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This book examines the leadership and legacy of Lee Hsien Loong, who was the third Prime Minister of Singapore from 2004 to 2024.Lee's tenure was a time of profound change within Singapore and its external environment. The chapters in this book recount how he led Singapore through several crises, including the 2008 Global Financial Crisis and the COVID-19 pandemic. The world was becoming multipolar, with relations between the United States and China turning confrontational and fraught. Being a key member of ASEAN, Singapore was not immune from the impact of these external changes. It was vital to navigate these changes delicately, to secure the country's strategic interests.As a small, open economy, workers and businesses had to adapt to the massive technological disruptions of the last two decades with the rapid spread of the Internet and mobile connectivity, the rise of the digital economy, as well as advances in automation and Artificial Intelligence. Lee introduced policies to promote innovation and enhance competitiveness, mitigate the impact of economic restructuring, and develop Singapore's human capital, all to achieve quality and inclusive growth for Singaporeans. The book also discusses the way he responded to the domestic challenges of income and wealth inequality, social stratification, low fertility, an ageing population, online safety, new forms of identity politics and Singaporeans' desire for a more sustainable, affordable and liveable habitat.The essays by Singaporean thought leaders analyse how Mr Lee, as Prime Minister, crafted policy, shaped government, and engaged the citizenry to adapt to the significant changes in the internal and external policy landscape. They consider the impact of policy innovations — both successes and shortcomings — and whether there remains unfinished business his successor must attend to.The authors' critical perspectives on areas ranging from foreign policy to economic strategy, social support frameworks, politics and state institutions reveal how prepared Singapore is for the future as a small but not inconsequential city-state in Southeast Asia. As Singapore looks beyond its 60th year of independence in 2025, these essays afford readers a timely examination of Lee Hsien Loong's contribution.