experts
Chong Ja Ian
Nonresident Scholar, Carnegie China

about


Chong Ja Ian is a nonresident scholar at Carnegie China, Carnegie’s East Asia-based research center on contemporary China, where he examines U.S.-China dynamics in Southeast Asia and the broader Asia-Pacific. Chong is also an associate professor of political science at the National University of Singapore. He received his PhD from Princeton University in 2008 and previously taught at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology. His research covers the intersection of international and domestic politics, with a focus on the externalities of major power competition, nationalism, regional order, security, contentious politics, and state formation. He also works on U.S.-China relations, security and order in Northeast and Southeast Asia, cross-strait relations, and Taiwan’s politics.

He was a 2019-20 Harvard-Yenching Visiting Scholar, 2013 Taiwan Fellow, 2012-13 East-West Center Asia Fellow, and a 2008-9 Princeton-Harvard China and the World Fellow. Chong’s current research examines how non-leading state behavior collectively intensifies major power rivalries, paying particular attention to the U.S.-China relationship. He has concurrent projects investigating how states react to sanctions on third parties by trade partners, and the characteristics of foreign influence operations. Chong has a longstanding interest in bridging academic, policy, and public discussions regarding these topics.

Chong is the author of External Intervention and the Politics of State Formation: China, Indonesia, Thailand, 1893-1952 (Cambridge, 2012), and a recipient of the 2013 International Security Studies Section Book Award from the International Studies Association. He has published in the China QuarterlyEuropean Journal of International RelationsInternational SecuritySecurity Studies, and Pacific Affairs, among other outlets. Chong is also an editor of AcademiaSG, which seeks to promote Singapore-related research.


areas of expertise
education
PhD, Princeton University, MA, Princeton University, MS, Georgetown University, BS, Georgetown University
languages
Cantonese Chinese, English, Malay, Mandarin Chinese, Taiwanese

All work from Chong Ja Ian

filters
10 Results
commentary
Beijing’s Chen Shui-bian Playbook for Lai Ching-te: A View from Southeast Asia

Taiwan faces a more forceful PRC and a need to further consolidate its democracy. These will be the true tests of Lai Ching-te’s political acumen and that of the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) team around him.

· June 6, 2024
commentary
Taiwan’s Voters Have Spoken. Now What: Implications of Taiwan’s 2024 Elections for Beijing and Beyond

Quiet but important shifts in Taiwan’s politics that will have critical implications for cross-strait ties.

· February 9, 2024
Q&A
Biden and Xi Meet at APEC

Southeast Asian capitals would prefer that the U.S. and PRC manage their relationship, if not get along.

· November 14, 2023
article
Amid Contending Narratives, A Read on U.S. and PRC Messaging in Singapore

As the world undergoes a new round of fragmentation and major power rivalry that includes the advancing of divergent visions of global order, Singapore is discovering that its interests are increasingly being pulled in different directions.

· November 8, 2023
Q&A
Negotiating U.S.-China Competition

A fragile reconnection in U.S.-China diplomacy presents an opportunity to begin to set the terms of strategic competition.

  • +2
· July 19, 2023
In The Media
in the media
What’s Behind Washington’s Wooing of Vietnam?

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken visits Hanoi seeking closer relations.

· April 17, 2023
Al Jazeera
Q&A
Has Xi’s Diplomacy been Effective in Southeast Asia?

Scholars from seven Southeast Asian countries share their takes on China’s regional engagement.

  • +4
  • Chong Ja Ian
  • Enrico V. Gloria
  • Nur Shahadah Binti Jamil
  • Pou Sothirak
  • Chanintira na Thalang
  • Christine Susanna Tjhin
  • Bich Tran
· April 6, 2023
article
The Many “One Chinas”: Multiple Approaches to Taiwan and China

Beijing says that over 180 countries accept its “one China principle” regarding Taiwan, but the reality is more complicated.

· February 9, 2023
Q&A
Southeast Asia Between the United States and China

Amid intensifying tensions, Southeast Asia is trying not to choose between Washington and Beijing. But will this approach remain viable going forward?

· November 22, 2022
event
Carnegie China Global Dialogue: U.S.-China Relations After the Midterms
November 9, 2022

One day after the U.S. midterm elections, Paul Haenle will moderate a discussion with American, Chinese, and Singaporean experts on the U.S.-China relationship.

  • +1