Charles Lyons-Jones
Research Fellow, Public Opinion and Foreign Policy Program
Biography
Publications
Charlie Lyons-Jones is a Research Fellow in the Lowy Institute’s Public Opinion and Foreign Policy Program. He oversees the annual Lowy Institute Poll and the Global Diplomacy Index.
Prior to joining the Lowy Institute, Charlie served in the Australian government for five years, with the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) and the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet. Overseas, Charlie served at the Australian High Commission in Islamabad; in Canberra, he worked on North Korea policy at DFAT and on China and Taiwan as an international adviser at PM&C.
Charlie began his career at the Australian Strategic Policy Institute (ASPI) as a Mandarin-enabled analyst of China’s military, the People’s Liberation Army. He was co-author of Leaping Across the Ocean: The Port Operators Behind China’s Naval Expansion and was an integral part of the ASPI team that built the China Defence Universities Tracker. His writing has featured in The Sydney Morning Herald, The Diplomat, The National Interest and has been cited in The Economist.
Charles holds a BA from the University of Melbourne and an MSc from the University of Oxford.
Beware Pakistan’s general bearing peace talks
Pakistan wants to broker peace with Iran – but at what price for America?
After Khamenei: China is watching, and so should Taiwan
The harder lesson from Iran may be what comes after a decapitation strike.
Taiwan: Tsai Ing-wen’s battle to discipline the DPP
The Taiwanese president struggles to get the green light for DPP leadership in the 2020 presidential elections.
Deng’s ghost haunts Xi, as Maoism makes a return
Clouds loom over China as economic growth slows and the effects of the trade war with US take hold.
How Taiwan deters China – and can do better yet
Far from a “lost cause”, the Asia Power Index demonstrates the chance Taiwan has to strengthen its defence networks.
China: vaccines and rumours from Zhongnanhai
Amid whispers of possible infighting, President Xi Jinping remains powerful while Premier Li Keqiang seeks gains.
Name shame: China’s trouble with Taiwan
Beijing’s nomenclature belligerence may actually be working in Tapei’s favour.
Boao Forum, through the eyes of China’s state media
“Confidence” was the message, reinforced in print and online.
China: the party, the state, and the new anti-graft body
Xi Jinping has taken a significant risk with reforms of the anti-corruption system.