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Ming
Xia Professor Political Science, Economics and Philosophy
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Ming Xia
Professor Office
: Building 2N
Room 236 Phone
: 718.982.3197 Fax
: 718.982.2888 ming.xia@csi.cuny.edu Visit my website
| Degrees : Bachelor’s and Master’s Degree from Fudan University, China PhD, Temple University
Biography / Academic Interests
: In addition to his duties at CSI, Professor Ming Xia is a visiting professor at the School of International Relations and Public Affairs, Fudan University; guest research fellow at the Center for Elections and People's Congress System at Fudan University and guest professor at Jishou University (Hunan, China). He has taught at Fudan University (1988-1991) and served as a residential fellow at the Sigur Center for Asian Studies at the George Washington University (2003), the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars (2004), and the East Asian Institute at the National University of Singapore (2004). He was the recipient of the Bernard Watson Best Dissertation Award from Temple University (1997) and the recipient of the Dolphin Award for Outstanding Scholarly Achievement from the College of Staten Island (2003). Professor Xia has taught the following courses: An introduction to Political Science, Comparative Government, East Asian Politics, Comparative Politics of Developing Countries, China: Politics and Foreign Relations, International Politics, International Organizations and International Political Economy.
Scholarship / Publications
: Ming Xia is the author of The Dual Developmental State: Development Strategy and Institutional Arrangements for China’s Transition (Ashgate 2000) and The People’s Congresses and Governance in China: Toward a Network Mode of Governance (Routledge, 2008). He is the co-editor of two special issues for The Chinese Law and Government on “The Battle Between the Chinese Government and the Falun Gong” and “The Falun Gong: Qigong, Code of Ethics, and Religion” (both from M.E. Sharpe, 1999). He is one of the producers for “China’s Unnatural Disaster, Tears of Sichuan Province,” a HBO documentary movie on the Wenchuan (Sichuan) earthquake. Professor Xia is currently working on a book manuscript, entitled “China at the Epicenter: On the organized crime and criminal underworld in China.” He also writes column articles for the electronic magazine, “China in Perspective” (Zhongguo Zonglan).
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