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He was director of the University of Michigan's Center for Chinese Studies from 1986 to 1989. In 2014 the university renamed the center the Kenneth G. Lieberthal and Richard H. Rogel Center for Chinese Studies. His publications focused particularly on China's politics, domestic and foreign policy, political economy, and on the evolution of US ...
Only four were professors of Chinese descent and none were convicted for espionage or theft. [16] According to Mark Cohen, a law school fellow at the University of California, Berkeley, "The government is settling for charges that have little to do with technology." [17] Zhengdong Cheng was imprisoned for 13 months after being arrested in ...
Cheng Li (Chinese: 李成; pinyin: Lǐ Chéng) is a Chinese-American scholar specializing in Chinese elite politics and contemporary Chinese society; he served as the director of the John L. Thornton China Center at the Brookings Institution from 2014 to 2023, replacing Kenneth Lieberthal in the role. [1]
The Berkeley APEC Study Center (BASC) is an APEC Study Center. It was established in 1996 in response to the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) Leaders Education Initiative introduced by President Bill Clinton and endorsed by the leaders of the other APEC member nations at their historic meetings on Blake Island, Seattle in November 1993.
Luis O. Gómez [1] [2] (7 April 1943 – 3 September 2017) was a buddhologist, translator and psychologist.He spent over three decades at the University of Michigan, working in the Department of Asian Languages and Cultures, Religious Studies Program, and the Department of Psychology.
The Journal of Contemporary China is a multidisciplinary peer-reviewed academic journal on contemporary Chinese affairs. [1] [2] It is published five times per year by Routledge and covers issues such as Chinese politics, law, economy, culture, and foreign policy, among others. [3]
The Journal of Chinese Linguistics is a peer-reviewed academic journal in the field of linguistics, particularly concerned with all aspects of the Chinese language. It was established in 1973 and is now published twice a year by University of California at Berkeley. The current editor-in-chief is William S-Y. Wang (Chinese University of Hong Kong).
Rudolf G. Wagner studied sinology, Japanese studies, political science and philosophy in Bonn, Heidelberg, Paris and Munich between 1962 and 1969. Wagner was head of the student government of Ludwig Maximilian University Munich from 1968–1969, where he completed his dissertation on the Buddhist studies topic “Hui-yuan慧遠's Questions to Kumarajiva鳩摩羅什” in 1969.