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The 21st Session of Yunshan Academic Salon: American Scholars Talked about Sino-American Relations-- Cooperation beyond Trust

2013-04-03  Click:[]

Joshua Eisenman

Senior Fellow in China Studies

Joshua Eisenman is Senior Fellow in China Studies at the American Foreign Policy Council and editor of AFPC's China Reform Monitor. Along with Ambassador David H. Shinn, he is coauthor of China and Africa: A Century of Engagement (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2012). China and Africa, which was named one of the top three books on Africa for 2012 by Foreign Affairs, covers China’s political, economic, military and social relations with all African countries. Mr. Eisenman was also coeditor of China and the Developing World: Beijing's Strategy for the 21st Century (ME Sharpe, 2007) and author of the book’s chapter on China-Africa relations. In 2011-12, as adjunct professor of politics at New York University, he taught the international relations of China, Chinese domestic politics, and the political economy of East Asia both in New York and Shanghai. He is currently teaching China-Africa relations at UCLA

Prof. YU Bin Ph.D

Yu Bin is Professor of Political Science at Wittenberg University (Ohio, USA) and Director of Wittenberg’s East Asian Studies program. Yu earned his Ph.D. from Stanford University (1991) and MA from the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (1982).

Yu’s professional activities includes: visiting scholar at the Center for American Studies, School of International Affairs and Public Policy, Fudan University in Shanghai (2006), Senior fellow of the Shanghai Association of American Studies (2002-current); faculty associate of the Mershon Center at Ohio State University (1991–current); visiting fellow at the Center for Asia/Pacific Research Center of Stanford University (1998); visiting fellow at the East-West Center in Hawaii (1994–95); President of Association of Chinese Scholars of Political Science & International Studies (1992–94); MacArthur fellow at the Center for International Security & Arms Control of Stanford University (1985–89); and research fellow at the China Center of International Studies, State Council, Beijing (1982–85).