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judging panel
Ambassador Julia Chang Bloch
Julia Chang Bloch is President of the US-China Education Trust (USCET), a non-profit organization working in China to promote US-China relations through education and exchange. USCET works with a network of 34 Chinese institutions, and Ambassador Bloch serves as Distinguished Adviser or Visiting Professor at several top Beijing and Shanghai universities.
Ambassador Bloch, the first Asian American to hold such rank in U.S. history, has had an extensive career in international affairs and government service, beginning as a Peace Corps Volunteer in Sabah, Malaysia, in 1964, and culminating as U.S. Ambassador to the Kingdom of Nepal in 1989. From 1981 to 1988, Ambassador Bloch served at the U.S. Agency for International Development as Assistant Administrator for Food for Peace and Voluntary Assistance and as Assistant Administrator for Asia and the Near East, positions appointed by the president and confirmed by the Senate. She also was the Chief Minority Counsel to a Senate Select Committee; a Senate professional staff member; the Deputy Director of the Office of African Affairs at the U.S. Information Agency; a Fellow of the Institute of Politics at Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government, and an Associate of the U.S.-Japan Relations Program of the Center for International Affairs at Harvard.
After 25 years in government service, Ambassador Bloch moved to the corporate sector in 1993, becoming Group Executive Vice President at the Bank of America, where she created the Corporate Relations Department, heading the bank’s Public Relations, Government Affairs, and Public Policy operations. From 1996 to 1998, Ambassador Bloch moved into philanthropy, serving as President and CEO of the United States-Japan Foundation, a private grant making institution, with $100 million in assets. Beginning in 1998, Ambassador Bloch shifted her focus to China, first becoming Visiting Professor at the Institute for International Relations and Executive Vice Chairman of the American Studies Center at Peking University, and subsequently affiliating with Fudan University in Shanghai, as well as the University of Maryland as Ambassador-in-Residence at the Institute for Global Chinese Affairs.
A native of China who came to the U.S. at age nine, Ambassador Bloch grew up in San Francisco and earned a bachelor's degree in Communications and Public Policy from the University of California, Berkeley, in 1964, and a master's degree in Government and East Asia Regional Studies from Harvard University in 1967. She was awarded an honorary doctorate of Humane Letters from Northeastern University in 1986.
Ambassador Bloch serves on a number of corporate and non-profit boards, including: Asia Institute for Political Economy, the University of HK, the Atlantic Council, Council of American Ambassadors, US Asia Pacific Council, Meridian International Center, World Affairs Council, the Fund for American Studies, and Penn Mutual Insurance Co. She was elected as a Fellow to the National Academy of Public Administration and is on the Expert/Eminent Persons Register of the ASEAN Regional Forum, a member of the Woodrow Wilson Council, as well as Trustee Emeriti of the Asia Society, Honorary Member of the Board of Directors of the Friends Society of the Asian Division, Library of Congress, and Honorary Fellow of the Foreign Policy Association. A member of the Council on Foreign Relations and American Academy of Diplomacy, she also serves on the Edumasters International Advisory Committee and the Editorial Board of Berkshire Publishing Group’s Encyclopedia of China.
She has received numerous awards, and her publications include: Women and Diplomacy, Bonds Across Borders, UK: Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2007; Nepal: End of Shangri-la, Liberal Democracy Nepal Bulletin, Vol. 1, No. 1, 2005, America’s Love-Hate Relationship with China, American Forum Journal of the Fudan University Center of American Studies, 2003, Commercial Diplomacy, Living with China: US-China Relations in the 21 st Century, an American Assembly book, New York: W.W. Norton, 1995. Japanese Foreign Aid and the Politics of Burden Sharing, Yen for Development, New York: Council on Foreign Relations, 1991.
Professor K.C. Fung
K.C. Fung is Professor of Economics at the University of California, Santa Cruz. His research areas are in international trade and finance, trade policies, multinational corporations, the WTO and the economics of the Asia/Pacific.
He has done influential work on trade and network, trade policies under imperfect competition and the Japanese keiretsu. He has also made substantial contributions to the international economics of China. His work includes the correct measurement of the U.S.-China bilateral trade balance, estimation of the domesticvalue added and foreign content of Chinese exports as well as trade and investment relationships between China and the United States, Japan, Korea, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Latin America and Central and Eastern Europe. He recently has also worked on the economics of production sharing and global supply chain.
Fung was a senior economist at the White House Council of Economic Advisers in both the Bush I and the Clinton administrations and he received a letter of commendation from the U.S. President. He was a Senior Research Fellow at the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) and he was a consultant to the World Bank, the WTO and the Asian Development Bank Institute (ADBI). He was a U.S. government delegate to the OECD and was an advisor and academic collaborator at the United States International Trade Commission (USITC). He partnered with the WTO and trained senior government officials from thirty-one countries. He also provided management training to senior executives associated with Alcatel and UTStarcom. He was also an external consultant for Morgan Stanley and a consultant for BBVA.
He has taught at Stanford University, the University ofWisconsin-Madison, Mount Holyoke College and the University of Hong Kong. At Stanford, he taught a Ph.D. course on trade theory. He was tenured at Mount Holyoke College and he was a visiting scholar/researcher at the University of Tokyo (Japan), Bruegel (Brussels), Tilburg University (Netherlands), The Bank of Finland (Helsinki), Chung Hua Institution of Economic Research (Taiwan) and the National University of Singapore. He is also a Senior Research Fellow at the Hong Kong Institute of Economics and Business Strategy (HIEBS), an Associate Director of the Hong Kong Centre for Economic Research (HKCER) and an academic consultant to the University of Barcelona, Spain.
Dr. Jo Kwong
Jo Kwong is the Vice President of Institute Relations at the Atlas Economic Research Foundation. For more than two decades, she has worked to promote and develop an international network of independent think tanks devoted to the ideas of liberty. Prior to joining Atlas in 1989, Kwong worked at free market organizations including the Institute for Humane Studies (Virginia); Capital Research Center ( Washington, DC); and the Property and Environment Research Center ( Montana).
Kwong received her doctorate in Natural Resource Economics from the University of Michigan and her undergraduate degree in biology at Brown University. She began her career in the free-market, nonprofit sector with a postdoctoral program in Nonprofit Management at the Institute for Humane Studies under the mentorship of John Blundell, currently the Director General of the Institute of Economic Affairs ( London). She lectures internationally on topics ranging from free-market environmentalism, markets and morality, globalization and women; to think tank management and development.
Kwong's policy books include Myths about Environmental Policy (Citizens for the Environment, Washington, D.C.), Protecting the Environment: Old Rhetoric, New Imperatives ( Capital Research Center, Washington, D.C.), and Market Environmentalism: Lessons for Hong Kong (Hong Kong Centre for Economic Research, Hong Kong). She is a contributing author to The Yellowstone Primer: Land and Resource Management in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem (Pacific Research Institute for Public Policy, San Francisco) and Rational Readings on Environmental Concerns (Van Nostrand Reinhold, New York).
In addition, Kwong has published in journals including the Harvard Journal of Law and Public Policy, Urban Lands, and the American Land Forum, as well as in the popular press such as the Wall Street Journal and The New York Times. On think tank management, she has authored "how to" guides including "The Think Tank Primer: Strategies for Advancing Freedom around the World" and "Guidelines and Recommendations for Starting an Institute," which are available at the Atlas website at www.Atlasnetwork.org.
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