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Hsu Yumin Wang

Core Faculty

Assistant Professor, Taipei School of Economics and Political Science (TSE), National Tsing Hua University

Hsu Yumin Wang

Email
wanghy@mx.nthu.edu.tw

Phone
+886-3-5715131 ext. 35916

Office 
Room C10, 2nd Floor, Innovative Incubation Center

Office Hours
Thursday 10 am – 12 pm

Personal Website
https://hsuyuminwang.com/

Mailing Address
Taipei School of Economics and Political Science
National Tsing Hua University
101 Section 2, Kuang-Fu Road
Hsinchu, 300044
Taiwan, R.O.C

Profile

I am an assistant professor in Political Science at Taipei School of Economics and Political Science. My current research centers on three key areas: (1) labor and courts under authoritarian regimes, (2) identity and redistribution, and (3) judicial legitimacy in Asian contexts. Geographically, my work concentrates on China, the United States, and Taiwan. Prior to my current position, I served as a Fellow with the Democracy Program at the Carter Center. I hold a PhD in Political Science from Emory University.

Research Interests

Autocratic Politics, Political Economy, Labor, Courts, Redistribution, Chinese Politics, East Asian Politics, Experiments, Measurements.

Awards and Honours

  • Taiwanese Overseas Pioneers Grants (2022-23)

Selected Publication

  • Wang, Hsu Yumin and Yeung, Eddy S. F.. Forthcoming. “Mimicking Democracy: The Legitimizing Role of Redistributionist Propaganda in Autocracies.” Journal of Politics.
  • Wang, Hsu Yumin. Forthcoming. “Information, Equal Treatment, and Support for Regressive Taxation: Experimental Evidence from the United States.” Political Behavior.
  • Wang, Hsu Yumin. 2024. “Appeasing Workers without Great Loss: Autocracy and Progressive Labor Legislation.” Comparative Politics, 56(2): 149–171.
  • Wang, Hsu Yumin. 2024. “Centralization, Elite Capture, and Service Provision: Evidence from Taiwan.” Comparative Political Studies, 57(1): 32-68.


Teaching

  • Advanced Comparative Political Economy

Semester: Fall | TSED700100 | 3 credits 
Module: Foundational Course (PhD Level)
Abstract
This course provides a graduate-level introduction to political economy. Major goals include covering the intellectual history as well as cutting edge of research in this area, introducing you to major theories as well as empirical techniques utilized in contemporary research, and getting you started on an original research paper that will (ideally) evolve into a publishable article or contribute to your dissertation research. Readings include a mixture of foundational approaches and recent research, covering a variety of methodological perspectives and geographic areas. The topical emphasis is on institutions, governance, development, redistribution, energy transitions, and peace. The course provides students interested in these topics an overview over the existing literature, an understanding of key unanswered questions and puzzles, as well as a set of theoretical and methodological tools that can be employed to answer those questions and puzzles.