Christina Larson is a journalist focusing on international environmental issues and a contributing editor to Foreign Policy magazine. She is based in Beijing and has reported widely from across China and Southeast Asia; her essays and reportage on China, the environment, climate change, and civil society have appeared in the The New York Times, Boston Globe, The Atlantic, The New Republic, Foreign Policy, Scientific American, Smithsonian, TIME, Washington Monthly, and the Christian Science Monitor, among other publications.
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Gauging the Impact of Warming On Asia’s Life-Giving Monsoons
August 20, 2012
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China’s Looming Conflict Between Energy and Water
April 30, 2012
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China’s Ma Jun on the Fight To Clean Up Beijing’s Dirty Air
April 10, 2012
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A Once-Polluted Chinese City Is Turning from Gray to Green
October 17, 2011
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Green Activists Feel Sting of Chinese Government Crackdown
June 30, 2011
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In China, a New Transparency On Government Pollution Data
December 20, 2010
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China Takes First Steps In the Fight Against Acid Rain
October 28, 2010
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Growing Shortages of Water Threaten China’s Development
July 26, 2010
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America’s Unfounded Fears of A Green-Tech Race with China
February 8, 2010
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The Great Paradox of China: Green Energy and Black Skies
August 17, 2009
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China’s Grand Plans for Eco-Cities Now Lie Abandoned
April 6, 2009
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On Chinese Water Project, A Struggle Over Sound Science
January 8, 2009
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China’s New Environmental Advocates
July 21, 2008
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China’s Emerging Environmental Movement
June 2, 2008