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Education’s
role in eliminating racism: We believe that George Floyd
and all those victimized before him died in vain if we do not do more
than emote, declare, and despair. Read a
statement from Asia Society's Center for Global Education at Asia
Society on how they are re-committing to transforming
education to build a more just and equal society.
A quick
programming note: As those of us in the northern
hemisphere transition into summer, we’ll be sending out this newsletter
every other Tuesday — so the next edition after this will drop on June
23. Did someone forward this to you? Subscribe
here.
This week: Author
and journalist Fareed
Zakaria and Kevin
Rudd discuss whether democratic or authoritarian
governments handled COVID-19 better, Orville Schell writes about the
end of an era in U.S.-China relations, and a new book considers the
global consequences of Indonesia’s anti-Communist killings. Plus, our
usual roundup of coronavirus content as well as a look at upcoming events
across the Asia Society network.
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POLICY
Democracy
vs. Authoritarianism Under COVID-19
The
spread of the coronavirus from China to the rest of the world has
presented political observers with a provocative question. Have the
world’s democracies handled the outbreak better? Or have authoritarian
regimes?
Asia Society Policy Institute President Kevin Rudd and author and
journalist Fareed Zakaria considered this question during a
wide-ranging conversation last week on the response to
COVID-19 from different systems of government.
Zakaria cited examples of both democratic and authoritarian governments
that have handled the coronavirus outbreak well, praising Singapore and
Hong Kong in particular for establishing effective contact tracing
mechanisms without misappropriating vast amounts of human data. But
China’s record, Zakaria said, was more mixed: Although Beijing
succeeded in suppressing the virus, it did so by imposing a severe
lockdown, creating a template for managing COVID-19 from which
countries like Italy and the United States borrowed.
Zakaria argued that the examples of South Korea, Japan, and Taiwan,
democracies that smothered the virus without resorting to shutdowns,
revealed the flaws of China’s approach.
“Yes, COVID cases are down to almost nothing in China,” he said. “But
they’re down to almost nothing in a lot of other places that didn’t do
what the Chinese did.”
Zakaria and Rudd also discussed the recent protests in the United
States and elsewhere following the death of George Floyd.
“They’re the most serious set of racially motivated protests since
1968,” said Zakaria, who attributed them to “deep inequities built into
the [American] system that have never been addressed.”
Image: Ezra Acayan/Getty
Images
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CURRENT
AFFAIRS
Orville
Schell on U.S.-China Relations: The Death of Engagement
In
the near half-century since President Richard Nixon made his famous
visit to Beijing, American policy toward China has, with remarkable
consistency, followed the logic of engagement. Bolstering economic
ties, the theory went, would fold China into the U.S.-led international
order and facilitate the country’s eventual transition to democracy.
In a
sweeping essay reviewing the past four-and-a-half decades
of Sino-American history, Arthur Ross Director of Asia Society’s Center
on U.S.-China Relations Orville Schell makes a
convincing case that engagement is on life support. Drawing
on his reflections from visits to China dating back to 1975, Schell
reveals American policymakers consistently underestimated the
resilience of the Chinese Communist Party, believing that its evolution
into a U.S.-friendly democracy was inevitable. Now, under the
leadership of Xi
Jinping, China’s government is as entrenched as ever —
and relations with Washington are under considerable strain.
Schell’s essay
appears in The
Wire China, a recently launched digital weekly, and
includes photographs and notes from his lifetime of observing China.
More: In The
Diplomat, Asia Society Policy Institute Vice President for
International Security and Diplomacy Daniel Russel cites
three flashpoints that could turn a “cold war” between China
and the United States hot.
Image: AFP/Getty
Images
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BOOKS
How
Indonesia's Anti-Communist Killings Shaped the Modern World
In
1965, the Indonesian military leader Suharto launched
a brutal extermination campaign against Indonesians either
affiliated with the Communist Party or harboring leftist sympathies.
The killings claimed up to one million lives and cemented Suharto’s
grip on power for the next 33 years.
In his new book The Jakarta Method,
author Vincent
Bevins documents how the United States government, then
escalating its involvement in the Vietnam War, was complicit in
Suharto’s rise, which established a pro-U.S. government in the world’s
fourth-largest country. In this
conversation with Asia
Blog, Bevins discusses how events in Indonesia became a
template for anti-communist actions throughout South and Central
America, forever shaping the historical trajectory of developing
countries caught in the Cold War.
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ETC.
COVID-19
Update: A Pulmonary Physician on What It's Like To Treat COVID-19
- Asia
21 Young Leader Avinesh
Bhar, a pulmonary physician, has spent the last
three months treating COVID-19 patients in Macon, Georgia. In this
conversation with Asia
Blog, Bhar shares what he’s taken from the experience
as well as how he thinks it will change the future of American
health care.
- Asia
Society Southern California presented a
conversation with New
York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof and
journalist Sheryl
WuDunn on the human cost of COVID-19.
- Shen
Lu, a Chinese journalist living
in the United States,
writes in ChinaFile
about how her immersion into traditional Chinese cooking has
alleviated her homesickness and helped her cope with the isolation
caused by COVID-19.
- Best-selling
author Parag
Khanna discusses how COVID-19 will reshape the
global economy and supply chain in
a conversation presented by Asia Society Northern
California.
- The
latest episode of the Asia
In-Depth podcast features a conversation with Washington Post correspondent
Gerry
Shih, one of the journalists forced to leave China
this year, on the
increasing difficulty in covering the country.
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UPCOMING EVENTS
With
the suspension and cancellation of in-person programming due to the
outbreak of COVID-19, Asia Society is planning to hold virtual programs
on the virus as well as other subjects — please follow us on Facebook
and Twitter
for updates, and subscribe to our
YouTube channel.
- June
9: Kevin Rudd, Orville Schell, and fellow China expert Susan Shirk
make
sense of the country’s just-concluded major political
gatherings in a conversation presented by the Asia Society Policy
Institute.
- June 11:
Caitlin
Welsh, director of the Global Food Security
Program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, assesses
the impact of COVID-19 on food security in an
event presented by Asia Society Texas.
- June
12: Bob
Davis and Lingling
Wei, authors of the new book Superpower Showdown,
speak
with Asia Society Policy Institute Vice President Wendy Cutler
and former Trump administration official Clete Willems
about the economic dimensions of the U.S.-China relationship.
- June 22-23:
The Asia Society Business Council presents a two-day webinar
series on COVID-19 from a scientific and a business perspective. Click
here for information about day one, and here
for information about day two.
- June 24-25: Asia
Society’s 2020 Global Talent, Diversity & Inclusion Virtual
Symposium will feature engaging speakers on building unity and
providing leadership in the new normal. More information is
available here.
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JOIN & SUPPORT
Asia Society relies on the generosity
of its friends and members to support its mission of strengthening
relationships and promoting understanding among the people, leaders,
and institutions of Asia and the United States.
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