Dr. Ken Lieberthal
Special Assistant to the President and Senior Director for
Asian Affairs,
National Security
Council
Kenneth Lieberthal is the
Special Assistant to the President and Senior Director for Asian Affairs at the
National Security Council. He assumed this position in August 1998. He is on
leave from the University of Michigan, where he is Professor of Political
Science and William Davidson Professor of Business Administration, Research
Associate of the Center for Chinese Studies, Faculty Associate of the Center for
Russian and East European Studies, and Faculty Associate of the William
Davidson Institute. He has been on the University of Michigan faculty since
1983. He earlier taught at Swarthmore College for 19172‑83. He has a B.A.
from Dartmouth College, and two M.A.'s and a Ph.D. in Political Science from
Columbia University.
Dr. Lieberthal's government
responsibilities encompass American policy toward all countries in Northeast,
East, and Southeast Asia. He has staffed Presidential meetings with leaders of
China, Japan, Republic of Korea, Australia, the Philippines, Singapore, and
Thailand. He also has staffed and participated in the 1.998 and 1999 APEC
Leaders Meeting trips, and has served on the North Korea Policy Review Team led
by Dr. William Perry, among other duties.
Before joining the
government, Dr. Lieberthal wrote and edited nearly a dozen books and authored
about four dozen published articles. His books include: Governing China: From Revolution Through Reform (W.W. Norton,
1995); Policy Making in China: Leaders,
Structures, and Processes (Princeton University Press, 1988) and Policy Making in China's Energy Sector (U.S.
Department of Commerce, 1986), both co‑authored with Michel Oksenberg; Bureaucracy, Politics,
and Decision Making in Post‑Mao China (U.C. Berkeley Press. 1991), co‑editor
with David Lampton; Revolution and
Tradition in Tientsin (Stanford University Press, 1980); Paths to Sino‑ US Cooperation in the
Automotive Sector (US Trade Development Program, 1989), with Michael Flynn
and others; and Central Documents and
Politburo Politics in China (University of Michigan, 1978). His most recent
articles are "The End of Corporate Imperialism" (with C.K. Prahalad),
Harvard Business Review (July-August
1998), which was awarded the McKinsey Prize for the best Harvard Business Review of 1998, and "'The
Ties That Bind," The China Business
Review (May‑June 1998).
Professor Lieberthal was
Director of Michigan's Center for Chinese Studies for 1986‑89. He has
served as a consultant for the U.S. Department of State, the World Bank, the
Kettering Foundation, the Aspen Institute, and firms in the private sector. He
is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations in New York, the Cosmos Club in
Washington, D.C., and a number of professional organizations. He has also
served on the Boards of the National Committee on US‑China Relations and
The Research Center for Contemporary China at Peking University, and on the
editorial boards of Asian Survey, 7he
China Quarterly, 77ze China Economic Review, the Journal of Asian Business, and the Journal of Contemporary China.
Dr. Lieberthal is married to
Jane Lindsay Lieberthal, a former University Administrator. He has two sons:
Keith with the Washington law firm of
Covington and Burling; and Geoffrey at Bain & Co. Dr. Lieberthal speaks
Chinese and Russian.