Xiaojun Li

Xiaojun Li (李晓隽) is an assistant professor of political science and faculty associate of the Institute of Asian Research at the University of British Columbia. My previous and ongoing research can be broadly divided into three research programs that investigate (1) the impact of domestic politics on the process and content of foreign economic and security policies, (2) the impact of global supply chains on trade and investment, and (3) the political economy of trade liberalization in developing and post-communist countries. In all of these research programs, I use China as theprimary case of inquiry and employ a variety of methods, including interviews, archival research, historical institutional analysis, survey research, web-scraping, and large-N analysis. 

His research has appeared or is forthcoming in Asian SurveyChinese Journal of International PoliticsChinese Political Science ReviewForeign Policy AnalysisInternational Studies QuarterlyJournal of Chinese Political ScienceJournal of Contemporary China, Journal of Experimental Political ScienceResearch and Politics as well as edited volumes, and has received grants and awards from such organizations as the National Science Foundation, the American Political Science Association, the International Studies Association, the Association of Chinese Political Studies, the Chiang Ching-Kuo Foundation, the China Times Cultural Foundation, and the Chinese Ministry of Education. A native of Shanghai, China, Li received his Bachelor's degree in English and international studies from China Foreign Affairs University in Beijing, Master's degrees in political science and statistics from the University of Georgia, and Doctor of Philosophy in political science from Stanford University. His first name is pronounced "shee·ow ji·win".

For the 2014-2015 academic year, he was a Princeton-Harvard China and the World Fellow at Harvard University's Fairbank Center for Chinese Studies.