yutiejun@pku.edu.cn
Room B206
Yu Tiejun

Professor

Department of National Security Studies

Profile

Professor Yu Tiejun serves as Chair of the Department of National Security Studies at the School of International Studies, Peking University. He is also a Boya Distinguished Professor and a Ph.D. supervisor. He earned his Bachelor’s degree in English from the PLA Foreign Languages Institute in 1993, a Master’s in International Relations from the School of International Studies at Peking University in 1999, and a Ph.D. in International Relations from the same institution in 2006. Professor Yu was a visiting scholar at George Washington University and the University of Tokyo, and he served as a visiting professor at Johns Hopkins University’s School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS).

He currently serves as President of the Chinese Association of American Studies and is a board member of several academic organizations, including the China Arms Control and Disarmament Association, the Chinese International Relations Association, and the China Association for Korean Peninsula Studies. He is also an editorial board member for journals such as The Korean Journal of Defense Analysis, Asian Politics & Policy, Global Studies, China International Strategy Review, and East Asian Studies.

Professor Yu’s research focuses on international relations theory, East Asian security, and China’s foreign and defense policy. He has published extensively in both Chinese and English, contributing to top-tier journals and edited volumes.

Education Background

2000  Peking University  Ph.D. in International Relations

1997  Peking University  M.A. in International Relations

1990  Peking University  B.A. in International Politics

Research Result

Books (Edited Volumes)

National Security Studies in Major Countries and Regions: History, Theory, and Practice, ed. Yu Tiejun & Zhuang Junju, Social Sciences Academic Press, 2024

Joint Research Report on Historical Perceptions between China and Japan (Prewar Volume): Why Did the China-Japan War Break Out?, ed. Wang Chaoguang & Yu Tiejun, Social Sciences Academic Press, 2020

China-Japan Security and Defense Exchange: History, Present, and Future, ed. Zhu Feng, Akiyama Masahiro & Yu Tiejun, World Affairs Press, 2012

China International Strategic Review, ed. Wang Jisi (Yu Tiejun as Associate Editor for multiple volumes), World Affairs Press, 2008–2021

Translations (Main Translator or Co-translator)

Jack Snyder, Myths of Empire: Domestic Politics and International Ambition, Peking University Press, 2007 (reprinted 2018)

Arnold Wolfers, Discord and Collaboration: Essays on International Politics, World Affairs Press, 2006

Michael Armacost, Friends or Rivals? Xinhua Publishing House, 1998

Book Chapters (Selected)

“The International Context Behind the Full-Scale Outbreak of the China-Japan War” (with Li Zhuo), in Why Did the Sino-Japanese War Break Out, Tokyo: Chuo Koron Shinsha, 2018

“U.S. Alliance Strategy,” in Forging Hegemony: U.S. Strategy and Decision-making During the Cold War, Shanghai People’s Press, 2013

“Review of International Studies,” co-authored annual sections in Reports on the Development of Social Sciences in Foreign Universities, Higher Education Press, 2008–2011

“Analyzing the U.S. Factor in China-Japan Relations,” in Changing East Asia and the United States, SSAP, 2010

“Military Alliances in East Asia,” in Peace and Security in East Asia, Current Affairs Press, 2005 (also published as “U.S. Military Alliances in East Asia” in Chinese Scholars View the World, New World Press, 2007)

“International Political Theory and INGOs,” in INGOs in Global Governance, Peking University Press, 2004

“Global Governance as a Theory of International Politics,” in New Trends and Explorations in Globalization, Central Compilation & Translation Press, 2003

Journal Articles

Yu, T. (1995). Balance of power and the new world order. International Politics Quarterly, (4).

Yu, T. (1995). Some thoughts on the relationship between major powers and the United Nations. Europe, (6).

Yu, T. (1999). An analysis of pragmatism in Japan’s postwar diplomacy: A case study of ODA policy evolution. Pacific Journal, (4).

Yu, T. (1999). Alliance theories in international politics: Progress and debates. Europe, (5).

Yu, T. (2000). Offensive realism, defensive realism, and neoclassical realism. World Economics and Politics, (5).

Yu, T. (2002). Ideas and power: The rise and fall of U.S. “revisionist” views of Japan. American Studies Quarterly, (1).

Yu, T. (2002). Problems in the Chinese translation of The U.S.-Japan Alliance: Past, Present, and Future — With comments on the quality of academic translation. International Forum, (1).

Yu, T. (2002). Developing U.S. relations through non-governmental channels: The case of Japan Center for International Exchange and its implications for China. International Politics Quarterly, (2).

Yu, T. (2002). Understanding the hindrance on the way of cooperation: Sino-Japan history problem from the perspective of international relations theory. Journal of Asia-Pacific Studies, 9(2), 25–44.

Yu, T. (2003). International relations theory and the Sino-Japanese history problem. Pacific Journal, (3).

Yu, T. (2005). Problems and reflections on China’s international relations research. Teaching and Research, (11).

Yu, T. (2007). Characteristics of international strategic studies in U.S. universities. International Politics Quarterly, (4).

Yu, T., & Snyder, J. (2007). Interview with Professor Jack Snyder. International Politics Quarterly, (4).

Yu, T. (2008). Some interpretations of the “Princeton Report.” In China International Strategy Review 2008. Beijing: World Affairs Press.

Yu, T. (2008). Sino-Japanese defense exchanges: Ups and downs. Teaching and Research, (11).

Yu, T. (2009). A review of international strategic studies in U.S. universities. American Studies Quarterly, (2).

Yu, T. (2009). Knowledge types beneficial to foreign policy making. International Politics Quarterly, (3).

Yu, T. (2009). How U.S. strategic elites are cultivated. Green Leaf, (11).

Yu, T. (2011). U.S.-China-Japan coordination as the key to constructing a complex Asia-Pacific security architecture. International Politics Quarterly, (1).

Yu, T. (2011). The Western master and Bible of war: Clausewitz and On War in China. In R. Pommerin (Ed.), Clausewitz Goes Global: Carl von Clausewitz in the 21st Century (pp. 42–59). Berlin: Miles Verlag.

Yu, T., & Qi, H. (2013). A review of the U.S. Department of Defense “Minerva” initiative. International Politics Quarterly, (1).

Yu, T. (2014). Crisis management in current Sino-Japanese relations. In Jisi Wang (Ed.), China International Strategy Review 2014. Beijing: World Affairs Press.

Yu, T. (2016). Crisis management in the current Sino-Japanese relations. In Jisi Wang (Ed.), China International Strategy Review 2014 (pp. 96–113). Beijing: Foreign Language Press.

Yu, T. (2015). Experience and implications of think tank development in world-class universities. China Higher Education Research, (8).

Yu, T., Ren, Y., & Wang, J. (2016). The significance of the Korean Peninsula in Xi Jinping's global strategy. In Chinese Perspectives Toward the Korean Peninsula in the Aftermath of North Korea's Fourth Nuclear Test (pp. 17–29). Washington, DC: Stimson Center.

Yu, T. (2017). East Asia: A year of destabilization. Regional Security Outlook 2017, Council for Security Cooperation in the Asia-Pacific (CSCAP), 10–12.

Yu, T. (2017). Testfall koreanische Halbinsel: Chinas Politik zwischen den beiden Koreas und den USA. Welt Trends, 127, 29–34.

Yu, T. (2018). The distinctive features of Japanese area studies and implications for China. International Politics Quarterly, (5).

Yu, T., Tang, S., & Qi, H. (Forthcoming). Rooted in China, facing the world: Establishing a disciplinary system of national security studies with Chinese characteristics. National Security Studies.

Undergraduate Courses:

History of International Relations (core course)

History of International Political Thought (elective)

International Relations and East Asian Security (university-wide elective)

Graduate Courses:

Northeast Asian Studies (Master’s elective)

International Security and Strategic Studies (Ph.D. elective, co-taught)

Theories and Practice of National Security (Ph.D. core, co-taught)

International Relations Theory (Ph.D. core, co-taught)