g. john ikenberry born: october 5, 1954 609-258-4779 (tel) · september 2017 . g. john ikenberry ....

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September 2017 G. John Ikenberry PERSONAL Born: October 5, 1954 Citizenship: U.S.A. Office Address: 116 Bendheim Hall Woodrow Wilson School Princeton University Princeton, N.J. 08544 609-258-4779 (tel) 609-258-0482 (fax) [email protected] EDUCATION Ph.D. Political Science, The University of Chicago, June 1985 M.A. Political Science, The University of Chicago, 1978 B.S. Political Science and Philosophy, Manchester College, 1976 HONORS, FELLOWSHIPS, AND GRANTS American Academy of Arts and Sciences, Member, 2016- Supernumerary Fellow and George Eastman Visiting Professorship, 72 nd , Balliol College, Oxford University, 2013-14 MacArthur Foundation grant, “The Day After,” 2012-14. Council for International Teaching and Research Grant, partnership project, Princeton and University of Tokyo, 2012-16. Japan Foundation Grant, 2012-13 (with Takashi Inoguchi, University of Tokyo) East-West Center POSCO Visiting Fellowship, 2011-12 American Academy of Berlin, Fellowship, 2011-12 (declined) Council for International Teaching and Research Grant, Princeton University, 2009-11 U.S.-Japan Foundation Grant, 2009-10 (with Takashi Inoguchi, University of Tokyo) Committee on Global Partnership, Project Grant, 2008-09 Member, School of Social Science, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, New Jersey, 2007-08 Princeton Institute for International and Regional Studies, Project Grant, 2006-09.

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September 2017 G. John Ikenberry PERSONAL

Born: October 5, 1954 Citizenship: U.S.A.

Office Address: 116 Bendheim Hall

Woodrow Wilson School Princeton University Princeton, N.J. 08544 609-258-4779 (tel) 609-258-0482 (fax) [email protected]

EDUCATION

Ph.D. Political Science, The University of Chicago, June 1985

M.A. Political Science, The University of Chicago, 1978

B.S. Political Science and Philosophy, Manchester College, 1976 HONORS, FELLOWSHIPS, AND GRANTS

American Academy of Arts and Sciences, Member, 2016- Supernumerary Fellow and George Eastman Visiting Professorship, 72nd, Balliol College, Oxford University, 2013-14

MacArthur Foundation grant, “The Day After,” 2012-14.

Council for International Teaching and Research Grant, partnership project, Princeton and University of Tokyo, 2012-16.

Japan Foundation Grant, 2012-13 (with Takashi Inoguchi, University of Tokyo) East-West Center POSCO Visiting Fellowship, 2011-12 American Academy of Berlin, Fellowship, 2011-12 (declined) Council for International Teaching and Research Grant, Princeton University, 2009-11 U.S.-Japan Foundation Grant, 2009-10 (with Takashi Inoguchi, University of Tokyo) Committee on Global Partnership, Project Grant, 2008-09 Member, School of Social Science, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, New Jersey, 2007-08

Princeton Institute for International and Regional Studies, Project Grant, 2006-09.

German Marshall Fund-USA, Transatlantic Fellow, research project on politics of unipolarity, 2002-2004

German Marshall Fund-USA, grant, workshop on U.S.-European relations, 2003

German Marshall Fund-USA, grant, workshop on European-American I.R. Theory, 2001

U.S.-Japan Foundation Grant, 2000-2002 (with Takashi Inoguchi, University of Tokyo)

Committee on Global Partnership Grant, 2000-2002 (with Takashi Inoguchi, University of Tokyo)

Fellow, Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, 1998-99

Hitachi/Council on Foreign Relations Fellowship, 1997-99

Research Award, International Center for the Study of East Asian Development, Kitakyushu, Japan, 1998-99, 1999-2001

Research Award, University Research Institute, The University of Pennsylvania, 1994-95, 1996-97

International Affairs Fellow, Council on Foreign Relations, 1991-92, Department of State, Policy Planning

Staff

Visitor, School of Social Science, Institute for Advanced Studies, Princeton, New Jersey, 1987-88

Fellowship, Institute for the Study of World Politics, 1983-84

Research Fellowship, Foreign Policy Studies Program, The Brookings Institution, 1982-83 PREVIOUS APPOINTMENTS

Senior Associate, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, Washington, D.C., 1992-93

Assistant Professor of Politics and International Affairs,

Princeton University, 1984-92

Joint Appointment in the Politics Department and the Woodrow Wilson School, Princeton University

Associate Professor of Political Science, The University of Pennsylvania

Co-Director, Lauder Institute, The University of Pennsylvania, 1994-98

Non-resident Senior Fellow, The Brookings Institution

Peter F..Krogh Professor of Geopolitics and Global Justice, Edmund Walsh School of Foreign Service and Department of Government, Georgetown University

PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES Member, Council on Foreign Relations Study Group on “U.S. Policy Toward Asia,” 2015-16.

Advisory Committee, Princeton-Oxford Global Fellows Program, 2014- International Editorial Board, Foreign Affairs Review (Beijing), 2014- Co-Editor, “Asia Today,” book series, Palgrave, 2012- Member, Commission on the Future of U.S-Brazil Relations, Council on Foreign Relations, Samuel W. Bodman and James D. Wolfensohn, Co-Chairs, 2010-11. Advisory Board, Center for International Affairs, Beijing University, China, 2007- Advisory Board, Center for European Policy Analysis, Washington, D.C., 2007-

Member, Scientific Advisory Council, Finnish Institute for International Studies, Helsinki, Finland, 2011-

Editorial Board, American Interest, 2007 Editorial Board, Princeton University Press, 2006- 2010 Editorial Board, Global Asia, 2006- Editorial Committee, World Politics, 2004- Co-editor, International Relations of the Asia Pacific, 2004- Associate Editor- 1999-2004

Advisory Group, Department of State, April 2004 – January 2005

Member, Commission on the Future of U.S.-European Relations, Council on Foreign Relations, Henry

Kissinger and Lawrence Summers, Co-Chairs, 2003-04.

Editorial Board, East-West Center, East Asian book series, 2002-2007.

Section Organizer, APSA annual conference, History and International Relations, 2002.

Series Co-Editor, History and International Relations, Princeton University Press, 2001-

Editorial Board, Current History, 1999-

Reviewer, Political and Legal Affairs, Foreign Affairs, 1998-

Editorial Board, Cambridge University Press, International Relations Series, 1997-2003

Board of Directors, International Institute for Mediation and Conflict Resolution, 1996-2000 Section Coordinator, "International Collaboration," American Political Science Association, 1996 annual

meeting.

Coordinator, Study Group on European Politics, Council on Foreign Relations, 1993-94.

Senior Staff Member, Carnegie Commission on the Reorganization of Government for the Conduct of Foreign Policy, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, 1992

Senior Research Adviser, Commission on the Future of the IMF and the World Bank, 1992-94

Editor, World Politics, 1988-92; Associate Editor, 1985-88

Program Coordinator, Program on Interdependent Political Economy, The University of Chicago, 1983-84

Rapporteur, Social Science Research Council Conference, "Research Implications of Recent Theories of the

State," Mt. Kisco, New York, February 1982

Editorial Assistant, Armed Forces and Society, Professor Morris Janowitz, Editor, January-December 1980, June 1981-April 1982

PUBLICATIONS BOOKS

Introduction to International Relations: Enduring Questions and Contemporary Perspectives (New York: Palgrave, 2015), co-authored with Joseph Grieco and Michael Mastanduno.

The Rise of Korean Leadership: Emerging Powers and Liberal International Order (New York: Palgrave, 2013), co-authored with Jongryn Mo.

Liberal Leviathan: The Origins, Crisis, and Transformation of the American World Order (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2011). [Paperback 2012] [translation, Chinese, Japanese, Italian, Russian forthcoming] [Choice – Outstanding Academic Title for 2011]

Liberal Order and Imperial Ambition: Essays on American Power and International Order (London: Polity Press, 2006). [translated into Italian and Japanese.]

After Victory: Institutions, Strategic Restraint, and the Rebuilding of Order after Major Wars (Princeton:

Princeton University Press, 2001). [Winner of the Robert L. Jervis and Paul W. Schroeder Prize for the best book on international history and politics published in 2000 and 2001.]

[translated into Italian, Japanese, and Chinese.]

State Power and World Markets: The International Political Economy, co-written with Joseph Grieco (New

York: Norton, 2003). [Chinese translation.]

The State, with John A. Hall (Milton Keynes, Open University Press, 1989; Minneapolis: University of

Minnesota Press, 1989).

[translated into French, Spanish, Portuguese, Romanian, Turkish, Chinese, and Japanese.]

Reasons of State: Oil Politics and the Capacities of American Government (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1988).

EDITED BOOKS

America, China, and the Struggle for World Order: Ideas, Traditions, Historical Legacies and Global Visions (New York: Palgrave, 2015).

Power, Order, and Change in World Politics (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2014). Introduction and internal chapter.

The Troubled Triangle: Japan, the United States, and China: The Duality between Security and Economy (New York: Palgrave, 2013), co-edited with Takashi Inoguchi.

Unipolarity and International Relations Theory (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2011), edited with Michael Mastanduno and William Wohlforth.

The Alliance Constrained: The U.S.- Japan Security Alliance and Regional Multilateralism (New York: Palgrave, 2011), edited with Takashi Inoguchi and Yoichiro Sato.

Crisis of American Foreign Policy: Wilsonianism in the New Century (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2009). With Thomas Knock, Tony Smith, and Anne-Marie Slaughter.

The United States and Northeast Asia: Debate, Issues, and New Order, edited by G. John Ikenberry and Chung-in Moon (Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2008).

The End of the West? Crisis and Change in Atlantic Order (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2008). Author of the Introduction.

The Uses of Institutions: U.S., Japan, and the Governance of East Asia, edited with Takashi Inoguchi (New York: Palgrave, 2006). Author of the introduction.

The Nation State in Question, co-edited with T.V. Paul and John A. Hall (Princeton: Princeton University

Press, 2003).

International Relations Theory and the Asia-Pacific, co-edited with Michael Mastanduno (New York: Columbia University Press, 2003).

Reinventing the Alliance: U.S.-Japan Security Partnership in an Era of Change, co-edited with Takashi

Inoguchi (New York: Palgrave Press, 2003).

American Unrivaled: The Future of the Balance of Power (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2002).

[Translated in Italian and Chinese.]

American Democracy Promotion: Impulses, Strategies and Impacts edited with Michael Cox and Takashi Inoguchi (London: Oxford University Press, 2000).

[Japanese translation, 2006.]

New Thinking in International Relations Theory, edited with Michael Doyle (Boulder: Westview Press, 1997). Co-editor with introduction and conclusion.

[Translated into Turkish, 2015]

American Foreign Policy: Theoretical Essays (Boston: Little, Brown, 1988; second edition, 1996; third

edition, 1999, fourth edition, 2001). Editor with introductory essay.

The State and American Foreign Economic Policy, edited by Ikenberry, David A. Lake, and Michael Mastanduno (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1988).

ARTICLES IN REFERRED JOURNALS

“Between the Eagle and the Dragon: America, China, and Middle State Strategies in East Asia,” Political Science Quarterly (Spring, 2016). “The Future of Multilateralism: Governing the World in a Post-Hegemonic Era,” Japanese Journal of Political Science Vol. 16, No. 3 (Summer 2015), pp. 399-413. “The Future of Liberal World Order,” Japanese Journal of Political Science, Vol. 16, No. 3 (Summer 2015), pp. 441-46. “From Hegemony to the Balance of Power: The Rise of China and American Grand Strategy in East Asia,” International Journal of Korean Unification Studies, Vol. 23, No. 2 (2015).

“Racing toward Tragedy? China’s Rise, Military Competition in the Asia Pacific, and the Security Dilemma,” with Adam Liff, International Security, Vol. 39, No. 2 (Fall 2014), pp. 52-91.

“Correspondence: Looking for Asia’s Security Dilemma,” with Adam Liff, International Security, Vol. 40, No. 2 (Fall 2015).

“Don’t Come Home America: The Case Against Off Shore Balancing,” with Stephen Brooks and William Wohlforth, International Security, Vol. 37, No. 3 (Winter 2012-13), pp. 7-51.

“Correspondence: Debating American Engagement: The Future of U.S. Grand Strategy,” with Stephen Brooks and William Wohlforth, International Security, Vol. 38, No. 2 (Fall 2014).

“Introduction: The End of the Cold War after 20 Years: Reconsiderations, Retrospectives and Revisions,” International Politics, Vol. 48, Numbers 4/5 (July/September 2011). Co-authored with Daniel Deudney. Special Issue: “IR and the End of the Cold War – Twenty Years After,” co-edited by Daniel Deudney and G. John Ikenberry.

“Pushing and Pulling: The Western System, Nuclear Weapons, and Soviet Change,” International Politics, Vol. 48, Numbers 4/5 (July/September 2011). Co-authored with Daniel Deudney. Special Issue on: “ IR and the End of the Cold War – Twenty Years After,” co-edited by Daniel Deudney and G. John Ikenberry.

“Introduction,” International Relations of the Asia Pacific (September 2010), Vol. 10, No. 3. 10th Anniversary Special Issue on “A Post-American East Asia? Networks of Currency and Alliance in a Changing Regional Context,” with co-editor Takashi Inoguchi. “Liberalism in a Realist World: International Relations as an American Scholarly Tradition,” International Studies, Vol. 46, No. 1 & 2 (January & April 2009), special issue on “International Studies in India.

“Liberal Internationalism 3.0: America and the Dilemma of Liberal World Order,” Perspectives on Politics (April 2009). [Reprinted in various anthologies] “Introduction: Unipolarity and International Relations Theory,” World Politics (January 2009), with Michale Mastanduno and William Wohlforth. “The APSR’s Evolving Relevance for U.S. Foreign Policy, 1906-2006,” American Political Science Review, (Fall 2006). Co-authored with Andrew Bennett.

“Power and Liberal Order: America’s Postwar World Order in Transition,” International Relations of the Asia Pacific (October 2005).

AThe Future of Liberal Hegemony is East Asia,@ Australian Journal of International Affairs Vol. 58

(September 2004), pp. 353-67.

AHegemony, Empire, and American Power,@ Review of International Studies, Fall 2004.

AIs American Multilateralism in Decline?@ Perspectives on Politics Vol. 1, No. 3 (Fall 2003). [Reprinted in Jack Snyder, ed., Readings in International Relations.] [Reprinted in David Skidmore, ed., Paradoxes of Power: U.S. Foreign Policy in a Changed World

(Boulder, Colo: Paradigm Books, 2007).] [Reprinted in John Kirton, ed., International Organization (Ashgate, 2009).]

AAmerican Power and the Empire of Democratic Capitalism,@ Review of International Studies

(December/January 2001-02).

ABetween Balance of Power and Community: The Future of Multilateral Security Cooperation in the Asia Pacific,@ International Relations of the Asia Pacific, Vol. 1, No. 2 (Winter 2001-2002).

"The Nature and Sources of Liberal International Order," Review of International Studies, with Daniel

Deudney, Vol. 25 (April 1999), pp. 179-96.

"Institutions, Strategic Restraint, and the Persistence of American Postwar Order," International Security, Vol. 23, No. 3 (Winter 1998/99), pp. 43-78.

"Choosing Partners in Asia," Australian Journal of International Affairs, Vol. 52, No. 3 (Nov. 1998).

"Globalization and the Emerging Asia-Pacific Region," Ritsumeikan Journal of International Relations and

Area Studies, Vol. 13 (March 1998), pp. 115-40.

"Constitutional Politics in International Relations," European Journal of International Relations, Vol. 4, No. 2 (June 1998), pp. 147-77.

"The Future of International Leadership," Political Science Quarterly, Vol. 111, No. 3 (Autumn 1996).

"Funk de Siecle: The Impasses of Western Industrial Society at Century's End," Millennium: Journal of

International Studies Vol. 24, No. 1 (1995), pp. 113-26.

"Balances, Blocs, Concerts and Clubs: Models of World Order After the Cold War," The Korean Journal of International Studies, Vol. XXIII, No. 4 (Winter 1992), pp. 545-564.

"The International Sources of Soviet Change," with Daniel Deudney, International Security, vol. 16, no. 3 (Winter 1991/92), pp. 74-118.

"A World Economy Restored: Expert Consensus and the Anglo-American Postwar Settlement,"

International Organization, 46 (Winter 1991/92), pp. 289-321.

"Soviet Reform and the End of the Cold War: Explaining Large-Scale Historical Change," with Daniel Deudney, Review of International Studies, 17 (Summer 1991), pp. 225-250.

"Socialization and Hegemonic Power," with Charles A. Kupchan, International Organization, Vol. 44, No. 3

(Summer 1990), pp. 283-315.

"Toward a Realist Theory of State Action," with David A. Lake and Michael Mastanduno, International Studies Quarterly, Vol. 33, (December 1989), pp. 457-74.

"Rethinking the Origins of American Hegemony," Political Science Quarterly, Vol. 104, No. 3 (Fall 1989), pp.

375-400.

"Manufacturing Consensus: The Institutionalization of American Private Interests in the Tokyo Round," Comparative Politics (April 1989), pp. 289-305.

"Introduction: Approaches to Explaining American Foreign Economic Policy," with David Lake and Mike

Mastanduno, International Organization, Vol. 42, No. 1 (Winter, 1988), pp. 1-14.

"Conclusion: An Institutional Approach to American Foreign Economic Policy," International Organization, Vol. 42, No. 1 (Winter, 1988), pp. 219-43.

"Market Solutions for State Problems: The International and Domestic Politics of American Oil Decontrol,"

International Organization, Vol. 42, No. 1 (Winter 1988), pp. 151-77.

"Expanding Social Benefits: The Role of Social Security," with Theda Skocpol, Political Science Quarterly (Fall 1987).

"The State and International Strategies of Adjustment," World Politics, Vol. 39, No. 1 (October 1986).

"The Irony of State Strength: Comparative Responses to the Oil Shocks in the 1970s,"

International Organization, Vol. 40, No. 1 (Winter 1985/86).

"The Political Formation of the American Welfare State in Historical and Comparative Perspective," with Theda Skocpol, Comparative Social Research (Greenwich, Conn: JAI Press, Vol. 6, 1983).

ARTICLES IN EDITED BOOKS AND NON-REFERRED JOURNALS

“Unraveling America the Great,” The American Interest, Vol. 11, No. 5 (March 2016). “American Decline, Liberal Hegemony, and the Transformation of World Politics,” in Frederic Merand, ed., Coping with Geopolitical Decline (forthcoming). “Culture and Foreign Policy: The American Liberal Tradition and Global Order Building,” in Jing Huang, ed., The Impact of National Cultures on Foreign Policy Making in a Multipolar World (forthcoming).

“The Stakeholder State: Ideology and Values in Japan’s Search for a Post-Cold War Global Role,” in Yiichi Funabashi and Barak Kushner, ed., Examining Japan’s Lost Decades (New York: Routledge, 2015). “The Rise, Character, and Evolution of International Order,” in Ordeo Fioretos, Tulia G. Falleti, and Adam Sheingate, eds., The Oxford Handbook of Historical Institutionalism (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2016). “A New Order of Things? China, the United States, and the Struggle over World Order,” in Asle Toje and Geir Lundestad, eds., Does the Rise and Fall of Great Powers Lead to Conflict and War? (2017). “The Last Empire? American Power, Liberalism, World Order,” in Ralph Schroeder, ed., Essays in Honor of Michael Mann (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2016). “Obama’s Pragmatic Internationalism,” The American Interest (May/June 2014).

“The Illusion of Geopolitics: The Enduring Power of the Liberal Order,” Foreign Affairs (May/June 2014), pp. 80-90. [Reprinted in “Foreign Affairs: The Best of 2014: Editors pick best articles of the year.]

“Can the World be Governed?” Current History (January 2014). One Hundred Year Anniversary Issue.

“America and the Transformation of East Asia,” in Michael Mochizuki and Deepa Ollapally, eds., Power and Identity in Asia, forthcoming.

“Lean Forward: In Defense of American Engagement,” Foreign Affairs (January/February 2013). “The Rise of China, the United States, and the Future of Liberal International Order,” in David Shambaugh, ed., Tangled Titans: The United States and China (New York: Roman and Littlefield, 2012). “Democratic Internationalism: An American Grand Strategy for a Post-Exceptionist Era,” Council on Foreign Relations, Working Paper, International Institutions and Global Governance Program, November 2012.

“East Asia and Liberal International Order: Hegemony, Balance, and Consent in the Shaping of East Asian Regional Order,” in Takashi Inoguchi and G. John Ikenberry, eds., Troubled Triangle: Japan, the United States, and China: The Duality between Security and Economy (New York: Palgrave, 2013).

“The Search for a Transatlantic Security Vision: U.S.-European Alliance Partnership in the 21st Century,” Mark D. Ducasse, ed., The Transatlantic Bargain (National Defense University, 2012).

“The Future of Liberal World Order: Internationalism after America,” Foreign Affairs (May/June 2011).

Correspondence with Amitav Etzioni, Foreign Affairs (November/December 2011).

“A Liberal Grand Strategy for America,” Democracy: A Journal of Ideas (May, 2011).

“Hegemony or Balance of Power? Regional Order and Conflict in a Transforming Asia,” in Ajey Leie and Namrata Goswami, eds., Imaging Asia in 2030: Trends, Scenarios and Alternatives (New Delhi, India: Academic Foundation, 2011).

“Global Security Cooperation in the 21st Century,” in Mary Kaldor and Joseph Stiglitz, eds., A Manifesto for a New Global Covenant: Protection without Protectionism (forthcoming, 2011).

“German Unification, Western Order, and the Post-Cold War Restructuring of the International System,” in Peter C. Caldwell and Robert R. Shandley, eds., German Unification: Expectations and Outcomes (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2011). “A Crisis of Global Governance?” Current History (November 2010). “Liberalism and Universalism,” in Timothy Garton Ash, et al, Liberalisms in East and West (Record of a Conference held at Oxford University in January 2009) (Oxford, 2010). “A New East Asian Security Architecture,” Global Asia, Vol. 5, no. 1 (Spring 2010). Guest Editor of Special Issue.

“The Right Grand Strategy,” The American Interest (December 2009)., pp. 16-18.

“The Unravelling of the Cold War Settlement,” Survival (December/January, 2009-2010), pp. 39-61,with Daniel Deudney. “Handle with Care,” American Review, Issue One (2009). (Inaugural Issue, published by United States Studies Centre, Sydney, Australia). “Asian Regionalism and the Future of U.S. Strategic Engagement with China,” in Kurt Campbell, ed., America, China, and East Asia (Washington, D.C.: Center for a New American Security, 2009). “The Myth of the Autocratic Revival,” Foreign Affairs (January/February 2009), with Daniel Deudney.

“United States Unilateralism: What Role Does America See For Europe?” in Geir Lundestad, ed., The United States and Europe: Cooperation and Conflict: Past, Present, and Future (London: Oxford University Press, 2008).

“The Rise of China and the Future of the West,” Foreign Affairs, Vol. 87, No. 1 (January-February 2008), pp. 23-37. “Debating a Strategy of Restraint,” The American Interest (Fall 2007). Comments on essay by Barry Posen.

“A New Order in East Asia?” in Kent Calder and Francis Fukuyama, eds., East Asian Multilateralism (Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2008).

“The Promise and Peril of Democracy in the Age of Globalization,” International House of Japan, conference proceedings. 2008.

“Grand Strategy as Liberal Order Building,” in Melvin Leffler and Jeff Legro, eds., After the Bush Doctrine: National Security Strategy of a New Administration (New York: Oxford University Press, 2008). “The Restructuring of the International System after the Cold War,” in Melvin Leffler and Arnie Westad, eds., Cambridge History of the Cold War, Volume 3 (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2009).

“America and the Reform of Global Institutions,” in Alan Alexandroff, ed., Can the World be Governed? Possibilities for Effective Multilateralism (Wilfrid Laurier University Press, Toronto, Canada), pp. 110-138.

“Rising States and International Institutions,” with Thomas Wright (Century Foundation, 2007). “A World of Liberty Under Law,” Global Asia Vol. 2, No. 1 (Spring 2007), 112-18.

“Globalization as American Hegemony,” in David Held and Anthony McGrew, eds., Understanding Globalization: Theories and Controversies (London: Polity Press, 2007).

Forging a World of Liberty Under Law (Final Report of the Princeton Project on National Security, September 2006), co-author with Anne-Marie Slaughter.

“America’s Security Trap,” Democracy: A Journal of Ideas, Vol. 1, No. 2 (Fall 2006).

[Reprinted in Michael Cox and Doug Stokes, eds., US Foreign Policy (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2008.)

“American Strategy in the New Asia,” The American Interest, Vol. 2, No. 1 (September/October 2006), pp. 89-94.

“The Rise of China, Power Transitions, and Western Order,” in Robert Ross, ed., The Rise of China (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2008), pp. 89-114.

“State Power and International Institutions: America and the Logic of Economic and Security Multilateralism,” in Dimitris Bourantonis, K. Ifantis and P. Tsakonas, eds., Multilateralism and Security Institutions in the Era of Globalization (New York: Routledge, 2007). “The Global Governance Crisis,” The InterDependent, Vol. 4, No. 1 (Spring 2006).

“The Strange Triumph of Unilateralism,” Current History (December 2005). “A Weaker World,” Prospect (UK) November 2005, pp. 30-33.

“America: Leviathan of Liberalism,” Zhonggong Zhongyang Dangxiao Xuebao [Central Party School Journal, Beijing, China], Vol. 9, No. 1 (February 2005), pp. 103-108.

ALiberal Leviathan,@ Prospect (UK), October 2004, pp. 46-51. ALiberal Realism: The Foundations of a Democratic Foreign Policy,@ The National Interest (Fall 2004). With

Charles A. Kupchan.

AAmerican Foreign Policy at a Crossroads,@ Nippon No Ronten 2005 [The Issues for Japan B 2005] (Tokyo: Bungei Shunjyu-sha, November 2004).

AThe End of the Neo-Conservative Moment,@ Survival, Spring 2004.

AIllusions of Empire,@ Review Essay, Foreign Affairs, March/April 2004.

AAmerica and the Ambivalence of Power, @ Current History, Vol. 102, No. 667 (November 2003), pp. 377-82.

ALiberal Hegemony or Empire? American Power in the Age of Unipolarity,” in David Held and Mathias

Koenig-Archibugi, eds., American Power in the Twenty-First Century (Cambridge: Polity Press, 2004). [Essays based on Ralph Miliband lectures, London School of Economics.]

[Reprinted in Mark Kesselman, ed., The Politics of Globalization: A Reader (New York: Houghton

Mifflin, 2007).]

AStrategic Reactions to American Preeminence: Great Power Politics in the Age of Unipolarity,@ National Intelligence Council report, summer 2003.

AAmerica in East Asia: Power, Markets, and Grand Strategy,@ in T.J. Pempel and Ellis Kraus, eds., Beyond

Bilateralism: The Emerging East Asian Regionalism (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2003).

AAnti-Americanism in the Age of American Unipolarity,@ in David Steinberg, ed., Korean Attitudes Toward

the United States: An Enduring and Endured Relationship, forthcoming.

AAmerica and the International Rule of Law,@ Gaiko Forum (March 2003).

AAmerica=s Imperial Ambition,@ Foreign Affairs, Vol. 81, No. 5 (September-October 2002), pp. 44-60. [Reprinted in America and the World (New York: Council on Foreign Relations, 2003).] [Reprinted in Gideon Rose and Jonathan Tepperman, eds., The U.S. vs al Qaeda: A History of the War

on Terror (New York: Council on Foreign Relations, ebook, 2011).]

AAmerican Grand Strategy in the Age of Terror,@ Survival (2001-02).

AState Power and Institutional Strategies: The United States in Europe and Asia,@ in Rosemary Foot, S. Neil McaFarlane, and Michael Mastanduno, eds., U.S. Hegemony and International Organizations (London: Oxford University Press, 2003).

AMultilateralism and American Grand Strategy,@ in Steward Patrick, ed., Unilateralism, Multilateralism,

and U.S. Foreign Policy (New York: Lynne Rienner, 2002).

AThe Political Foundations of Atlantic Order,@ in Hall Gardner and Radoslava Stefanova, eds., The New Transatlantic Agenda: Facing the Challenges of Global Governance (Aldershot, U.K.: Ashgate, 2001).

AGetting Hegemony Right,@ The National Interest (Spring 2001), pp. 17-24.

AFrom Containment to Engagement: Korea, East Asia, and American Liberal Grand Strategy,@ in Chung-in

Moon, ed., The Korean Summit and the Dismantling of the Cold War Structure (Yonsei University, 2001).

ADistant Gains: Hegemony, Institutions, and the Long-term Returns on Power,@ in Daniel Deudney and

Michael Mastanduno, eds., Power and Order: Essays in Honor of Robert Gilpin (forthcoming).

AAmerica=s Liberal Grand Strategy in the Asia-Pacific,@ in Takashi Inoguchi, ed., Japan=s Foreign Policy in Pacific Asia (Aldershot, U.K.: Ashgate, 2001).

AInstitutions, Hegemony, and Global Governance,@ in Jitsuo Tsuchiyama, ed., Global Governance (Tokyo: Aoyama Gakuin University, forthcoming). To be published in Japanese translation.

AStrengthening the Atlantic-Political Order,@ The International Spectator (A Quarterly Journal of the Istituto

Affari Internazionali, Rome, Italy) Vol. XXXV, No. 3 (September 2000), pp. 57-68.

ADon=t Panic,@ Review Essay of Robert Gilpin=s The Challenge of Global Capitalism,@ Foreign Affairs, Vol. 79, No. 3 (May/June 2000).

ABetween Balance of Power and Community: The Future of Multilateral Security Cooperation in the Asia

Pacific,@ with Jitsuo Tsuchiyama, Working Paper, East Asian Energy Markets and Energy Cooperation in Northeast Asia, The James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy of Rice University, May 2000.

AThe Political Economy of Asia-Pacific Regionalism,@ East Asian Economic Perspectives, Vol. 11 (March

2000), pp 35-61.

AThe Price of Victory: American Power, Post-Cold War Order, and the Use of Force in Kosovo,@ in Albrecht Schnabel and Ramesh Thakur, eds, Kosovo and the International Community: Selective Indignation, Collective Intervention, and the Changing Contours of World Politics (Tokyo: United Nations University Press, 2000).

AThe Political Economy of Asia-Pacific Regionalism,@ Working Paper, International Centre for the Study of

East Asian Development, Kitakushu, Japan., Fall 1999.

AWhy Export Democracy?@ Wilson Quarterly (Spring 1999), pp. 56-65.

"America=s Liberal Hegemony," Current History (January 1999). Part of an 85th anniversary issue devoted to "World Order 1919-1998," pp. 23-28.

"Globalization and the Stability of World Order," Asia-Pacific Review (Fall/Winter 1998), pp. 1-13.

"Liberal Hegemony and the Future of American Postwar Order," in T.V. Paul and John A. Hall, eds.,

International Order and the Future of World Politics (Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press, 1999).

[Reprinted in Joel Krieger, ed., Globalization and State Power: A Reader (New York: Prentice Hall,

2005).]

"Realism, Structural Liberalism, and the Sources of Western Political Order," in Ethan Kapstein and Michael Mastanduno, eds., Realism and International Relations after the Cold War (New York: Columbia University Press, 1998), co-authored with Daniel Deudney.

"Globalization of the World Economy and the Future of the Asia-Pacific Region," in Robert Scalipino, et al,

eds., East Asia in the 21st Century: Korean and American Perspectives, forthcoming.

"Globalization: Concepts and Patterns," in Chung-in Moon and Jongryn Mo, eds., Democratization and Globalization in Korea: Assessments and Prospects (Seoul: Yonsei Monograph Series on International Studies: 4, 1999), pp. 135-58.

"The Future of American Leadership," International House of Japan Bulletin, Fall 1996. [Also published in its

Japanese edition, Kokusai Bunka Kaihan Kaiho.]

"The Myth of Post-Cold War Chaos," Foreign Affairs, Vol. 75, No. 1 (March/April 1996). [Reprinted, Foreign Affairs, Special Anniversary Issue (January/February 2012.)

"Political Structures and Postwar Settlements," in Samuel F. Wells and Paula Bailey Smith, eds., European

Order, 1919 and 1991 (Washington: D.C.: Woodrow Wilson Center, The Smithsonian Institution, 1996).

"America After the Long War," Current History, with Daniel Deudney, Vol. 94, No. 595 (November 1995), pp.

364-69.

"Capitalist Conflict? State and Market in America and Western Europe," in Rand Corporation, Markets and Society: European and American Perspectives (New York: St. Martin's Press, 1995).

"State, Society, and Everything In Between," Contention: Debates in Society, Culture and Science (Spring 1994).

"Response to Critics," World Policy Journal (Spring 1994).

"After the Long War," Foreign Policy, No. 94 (Spring 1994), with Daniel Deudney.

"The Logic of the West," World Policy Journal (Winter 1993/94), with Daniel Deudney.

Atlantic Frontiers: A New Agenda for U.S.-EC Relations, with Mark Nelson (Washington, D.C.: Carnegie

Endowment for International Peace, 1993).

"Salvaging the G-7," Foreign Affairs, Vol. 72, No. 2 (Spring 1993), pp. 132-39.

"Creating Yesterday's New World Order: Keynesian 'New Thinking'and the Anglo-American Postwar Settlement," in Judith Goldstein and Robert Keohane, eds., Ideas and American Foreign Policy: Beliefs, Institutions, and Political Change (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1993).

"The Political Origins of Bretton Woods," in Michael Bordo and Barry Eichengreen, eds., A Retrospective on

the Bretton Woods System: Lessons for International Monetary Change (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1992), pp. 155-182.

"Who Won the Cold War?" Foreign Policy, 87 (Summer 1992), with Daniel Deudney, pp. 123-138.

"The State and Strategies of International Adjustment," in Richard Little and Michael Smith, eds.,

Perspectives on World Politics (London: Routledge, 1991), pp. 157-68.

"An Intellectual Remembrance of Klaus Knorr," with Michael Doyle and Richard Betts, in Henry Bienen, ed., Power, Economics, and Security (Boulder, Co.: Westview Press, 1992).

"Legitimacy and Power: The Waning of American and Soviet Hegemony," with Charles A. Kupchan, in Henry

Bienen, ed., Power, Economics, and Security (Boulder, Co.: Westview Press, 1992), pp. 147-71.

"The International Spread of Privatization Policies: Inducements, Learning and 'Policy Bandwagoning,'" in Ezra Suleiman and John Waterbury, eds., The Political Economy of Public Sector Reform and Privatization (Boulder, Co.: Westview Press, 1990), pp. 88-110.

"The Legitimation of Hegemonic Power," with Charles Kupchan, in David Rapkin, ed., Hegemony and

Leadership in International Relations, Yearbook of International Political Economy (Boulder, Co.: Westview Press, 1990), pp. 49-69.

BOOK REVIEWS AND OTHER WRITINGS

Political and Legal books, reviews for Foreign Affairs “After American Unipolarity,” Nekkei, Tokyo, Japan. “World View: A World of Liberty and Law,” Newsweek, 9 October 2006, with Anne-Marie Slaughter. “A Bigger Security Council, with Power to Act,” International Herald Tribune, 26 September 2006, with

Anne-Marie Slaughter. “Don’t Lose Seoul, America,” Los Angeles Times, 13 September 2006, with Mitchell Reiss. “Japan’s History Problem,” op-ed, The Washington Post, 17 August 2006, p. A25.

ABooks of the Times: Brzezinski Offers His Vision as an Alternative on Security,@ New York Times, March 30, 2004.

ABooks of the Times: Kissinger review,@ New York Times.

ADer Western ist nicht tot,@ Interview in Die Welt, 12 April 2003. “Japan Has Kept Asia Anxious Too Long,” Los Angeles Times, 16 August 2001, with Michael O’Hanlon.

"New Grand Strategy Uses Lofty and Material Desires," Los Angeles Times, Sunday Outlook Section, 12 July

1998.

"Reform and Renewal," excerpt of Foreign Affairs article, International Herald Tribune, editoral page, 9 May 1996.

"Silence Will Not Debunk the Right's Dark Fantasies," Los Angeles Times, Sunday Opinion section, 21 April

1996, M1, M6.

"Francis Fukuyama, Trust," Foreign Affairs Vol. 75, No. 2 (March/April 1996).

"A Post-NATO Western Organization Must First Create a New Vocabulary," Los Angeles Times, Sunday Opinion section, 26 March 1995, M2, M6.

"Barry Buzan, et al, Logic of Anarchy," Millennium: Journal of

International Studies, (Summer 1993).

"Beware this Trans-Atlantic Cooling," with Mark M. Nelson, International Herald Tribune, 27 January 1993.

"Response to Letter," Foreign Policy, with Daniel Deudney, No. 89 (Winter 1992-93).

"A World from Scratch," New York Times, 25 December 1992.

"Plowshares not Swords Ended the Cold War," with Daniel Deudney, Newsday, Currents Section," Sunday, November 29, 1992, pp. 36-37.

"The Atlantic and Pacific Communities and the Future of Global Trade and Development," Atlantic Council

Report, March 1992.

"Is a Toehold in Europe the Best We Can Do?" with Charles Kupchan, Newsday, Currents Section, Sunday, November 24, 1991, pp. 38-39.

"Cheryl Payer, The World Bank: A Critical Analysis: American Political Science Review, June 1984.

"George Shepard, Francois Duchene, and Christopher Saunders, eds., Europe's Industries: Public and Private

Strategies for Change," American Political Science Review, June 1985.

"Martin Carnoy, The State and Political Theory," American Journal of Sociology, Jan. 1986.

"Richard Rose and Rei Shirator: The Welfare State East and West," American Political Science Review.

"Peter Hall, Governing the Economy: The Politics of State Intervention in Britain and France," American Journal of Sociology, Nov. 1988.

RECENT PROFESSIONAL PAPERS AND TALKS

Lecture, “The End of the Liberal Order?” Montague Burton Lecture, The University of Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom, 21 September 2017. Co-Organizer, “Global Hiroshima: The History, Politics, and Legacies of Nuclear Weapons,” Hiroshima, Japan, August 3-4, 2017.

Participant, “Hiroshima Roundtable,” Hiroshima, Japan, August 1-2, 2017. “Dialogue with Chung-in Moon,” East Asia Foundation, Seoul, Korea, 12 July 2017. Lectures, Kyung Hee University, July 3-20, 2017.

Talk, “An American View of Europe,” conference on Europe and the World, to mark the retirement of Margaret Macmillan, St. Antony’s College, Oxford University, 25 June 2017. Talk, “The Balance of Power and the Transformation of East Asia,” Hong Kong International Studies Association Conference, Hong Kong, 16 June 2017. Participant, “Populism, Nationalism, and Global Governance,” workshop, American Association of Arts and Sciences, Boston, 12 June 2017. Organizer, workshop on “Contested Narratives of the Global,” Princeton University, in collaboration with Science Po and Oxford University, 9-10 June 2017. Co-Organizer, graduate student workshop on Narratives of Global Order, Princeton University, 7 June 2017, with Jeremy Adelman. Talk, “The Future of Liberal Internationalism,” Brookings Institution, workshop on transformations of global order, Washington, D.C., 5 June 2017. Participant, conference on The Future of East Asian Order, Asan Institute, Seoul, South Korea, 26-27 May 2017. Lecture, “Is the Postwar Liberal Order Over?” School of Government, Luiss Guido Carli University, Rome, Italy, 18 May 2017. Co-Organizer, Oxford-Princeton Global Leadership Fellows conference, Princeton University, 15-16 May 2017. Co-Organizer, workshop on “The Hirschman Effect,” Princeton University, 12-13 May 2017. Organizer, workshop on “Perceptions of American Power and Role in the World,” National Intelligence Council, Washington, D.C., 28 April 2017. Paper, “Liberal Theory and International Cultural Diversity,” presented at workshop on Global Cultural Diversity, Barcelona, Spain, 30-31 March 2017. Lectures, American Foreign Policy, ASERI, School of Economics and International Relations, Catholic University, Milan, Italy, 20-21 March 2017. Lecture, US-China Relations, NATO Defense University, Rome, Italy, 3 March 2017.

Chair, panel on “China’s Use of Trade and Investment for Political Influence,” International Studies Association annual meeting, Baltimore, MD, 25 February 2017. Talk, panel on “The Future of International Order,” International Studies Association annual conference, Baltimore, MD, 24 February 2017. Talk, panel on the work of Rosemary Foot, International Studies Association annual meeting, Baltimore, Maryland, 23 February 2017. Talk, panel on “Emerging Powers and International Order,” International Studies Association annual conference, 23 February 2017.

Paper, “The Problem of ‘Decline’ in World Politics,” panel on the world politics of declining states, International Studies Association annual meeting, 23 February 2017. Talk, “Economics and Security in East Asia,” University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan, 31 January 2017. Public Lecture, “The Crisis of Liberal World Order,” International Christian University, Tokyo, Japan, 30 January 2017.

Public Lecture, “The Crisis of Liberal Democracy,” Kyung Hee University, 12 January 2017. Organizer, Workshop on “Gray Area Conflict: Cyber and the Role of Information Warfare,” National Intelligence Council, Washington, D.C., 15 December 2016. Speaker, Five University Workshop on East Asian Security Cooperation and Conflict,” University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan, December 2-3, 2016. Distinguished Lectures, “The Crooked Arrow of History: The Rise, Triumph, and Crisis of Liberal Internationalism,” University of Virginia, 16, 17, and 18 November 2016. Co-Organizer, Princeton-Science Po workshop on “Contested Global Narratives,” Science Po, Paris, France, 9-10 November 2016. Co-Organizer, Princeton-Oxford, Global Leadership Fellows, annual workshop, Oxford University, Oxford, United Kingdom, 31 October-1 November, 2016. Paper presentation, “Wilson and the Origins of Liberal Internationalism,” panel on Japan and Liberal Internationalism, Japan International Studies Association, Tokyo, Japan, 14 October 2016. Special Lecture, Research and Publishing in the Field of International Relations, Japan International Studies Association, 15 October 2016.

Organizer, Workshop on “Deterrence and Escalation,” National Intelligence Council, Washington, D.C., 30 September 2016. Organizer, Workshop on “Hegemonic Order Studies,” Princeton University, Princeton, N.J., 16-17 September 2016. Paper presentation, “Varieties of Internationalism,” Panel on Internationalisms, American Political Science Association, Annual Meeting, Philadelphia, PA, 1 September 2016. Speaker, Panel on “The Future of Liberal International Order,” American Political Science Association, Annual Meeting, Philadelphia, PA, 1 September 2016.

Speaker, Panel on “Debates about Global Order,” American Political Science Association, Annual Meeting, Philadelphia, PA, 2 September 2016. Organizer, Workshop on “Global Trends Report,” National Intelligence Council, Washington, D.C., 4 August 2016. Lectures on Global Politics, Kyung Hee University, 4-20 July 2016. Organizer, Graduate Student workshop, University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan, 17-18 June 2016. Organizer and Participant, “Conference on U.S.-Japan Relations,” Princeton University-University of Tokyo partnership, International House of Japan, Tokyo, Japan, 15-16 June 2016. Paper presentation, “The Arrow of History: Stories of Liberal Internationalism,” paper presented at workshop on “Contested Global Narratives,” Science Po, Paris, France, 8-9 June 2016. Panelist, “Toward an Arms Control Agenda in East Asia,” Jeju Peace Forum, Jeju, South Korea, 26 May 2016. Participant, Fellows Workshop, Global Leadership Fellows, Oxford University, Oxford, U.K., 17-18 May 2016. Co-Organizer, “Fifth Annual Global Governance Conference,” Princeton University, Princeton, 13-14 May 2016. Speaker, Conference on “The Agenda for the G-7 Summit,” Japan Institute for International Affairs, Tokyo, Japan, 10-11 May 2016. Co-Organizer, workshop on “Challenges to Liberal Democracy,” with Professor Jan Mueller, Center for Human Values, Princeton University, 6-7 May 2016. Co-Organizer, annual conference of Center for International Security Studies, Princeton University, Princeton, N.J. 21-22 April 2016. Organizer, Workshop on “Ideological and Political Challenges to Liberal Democracy,” National Intelligence Council, Washington, D.C., 15 April 2016. Talk, “Multilateralism and Regionalism in East Asia,” CFR Study Group on American Policy Toward East Asia, Council on Foreign Relations, New York, 16 March 2016. Co-organizer, conference on “The Day After: Responses to Crisis in North Korea,” Asan Institute, Seoul, South Korea, 11-12 February 2016. Speaker, conference on “Rethinking Security Studies,” University of Tokyo, 29-30 January 2016. Lecture, “Liberalism and Global Order,” Kyung Hee University, 14 January 2016. Talk, “American Grand Strategy in East Asia,” Korean National Assembly, Seoul, South Korea, 13 January 2016. Paper presentation, “The Origins of Liberal Internationalism,” workshop on Liberal Internationalism in Japan, International House of Japan, Tokyo, Japan, 8-9 January 2016.

Participant, The Dahrendorf Forum, “Debating Europe,” Berlin, Germany, 10-11 December 2015.

Talk, “China, the United States, and the Struggle for World Order,” at Five University Collaboration on East Asian Security Cooperation, Beijing, China, 3-4 December 2015. Participant, Princeton-Oxford Global Fellows Workshop, Oxford University, November 1-2, 2015. Participant, Conference on “New Players – Old Rules: The Global Order,” 160th Bergedorf Round Table, Beijing, China, 28-30 October 2015. Participant, Council on Foreign Relations Study Group Series: U.S. Policy Toward Asia,” CFR, New York City, N.Y., 7 October 2015. Co-Organizer, international conference on “Nuclear Legacies: A Global Look at the 70th Anniversary of the Hiroshima Bombing,” Princeton University, 1-2 October 2015. Organizer, Workshop on “China and International Order,” National Intelligence Council, Washington, D.C., 24 September 2014. Co-Organizer, workshop on “Hegemonic Order Theory, 3.0,” Princeton Institute for International and Regional Studies, Princeton University, 10-11 September 2015. Lecture, “International Relations Theories and Today’s Global Problems,” NATO Defense College, Rome, Italy, 8 September 2015. Lectures, Fulbright Program, BA Argentina, 10-14 August 2015. Participant, Hiroshima For Global Peace Plan Promotion Committee, Hiroshima, Japan, 8 August 2015. Participant, Hiroshima Round Table, Hiroshima, Japan, 8 August 2015. Presentation, Global History Workshop, Oxford University, 25-26 June 2015. Participant, book launch of Turkish edition of “New Thinking in International Relations Theory,” Kadir Has University, 23 June 2015. Talk, “The Future of Multilateralism,” Kadir Has University, Istanbul, Turkey, 23 June 2015. “Governing the World: Great Powers and Dilemmas of Order Building, 1815, 1919, 1945, and Today,” paper presented at conference on “200 Years of Conference Diplomacy: From the Congress of Vienna to the G8,” Berlin, Germany, 8-9 June 2015. Co-Organizer, “The Fifth Annual Princeton Workshop on Global Governance,” Princeton University, 4-5 June 2015. Participant, Roundtable on East Asia Security, Jeju Peace Forum, Jeju Island, South Korea, 21 May 2015. “A Liberal Perspective on the Future of East Asia,” paper presented at Jeju Peace Forum, Jeju Island, South Korea, 20-21 May 2015. Speaker, Alumni Reunion Conference, Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, Washington, D.C., 15 May 2015, Participant, Princeton-Oxford Global Fellows Workshop, Oxford University, 7-8 May 2015. Participant, “West Lake Strategic Conversations,” Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, China, 26-27 April 2015.

Participant, Roundtable on “The Future of History, Power, Interests, and Identity in East Asia,” Jeju Forum for Peace and Prosperity, Jeju, South Korea, 21 May 2015. Participant, Roundtable on “Overcoming Geopolitical Gap in Northeast Asia: Toward a New Politics of Harmony and Trust,” Jeju Forum for Peace and Prosperity, Jeju, South Korea, 20 May 2015.

“The Future of Liberal Order in East Asia,” paper presented at East Asia Foundation book workshop, Jeju Forum for Peace and Prosperity, Jeju, South Korea, 20 May 2015. Participant, Roundtable on America’s Role in the World, 30th Anniversary Conference, Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, Washington, D.C. 15 May 2015. Participant, Oxford-Princeton Global Leadership Fellows Program, annual conference, Oxford University, Oxford, UK, 7-8 May 2015. Organizer, National Intelligence Council workshop on “The Geopolitics of the Changing Global Financial System,” Washington, D.C., 1 May 2015. Participant, “West Lake Strategic Conversations,” Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, China, 26-27 April 2015. Chair, “Fireside Conversation with Michele Flournoy,” Woodrow Wilson School, Princeton University, 21 April 2015. Chair, Public Lecture by Francis Fukuyama, Princeton University, 8 April 2015. Participant, public debate on American grand strategy, with Henry Nau, Clio Society, Princeton University, 26 March 2015. Roundtable participant, public lecture by Perry Anderson, Princeton University, 25 March 2015. Lectures, ASERI, Catholic University of Milan, Milan, Italy, 18-20 March 2015. Organizer, International Conference on “The Day After: Peace and Security on the Korean Peninsula in the Wake of the Collapse of North Korea,” Colonial Williamsburg, Williamsburg, Virginia, 26-27 February 2015. Discussant, Roundtable on “1919 – Think Tanks and the Construction of International Knowledge,” Princeton University, 23 February 2015. International Studies Association annual meeting, New Orleans, 18-21 February. “America and the Globalization of the Westphalian System: The Imperial ‘Old West’ and the Anti-Imperial ‘New West,’” paper presented at Yale University, 11 February 2015. Participant, conference on “Security Conflict and Cooperation in East Asia,” University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan, 28-29 January 2015. Organizer, National Intelligence Council workshop on “Rising States and the World Economy,” Washington, D.C., 23 January 2015. “Geopolitics of Regionalism in East Asia,” paper presented at conference on Security Relations in East Asia, National University of Singapore, Singapore, 8-9 January 2015. Organizer, “Five University Collaboration on East Asian Security Conflict and Cooperation,” Princeton University, Princeton, 12-13 December 2014.

“America and the Globalization of the Westphalian System: The Imperial ‘Old West’ and the Anti-Imperial ‘New West,’” paper presented at workshop on “America, Liberalism, and Empire,” Princeton Institute for International and Regional Studies, 5 December 2014. “The Future of the American-Led International Order,” talk presented at the Princeton Club, New York, 11 November 2014. “The Future of Multilateralism: Governing the World in a Post-Hegemonic Era,” paper presented at a workshop on “Empowering Multilateral Institutions,” for the occasion of the inauguration of the graduate program in international studies and regional development, University of Niigata Prefecture, International House of Japan, Tokyo, Japan, 22 November 2014. “The Future of Multilateralism: Governing the World in a Post-Hegemonic Era,” paper presented at a conference on “Strengthening International Organizations in a World of Turmoil – The Role of Hiroshima,” The 2014 International Symposium, Co-hosted by Hiroshima University and Niigata International University, Hiroshima, Japan, 21 November 2014. “America and the Globalization of the Westphalian System: The Imperial ‘Old West’ and the Anti-Imperial ‘New West,’” paper presented at the international relations seminar, Columbia University, 13 November 2014. “The Future of the Liberal International Order,” talk given at the Festival della Diplomazia, Universita degli Studi Roma Tre, Rome, Italy, 29 October 2014. Discussion at the Segreteria Generale of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Rome, Italy, 29 October 2014. “American Grand Strategy in a World in Turmoil,” The Academy of American Studies, Rome, Italy, 29 October 2014. Participant, Workshop for Fellows on the Princeton-Oxford Global Fellows Program, Oxford University, 27-28 October 2014. Interview with Jeff Garten, Yale University project on “The Future of Global Finance,” Princeton University, 15 October 2014.

“Culture and Foreign Policy: The American Liberal Tradition and Global Order Building,” paper presented at conference on “The Impact of National Cultures on Foreign Policy Making in a Multipolar World,” Robert Bosch Stiftung, Berlin, Germany, 4 October 2014. Organizer, Workshop on “Forecasting Trends in World Politics,” National Intelligence Council, Washington, D.C., 26 September 2014. “Debating International Order: Sovereignty, Interdependence, and the Future of Liberal Modernity,” paper presented at workshop on “Globalization and the Social Sciences,” Princeton University, 12-13 September 2014. “America and the Globalization of the Westphalian System: The Imperial ‘Old West’ and the Anti-Imperial ‘New West,’” paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association, Washington, D.C., 29 August 2014. “The Rise, Character, and Evolution of International Order,” paper presented at the American Political Science Association, Washington, D.C., 29 August 2015. Lectures on Global Politics, Kyung Hee University, 14-23 July 2014.

Co-Convener, Workshop on “The Future of Peace and Security on the Korean Peninsula,” project meeting for the Macarthur Foundation project on “The Day After,” Beijing, China, 25-26 June 2014. “A New Order of Things? China, the United States, and the Struggle over World Order,” paper presented at conference on “Does the Rise and Fall of Great Powers Lead to Conflict and War?” Nobel Institute, Oslo, Norway, 19-20 June 2014. Organizer of Workshop on “The Credibility of American Security Commitments,” National Intelligence Council, Washington, D.C., 13 June 2014. Co-Convener, “Princeton-Oxford Conference on Global Governance,” Oxford University, 6-7 June 2014. “Rising States, America, and International Order,” lecture given at the Free University of Berlin, Berlin, Germany, 27 May 2014. “The Future of Liberal International Order,” talk given at the Finnish Institute of International Affairs, Helsinki, Finland, 23 May 2014. “The Future of Liberal International Order,” talk given at the Council of the European Community, Brussels, Belgium, 16 May 2014. Lecture, “The Rise of China and the Future of Liberal World Order,” Annual Douglas Dillon Lecture, Chatham House, The Royal Institute of International Affairs, London, U.K., 7 May 2014. Paper, “The Last Empire?: American Power, Liberalism, and World Order,” Conference of the work of Michael Mann, Oxford University, 2 May 2014. Lecture, “Globalization, International Order, and Hegemony,” Sabanci University, Istanbul, Turkey, 21 April 2014. Lecture, “How Will the International Order Accommodate Rising Powers: A Liberal Perspective,” Istanbul Sehir University, Istanbul, Turkey, 18 April 2014. Lecture, “How Will the International Order Accommodate Rising Powers: A Liberal Perspective,” TOBB University, Ankara, Turkey, 16 April 2014. Lecture, “The Rise of China and the Future of Liberal Order,” School of International Relations, Ca’ Forscari University of Venice, Venice, Italy, 14 April 2014. Speaker, Dinner Salon, “The Rise of China and the Future of International Order,” European Council on Foreign Relations, London, U.K., 26 March 2014. Lectures, “Relations among the Great Powers,” ASERI, Catholic University of Milan, 10-12 March 2014. Organizer, Workshop on “The Future of Power,” National Intelligence Council seminar, Washington, D.C., 28 February 2014.

“An American Century or an Asian Century,” Public Lecture, Sheikh Zayed Theatre, London School of Economics, London, 18 February 2014.

“Between the Eagle and the Dragon: Middle State Strategies in East Asia,” paper presented at IR Colloquium, Department of Politics and International Relations, Oxford University, 13 February 2014

Lecture, “American Global Order Building in the 20th Century,” Balliol College, Oxford, 10 February 2014.

Talk, “Rising States and the Future of International Order,” Workshop on “U.S. Grand Strategy and the International Order,” The Brookings Institution, 6 February 2014. Chair, panel on “The Future of Security Cooperation in East Asia,” at Princeton-University of Tokyo conference, Tokyo, Japan, 1 February 2014. “The Sources of Great Power Restraint and Stability in East Asia,” paper presented at Princeton-University of Tokyo conference, Tokyo, Japan, 31 January 2014 “Rising States and the Future of Liberal International Order,” public debate, London School of Economics and the Transatlantic Academy, London, 23 January 2014. “The Sources of Great Power Restraint and Stability in East Asia,” paper presented at Center for International Security Studies, Peking University, 9 January 2014. Talk, “Asia and Liberal International Order,” Five University Collaboration on East Asia Security Cooperation,” Lew Kuan Yew School of Public Policy, National University of Singapore, Singapore, 13 December 2013.

Eastman Professor Lectures, Oxford University, 26 November 2013, and 3 December 2013.

Talk, “Rising Security Challenges in East Asia,” Korea Global Forum, Seoul, South Korea, 21-22 November 2013.

Talk, “Rise of China and Liberal Order,” London School of Economics, 16 October 2013. Talk, “Obama Foreign Policy in the Middle East,” French Foreign Ministry, Paris, France, 15 October 2013. Talk, “Rising States and International Order,” British Academy, 8 October 2013.

Chair, National Intelligence Council workshop on “The Changing Character of Power and Influence in 2020,” Army-Navy Club, Washington, D.C., 27September 2013.