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DR.
SUJIAN GUO, CUSCPS DIRECTOR
Dr.
Sujian Guo
is Professor in the Department of Political Science and Director of
Center for US-China Policy Studies (CUSCPS) at San Francisco State University. Guo
is adjunct professor and guest research fellow of many Chinese
academic institutions, such as Fudan University's Fudan Institute for
Advanced Study in Social Sciences, Fudan University Center for Chinese
Foreign Policy, Renmin University of China School of International Studies,
North China University, Inner Mongolia University, and Guizhou University.
Guo is Editor-in-Chief of
Journal
of Chinese Political Science, a refereed academic journal published by
Springer,
and Editor of Rowman & Littlefield Publishers-Lexington's book series "Challenges Facing Chinese Political Development." Guo
is also Director of BSS summer program
at Peking University in Beijing.
His areas of specialization include Comparative Politics, International Relations and
Methodology. His research interests have focused on China/Asian politics,
US-China relations, international relations of East Asia, communist and
post-communist studies, democratic transition, and political economy of East and Southeast
Asia.
He has published
more than 40 articles both in English and Chinese. His sole-authored and
edited books
include Thirty Years of China-US Relations: Analytical Approaches and
Contemporary Issues
(2010);
China's
Environmental Crisis: Domestic and Global Political Impacts and Responses (2010); Environmental Protection Policy and Experience in the U.S. and
China's Western Regions
(2010); Greater China in an Era of Globalization
(2009); China in Search of a Harmonious Society
(2008); Harmonious World and China's New Foreign Policy
(2008); New
Dimensions of Chinese Foreign Policy (2007); Challenges Facing Chinese Political Development
(2007); China in the Twenty-First Century: Challenges and Opportunities
(2007); The Political Economy of Asian Transitions from Communism
(2006); China's
"Peaceful Rise" in the 21st Century (2006); and Post-Mao
China: from Totalitarianism to Authoritarianism? (2000).
DR.
JEAN-MARC F. BLANCHARD, ASSOCIATE DIRECTOR
Dr. Jean-Marc
F. Blanchard is Associate Director of the Center for U.S.-China Policy
Studies and Associate Professor in the Department of International
Relations at San Francisco State University (SFSU).
He received Ph.D. and M.A. degrees in Political Science from
the
University
of
Pennsylvania.
His research interests include
China
’s integration into the global economic system,
China
’s interactions with multinational corporations, Chinese
multinational corporations, Sino-Japanese relations, and Chinese
territorial and maritime issues. He
is a co-editor of Harmonious
World and China’s New Foreign Policy (Lanham: Lexington-Rowman
& Littlefield Publishing, 2008), a co-editor of and contributor to
Power and the Purse: Economic Statecraft, Interdependence, and
National Security (
London
: Frank Cass, 2000), and the author of nearly 20 book chapters and
refereed journal articles. Examples
include “China, MNCs, and Globalization” (2007), “China’s
Peaceful Rise and Sino-Japanese Territorial and Maritime Tensions”
(2006), “Linking Territorial Disputes and War” (2005), “Giving
the Unrecognized their Due: Regional Actors, International
Organizations, and Multilateral Economic Cooperation in Northeast
Asia” (2003), and “The U.S. Role in the Sino-Japanese Dispute over
the Diaoyu (Senkaku) Islands, 1945-1971” (2000).
At SFSU, he teaches courses on Chinese Foreign Policy,
Multinational Corporations, and the International Political Economy.
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FACULTY RESEARCH ASSOCIATES |
AFFILIATED
RESEARCH
ASSOCIATES |
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Jean-Marc Blanchard, International Relations
Adam Burke, Health and Human Services
Yea-Mow Chen, Finance
George Cheng, SFSU Library
Wan-lee Cheng, College of Creative Arts
Jeff Cookston, Psychology
Sheldon Gen, Public Administration
Qian Guo, Geography
Sujian Guo, Political Science
Pi-Ching Hsu, History
Summer Hsia, Education
Sung Hu, Science
and Engineering
Leigh Jin, College of Business
Mark Johnson,
Arts
Ming-ye Lee,
Education
Xiaohang Liu, Geography
Kathleen McAfee, International Relations
Wenshen Pong,
Science
and Engineering
Stephen Rudman, International Business
Mary Scott,
Humanities
Robert Smith, Political Science
Susan Sung,
Social Work
Andrei P. Tsygankov, International Relations
Gerardo Ungson, International Business
Jun Wang,
Health and Human Services
Janey Wang, Public Administration
Lihua Wang, International Business
Bernard Wong, Anthropology
James Wong, Computer Science
Yim-Yu Wong, International Business
Yenbo Wu, Director of OIP
Peng Xu, Economics
Nini Yang, International Business
Darlene Yee,
Health and Human Services
Lena
Zhang, BECA, Creative Arts
Weimin Zhang, Cinema, Creative Arts
Yanchun Zhang, Economics
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Bruce Dickson, GWU
Lowell
Dittmer, UC Berkeley
June T. Dreyer, U of Miami
Joseph Fewsmith, Boston
U
Taylor M. Fravel, MIT
Avery Goldstein, U of Penn
Dennis Hickey, Missouri
State
Eric A. Hyer, Brigham Young U
Canrong Jin, Renmin U China
Scott Kennedy, Indiana U
Peter Moody, U of Notre Dame
Thomas Moore, U of Cincinnati
Bruce Pickering, Asian Society
Ren Xiao, Fudan University
Anthony Saich, Harvard U
Ting Wai, HK Baptist U
Fei-ling Wang, Georgia Tech
Jisi Wang, Peking University
Jianwei Wang, UW-Stevens Point
Lynn T White,
Princeton
Elizabeth Wishnick, Montclair State
Brantly Womack, U of Virginia
Xinbo Wu, Fudan U China
Guanbin Yang, Renmin U China
Zicheng Ye, Peking University
Bin Yu, Wittenberg
U
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VISITING SCHOLARS |
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Zou Lijun, Law School, Nanking
University (2010)
Zhou
Xinyu, School of International Studies, Renmin University of
China (2009)
Hu Bo,
School of International Studies, Peking University (2008)
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