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Sun-Young Kwak is a Ph.D. candidate in Political Science at the University of Southern California. Her dissertation examines the effects of globalization, national characters, and transnational advocacy networks on environmental policy reforms in France and Korea. Her areas of interest include comparative politics, political theory, and international relations. (E-mail: skwak@usc. edu) Yong Wook Lee is Assistant Professor in the Department of Political Science and International Relations at Korea University. His research interests include examining how identities and norms affect and are affected by states and their practices within domestic and international contexts. He just published his first book, The Japanese Challenge to the American Neoliberal World Order: Identity, Meaning, and Foreign Policy (Stanford University Press, 2008). (Email : yongir@korea.ac.kr) Haeran Lim is Associate Professor of Political Science at Seoul National University. She was a CNAPS visiting fellow at The Brookings Institution from 2007-2008. Her major areas of expertise are comparative political economy, political economy of East Asian countries—particularly Korea and Taiwan—and industrial transformation and industrial policy. She has published numerous articles, and is the author of Korea’s Growth and Industrial Transformation (Macmillan Press, 1998). (E-mail: hrlim@snu.ac.kr) Kamal Sadiq is Assistant Professor of Political Science at the University of California, Irvine. He specializes in Citizenship; Immigration ; Human Trafficking; International Illegal Flows; States and Security in Developing Countries; International Relations. His regional expertise is in South Asia (India, Pakistan) and Southeast CONTRIBUTORS Asia (Malaysia, Indonesia). He has recently published Paper Citizens : How Illegal Immigrants Acquire Citizenship in Developing Countries (Oxford University Press, 2009). (E-mail: kamal@ uci.edu) Sueo Sudo is Professor of International Relations at Nanzan University , Nagoya, Japan. He has worked as a research fellow in the Institute of Asian Studies, Chulalongkorn University, Thailand, and as a fellow in the Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, Singapore . He is the author of The Fukuda Doctrine and ASEAN (Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, 1992), The International Relations of Japan and South East Asia (Routledge, 2002), and Evolution of ASEAN-Japan Relations (Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, 2005). (E-mail: sudos@nanzan-u.ac.jp) Stein Tønnesson has been director of the International Peace Research Institute (PRIO) in Oslo since 2001. His publications include The Vietnamese Revolution of 1945 (SAGE, 1991); Asian Forms of the Nation (edited with H. Antlöv, Curzon, 1996); and two forthcoming works—a comparative article on “The Class Route to Nationhood” in Nations and Nationalism, and a book, Vietnam 1946: How the War Began, to be published by the University of California Press in 2010. (E-mail: Stein@PRIO.no) Susan Turner is currently a master’s degree candidate at George Mason University in Virginia, where she concentrates on Chinese politics. She studied at Sichuan University in Chengdu in 2005 and studied in Russia in 2006. In 2007 she interned for the Minorities at Risk Organizational Behavior Project (MAROB) at the University of Maryland. (E-mail: susan_celeste@ahp.org) ...

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