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Latest Policy Briefs and Reports
Peace and Security in Northeast Asia
The Current Need for ‘Reassurance’ in the Taiwan Strait: A Chinese Mainland Perspective
Policy Brief No.232 - July, 2025 • By Shao Yuqun
The Chinese mainland government places significant importance on the assurances provided by both the US government and the Taiwan authorities regarding the Taiwan question. The author argues that the US should publicly declare that it pursues long-term peaceful coexistence with China, will not obstruct the peaceful reunification across the Taiwan Strait for the sake of strategic competition, and does not support Taiwan independence. Chinese officials can regularly restate the mainland’s policy towards Taiwan to the international community, emphasizing that "peaceful reunification is the best way to achieve cross-strait reunification." China should avoid engaging in the so-called ‘great power strategic competition’ with the United States and should conduct authorized ‘Track II’ dialogues with scholars and former officials from the DPP.
Democracy in the 21st Century: Fragility and Resilience
Summary Report No.231 - July, 2025 • By Apolline Foedit
This report summarizes the key discussions and outcomes of the 2025 annual meeting of the Toda Peace Institute’s Global Challenges to Democracy Working Group, held in Geneva on 5–6 June in collaboration with the Centre on Conflict, Development and Peacebuilding (CCDP), Geneva Graduate Institute. The meeting centred on three main themes: the democratic threats posed by Trump’s second presidency, strategies for strengthening democratic resilience, and the Toda Peace Institute’s contributions to this effort —particularly through the Democracy Lighthouse platform. The report captures the group’s shared concerns over democratic backsliding and outlines ongoing initiatives, including a systems map of democratic erosion, research on democratic resilience, and case studies on India and the MENA region.
America's Retreat and the Future of Economic Multilateralism
Policy Brief No.230 - July, 2025 • By Jordan Ryan
This policy brief discusses the systematic retreat of the United States from multilateral institutions which threatens global economic reform, coinciding with China's construction of alternative frameworks and rising great-power bilateralism. This leads to a growing incapacity for shared solutions on development finance, climate action, and tax coordination. The analysis identifies three strategic pathways—institutional evolution, adaptive pluralism, and functional cooperation—to preserve multilateral effectiveness. Success depends on recognising structural power shifts, redefining legitimacy through performance, and rebuilding trust by delivering economic justice. Without credible multilateral reform, global systems face cascading failures including debt crises, proliferating tax havens, and inadequate climate adaptation funding. The moment demands bold, inclusive reform or risks a return to systemic economic instability.
Peace and Security in Northeast Asia
Military Aspects of Deterrence and Reassurance Regarding Cross-Taiwan Strait Conflict
Policy Brief No.229 - July, 2025 • By Karl Eikenberry
This Policy Brief analyzes the military aspects of the situation in the Taiwan Strait, where Mainland China’s relative power has been increasing. The author discusses the risk of war and how it can be avoided through a mix of deterrence and reassurance among the three parties: Mainland China, Taiwan, and the US. The author concludes by suggesting systematic dialogue on many levels to avoid accidents and above all to reduce the risk of a nuclear exchange.
‘Trump-ed’ Democratic Ideals in Arab–US Relations: ‘Democracy Promotion in Reverse’?
Report No.228 - July, 2025 • By Larbi Sadiki
This report discusses the rise of transactionalism in the Gulf states' relations with the US, which is set not only to sideline democratic principles, norms, and institutions within Gulf polities, but also within the wider Arab region. Transactionalism in this context favours close American ties with despotic regimes in the Gulf monarchies. The notion of 'democracy promotion in reverse' is introduced in the elaboration of US–Gulf relations in the Trump 2.0 Era. The foreign policies of these authoritarian regimes seem, with the benefit of hindsight and in the context of Arab Spring reforms, to counteract any notion of transformational politics favouring democratization in the rest of the Arab region.