Alice L. Miller

Dr. Alice Lyman Miller (born Harold Lyman Miller, 1944) is a researcher, writer, and professor known for her analysis of Chinese history, politics, and foreign policy. Miller worked as an intelligence analyst for the Central Intelligence Agency, taught at Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS) of Johns Hopkins University and the Naval Postgraduate School, and is researcher and visiting fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University. She completed her gender transition in 2006.[1]

Career

Born and raised in upstate New York, Miller then attended Princeton University[2] and received a PhD from George Washington University in 1974 with a doctoral dissertation on Qing dynasty politics. She worked as an analyst at Central Intelligence Agency, from 1974 to 1990. From 1990 to 2000, she was as professor of China studies and for most of that period, director of the China Studies Program at Johns Hopkins SAIS in Washington, D.C.[3]

Miller is also a professor of National Security Affairs at the Naval Postgraduate School.[4]

Personal life

In 2002, she began a series of treatments for gender transition and began using the name Alice Lyman Miller. She said her professional community and family were supportive of her transition.[5]

Works

  • Harold Lyman Miller. Factional Conflict and the Integration of Ch'ing Politics, 1661-1690. Phd thesis, George Washington University,1974.
  • H. Lyman Miller. Science and Dissent in Post-Mao China: The Politics of Knowledge. University of Washington Press, 1996.
  • Miller, H. Lyman (2000), "Late Imperial Chinese Slate", in Shambaugh, David L. (ed.), The Modern Chinese State, New York: Cambridge University Press, pp. 14–41, ISBN 978-0521772341
  • The CCP Central Committee's Leading Small Groups (2008)
  • The Central Departments under Hu Jintao (2009)[6]
  • Miller, Alice Lyman (2009). "Some Things We Used to Know About China's Past and Present (but Now, Not So Much)". Journal of American-East Asian Relations. 16 (1–2): 41–68. doi:10.1163/187656109793645724.
  • Becoming Asia: Change and Continuity in Asian International Relations Since World War II with Richard Wich (2011)[7]

See also

Notes

  1. Alice L. Miller
  2. White (2012).
  3. "Naval Postgraduate School - Dr. Alice Lyman Miller". Nps.edu. 2012-05-09. Retrieved 2014-02-10.
  4. 李珅. "With growth comes power, and vulnerability". China.org.cn. Retrieved 2014-02-10.
  5. Trevenon (2015).
  6. Shambaugh, David (2012). Tangled Titans: The United States and China. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. p. 145.
  7. Alice Lyman Miller and Richard Wich. "Becoming Asia: Change and Continuity in Asian International Relations Since World War II - Alice Lyman Miller and Richard Wich". Sup.org. Archived from the original on 2014-02-22. Retrieved 2014-02-10.

References

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