![]() ![]() Global affairs professor discusses deteriorating U.S.-China relations ( The Observer).China can’t have it both ways in Europe ( Foreign Policy).Essay: China’s geostrategic conception of the developing world ( East Asia Forum Quarterly).Analysis: Countering China’s security state: A bipartisan approach (American Foreign Policy Council).Journal article: Building a more “democratic” and “multipolar” world: China’s strategic engagement with developing countries ( The China Review).Book review: Rising China’s influence in developing Asia ( The China Journal).Nitze School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS) where he studied at the Hopkins-Nanjing Center, and a BA in East Asian Studies from The George Washington University’s Elliott School of International Affairs. Before coming to Notre Dame in 2019, he was assistant professor of public affairs at the University of Texas at Austin.Įisenman holds a PhD in political science from UCLA, an MA in International Relations from Johns Hopkins University’s Paul H. He was a policy analyst on the US-China Economic and Security Review Commission (2003–05) and has been senior fellow for China studies at the American Foreign Policy Council since 2006. BiographyĮisenman has been a visiting faculty member at Fudan University (summer 2017), Peking University (summer 2016), and NYU–Shanghai (2011–12). Eisenman’s next book with Shinn, which will examine the China-Africa political and security relationship, will be published in 2023 by Columbia University Press. His second book, China and Africa: A Century of Engagement (University of Pennsylvania Press), co-authored with David Shinn, was named one of the “ Best International Relations Books of 2012″ by Foreign Affairs. In 2020, the book’s updated second edition was published in Chinese by the Chinese University of Hong Kong Press. In China Steps Out: Beijing’s Major Power Engagement with the Developing World(Routledge, 2018), Eisenman worked with Eric Heginbotham to analyze China’s policies toward the developing world. Hamilton Book Award honorable mention and was highly reviewed in more than a dozen prestigious outlets including Foreign Affairs, the Wall Street Journal, the American Historical Review, Journal of Asian Studies, and the China Journal. The book explains how more capital investment and better farming techniques increased agricultural productivity growth in Maoist China. Joshua Eisenman’s ( 马佳士) research focuses on the political economy of China’s development and its foreign relations with the United States and the global south -particularly Africa. His work has been published in top academic journals including the World Development, Development and Change, Journal of International Development, Global Environmental Politics, Journal of Contemporary China and Cold War History, and in popular outlets such as Foreign Affairs, the Wall Street Journal, and Foreign Policy. His views on China’s domestic and foreign policy have been cited in the New York Times, the Washington Post, the Economist, on National Public Radio (NPR)and in many other prestigious outlets.Įisenman’s most recent book, Red China’s Green Revolution: Technological Innovation, Institutional Change, and Economic Development Under the Commune (Columbia University Press, 2018) received the 2019 Robert W. China, Dev & the Global South (elective for master of global affairs). ![]() US-China Relations (elective for undergraduate global affairs major).Policymaking for a Global Era ( undergraduate course).He also is a fellow of the Keough School’s Liu Institute for Asia and Asian Studies, Kellogg Institute for International Studies, and Pulte Institute for Global Development. Joshua Eisenman is associate professor of politics in the Keough School of Global Affairs at the University of Notre Dame. International political economy comparative politics development Chinese politics US-China relations China’s relations with developing countries China-Africa relations At the Keough School Associate Professor of Politics Expertise ![]()
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