SFSU | BSS | CURRICULUM VITAE | COURSES | JOURNAL | CENTER  | ACPS | SVCC | CONTACT ME

Sujian Guo  Ph. D

  Department of Political Science
San Francisco State University
1600 Holloway Ave. HSS 263
San Francisco, CA 94132-4155

Telephone: (415) 338-7523

Fax: (415) 338-2391
E-mail: sguo@sfsu.edu


HOME

CURRICULUM VITAE

CENTER FOR US-CHINA POLICY STUDIES

JOURNAL OF CHINESE POLITICAL SCIENCE


ASSN OF CHINESE POLITICAL STUDIES

BOOK SERIES EDITOR

VIDEO AND PHOTOS

CHINA/ASIA

CHINA PICTURES

SAN FRANCISCO

CAMPUS MAP

WEB DICTIONARY


Back to Top   


 
 

 


Welcome to China Pictures


SPRING 2008 COURSES 

PLSI 411 East Asian Politics

(GE Segment III)

bullet4.gif (880 bytes) Handouts

 Land and People: China and Japan  Political Culture: China and Japan

China's early history Timeline of Chinese dynasties Pre-1911 -- 1949 -- 2003
Japan's political development  China: totalitarianism  

China: political institutions Japan: Political Institutions
China: Political Economy Japan: Political Economy
China: transition from totalitarianism  Japan: transition from one party system

Taiwan and Korea: Land and People (use IE browser for ppt slide show)
Taiwan and Korea: Political Culture

Taiwan and Korea: Political Development
Taiwan and Korea: Political Institutions
Taiwan and Korea: Political Economy (use IE browser for ppt slide show)

 

Final Exam

(instructions)

 

PLSI 418 Political Transition in E & SE Asia

(GE Segment III)

bullet4.gif (880 bytes) Handouts

 

Final Exam

(Instructions)

 

 

bullet4.gif (880 bytes) Handouts

FALL 2008 COURSES


Professor Guo will be on sabbatical leave in Fall 2008

RESOURCES

 

Writing Paper Guidelines

Criteria for Evaluating Papers

How to write a good paper

  Citation and Style Guides

Department Plagiarism Policy

  Finding Academic Sources

Major works on Totalitarianism

Undergraduate Advising

 

TEACHING SPECIALTY AND INTEREST

 

Courses taught:  Introduction to Political Science; Introduction to International Relations; Introduction to Political Ideologies; Introduction to Political Economy; Comparative Politics; Comparative Political Economy; Comparative Asian Politics; East Asian Politics; Chinese Politics;  Political Transition in East and Southeast Asia; International Political Economy; American National Security;  Politics of Developing Areas; senior seminar: Theory and Practice of Democratic Transitions.  Graduate seminars: Comparative Politics; Democracies and Democratization; Asian Transitions from Communism.

 

Other Courses to be offered: Chinese Economic System in Transition, Political Economy of East and Southeast Asia, Chinese Foreign Policy, US-China Relations, Economic Reforms in post-Mao China, China and Russia in Transition, Political Economy of Development, Politics of Post-Communist Transition, Communism in Theory and Practice, Comparative Methodologies, Comparative Human Rights.