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  1. Marino Xanthos

    Marino Xanthos

    Writing for PS since 2013
    1 Commentary

    Marino Xanthos is Professor of Chemical, Biological, and Pharmaceutical Engineering at the New Jersey Institute of Technology.

  2. Lucie Qian Xia

    Lucie Qian Xia

    Writing for PS since 2023
    1 Commentary

    Lucie Qian Xia is a diplomatic scholar and adviser who previously served the UN Representation Office to the European Union and the EU Delegation to China.

  3. Liu Xiaobo

    Liu Xiaobo

    Writing for PS since 2005
    2 Commentaries

    Liu Xiaobo, a Nobel Peace Prize laureate, was president of the Chinese chapter of PEN.

  4. Zhenhua Xie

    Writing for PS since 2009
    1 Commentary

    Xie Zhenhua is President Hu Jintao’s Special Representative on Climate Change and Vice Chairman of the National Development and Reform Commission of China.

  5. Chenggang Xu

    Chenggang Xu

    Writing for PS since 2022
    1 Commentary

    Chenggang Xu is Senior Research Fellow of the Stanford Center on China's Economy and Institutions at Stanford University.

  6. Jiajun Xu

    Jiajun Xu

    Writing for PS since 2020
    1 Commentary

    Jiajun Xu is Executive Deputy Dean of Peking University’s Institute of New Structural Economics.

  7. Lin Xu

    Lin Xu

    Writing for PS since 2021
    1 Commentary

    Lin Xu is Chairman of the US-China Green Fund.

  8. Qiyuan Xu

    Qiyuan Xu

    Writing for PS since 2022
    2 Commentaries

    Qiyuan Xu is Senior Fellow and Deputy Director of the Institute of World Economics and Politics at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

  9. Yan Xuetong

    Writing for PS since 2011
    1 Commentary

    Yan Xuetong, one of China’s leading strategic thinkers, is Professor of Political Science and Director of the Institute of International Studies at Tsinghua University, Beijing, and Chief Editor of The Chinese Journal of International Politics. His latest book is Ancient Chinese Thought, Modern Chinese Power.

  10. Maria Xynou

    Maria Xynou

    Writing for PS since 2017
    1 Commentary

    Maria Xynou, a digital rights advocate, manages community research on the study of Internet censorship at the Open Observatory of Network Interference (OONI) project.

  1. obstfeld4_Jabin BotsfordThe Washington Post via Getty Images_trumplighthizer Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post via Getty Images

    The Dangers of a US Capital Inflow Tax

    Maurice Obstfeld worries that a little-known, highly costly method of deficit reduction is gaining political traction.
  2. beaufils1_ Alain DENANTESGamma-Rapho via Getty Images_solar panels Alain DENANTES/Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images

    Europe’s Green Transition Requires More Skilled Workers

    Julie Beaufils urges policymakers to boost the attractiveness of technical vocations by expanding access to apprenticeships.
  3. volz8_iStock  Getty Images Plus_global finance iStock / Getty Images Plus
    Free to read

    A Monetary and Economic Order Fit for the Twenty-First Century

    Ulrich Volz, et al. identify eight priorities to build a more resilient, inclusive, and sustainable global financial architecture.
  4. ghazouani1_YANICK FOLLYAFP via Getty Images_africachildren Yanick Folly/AFP via Getty Images

    Putting Africa on the Path to Prosperity

    Mohamed Ould Ghazouani & Ajay Banga urge the G7 to focus on the continent’s future, and on five priorities in particular, at this week’s summit.
  5. op_benami1_LOUAI BESHARAAFP via Getty Images_syriaconflict Louai Beshara/AFP via Getty Images

    Anatomy of a Massacre

    Shlomo Ben-Ami

    The 1860 massacre of Christians in Damascus holds useful lessons about what it takes to arrest – and recover from – inter-communal violence. But there is a difference between a pogrom and a genocide, and conflating the two can do more harm than good.

    considers what the 1860 massacre of Christians in Damascus can and cannot teach us about preventing genocide.
  6. GettyImages-2156649816 Photo by Nikolas Kokovlis/NurPhoto via Getty Images

    AI: Hope or Hype?

    Whether generative artificial intelligence will do more harm or good to our families, economies, and societies remains an open question. In devising strategies for harnessing the technology, optimism is undoubtedly warranted, but it should not come at the expense of realism.

  7. ehrenreich1_Francis DeanCorbis via Getty Images_denmark eu Francis Dean/Corbis via Getty Images

    How Denmark Keeps the Far Right at Bay

    Michael Ehrenreich explains how mainstream parties have neutralized the threat of right-wing populists.
  8. slobodian1_ Drew AngererGetty Images_peterthieltrump Drew Angerer/Getty Images

    How Techno-Libertarians Fell in Love with Big Government

    Quinn Slobodian argues Silicon Valley investors are against the state only insofar as it is not enriching them personally.
  9. gros187_CostfotoNurPhoto via Getty Images_china semiconductor Costfoto/NurPhoto via Getty Images

    How Chinese Savings Can Support the Global Green Transition

    Daniel Gros urges the EU to welcome cheap low-carbon goods, such as electric vehicles, from China.

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