Peng Ming-min
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Peng Ming-min(Taiwanese: Phêⁿ Bêng-bín; 彭明敏, pinyin: Péng Míngmǐn) (born August 15, 1923) is a noted Taiwan independence activist and politician. He first received his primary education in Taiwan before going to Japan for secondary education, graduating from Kwansei Gakuin Middle School in 1939 and the Third Higher School in 1942. During World War II, he studied law and political science at the Tokyo Imperial University until 1945. He also obtained graduate degrees in law from Mcgill University in Montréal, and University of Paris. In 1964, Peng and his two students Hsieh Cong-min and Wei Ting-chao were arrested for secretly printing a manifesto in support for Taiwan Independence. Peng was sentenced to eight years in jail, but released in late 1965 and put under house arrest. In January 1970, Peng escaped from Taiwan and received political asylum in Sweden. He was in exile in the United States until 1991 when he returned to Taiwan when martial law was lifted. He was the presidential candidate for the Democratic Progressive Party in 1996 garnering about 20% of the vote.
During Peng's exile in the United States, he was at the Center for Chinese Studies at the University of Michigan from 1970 until 1972, after which he joined the faculty at Wright State University until 1974. It was during his time at Michigan when he wrote his autobiography.