Gilbert Friedell Rozman (born 18 February 1943) is an American sociologist specializing in Asian studies.
Rozman completed an undergraduate degree in Chinese and Russian studies at Carleton College, and earned a doctorate in sociology at Princeton University.[1][2] He was a Princeton faculty member between 1970 and 2013,[3] where he taught as Musgrave Professor of Sociology.[4][5]
Selected publications
Rozman, Gilbert (1971). Urban Networks in Russia 1750–1800 and Premodern Periodization. Princeton University Press.[6]
Rozman, Gilbert (1973). Urban Networks in Ch'ing China and Tokugawa Japan. Princeton University Press.[7]
^Rozman, Gilbert (March 2012). "East Asian Regionalism and Sinocentrism". Japanese Journal of Political Science. 13 (1): 143–153. doi:10.1017/S1468109911000338.
^Falkus, Malcolm (May 1977). "Individual Towns and Regions - Gilbert Rozman, Urban Networks in Russia 1750–1800 and Premodern Periodization. Princeton and Guildford: Princeton University Press, 1976. 337 pp. Tables. Figs. Bibliography. $16.50. £9·40. - James H. Bater, St Petersburg: Industrialization and Change [Studies in Urban History 4]. London: Edward Arnold, 1976. xxiii + 469 pp. Plates. Tables. Figs. £14·95". Urban History. 4: 92–94. doi:10.1017/S0963926800002674.
^Schwartz, Benjamin I. (1 June 1975). "Gilbert Rozman. Urban Networks in Ch'ing China and Tokugawa Japan. Princeton: Princeton University Press. 1973. Pp. xiv, 355. $16.50". The American Historical Review. 80 (3): 705–706. doi:10.1086/ahr/80.3.705-a.
^Fairbank, J. K. (1 October 1982). "Gilbert Rozman, editor. The Modernization of China. New York: Free Press and Collier Macmillan, London. Under the auspices of the Center of International Studies, Princeton University. 1981. Pp. xv, 551. $22.50". The American Historical Review. 87 (4): 1142–1143. doi:10.1086/ahr/87.4.1142.
^Young Chul Cho (July 2013). "East Asian National Identities: Common Roots and Chinese Exceptionalism, edited by Gilbert Rozman. Washington: Woodrow Wilson Center Press; Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2012. xiv + 283 pp. US$50.00 (hardcover)". The China Journal. 70 (70): 274–277. doi:10.1086/671320.