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Excellence in Teaching Awards 2006 Winner Small Group Teaching
PhD A.N.U., MA Chinese Academy of Social Sciences
(Beijing), BA College of International Relations
(Beijing)Phone: + 61 8 6488 2085
Fax: + 61 8 6488 1060
jiechen@cyllene.uwa.edu.au
Chen Jie teaches International Relations in East Asia. He has
a major research interest in foreign policies and transnational
civil society in East Asia in general, and China and Taiwan in
particular.
Teaching
POLS2208
Politics in Greater China
POLS3308
Politics in Greater China
POLS2233
International Relations in East Asia
POLS3333
International Relations in East Asia
Selected Publications
Books/Monographs
Foreign Policy of the New Taiwan: Pragmatic Diplomacy in
Southeast Asia, London: Edward Elgar Publishing Limited,
July (2002). 328 pp. ISBN 1-84064-635-7. This book
was chosen as an Outstanding Academic Title for 2003 by Choice
Magazine (American Library Association).
Changing Perceptions: the Attitudes of the PRC Chinese
Towards Australia and China, 1989-1996, Australia-Asia Paper
No. 78, Centre for the Study of Australia-Asia Relations,
Griffith University, Australia, November (1996) co-authored with
Edmund S.K. Fung. 31pp. ISBN 0 86857 742 1.
Refereed Journals
NGO Community in China: Expanding Linkages with Transnational
Civil Society and their Democratic Implications, China
Perspectives, The French Centre for Research on Contemporary
China, No. 68, Nov-Dec (2006) pp. 29-40.
ONG et societe civile transnationale, Perspectives
Chinoises, No. 97, Septembre-Decembre (2006) pp. 31-43.
Burgeoning Transnationalism of Taiwan's Social Movement NGOs,
Journal Of Contemporary China, University of Denver,
USA, Vol. 10, No. 29, November (2001) pp. 613-644.
The Influences of Democracy on Taiwan's Foreign Policy,
Issues & Studies, Institute of International
Relations, Taipei, Taiwan, Vol. 36, No. 4, July/August (2000) pp.
1-32.
Taiwan zai Dongnanya de waijiao: chaoyue jingji maoyi, zhengjing
quangui ji qiaowu linian (Taipei's policy towards the ASEAN
countries: beyond obsession with elite, economic statecraft and
ethnic Chinese), Nanyang Xuebao (Journal of the South
Seas Society), biannual, bilingual, published by South Seas
Society, Singapore, Vol. 54, December (1999) pp. 48-56.
Shaking off a historical burden: China's relations with
ASEAN-based communist insurgency in Dneg’s era,
Communist and Post-Communist Studies, Center for Russian
& East European Studies, University of California, Los
Angeles, Vol. 27, No.4, December (1994) pp. 443-462.
China's Spratly policy: with special reference to its approach to
the Philippines and Malaysia, Asian Survey, Institute of
East Asian Studies, University of California, Berkeley, Vol.
XXXIV, No.10, October (1994) pp. 893-903.
Human rights: ASEAN’s new importance to China, The
Pacific Review, The International Institute for Strategic
Studies, London, Vol. 6, No. 3 (1993) pp. 227-237.
“Taiwan problem’ in Peking’s ASEAN Policy,
Issues & Studies, Institute of International
Relations, Taipei, Taiwan, Vol. 29, No.4, April (1993) pp.
95-124.
Book Chapters
Transnational Politics of Taiwan’s Civil Society:
Grassroots Aspirations and the State’s Diplomatic
Isolation, in Edward Friedman, ed., China’s Rise,
Taiwan’s Dilemma and International Peace, London:
Routledge (2006) pp. 110-129.
Taiwan's Diplomacy in Southeast Asia: Still Going South?
China and Southeast Asia: Global Changes and Regional
Challenges, ed Leong, H.K., Ku, S.C.Y., Singapore, Institute
of Southeast Asian Studies (2005) pp. 231-258
Relations between the DPP government in Taiwan and the United
States, in Marika Vicziany, David Peter Wright-Neville and Pete
Lentini, eds., Regional Security in the Asia Pacific: 9/11
and After, Edward Elgar: Cheltenham, UK, (2004) pp. 216-229.
Exploring the human dimensions of Taiwan-Southeast Asia economic
interdependence: migrant labourers, ethnic Chinese and alien
wives, in Samuel C. Y. Ku, ed., Southeast Asia in the New
Century: An Asian Perspective, Kaohsiung, Taiwan: National
Sun Yat-Sen University Press (2002) pp. 83-124.
China’s ASEAN policy: towards a more comprehensive and
long-term approach, in Chandran Jeshuran, ed., Major Asian
Powers and the Future of Southeast Asian Security, Institute
of Southeast Asian Studies, Singapore (1993) pp. 144-180.
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