Taiwan's past and present are inseparable from the past and present of the People's Republic of China. Therefore, unless we first evaluate her mainland cousin, the mainstream political situation of the People's Republic of China, we will make assumptions and critical comments about the potential "future of Taiwan" I can not. Given the current rhetoric in Taipei and Beijing, it may be argued that there are three possibilities of "Taiwan futures". 1) peaceful unification with the People's Republic of China, 1 country, 2 systems, 2) Taiwan's declaration as a national vote of a sovereign state independent of the People's Republic of China, 3) military unification has achieved unity
The world's largest futures research project is Tamkang University in Taiwan. Futures research is a compulsory course at the undergraduate level, with 3 to 5 thousand students attending classes every year. It is a master's program of the graduate futures research institute. This program accepts only 10 students per year. The program is related to Journal of Journal Research. The oldest future research project in North America was founded in 1975 at the University of Houston - Clear Lake. I moved to the University of Houston in 2007 and changed my degree to Foresight. The basics of the plan is that if you study and teach history in an academic environment, the future should be the same. Its mission is to train professional futurists
Taiwan is located east of the Taiwan Strait and is the largest island in the People's Republic of China located on the southeastern coast of mainland China. The majority of the population of Taiwan is Kanji, born in mainland China and divided into three groups according to what is called Chinese dialect (Taiwan National Information 2007). People in Taiwan cherish the information made carefully. They appreciate sharing a deep broad contextual understanding to convey and understand the core message. This situation appears in the form of words, gestures, and facial expressions.
In the past 20 years, members of Taiwan Research Working Group of Fair Bank China Research Center held a series of meetings in Taiwan and mainland this January. On both sides of the Taiwan Strait, we met with stakeholders, politicians and scholars between governments on the coastal relations. In Taiwan, this includes the president, the minister responsible for the mainland problem committee, the chairman of the Strait Exchange Fund and the delegates of major parties. On the mainland we met the Taiwan Secretariat of the State Council, the Taiwan Institute of Chinese Academy of Sciences, the Taiwan Institute of Xiamen University, the Chinese Contemporary International Relations Institute, and the Chinese Foundation. International strategy research