Experts

  • Professor of Humintarianism and Security, Cranfield University, UK
    Hazel Smith is Professor of Humanitarianism and Security at Cranfield University, UK, a member of the Research Committee of the UK Economic and Social Research Council and an elected fellow of the Royal Society of Arts. Her core area of research is on the economics, society, politics and international relations of North Korea. She has researched the country for over twenty years and lived and...
  • Retired Australian Diplomat and Defense Official
    SubjectsAsia
  • University Lecturer in Comparative Politics (African Politics), Department of Politics and International Relations, Oxford University
  • Professor of Sociology, Delhi School of Economics, Delhi University, India
  • Assistant Professor, School of Public Affairs, American University Non-resident Scholar, South Asia Program, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace adjunct staff, RAND Corporation
    Stephen Tankel joined the faculty at American University last year as an assistant professor in the School of Public Affairs. He is also a non-resident scholar in the South Asia Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and an adjunct staff member at the RAND Corporation.Stephen’s research focuses on political and military affairs in South Asia, terrorism, and insur...
  • Professor of International Political Economy, Waseda University
      Takashi Terada is professor of international relations at the Organization for Asian Studies, Waseda University, and will be professor at Doshisha University from March 2012. Before taking up his position at Waseda, Terada was an assistant professor at the National University of Singapore. His most recent works in English include “The Origins of ASEAN+6 and Japan's Initiatives: China’s Ris...
  • Associate in Research, Fairbank Center for East Asian Research, Harvard University
  • Associate Professor, China Studies Program, The Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies
    I often describe myself as the China counterpart to the narrator in Iris Murdoch's novel, The Philosopher's Pupil, who says "my role in life is listening to people's stories." My role in life is to listen to Chinese people tell their stories—and then to relate those stories here in the West in a way that makes sense to both us and the storytellers themselves. The turning point in my life as...
  • Associate Professor, Department of Political Science, Purdue University
  • Senior Director, Albright Stonebridge Group
    ExpertiseUnited States-India Relations

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