event

Engaging China in Arms Control

Tue. March 8th, 2022
Live Online

China is dramatically enhancing its nuclear arsenal and military capabilities. Practitioners in the United States, Japan and elsewhere increasingly wonder what could motivate Chinese leaders to explore arms control as a way to mitigate the costs and instabilities of arms racing and potential conflict.  

We invite you to a two-part discussion of this challenge on March 8, from 19:00 to 20:30 EST.  

Watch live on YouTube.

event speakers

Nobumasa Akiyama

Nobumasa Akiyama is a professor at the graduate school of Law and the school of International and Public Policy at Hitotsubashi University.

Bin Li

Tsinghua University/Carnegie Endowment

George Perkovich

Japan Chair for a World Without Nuclear Weapons, Vice President for Studies

George Perkovich is the Japan chair for a world without nuclear weapons and vice president for studies at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, overseeing the Nuclear Policy Program and the Technology and International Affairs Program. He works primarily on nuclear strategy and nonproliferation issues, and security dilemmas among the United States, its allies, and their nuclear-armed adversaries. 

Brad Roberts

Brad Roberts is director of the Center for Global Security Research at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. Among his recent publications is an edited CGSR Occasional Paper entitled “Taking Stock: US-China Track 1.5 Nuclear Dialogue."

Nobushige Takamizawa

TAKAMIZAWA Nobushige is a professor in the Graduate School of Public Policy at University of Tokyo. He served as Ambassador of Japan to the Conference on Disarmament in Geneva from December 2016 to January 2020.

Caitlin Talmadge

Caitlin Talmadge is associate professor of Security Studies in the School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University, where she specializes in the study of nuclear deterrence and escalation, civil-military relations, and military operations and strategy.

Tong Zhao

Senior Fellow, Carnegie China

Tong Zhao conducts research on strategic security issues.