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Mr. Aoyama is a Doyukai Fellow and a staff member in the Nuclear Fuel Contract Strategy Group of the Kansai Electric Power Co., Inc. in Osaka Japan. He is engaged in the nuclear fuels purchase negotiations with foreign suppliers. His research focus will be on the current and potential world nuclear nonproliferation schemes to secure the peaceful uses of nuclear energy as well as the potential impact on the Japanese Utilities of the suggested initiatives in the field of multilateral approaches to the nuclear fuel cycle. He holds Bachelor in Law from Kyoto University, Japan.
email: koji_aoyama@ksg.harvard.edu
President, Professor and Tutor of Doctoral Candidates, Linyi Normal University, Shandong Province, China. He is also a Managing Director of China Education Society and Chairman of Pedagogy Research Society of Shandong Province. He received a Master's degree in Education(Pedagogy) from Qufu Normal University and a Doctoral Degree of Higher Education from Xiamen University. He was a Visiting Research Fellow at Flinders University of South Australia from 1988 to 1989. He has written over 220 academic theses in periodicals and newspapers and has received over 30 Citations of Excellence in Research and Teaching. Dr. Han plans to study various aspects of higher education especially undergraduate curriculum reform and innovation in administration.
email: yanming_han@ksg.harvard.edu
Vice-Governor of Henan Province and he has performed the chairman’s responsibility for Henan Association for Science and Technology for four years. Before that he was a professor and vice-president of Zhengzhou Institute of Aeronautics. During his academic time he was a visiting professor and visited University of California Davis and University of Waterloo as well as Seoul National University, executing some joint NSF(C) projects. He received a national award with distinguished youth for Science Foundation. Mr. Xu is researching relations of the economy on technology with a global view.
email: jichao_xu@ksg.harvard.edu
Executive Director, Shaanxi province, China. Mr. Zhao started to work at Shaanxi province from 2001. Before then, Mr. Zhao worked at Anhui province for more than twenty years, and from 1998 to 2001, he served as Secretary of Politics & Law DG of Public Security Bureau. Mr. Zhao received a Bachelor's degree on Metal Physics from Central South University of Technology, and a Master's degree on Social Administration from Chinese Central Party School. Mr. zhao will be examing the role of state and local government in a market economic system.
email: zhengyong_zhao@ksg.harvard.edu
Ilan Alon is the Distinguished Petters Chair of International Business and Executive Director of Rollins China Center, Rollins College, Winter Park, Florida. He has published 20 books (3 authored), 70 peer-reviewed articles, and numerous chapters, conference papers, and trade articles. His four recent books on China include Chinese Culture, Organizational Behavior and International Business Management (Greenwood, 2003), Chinese Economic Transition and International Marketing Strategy (Greenwood, 2003), and Business and Management Education in China: Transition, Pedagogy and Training (World Scientific, 2005), The Globalization of Chinese Enterprises (2008, Forthcoming). Dr. Alon established the Rollins China Center in 2005, one of few such Centers in academic institutions worldwide (www.rollins.edu/chinacenter). The Center has hosted international conferences, seminars and visiting scholars, as well as helped organize trips for faculty, students, and alumni from Rollins.
email: ilan_alon@ksg.harvard.edu
Helen is currently a research manager at Li & Fung Development (China) Ltd. She holds an MsC in Economics and Economic History from the London School of Economics. Her research will focus on the relationship between internal reforms and external liberalization of emerging, developing economies, through comparative analyses and scenario-painting exercises of the BRIC (Brazil, Russia, India, China) economies. Helen welcomes inquiries and suggestions regarding her research.
email: helen_chin@ksg.harvard.edu
Marc Fetscherin is an Assistant Professor at the Crummer Graduate School of Business and the International Business Department at Rollins College. He is also an associate of the China Center at Rollins, one of twelve in the nation. He teaches various courses related to International Business and Marketing. Dr. Fetscherin was a Post-Doc at Harvard University as well as a researcher at the University of California at Berkeley. He received his Ph.D. in Economics and Social Science from the University of Bern, Switzerland. He also holds a master degree in Business Administration (MBA) from the London School of Economics (LSE), UK; as well as a Master in Management (MIM) from the University of Lausanne, Hautes Etudes Commerciales (HEC), Switzerland. He has published over 70 publications and is a reviewer for various international journals and conferences proceedings. During his appointment at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University, he will conduct research on globalization of Chinese enterprises, competitiveness of Chinese industries and companies, and corporate social responsibility.
email: marc_fetscherin@ksg.harvard.edu
Mr. Ge graduated from University of International Business and Economics in Beijing, 2002. Two years later he received his MS.c Economics at Manchester University in England. As a Ph.D candidate and a researcher at Center of Public Assets at Tsinghua University, his research mainly focuses on the relationship between public and private sector in China. The perfect integration and organic interaction of private ownership, market mechanism and public ownership, social mechanism is the true essence that must be mastered to raise the allocation efficiency of resources, resolve the effective demand inadequacy and realize the total employment. September 2007 - January 2008.
email: cheng_ge@ksg.harvard.edu
Subsection Chief, Keelung Customs Office, Taiwan. As a specialist on Express Consignment Clearance and customs valuation, he went to Hanoi in 2003, under the sponsorship of the Sub-Committee on Customs Procedures of APEC (APEC/SCCP), to provide technical assistance to Vietnam Customs; he attended the Technical Committee on Customs Valuation of the World Customs Organization in Brussels in 2004. He got a Master’s degree in translation studies from Fujen University in Taiwan. He will focus his research on customs procedures in Taiwan’s Free Trade Zones (FTZs) and Foreign Trade Zones in the US. July 2007 - January 2008.
email: kuoping_huang@ksg.harvard.edu
Angela Joo-Hyun Kang is US Representative & Research Associate of the Korea Corporate Citizenship Center. With experiences in both in private sector as a PR, sales and marketing professional and nonprofit sector as a strategic alliance executive, she has been helping CSR of Korean multinational corporations with the Center for Corporate Citizenship at Boston College and Business for Social Responsibility. She was the Business and Human Rights Coordinator of National Human Rights Commission of Korea. She holds a Master of Public Administration from the John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University, where she was a Mason Fellow of the Edwards S. Mason Program in Public Policy and Management.
email: Joo-hyun Kang@ksg.harvard.edu
Ms. Koo is Associate Professor of Business Administration at Seoul Women’s University in Korea. She previously worked for the National Credit Union Federation of Korea as a senior researcher and taught financial management and accounting at Credit Union College. She holds a MBA from Seoul National University and a Ph.D from Seoul Women’s University and was a visiting scholar at University of Illinois. She served on government committees including the Evaluation Committee of Civil Service Commission and the Regulatory Advisory Committee of Financial Supervisory Commission. Her research interests are the regulation of credit unions and the performance-based budgeting.
email: chung-ok_koo@ksg.harvard.edu
Mr. Lee is former Deputy Director in the International Economic Policy Planning Team in the Korean Ministry of Finance and Economy. He participated in several trade and investment negotiations with US, China, Japan, ASEAN and EFTA. He planned development projects for developing countries and North Korea. He was also a member of ODA policy reform T/F of Korean Government. His research is focused on government innovation and leadership roles in networked world. He has an MPA degree from Kennedy School of Government and B.A.(international economics) and Master (public policy) degrees from Seoul National University.
email: joo-sueb_lee@ksg.harvar.edu
Mr. Lee is currently a Fulbright visiting scholar. He is a Professor in Public Administration at the National Open University and Adjunct Professor in the Graduate School of Public Administration at Dong-High University and Tsinghwa University, Taiwan. Dr. Lee received his Ph.D. in Public Policy Analysis from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He was a visiting Professor of the Institute of Taiwan Study at Nanjing University, China in 2006. He is alumni of American Council of Young Political Leaders (ACYPL). Dr. Lee also serves as a Deputy Director (on part-time basis) of the Department of Policy Research for the People First Party (PFP) and Senior Advisor of public budgeting and finance for the National Policy Research Foundation (KMT Think Tank) in Taiwan. His research interests focus on public budgeting, performance management and comparative public policy. July 2007 - January 2008.
email: yun-jie_lee@ksg.harvard.edu
Peng Hong Lee
has been President of Macao Trade and Investment Promotion Institute (Government Agency of the Macao Special Administrative Region China) since September 1999, this position provides him with the opportunity to use his experience to combine theory and practice in high-level economic activities. He obtained a Ph. D from the Institute of Economics, Tsinghua University and a Master Degree in Public Administration from the University of Macao (joint program with the Portuguese National Institute for Public Administration). Dr. Lee published a book “Strategy for Developing the Macao Platform: Research on Macao’s Role as a Service Platform for the Economic Co-operation between China and Portuguese-Speaking Countries” in 2006.His areas of interests include International Relations, International Political Economics and Economic Development. Dr. Lee will mainly focus on “Strategy for Macao’s economic development” and “Economic relations between China and Portuguese-Speaking Countries” for his fellowship at Kennedy School.
email: peng_hong_lee@ksg.harvard.edu
Alec Li is an attorney with a focus on mergers and acquisitions, securitization and venture capital. Alec will concentrate on analyzing significant Sino-U.S. M&A cases and researching problems that have emerged from Sino-U.S. bidirectional investment. He represented China in negotiations on issues of “Trade, Debt and Finance” and “Trade and Development” in the WTO Doha Round Negotiations in 2004 and 2005. As a member of China’s Trade Negotiation Delegation, he settled trade disputes in the U.S., Peru and Brazil. Alec was the two-time champion in National Chinese Competition and won the first prize in China’s Seventh National English Competition.
email: alec_li@ksg.harvard.edu
Associate Professor of Economics, Tokyo Keizai University. He will be researching the respective roles of the state and the market and their interactions in economic development in light of China’s experience. He is also an associate professor at the Department of Economics of Tokyo Kenzai University (TKU) in Tokyo, Japan. He is head of the secretariat for the Japanese Research Association of Chinese Economy. Professor Luo has written several books including: Economic Development of China (2005, co-author). His current research focuses on poverty reduction, education and economic development in rural China. He earned his master’s degree in economics from, and completed his Ph.D study at Hitotsubashi University, earned his Ph.D and master’s degrees in economics from Renmin University of China, and his bachelor’s degree in economics from Zhejiang University in Hangzhou, China.
email: huanzhen_luo@ksg.harvard.edu
Mr. Miao graduated from the London School of Economics and Political Science. He is a PhD Candidate in Public Administration at the University of Southern California, where he also received his Master of Public Administration. Jiaming has interned at the United Nations Office of Human Resource Management, the United Nations Office of Legal Affairs, and the United Nations Executive Office of the Secretary-General. His research interests include comparative administration and international development. During his appointment as an Asia Programs Fellow at Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University, Jiaming will conduct research on corporate social responsibility.
email: jiaming_miao@ksg.harvard.edu
Gang Peng is the Economic Professor and the Director of the Economic Research Centre for Developing Countries of Renmin University of China.
Mr. Pang’s major research areas are development economics and international economics. He dedicates himself to explore the Chinese economic development theory based on comparative studies of the experiences of other developing countries. Mr. Peng is a leading scholar in studying poverty amid affluence, particularly on its interlinks with globalization.
Mr. Peng has broad experiences in international academic exchange. Since 1992, he has conducted research and teaching activities in Europe, the U.S. and Japan with sponsorship from the Ford Foundation, the European Commission and the WTO among others. A native of Beijing, Mr. Peng was born in 1955. He is married with one daughter.
email: gang_peng@ksg.harvard.edu
Dr. Quach is a Lecturer of Finance at National Economics University in Hanoi, Vietnam. He is a Fulbright Scholar. He graduated from the National Economics University and has an MBA and a PhD from Birmingham Business School in England. Dr. Quach’s work experience is a mix of academia and industry. He is the Investment Director at the Thang Long Securities Corporation – one of the top 5 leading investment firms in Vietnam. Dr. Quach has worked as a consultant team member in projects contracted with several organizations such as PricewaterhouseCoopers, ADB, WB and UNDP in Vietnam and several community development finance institutions in the UK. He has been a visiting professor/research fellow at Hanoi School of Business, University of Birmingham, University of Liverpool, University of Salford (Manchester), California State University at Long Beach. He will be looking at new models and products for micro-finance in Vietnam, by comparing the US experience.
email: manh_hao_quach@ksg.harvard.edu
Fei Rong
is a PhD student in the School of Public Policy and Management, Tsinghua University. Mr. Rong's major research areas are theories of development strategy and leadership. For two years, he has cooperated with Professor Yu yongda of Tsinghua University developing a theory called Advantage Integration, which has already been adopted by Guangdong Province (one of the richest regions in China) and many other regions as their guidance for further development. To promote the research on this theory, Mr. Rong has paid several academic visits in different countries, such as US (New York and Washington DC), UK (Sheffield and Manchester), Germany (Berlin and Osnabruck), and Netherland (Hague).
email: fei_rong@ksg.harvard.edu
Mr. Tagaki is Researcher, Research Institute for System Science, NTT DATA Corporation. He will be examining effective public-private networks for public benefit. As a researcher for IT and public governance, Mr. Takagi has conducted research projects including “e-democracy” (Public Participation using Information and Communication Technology) and “Networked Governance” (Networks of Public and Private organizations), etc. His research in the Kennedy School of Government will focus on the process of innovations in the public sector and finding out key elements for successful innovations. He holds a bachelor’s degree of Political Science from KEIO University.
email: soichiro_takagi@ksg.harvard.edu
Jay S. Siegel is a Senior Research Fellow presently focusing on policy analysis in China in the areas of labor relations and dispute resolution in the workplace. As Senior Advisor-Labor Relations to the U.S. Department of Labor-Chinese Ministry of Labour and Social Security joint Labor Law Cooperative Project in 2004-5, he presented seminars in China on U.S. labor relations practices and assisted in a review and analysis of Chinese labor laws. Earlier, as an Adjunct Lecturer at the Kennedy School, he taught labor-management policy analysis and dispute resolution (negotiation, mediation & arbitration) skills. While at Harvard he also did research in Japan on lifetime employment policy as a Fulbright Scholar in the ‘Japan Today’ Program. Prior to Harvard he was in private law practice and was elected national chairman of the Labor & Employment Section of the American Bar Association. During this time he also served as Special Labor Counsel to the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. A member of the Fulbright Senior Specialists Roster, he has lectured on labor and employment matters in China, Japan, Korea and Russia as well as written book chapters and presented research papers at international conferences on various subjects in the labor and employment field. He holds a B.A. in political science and a J.D. in law from New York University.
e:.jsiegel@ksg.harvard.edu
is currently an Associate Professor in the Department of Public and Social Administration, City University of Hong Kong. He holds a PhD, University of Warwick (UK), Department of Sociology. His research will examine the lobbying process in the United States and the way business attempts to influence U.S. government policy in which to benefit their interest, but which also intentionally or consequentially have potential to influence relations and labor processes with China.
email: william_taylor@ksg.harvard.edu
holds a Phd in Economics from Hitotsubashi University. He currently serves as a Professor of Economics at Waseda University, Tokyo. His research proposal concerns the impact of globalization on the transition and development of the Vietnamese economy.
email: van_tran_tho@ksg.harvard.edu
is currently an Assistant Professor in the MPA Program, Dept. of Political Science, East Carolina University. He holds a PhD in Public Administration from the Maxwell School, Syracuse University. His research will concern public budgeting and finance, specifically issues related to capital budgeting and finance as well as education and policy. Wang’s two main research projects while at the MR-CBG will be design of state capital assistance programs and capital budgeting and finance at the state level.
email: wen_wang@ksg.harvard.edu
Lecturer, School of Economics, Shaghai Jiaotong University. He is the President of Shanghai Jiner Information Inc. His research areas are including ventural capital investment in Great China, reform of local government, and future trend of the new China. Dr. Xu's research at the Kennedy School will be focused on three distinct areas of interest. The first involves the reform modes of economic and politic relations in China. The second try to give the exact or basic meaning of Intellectual Property Right, so as to explain the mechanism of those developed coutries or super capitals to push IPR protection. The third is to to rethink the core words of traditional Chinese political culture, create and redefine several words and make them popular to the western society. He has a Phd in enterprise management, and a master degree in math.
email: jin_xu@ksg.harvard.edu
Gang Xue is a joint PhD candidate sponsored by the China Scholarship Council. He is a doctoral candidate in the School of Management from Central University for Nationalities, China. Mr. Xue has received his bachelor and master degree in Administrative Management. He had worked as civil servant in township government, county government and provincial government in China for five years. His research mainly focuses on governance and reform of Chinese government.
e: gang_xue@ksg.harvard.edu
Deputy Director, General Office of the State Council, China. Mr. Zhang is looking at coordination of emergency preparedness and response between Chinese central and local governments.
email: qiang_zhang@ksg.harvard.edu
Associate Professor, School of Public Administration, Renmin University, China. Mr. Zhang earned his master’s degree in economics from Anhui University in eastern China and PhD degree in economics from Renmin University of China. After graduation, he entered into China Academy of Social Science (CASS) and worked in the Institute of Industrial Economy, then moved to School of Public Administration, Renmin University. His main interest fields include public finance and corporate finance, the transitional structure of regulation on public finance in China, and the financing of public health. During the stay in Harvard, Mr. Zhang will be working on the mechanism of US local public debts and its implications for China, as well as the financing of public health and its implications for China.
email: yuwen_zhang@ksg.harvard.edu
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