Japan: America’s Canary in the Chinese Coal Mine
Speaker:
William Chou
Senior Fellow and Deputy Director, Japan Chair, Hudson Institute
Friday, March 6, 2026 | 12:15 - 1:30 pm | SRH 3.124, The LBJ School of Public Affairs
On Friday, March 6, the Clements Center for National Security and the Alexander Hamilton Society – UT Chapter, will host William Chou, Senior Fellow and Deputy Director, Japan Chair at the Hudson Institute, for a talk on “Japan: America’s Canary in the Chinese Coal Mine.” Join us at 12:15 pm in SRH 3.124 at the LBJ School of Public Affairs.
William Chou is a senior fellow and deputy director of Hudson Institute’s Japan Chair. His work at Hudson focuses on the United States’ relationship with Japan and other Indo-Pacific issues, especially economic security, trade and investment, and regional partnerships. Dr. Chou’s recent projects include analyses of the Nippon Steel–US Steel partnership, economic security cooperation among the US, Japan, and the European Union, automotive and critical mineral supply chains, and US industrial and trade initiatives around the world.
Dr. Chou writes and speaks regularly on policy issues, with his analysis appearing in publications such as The Wall Street Journal, Bloomberg, Politico, The Washington Post, Nikkei, The New York Times, and the Financial Times.
He holds a BA in history from Yale and a PhD in history from the Ohio State University, with a dissertation and book manuscript on Cold War US-Japan commercial and diplomatic relations. He is a former fellow at the Smithsonian, the Clements Center at the University of Texas at Austin, and the University of Tokyo. He began his career as a research analyst at the Institute for Defense Analyses during the Iraq War.
A native New Yorker, Dr. Chou is a former Jeopardy! champion.