Search for books, people and lists
Read This Twice
HomePeopleBooksSonaLibrariesSign in

Andrew Erickson

Recommended Books

Andrew Erickson is a professor of strategy in the U.S. Naval War College (NWC)'s China Maritime Studies Institute (CMSI). He helped to establish CMSI in 2006, and has subsequently played an integral role in its development. Since 2008 Erickson has been an associate in research at Harvard's Fairbank Center.
2 books on the list
Sort by
Latest Recommendations First
Layout
Toxic Politics book cover
Toxic Politics
China's Environmental Health Crisis and its Challenge to the Chinese State
Yanzhong Huang - 2020-12-03
Goodreads Rating
"Toxic Politics" by Yanzhong Huang exposes the dire health crisis in China caused by environmental degradation and how it affects Chinese society, the economy, and the government's legitimacy. This insightful read challenges the notion that China is winning the pollution war and investigates the failures of institutional structures and conflicting incentives for officials. The book discusses the resilient yet flawed political system and provides analysis on its domestic and international implications. Discover the truth behind China's deepening health crisis in "Toxic Politics."
Andrew Erickson
2020-09-17T16:25:03.000Z
#MyTake (2/2): “To understand some of #China’s most pressing challenges now & in the future, read this book!” Strong blurbs from Allen, @MerthaAndrew, Chen, Lampton, Lieberthal, Hamburg, @eosnos, & @SusanShirk1! Watch for further info & events @CFR_org:      source
Chinese Industrial Espionage book cover
Chinese Industrial Espionage
Technology Acquisition and Military Modernisation (Asian Security Studies)
William C. Hannas - 2013-05-15
Goodreads Rating
Discover the intricate and expansive system of Chinese industrial espionage in this meticulously researched account of the country's efforts to acquire foreign technology. Based on primary sources and written by leading government analysts, this book exposes China's policy of stealing technology and converting it into weapons and competitive goods without compensation. With a comprehensive and detailed examination of transfer processes, including clandestine technology transfers and theft through cyberspace, this book is essential for anyone interested in Chinese politics, Asian security studies, US defense, foreign policy, and IR in general.
Andrew Erickson
2019-05-25T18:48:47.000Z
No, most countries couldn't. #China combines tremendous indigenous capabilities with the world's largest, most capable infrastructure for acquiring & utilizing foreign tech--by ALL means necessary. Hannas, @jmulvenon & Puglisi wrote a great book on this:      source