Challenges
in U.S. relations with great powers such as China and Russia derive not
only from divergent national interests, but from distinct conceptions
of nationhood, sovereignty, and modernity. Americans must therefore
consider not only what the United States would like Russia and China to do, but how Chinese and Russians see themselves, one another, and the wider world, including the United States. China and Russia: On Their Own Terms is
a joint project of the Wilson Center’s Kennan and Kissinger Institutes.
The goal of the series is to offer U.S. policymakers, analysts, and the
broader public a primary source perspective on how China and Russia see
their evolving international roles in light of their histories,
cultural narratives, and national myths. Speakers Ho-fung Hung, Associate Professor of Sociology, Johns Hopkins University Nikolai Zlobin, President, Center on Global Interests Moderators Robert Daly, Director, Kissinger Institute on China and the United States Matthew Rojansky, Director, Kennan Institute
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