Current NYU Shanghai Global Research Initiatives Fellows

Xiang Lu
PhD Candidate, Department of Sociology, GSAS

Synopsis of Research in Shanghai (May 27 - July 26) :

Xiang Lu’s dissertation project examines the relationship between the Chinese Muslim internal migrants and Arab immigrants in Shanghai and Yiwu; a city two hours away by train. She will conduct interviews and do participant observation in the two cities along with using the archives in the local libraries to learn about the history and settlement of these two migrant groups. Lu will also benefit from the faculty members at NYU Shanghai who are knowledgeable about the topic, such as Dr. Zvi Ben-Dor Benite who specializes in Islamic studies and modern Chinese history.

William Godel
PhD Candidate, Department of Politics, GSAS

Synopsis of Research in Shanghai (June 16 - July 7) :

William Godel researches comparative politics, social media, and methods in political science. He has extensive experience in China and speaking Chinese (3.5 years) and is interested in researching Chinese social media use. In particular, how Chinese social media and internet culture differs-- or is similar to-- Western paradigms. His dissertation also researches state formation, and he would like to research China's historical experience in state formation and identify it with contemporary Chinese administrative capacity. 

Nancy Huang
MFA Candidate, Creative Writing Program, GSAS

Synopsis of Research in Shanghai (May 27 - June 21) :

The Shanghai No. 3 Girl's High School is a historic and gothic treasure of Asia. Founded in 1892 by Methodist missionaries, the regal school now serves as a hallowed institution for China's daughters to receive a well-rounded education. Nancy Huang’s book, "Favorite Daughter," focuses on the school before the Cultural Revolution, back when it was the McTyeire Academy, and the determined young women who studied there. When Huang was younger, she lived in Shanghai and attended one of the three elite international schools in the city, and as a result is deeply familiar with life abroad, expat culture, Western-style schools in Asia, and the emotional realities of diaspora. As a Chinese-American woman, her youth in Shanghai was intimately connected to her upbringing in America. She recognizes that stories of diaspora aren't linear; they are circular, because there is always a return journey back to the Old Country through food, memory, or culture. In this way, Shanghai is a site of return and revival for her, and an essential component to this novel. Studies have repeatedly shown that countries with imbalanced sex ratios lead to women attending school at decreasing rates. In a country that is overwhelmingly male, Huang’s novel will draw real-world connections to the past and future. Confucius once said that an educated woman is a worthless woman, and China's culture is still intensely patriarchal; so following the lives and coded resistances of these young women is revelatory for her. In Shanghai, Huang will be operating under the legacy of writers like Jules Verne, Jenny Zhang, Lu Xun, Eileen Chang, and Isabel Sun, and she is dedicated to shining a light on a period when being a Chinese woman meant being cultivated to suffer.

Zhenhuan Lei
PhD Candidate, Department of Politics, GSAS

Synopsis of Research in Shanghai (May 27 - July 26) :

Zhenhuan Lei has three ongoing research projects on Chinese politics. The first one is about why Chinese cities have strong interests in building grand subway systems even if mayors cannot finish building subways in their terms; for which he argues that there is a political incentive behind it. In his second project, he finds that township governments in China used fiscal transfers to influence village officials but hurt villagers' welfare. Finally, he has a third project discussing how city mayors' political connections can help firms in their cities get listed in the Chinese stock market. Given the research focus of these projects are all China, Lei believes NYU Shanghai to be the best place to further his research projects. He knows Professor Eric Hundman at NYU Shanghai, who also studies Chinese politics. Professor Hundman, along with other scholars in leading universities in Shanghai, can give feedback to Lei on how to improve these research projects.

Rui Yang
PhD Candidate, Department of Applied Psychology, Steinhardt

Synopsis of Research in Shanghai (May 27 - July 26) :

Rui Yang’s research focuses on gender socialization and child development in the context of urban China. Yang is the manager of Nanjing MetroBaby and MetroTeen project, a study with over 1100 families from Nanjing, collaborated across NYU, NYU-Shanghai, NYU-Abu Dhabi, University of Pennsylvania, and the Southeast University in China. This project aims to study child development and parenting in the rapidly changing China by using multi-cohort and longitudinal design. Their most recent 10th year follow-up took place in 2016, and they are hoping to continue to collect data with these families in the near future; which is what requires Yang to work with collaborators Dr. Xuan Li and Dr. Lixian Cui from NYU-Shanghai closely for a period of time. In addition, she is working closely with Dr. Xuan Li on several papers. Both Yang and Li are interested in parental gender beliefs and their practices in socializing these beliefs to children-- they have been working together since 2016. Currently, they are in the process of writing two papers with the Nanjing interview data, and are hoping to develop another longitudinal quantitative paper over the summer.