Throughout my academic career, I have been disseminating my research to both academic and non-academic audiences. In my opinion, the dissemination process is part of the research analysis and can amplify my research impact. Because of this commitment, I organize and engage in public events; write blog posts; and accept interviews in public media outlets.
Hong Kong’s Democratic Diaspora Is Embracing British Elections [Foreign Policy]
July 2020 Hong Kong pro-democracy primaries [Participedia (A global network and crowdsourcing platform for democratic innovations)]
Why Authoritarian Regimes Bother With Elections [The Atlantic]
‘Patriots Only’: Hong Kong’s New Election System in Action [The Diplomat]
2020 US election commentary: When losers are no longer willing to admit defeat (in Chinese) [Initium Media]
Hong Kong - A year of protest [Center for Civil Society Research, WZB]
The Mind Tricks of Electoral Psychology [Fair Observer]
Estimating vote share of radical right parties with “Wisdom of Crowds” [The Centre for Analysis of the Radical Right (CARR)]
The Chinese University of Hong Kong 50th Anniversary [in Cantonese]
During 2012-2016, several alumni of CUHK and I formed a committee in writing the history of CUHK. It records how globalization and different stake holders of CUHK transformed its institutional settings, policies, and culture. The key episodes being analyzed include the controversies over official language, environmental policy, campus planning. In the editing process, we studied archives and interviewed various under-represented actors, such as student representatives, workers and LGBT group.