Dr. Roselyn Hsueh is Associate Professor of Political Science at Temple University in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. She recently served as Residential Research Faculty Fellow at the Institute of East Asian Studies at U.C. Berkeley and Visiting Scholar at the Center for the Study of Law & Society at U.C. Berkeley School of Law. Prior to arriving at Temple, she served as Hayward R. Alker Post-Doctoral Fellow at the University of Southern California’s Center for International Studies and conducted research as a U.S. Fulbright Scholar at the Institute of World Economics and Politics, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.
Dr. Hsueh’s recent article, “State Capitalism, Chinese-Style: Strategic Value of Sectors, Sectoral Characteristics, and Globalization,” examines patterns of market governance across different sectors of varying strategic importance. Moreover, her current book under completion investigates the mediating role of market governance in the relationship between global economic integration and development outcomes in China, India, and Russia. Her other research projects analyze China’s political economic engagement in Africa; and the politics of trade policy and the political economy of identity in post-developmental state East Asia.
Dr. Hsueh’s 2011 book, China’s Regulatory State: A New Strategy for Globalization, examines the politics of market reform and evolving government-business relations across industries in post-Mao China. She has testified in Congress before the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission, and The Economist, Foreign Affairs, The Huffington Post, National Public Radio (NPR), The Washington Post, and Inside Higher Ed have featured her research. She received her Ph.D. from U.C. Berkeley.