Alice Lyman Miller is a research fellow at the Hoover Institution
and teaches at Stanford University and the United States Naval
Postgraduate School. She is the founding editor of the Hoover
Institution's China Leadership Monitor and author of Science and
Dissent in Post-Mao China (1996).
Richard Wich has extensive government and academic experience in
Communist and Asian affairs. He is a visiting scholar at John
Hopkins University's School of Advanced International Studies and
is the author of Sino-Soviet Crisis Politics (1980).
"This elegant synthesis of the major events and their interactions in the extraordinarily complex international politics of Asia after WWII is an important contribution. Tailor made for advanced courses on the history of Asian international relations, its readability and narrative structure also offer the general reader access to a historical perspective on a region that is transforming the world today." - Carla Freeman, PhD, Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies "Alice Lyman Miller and Richard Wich have done a great service in this thorough and thoughtful volume. The historical depth, detailed analysis, and broad geographic scope of Becoming Asia put it in a class by itself among the fine surveys of Asian international relations in the last century." - Robert Sutter, School of Foreign Service, Georgetown University
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