After the Xi–Cheng Meeting: Taiwan’s Democratic Subjectivity and the Politics of Peace

Written by Percy Yixuanchen Yu. This article argues that the real question following the Cheng-Xi meeting and its repercussions is whether Taiwan can convert its own democratic pluralism into strategic agency under simultaneous external pressure. This democratic subjectivity has three dimensions: institutional legitimacy, societal authorisation, and external credibility.

What Taiwan’s Resilience Planning is Missing

Written by Tom Wilson. As Taiwan prepares for the 2026 urban resilience exercises, this article examines a key challenge in the current approach: a mismatch between how resilience is formally defined and measured, and how it operates in practice in Taiwan crisis settings, where informal, trust-based community networks often play a central role.

Thailand and Taiwan: A Chance for Enhancing Relations

Written by Jordan Laramore. This article analyses the past and present of Thai-Taiwan relations. Despite the challenges posed by China’s growing ties with Thailand, this article argues that Thailand and Taiwan can build on their strong historical ties and have many opportunities for cooperation, including expanding health cooperation and soft-power exchanges between civil societies.

Beyond the Hype: a holistic view of Taiwan’s national passion – Baseball, is our system healthy?

Written by Yenting Lin. Amid baseball’s rise to national prominence in Taiwan, this article assesses whether the baseball system is truly healthy. While the system can produce popularity and results, the issue is structural – fragmented governance, weak development systems, and shallow industry. This article argues that Taiwan should improve its long-term investment and development.

Reorienting Taiwan on Turtle Island: My Encounter with Emma Teng’s Taiwan’s Imagined Geography

Written by Jo-Tzu Huang. Emma Teng’s Taiwan’s Imagined Geography has inspired the author to rethink Taiwan through settler-colonial and imperial frameworks. Teng’s analysis of Qing travel writings reveals how geography and identity were constructed. It challenges Western-centric colonial theories and prompts reflection on Taiwan’s layered colonial histories within global human geography discourse. 

Layers of the Law: My Reflection on An Introduction to Taiwan’s Legal History by Tay-sheng Wang

Written by Shih-An Wang. The author explains how Taiwanese legal scholarship has shifted from foreign-centred doctrines to contextual, historically grounded approaches emphasising Taiwan’s layered legal identity. Through Tay-sheng Wang’s influence, legal history reveals law as dynamic and contingent. This perspective informs constitutional studies, highlighting democracy’s fragility, authoritarian legacies, and Taiwan’s evolving legal system as an ongoing, multi-layered narrative. 

1 2 3 281