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Dilemmas of Reform in Jiang Zemin’s China, by Andrew J. Nathan, Zhaohui Hong, and Steven R. Smith (eds.)

 

Contributors

 

Gene Hsin Chang is associate professor of economics at the University of Toledo and associate editor of China Economic Review. He has published more than sixty articles and chapters in academic journals and books.

Jie Chen is associate professor of political science at Old Dominion University in Virginia. His major research interests are Chinese politics and Sino–U.S. relations.

Xiaonong Cheng is a Ph.D. candidate in sociology at Princeton University. He has published more than thirty articles both in the United States and China. His writings cover a variety of economic, social, and political issues. He is chief-editor of an academic journal, Modern China Studies, sponsored by the Center for Modern China in Princeton, New Jersey.

Hungdah Chiu is professor of law and director of the East Asian Legal Studies Program at the University of Maryland School of Law in Baltimore. He has published numerous papers and books in the areas of international law, Chinese legal development, and U.S.–China relations. He has been elected president of the International Law Association.

Zhaohui Hong is associate professor of history at Savannah State University in Georgia. He has published five books and more than forty research articles on China’s reform, comparative modernization, U.S.–China relations, and U.S. economic history.

C. W. Kenneth Keng is professor of economics at the University of Toronto, Canada. With numerous papers in areas of econometrics, energy economics, operation management, and industrial strategies, he is currently doing research in Asia-Pacific economic development with special emphasis on Greater China.

Shaomin Li is associate professor at the City University of Hong Kong. His research interests include strategic management, international business, and political economy. He has published over twenty research articles and eight books. He is coeditor of the China Industrial Markets Yearbook. He recently published Business Operations in China’s Transition (with Xiaofeng He and Oliver H. M. Yau).

Hong Liang is an economist at the International Monetary Fund. She earned her Ph.D. in economics from Georgetown University. Her research areas cover exchange-rate regimes, capital flows, and commodity trade.

Andrew J. Nathan is professor of political science at Columbia University and former director of its East Asian Institute. He is a member of the board of directors of the Center for Modern China and chair of the board of editors of the Journal of Contemporary China. His recent books include China’s Transition and (with Robert S. Ross) The Great Wall and the Empty Fortress: China’s Search for Security.

John M. Scheb II is professor of political science at the University of Tennessee. His major research interests include judicial politics and American government.

Steven R. Smith is professor of history at Savannah State University in Georgia. He has published more than a dozen articles, most of which have been on topics in the social history of early modern England. He has served as visiting professor at Northeast Normal University and Xinzhou Teachers College in China.

Yi Sun is assistant professor of East Asian history at the University of San Diego. Her areas of research include modern China, women in Asia, and Sino-American relations.

Guoqiang Tian is professor of economics at Texas A&M University. He is the author or coauthor of over eighty publications. He has written a book and edited fourteen books. His research interests include economic mechanism design, mathematical economics, general economic theory, dynamic optimization, game theory, transitional economics, and Chinese economies.

Guoguang Wu is assistant professor of political science at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. He is the author of numerous articles and seven books on Chinese politics. His current research interests cover China’s political change in the reform years and U.S.–China relations in the post–Cold War era.

Jason Z. Yin is associate professor of strategy management and international business at the W. Paul Stillman School of Business, Seton Hall University. He has published three books and edited twelve books on technology and modern business management. He also published numerous papers in areas of strategic management of technology, international trade, technology transfer, and intellectual property rights.

Wei Yu is assistant research professor of medicine at Boston University School of Medicine. His research interests include public finance, health care financing, cost-effective analysis in medical treatment, and the economic impact of aging. He has written articles for several finance and economics journals in both the United States and China.

Yang Zhong is associate professor of political science at the University of Tennessee. His major research interests include comparative study of political system transformation in communist and former communist countries, local government in China, and foreign relations in East Asia.

 

Dilemmas of Reform in Jiang Zemin’s China