Chen Qi
Resident Scholar , Carnegie-Tsinghua Center for Global Policy

about


Chen Qi was a resident scholar at the Carnegie-Tsinghua Center until June 2020.

An expert on U.S.-China relations, global governance, and China’s foreign policy, Chen ran the center’s U.S.-China Track II dialogue. This important research program sets the stage for communication and exchange between Chinese and American scholars on critical issues concerning the U.S.-China bilateral relationship and East Asian regional affairs, promotes understanding and trust among decision-makers on both sides, and contributes to the U.S.-China relationship and the stability of East Asia.

Chen is also a professor in Tsinghua’s Department of International Relations and currently serves as vice chair of the department. Additionally, he is the secretary general of China’s Community of Political Science and International Studies, and executive editor of the Chinese Journal of International Politics. He also served as a member of the United Nations Commission on Human Security partner countries expert group from 2006 to 2008.

Chen is the author of numerous publications, including Interference among States during Spring and Autumn Period (forthcoming), The Rise of China and the World Order (2011), and Containment and Appeasement (2004). He has also published several academic papers on international political economy and trade issues.

Chen was a visiting scholar in the United States at the University of Illinois Department of Political Science in 2005 and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Center for International Studies in 2001.


education
Ph.D., Tsinghua University M.A., Renmin University B.A., Peking University
languages
Chinese, English

All work from Chen Qi

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28 Results
Q&A
U.S.-China Relations at the Forty-Year Mark

January 2019 marks the fortieth anniversary of the normalization of relations between the People’s Republic of China and the United States. Four Carnegie scholars—two American and two Chinese—assess the relationship today.

· January 29, 2019
In the Media
Cooperation Is the Best Way to Build a Bright Future for All

Amid the escalating Sino-U.S. trade friction, Xi’s speech can be seen as creating a mediating space for potential negotiation between Beijing and Washington in order to prevent the global economy from suffering another big blow.

· April 11, 2018
China Daily
In the Media
The Contradictory Nature of Trump’s Trade Policies

President Trump has promised to bring jobs and manufacturing back to the United States but his economics policies are in line with those of previous administrations.

· July 27, 2017
Global Times
commentary
U.S. and Chinese Scholars Take on the U.S.-China Economic Dialogue

What are the outcomes of the dialogue and what are the implications for economic relations between the two countries? Six Scholars from China and the United States give their insights.

  • +3
· July 26, 2017
In the Media
Young Ambassadors Program Builds Sino-U.S. Trust for New Generation

The Carnegie–Tsinghua Center’s Young Ambassadors Program was recognized at the 2016 U.S.-China Consultation on People-to-People Exchange for its pioneering efforts to cultivate the next generation of global leaders.

· July 24, 2016
Global Times
In the Media
A Subtle Thaw in China-North Korea Relations

A June 2016 meeting between Xi Jinping and North Korean government officials show that relations are warming between the two nations.

· June 2, 2016
THU 27 Center
event
The International Order: Present and Future
May 14, 2015

The global order is going through a transition as the world’s center of gravity increasingly shifts toward Asia.

event
The Influence of Asian Stakeholders in Washington
March 30, 2015

Globalization and economic integration are enhancing the influence that stakeholders from Asian countries have in Washington DC.

  • Chen Qi
  • Kent Calder
  • Liu Jiangyong
event
Globalization’s Effects on the International Community
September 19, 2014

Globalization has integrated the global economy and lifted billions of people out of poverty. However, it has also dispersed global political power and has strained the existing world order.

  • +2
  • Chen Qi
  • Bertrand Badie
  • Marie-Françoise Durand
  • Wataru Sawamura
  • Cui Baoguo
Q&A
China’s First Trip to RIMPAC

The world’s largest international maritime exercise, the 2014 Rim of the Pacific (RIMPAC) exercise, is taking place from June 26 to August 1, 2014. Twenty-three countries are participating, including the United States, Japan, Australia, and, for the first time, China.

· June 26, 2014