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Partial bibliography of articles by Emily MacFarquhar

(Click on post-1975 titles for full text. To read .pdf files, you must install the free Adobe Acrobat Reader, available here).

Major articles

The Economist (1965-1987)

U.S. News & World Report (1987-1996)

The New York Times Book Review (1986-1996)

Other

 

 

 

Major articles

 

China: Mao's last leap, The Economist, 1968

China Survey, The Economist, December 31, 1977

"Indochina's Refugees", The Economist, July 21, 1979

"China in the 1980s" (with Brian Beedham and Alice Barrass), The Economist, December 29, 1979

"When the sants go marching in" (Amritsar), The Economist, March 31, 1984

India Survey, The Economist, May 9, 1987

"The War Against Women: In much of the world, political and economic 'progress' has been dragging them backward" (with Jennifer Seter, Susan V. Lawrence, Robin Knight and Joannie M. Schrof), U.S. News & World Report, March 28, 1994

"Changing times: The indirect, stop-and-go life patterns of Wellesley women are not aberrations but archetypes of our time" (with Susan Priestland), U.S. News & World Report, June 6, 1994

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1965-1987

"China: Trial by fumes", 1965

"Peasant Leader?" (Review of Mao and the Chinese Revolution by Jerome Ch'en), February 27, 1965

"Women in China: Where have the heroines gone?", March 13, 1965

"Ching-kuo's Choices" (Foreign Report), March 25, 1965

"China and Russia: Teachers of the World, Unite", May 15, 1965

"Village Life in China" (Review of Report from a Chinese Village by Jan Myrdal and Planning in Chinese Agriculture: Socialization and the Private Sector, 1956-1962 by Kenneth R. Walker), May 22, 1965

"Formosan Exile Gives Up" (Foreign Report), May 27, 1965

"China's Army: Good-bye to gold braid", June 5, 1965

"A Poor Case" (Review of A Curtain of Ignorance by Felix Greene), August 7, 1965

"The Yellow Peril Myth" (Review of China and the Bomb by Morton H. Halperin), August 14, 1965

"China: Peddling to peasants", September 4, 1965

"Tibet: Autonomation", September 4, 1965

"China's Teeth", September 18, 1965

"Personal View of China" (Review of The Crippled Tree by Han Suyin), September 25, 1965

"China: Theatre of the absurd", October 9, 1965

"North Korea: Nobody's little brother", November 6, 1965

"China: Private pigs", November 20, 1965

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"China: How much oil?", January 8, 1966

"Shiina in Moscow", January 22, 1966

"China: 'Some people'", January 29, 1966

"China and Vietnam: Pep talk", February 5, 1966

"Japan: Mr Eda's near miss", February 5, 1966

"China out of the cupboard", March 12, 1966

"Asian Quadrille" (Foreign Report), March 17, 1966

"China and Cuba: Rice boils over", March 19, 1966

"China: Part-time peasants", March 26, 1966

"Why Formosa Must Go: It is the price for getting China into the UN--and it could help the Formosans too", April 2, 1966

"Vietnam: Now what?", April 2, 1966

"Diem's ghost walks again", April 9, 1966

"The Other End of the Gun" (Review of Defeating Communist Insurgency by Robert Thompson), April 23, 1966

"Indonesia and China: Policy Becomes Possible", April 23, 1966

"China: Pooh Bah kowtows", May 7, 1966

"Fallout over Peking", May 14, 1966

"Cadres on the Carpet" (Foreign Report), May 19, 1966

"China: Cautionary tales by Teng To", May 21, 1966

"China: Who is the 'boss'?", May 28, 1966

"Vietnam: Untrusted", May 28, 1966

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"Ho is not Tito", June 4, 1966

"Anglo-Chinese What?", June 4, 1966

"The Heretics of Peking: Who is next on China's purge list--and has there really been a revolt of the moderates?", June 11, 1966

"China: Shock Troops", June 18, 1966

"China: No more Latin, no more French", June 25, 1966

"China: A straight fight for power?", July 9, 1966

"Mao Writes His Will: It looks more and more as if China's purge is Mao's last attempt to preserve China in his image", July 16, 1966

"China: Half-study", July 23, 1966

"China: But has he tried walking on it?", July 30, 1966

"China: Enter the all-round man", August 6, 1966

"Three unimportant miles", August 13, 1966

"Almost everybody in China reads Chairman Mao", August 13, 1966

"The 'close friend in combat' takes the rostrum" (China's purge), August 20, 1966

"Young Puritans hot-eyed in search of sin" (Red Guards), August 27, 1966

Review of Mao Tse-tung by Stuart Schram, 1966

"China: Opening for a first lady", September 3, 1966

"The Great Swim Forward" (Foreign Report), 1966

"Guards to the grindstone", September 24, 1966

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"Emergency exit", September 24, 1966

"Jugoslavia: One step back", 1966

"China and Indonesia: Let our people go", October 1, 1966

"Has Mao Killed his Child", October 8, 1966

"Curiouser and curiouser" (Chinese purges), October 22, 1966

"Japan: Fiddling among the honourables", October 29, 1966

"China: They shot an arrow in the air", November 5, 1966

"China: White backlash", November 12, 1966

"Russia's Propaganda War" (Foreign Report), November, 1966

"Sihanouk's Shadow Cabinet" (Foreign Report), November, 1966

"China: Revolutionary freeze", November 26, 1966

"China: Red Guards go home", December 3, 1966

"The Guards Let Lin Down", December 10, 1966

"China: Hunting the handful", December 17, 1966

"Vietnam: Challenge to Ky", December 24, 1966

"Japan: Sincerity day", December 31, 1966

"China: The top men brought to judgment", December 31, 1966

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"China: Confirming the worst", January 7, 1967

"Costly polemics" (Review of Peking and People's Wars by Samuel B. Griffith), January, 1967

"The East is Blood Red", January 14, 1967

"How the Anti-Maoists Do It", January 21, 1967

"It's Khe Sanh That Really Counts", January 27, 1967

"Who's the real hot warrior in Peking?", February 25, 1967

"Formosa: Chiang's cultural revolution", 1967

"The hearts-and-minds contest comes to Field of Lions" (Thailand), April 1, 1967

"Japan: Tokyo swings left", 1967

"Indonesia: Race hate runs amuck", April 29, 1965

"China: Know thine enemy", April 29, 1967

"India's Food: A land of plenty", May 13, 1967

"China: No, I'm the king of the mountain", May 13, 1967

"South Korea: I like Park", May 13, 1967

"Mao Tries It On: But there is no need at all for Hongkong to be th pushover Macao was", May 20, 1967

"India's New Opposition Party" (Foreign Report), May, 1967

"China: Back to orderly revolution", May 27, 1967

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"Unmacaoed: China's riot-leaders in Hongkong seem to have pulled back for a rethink", June 3, 1967

"Bonus for China", June 10, 1967

"The bravest soldier", June 10, 1967

"Korea: Rigging like Rhee", June 17, 1967

"One of Our Chinas is Missing: Does communist China still really exist as an organised country?", June 17, 1967

"China: Preserving the forms", July 8, 1967

"China and Burma: The end of a lovely relationship", July 8, 1967

"The Mice under Mao's Feet: From Hongkong to Burma, China's small neighbours are realising that China's cultural revolution means trouble for them too", July 15, 1967

"Who's in Charge Here?" (China), August 5, 1967

"Indonesia: A little cool water on one race war", August 12, 1967

"China: Liu: a suitable case for treatment", August 19, 1967

"Who's the Paper Tiger?", August 26, 1967

"Don't think Mao has given up", October 7, 1967

"Japan: Students have a second shot", October 14, 1967

"Indonesia: Shuharto's not on top of it yet", October 21, 1967

"China: After the party", October 21, 1967

"China: Come back, cadres", November 5, 1967

"Red Militia in Kerala" (Foreign Report), November, 1967

"Dayak Tribesmen on the Rampage" (Foreign Report), November, 1967

"India: Too late to save Bengal's economy", December 9, 1967

"Here's to the Next Time: Chairman Mao is winding up Cultural Revolution No. 1. He hasn't found a way of avoiding theneed for more of them later on", December 23, 1967

"Some south-east Asians are more neutral than others", December 30, 1967

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"Cambodia: See no evil", January 6, 1968

"China: Not yet bumper to bumper", January, 1968

"Cambodia: Pursuit and happiness", January 20, 1968

"The feuding starts again in China", January 20, 1968

"The Chinese go back to essentials: money", January 27, 1968

"Towards a happy life in the bosom of Marshal Kim", February 3, 1968

"South Korea: Fire in their bellies", February 10, 1968

"China: Paste-up jobs", February 10, 1968

"Korea: Shaking the smaller fist", February 17, 1968

"Cambodia: Waving big sticks", March 9, 1968

"Japan and China: Half a loaf", March 9, 1968

"Discrimination against Women in China" (Foreign Report), March 14, 1968

"China: The longest hangover", March 23, 1968

"So does China", April 6, 1968

"China: Enemies on every side", April 13, 1968

"Mrs Mao rides again", April 20, 1968

"Mao Takes Alarm", April 27, 1968

"The Thoughts of Kim Il-sung" (Foreign Report), May 9, 1968

"Take your partner and whirl him round" (China), May 11, 1968

"Pitfalls in the Maoist road", May 25, 1968

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"Vietnam: Enter a Hanoi hawk", June 8, 1968

"Sino-Burmese Split Widens" (Foreign Report), June 27, 1968

"The Balkans of Asia: General Ne Win's Burma, and its neighbours, look like a new powder-keg", June 29, 1968

"The Re-run Revolution", August 17, 1968

"A pox on all your houses", August 31, 1968

"China: The new vanguard", August 31, 1968

China: Mao's last leap, 1968

"The official chop for Liu", November 9, 1968

"Okinawa: Taut little island", November 23, 1968

"China: More revolution? We don't think so", December 21, 1968

"North Korea: Face has two sides", December 28, 1968

"China: Small fry after all", February 15, 1969

"So China Won't Talk: Its foreign minister, Chen Yi, is in trouble, and it couldn't think of anything to say to the Americans anyway", February 22, 1969

"Mao gets up on tiptoes for another great leap", March 1, 1969

"Mao reminds the Russians of what he did to India", March 15, 1969

"Mao's three-way alliance", April 12, 1969

"Generals' line", July 12, 1969

"Ho is in his grave--and Kosygin is in Peking", September 13, 1969

"Let's Stand Idly By: Provided it does not escalate into an out-of-control big war, the Russian-Chinese conflict is pure gravy for the rest of us", September 20, 1969

"It's Later Than Mao Thinks: China needs pulling together more urgently than its ageing leader seems to realise", October 4, 1969

"China defies Russia--and muddles on at home", October 4, 1969

"Pass the thodolite, comrade" (Sino-Soviet border), October 11, 1969

"China: 48 more at Mao's pleasure", October 11, 1969

"China: An excuse to open the door", October 18, 1969

"Indonesia: The skeleton comes out of the closet", November 8, 1969

"North Korea: The son of Mount Baikdoo", November 15, 1969

"China: The sweet pain of those bullets", November 29, 1969

"Pakistan: Army regimes please note", December 6, 1969

"China: Collusion course", December 6, 1969

"Panther hunt?" (Black Panthers), December 13, 1969

"China: Too few men? Let the women work", 1969

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"After You, Mr Sato", January 3, 1970

"China: Out sick", January 10, 1970

"Back to Warsaw", January 17, 1970

"When Comrades Fall Out", January 24, 1970

"The Philippines: The two-term itch", February 7, 1970

"China is a chessboard again", February 14, 1970

"China: No laughing matter", February 21, 1970

"Ceylon: Sprouts among the weeds", February 28, 1970

"The thoughts of Lenin in the hands of Mao", April 18, 1970

"North Vietnam: The pragmatist", March 14, 1970

"China: Spies in the eyes", March 21, 1970

"The Awful Example of Bengal", April 4, 1970

"China: Lips and teeth again", April 11, 1970

"We Have Stood Up" (China's satellite launch), May 2, 1970

"Mao's party is back behind the gun" (Foreign Report), September 5, 1973

"Korea is still a question" (Foreign Report), September 5, 1973

"North Korea hardens its line", October 31, 1973

"Kissinger compromise over Korea" (Foreign Report), November 28, 1973

"Shanghai's political signpost" (Foreign Report), December 5, 1973

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"The issues behind China's reshuffle" (Foreign Report), January 17, 1974

"China: In the firing line", April 20, 1974

"China: Cheshire Chou", April 27, 1974

"India: Derailed", May 11, 1974

"China: It's not just Chou's health", May 25, 1974

"Pakistan: All in the name of Allah", June 15, 1974

"He can do it at a stroke" (Bhutto and Bangladesh), June 22, 1974

"India: The woman who showed the men the way" (Mrs Gandhi), June 22, 1974

"China: Is it all happening again?", June 22, 1974

"Pakistan and Bangladesh: Time to pay up", July 6, 1974

"China: Teng commands the gun", February 8, 1975

"South Korea: Tortured", February 22, 1975

"China: Down with the bourgeoisie", February 22, 1975

"Abortion law: Europe is moving both ways", March 1, 1975

"China: Enter the big gun", March 8, 1975

"Thailand: Pramotion", March 22, 1975

"Cynics and chiliasts in Peking" (Foreign Report), October 22, 1975

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China Survey, December 31, 1977

"Making China Work", p. 23

"Call it continuity", p. 24

"On a wing, a prayer, and a string", p. 24

"Where have all the beavers gone?" p. 25

"Dream machines", p. 26

"Generation game", p. 28

"Let a few flowers bloom", p. 30

"Indochina's Refugees", July 21, 1979

"The survivors who seek their place in paradise", p. 19

"The Khmers who couldn't look back", p. 21

"China in the 1980s" (with Brian Beedham and Alice Barrass), December 29, 1979, p.17

"When the sants go marching in" (Amritsar), The Economist, March 31, 1984, p. 23

India Survey, May 9, 1987

Flying Solo, p. 5

Sikhs Are Indians Too, p. 7

Trading Places, p. 9

What's Ours is Yours, p. 10

A Looser Corset, p. 11

It Won't Go Away, p. 13

Violence Loves a Vacuum, p. 15

Gorbashok, p. 16

The Good Life Begins at 40, p. 18

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1987-1996

"China Puts Off the Millenium: It isn't even trying to finish modernizing for another 60 years" (with Marlowe Hood), November 9, 1987, p. 50

"Put the Right Men in the Right Place..." (on Reagan-Gorbachev summit) (with Peter Ross Range, Kenneth T. Walsh and Louise Lief), December 14, 1987, p. 22

"Beijing battles the brain drain," March 21, 1988, p. 10

"China Corners the Copycat Arms Market: Cheap weapons, no questions asked, means billions worth of business for Beijing" (with Robin Knight and Robert Kaylor),, April 11, 1988, p. 45

"Off with an Afghan Albatross: The Soviets prepare to shed a burden, leaving turbulence behind" (with Jeff Trimble and Maleeha Lodhi), April 18, 1988, p. 48

"The Killing Fields of Mozambique: Rebels without a cause serve South Africa by wreaking havoc", May 2, 1988, p. 45

"China Lays Down the Law for Hong Kong: Beijing's design for an unfree future raises anxiety levels", May 16, 1988, p. 34

"Now for the Next All-Afghan War" (with Jeff Trimble and Edward Girardet), May 30, 1988, p. 26

"Pakistan after Zia: Whoever follows him may be less keen on pursuing the war next door", August 29, 1988, p. 75

"Pakistan Walks Warily to the Polls: Skepticism hovers over the first chance at civilian rule in 11 years", October 17, 1988, p. 53

"The Daughter Also Rises: Benazir Bhutto claimed her legacy by winning last week's poll" (with Maleeha Lodhi and Nayyar Zaidi), November 28, 1988, p. 46

"The Case of the Reluctant Drug Maker: An abortion pill that's not for sale", January 23, 1989, p. 54

"After the Soviets go: Diplomats talk of peace, warriors maneuver for power as Moscow's troops leave Afghans to sort out their future", February 13, 1989, p. 32

"The flowering of dissent in Deng's Republic", March 13, 1989, p.12

"Can Pakistan's Superwoman Survive? Benazir Bhutto is off to a slow start, and a lingering war next door in Afghanistan could hurt her in half a dozen ways", April 17, 1989, p. 38

"Reinventing China: What began as another hapless student protest has become a revolution", May 29, 1989, p. 30

"Deng's Hardliners and Their Enemies List: The coming purge will hit the Communist Party and the Army", June 5, 1989, p. 24

"Pakistan's steel magnolia", June 12, 1989, p. 14

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"China Prepares for a Bitter Harvest: A return to normalcy masks economic trouble", July 10, 1989, p. 34

"Outside Agitators for Democracy: From the U.S., Chinese students fight on" (with Susan Lawrence), August 7, 1989, p. 34

"Will The Last One to Leave Please Turn Out The Lights? A jittery Hong Kong wonders where the life boats are", August 21, 1989, p. 36

"Beijing's Bad-Times Bash: Despite the crackdown, celebrating 40 years of Communism", October 2, 1989, p. 33

"No Rerun for the Gandhi-Dynasty Show", December 11, 1989, p. 47

"'Our Democracy Is the Best': A conversation with China's party chief" (with Mortimer B. Zuckerman), March 12, 1990, p. 50

"Back to the Future in China: Nine months after the tragedy in Tiananmen Square, China's leaders are guided less by vision than by the desire to survive", March 12, 1990, p. 40

"In Hong Kong, the Future Is Now: Britain will rule until 1997, but China is already moving in", March 19, 1990, p. 33

"The Kashmir question: Could fresh trouble on the Indo-Pakistan border spark the world's first-ever nuclear exchange", June 11, 1990, p. 42

"Will the flags follow trade? Taiwan's beachhead on the mainland" (Xiamen), July 16, 1990, p. 46

"Hanoi's hasty pudding: Beset by hunger and hyperinflation, Vietnam suddenly discovers capitalism, turning Ho Chi Minh's Communism on its head", July 23, 1990, p. 38

"Dateline: Karachi", October 22, 1990, p. 22

"Born to rule, bred to lose: How Pakistani Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto dazzled the world but self-destructed at home", November 5, 1990, p. 40

"Praise Allah and pass the ammunition: As Moscow and Washington try to end the Afghan War, the mujeheddin turn up the heat", November 12, 1990, p. 54

"A political free-for-all: As India burns, its politicians help light the torches", November 19, 1990, p.50

"Bleeding Kashmir: Arson and torture in the name of order", November 19, 1990, p. 52

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"Communists prevail in Balkans, for now" (with Robin Knight, Eric Ransdell and Susan V. Lawrence), April 15, 1991, p. 50

"'The United States also sells weapons': China's president sees a double standard" (with Mortimer B. Zuckerman and Susan Lawrence), May 27, 1991, p. 43

"On the Defensive: As Washington debates whether to get tough, China braces itself", May 27, 1991, p. 37

"Passage from Regal India: The death of Rajiv Gandhi could invigorate his country's debased democracy" (with Brahma Chellaney), June 3, 1991, p. 36

"India's Nod to 'Mr. Morose': The new prime minister, heir to the Gandhis, is a low-risk choice for high-risk times", July 1, 1991, p. 42

"Cambodia Starts Over: Can a coalition of former rulers put the killing fields behind them?", November 25, 1991, p. 43

"A Saturday morning call" (Dai Qing), December 2, 1991, p. 14

"Pakistan giving peace a chance in Afghanistan", February 10, 1992, p. 48

"Breaking the Chain Reaction: Why there may be a chance to end India's and Pakistan's race to develop nuclear weapons", March 9, 1992, p. 42

"The nuclear epidemic" (with Stephen Budiansky, Tim Zimmermann, Bruce B. Auster, Douglas Pasternak, Jim Impoco, Susan V. Lawrence, Louise Lief and Julie Corwin), March 16, 1992, p. 40

"Driving to a Reunion? Maybe, but Korea will not be another Germany", April 20, 1992, p. 44

"Fighting over the dream: The riots in L.A. left Koreans and blacks further apart than ever", May 18, 1992, p. 34

"Paving the way to prosperity: Gordon Wu's new road will make money for both Hong Kong and China, as the colony counts down to Beijing's 1997 takeover", July 6, 1992, p. 55

"The Cost of Leaving Home in Bosnia", August 24, 1992, p. 13

"Something wicked this way comes: The risks of not intervening in Yugoslavia", September 7, 1992, p. 70

"Fireworks on the Mekong River", November 23, 1992, p. 18

"Hope in the ashes of a holocaust" (Cambodia), November 30, 1992, p. 40

"You can go home again" (Afghanistan), November 30, 1992, p. 45

"Loophole Politics in Hong Kong", November 30, 1992, p. 47

"Even $2 Billion May not Buy Peace: In Cambodia, the U.N.'s biggest peacemaking venture could turn out to be a lesson in limits", December 21, 1992, p. 68

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"From Bosnia to Bombay" (fundamentalism), February 1, 1993, p. 63

"'China's arms sales are very limited': A conversation with party leader Jiang Zemin" (with Mortimer B. Zuckerman and Susan V. Lawrence), March 15, 1993, p. 60

"Following Deng's lead: China's patriarch is entrusting his reforms to an untested apparatchik" (with Susan V. Lawrence), March 15, 1993, p.57

"Nuclear trouble" (North Korea), March 22, 1993, p. 11

"Remembrance of things not yet past" (genocide), April 26, 1993, p. 12

"The U.N.'s other quagmire: In Cambodia, elections may bring new fighting instead of peace" (with John Kreiger), May 24, 1993, p. 45

"When judges just say no" (Pakistan), June 7, 1993, p. 55

"Pakistan's future: politicians or generals?", October 18, 1993, p. 18

"Bhutto's uphill battle", November 1, 1993, p. 58

"From battleground to backwater" (Afghanistan), December 13, 1993, p. 69

"A crucial test for reform" (Hong Kong), January 24, 1994, p.56

"The War Against Women: In much of the world, political and economic 'progress' has been dragging them backward" (with Jennifer Seter, Susan V. Lawrence, Robin Knight and Joannie M. Schrof), March 28, 1994, p. 42

"The echoes of Sita: A lethal, age-old contempt for women persists", March 28, 1994, p. 54

"The great Asian TV sweepstakes: There are big dollar signs in all those eyeballs" (with William J. Cook and Susan V. Lawrence), March 28, 1994, p. 68

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"Can South Asia's nukes be capped?", April 25, 1994, p. 22

"America and the un-China" (India), May 23, 1994, p. 49

"Changing times: The indirect, stop-and-go life patterns of Wellesley women are not aberrations but archetypes of our time" (with Susan Priestland), June 6, 1994, p. 75

"Population wars", September 12, 1994, p. 54

"Unfinished business: The Cairo conference" (with Faiza Ambah), September 19, 1994, p. 57

"A doctor's tale: Mao's physician paints a chilling portrait of a dictator and his court", October 10, 1994, p. 48

"The rise of Taliban: A new force of Muslim fighters is determined to rule Afghanistan", March 6, 1995, p. 64

"Graffiti and the gallows", March 6, 1995, p. 26

"Under attack in Pakistan: Americans died, but Benazir Bhutto is a political target, too" (with Jennifer Griffin), March 20, 1995, p. 52

"A Volatile Democracy: Right-wing election victories in India have shaken the political order and economic reform", March 27, 1995, p. 37

"A banking lesson from Bangladesh: The Clintons are fans of Mohammed Yunus", April 3, 1995, p. 41

"Nuclear scares in South Asia: India vs. Pakistan", April 17, 1995, p. 43

"A plea for change" (Xu Liangying), May 29, 1995, p. 18

"Drawing battle lines in Beijing: Sharp disagreements over women's rights mark a U.N. conference" (with Susan V. Lawrence), September 11, 1995, p. 43

"Two steps forward, three steps back: China gets it wrong at the women's conference" (with Susan V. Lawrence), September 18, 1995, p. 63

"Campaigning across the Taiwan Strait: China tries to influence Taipei's politics, including the presidential elections", September 25, 1995, p. 65

"Hoisting the red flag over Hong Kong: Elections signal resistance to Beijing's rule", October 2, 1995, p. 56

"'The problem is political will': Jiang Zemin on Bill Clinton, Taiwan, his leadership and Deng Xiaoping" (with Mortimer B. Zuckerman and Susan V. Lawrence), October 23, 1995, p. 72

"The new look in Beijing" (with Susan V. Lawrence), October 23, 1995, p. 68

"A familiar dynasty gives way in India: Elections in India could scramble the old political order", May 6, 1996, p. 54

"India's born-again archnationalists soften some stands", May 27, 1996, p. 60

"C-Day minus one year and counting: Hong Kong warily awaits China's takeover", July 8, 1996, p. 35

"Genie in Kabul: Radical Islamic warriors seize Kabul", October 7, 1996, p. 23

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Book Review

1986-1996

"45 Months of Terror" (Review of When the War Was Over: The Voices of Cambodia's Revolution and Its people by Elizabeth Becker), October 26, 1986, p. 22

"Telling the Truth, Taking the Punishment" (Review of A Higher Kind of Loyalty: A Memoir by China's Foremost Journalist by Liu Binyan), May 27, 1990, p. 3

"The Dowager Got a Bad Rap" (Review of Dragon Lady: The Life and Legend of the Last Empress of China by Sterling Seagrave with Peggy Seagrave), May 3, 1992, p. 12

"Their Man in Tokyo" (Review of The Secret Sun: A Novel of Japan by Fred Hiatt), October 18, 1992, p. 53

"Made in China" (Review of China Hands: The Adventures and Ordeals of the American Journalists Who Joined Forces With the Great Chinese Revolution by Peter Rand), December 10, 1995, p. 24

"Momism" (Review of Fruitful: A Real Mother in the Modern World by Anne Roiphe), October 13, 1996, p. 33

"Inside the Chinese Gulag" (Review of Troublemaker: One Man's Crusade Against China's Cruelty by Harry Wu with George Vecsey), November 10, 1996, p. 24

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Other

"Taiwan's Tiff with Tokyo", Far Eastern Economic Review, January 2, 1964

"Taiwan after de Gaulle", Far Eastern Economic Review, March 12, 1964

"Taiwan Looks Ahead", The New Leader, April 13, 1964

"A New Uniform Look For Peking's Soldiers", New York Herald Tribune, June 13, 1965

"Peking Purges and Pardons: Red Guard Attacks Harming Party Organisation", Forum World Features, November 12, 1966

"Cultural Revolutionary Diplomacy: China halts violence against embassies", Forum World Features, February 3, 1968

"Non-Governmental Organizations, Early Warning, and Preventive Diplomacy" (with Robert I. Rotberg, and Martha A. Chen), World Peace Foundation Report Number 9, 1995

"Dire Straits", The New Republic, July 14-July 21, 1997, p. 25

"Benazir Bhutto: Comeback Kid?", Alicia Patterson Foundation Reporter 19 #1, 1998

"Benazir and the Bomb", Alicia Patterson Foundation Reporter 19 #2, 1999

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