Podcast with Cheng Li, author of “Middle Class Shanghai: Reshaping US-China Engagement”

Cheng Li

In mid-November, Washington and Beijing mutually agreed to start granting journalist visas again, putting an end to months of reciprocal visa rejections and denials. A perhaps minor, yet still important, thawing among grander narratives of decoupling and worsening relations between the two countries.

 

 

Middle Class Shanghai: Reshaping US-China Engagement, Cheng Li (Brookings Institution Press, May 2021)
Middle Class Shanghai: Reshaping US-China Engagement, Cheng Li (Brookings Institution Press, May 2021)

Cheng Li’s Middle Class Shanghai: Reshaping US-China Engagement plots out a new way to understand the U.S.-China relationship. Cheng Li’s book attempts to show the importance of the city of Shanghai to China’s economic and political development, and studies its population to show the continued value of engagement between Americans and Chinese.

Readers can find an excerpt from Middle Class Shanghai on the Brookings website: Shanghai’s dynamic art scene.

Cheng Li is the director of the John L Thornton China Center and a senior fellow in the Foreign Policy program at Brookings. He is also a director of the National Committee on US-China Relations.

We’re joined in this interview by Brian Wong. Brian is a Co-Founder of the Oxford Political Review, a columnist with the Hong Kong Economic Journal and a contributor to the Neican newsletter.

The three of us talk about the city of Shanghai, its importance to China, and why looking at US-China relations through the prism of a single city might be a better way to understand the international system.


Nicholas Gordon has an MPhil from Oxford in International Relations and a BA from Harvard. He is a writer, editor and occasional radio host based in Hong Kong.