Editor Sumit Ganguly holds
the Rabindranath Tagore Chair in Indian Cultures and Civilizations at
Indiana University Bloomington.
He is a member of Indiana's political
science faculty as
well as the director of the India
Studies Program. Professor Ganguly was previously professor of Asian
studies and government at the University of Texas at Austin, professor
of political
science at Hunter College of the City University of New York, and also
taught at James Madison College at Michigan State University. He is
a member
of the Council on Foreign Relations in
New York and the International Institute
of Strategic Studies in London. Professor Ganguly has also been
a fellow at the Woodrow Wilson International
Center,
Washington, DC, and at the Center
for International Security and Cooperation at Stanford University.
He has written extensively on ethnic conflict, inter-state war and foreign
policy
issues. Recent books include
Conflict Unending: India-Pakistan Tensions Since 1947 and
The Crisis in Kashmir: Portents of War, Hopes of Peace; edited volumes
include
Understanding Contemporary India,
India as an Emerging Power, and
Fighting Words: Language Policy and Ethnic Relations in Asia. He
can be reached at sganguly-at-indiana.edu.
Editor Devin
T. Hagerty is an Associate Professor of political
science at the University of Maryland,
Baltimore County. Prior to arriving at UMBC in 2001, he was a
Senior Lecturer in Government and International Relations at the
University of Sydney. Dr. Hagerty has also taught at the University
of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, and the University of Pennsylvania.
He worked as a staffer in the U.S. Congress from 1986 to 1989. Dr.
Hagerty’s main research interests are India-Pakistan security
issues, Kashmir, nuclear proliferation and arms control, and U.S.
alliances in the Asia-Pacific region.He is the author of The
Consequences of Nuclear Proliferation: Lessons from South Asia,
published by the MIT Press in 1998. Dr. Hagerty’s forthcoming
works are: (with Sumit Ganguly) Fearful Symmetry: Indo-Pakistani
Crises in the Shadow of Nuclear Weapons (Oxford University Press
and the University of Washington Press) and (editor) South Asia
in World Politics (Rowman and Littlefield). He has also published in
International Security, Security Studies, India Review, Current History,
the Australian Journal of International Affairs, the Journal of South
Asian and Middle Eastern Studies, Asian Survey, the Fletcher Forum,
and numerous edited volumes. Dr. Hagerty can be reached at devinhagerty
-at- hotmail.com.
Editor Michael Chambers is
an Assistant Professor of political
science at Indiana
State University. He previously taught
at St. Olaf College, and was a visiting
scholar at the Fairbank
Center for East Asian Research, Harvard University, during 2003-2004.
Dr. Chambers’ research
focuses on Chinese foreign policy toward the Asia-Pacific, and he is
currently working on a book that examines China’s alliance behavior
with its Asian allies. He is the editor of South
Asia in 2020: Future Strategic Balances and Alliances (U.S. Army
War College, Strategic Studies Institute, 2002), and has forthcoming
articles on the
Sino-North Korean alliance and on the Sino-Thai relationship. Dr. Chambers
can be reached at pschamb-at-indstate.edu.
Managing Editor Amy Freedman is an
Adjunct Associate Research Scholar at the Weatherhead
East Asian Institute, Columbia
University.
She was
previously an Associate Professor of Government at Franklin
and Marshall College, Lancaster, Pennsylvania. Dr. Freedman's main
research interests are political economy issues; and political Islam
in Southeast Asia.
She is the author of Political Change and Consolidation: Democracy's
Rocky Road in Thailand, Indonesia, South Korea and Malaysia, published
in 2006 by Palgrave. She has also written on (with Robert Gray) the implications
of US missile defense for security relations in Asia. Dr. Freedman has
published articles in World Affairs, Orbis, Modern Asian Studies, the
Japanese Journal of Political Science, Asian Affairs, and several edited
volumes. Dr. Freedman can be reached at alf2107 - at- Columbia.edu
Associate Editor Tanya Ogilvie-White is
the Director of the Diplomacy Programme, School
of Political Science and Communication,
University of Canterbury, New
Zealand. Her research focuses on global
and regional governance issues, particularly those relating to nuclear
security, non-proliferation and counter-terrorism. Prior to joining the
University of Canterbury, Dr Ogilvie-White was a Research Fellow at the
Mountbatten Centre for International
Studies (MCIS), University of Southampton,
UK; a representative for the Programme for Promoting Nuclear Non-Proliferation
(PPNN); and a tutor at the UK Defence Academy. In 2005 she was appointed
as New Zealand's representative to the Council for Security Cooperation
in the Asia-Pacific (CSCAP) expert group on "How to Realize Multilateral
Security Cooperation in Northeast Asia". Dr Ogilvie-White can be
reached at tanya.ogilvie-white -at- canterbury.ac.nz
Associate Editor Joseph Chinyong Liow is
Associate Professor and Head of Research for the Institute of Defence
and
Strategic
Studies
at the Rajaratnam School of International
Studies, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. He is
also Coordinator of the research programmes in Civil and Internal
Conflicts as well as Contemporary Islam. Joseph's
research interests lie in the field of Muslim politics in Southeast
Asia, the international politics of Southeast Asia, and Malaysian
domestic politics and foreign policy. His articles have appeared
in numerous international journals, including Asian Survey, Contemporary
Southeast Asia, Third World Quarterly, Commonwealth and Contemporary
Politics, Australian Journal of International Affairs, Southeast
Asia Research, Asian Journal of Political Science, Studies in Conflict
and Terrorism, Asia Policy, and Journal of Southeast Asian Studies,
as well as innumerous edited volumes. Joseph is also the author
of
The
Politics of Indonesia-Malaysia Relations: One Kin, Two Nations (RoutledgeCurzon
2005) and Muslim
Resistance in Southern Thailand and Southern Philippines: Religion,
Ideology, and Politics (East-West
Centre Washington 2006), and is editor of Order
and Security in Southeast Asia: Essays in Memory of Michael Leifer (Routledge
2006). Joseph obtained his Ph.D in International Relations from
the London
School of Economics and Political Science.He can be reached
at iscyliow -at- ntu.edu.sg
Assistant Editor Leila Zakhirova is working towards
a PhD in political science at Indiana
University, Bloomington. Her fields
of study are international relations and comparative politics with research
interests focused on informal institutions and party formation in post-Soviet
Central Asia. She has an MA in political science from Kansas
State University and a BA in English and philosophy from Bethany
College, Lindsborg. She
can be reached at lzakhiro-at-indiana.edu.
To
email any of the editors replace the -at- in their given email addresses
with @.