Shortly after Deborah Seligsohn was last on Sinica, in April, the lab leak hypothesis seemed suddenly to gain traction — at least in American media. This week, Kaiser invites Deborah back to the show to talk about why the possibility that SARS-CoV-2 escaped from the Wuhan Institute of Virology, a notion long regarded by virologists as less probable than zoonotic transmission, has burst back into the conversation. Deborah served as the State Department’s Environment, Science, Technology and Health Counselor in the U.S. Embassy in Beijing from 2003 to 2007. She is an assistant professor of political science at Villanova University in Philadelphia.
3:00: The persistence of the lab leak theory
11:40: Navigating the political and institutional landscape within China
25:36: A view from Beijing’s perspective
31:02: Eliciting cooperation from Beijing, and what should our priorities be
Recommendations:
Deborah: The podcast This Week in Virology, particularly episodes 760 and 762, which touch on the COVID-19 pandemic.
Kaiser: Richard L. Watkins, a candidate running for the U.S. Senate in North Carolina.
Filmmaker Daniel Whelan on Yiwu, a city at the core of cheap Chinese goods
What is cultural about the Cultural Revolution? Paul Clark on creativity amid destruction
It's all connected: Silk Roads old and new
A discussion with Cheng Li: Where is Chinese politics going?
Clay Shirky on tech and the internet in China
Calming the waters of the South China Sea and beyond
Whose century is it, anyway?
The Kaiser Kuo exit interview
Understanding China through a vibrant Shanghai street
Why do so many Chinese people admire Donald Trump?
Patrolling China's cyberspace
Arthur Kroeber vs. The Conventional Wisdom
50 years of work on U.S.-China relations
Live: The Cultural Revolution at 50
Public opinion with Chinese characteristics
Neo-Maoists: Everything old is new again
Allegiance
Sauced: American cooking in China
The China meltdown
Air pollution and climate change
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