Yuan
Ming (China)
Director, Institute of International Relations,
Peking University,
Beijing, China
Professor Yuan Ming was originally trained
as a student of western language and literature
at Peking University. Prior to her graduate
work, she spent eight years in the rural
areas in Northwest China. China’s Reform
and Open Door policy opens the opportunities
for her to accomplish the graduate work
in the Law Department of Peking University
and then to visit these distinguished institutions
abroad. She was a visiting scholar at U.C.
Berkeley from 1983 to 1985; a Senior Associate
Member at the St. Antony’s College in Oxford
University from 1989 to 1990. Since 1995,
she was invited and did research at the
Carter Center in Atlanta, Georgia; the Carnegie
Endowment for International Peace and the
Brookings Institution in Washington D.C.
She travels a lot and is a frequent speaker
at many international gatherings such as
the World Economic Forum in Davos, the Trilateral
Commission, the Club of Rome, etc.
Professor Yuan Ming teaches the History
of International Relations, Western Classics
of International Relations at Peking University.
She is also the Vice-Dean of the School
of International Studies, the Director of
the Center for American Studies at the University.
Her publication includes Cross Century Assignment:
the International Relations Studies in China;
A History of International Relations ( 1648-1989),
which is one of the leading publication
and textbook in China. She is also the co-editor
of Sino-American Relations (1945-1955);
the Golden Age of U.S.-China-Japan Relations.
Professor Yuan Ming has organized many international
conferences in China, and has wide links
in Asia, North America, Europe and Oceania.
Professor Yuan Ming is a member of the Chinese
People’s Political Consultative Conference
and a member of the CPPCC’s Foreign Relations
Committee. She sits on the boards of numbers
of institutions in China. She was also the
Trustee of the Asia Society in New York
(1998-2004). In 2004, she joined the International
Advisory Board of the Council on Foreign
Relations in New York.