Cynthia Ann Sanborn

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Cynthia Ann Sanborn

Cynthia Ann Sanborn

@CSanbornUP

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

Lima, Peru 参加日 Ekim 2020
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Cynthia Ann Sanborn がリツイート
Centro de Estudios sobre China y Asia-Pacífico
¿Qué tan "verde" es el desarrollismo verde? 🌱🌎 Roger Merino, profesor en @PacificoEGP, analiza si las inversiones chinas en minerales y energía en Sudamérica realmente cumplen con normas ambientales o si solo reproducen modelos extractivos.
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Cynthia Ann Sanborn
Cynthia Ann Sanborn@CSanbornUP·
“Since 2000, exactly 100 members of Congress have worked for foreign governments after leaving public office, according to a new Quincy Institute analysis. And as the map below shows, the most common employers of these former lawmakers are authoritarian governments”.
Responsible Statecraft@RStatecraft

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…

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James Martin, SJ
James Martin, SJ@JamesMartinSJ·
Dear friends: I don’t know any Catholic in the United States, from the most traditional to the most progressive, who does not have strong feelings about the comments from President Trump and Vice President Vance about Pope Leo XIV. These include not only President Trump’s initial disrespectful Truth Social post about the Holy Father, but also Vice President Vance’s similarly disrespectful comments about Pope Leo having to be “careful” when he speaks about theology. Let me share some of my own feelings. First of all, it is shocking that a President and Vice President would treat such a good, holy and learned man with such disdain. Imagine telling a man with the Holy Father’s learning and experience (and authority) that he doesn’t understand theology sufficiently. What’s more, imagine attacking him as, ridiculously, “weak on crime” or somehow not understanding foreign policy. Second, I’m edified by Pope Leo’s charitable and courageous response to all this. Charitable because he has not responded in any way other than with charity and respect. As some of you may know, I know the Holy Father slightly, thanks to our being seated together at the Synod for two weeks, and know him to be a kind, reserved, discerning and highly intelligent person. In a word, holy. But courageous too: as we have seen during his time in Algeria and Cameroon, Pope Leo has not shied away from continuing to preach the Gospel, and speaking out in favor of peace (and yes, he understands St. Augustine’s concept of the “just war”) and against, as he said today, tyrants and those who would use God’s name to support violence of bloodshed. So, where will this all end? It’s hard to say. But I would imagine that now that the taboo has been broken, politicians will continue to denigrate him and thus try to persuade people, without saying it explicitly, to think that the Pope’s words do not need to be listened to. But this will be in vain for two reasons. First, Pope Leo is clearly fearless. A few hours after he was elected as pope, I spoke with a fellow Augustinian priest who had known “Bob” for decades. “He’s a great listener, very kind and much loved.” Then he paused. “But he’s no pushover.” But the main reason that the Pope’s words will be heard is less about Robert Prevost’s own many virtues but something else: the Vicar of Christ will be heard because he is preaching the Gospel. As Jesus told his disciples, “Heaven and earth may pass away, but my words will never pass away.” So, in these strange times, fear not.
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Cynthia Ann Sanborn
Cynthia Ann Sanborn@CSanbornUP·
El Papa es peruano pues! 🇵🇪 😊
James Martin, SJ@JamesMartinSJ

Dear friends: I don’t know any Catholic in the United States, from the most traditional to the most progressive, who does not have strong feelings about the comments from President Trump and Vice President Vance about Pope Leo XIV. These include not only President Trump’s initial disrespectful Truth Social post about the Holy Father, but also Vice President Vance’s similarly disrespectful comments about Pope Leo having to be “careful” when he speaks about theology. Let me share some of my own feelings. First of all, it is shocking that a President and Vice President would treat such a good, holy and learned man with such disdain. Imagine telling a man with the Holy Father’s learning and experience (and authority) that he doesn’t understand theology sufficiently. What’s more, imagine attacking him as, ridiculously, “weak on crime” or somehow not understanding foreign policy. Second, I’m edified by Pope Leo’s charitable and courageous response to all this. Charitable because he has not responded in any way other than with charity and respect. As some of you may know, I know the Holy Father slightly, thanks to our being seated together at the Synod for two weeks, and know him to be a kind, reserved, discerning and highly intelligent person. In a word, holy. But courageous too: as we have seen during his time in Algeria and Cameroon, Pope Leo has not shied away from continuing to preach the Gospel, and speaking out in favor of peace (and yes, he understands St. Augustine’s concept of the “just war”) and against, as he said today, tyrants and those who would use God’s name to support violence of bloodshed. So, where will this all end? It’s hard to say. But I would imagine that now that the taboo has been broken, politicians will continue to denigrate him and thus try to persuade people, without saying it explicitly, to think that the Pope’s words do not need to be listened to. But this will be in vain for two reasons. First, Pope Leo is clearly fearless. A few hours after he was elected as pope, I spoke with a fellow Augustinian priest who had known “Bob” for decades. “He’s a great listener, very kind and much loved.” Then he paused. “But he’s no pushover.” But the main reason that the Pope’s words will be heard is less about Robert Prevost’s own many virtues but something else: the Vicar of Christ will be heard because he is preaching the Gospel. As Jesus told his disciples, “Heaven and earth may pass away, but my words will never pass away.” So, in these strange times, fear not.

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Cynthia Ann Sanborn がリツイート
Centro de Estudios sobre China y Asia-Pacífico
🌏El tablero logístico del Pacífico Sur se reconfigura por las tensiones globales. ¿Cómo evoluciona la conectividad Asia-América Latina y qué oportunidades geoeconómicas se abren para el Perú como hub regional? 🇵🇪 Conoce el aporte de Gabriel Arrieta, investigador afiliado #CECHAP
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Cynthia Ann Sanborn がリツイート
Centro de Estudios sobre China y Asia-Pacífico
📘 The research launches "Latin America, China and the Energy Transition" —a series of working papers by CECHAP and @GDP_Center on energy value chains and ESG challenges across the region. 🧵
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PREDOC.org
PREDOC.org@predoc_org·
Pre-doc opening in political economy! Profs Natalia Garbiras-Díaz (@NGarbirasDiaz) (@HarvardHBS) and Mateo Montenegro (TSE) are seeking a researcher based in Peru to support their research agenda on governance and accountability in Latin America bit.ly/3O8KJPo
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Cynthia Ann Sanborn がリツイート
Centro de Estudios sobre China y Asia-Pacífico
🌎 La transición energética y los cambios en el escenario global están influyendo en América Latina. @KehanWang , investigador del CECHAP, analiza ese escenario y sus implicancias para la región. ▶️ Conócelo en el siguiente reel.
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Cynthia Ann Sanborn@CSanbornUP·
Sharp comments from Evan.
Evan A. Feigenbaum@EvanFeigenbaum

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.

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Cynthia Ann Sanborn がリツイート
Council on Foreign Relations
“5 years ago, in the top 10 would be 8 U.S. universities, 1 from France, and 1 from Germany and/or the UK, depending on the count. Right now, if you see the same index in 2025, 8 of the top are Chinese and only 1—Harvard—remains,” says Albert Bourla, chairman and CEO of Pfizer, Inc. Bourla refers to the Nature Index, a ranking of universities and institutions by their contributions to high-quality scientific research in the natural sciences. 🔗 Watch the full conversation: on.cfr.org/4bIWMw3
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