and whether China should be considered “revisionist,” among other topics.
Show Notes
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
118 Listeners
961 Listeners
271 Listeners
1,077 Listeners
315 Listeners
410 Listeners
29 Listeners
595 Listeners
201 Listeners
700 Listeners
133 Listeners
147 Listeners
399 Listeners
103 Listeners
130 Listeners
151 Listeners
414 Listeners