This document appears to be page 59 of a House Oversight Committee report (Section 5) analyzing the relationship between US and Chinese think tanks as of 2018. It details the demographics of US China experts, the necessity of cross-border interaction for research, and notes a significant decline in the openness and productivity of these dialogues due to stricter Chinese government regulations, such as travel limits and topic vetting. While part of a document dump often associated with investigations (potentially overlapping with foreign influence inquiries), this specific page does not mention Jeffrey Epstein or flight logs.
| Name | Role | Context |
|---|---|---|
| China experts | Subject matter experts |
Interviewed for the report, some served in US government
|
| US think tanker | Interviewee |
Quoted regarding the decline in productivity of conversations
|
| Chinese interlocutors | Counterparts |
Noted for a decline in candor and greater uniformity in speech
|
| Name | Type | Context |
|---|---|---|
| US think tanks |
Subject of the report regarding their focus on China
|
|
| Chinese think tanks |
Counterparts to US institutions
|
|
| US government |
Previous employer of about half the experts interviewed
|
|
| Chinese government |
Source of partial funding for one think tank; issuer of new restrictive regulations
|
|
| House Oversight Committee |
Implied by footer stamp 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT'
|
| Location | Context |
|---|---|
|
Primary subject location
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|
|
Location of US think tanks
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|
People's Republic of China, origin of some staff
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Complete text extracted from the document (3,028 characters)
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