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The Asian 21st Century e-book downloads top 3 million! Chinese version already published by CITIC
As of July 3rd, downloads of The Asian 21st Century e-book exceeded 3 million! The book, authored by Singapore veteran diplomat Kishore Mahbubani, is part of the “China and Globalization” series, which is jointly published by the Center for China and Globalization (CCG) and Springer Nature Group.
July 06 , 2023 -
Lord Jim O’Neill: What Is the Right Way to Structure Global Health? The Case for Radical New Organisations and Thinking
If a solution to antibiotic abuse cannot be found, then by 2050, there could be as many as 10 million people a year dying from AMR-related illnesses. The COVID-19 pandemic has proved that there are massive economic and financial costs from global health threats when not met by fast robust actions.
May 09 , 2022 -
China and the World in a Changing Context-Perspectives from Ambassadors to China
China and the World in a Changing Context-Perspectives from Ambassadors to China is the latest volume in CCG’s “China and Globalization” series, which seeks to create a balanced global perspective by gathering the views of highly influential scholars, practitioners, and opinion leaders from around the world on issues of policy and governance.
April 14 , 2022 -
Ambassador of New Zealand to China and Mongolia: New Zealand – A Trade-Led Economic Recovery
For most of us, COVID-19 has been the greatest challenge to our societies and our economies in more than a generation. For New Zealand, part of the answer to rebuilding our economy lies in a trade-driven response achieved through international cooperation at every level.
May 06 , 2022 -
Pascal Lamy: The Pitfalls, Principles and Priorities of Establishing a New Global Economic Order
“Some scholars call it the world legal economic order, while others describe it as the ‘rules-based’ global order. This essay contends that the world urgently needs a new economic order. While the world cannot, and should not, revolutionize the system that is currently in place, it does need to consider how it should be reorganized and subsequently replaced by a new order. It is essential that a new order serves not only the established world powers but a greater number of the newly emerging economies and nations. The development of this new order must ensure that it is representative of a world that is markedly different from the post Second World War ‘legal economic order’. Those creating the new order are dealing with new challenges that could not even be imagined at the end of the Second World War. Humanity now inhabits a world that is more interconnected, more interdependent and, in a word, more ‘global’. This connectivity is part and parcel of the process of globalization, which at this point cannot be avoided. China and other emerging powers will be greater contributors to the process of globalization if they follow fundamental principles that benefit all of mankind.”
April 12 , 2022