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The rise of the middle class in China has heightened the demand for public participation in the Chinese government’s decision-making processes. Discussants examine public participation in China's policy-making process.
A panel discussion with Dmitri Trenin, Carnegie Endowment Senior Associate and Director of Research at the Carnegie Moscow Center, and Celeste Wallander, Director of the Russia and Eurasia Program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.
Participants from across the Middle East joined U.S. and European scholars and policy-makers at a three-day conference in Kuwait, to discuss the role of Islamist groups in Arab political reform. While suspicious of the U.S., most participants professed support for democratic principles and expressed interest in continuing the dialogue.
The Carnegie Endowment hosted a panel discussion to discuss the implications of Georgian President Eduard Shevardnadze's resignation on political stability in Georgia, as well as neighboring countries, and on Georgia's foreign policy.
Discussants analyze the nature of organized peasant rebellions in rural China.
A meeting on German foreign relations, their context and German policy toward the East with Dr. Klaus Segbers, Professor of Political Science and East European Politics at Osteuropa-Institut and Department of Political Science, Free University of Berlin.
Khalid Al-Dakhil discusses U.S.-Saudi relations after the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001.
Dr. Abdullah discussed the current situation in Afghanistan and answered questions from participants. Read transcript below, or click to listen to audio.
A discussion meeting with Timothy Colton of Harvard University and Michael McFaul of the Carnegie Endowment.
Professor Jerome A. Cohen assessed recent U.S.-China criminal justice disputes in the historical context. Dr. Murray Scot Tanner focused on contemporary criminal justice and anti-torture regulations in China. Dr. Michael D. Swaine moderated the discussion.