Gilbert Rozman and Sergey Radchenko, Introduction: Asia’s Northern Tier
Sino-Russian Strategic Relations
Introduction
Ch. 1 Gilbert Rozman, The Russian Pivot to Asia
Ch. 2 Paul Schwartz, Evolution of Sino-Russian Defense Cooperation since the Cold War (2 parts)
Ch. 3 Alexander Lukin, Russia, China, and the Emerging Greater Eurasia
Ch. 4 Stephen Blank, Russo-Chinese Relations in Strategic Perspective
Sino-Russian Relations in Triangular Context
Introduction
Ch. 5 Zhao Huasheng, Sino-Russian Relations in Central Asia
Ch. 6 Richard Weitz, Russia, China, and Central Asia: Time for Decision
Ch. 7 Sergey Radchenko, Sino-Russian Competition in Mongolia
Ch. 8 Mark Minton, A Stronger Korea-Mongolia Link in a Changing Northeast Asia
Ch. 9 Jargalsaikhany Mendee, Mongolia’s Dilemma: A Politically Linked, Economically Isolated Small Power
Ch. 10 Sergey Radchenko, Mongolia Hangs in the Balance: Political Choices and Economic Realities in a State Bounded by China and Russia
Strategic Thinking toward North Korea
Introduction
Ch. 11 Cheng Xiaohe, Chinese Strategic Thinking Regarding North Korea
Ch. 12 Catherine Jones, China’s Interests, Actors, and the Implementation of Sanctions against North Korea
Ch. 13 Alexander Lukin, Russian Strategic Thinking Regarding North Korea
Ch. 14 Stephen Blank, Making Sense of the Russo-North Korea Rapprochement
Ch. 15 Sergey Radchenko and Gilbert Rozman, The Sino-Russian-North Korean Northern Triangle: Positive Scenarios and Negative Scenarios
Ch. 16 Gilbert Rozman, North Korea’s Place in Sino-Russian Relations and Identities
Gilbert Rozman is an Associate Faculty member at Princeton University's East Asian Studies department. Rozman, Musgrave Professor of Sociology, specializes in Northeast Asian societies: China, Japan, Korea, and Russia. He has compared them, most recently concentrating on national identities. In addition, Rozman works on sociological factors in international relations, emphasizing mutual perceptions and barriers to regionalism.
Sergey Radchenko has an international reputation for research on the history of the Cold War. He has written on Sino-Soviet and Soviet-Japanese relations, atomic diplomacy, Soviet engagement with the Third World, and on Cold War crises. He is a Global Fellow in the History and Public Policy of the Wilson Centre Program, working on China’s Foreign Policy Under Mao Zedong and Zi Jiang Distinguished Professor at East China Normal University.