Leif-Eric Easley is Shorenstein APARC's 2010-11 Northeast Asian History Fellow. Dr. Esley got a doctorate. In 2010, he was a government department specializing in East Asian international relations at Harvard University. His paper presents a theory of national identity, a model of intergovernmental trust and security based on extensive field survey in Seoul, Tokyo and Beijing.
Shorenstein During the APARC period, Easley will participate in the investigation and writing of manuscripts on nationalism and strategic trust in Northeast Asia. He will also teach courses on national identity and controversial historical issues, focusing on the impact of international relations in Japan, China, Korea and the United States.
Easley got a bachelor's degree in political science from the University of California Los Angeles in mathematics and graduated with honors there and received the Asian Theater Missile Defense Paper. He is a longtime partner of Harvard Asia International Exchange Program (HPAIR) and is a Japanese region editor of Harvard Asia Quarter. He served as a professor at Asian international relations and foreign policy at Harvard University and served as a consultant on advanced literature on Asian historical memory and foreign policy. He is a visiting researcher at Yonsei University and a researcher at the Korea Academy at the University of Southern California.
Easley was frequently lectured at international conferences and actively participates in the high-level exchange between the United States and Asia (Second Truck diplomacy) as the Kelly Fellow and Pacific Forum Strategic and International Research Center (CSIS). His research has been published in various academic journals and complemented with comments from major newspapers.
In 1997 I entered the University of California Los Angeles, received a manager and graduate scholarship, graduated from Long Beach Poly and acquired a two year college graduation qualification in high school. Esley's spirit began to allow him to focus on international relations and international political economy, so it entered the humanities and minors in mathematics. Because Easley is dedicated to worldwide problems, he has spent a lot of time - sometimes leaving UCLA. He studied in the UK, France, the Netherlands, and Japan, traveled to 21 countries and attended the International Student Council on behalf of UCLA. In summary, Easley supported the holding, participation and disclosure of more than 40 conferences and seminars, from New York to Beijing, from Asian international security to world trade, the Internet.
Leif-Eric Easley is Shorenstein APARC's 2010-11 Northeast Asian History Fellow. Dr. Esley got a doctorate. In 2010, he was a government department specializing in East Asian international relations at Harvard University. His paper presents a theory of national identity, a model of intergovernmental trust and security based on extensive field survey in Seoul, Tokyo and Beijing. Shorenstein During the APARC period, Easley will participate in the investigation and writing of manuscripts on nationalism and strategic trust in Northeast Asia. He will also teach courses on national identity and controversial historical issues, focusing on the impact of international relations in Japan, China, Korea and the United States.
In addition to pursuing overseas, Easley is deeply involved in numerous extracurricular activities and service related activities at UCLA. He is the chairman of the Institute of Residents of the University of California, Los Angeles, and the Association received the highest academic award from undergraduate students. In the first years using RSS, Easley created an RSS lunch program that attracted guests such as Chancellor Carnesale and Michael Dukakis. Easley is also the director of the career network program of Student Alumni Association. Other activities related to his campus include everything from the Bruen Leadership Program to in-campus and leisure sports, and to the model United Nations.