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CONTRIBUTORS Mely Caballero-Anthony is Assistant Professor at the Institute of Defence and Strategic Studies, Singapore, where she is project coordinator of the IDSS-FORD Project on Non-Traditional Secu­ rity in Asia. She has been active in Track II work through her association with the Council for Security Cooperation in the Asia Pacific (CSCAP) and the ASEAN-ISIS network. She has published widely on regional security affairs, including co-edit­ ing The Asia Pacific in the New Millennium: Political and Security Challenges (2001) and a forthcoming book in 2004, Regional Secu­ rity in Southeast Asia (ISEAS Singapore). (E-mail: ismcanthony@ ntu.edu.sg) Young Nam Cho is Assistant Professor at the Graduate School of International Studies, Seoul National University. His most recent English-language journal publications can be found in The China Quarterly, Issues & Studies, and Development and Society. His recent research has focused mainly on the power and roles of China's local people's congresses in the era of market socialism. (E-mail: yncho@snu.ac.kr) Yanzhong Huang is Director of the Center for Global Health Studies and Assistant Professor in the John C. Whitehead School of Diplomacy and International Relations at Seton Hall Univer­ sity. He obtained his Ph.D. degree in political science from the University of Chicago in 2000. His research and teaching interests cover Chinese politics, global health, and U.S.-China relations. (E-mail: huangyan@shu.edu) Yoo Hyang Kim is a Research Fellow at the National Assembly Library of the Republic of Korea. She has published articles in English, Japanese, and Korean language journals, and is co­ author of two Korean works, Information Society and Global Peace (Orum, 2002) and Politics and Information Society (Orum, 2001). Her research interests include information technology standards and international political economy, as well as the influence of information technology on North Korea. (E-mail: agora@nanet. go.kr) Justin Yifu Lin is Professor and Founding Director of the China Centre for Economic Research at Beijing University and Professor of Economics at Hong Kong University of Science and Technolo­ gy. Among his numerous publications, which have been widely translated, are eight books, including The China Miracle: Develop­ ment Strategy and Economic Reform (Chinese University of Hong Kong Press, 1996 and 2003) and The State-owned Enterprise Reform (Chinese University of Hong Kong Press, 1999. (E-mail: jlin@ccer. pku.edu.cn) Shogo Suzuki is a doctoral candidate in the Department of International Relations, Australian National University. He has published in the Working Paper series of the department. His research interests include international relations theory with particular reference to East Asia, Sino-Japanese relations, and Chinese foreign policy. (E-mail: shogo.suzuki@anu.edu.au) Yiwei Wang is Assistant Professor in the Center for American Studies, Fudan University, Shanghai. From 2000-2001 he was Fox Fellow of the Yale Center for International and Area Studies. Besides several articles on U.S. strategy and diplomacy pub­ lished in Chinese journals, he has two books forthcoming in 2004: Coping with the Future: American Congress and National Secu­ rity Policy (Fudan University Press), and The Strategy, Theorem and Idea of Balance of Power: Historical Indications and Theoretical Dilemmas (Shanghai People's Press). (E-mail: yiweiwang@fudan. edu.cn) Baohui Zhang is an Associate Professor of Government at Daemen College in Amherst, New York. He has published articles in Comparative Political Studies, Theory and Society, Communist and Post-Communist Studies, and Asian Affairs, among others. His research interests include Chinese politics, U.S.-China relations, and democratization. Currently his research focuses on the role of nuclear weapons in U.S.-China relations. (E-mail: bzhang@ daemen.edu) ...

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