Manjari Chatterjee Miller
Associate Professor of International Relations
International Studies
Boston University
United States of America
Biography
Manjari Chatterjee Miller works on foreign policy, ideas and security, with a focus on South and East Asia, particularly rising powers, India and China. Her book, Wronged by Empire: Post-Imperial Ideology and Foreign Policy in India and China, argues that the bitter history of colonialism affects the foreign policy behavior of India and China even today. She is currently working on rising powers, and the domestic ideational frameworks that explain their changing status. Miller’s research has appeared in academic journals as well as non-academic outlets such as Foreign Affairs, the New York Times, The Diplomat, the Asia Society Policy Institute, The Hindu and the Christian Science Monitor. Her work has been supported by grants from, among others, the Smith Richardson Foundation, the East-West Center, Oxford University, the Weatherhead Center for International Affairs, and the US Department of Education. Miller is also a Non-Resident Fellow at the Atlantic Council, Washington D.C.
Research Interest
South Asia, East Asia, Foreign/Security Policies of India and China, Ideational Influences on International Relations
Publications
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Chatterjee Miller M. The Un-Argumentative Indian?: Ideas About the Rise of India and Their Interaction With Domestic Structures. India Review. 2014 Jan 2;13(1):1-4.
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Miller MC. Indias Feeble Foreign Policy: A Would-Be Great Power Resists Its Own Rise. Foreign Affairs. 2013 May 1;92(3):14-9.
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Miller MC. Wronged by empire: Post-imperial ideology and foreign policy in India and China. Stanford University Press; 2013 Aug 21.