Monday September 6, 2010

Welcome   |   Register   |   Log in

Nonresident Senior Fellow

David Shambaugh

Nonresident Senior Fellow, Foreign Policy, Center for Northeast Asian Policy Studies

David Shambaugh is an expert on Chinese politics and foreign policy. A former editor of The China Quarterly, he has held advisory posts on East Asia issues with the National Security Council and the U.S. State Department.



Expertise

China; U.S.-Asian relations; China's foreign policy; Asian security

  • Language Fluency:
  • French
  • Chinese

Background

Current Positions
Director, China Policy Program, and Professor of Political Science and International Affairs, Elliott School of International Affairs and Department of Political Science, George Washington University

Past Positions
Lecturer, Senior Lecturer, Reader, University of London School of Oriental and African Studies, Department of Political Studies (1988-1996); Lecturer, University of Michigan Department of Political Science (1987); Editor, The China Quarterly (1991-1996); Acting Director and Program Associate, Asia Program of the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars (1987-1988); U.S. National Security Council, East Asia Bureau, staff assistant (1977-1978); U.S. Department of State, Bureau of Intelligence & Research, Office of East Asia & the Pacific, Intern and analyst on Chinese and Indochina affairs (1977); Visiting scholar or student in China (1980, 1983-85, 1991, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1998, 2000), Taiwan (1990-91), Hong Kong (1991), Russia (1990), Germany (1995), and Japan (1998)

Education

Ph.D., University of Michigan Dept. of Political Science; M.A., Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies, 1980; B.A., George Washington University Elliott School of International Affairs, 1977


Research and Commentary

Save to My PortfolioChina Flexes Its Soft PowerJune 07, 2010International Herald Tribune
Save to My PortfolioThe Year China Showed its ClawsFebruary 16, 2010Financial Times
Save to My PortfolioIs China Ready To Be A Global Power?November 10, 2009Global Times
Save to My PortfolioThe China Awaiting President ObamaNovember 10, 2009Brookings Northeast Asia Commentary
Save to My PortfolioChina on the Road to ProsperitySeptember 18, 2009TIME Magazine
Save to My PortfolioChina and Russia: When Giants Meet June 15, 2009The New York Times
Save to My PortfolioAsia Still Likes AmericaFebruary 17, 2009International Herald Tribune
Save to My PortfolioChina and the U.S.: A Marriage of Convenience January 06, 2009International Herald Tribune
Save to My PortfolioChina’s New Foray into Latin AmericaNovember 17, 2008Yale Global Online
Save to My PortfolioChina's Competing NationalismsMay 05, 2008International Herald Tribune
Save to My PortfolioThe 'China Honeymoon' is OverNovember 26, 2007International Herald Tribune
Save to My PortfolioChina’s 17th Party Congress: Maintaining Delicate BalancesNovember 01, 2007Brookings Northeast Asia Commentary
Save to My PortfolioChina: Let a Thousand Democracies BloomJuly 06, 2007International Herald Tribune
Save to My PortfolioDecent Asia Policy, Needs WorkMay 29, 2007International Herald Tribune
Save to My PortfolioChina-Europe Relations Get ComplicatedMay 01, 2007Brookings Northeast Asia Commentary
Save to My PortfolioFor Hu and Bush, a Long List of Fires to FightApril 18, 2006YaleGlobal Online
Save to My PortfolioSino-American Bridges Need to be RepairedSeptember 01, 2005Financial Times
Save to My PortfolioDon't lift the arms embargo on ChinaFebruary 23, 2005International Herald Tribune
Save to My PortfolioChina Engages Asia: Reshaping the Regional OrderJanuary 01, 2005International Security
Save to My PortfolioChina and Europe: The Emerging AxisSeptember 01, 2004Current History
Save to My PortfolioChina and the Korean PeninsulaMarch 01, 2003The Washington Quarterly
Save to My PortfolioWill the Party Lose China?November 07, 2002The New York Times
Save to My PortfolioThe Taiwan Prescription Is Deterrence Without ProvocationApril 23, 2001International Herald Tribune
Save to My PortfolioNo Easy Way Forward with ChinaApril 03, 2001The New York Times

More Research and Commentary »

Contact Information

communications@brookings.edu

202.797.6105
Office of Communications

My Portfolio

My New Content

View suggested content based on items you have saved to your Portfolio.
Log in or register now