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Lyu Jinghua
Visiting Scholar, Cyber Policy Initiative

about


Lyu Jinghua is no longer with the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

Lyu Jinghua was a visiting scholar with Carnegie’s Cyber Policy Initiative. Her research focuses primarily on cybersecurity and U.S.-China defense relations.

Lyu is a retired colonel from the Chinese People’s Liberation Army. Her research includes Asia-Pacific security issues, China’s defense policy, U.S.-China military to military relations with an emphasis of cybersecurity issues.

Before retirement in 2016, Lyu worked as a research fellow at the Center on China-America Defense Relations, Academy of Military Science of the Chinese People’s Liberation Army. She was also a senior fellow at the Pangoal Institution, one of the most influential public policy think tanks in China.

She has written extensively on cybersecurity and cyber conflict in Chinese journals and newspapers, including China Military Science (Zhongguo Junshi Kexue), International Review, Military Art Journal (Junshi Xueshu), and the PLA Daily.


All work from Lyu Jinghua

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14 Results
paper
China-U.S. Cyber-Nuclear C3 Stability

Cyber threats to nuclear command, control, and communications systems (NC3) attract increasing concerns. Carnegie and partners have developed a platform of unclassified knowledge to enable U.S.-China engagement on this issue.

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· April 8, 2021
In the Media
The Race of Chinese Companies in the 5G Competition

With the potential of enabling not only significant economic growth but also the innovation of critical technologies in various fields, both the United States and China view 5G as one of the key influencing factors in the “great power competition.”

· September 18, 2020
Italian Institute for International Political Studies
commentary
Navigating the U.S.-China Competition in Cyberspace

Although cyberspace represents a relatively new facet of the U.S.-China relationship, controversies within this domain have rapidly evolved into critical and contentious issues in the eyes of both parties, affecting a wide swath of policy areas such as trade, defense, transparency, and the rule of law.

· September 4, 2020
Turkish Policy Quarterly
Q&A
What Is the U.S. Ban on TikTok and WeChat All About?

Two experts, one Chinese one American, weigh in on the TikTok and WeChat ban. This high-stakes contest reflects a wider technological decoupling that could splinter the internet

· August 25, 2020
In the Media
U.S., China Should Pursue Peace, Not Military Brinkmanship

While the world hoped this pandemic might lead to more cooperation between these two great powers, American and Chinese leaders instead fell into a blame game and allowed their increasing suspicions to guide their decision-making.

· May 12, 2020
Defense One
In the Media
Travails of an Interconnected World: From Pandemics to the Digital Economy

Biological viruses and computer malware differ in important respects. They have considerable potential to spread widely, invading, disrupting and destroying their targets.

· April 30, 2020
LawFare Blog
commentary
Three Lessons China Has Learned About Global Governance

How has Beijing’s approach to multilateral institutions evolved in the seventy years since the founding of the People’s Republic of China?

· September 25, 2019
In the Media
Room for New Partnerships: A Chinese View on Europe’s Cybersecurity

A survey of European cybersecurity policy reveals both challenges and opportunities for the EU’s evolving relationship with China.

· April 18, 2019
ISPI
In the Media
What Are China’s Cyber Capabilities and Intentions?

Given that suspicion about China’s cyberwarfare capabilities and intentions could lead to conflict, it is necessary to examine China’s views of cyber warfare from a different perspective than most are familiar with.

· April 1, 2019
IPI Global Observatory
In the Media
Is There Common Ground in U.S.-China Cyber Rivalry?

In light of their shared interests in geopolitical stability and the digital economy, the U.S. and China should better reflect whether they can more constructively manage their competition in and over the cyber domain.

· March 15, 2019
Cipher Brief