The Program on Geopolitics, Technology, and Governance (GTG) examines how emerging technologies—including artificial intelligence, quantum computing, and smart devices—are redefining power, economies, and policies worldwide. Our research addresses the complex challenges these advances pose for international security, and how governments, businesses, and individuals adapt to shifting landscapes of risk and opportunity.
Artificial intelligence is reshaping economies, security, and governance worldwide, raising urgent questions about how to distribute its benefits equitably while managing risks. GTG examines how democracies can leverage AI innovation to advance shared prosperity and security, with particular attention to infrastructure requirements, Global South perspectives, and mechanisms for international cooperation.
Related projects:
AI for Peace
This research initiative investigates how the United States and its allies and partners can leverage their comparative advantages in AI innovation to equitably distribute the benefits of AI while incentivizing trustworthy deployment. The research focuses on three key areas:
Infrastructural requirements for deploying AI at scale for countries at all levels of economic development and multilateral, multi-stakeholder mechanisms for meeting those requirements.
Global South perspectives on promising use cases for AI and governance approaches for facilitating AI deployment while managing risks.
Prospects and options for international collaborations to address cross-border security, environmental, and other externalities.
The Future of Decision-Making Project (FODM) is a multi-year, interdisciplinary research initiative examining how emerging technologies—particularly artificial intelligence and advanced decision-support systems—are reshaping human decision-making in high-stakes domains such as national security, defense, and crisis management. Rather than focusing solely on technological capability, the project centers on the human dimension: how judgment, responsibility, and accountability evolve as machines increasingly inform, shape, or constrain human choices. The project brings together scholars and practitioners from academia, government, and industry to develop empirically grounded, policy-relevant insights into the future of human-machine decision systems.
GEOPOLITICS OF TECHNOLOGY
Emerging technologies are becoming central to great power competition and regional security dynamics. GTG examines how technological advantages translate into geopolitical leverage, how U.S. strategy can balance competition with innovation and alliance partnerships, and how technology is reshaping power dynamics across critical regions like East Asia.
GTG's annual conference and ongoing research initiative brings together leading regional experts, policymakers, and industry leaders to examine how technological developments are reshaping geopolitical dynamics across East Asia. The research focuses on critical technology supply chains—particularly semiconductors—regional responses to U.S.-China competition, and opportunities for multilateral cooperation on technology governance.
CHINA & DIGITAL COMPETITION
China's rapid digital development and distinct governance approaches have profound implications for global markets, security, and technology standards. GTG analyzes Chinese technology policy and corporate strategies through original-language sources, providing insights into how China's digital trajectory shapes international competition and governance debates.
The DigiChina project, led by Graham Webster, enhances understanding of China's digital policy developments through translating and analyzing Chinese-language sources. Since 2017, DigiChina has published translations of primary sources, contextual explanation, and analysis on China’s technology policy landscape, covering topics including the Cybersecurity Law regime, data governance, artificial intelligence, and China’s official push for greater technological independence.
CYBERSECURITY & INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION
Effective governance of technology challenges requires sustained dialogue and cooperation across borders. GTG facilitates Track II exchanges with international partners, building relationships and shared understanding that can lay groundwork for broader policy cooperation on cybersecurity and technology governance issues.
Recent Publications
Publications
Filter:
Filter resultsClose
Afghanistan
Albania
Algeria
Andorra
Angola
Antigua & Barbuda
Argentina
Armenia
Australia
Austria
Belgium
Belize
Brunei
Canada
Caribbean
China
Denmark
Eastern Europe
Northeast Asia
Azerbaijan
Bahamas
Bahrain
Bangladesh
Benin
Bolivia
Bosnia & Herzegovina
Burma
Central America
Central Europe
Costa Rica
Cyprus
Czech Republic
Estonia
Fiji
Japan
Mexico
Oceania
Portugal
Barbados
Belarus
Bhutan
Botswana
Brazil
Bulgaria
Cambodia
Egypt
El Salvador
Finland
France
Germany
Iberian Peninsula
Kiribati
Mongolia
North America
South Asia
Spain
United States
Burkina Faso
Chile
Croatia
Cuba
East Timor
Georgia
Greece
Guatemala
Hungary
India
Iran
Latvia
Marshall Islands
North Korea
Scandinavia and Baltic Rim
South America
Southeast Asia
Burundi
Colombia
Dominica
Honduras
Iceland
Indonesia
Iraq
Kazakhstan
Kosovo
Liechtenstein
Lithuania
Maldives
Micronesia
South Korea
Western Europe
Cameroon
Dominican Republic
Ecuador
Ireland
Israel
Kyrgyzstan
Laos
Macedonia
Nauru
Nepal
Nicaragua
Norway
Poland
Taiwan
Cape Verde
Grenada
Guyana
Italy
Jordan
Malaysia
Moldova
Montenegro
New Zealand
Pakistan
Panama
Slovakia
Sweden
Central African Republic
Haiti
Kuwait
Luxembourg
Palau
Paraguay
Philippines
Romania
Russia
Slovenia
Sri Lanka
Chad
Jamaica
Lebanon
Malta
Papua New Guinea
Peru
Serbia
Singapore
Switzerland
Tajikistan
Comoros
Libya
Monaco
Samoa
St. Kitts & Nevis
Suriname
Thailand
Turkmenistan
D.R. Congo
Morocco
Netherlands
Solomon Islands
St. Lucia
Ukraine
Uruguay
Vietnam
Congo
Oman
San Marino
St. Vincent & the Grenadines
Tonga
Uzbekistan
Venezuela
Côte d'Ivoire
Qatar
Trinidad & Tobago
Tuvalu
United Kingdom
Djibouti
Saudi Arabia
Vanuatu
Vatican City
Equatorial Guinea
Syria
Eritrea
Tunisia
Ethiopia
Turkey
Gabon
United Arab Emirates
Gambia
Yemen
Ghana
Guinea
Guinea-Bissau
Kenya
Lesotho
Liberia
Madagascar
Malawi
Mali
Mauritania
Mauritius
Mozambique
Namibia
Niger
Nigeria
Rwanda
Säo Tomé & Príncipe
Senegal
Seychelles
Sierra Leone
Somalia
South Africa
South Sudan
Sudan
Swaziland
Tanzania
Togo
Uganda
Zambia
Zimbabwe
The Americas
Asia-Pacific
Europe
Middle East and North Africa
Russia and Eurasia
Sub-Saharan Africa
2024 MIP Class
Admissions
Aging
Agricultural trade
AHPP Working Paper Series
Alumni
APARC In-House Series
Arms Control
Biofuels
Capstone
CDDRL 20th Anniversary
CDDRL Research in-brief
CDDRL Seminar Write-ups
Children's health
Class of 2024
Class of 2025
Conference Blog
Corruption
Courtesy Faculty
Democracy promotion
Early Childhood Development
Entrepreneurship Inside Government
European Union
GKC
GKC Leadership
Globalization
Graduation
Hacking for Defense (H4D)
Health
Health and the Environment
Hypertension
In the Classroom
Inclusion and Exclusion
Inequality
Infrastructure
International Law
Internship Blog
Israel Fellows
Masters in International Policy
Meet the Class
Migration and Citizenship (Society)
National Security Innovation Scholars
Obesity
Palm Oil
Profile
Race
Rule of Law
SAI
Shorenstein APARC Policy and Working Papers
Smoking
Social Media Lab
Staff
Takedown
Teaching Team
Technology
Technology, Innovation, and Great Power Competition
Vision Care
Agriculture
Agriculture policy
Arms Smuggling
Borders
Cap and Trade
Comparative effectiveness research
Culture
Democracy
Disaster response
Health care institutions
HIV/AIDS
Kyoto Protocol
Population health
State-building
Biosecurity
Business
Demographics
Diabetes
Elections
Health policy
Media
World Bank
Aquaculture
Bioterrorism
Cleantech
Coal
Discrimination
Disease
Health Care Reform
Human Rights
Investment
Military
Protectionism
World Trade Organization
Diplomacy
Economic Affairs
Electricity
Global Health
Homeland Security
Information Technology
Intelligence
NATO
Civil Wars
Climate
Education
Energy and Climate Policy
Ethnicity
Foreign Aid
Health Care
Institutions and Organizations
Negotiation
Climate change
Conflict
Energy Infrastructure
Entrepreneurship
Foreign Policy
Gender
Health Outcomes
Peacekeeping
Policy Analysis
Energy Services
Food Markets
History
Migration and Citizenship
Crime
Cybersecurity
Deforestation
Fossil Fuels
Islam
Nutrition
Trade
Fisheries
Food Security
Public Health
Drug trafficking
Hunger
Natural gas
Publication Series
Shorenstein APARC Studies with Stanford University Press
Innovation
Nuclear Energy
Religion
Nuclear policy
Poverty
Natural Resources
Renewable Resources
Science and Technology
Kidnapping
Oil
Water
Sustainable development
Missiles
Nuclear Risk
Nuclear Safety
Terrorism
Torture convention
Violence
Governance
International Relations
Health and Medicine
International Development
Security
Energy
Environment
Society
Walter H. Shorenstein Asia-Pacific Research Center
Center for Health Policy / Department of Health Policy
Center for International Security and Cooperation
Center on Democracy, Development, and the Rule of Law
Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies
The Europe Center
Center on Food Security and the Environment
Stanford Center at Peking University
Bechtel Conference Center At Encina Hall
Internal Center (Content Staging)
Cyber Center
Center on China’s Economy and Institutions
Program on Energy and Sustainable Development
Korea Program
Southeast Asia Program
Stanford Program on Regions of Innovation and Entrepreneurship
China Program
Stanford Program on International and Cross-Cultural Education
Global Affiliates Program
Asia Health Policy Program
Program on Human Rights
Rural Education Action Program
Arab Reform and Development Program
Draper Hills Summer Fellows Program
Program on Poverty and Governance
Japan Program
Stanford International Crime and Violence Lab
Austrian and Central European Program
European Governance
Europe and the Global Economy
Migration
France and the Francophone World
Iberian Studies Program
Industrial Affiliates Program
Program on American Democracy in Comparative Perspective
Taiwan Program
GDPI
Student Programs
Global Populisms
Ford Dorsey Master's Program in International Policy
At SCCEI, we aim to shed some light on what actually is happening in China, and exactly how these happenings might affect the rest of the world. 2021 was an active and busy year for our team. Take a look at our 2021 Annual Report to see all of the incredible work and accomplishments we have achieved together. Download your copy or read it online.
Is it possible to reduce crime without exacerbating adversarial relationships between police and citizens? Community policing is a celebrated reform with that aim, which is now adopted on six continents. However, the evidence base is limited, studying reform components in isolation in a limited set of countries, and remaining largely silent on citizen-police trust. We designed six field experiments with Global South police agencies to study locally designed models of community policing using coordinated measures of crime and the attitudes and behaviors of citizens and police. In a preregistered meta-analysis, we found that these interventions led to mixed implementation, largely failed to improve citizen-police relations, and did not reduce crime. Societies may need to implement structural changes first for incremental police reforms such as community policing to succeed.
International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health,
November 30, 2021
Research continues to highlight the central relationship between caregivers’ mental health and their children’s development. This study examined the relation between primary caregivers’ mental health and school-aged children’s outcomes, including student mental health, resilience, and academic performance, in rural China. Using cross-sectional data from economically poor areas in the Gansu province, 2989 students (mean age = 11.51, 53.33% male, 46.67% female) and their primary caregivers (74.2% female) completed the 21-item, self-report Depression Anxiety Stress Scale. Students also completed the 25-item Connor-Davidson Resilience Scale and a standardized math test. The results indicated a high prevalence of caregiver depression (31%), stress (39%), and anxiety (24%). Characteristics that were significantly correlated with caregiver mental health issues included being a grandparent, having a low socioeconomic status and low education level, and living in a household with at least one migrant worker. Apart from caregiver stress and student resilience, caregiver mental health issues were negatively correlated with all student outcomes, including student mental health, resilience, and academic performance. Although additional empirical research is needed to investigate the associations between caregiver mental health and student outcomes, our results suggest that rural communities could benefit greatly from programs focused on improving the mental health of caregivers and this, in turn, may have a positive impact on student outcomes.
Can differences in beliefs about politics, particularly the benefits of war and peace, move markets? During the Siege of Paris by the Prussian army (1870-71) and its aftermath, we document that the price of the French 3% sovereign bond (rente) differed persistently between the Bourse in Paris and elsewhere, despite being one of the most widely held and actively traded financial assets in continental Europe. Further, these differences were large, reaching the equivalent of almost 1% of French GDP in overall value. We show these differences manifested themselves during the period of limited arbitrage induced by the Siege and persisted until the terms of peace were revealed. As long as French military resistance continued, the rente price was higher in Paris than the outside markets, but when the parties ceased fire and started negotiating peace terms this pattern was reversed. Further, while the price responded more to war events in Paris, the price responded more to peace events elsewhere. These specific patterns are difficult to reconcile with other potential mechanisms, including differential information sets, need for liquidity, or relative market thickness. Instead, we argue, these results are consistent with prices reflecting the updating of different prevailing political beliefs that existed in Paris and elsewhere about the benefits of war and peace.
Frontiers in Global Women's Health,
November 18, 2021
Background: Maternal mental health problems play an important role in infant well-being. Although western countries have extensively studied the associations between maternal mental disorders, hygiene practices and infant health, little is known in developing settings. This study investigates the correlations between postnatal mental health problems, hand washing practices and infant illness in rural western China. Methods: A total of 720 mothers of infants aged 0–6 months from four poor counties in rural western China were included in the survey. Mental health symptoms were assessed using the Depression, Anxiety, and Stress Scale-21 (DASS-21). Questions about infant illness and hand washing practices followed evaluative surveys from prior studies. Adjusted ordinary least squares regressions were used to examine correlations between postnatal mental health (depression, anxiety, and stress) symptoms, hand washing practices, and infant illness outcomes. Results: Maternal depression, anxiety and stress symptoms were significantly associated with reduced hand washing overall and less frequent hand washing after cleaning the infant's bottom. Mental health symptoms were also associated with a higher probability of infants showing two or more illness symptoms and visiting a doctor for illness symptoms. Individual hand washing practices were not significantly associated with infant illness; however, a composite measure of hand washing practices was significantly associated with reduced probability of infant illness. Conclusion: Postnatal mental health problems are prevalent in rural China and significantly associated with infant illness. Policy makers and practitioners should investigate possible interventions to improve maternal and infant well-being.
A randomized trial of community-level mask promotion in rural Bangladesh during COVID-19 shows that the intervention increased mask-use and reduced symptomatic SARS-CoV-2 infections.
We present evidence from a randomized experiment testing the impacts of a six-month early childhood home-visiting program on child outcomes at school entry. Two and a half years after completion of the program, we find persistent effects on child working memory - a key skill of executive functioning that plays a central role in children's development of cognitive and socio-emotional skills. We also find that the program had persistent effects on parental time investments and preschool enrollment decisions. Children were enrolled earlier and in higher quality preschools, the latter reflecting a shift in preferences over preschool attributes toward quality. Our findings imply an important role for the availability of high-quality subsequent schooling in sustaining the impacts of early intervention programs.