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CARNEGIE
ENDOWMENT FOR INTERNATIONAL PEACE:
CARNEGIE ANNOUNCES MAJOR
ADDITION TO CHINA PROGRAM - APPOINTS DOUGLAS PAAL IN WASHINGTON AND TWO
LEADING SCHOLARS IN BEIJING:
05/05/2008
(MaximsNews Network)
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UNITED
NATIONS - / MaximsNews Network / 05
May 2008 -- Douglas H. Paal, a leading expert on China, former
U.S. representative to Taiwan, and national security official in the George H.
W. Bush and Reagan White Houses, has joined the Carnegie Endowment for
International Peace as Director of its China Program in Washington and
Beijing.
Making
the announcement Carnegie Endowment President, Jessica T. Mathews, said:
“For
over 25 years, Doug Paal has worked on the crucial issues affecting China, the
Far East, and beyond. He has a rare mix of scholarly expertise, high level
policy experience, and practical knowledge of the region in the public and
private spheres. There is no one better equipped to lead Carnegie’s work on
this critically important country and region. I am delighted and very proud that
he will be taking on a leading role in the Endowment’s Washington office.”
Douglas
Paal said:
“It’s
a privilege to be invited to join the distinguished colleagues who constitute
the Carnegie Endowment. I look forward to being part of an active program of
innovative projects to shape policy in Washington and Beijing.”
The
Endowment also announced two major new appointments in China.
Shi
Tianjian, formerly associate professor in the Department of Political Science at
Duke University, will head the Endowment’s presence in Beijing.
Zhou
Dadi, the former director general of the Energy Research Institute (ERI) of the
National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) in China, will run the Beijing
arm of the Carnegie Energy and Climate Program.
Dr.
Mathews said:
“Shi
Tianjian’s work in and knowledge of both China and the United States,
particularly on the important issues of security and political progress, make
him perfectly suited to take over the reins of our work in Beijing on these and
other issues, as we develop our presence. To be able to add to Tianjian’s
skills those of Zhou Dadi, one of China’s preeminent experts in the field of
energy and climate, to complement the work of our Energy and Climate program in
Washington DC, gives Carnegie a team of leading experts in the key policy issues
affecting China, the United States, and the world.”
###
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NOTES
Douglas H. Paal was the director of the American Institute in Taiwan from April
2002 to January 2006.
He was
the president of the Asia Pacific Policy Center (APPC), a non-profit institution
in Washington, D.C., which advocates bipartisan promotion of trade and
investment, as well as defense and security ties across the Pacific.
Prior to
forming the APPC, Paal was the special assistant to President Bush for National
Security Affairs and senior director for Asian Affairs on the National Security
Council, where he also served in the Reagan Administration.
Paal has
worked in the State Department with the Policy Planning Staff and as a senior
analyst for the CIA.
He also
served in the U.S. Embassies in Singapore and Beijing.
He
studied Asian history at Brown and Harvard Universities and the Japanese
language in Tokyo.
He has
spoken and published frequently on Asian affairs and national security
issues.
Shi
Tianjian is a specialist in Asian security issues and political
participation.
He was
associate Professor and before that assistant Professor in Duke University’s
Department of Political Science from 1993 to 2008.
He was
also assistant professor in the Department of Political Science, University of
Iowa, 1992 to 1993, a lecturer in Peking University’s Department of
International Politics, 1988 to 1989, and deputy director of The Opinion
Research Center of China, 1988 to 1989.
The
author of several books, including, Lineage and Village Governance in
Contemporary China: Multidisciplinary Research and Political Participation in
Beijing, Shi Tianjian also sits on the Editorial Board of Journal of
Contemporary China, and is a present or past member of the editorial board of
China Review and of Chinese Social Science Quarterly.
Zhou
Dadi is director general (emeritus) of the Energy Research Institute (ERI) of
the National Development and Reform Commission, where he served as director
general for 8 years.
Earlier,
Dadi served in ERI for 22 years as research professor and vice director,
focusing on energy economics and energy system analysis.
Dadi has
been a prominent intellectual leader in China’s energy import and export
reform policies, energy price reform, energy efficiency policy, and climate
change. He now serves as a member of the Expert Committee of the Energy Field of
the 863 Program of China (which reports to the State Council).
Zhou
Dadi was educated in Beijing, earning his B.S. in 1970 in the Department of
Engineering Physics, Tsinghua University, and his M.S. in 1976 in the Department
of Environmental Engineering, also at Tsinghua University.
He is a
member of the Scientific and Technical Advisory Panel (STAP) of Global
Environment Facility; deputy director, Executive Office of the China Green
Lights Program; chief scientist for the Expert Team of China for Working Group
III of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC); lead author of the
Third Assessment Report, IPCC WG III (Mitigation); chairman of the Board of
Directors of the Chinese Energy Economics Society; executive member of the Board
of Directors of the Chinese Society of Energy Research; board member of the
Chinese Society of Sustainable Development; and board member of the Chinese
Society of Input/Output Research.
Dadi has
served as a consultant to the World Bank, Global Environmental Facility, and
many other organizations around the world, and has been a visiting fellow at the
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) and visiting scientist at the
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL) in the United States.
Zhou
co-founded the Energy Efficiency Center in Beijing in 1992 in cooperation with
PNNL and LBNL.
Zhou
Dadi received the OECD Climate Technology Initiative (CTI) Global Climate
Leadership Award in 2000.
He has
participated in more than 30 key research projects and published more than 50
papers and books.
He
speaks native Mandarin and is fluent in English.
The
Carnegie China Program in Beijing and Washington provides policy makers in both
countries with a better understanding of the dynamics within China and between
the United States and China.
In
addition to books, policy briefs, papers and other publications, the Program
produces Carnegie China Insight Monthly, a Chinese-language e-newsletter, and
the Hong Kong Journal, an online quarterly covering political, economic, and
social issues on Hong Kong and its relations with mainland China, the United
States, and other governments and international organizations.
The
Carnegie Energy and Climate Program aims to provide leadership in global energy
and climate policy.
The
program integrates thinking on energy technology, environmental science, and
political economy to reduce risks stemming from global change and competition
for scarce resources.
It will
create new products and collaborate with Carnegie experts around the world to
provide information and change the way policy makers think about energy
policy.
Building
on the successful establishment of the Carnegie Moscow Center fourteen years
ago, and following its century-long practice of adapting to radically-changed
global circumstances, the Endowment is undertaking a fundamental re-definition
of its role and mission.
In a
two-day series of events to publicly launch the NEW VISION in February 2007, the
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace announced that it has added
operations in Beijing, Beirut, and Brussels to its existing offices in
Washington and Moscow, pioneering the idea that a think tank whose mission is to
contribute to global security, stability, and prosperity requires a permanent
international presence and a multinational outlook at the core of its
operations.
For more
information on the Carnegie Endowment’s NEW VISION or to watch the NEW VISION
DVD online, please click here.
Labels:
United
Nations, U.N., Carnegie
Endowment, China, Douglas
Paal
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