Contributors
Editor:
Shao Binhong (邵滨鸿 )
is senior editor at the Institute of World Economics and Politics at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (CASS) and also the Secretary-General of the China Society of World Economics. Since 1996, she has been managing editor-in-chief of the International Economic Review, one of China’s core periodicals.
Authors:
Cai Fang (蔡昉 )
is Academician and Vice President of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (CASS). He attended China Renmin University, Graduate School of CASS and received his PhD degree in Economics. He served as Director of the Institute of Population and Labor Economics at CASS for 16 years before 2014. He has been visiting scholar to universities and institutions such as the University of Washington, the Australian National University, Stanford University, and the World Institute of Development Economics of the UN University.
He also serves as a member of the Standing Committee and Vice Chairman of the Committee of Agricultural and Rural Work of the 13th National People’s Congress. He also serves as adviser for several government ministries and provincial governments. He edits the Chinese journal Studies of Labor Economics and serves as a member on the editorial boards for academic journals such as Social Sciences in China and Economics Studies.
His research focuses on theoretical and policy issues about China’s agriculture, labor, population, reform, growth, and poverty. Cai Fang was awarded several important awards in Economics in China, such as the Zhang Peigang Development Economics Prize and the Sun Yefang Economics Prize.
His publications include China’s Economy: Reform and Development (McGraw-Hill, 2009, coauthored); Transforming the Chinese Economy, 1978–2008 (Brill, 2010, edited); China’s Population and Labor Issues Report (Brill, serial books, edited); China’s Economic Growth Prospects: From Demographic Dividend To Reform Dividend (Edward Elgar, 2016); Demystifying China’s Economy Development (Springer-Verlag, 2015).
Guo Shuqing (郭树清 )
was appointed Chairman of China Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission (CBIRC) and Secretary of CPC CBIRC Committee, as well as Secretary of CPC PBC Committee and Deputy Governor of People’s Bank of China (PBC) in March 2018. Mr. Guo is also a member of the 19th CPC Central Committee. His scholarly interests cover macroeconomics and comparative economic systems. Guo is considered to be an open-minded, insightful and profound official-scholar in Chinese Government. He has been a main participant in China’s economic reform programme.
Guo has extensive working experience in local governments, the central bank, regulatory authorities, and leading financial institutions. Prior to his current appointment, Mr. Guo held various positions, including Chairman and Secretary of Party Committee of China Banking Regulatory Commission (CBRC), Governor of Shandong Province, Chairman of China Securities Regulatory Commission, Chairman of China Construction Bank, Deputy Governor of People’s Bank of China, Administrator and Party Secretary of the State Administration of Foreign Exchange, Vice Governor of Guizhou Province, etc.
He worked as a research assistant in the institute of Marxism-Leninism of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences from March 1985 to February 1988. During that time he worked for doctoral law students and also entered the University of Oxford as a visiting researcher.
His main works:
“Potentials and Problems of the Chinese Economy.” International Economic Review, 6 (2010).
“Some Thoughts on Basic Problems in China’s Economy.” International Economic Review, 3 (2007).
“The Internal and External Imbalances of China’s Economy.” Economic Research Journal, 12 (2007).
The Face of the Two States of Imbalance. Renmin University Press, 2007.
Of the Overall Gradual. Economic Science Press, 1998.
The Economic System Transition and Macro-Control. Tianjin People’s Publishing House, 1992.
The Comparison of the Price System. Zhejiang People’s Publishing House, 1987.
Huang Qifan (黄奇帆 )
is the Vice Director of the China Center for International Economic Exchanges (CCIEE) and Academic Consultant to the China Finance 40 Forum.
Sheng Bin (盛斌 )
Dr., is the “Cheung Kong Scholar” professor at the Institute of International Economics, Nankai University, and senior research fellow at the Center for Transnationals’ Study and APEC Study Center, Nankai University. He is also the dean of the School of Economics, Nankai University, and the director of China APEC Academy. He is the vice secretary of China’s Society of World Economy, vice secretary of China’s University Association of International Trade Studies, vice chairman of China’s Society of American Economy, vice chief-editor of Nankai Economic Studies and other academic positions. He was senior visiting scholar of the U.S. Fulbright Foundation at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, Washington, D.C. during 2008–2009 and visiting scholar EU-China Higher Education Cooperation Program during 1999–2000.
Su Danni (苏丹妮 )
assistant professor, School of Economics, Nankai University, Ph.D. in Economics.
Shao Chaodui (邵朝对 )
assistant professor, School of Economics, Nankai University, Ph.D. in Economics.
Tang Shiping (唐世平 )
Ph.D., Distinguished Professor of Fudan University, Chair Professor Chen Shuqu of School of International Relations and Public Affairs, Fudan University; Distinguished Professor of “Changjiang Scholar” of the Ministry of Education. Editorial board member of International Studies Quarterly and Security Studies. He received his Ph.D. in molecular biology and genetics from Wayne State University in 1995. He obtained a master’s degree in international relations from the University of California at Berkeley in 1999.
His research fields include international politics, comparative politics, institutional economics, political (scientific) theory and social science philosophy.
Selected Publications of Tang Shiping:
Tang Shiping, On Social Evolution: Phenomenon and Paradigm, Routledge 2020.
Tang Shiping, Social Evolution of International Politics, Oxford University Press, 2013.
Tang Shiping, A General Theory of Institutional Change, Routledge / Taylor & Francis, 2011.
Tang Shiping, A Theory of Security Strategy for Our Time: Defensive Realism, Palgrave Macmillan, 2010.
Long Guoqiang (隆国强 )
is Vice-President and Research Fellow of the Development Research Center (DRC). From 1987 to 1993, he taught at the Department of Urban and Regional Science, Peking University at Campus One. He has done research on China’s Foreign Economic Policies at the DRC since 1993. He was a visiting fellow at the Brookings Institution’s Center for Northeast Asia Policy Studies, from 1998 to 1999.
He graduated from Peking University and received his Bachelor’s Degree in Science (1987), Master’s Degree in Management Science (1992), and Ph.D. in Economics (1998). He attended a training course on modern economics at Renmin University from 1989 to 1990, a financial planning program by IMF in 1994, a Training Program in Public Administration jointly by Tsinghua University and Harvard University in 2010, and a China Executive Leadership Program in Cambridge University in 2014.
He is Chairman of the Consultation Commission of Ministry of Commerce of China (MOFCOM), Chairman of Consultation Commission of the China Council for the Promotion of International Trade (CCPIT), Vice Chairman of the China Association for International Economic Cooperation.
Liao Fan (廖凡 )
Ph.D. (2004) in law, Peking University, is a senior research fellow and professor at the Institute of International Law, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (CASS). He is the lead research fellow of the CASS innovation project “International Economic Law Issues in the BRI Implementation”; council director of Chinese Society of International Economic Law; arbitrator at China International Economic and Trade Arbitration Commission (CIETAC) and Shenzhen Court of International Arbitration (SCIA); and specialist mediator at Singapore International Mediation Center (SIMC). Before taking the present post, Dr. Liao was a visiting scholar at Columbia University. His main research interests include fundamental theory of international law, international economic law and banking and financial law.
Selected Publications of Liao Fan:
“The Reform of the WTO: Global Agenda and China’s Position.” International Economic Review, 2019/02.
“The Interpretation and Construction of a Community with Shared Future for Mankind against the Background of Global Governance.” China Legal Science, 2018/05.
“Regulation of Government Subsidies: International Rule and China’s Response.” Political Science and Law, 2017/12.
“Regulation of Financial Conglomerates in China: from De facto to De jure.” European Business Organization Law Review, 2011/02.
“International Monetary System: Difficulties and Way Out.” Chinese Journal of Law, 2010/04.
Yu Zhi (余智 )
is a Professor of Economics at Renmin University of China. He is also a Research Associate at the China (Shanghai) Free Trade Zone Research Center and the U.S. Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas. He received his PhD in Finance from Renmin University of China and PhD in Economics from Georgetown University. He once conducted research at the National Commission of Development and Planning of China, the International Monetary Fund, and the US Department of Commerce. His research focuses on international trade and international finance. His papers were published in academic journals such as the Journal of International Economics and International Economic Review (Chinese). His policy comments have appeared in famous media including China Business Network, Associated Press (US), Bloomberg (US), Sputnik News Agency (Russia), Financial Times (Chinese), and Lianhe Zaobao (Singapore), etc.
Selected Publications of Yu Zhi:
“Tariff Pass-through, Firm Heterogeneity and Product Quality.” (with Rodney Ludema), Journal of International Economics, 2016 (103).
“China’s Adjustments of its International Trade Strategies Fit its Own Interests.” International Economic Review (Chinese), 2019 (02).
“The Most Recent Developments of the Research in Trade Policy Uncertainty.” International Trade Issues (Chinese), 2019 (05).
Sun Shao (孙劭 )
Ph.D. (2016) in Natural Disasters, Beijing Normal University. Associate Professor of National Climate Center, China; member of Chinese delegation in United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC); principal investigator of National Natural Science Foundation Program of China. Dr. Sun has published more than 20 research papers in the research of climate change and natural disasters, and the achievement have been widely applied in the risk management operation of the China Meteorological Administration.
Selected Publications of Sun Shao:
Shao Sun, Jianqing Zhai, Ying Li, et al. Urban waterlogging risk assessment in well-developed region of Eastern China. Physics and Chemistry of the Earth. 2019. doi:10.1016/j.pce.2019.102824.
Peijun Shi, Shao Sun, Daoyi Gong, et al. World Regionalization of Climate Change (1961–2010)[J]. International Journal of Disaster Risk Science, 2016, 7(3):216–226. doi:10.1007/s13753-016-0094-5.
Shao Sun, Jiayi Fang, Wei Gu, et al. Mapping Storm Surge Risk of the World. In: World Atlas of Natural Disaster Risk, Springer, 2015. 103–111. doi:10.1007/978-3-662-45430-5.
Li Xiangyang (李向阳 )
is a senior research fellow and director of the National Institute of International Strategy (NIIS) in CASS. He is president of the Chinese Society of South Asia, and deputy president of the Chinese Society of Asia-Pacific, of the Chinese Society of World Economics, and of the Chinese Society of Emerging Economies. He is also a member of the International Economic and Financial Advisory Committee of China’s Foreign Ministry, of the Expert Committee on International Development Cooperation of China’s Ministry of Commerce.
He received a BA in Economics from the Central University of Finance and Economics, and his MA and Ph.D. in Economics from the Graduate School of CASS in 1983, 1988, 1998 respectively. In addition, he studied at Tilburg University of Netherland in 1996. He served as deputy-director, Institute of World Economics and Politics in CASS, from 2004–2009, and then entered his present institution.
Li’s scholarly interests cover international economics, firm theory, globalization and regional economic integration, China’s foreign strategy. He has published numerous works in these fields.
Kong Yuan (孔元 )
Research Fellow at The Institute of European Studies, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (CASS); Post-Doctoral Fellow at Tsinghua Institute for Advanced Study in Humanities and Social Sciences (TIAS); Ph.D., Peking University Law School, Columbia University Visiting Scholar, 2014.9–2015.08; Chief Editor of Empire and History of International Law book series, Chief Editor of Nomos book series in China. Kong currently works on Early Modern European Intellectual History and Legal Theory, Empire and History of International Law.
Selected Publications of Kong Yuan (in Chinese):
1. Rethinking Nation-states through Constitutional and International Law: an Inward and Outward Perspective. Open Times, Vol. 4, 2018.
2. The Historical Formation of Constitutional Discourse: A Case Study on Jean Bodin. Peking University Law Journal, Vol. 29, No. 6, 2017.
3. Jean Bodin’s Reconstruction of Roman Law Tradition. Tsinghua Law Journal, (5), 2017.
4. Ideology and Imperial Politics: the Evolution and Crisis of Post-War American Conservatism. Open Times, (4), 2017.
5. Rethinking Jean Bodin’s Legacy in Early Modern Historiography. Du Shu Magazine, (9), 2017.
6. Kantorowicz’s Two Bodies. Du Shu Magazine, (10), 2017.
7. Identity Politics, Clash of Civilizations and the Crisis of American Republic. China Book Review, (12), 2017.
Zhao Tingyang (赵汀阳 )
Great Wall scholar, professor of philosophy at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. Steering member of Transcultura Institute European (since 1999). Visiting professor at department of eastern studies at Harvard (2013). Academic area: Political philosophy, Ontology, Ethics.
Selected Publications of Zhao Tingyang:
1. On Possible Lives (6th printing since 1994), SDX Joint Publishing Company, 1994, 1995; China Renmin University Press, 2004; 2005.
2. All-under-heaven System (4th printing since 2005), Jiangsu Education Press, 2005.
3. Studies on Bad World (2th printing since 2009), China Renmin University Press, 2009.
4. Politics for Everybody (3th printing since 2010), Social Sciences Academic Press 2010.
5. Du Ciel à la Terre (coauthor with Regis Debray), les Arenes, France (2014).
6. “The original game”, In Spielen nach den spielregeln, ed. By Ghosh-schellhorn and Marti, LIT Verlag, Berlin.
7. “The self and the other,” Frontiers of Philosophy in China, Vol. 3, No. 2, 2008, Beijing.
8. “An interpretation of harmony in terms of Confucian improvement”. Fudan Journal of the Humanities and Social Sciences. Vol. 2, No. 1 2009, Shanghai.
9. “Ontologie de la coexistence: du cogito au facio.” In Diogène, n° 228, octobre–décembre 2010, Paris-London.
10. “All-under-heaven and methodological relationalism”. In Contemporary Chinese Political Thought. ed. Fred Dallmayr, University Press of Kentucky, 2012, USA.
11. “Liberté et harmonie: affrontement ou convergence.” In Debray & Jullien (ed): Culture nationale et universalisme. Ginkgo éditeur, Paris, 2013.
12. “The China dream in question. Economic and political studies”, V2N1, Jan 2014, Renmin University of China.