Advertisement · 728 × 90

Posts by Jeffrey Ding

Preview
Reputation collectives: how international industry associations influence China’s safety standards in high-risk technologies Emerging economies face challenges in managing safety risks from powerful technologies. Indeed, some analysts identify China as the most likely source of an accident linked to emerging technologies...

Drawing on expert interviews & Chinese-language sources, we examine interactions b/t international industry associations and Chinese firms in three high-risk technological domains: nuclear power, civil aviation, and chemicals. We conclude with implications for AI.
www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10....

2 months ago 2 0 0 0

For instance, certification clubs rely on public naming and shaming, whereas reputation collectives employ internal benchmarking. An earlier version of this paper was titled "Industrialists Anonymous", as a nod to Alcoholics Anonymous (which also tries to protect candid disclosures).

2 months ago 0 0 1 0

We label this the "reputation collectives" mechanism, differentiating it from a more familiar mechanism of international private regulation called "certification clubs" (think: fair trade coffee).

2 months ago 0 0 1 0

Co-authored with GW PhD student Dennis Li, my latest article in Review of International Political Economy presents an unexpected answer: in industries where one firm’s accident damages the reputation of all others, intl industry associations can help improve safety standards in emerging economies.

2 months ago 0 0 1 0

Many policymakers and researchers see China as the most likely source of an AI accident. Yet, China has achieved remarkable safety gains in certain high-risk technological domains, including civil aviation and nuclear power. How?

2 months ago 1 0 1 0
Post image Post image Post image Post image

On November 19th, Professor @jeffreyding.bsky.social from The George Washington University received the prestigious Lepgold Book Prize at the Mortara Center. This award recognizes the best book in international relations published in 2024.

Photo credit: @georgetown-sfs.bsky.social

4 months ago 16 5 3 1

The GRFP announcement from NSF cuts out an entire cohort of 2nd year students from consideration, without warning. This is so deeply unfair that it warrants a formal protest from the scientific community. If someone wants to work with me to craft an open letter and solicit signatures, LMK.

6 months ago 171 86 9 9
Advertisement

I feel very honored to receive the Lepgold Prize, awarded by Georgetown's Mortara Center to the best book in international relations published in the preceding year. Thanks to the selection committee for recognizing my book Technology and the Rise of Great Powers!

7 months ago 10 0 1 0
Preview
科技與大國崛起:通用技術如何改變權力布局? 書名:科技與大國崛起:通用技術如何改變權力布局?,原文名稱:Technology and the Rise of Great Powers: How Diffusion Shapes Economic Competition,語言:繁體中文,ISBN:9786267645291,頁數:352,出版社:衛城出版,作者:傑佛瑞‧丁,譯者:許瑞宋,出版日期:2025/06/04,類別:商業理財

My book Technology and the Rise of Great Powers is now available in traditional Chinese! Much thanks to Taiwanese publisher Acropolis [衛城出版] and translator Ruisong Xu [許瑞宋] for diffusing these ideas.

www.books.com.tw/products/001...

10 months ago 7 0 1 0
Post image

Some reading for business and pleasure this afternoon. A preview of next week’s ChinAI…

1 year ago 2 0 0 0
Preview
U.S.-China Artificial Intelligence Competition | ChinaPower Project In this episode of the ChinaPower Podcast, Dr. Jeffrey Ding joins us to discuss U.S.-China artificial intelligence (AI) competition and his book, Technology and the Rise of Great Powers: How…

How well can the US and China integrate AI into their economies and societies? @jeffreyding.bsky.social argues that "The U.S. is better positioned to spread and embed AI across a broad range of productive processes.” Learn about U.S.-China AI competition on this #ChinaPower Podcast:

1 year ago 2 1 0 0
Post image

I had the cool opportunity to discuss DeepSeek and China's AI development on Wolf Blitzer's CNN show last night. They were kind enough to give some primetime product placement for my book too! @princetonupress.bsky.social www.cnn.com/2025/01/27/b...

1 year ago 11 1 0 0
Post image

We are delighted to publish working papers by the Climate & Environment team of this year's fellowship cohort, available at global.upenn.edu/future-of-us.... And please join us for a live webinar featuring these authors tomorrow January 23 from 4-5 pm ET, registration link at the QR code below:

1 year ago 7 7 0 1
Preview
ChinAI #296: DeepSeek goes left, ModelBest goes right Greetings from a world where…

For more on how Chinese startups are trying to build "denser" models (competitive levels of performance with fewer parameters), see latest ChinAI issue: chinai.substack.com/p/chinai-296...

1 year ago 2 1 0 0
Preview
How Chinese A.I. Start-Up DeepSeek Is Competing With OpenAI and Google The company built a cheaper, competitive chatbot with fewer high-end computer chips than U.S. behemoths like Google and OpenAI, showing the limits of chip export control.

Very pleased to be quoted in The New York Times on how Chinese AI startups are building more efficient AI models. Includes fascinating details about how engineers are using DeepSeek's models in the open source SGLang project. www.nytimes.com/2025/01/23/t...

1 year ago 8 3 1 1