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The Pacific Rim Report
The Pacific Rim Report (PR Report) was created in 2022 as an internal publication that brings together the latest research wisdom from in-house PRSC researchers and contributing consultants, and is dedicated to providing interested members of the public, experts and individuals with:

●Publishing the latest information on international and Pacific Rim issues.
●Providing commentary on major events.
●Assessing and implementing actionable recommendations.

As a bilingual online publication that accepts paid subscriptions and targeted delivery, PR Report providing news, analysis, columns, commentary and industry insights, and is updated regularly to reflect policy flows, industry trends and to promote leading information and activities in strategic policy advice in the Asia-Pacific region.

We want PR Report to serve as a close network of government officials, large multinational corporations, business associations, NGOs, investment firms, democracy groups, research institutions and individuals in need to disseminate information, gain insight and capture value.

The PR Report  focuses on the following areas:
  • COVID-19
    Paying attention to the traceability of the New Crown Pneumonia outbreak, the current status of vaccination and its social impact, global epidemic prevention policies and their impact on international dynamics.
  • Digital Technology
    Following on the development and impact of artificial intelligence, global AI professional R&D, AI applications in defense, mathematics, energy, 5G/6G, high performance computing, blockchain, meta-universe, etc.
  • Pacific Rim Security
    Following on Taiwan-US dynamics, US-Japan dynamics, ASEAN dynamics, Asia-Pacific security cooperation dynamics, etc.
  • Global Crises
    Paying attention to global political crises, economic crises, democracy crises, peace crises, climate crises, and new crown pandemic crises. Analyzing the magnitude and scale of the challenges facing the world in the midst of a century of unprecedented change, and the impact of interlocking and cross-cutting crises on all of the Sustainable Development Goals.
  • China-US Game
    Following on the US-China game and the [Dragon And Eagle Dispute]: 1. the huge interests of US companies in China; 2. China's national debt in the US; 3. globalization vs. counter-globalization; 4. import and export and tariff issues between China and the US; 5. Chinese environmental protection vs. US anti-environmental protection; 6. 5G and high-tech war for supremacy; 7. geopolitical conflicts in the South China Sea, Taiwan Strait and North Korea; 8. Beijing consensus vs. Washington consensus etc.