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Marc Blecher (marc.blecher@oberlin.edu) graduated from Cornell University and received his M.A. and Ph.D. from the University of Chicago. He is Professor of Politics and East Asian Studies at Oberlin College (USA). He has also served as Visiting Professor of Political Science at the University of Chicago and Visiting Fellow at the Institute of Development Studies of the University of Sussex (UK). He is the author of four books, and the editor of one more, on Chinese politics, society and political economy — including Tethered Deer (Stanford University Press), Micropolitics in Contemporary China (Sharpe), and China Against the Tides (Continuum), which has been translated into Chinese and Korean. He has also published several dozen articles on local politics and political economy in rural and urban China. He is currently pursuing two research projects: a book on class formation and workers’ politics in China tentatively entitled A World to Lose; and continuing research on the role of the county government in Xinji Municipality, Hebei (the topic of Tethered Deer), this time focusing on urban planning and land use. He lives in Oberlin, Ohio with his wife Sharon, and spends several months each year at his other home in London.
Gardner Bovingdon(gbovingd@indiana.edu) is Assistant Professor in the Department of Central Eurasia Studies and Adjunct Assistant Professor in the Department of Political Science at Indiana University. His research interest is in politics in contemporary Xinjiang; history of modern Xinjiang; historiography in China; and nationalism and ethnic conflict. He has published articles in Modern China and Twentieth Century China and is a contributor to Governing China's Multiethnic Frontiers (University of Washington Press, 2005). His current projects include a book project on the sources of conflict in Xinjiang, a book project dealing with politics and historiography in China, and a research project dealing with state policies and ethnogenesis in Xinjiang. He received his Ph.D. from Cornell University in 2002.
Mark W. Frazier (mark.frazier@lawrence.edu) is the Chair of the Department of Government and the Henry Luce Assistant Professor of East Asian Political Economy at Lawrence University, a liberal arts college in Appleton, Wisconsin. In 2004-2005, he was a Fulbright Research Fellow based in Beijing and Shanghai, where he conducted social surveys and interviews on how citizens and officials have responded to pension reforms. Frazier has authored articles on pension politics in Studies in Comparative International Development (Summer 2004), The China Journal (January 2004), and Asia Policy (January 2006). He is also the author of The Making of the Chinese Industrial Workplace: State, Revolution, and Labor Management (Cambridge University Press, 2002), which explores labor practices in state-owned enterprises before and after the 1949 revolution. He received his Ph.D. in political science in 1997 from the University of California, Berkeley.
Nandini Gupta (nagupta@indiana.edu) is an Assistant Professor of Finance at Indiana University's Kelley School of Business. She obtained her PhD in economics from the University of Pittsburgh. Her research is in the areas of corporate and international finance with an emphasis on emerging markets. She has written about the effect of privatization on the performance of Indian state-owned firms, the political economy of foreign direct investment liberalization, the political economy of the decision to privatize in India, and the effect of financial market reforms on economic growth. Her work has been published in the Journal of Finance and the RAND Journal of Economics.
Stephan Haggard(shaggard@ucsd.edu) is the Lawrence and Sallye Krause Professor at the Graduate School of International Relations and Pacific Studies (IR/PS) at the University of California, San Diego (UCSD). He is the author of Pathways from the Periphery: the Political Economy of Growth in the Newly Industrializing Countries (1990), The Developing Countries and the Politics of Global Integration (1995); and The Political Economy of the Asian Financial Crisis (2000). He is co-author, with Robert Kaufman, of The Political Economy of Democratic Transitions (1995), and with David McKendrick and Richard Doner, From Silicon Valley to Singapore: Location and Competitive Advantage in the Disk Drive Industry (2000). He is co-editor of Presidents, Parliaments and Policy (2000, with Mathew McCubbins) and other collective research projects on the politics of economic reform. He has just completed a book with Marcus Noland on food availability in North Korea entitled The Distribution of Misery: Famine, Aid and Markets in North Korea (2006) and is initiating a project with Tai-Ming Cheung on Chinese-North Korean economic relations. He is also working on a project with Robert Kaufman on social policy in East Asia, Latin America and Central Europe entitled Recrafting Social Contracts: Welfare Reform in Latin America, East Asia and Central Europe.
Rick Harbaugh (riharbau@indiana.edu) is assistant professor of Business Economics and Public Policy at Indiana University's Kelley School of Business. He is also an adjunct professor in the East Asian Languages and Culture Department. Professor Harbaugh received his Ph.D. at the University of Pittsburgh, where he researched the theory of mixed property rights. Before receiving his Ph.D., he covered economic developments in China and Taiwan for Chase Econometrics and then for Wharton Econometric Forecasting Associates. He received his Master's degree in economics from National Taiwan University. He is the author of a popular Chinese-English etymological dictionary, Chinese Characters: A Genealogy and Dictionary, and the founder and webmaster of the Chinese learning website Zhongwen.com. Before coming to Indiana in 2003, he taught at the Yale School of Management and the Claremont Colleges. Professor Harbaugh teaches courses on the Chinese economy and on game theory at the Kelley School.
Ho-fung Hung (hofung@indiana.edu) is an assistant professor at the Department of Sociology at Indiana University. He researches and publishes on contentious politics, globalization, nationalism, and social theory. His current projects include one that expounds China’s particular form of modernity by examining how the neo-Confucianist ideology shapes its trajectory of state formation and social protests from the eighteenth century to the present, in contrast to the European trajectories. Another project traces China’s changing conception of nationhood and frontier in light of Beijing’s contentious interaction with such intractable regions as Tibet, Hong Kong and Taiwan since 1949. Besides these two major projects, he also writes about the rise of China in the modern world-system, orientalist construction of non-western civilizations in modern social theory, and globalization of the SARS epidemics, among others.
Hu Shuli (shulihu@caijing.com.cn) is founder and editor of Caijing (Business and Finance Review), China's leading independent business magazine. Born in 1953, Ms. Hu entered the journalism program at People's University in 1978. She worked as a reporter for 16 years at Worker's Daily and then China Business Times, before starting the privately-financed Caijing in 1998. Ms. Hu has been called "the most dangerous woman in China" for her penetrating editorials and the magazine's groundbreaking stories on China's financial markets and corruption. Ms. Hu has been the recipient of several fellowships and awards, including the World Press Review's International Editor of the Year in 2003. During the Spring 2006 she is an Asian Pacific Leadership Fellow at UC-San Diego's Graduate School of International Relations and Pacific Studies.
Gregory Kasza (kasza@indiana.edu) received the PhD in political science from Yale in 1983. His scholarship analyzes Japanese politics from a broad comparative perspective, and his interests include state-society relations, war and politics, fascism, and welfare policy. He is the author of The State and the Mass Media in Japan, 1918-1945 (U. of California Press, 1988) and The Conscription Society (Yale U. Press, 1995). The latter book is a study of official mass organizations in Japan, China, and five other countries. Professor Kasza's latest project is a book titled One World of Welfare: Japan in Comparative Perspective (Cornell U. Press, forthcoming 2006). In addition to six years of research in Japan, Kasza has done fieldwork in Latin America, and he has held research appointments at Kyoto, Hitotsubashi, Tokyo, Harvard, and Oxford universities. He teaches courses on Japanese politics, business and public policy in Japan, war in comparative politics, qualitative methods, the introduction to East Asian civilization, and the graduate survey of comparative politics.
Scott Kennedy (kennedys@indiana.edu) (Ph.D., George Washington University, 2002) conducts research on and teaches about East Asian politics and political economy at Indiana University, where he is an assistant professor in the Department of East Asian Languages and Cultures and an adjunct assistant professor in the Department of Political Science. His recently published book, The Business of Lobbying in China (Harvard University Press, 2005), documents the growing influence of domestic and foreign businesses on national economic policy in China, and also shows that although companies operate in a common political system, economic circumstances shape the nature and outcome of lobbying. Kennedy has published articles in World Policy Journal, The China Journal, The China Quarterly, Problems of Post-Communism, Political Science Quarterly, Financial Times, Asian Wall Street Journal, and China Business Review. He is currently working on two research projects. The first examines corporate political activity in China in comparative perspective. The other considers Chinese government and industry participation in several global economic regimes, including those related to fair trade, technical standards, and credit rating.
Jason Kindopp (kindopp@eurasiagroup.net) is the China analyst at Eurasia Group and a member of the Asia Practice. Jason received a PhD in political science and a master's degree in international affairs from George Washington University. He also holds a graduate certificate in Chinese Studies from Johns Hopkins University and a bachelor's degree from Pacific Union College. Prior to joining the Eurasia Group, Jason was a resident scholar at the National Committee on United States-China Relations. He has also been a visiting scholar at the Sigur Center for Asian Studies and the Brookings Institution, and has taught and studied at Chinese universities in Nanjing and Hefei. Jason has lived and researched extensively in mainland China, Hong Kong, and Taiwan. A specialist in state-society relations and political stability in China, Jason's doctoral work focused on threats to social stability in China. He has also edited (with Carol Lee Hamrin), God and Caesar in China: Policy Implications of Church-State Tensions (Brookings Institution Press, 2004), which examines the political implications of the religious resurgence in China. He is a contributor to Brookings' Northeast Asia Survey, and has been published in a variety of media.
Arthur R. Kroeber (kroeber@theceq.com) is co-editor of the China Economic Quarterly and managing director of its parent company, Dragonomics Research & Advisory, an independent research firm specializing in analysis of the Chinese economy and its impact on global markets. A graduate of Harvard, Mr. Kroeber worked as a financial journalist in Asia beginning in 1987, writing articles on China and India for publications including The Economist, the Far Eastern Economic Review, and Wired. He spent several years as an analyst of the Economist Intelligence Unit, covering Taiwan, China and South Asia, before joining Dragonomics in 2002. He is a frequent contributor to the opinion page of the Financial Times and a consultant to Oxford Analytica.
Marjorie A. Lyles (mlyles@iupui.edu) (Ph.D. in Business Administration from the University of Pittsburgh).is Professor of International Strategic Management and the OneAmerica Chaired Professor of Business Administration at Indiana University's Kelley School of Business. She was founding Director of the Indiana University Center on Southeast Asia. She is a member of the American Management Association's International Council and has been an Invited Scholar and consultant for the U.S. Department of Commerce in the Peoples' Republic of China, a visiting scholar at the National Institute of Development Administration (NIDA) in Bangkok, Thailand, and a visiting scholar at the Universiti Sains Malaysia in Malaysia. She has consulted with USAID in Indonesia on higher education development. She spent a year as a visiting professor at the European Institute of Business Administration (INSEAD) in France. She has presented and authored over 100 articles on strategic management and international business. Her research has appeared in such journals as Administrative Science Quarterly, Academy of Management Review, Strategic Management Journal, Long Range Planning, the Journal of Business Strategy, and the Journal of Management. On her work on joint ventures, she has given presentations in various countries including China, Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia, Vietnam, Hungary, Costa Rica, the Netherlands, Poland, Romania, Spain, Thailand and Taiwan. She serves on the editorial board of the Journal of International Business and has served on the boards of the Academy of Management Review, Academy of Management Journal, and Journal of Management. She is listed in Outstanding Young Women in America and Who's Who in Finance and Industry.
Barrett McCormick (barrett.mccormick@marquette.edu) has been at Marquette University since 1984, except for two years beginning in 1991 spent at the Australian National University. He received his Ph.D. from the University of Wisconsin in 1985. He specializes in Chinese politics and his current research project is about Media Markets and the Transformtion of China's Public Sphere. Previous projects include edited volumes and articles on U.S.-China relations [with Edward Friedman,What If China Doesn't Democratize? (ME Sharpe, 2000)] and comparing China to Eastern Europe and East Asia [with Jonathan Unger, The Future of Chinese Socialism (ME Sharpe, 1996)]. McCormick's publications also include Political Reform in Post-Mao China (California, 1990), and articles in journals such as The China Journal, Journal of Asian Studies, Pacific Affairs, Issues and Studies and Twenty-First Century.
Andrew Mertha (amertha@artsci.wustl.edu) received his B.A and Ph.D. in political science at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. His book, The Politics of Piracy: Intellectual Property in Contemporary China, was published by Cornell University Press in 2005. He has published articles in International Organization (Summer 2005), Comparative Politics (Summer 2006 and forthcoming), and The China Quarterly (June and December 2005). He is finishing up a book project on the politics of hydropower in China. Since 1988, Mertha has lived in China for almost seven years, having taught English in Sichuan and manufactured toys in Shanghai and Guangdong, as well as engaging in field research in Beijing, the Yangtze River Delta, and the Southwest.
Ethan Michelson (emichels@indiana.edu) has been an Assistant Professor in the Departments of Sociology and East Asian Languages and Cultures at Indiana University-Bloomington since receiving his Ph.D. in sociology from the University of Chicago in 2003. In addition to his ongoing research on a variety of dimensions of the Chinese legal profession, he is also studying grievances and
disputes in rural China.
Barry Naughton (bnaughton@ucsd.edu) is an economist who specializes in China’s transitional economy. Naughton teaches at the Graduate School of International Relations and Pacific Studies of the University of California at San Diego. In 1998, he was named the first So Kuanlok Professor of Chinese and International Affairs. His study of Chinese economic reform, Growing Out of the Plan: Chinese Economic Reform, 1978-1993 (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1995) won the Masayoshi Ohira Memorial Prize. He has edited two volumes on China, The China Circle: Economics and Technology in the PRC, Taiwan and Hong Kong (Brooking Institution, 1997), and, with Dali Yang, Holding China Together: Diversity and National Integration in the Post-Deng Era. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2004. His most recent work is a general survey and textbook, The Chinese Economy: Transitions and Growth, Cambridge: MIT Press, forthcoming, 2006.
Kevin O'Brien (kobrien@berkeley.edu) received his Ph.D. from Yale University in 1987. Professor O'Brien's research focuses on Chinese politics in the reform era. His most recent work centers on theories of popular contention, particularly the origins, dynamics and outcomes of "rightful resistance" in rural China. He is the author of Reform Without Liberalization: China's National People's Congress and the Politics of Institutional Change, as well as articles on legislative politics, local elections, and village political reform. Recent publications include "Suing the Local State," in China Journal; "Discovery, Research Re(Design), and Theory Building," in Doing Fieldwork in China; "Popular Contention and Its Impact in Rural China," in Comparative Political Studies. This last article was a co-winner of the Sage Award for Best Paper in Comparative Politics delivered at the 2004 American Political Science Association Meeting. He is also the co-editor of a book entitled Engaging the Law in China: State, Society and Possibilities for Justice (Stanford, 2005). A new book, with his long-time collaborator, Lianjiang Li, was published by Cambridge University Press in February 2006. It is called Rightful Resistance in Rural China.
Scott O'Bryan (spobryan@indiana.edu) teaches and writes on the intellectual history of political-economics and on the cultural history of modern Japan. He received an M.A. from Yale University in East Asian Studies in 1992 and a Ph.D. in history from Columbia University in 2000. He is a member of the Institute for International Strategy, School of Liberal International Affairs, Waseda University, Tokyo Japan. His research interests include the history of social science, consumption and mass consumer culture, environmental history, urban history, and peace history. He is completing a book manuscript titled A Fetish for Growth: National Exceptionalism and Economic Knowledge in Post-Imperial Japan, 1945-1975. His next major project, Dreams of the Archipelago, is an environmental, urban, and cultural history that narrates a variety of schemes to reshape the built environments and human geographies of late twentieth-century Japan.
Margaret M. Pearson (mpearson@gvpt.umd.edu) is Professor of Government and Politics at the University of Maryland, College Park. She received her Ph.D. in Political Science from Yale University in 1987. Her publications have focused on China’s domestic political economy and China’s role in the world economy, and include the books Joint Ventures in the People's Republic of China (Princeton Press, 1991) and China's New Business Elite (University of California Press, 1997), as well as articles in World Politics, Public Administration Review, The China Journal, Modern China, and other journals. Her current research interests include the emergence of China’s regulatory state and China's integration into global trade regimes. She teaches courses on Chinese domestic politics and foreign policy, on East Asian politics, and on comparative politics.
Vladimir Popov (vpopov@nes.ru) is currently a Professor at the New Economic School in Moscow (http://www.nes.ru/english/people/faculty/personal/Popov.htm), a Sector Head at the Academy of the National Economy in Moscow (http://www.gsib.ru/wrk/ekonom.html), and Visiting Professor at Carleton University in Ottawa (http://www.carleton.ca/eurus/Faculty/Popov.htm). He graduated from the Economics Department of the Moscow State University in 1976 and holds Ph.D.s (Candidate of Science, 1980; and Doctor of Science, 1990) from the Institute of the U.S. and Canada of the Academy of Sciences of the USSR. Dr. Popov has written numerous books, articles, and papers. Some of his most recent books include, Three Drops of Water: Notes on China by a Non-Sinologist (“Delo Publishers”, 2002), Transition and Institutions: The Experience of Late Reformers (Oxford University Press, 2001), co-edited with G. A. Cornia, The Asian Crisis Turns Global (Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, 1999), with Manuel Montes. Among his recent articles is “Shock Therapy versus Gradualism Reconsidered: Lessons from Transition Economies after 15 Years of Reforms.” TIGER Working paper No. 82, 2006 (http://www.tiger.edu.pl/publikacje/TWPNo82.pdf).
Michael Robinson (robime@indiana.edu) recieved his Ph.D. in History at the University of Washington in 1979. He subsequently taught in the Department of History at Universtiy of Southern California from 1980-1995. He joined the faculty of the East Asian Languages and Cultures Department at Indiana University in 1995. Robinson's specialty is the history of modern Korea with a particular emphasis on its colonial period. He has written widely on Korea during this period as well as essays and articles on Japanese colonialism. He is the author of Cultural Nationalism in Colonial Korea, Korea Old and New: A Short History, and an edited volume, Colonial Modernity in Korea, 1910-1045. He is finsihing a text on modern Korea, Korea's Twentieth Century Odyssey, that will be published by University Hawaii press next year. In addition to his writing and teaching about Korea and East Asia, Robinson has also participated in numerous conferences on Business in East Asia.
Heidi Ross (haross@indiana.edu) is Professor in Indiana University's Department of Educational Leadership and Policy Studies. Prior to taking her position at Indiana Ross was Professor at Colgate University, where she served as Director of Asian Studies and Chair of the Educational Studies Department. Ross has published widely in Chinese secondary schooling, gender and development, and qualitative research methodologies. She has served as President of the Comparative and International Education Society, is Co-editor of the Comparative Education Review, and is the in-coming Director of East Asian Studies at Indiana University. Ross received her Ph.D. at the University of Michigan.
Victor Shih (vshih@northwestern.edu) is currently assistant professor of political science at Northwestern University. He is currently completing a book manuscript on how factional politics affects monetary and banking policies. He also has an on-going project on the political logic of taxation and fiscal redistribution in China. Additionally, he has side projects on elite signaling in China, free-riding in the maintenance of reserve currency, and the state’s role in regulating the non-performing loans market in China. He has published in the China Quarterly, The Journal of East Asian Studies, and the Journal of Contemporary China.
Ben Ross Schneider (brs@northwestern.edu) is Professor in the Department of Political Science at Northwestern University. His teaching and research interests fall within the general fields of comparative politics, political economy, and Latin American politics. His books include Politics within the State: Elite Bureaucrats and Industrial Policy in Authoritarian Brazil (Pittsburgh University Press, 1991), Business and the State in Developing Countries (Cornell University Press, 1997), Reinventing Leviathan: The Politics of Administrative Reform in Developing Countries (North-South/Lynne Rienner, 2003), and Business Politics and the State in 20th Century Latin America (Cambridge University Press, 2004). He also has written on topics such as economic reform, democratization, technocracy, the developmental state, and comparative bureaucracy. Schneider's current research revolves around two longer term projects, the first on the politics of recent market reforms, and the second on the distinct institutional foundations of capitalist development in Latin America with particular attention to corporate governance, foreign investment, and worker training. Schneider received his Ph.D. from Berkeley in 1987.
Aseema Sinha (asinha@polisci.wisc.edu) (Ph.D., Cornell, 2000) teaches in the areas of comparative political economy, comparative social movements, globalization, and South Asia at the University of Wisconsin. Her first book, The Regional Roots of Developmental Politics in India: A Divided Leviathan (Indiana University Press, 2005) received the Joseph Elder Award for the Best Book in the Indian Social Sciences. Her research focuses on the linkages between politics and economics, business-government relations, comparative federalism, and globalization, with particular emphasis on the international sources of change in developing countries. She is also interested in India-China comparisons, including federalism and how it influences economic reform trajectories in both countries; in this context, she has contributed to the debate on market-preserving federalism. Her current research focuses on the impact of globalization processes, specifically participation in the WTO, and on India's political institutions and practices. She is in the process of completing a second book, When David Meets Goliath: How Global Trade Rules Shape Domestic Politics in India. She was a fellow at the Kellogg Institute at the University of Notre Dame in 2001 and a fellow at the Woodrow Wilson International Center For Scholars in Washington DC in 2004-2005.
Yan Sun (ysun3@gc.cuny.edu) is a professor of political science at City University of New York, the Graduate Center and Queens College. She received her degrees from Nanjing University, the School of Foreign Affairs in Beijing and the Johns Hopkins University. She is the author of The Chinese Reassessment of Socialism: 1976-1992 (Princeton University Press, 1995) and Corruption and Market in Contemporary China (Cornell University Press, 2004), as well as numerous professional articles on post-Mao Chinese politics, ideological developments, political corruption, and comparative Chinese and Russian post-socialist transitions.
Yi-Feng Tao (yftao@ntu.edu.tw) (Ph.D. Columbia University 2001) currently serves as Assistant Professor in the Department of Political Science at National Taiwan University. Her teaching and research interests include Chinese politics, comparative political economy, and politics of finance. Writing her dissertation on China's central-local relations with a specific focus on banking reforms, she is particularly interested in the effects of political institutions on economic policy outcomes in transitional China. Her current research project is China's political business cycle.
Kellee S. Tsai (ktsai@jhu.edu) is Associate Professor of Political Science at Johns Hopkins University. She wrote her dissertation as an Academy Scholar at the Harvard Academy of International and Area Studies and received her Ph.D. in Political Science from Columbia University. She is author of Back-Alley Banking: Private Entrepreneurs in China (Cornell 2002), Nongcun gongyehua yu minjian jinrong: Wenzhou de jingyan [Rural industrialization and informal finance: insights from Wenzhou] (co-authored in Chinese with Wang Xiaoyi and Li Renqing) (Shanxi 2004), Japan and China in the World Political Economy (co-edited with Saadia Pekkanan) (Routledge 2005), chapters in various edited volumes, and articles in China Journal, China Quarterly, Comparative Political Studies, Journal of Chinese Political Science, Journal of International Affairs, and World Development. Tsai is currently finishing a book manuscript entitled, Capitalism without Democracy: Politics of Private Sector Development in China (under contract at Cornell), which is based on extensive fieldwork, as well as a 2001-2004 national survey of private entrepreneurs funded by the National Science Foundation. She is also developing a new project on the political economy of overseas Chinese capital flows. Her professional experience includes employment at Morgan Stanley, Women's World Banking, and the World Bank.
Jeffrey N. Wasserstrom (jwassers@indiana.edu) (B.A. UC Santa Cruz, 1982, M.A. Harvard, 1984, doctorate Berkeley, 1989) is currently the Director of the East Asian Studies Center and a Professor of History and of East Asian Languages and Cultures at Indiana University, and in the fall of 2006 will move to the University of California at Irvine to take up a position there as Professor of History. A specialist in modern and contemporary Chinese history, his books include Student Protests in Twentieth-Century China: The View from Shanghai (Stanford University Press, 1991), China's Brave New World - And Other Tales for Global Times (Indiana University Press, forthcoming 2007), and several edited volumes, among them Popular Protest and Political Culture in Modern China (Westview Press, 1992 and 1994 editions), which he co-edited with Elizabeth Perry. His articles and review essays have appeared in a variety of academic journals (from area studies ones such as China Quarterly and the Journal of Asian Studies, to disciplinary ones such as the Journal of Women's History), and he has contributed reviews and short commentaries to newspapers and many general interest magazines (e.g., The Nation, New Left Review, Times Literary Supplement, Dissent, Far Eastern Economic Review, and the international edition of Newsweek). He has served as a consultant to the Long Bow Group on two of their films, The Gate of Heavenly Peace and Morning Sun, and is one of the editors for a University of California Press book series, Asia: Local Studies/Global Themes.
Andrew Wedeman (awedeman@unlnotes.unl.edu) is an Associate Professor of Political Science at the University of Nebraska, Lincoln, where he is also the Director of the International Studies Program and the Asian Studies Program. He received his Ph.D. from UCLA in 1994. His research focuses on the political economy of reform in China and specifically on the relationship between corruption and development, both in China and elsewhere in the developing world. He has also written extensively on security in East Asia and relations between Taiwan and Mainland China. His publications include two books: From Mao to Market: Rent Seeking, Local Protectionism, and Marketization in China and The East Wind Subsides: Chinese Foreign Policy and the Origins of the Cultural Revolution; as well as an extensive series of scholarly articles in journals such as The China Quarterly, The Journal of Contemporary China, and The China Review. He has also published chapters in edited volumes, including US Foreign Policy in a Globized World of which he also co-edited. Over the years, he has lived in Korea, Thailand, Cambodia, India, the Cote d’Ivoire, China, and Taiwan. During 2001-2, he was a Fulbright Research Professor at Taiwan National University and will spend 2005-6 as a Visiting Associate Professor with the Hopkins-Nanjing Graduate Program.
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