Dr Merriden Varrall

Nonresident Fellow
Areas of expertise

China; Chinese foreign and domestic policy; Chinese development policy

Dr Merriden Varrall
Biography
Publications
News and media

Dr Merriden Varrall is a Nonresident Fellow at the Lowy Institute. She is Director of the Australia Geopolitics Hub at KPMG. From 2014- 2018, Merriden was the Director of the Lowy Institute’s East Asia Program. Before joining the Institute, Merriden was the Assistant Country Director and Senior Policy Advisor at United Nations Development Programme, China, where she worked on China’s role in the world, focusing on its international development cooperation policy. Prior to that she worked for the Australian Government Treasury and the Department of Family and Community Services. Merriden spent almost eight years living and working in China, including lecturing in foreign policy at the China Foreign Affairs University and conducting fieldwork for her doctoral research. Merriden has a PhD examining Chinese foreign policy from Macquarie University, Sydney, and the Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam. She has a Masters Degree in International Affairs from the Australian National University, and completed her undergraduate studies in international studies at the University of Technology Sydney.

How China views the plight of refugees
How China views the plight of refugees
The Chinese position is that its most valuable contribution to the global humanitarian good is the development and stability of China itself.
Australians' views of China: we need to go deeper than 'fear and greed'
Commentary
Australians' views of China: we need to go deeper than 'fear and greed'
Originally published in the Sydney Morning Herald.Merriden Varrall
China: When having a child is a poor career move
China: When having a child is a poor career move
'Have you ever thought about the problems Chinese female professionals face in our society before bringing in this policy?'
Why altruism is risky in China
Why altruism is risky in China
These tragic events demonstrate a very unfortunate combination of a moral obligation system in which loyalty is due only to those closest to you, and a fundamental lack of trust.
Australia's reputation in China entrenched as greedy, untrustworthy and a US lapdog
Commentary
Australia's reputation in China entrenched as greedy, untrustworthy and a US lapdog
Originally published in the Australian Financial Review. Merriden Varrall
Remembering Tiananmen in Hong Kong
Commentary
Remembering Tiananmen in Hong Kong
Originally published in The Diplomat.Merriden Varrall
Does China's rise threaten the rules-based order?
Does China's rise threaten the rules-based order?
China is being told that its very presence in the Asian region signals the beginning of the end of the rules-based-order.
Four Corners sees the Party-state in all the shadows
Four Corners sees the Party-state in all the shadows
In general, given the way networks and contacts work in China, Party connections are not necessarily a cause for alarm.
What Chinese media thought of the Shangri-La Dialogue
What Chinese media thought of the Shangri-La Dialogue
China believes it is being deliberately misrepresented and victimised by an ‘arrogant’ US and its allies
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