May 17

Past Event

Vietnamese Foreign Policy after the 11th Party Congress

Event Materials

Summary

At the 11th Party Congress of the Communist Party of Vietnam in January 2011, leaders mapped out Vietnam’s direction for the next five years and beyond in all areas. Although foreign observers have argued that the congress produced no changes, others claim that there were, in fact, some significant changes in terms of balance of power within the party structure – which will have implications for Vietnam’s public policy. Whether new ambition, goals, and personnel can steer Vietnam toward a more open society, more economic progress, and expanded international relations depends largely on how Hanoi’s leaders handle a number of existing pressing problems and whether they adopt bolder reform measures.

On May 17, CNAPS Visiting Fellow Tuan Minh Ta presented his perspective on what has and has not changed in Vietnam’s politics and foreign policy after the 11th Party Congress, and assessed the challenges that Vietnam’s leaders must address.

Details

May 17, 2011

3:30 PM - 5:00 PM EDT

The Brookings Institution

Kresge Room

1775 Massachusetts Ave., NW

Map

For More Information

Brookings Office of Communications

(202) 797-6105

Event Agenda

  • Introduction

    • Portrait: Richard Bush

      Richard C. Bush III

      Director

      Foreign Policy

  • Speaker

    • Tuan Minh Ta

      Visiting Fellow, Foreign Policy, Center for Northeast Asian Policy Studies