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![The Missing Piece [International]](https://podcast-api-images.s3.amazonaws.com/corona/show/6163060/logo_300x300.jpeg)
After the White House fallout between US President Donald the Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, things are not going so well for Ukraine right now. While waiting for the response from Russia, no one knows what will happen to the war in Ukraine. In this conversation, Dr. Harold James, a well-known scholar, author joins the show to discuss the war in Ukraine and why it is crucial for China to pay attention to the details.
Dr. Harold James, the Claude and Lore Kelly Professor in European Studies at Princeton University, is Professor of History and International Affairs at the Woodrow Wilson School, and an associate at the Bendheim Center for Finance. His books include a study of the interwar depression in Germany, The German Slump (1986); an analysis of the changing character of national identity in Germany, A German Identity 1770-1990 (1989); International Monetary Cooperation Since Bretton Woods (1996), and The End of Globalization (2001), which is available in 8 languages. He was also coauthor of a history of Deutsche Bank (1995), which won the Financial Times Global Business Book Award in 1996, and he wrote The Deutsche Bank and the Nazi Economic War Against the Jews (2001). His most recent books include Family Capitalism, Harvard University Press, 2006.
By The Missing PieceAfter the White House fallout between US President Donald the Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, things are not going so well for Ukraine right now. While waiting for the response from Russia, no one knows what will happen to the war in Ukraine. In this conversation, Dr. Harold James, a well-known scholar, author joins the show to discuss the war in Ukraine and why it is crucial for China to pay attention to the details.
Dr. Harold James, the Claude and Lore Kelly Professor in European Studies at Princeton University, is Professor of History and International Affairs at the Woodrow Wilson School, and an associate at the Bendheim Center for Finance. His books include a study of the interwar depression in Germany, The German Slump (1986); an analysis of the changing character of national identity in Germany, A German Identity 1770-1990 (1989); International Monetary Cooperation Since Bretton Woods (1996), and The End of Globalization (2001), which is available in 8 languages. He was also coauthor of a history of Deutsche Bank (1995), which won the Financial Times Global Business Book Award in 1996, and he wrote The Deutsche Bank and the Nazi Economic War Against the Jews (2001). His most recent books include Family Capitalism, Harvard University Press, 2006.