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A Seminal Case for Climate Litigation
Climate change presents states with new obligations. Chile and Colombia are asking what those are.
· June 26, 2024
We analyze the unique set of exchanges—educational, commercial, cultural, infrastructure and diaspora—that inform the West Coast’s relationships with Asia, Oceania, as well as countries in Latin and South America.
Climate change presents states with new obligations. Chile and Colombia are asking what those are.
“Country living” became the way Asian immigrants pictured the ideal American life, but the reality was more complex.
How groundbreaking infrastructure projects will shape cities and geopolitics.
How domestic and global trends could reshape both U.S. policy and geopolitical standing.
The author of Sea Change explains the frustration, grief, and anger of the people at the forefront of the environmental crisis.
To Push Back, the West Must Invest More in Urban Life
The summit is a chance for Californians to consider their place in the world.
In matters ranging from trade, economy, and climate change to entertainment and education, California and South Korea are uniquely situated for strong collaboration to help both partners adapt to the challenges of the twenty-first century.
California is ground zero for engagement.
America’s dedication to the Asian theater and the rising political temperature in Washington over U.S.-China relations raise intriguing questions about how Asian Americans perceive these changes.
Discussions of the social attitudes and political prefer- ences of Asian Americans can often obscure the picture as much as they illuminate it. The community’s views are shaped by not only their place of birth but also by various other demographic factors such as ethnic/national heritage and generational divides.
A narrow focus on the political clout of Asian Americans often obscures a more fundamental question: what exactly do Asian American voters want from their government?