Scholarship

Total 14 Posts

MERICS Report on Managing China’s Economic Coercion

In a new paper entitled "Fasten your seatbelts: How to manage China’s economic coercion" published by European think tank MERICS, authors Aya Adachi, Alexander Brown and Max J. Zenglein offer a number of insights into the use of economic coercion by the Chinese government and how it

New Law Journal Article Examines Chinese Sanctions Regime

In a recent law journal article, law professor Timothy Webster describes the Chinese sanctions regime, the Western sanctions mechanisms that inspired it, and also its deviation from Western goals.

Law Journal Article Looks at Concurrent Proceedings under Chinese BITs and Domestic Courts

A recent article in the ICSID Review examines a German investment in China, and how a government expropriation was challenged in domestic courts and before an international tribunal.

New Fred Bergsten Book on U.S., China and Global Economic Leadership

At a Peterson Institute event last week, Fred Bergsten discussed his new book entitled "The United States vs. China: The Quest for Global Economic Leadership."

New Paper Examines China's Emerging Practice in Subsidizing New Energy Vehicles

A new paper by legal scholars Mandy Meng Fang and Weihuan Zhou offers an analysis of China’s "emerging practice in subsidizing the low carbon energy (LCE) transition by using the new energy vehicles (NEVs) industry as a case study." They describe a shift in priorities for Chinese

New Paper Considers China's Changing Perspective on the WTO

A new paper [https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3958510] by legal scholar Henry Gao looks at how China’s perspective on the WTO has changed over the years, from initially viewing it as "the symbol for its aspiration to integrate into the world economy,"

New Paper Shows How WTO Jurisprudence Has Created Flexibilities for Anti-Dumping Actions against Distorted Markets, Which China Has Made Use Of

A new paper [https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3929143] by legal scholars Weihuan Zhou and Xiaomeng Qu looks at the evolution of the World Trade Organization (WTO)’s jurisprudence on anti-dumping (AD), focusing on the flexibility the WTO AD Agreement provides for tackling market distortions caused
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