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External
Examiner
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STEVE
SMITH is Vice
Chancellor and Professor at the University
of Exeter, and Chair of the England
and Northern Ireland Council of Universities
UK. Prior to taking up that post
in October 2002 he was Professor
of International Politics and Pro
Vice Chancellor at the University
of Wales, Aberystwyth from 1992.
Before that he was Professor of International
Relations at the University of East
Anglia. He was the editor of the
Cambridge University Press series
Studies in International Relations
from 1986-2006. In 2003/ 04 he assumed
responsibilities as President of
the International Studies Association.
He has written over 100 academic
papers and is the author/editor of
15 books, most recently (edited with
Tim Dunne and Milja Kurki) International
Relations Theories (Oxford University
Press, 2007), (edited with Tim Dunne
and Amelia Hadfield) Foreign
Policy: Theories, Actors, Cases (Oxford University
Press, forthcoming 2008), and (edited
with John Baylis and Patricia Owens)
The Globalization of World Politics (4th edition, Oxford University Press,
forthcoming 2008). He has served
as external examiner at over a dozen
leading British universities.
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Lee Lai To holds an undergraduate degree in Economics from The Chinese University of Hong Kong, and PhD in Political Science from the University of California, Santa Barbara. Lee, who has written and lectured internationally and regionally on Chinese politics, the South China Sea conflicts, cross-strait relations, Singapore’s foreign policy, and Asia- Pacific security, has also been actively taking part in many of the academic and Track Two conferences on regional and international affairs. His professional interests have taken him to numerous universities in the US, Canada and Asia as a visiting scholar and provided him with many opportunities to work with like-minded academic, official, semi-official and private think tanks and strategic institutes especially those in the Asia-Pacific region. |
Consultant
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STEPHEN
M. WALT is the Robert and
Renee Belfer Professor of International
Affairs at Harvard's John F. Kennedy
School of Government, and Faculty
Chair of the International Security
Program at the Belfer Center for
Science and International Affairs.
He previously taught at Princeton
University and the University of
Chicago, where he served as Master
of the Social Science Collegiate
Division and Deputy Dean of Social
Sciences. He has been a Resident
Associate of the Carnegie Endowment
for Peace and a Guest Scholar at
the Brookings Institution; as well
as consultant for the Institute for
Defense Analyses, the Center for
Naval Analyses, and the National
Defense University. He was elected
a Fellow of the American Academy
of Arts and Sciences in May 2005.
He serves on the editorial boards
of Foreign Policy, Security Studies,
International Relations and The Journal
of Cold War Studies, and is Co-Editor
of the Cornell Studies in Security
Affairs, published by Cornell University
Press. Professor Walt is the author
of The Origins of Alliances (1987),
which received the 1988 Edgar S.
Furniss National Security Book Award,
and Revolution and War (1996). Recent
articles include “An Unnecessary
War” Foreign Policy (January/February
2003); and “The Relationship
between Theory and Policy in International
Relations,” in the Annual Review
of Political Science (2005). His
most recent book is Taming American
Power: The Global Response to U.S.
Primacy (2005), which was a finalist
for the 2006 Lionel Gelber Book Award
and the 2006 Arthur Ross Book Award.
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