Shorenstein Asia-Pacific Research Center News
Top aging and healthy policy experts from China, Singapore, and South Korea agree that helping older adults age at home requires addressing systemic health care bottlenecks rather than racing to build smarter AI models.
Japanese capital is flowing rapidly into U.S. markets to back AI, tech IPOs, and data infrastructure.
Seven scholars researching diverse topics across contemporary Asian studies will join the APARC community starting this summer.
Speaking on the latest episode of the APARC Briefing series, the Thai democracy champion opens up about his upbringing, offers insights from his newfound role in social activism, and shares why he continues to hold hope for reform in Thailand.
Barron's Quotes Gi-Wook Shin on How Korea’s Semiconductor Boom Is Creating Social Instability
Record profits led to significant employee bonuses, sparking turmoil, including internal union disputes.
Beijing is betting that its new model of growth, defined by dominance of frontier technologies, kicks in before the old one, driven by land sales and construction, collapses.
Banned from political office but unbowed, the Thai pro-democracy leader revisited Stanford to analyze the recent electoral defeat of his progressive party, weigh in on regional tensions in Southeast Asia and Thailand’s geopolitical balancing act, and consider the prospects for the country’s future and his political comeback.
South Korean President Lee Jae Myung’s ruling Democratic Party won the majority of key local contests in the country's local elections, but faced a symbolic blow as conservative opposition incumbent Oh Se-hoon secured another term as mayor of Seoul.
Political scientist Gaea Morales, APARC’s 2025-26 Shorenstein postdoctoral fellow on contemporary Asia, studies questions at the nexus of global policy and local action and how Southeast Asian megacities build climate resilience by drawing on local knowledge and global networks to drive change from the ground up, even in the absence of central government support.
China’s tobacco monopoly has become so financially vital to the government that even its powerful leader has failed to curb the country’s smoking habit.
Teren Sevea, APARC’s Lee Kong Chian NUS-Stanford Fellow on Southeast Asia, reveals how overlooked histories and everyday ethics in Southeast Asia can reshape our understanding of the past and our responsibility for the future.
Taiwan is emerging as a testing ground for the defining tensions of our time: democratic fragility, artificial intelligence, technological competition, platform governance, and cultural identity. At a recent Stanford conference, scholars, technologists, and filmmakers explored how these pressures are converging in Taiwan, positioning the island not simply as a geopolitical flashpoint but as a society navigating rapid political, economic, and cultural transformation in real time.
The next-gen battlefield is already here, emphasized policymakers and defense leaders at a Japan Program conference on the implications of critical AI, cyber, and space technologies for the alliance network in the Asia-Pacific region. Panelists warned that future conflicts will be shaped as much by data, supply chains, and autonomous systems as by conventional military power.
As Arctic ice melts, South Korea sees new opportunities in energy, shipping, and shipbuilding – but also growing geopolitical risks tied to US-China-Russia competition.
Speaking on the latest episode of the APARC Briefing series, China expert and veteran diplomat Susan Thornton argues for managing expectations of the summit between the two presidents, rethinking the U.S.-China technology competition, and understanding Beijing’s long game on Taiwan.
Sponsored by Stanford University’s Shorenstein Asia-Pacific Research Center, the 25th annual Shorenstein Journalism Award honors Mahtani for her exemplary investigations into the erosion of democracy in Hong Kong and China's growing global influence.
APARC Visiting Scholar Seok-Jin Eom, professor of public administration at Seoul National University, offers a history of Korean public administration, arguing that PA knowledge was not simply transplanted from the United States but was actively indigenized by Korean scholars who adapted foreign theories to meet the country’s evolving historical and political demands. Rather than accepting the prevailing “blank slate” narrative, Eom reveals a dynamic intellectual history shaped by colonial legacies, geopolitics, and the agency of Korean academics.
Speaking on the APARC Briefing video series, University of Chicago sociologist Kimberly Kay Hoang examines the architecture of global capital and how corruption discourse is transforming governance and political order in Asia and the United States.
University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa sociologist Myungji Yang offers a historical account of South Korea’s far right, arguing that recent reactionary mobilization reflects long-standing Cold War legacies, anti-communism, and conservative political networks. Although South Korea is often viewed as one of Asia’s democratic success stories, Yang suggests that recent political turmoil has revealed how deeply rooted illiberal forces remain.
The Walter H. Shorenstein Asia-Pacific Research Center’s Korea Program welcomes back The Journal of Korean Studies with the publication of Volume 31, Issue 1.
Across five Asian health care systems, rapid population aging drives up disease burden, particularly for chronic conditions, even as medical advancements improve outcomes for individual patients, according to a study co-authored by Stanford health economist Karen Eggleston.
The Asahi Shimbun's GLOBE+ features the latest findings from the Stanford Japan Barometer, a periodic public opinion survey co-developed by Stanford sociologist Kiyoteru Tsutsui, which unveils nuanced preferences and evolving attitudes of the Japanese public on political, economic, and social issues. Its recent experiment revealed that Japanese people have become wary about accepting foreign workers in recent years. Political influences are behind this trend.
A Stanford Japan Barometer experiment reveals that invoking Japan's energy dependence on Middle Eastern oil, rather than the Japan-U.S. alliance, increases the Japanese public’s support of deploying the Self-Defense Forces to the Strait of Hormuz, but does not overcome the underlying opposition to military action in the crisis.