A Top Global Think Tank

Chin-Hao Huang

Chin-Hao Huang is a researcher with the SIPRI China and Global Security Program where he currently co-leads a study on China’s evolving approach toward foreign military activities and peacekeeping operations.  Previously, he worked at the Freeman Chair in China Studies at the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), Washington, D.C., U.S.A.  Mr. Huang coordinated the CSIS China-Africa project, a multi-year initiative examining Chinese intentions, policies, and practices in Africa and implications for U.S. strategic interests and has authored and co-authored several monographs and book chapters on China-Africa-U.S. relations. He has published other works on Chinese foreign and security policy in China Security, China and Eurasia Forum Quarterly, PacNet, South China Morning Post, Asia Times, and China Brief.  He also co-authors the chapter on China-Southeast Asia relations for the Pacific Forum CSIS quarterly journal, Comparative Connections. He is a graduate of the Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service, Georgetown University.

Recent publications:

“China’s Expanding Presence in UN Peacekeeping Operations and Implications for the United States,” PLA Mission Beyond Taiwan (Strategic Studies Institute: Carlisle, PA, 2009) (with Bates Gill)

“China–Southeast Asia Relations: South China Sea, Economic Issues,” Pacific Forum Comparative Connections, vol. 11, no. 1 (April 2009), pp. 63–72 (with Robert Sutter)
 
“China’s Expanding Peacekeeping Role: Its Significance and the Policy Implications,”  SIPRI Policy Brief (February 2009)  (with Bates Gill)

“China’s Renewed Partnership with Africa: Implications for the United States,” China into Africa: Trade, Aid, and Influence (Brookings Institution Press: Washington, DC, 2008)

“China–Africa Relations: An Early, Uncertain Debate in the United States,” China Returns to Africa: A Rising Power and a Continent Embrace (Hurst Publishers: London, 2008) (with Bates Gill and J. Stephen Morrison)

“US–China relations and Darfur,” Fordham International Law Journal, vol. 31, no. 4 (April 2008), pp. 827–42