The soft war that America is losing // Financial Review
- How Distance Learning Could Put Chinese Students at US Universities at Risk // Library of Congress
- The Crisis of Liberal Internationalism: Japan and the World Order
- Immigrant Incorporation in East Asian Democracies
- Putin's Russia: Economics, Defense, and Foreign Policy
- Explaining Japan’s Soft Approach to COVID-19 // Epicenter
- Intimate Disconnections: Divorce and the Romance of Independence in Contemporary Japan
- The Business Reinvention of Japan: How to Make Sense of the New Japan and Why it Matters
- Childcare Allowances and Public Pensions: Welfare and Demographic Effects in an Aging Japan // B.E Journal of Economic Analysis and Policy
- The World's Refugee System is Broken// The Atlantic
- Japan's New Regional Reality: Geoeconomic Strategy in the Asia-Pacific
- Segregation Has Gotten Worse, Not Better, and It's Fueling the Wealth Gap Between Black and White Americans // TIME Magazine
- 'It's a Race to the Bottom.' The Coronavirus is Cutting Into Gig Worker Incomes as the Newly Jobless Flood Apps
- China, Japan, and the art of economic statecraft// Brookings
- Greening East Asia: The Rise of the Eco-Developmental State
- The paid-leave pioneers: A few Japanese dads have sparked a child-care revolution // The Lily
- Disney's magical thinking won't keep politics away from 'Mulan' // Nikkei Asian Review
- 'If We Don't Work, We Don't Get Paid.' How the Coronavirus is Exposing Inequality Among America's Workers // TIME Magazine
- The Policy Response to Declining Fertility Rates in Japan: Relying on Logic and Hope Over Evidence // Social Science Japan Journal
- Abe Global Reports | Cyber Challenges: The Internet, Global Competition, and National Security
- TikTok deal puts Japan between a rock and a hard place // Nikkei Asia
- ‘Mulan’ is a movie about how much Hollywood needs China // The Washington Post
- Global Economic Turmoil and the Public Good
- To Prevent Next Coronavirus, Stop the Wildlife Trade, Conservationists Say // New York Times
- Illegal Trade in Pangolins Keeps Growing as Criminal Networks Expand // National Geographic