2016 Competition

Lists of the six recipients of EAI Fellowship, with their affiliations and project titles.

 

Yuen Yuen Ang, Assistant Professor, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, US, "The Problem of Defining Success in China’s Bureaucracy"

 

Eric C.C. Chang, Associate Professor, Michigan State University, US, "olitical Corruption and Democratization in East Asian Democracies"

 

Timur Dadabaev, Associate Professor, University of Tsukuba, Japan, "Engagement and Contestation: An Entangled Imagery of the New Silk Road in China, Japan and South Korea"

 

Courtney Jane Fung, Assistant Professor, University of Hong Kong, "Reconciling Status: China and the Dilemma of Intervention in Syria, 2011-2014"

 

Enze Han, Senior Lecturer/Associate Professor, School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), University of London, UK, "Weaker States Under the Shadow of Great Powers: Foreign Policy Choices of Southeast

Asian States"

 

Sijeong Lim, Assistant Professor, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands, "Who Wants Government Protection?: Globalization, Economic Insecurity, and Welfare State Attitudes in Newly Industrialized Asia"

 

2015 Competition

Lists of the five recipients of EAI Fellowship, with their affiliations and project titles.

 

Alexander Bukh, Senior Lecturer, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand: “Territorial disputes and non-state actors in Northeast Asia”


Gerald Chan, Professor, University of Auckland, New Zealand: “China’s High-speed Rail Diplomacy: Global Impacts and East Asian Responses”


Sheena Greitens, Assistant Professor, University of Missouri, US: “Post-Authoritarian Citizenship among North Koreans in South Korea”


David Kearn, Assistant Professor, St. John's University, US: “Maintaining Stability in East Asia During a Period of Power Transition”


Jagannath Panda, Research Fellow & Center Coordinator, Institute for Defense Studies and Analysis (IDSA), India: “From ‘Look East’ to ‘Act East’: India as a Possible Security Provider?” 

 

2014 Competition
Lists of the five recipients of EAI Fellowship, with their affiliations and project titles.

 

Allen Carlson, Associate Professor, Cornell University: “China Transnationalized?


Rosemary Foot, Professor, University of Oxford: “East Asian Perceptions of the Obama Administration’s “Rebalance” Towards Asia”


Alex Dukalskis, Lecturer, University College Dublin: “Northeast Asia and the International Criminal Court: Causes and Consequences of Normative Disposition


Seung-youn Oh, Assistant Professor, Bryn Mawr College: “Convenient Compliance: China’s Industrial Policy Staying One Step Ahead of WTO Enforcement


Yongwook Ryu, Assistant Professor, The Australian National University: “The ‘History Problem’, Domestic Audience Costs, and Public Support in Japan”  

 

2013 Competition
Lists of the five recipients of EAI Fellowship, with their affiliations and project titles.
 

 

Sheng Ding, Associate Professor, Bloomsburg University of Pennsylvania: “Chinese Soft Power and Public Diplomacy: An Analysis of China’s New Diaspora Engagement Policies

 

Ji-Young Lee, Assistant Professor, American University: “Historicizing China’s Rise and International Relations of East Asia

 

Matthew A. Shapiro, Assistant Professor, Illinois Institute of Technology: “International Collaboration and Green Technology Generation: Assessing the East Asian Environmental Regime

 

Fiona Yap, Associate Professor, Australian National University: “Citizens’ Response to Government Corruption:Experimental Evidence from Australia, Singapore, and the United States

 

Ka Zeng, Professor, University of Arkansas: “Domestic Politics and U.S.-China Trade Disputes over Renewable Energy

 

2012 Competition
Lists of the five recipients of EAI Fellowship, with their affiliations and project titles.

 

Daniel P. Aldrich, Associate Professor, Purdue University: “The Role of Governmental Capacity and Citizens’ Input in Disaster Management

 

Myung-koo Kang, Assistant Professor, Baruch College, City University of New York: “Addiction to Uncertainty: Regulatory Rush and the Exceptional Growth of Financial Derivatives Markets in South Korea

 

Patrick Köllner, Director/Professor, University of Hamburg: “Informal Institutions in Autocracies: Analytical Perspectives and the Case of the Chinese Communist Party

 

Min Ye, Assistant Professor, Boston University: “China Invests Overseas: How Home Institutions Affect China’s Outbound Direct Investment

 

Yuan-kang Wang, Associate Professor, Western Michigan University: “Managing Hegemony in East Asia: China’s Rise in Historical Perspective

 

2011 Competition
Lists the five recipients of EAI Fellowship, with their affiliations and project titles.

 

Kai He, Assistant Professor, Utah State University: “Decision Making During Crises: Prospect Theory and China’s Foreign Policy Crisis Behavior after the Cold War” 

 

Hyon Joo Yoo, Assistant Professor, Trinity University: “Do Domestic Processes Prevent Balancing?: Comparative Analysis on Alliance Policies by Japan and South Korea

 

Yu Zheng, Assistant Professor, University of Connecticut: “When World’s Workshop Meets Its Office: Comparative Advantage, Institutions, and Foreign Investment in China and India

 

Peter Van Ness, Visiting Fellow, Australian National University: “Collapse of Moral Authority and the End of the Civilizer State: Comparing Two Cases - Mao’s China and George W. Bush’s United States

 

Thomas Berger, Associate Professor, Boston University: “Navigating a Sea of Troubles: US Alliances and Maritime Disputes in East Asia

 

2010 Competition 
Lists the five recipients of EAI Fellowship, with their affiliations and project titles.

 

Steve Chan, Professor, University of Colorado, Boulder: "Money Politics: International Credit/Debt as Credible Commitment”

 

Aurel Croissant, Prof. Dr., Ruprecht-Karls-Universitaet, Heidelberg: “Civilian Control of the Military in Democratizing Asia”

 

Evelyn Goh, Doctor, Royal Holloway, University of London: “Japan, China, and the Great Power Bargain in East Asia”

 

Yves Tiberghien, Associate Professor, University of British Columbia: “East Asian Politics and the Great G20 Game: Convergence and Divergence in Chinese, Korean, and Japanese Approaches”

 

Andrew Yeo, Assistant Professor, Catholic University of America: “Bilateralism, Multilateralism, and Institutional Change in Northeast Asia’s Regional Security Architecture”

 

2009 Competition 
Lists the five recipients of EAI Fellowship, with their affiliations and project titles.   

 

Mary Alice Haddad, Assistant Professor at Wesleyan University:
“Teaching States to Listen: Environmental Politics in East Asia”

 

Jennifer Lind, Assistant Professor, Dartmouth College:
“Regime Type and National Remembrance”

 

Richard Samuels, Professor at MIT:
“Kidnapping Politics in East Asia”

 

Barbara Stallings, Professor at Brown University:
“A Tale of Two Crises: The Political Economy of East Asian Finance in the 1990s and 2000s”

 

Susan Whiting, Associate Professor at University of Washington:
“What’s Law Got to Do With It? Competition among Legal, Political, and Social Norms in the Generation and Resolution of Rural Land Disputes”

 

2008 Competition 
Lists the five recipients of EAI Fellowship, with their affiliations and project titles.   

 

Saori N. Katada, Associate Professor at the school of International Relations, University of Southern California: “Understanding Fragmented Regionalism in East Asia”
  
Jonathan Schwartz, Assistant Professor of Department of Political Science and International Relations, the State University of New York, New Paltz:
“Comparative Policy Implementation: Emergency Epidemic Responses in South Korea, China and Taiwan”
  
Gi-Wook Shin, Director of Asia-Pacific Research Center and Professor of Sociology, Stanford University: “Historical Disputes and Reconciliation: Towards an East Asian Model”
  
Etel L. Solingen, Professor of Department of Political Science, University of California Irvine: “Positive and Negative Inducements in Non-Proliferation: Comparing Northeast Asian Approaches vis a vis North Korea”
  
Alan M. Wachman, Associate Professor of Department of Fletcher school of law and diplomacy, Tufts University: “A New Great Game? Democracy, Development, and Geostrategic Rivalries in Mongolia"

 

2007 Competition 
Lists the six recipients of EAI Fellowship, with their affiliations and project titles.

 
Matthew M. Carlson: Assistant Professor of Political Science at University of Vermont: "Perceptions of Governance in East Asia"
  
William W. Grimes: Associate Professor of International Relations at Boston University: "Political Economy of Exchange and Market Competition in East Asia" 


Soo Yeon Kim: Assistant Professor of Government and Politics at University of Maryland: "Wither Multilateralism? International Trade in East Asia after the Cold War"
  
Hong Yong Lee: Professor of Political Science at UC Berkeley: "A Comparative Study of Institutional Templates in China, Korea, and Japan"
  
Jong-Sung You: Assistant Professor, Graduate School of International Relations and Pacific Studies, UCSD: "Comparative Study of Corruption in South Korea, Taiwan, and the Philippines"
  
Jianwei Wang: Professor of Political Science at University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point: "China's Peaceful Rise: A Comparative Study"

 

2006 Competition 
Lists the six recipients of EAI Fellowship, with their affiliations and project titles.  

 

Tun-jen Cheng, Professor of Government at College of William and Mary: “Religious Organizations in East Asian New Democracies"
  
Jacques E.C. Hymans, Assistant Professor of Government at Smith College: “The Psychology of North Korean Nuclear Proliferation”
  
Victoria Tin-bor Hui, Assistant Professor of Political Science at University of Notre Dame: “Toward a Multicultural Approach to the Liberal Peace: A Comparison of Historical China and Historical Europe”
  
Peter J. Katzenstein, Professor of International Studies at Cornell University: “China"s Rise: East Asia and Beyond”
  
T.J. Pempel, Professor and Director of Institute of East Asian Studies, UC Berkeley: “The Security-Economics Tradeoff in Asian Regionalism"


Elizabeth Anne Wishnick, Assistant Professor of Political Science at Montclair State University: “Environmental Risk in China’s Relations with Japan”

 

2005 Competition 
Lists the six recipients of EAI Fellowship, with their affiliations and project titles. 

 

Jeffrey Broadbent, Associate Professor, Department of Sociology, University of Minnesota: “Environmental Movements in Korea, Taiwan, Japan and China: Comparative Development, Opportunities and Functional Roles“
  
Neil J. Diamant, Associate Professor, Department of Political Science, Dickinson College: "New Methods for Understanding Power and Legitimacy in China: The Cases of Patriotism, Law, and Gender“
  
Yufan Hao, Professor, Department of Political Science, Colgate University: "Dilemma of Openness: Societal Pressure in China’s Foreign Policy Making“
  
David Kang, Associate Professor, Department of Government, Dartmouth College: "China Reassures Asia: The Microfoundations of Hierarchy“
  
Gilbert Rozman, Musgrave Professor of Sociology, Department of Sociology, Princeton University: "The Northeast Asian Triangle and Regionalism“
  
Jae-Jung Suh, Assistant Professor, Department of Government, Cornell University: "War-like History or Diplomatic History?: Historical Contentions and Regional Order in East Asia"