Miller Co-edits Book on China-India Relations; Ye Contributes Chapter

Manjari Chatterjee Miller, Associate Professor of International Relations at the Frederick S. Pardee School of Global Studies at Boston University, is co-editor of the Routledge Handbook of China-India Relations, along with Kanti Bajpai (Professor and Director, Centre on Asia and Globalisation, Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy, National University of Singapore), and Selina Ho (Assistant Professor, National University of Singapore).

The Handbook is the culmination of a two-year collaboration between Miller, Bajpai and Ho which included a trip by Miller to the Lee Kuan Yew School where she was invited to be a visiting associate professor. The Handbook draws from both established academic and policy experts not just from the United States but from all over the world; covers expansive issues with topics ranging from the historical relationship to territorial disputes, connectivity, trade relationship, health governance and outer space; and speaks to gender parity with almost half of the contributors being women.

Pardee School Associate Professor Min Ye is also one of the Handbook contributors, her chapter in the book titled, “Divergent Capitalisms in India and China: A Historical Institutionalist Approach.” Min Ye is the author of Diasporas and Foreign Direct Investment in China and India (Cambridge University Press, 2014), The Making of Northeast Asia (with Kent Calder, Stanford University Press, 2010) and, most recently, of The Belt Road and Beyond (Cambridge University Press, 2020).

Assistant Professor Julie Klinger, now at the University of Delaware and earlier at the Pardee School, also contributed a chapter titled “China, India, and Outer Space: Cooperation and Competition in the Global Commons.”

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Manjari Chatterjee Miller is Associate Professor of International Relations at the Frederick S. Pardee School of Global Studies at Boston University. She works on foreign policy and security issues with a focus on South and East Asia. Her book, Wronged by Empire: Post-Imperial Ideology and Foreign Policy in India and China (Stanford University Press, 2013) argues that the bitter history of colonialism affects the foreign policy behavior of India and China even today.