Can Taiwan Survive?
The Focus - Een podcast door Auscast Network
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šļøAs China increases military pressure and Trump 47 reshapes U.S. foreign policy, Taiwanās future is more uncertain than ever.Dr. John Bruni speaks with Dr. Alice Yang from Taipeiās Institute for National Defense and Security Research about Taiwanās fight for democracy, U.S. ambiguity, and what regional conflict could mean for the world.š§ Available now on Spotify, iTunes & the Auscast Network. Show Notes: Connect with Alice: At INDSR -Ā [email protected]Ā Facebook -Ā https://www.facebook.com/INDSRTW X -Ā @INDSRTW YouTube -Ā https://youtube.com/@indsr8906?si=diU9m_YM3w2438vpĀ Taiwanese political parties: š¹š¼Ā 1. Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) Position on China: Pro-status quo with an emphasis on sovereignty While it doesnāt formally push forĀ de jureĀ independence, it views Taiwan asĀ already independentĀ under the name āRepublic of China (Taiwan)ā Strongly resists unification with China ā Ā Supports a Taiwanese identity distinct from Chinaš«Ā Opposes āOne Chinaā or any future unification with the PRC š¹š¼Ā 2. Kuomintang (KMT) Position on China: SupportsĀ eventual peaceful unificationĀ under the right conditions but rejects the use of force FavorsĀ closer economic and cultural tiesĀ with China Supports the "1992 Consensus" (One China, but each side has its own interpretation) āļøĀ Seeks peace and dialogue with Beijingš§©Ā Ambiguous on independence vs. unification, but tilts toward eventual integration if democratic and safe š¹š¼Ā 3. Taiwan Peopleās Party (TPP) Position on China: PromotesĀ status quo Calls for pragmatic engagement with both the U.S. and China Avoids strong ideological stances on unification vs. independence š§Ā Middle-of-the-road approach: avoid provoking China while protecting Taiwanās democracy š¹š¼Ā 4. New Power Party (NPP) Position on China: Advocates forĀ formal independence Strongly opposes unification or the ā1992 Consensusā š„Ā More hardline than the DPP on Taiwanese independence š¹š¼Ā 5. People First Party (PFP)Ā (Now marginal) Position on China: Pro-unification under peaceful, negotiated terms Supports āOne Chinaā framework šĀ Formerly significant, now politically marginal Ā Top Publications: Publications: Annual Assessment Reports at INDSR: These reports cover various aspects of Taiwan's defence strategy, including military technology trends and China's military developments (INDSR).Ā Weaponized Interdependence: Chinaās Economic Statecraft and Social Penetration against Taiwan: This paper discusses how China uses economic means to influence and penetrate Taiwanese society, published in the journal Orbis (TAEF).Ā Building a Disaster Resilient Community in Taiwan: Co-authored with Judy H.S. Wu, this research analyses the social capital in disaster preparedness in Taiwan, published in Politics and Governance(TAEF).Ā Enabling Human Values in Foreign Policy: This paper explores the transformation of Taiwan's New Southbound Policy, emphasizing the human values driving Taiwan's foreign policy, published in the Journal of Human Values (TAEF).See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
