http://releases.usnewswire.com/GetRelease.asp?id=53681


Brookings Launches China Initiative

9/20/2005 1:37:00 PM


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To: National and International desks 

Contact: Dewardric L. McNeal (D.L.), 202-797-6027, [EMAIL PROTECTED], or
Shawn Dhar, 202-797-6284, [EMAIL PROTECTED], both of the Brookings
Institution 

WASHINGTON, Sept. 20 /U.S. Newswire/ -- The Brookings Institution today
launched its new China Initiative, which is intended to explore the dynamics
of China's transformation and emergence as a political and economic power
and the implications for the United States, China, the East Asian region,
and the world. 

The Initiative was established through the generosity of Brookings Chairman
John L. Thornton, and will be directed by Senior Fellow Jeffrey A. Bader,
who previously served as ambassador and a senior official at the State
Department, National Security Council, and the Office of the U.S. Trade
Representative. 

"The rise of China and its impact on the world is the most important
geo-political event of the twenty-first century," said Thornton, who is a
professor of global leadership at Tsinghua University in Beijing. "With
today's launch, Brookings is now poised to establish itself as a key
destination for both Chinese and American policy-makers seeking to
understand China's critically important role in today's world."

The China Initiative will focus on areas in which China has special
challenges or problems, including energy policy, political and economic
reform, urban development, and public health. 

"The Initiative aims to analyze the issues facing China and the problems and
opportunities that China's rise presents to other nations," said Brookings
Institution President Strobe Talbott. "The Initiative will make
recommendations to policy- makers on these challenges, as we seek to
understand -- and promote others' understanding of -- the internal
transformation of China and its emergence as a major factor in the new
international system."

In its research efforts the Initiative will work with Chinese scholars and
other Brookings scholars with expertise relevant to China's problems. The
Initiative will produce works of scholarship as well as issue reports and
recommendations to governments and policy-makers. 

"As China continues to play a growing role in the global community, its
ascension is likely to be one of our most complex and vital foreign policy
challenges for many years to come," said Jeffrey A. Bader, senior fellow and
director of the China Initiative. "The objective of the China Initiative is
to tackle these challenges head on, in the hopes of providing policy-makers
and governments with the necessary tools and counsel, so that they can make
informed and thoughtful policy decisions."

The China Initiative began its public work today with a series of panel
discussions on China's emergence. Panelists included Donald Evans, former
secretary of commerce; Samuel Berger, former national security advisor;
Carla Hills, former U.S. trade representative; Kishore Mahbubani, former
permanent secretary for the Singapore Foreign Ministry; Fred Hu, chairman of
Goldman Sachs China; and J. Stapleton Roy, former U.S. ambassador to China.

For more information about the Initiative, its staff, and upcoming events
and publications, visit http://www.brookings.edu/china.






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