Lapse In Appropriations

The most recent appropriations for the Department of War expired at 11:59 p.m. EDT on Sept. 30, 2025. Military personnel will continue in a normal duty status, without pay, until such time as a continuing resolution or appropriations are passed by Congress and signed into law. Civilian personnel not engaged in excepted activities will be placed in a non-work, non-pay status.

May 24, 2011

News

‘We’ over ‘Me’, Richard Sears Retires after 52 Years of Service

Richard Sears, the Center’s Dean of Admissions and Business Operations, retired on December 31, 2022. Sears served at the Center for over 20 years and previously for 30 years in the United States Navy.

By |2025-10-16T15:15:40-10:00January 13, 2023|Categories: DKI APCSS, news, Awards|Tags: , , , |

Has China’s Economic Development Led to the Democratization of China?

Dr.Sungmin Cho has published a new article titled “Does China’s Case Falsify Modernization Theory? Interim Assessment,” in the Journal of Contemporary China. Using the political science theory of modernization, Dr. Cho revisits the question of whether China's economic development [...]

By |2023-01-06T14:27:10-10:00January 6, 2023|Categories: Faculty Articles, news, Cho|Tags: , , |

Vietnam’s Approach to China: Bamboo Diplomacy with Neo-tributary Characteristics

This article discusses China’s efforts in strengthening China-Vietnam relations and Vietnam’s use of bamboo diplomacy to keep China at arm’s length without coming across as an adversary. According to Vuving, Vietnam’s Communist Party chief, Nguyen Phu Trong, used bamboo as a metaphor to advocate for a foreign policy “that combines flexibility in tactics and firmness in principles, thus resulting in resilience.”

By |2025-06-04T15:08:03-10:00December 3, 2022|Categories: Vuving, Publications, news|Tags: , , |

Politics by Numbers: Counting Plato’s Shadows

James Sullivan is currently a non-resident Visiting Scholar at the Daniel K. Inouye Asia Pacific Center for Security Studies and is pursuing an ALM in International Relations from Harvard Extension School. His paper analyzes China's use of tone when addressing [...]

By |2025-05-29T10:26:20-10:00November 26, 2022|Categories: Security Nexus, news|Tags: , , , |

Faculty members attend the fourth Mekong-U.S. Partnership Track 1.5 Policy Dialogue

In July of 2022, faculty members Dr. Lori Forman and Dr. Deon Canyon attended the fourth Mekong-U.S. Partnership Track 1.5 Policy Dialogue in Cambodia. As of late October 2022, the report for this event in now available online on [...]

By |2025-06-04T14:58:08-10:00November 7, 2022|Categories: Outreach, Forman, Canyon, news, Engagements|Tags: , |

Improving Pandemic Response with Military Tools: Using Enhanced Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance

“Improving Pandemic Response With Military Tools: Using Enhanced Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance” is an article published in September 2022 that is part of a larger journal entitled Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness on the Cambridge University Press website. [...]

By |2025-06-04T15:03:53-10:00September 30, 2022|Categories: Publications, Canyon, news, kevany|Tags: , , |
Go to Top