



Cynthia Ann Sanborn
2.6K posts

@CSanbornUP
Director, CECHAP. @Cechap_Up Political Scientist & professor, @UdelPacifico Peru🇵🇪. China in Latín America; science, research and gender equality everywhere.





The True Size of Peru 🇵🇪

Meet the former members of congress making coin representing foreign governments in Washington DC -- and what they do to earn it. @BenFreemanDC @nick_clevelands responsiblestatecraft.org/revolving-door…







With less than two months to go until the 2026 FIFA World Cup kicks off, global anticipation is building. In Yiwu, east China's Zhejiang Province, known as the "world's supermarket," orders for World Cup-related products are surging. Vendor Chen Jian at the Yiwu International Trade City said that with matches held across three countries, order volumes could rise by around 50%. Some local businesses have already secured official licenses to produce World Cup merchandise. Customs data shows that in January – February 2026, Yiwu's exports of sporting goods and equipment reached 2.34 billion yuan (about $320 million), up 38.5% year on year. The city is leveraging the World Cup momentum to drive growth in sports consumption. #ChinaSeen

Peru’s Perennial Presidential Loser Is Getting Her Best Shot Yet bloomberg.com/news/articles/…

🗳️🚤 Elecciones 2026 en Puno: desde tempranas horas de la madrugada, pobladores de zonas como los Uros se trasladan en lanchas hacia la ciudad, enfrentando bajas temperaturas y largas distancias para poder sufragar. 👉youtu.be/AZVUjY43BR8 #EleccionesxRPP







En esta Semana Santa, seis proyectos dan esperanza a la conservación de animales en peligro de extinción en América Latina, como un dron que sigue al mono choro en Perú, ganaderos que protegen jaguares en México y un hospital de huemules en Chile. es.mongabay.com/2026/04/jaguar…



First, China does not, in fact, "get 90% of its oil from the Strait of Hormuz." But more saliently, I will say again what I wrote and then told the @FT several weeks ago: After 10 years of dark American warnings about the need to constrain China's global ambitions, we have truly crossed into a bizarro world when the president appears to be begging Beijing for an expeditionary naval deployment. American national security elites have spent years yakking about China’s global ambitions to literally everyone in every region, including about an expeditionary capability that would challenge American power and, the U.S. claimed, undermine global stability. To now turn on a dime and literally invite a Chinese deployment is nakedly hypocritical but also, in my view, strategic malpractice. It's not hard to presume that U.S. commanders will hardly welcome a direct Chinese security role in a region where the U.S. had tried to minimize and bound China's security role beyond Iran. And so to flip overnight from demanding that the region reduce technology cooperation, reject Chinese infrastructure, and avoid broadened security cooperation with China is, well, surreal. By the way, burden sharing is a more than reasonable expectation in alliances—although not usually so with strategic competitors and prospective military adversaries. But (1) "we're the hegemon!" and (2) "over to you guys, because we don't do public goods" don't usually go together.

