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.

Understanding China’s approach to aid
Understanding China’s approach to aid
A supposed ‘white elephant’ might actually be a source of national pride.
How to handle the finger-wagging from Beijing
Commentary
How to handle the finger-wagging from Beijing
Originally published in the Australian Financial Review (Photo:  Merriden Varrall
What the White Paper misses on China
What the White Paper misses on China
The assumption that China can be encouraged into a ‘more responsible role’ is ill-founded.
No need to self-censor in the face of China
No need to self-censor in the face of China
China has not actually taken any action to prompt Silent Invasion being pulled.
The 19th Party Congress: Xi's mid-term appraisal
The 19th Party Congress: Xi's mid-term appraisal
While China under Xi Jinping is going to be challenging for the region, ultimately the Party Congress is about what the leadership is doing for China.
On North Korea, China’s interests are unchanged
On North Korea, China’s interests are unchanged
China closing North Korean businesses should not be seen as a shift in approach.
Beijingers keep calm and carry on
Beijingers keep calm and carry on
The people of Beijing are the embodiment of flexibility and adaptiveness.
A Chinese threat to Australian openness
Commentary
A Chinese threat to Australian openness
Originally published in the New York Times (Photo: Flickr/Mark爱生活) Merriden Varrall
China sees the West behind Liu Xiaobo
China sees the West behind Liu Xiaobo
Social media posts by Chinese people around the world suggest the idea that the West has some role in Liu Xiaobo’s downfall has traction.
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