September 04, 2019

The Low Road: Charting China's Digital Expansion

China's Belt and Road has equipped governments worldwide to use innovations, such as facial recognition technology, to conduct surveillance and limit dissent. As Beijing tightens control of the Internet within its own borders, what consequences lie ahead for people living under other authoritarian regimes and fragile democracies? CNAS experts Kara Frederick, Daniel Kliman, and Ely Ratner explain how China's high-tech illiberalism may shape the twenty-first century.

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Indo-Pacific Security

The Autocrat’s New Tool Kit

Chinese authorities are now using the tools of big data to detect departures from “normal” behavior among Muslims in the country’s Xinjiang region—and then to identify each su...

Indo-Pacific Security

Blunting China’s Illiberal Order: The Vital Role of Congress in U.S. Strategic Competition with China

How the United States fares in its strategic competition with China will ultimately depend on our own competitiveness, which means we need to be committed and focused on enhan...

Indo-Pacific Security

Addressing China’s Digital Expansion

Experts assess the global implications of China’s “Digital Silk Road” and identify how the United States and its allies and partners can advance information connectivity....

Countering High-Tech Illiberalism

Learn more about how the Center for a New American Security will address the ways in which democracies and open societies are threatened by illiberal regimes armed with cuttin...

Indo-Pacific Security

Grading China's Belt and Road

The Belt and Road is more than just an economic initiative; it is a central tool for advancing China’s geo-political ambitions....

CNAS Project Launch: Securing Our 5G Future

Securing Our 5G Future will explore the opportunities and challenges of 5G in a world of highly globalized and competitive innovation....

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