In her judicious survey of Japan’s economics and politics over the last three decades, Solís argues that the country has left stagnation behind to emerge as a regional “network power par excellence.” - Foreign Affairs
Mireya Solís is director of the Center for Asia Policy Studies, Philip Knight Chair in Japan Studies, and a senior fellow in the Foreign Policy program at Brookings. Prior to her arrival at Brookings, Solís was a tenured associate professor at American University’s School of International Service.
Solís is an expert on Japanese foreign economic policy, international trade policy, and U.S. economic statecraft in Asia. She is the author of “Dilemmas of a Trading Nation: Japan and the United States in the Evolving Asia-Pacific Order” (Brookings, Press, 2017), recipient of the 2018 Masayoshi Ohira Memorial Award. She also authored “Banking on Multinationals: Public Credit and the Export of Japanese Sunset Industries” (Stanford University Press, 2004) and co-edited “Cross-Regional Trade Agreements: Understanding Permeated Regionalism in East Asia” (Springer, 2008) and “Competitive Regionalism: FTA Diffusion in the Pacific Rim” (Palgrave Macmillan, 2009).
Her most recent book, “Japan’s Quiet Leadership: Reshaping the Indo-Pacific” (Brookings Press, September 2023) addresses the question of why and how Japan has emerged from the “lost decades” unscathed from the populist wave and a far more consequential actor in the geopolitics of the Indo-Pacific. The book provides a sweeping look at Japan’s domestic economic and political evolution, its economic statecraft, and the array of geopolitical challenges that have triggered a gradual but substantial shift in the country’s security profile. This deep dive into Japan’s trajectory over the last three decades underscores Japan’s hidden strengths in its democratic resilience, social stability, and proactive diplomacy; while reckoning with the profound challenges the nation faces: depopulation, rising inequality, voter disengagement, and threats to Asia’s long peace.
Solís has offered expert commentary to The New York Times, Financial Times, Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, Politico, The New Yorker, Nikkei, Kyodo News, Asahi Shimbun, Jiji Press, Japan Times, NHK World, Bloomberg, CNN, and BBC, among others. Solís earned a doctorate in government and a master’s in East Asian studies from Harvard University, and a bachelor’s in international relations from El Colegio de México.
Affiliations:
- Japan America Society of Washington, D.C., member, board of trustees
- Japan-American Student Conference, member, national advisory committee
- México y la Cuenca del Pacífico, member, international editorial board
- Pacific Economic Cooperation Council, Mexico Chapter, member
- U.S.-Japan Network for the Future, member, advisory committee
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Past Positions
- Associate Professor, American University School of International Service
- Assistant Professor, Department of Politics, Brandeis University
- Visiting Professor, Center for International Relations, El Colegio de México
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Education
- Ph.D. (1998), M.A. (1991), Harvard University
- B.A., El Colegio de México, 1989
Economic security in East Asia
Mireya Solís, Jungmin Pak, Hyunsoo Joo, Haeyoon Chung
March 5, 2024
Jason Hsu, Akira Igata, Sarah Kreps, Joshua P. Meltzer, Mireya Solís, David Wessel, Myung-hee Yoo
February 22, 2024
The Brookings Institution, Washington DC
9:00 am - 11:30 am EST
Japanese foreign policy and politics
Mireya Solís, Laura McGhee
February 2, 2024
Mireya Solís
September 1, 2023
Mireya Solís
May 17, 2023