
Name:Ye Fangjin
Title: Associate Professor
Research Interest: International Political Economy, Comparative Political Economy, International Organizations and Global Governance, Foreign Direct Investment
Courses Taught: Research Methods in Social Science, Political Philosophy and Comparative Institutional Studies
E-mail:ye.fangjin@shufe.edu.cn
Educational Background
2016, Doctor of Political Science, Michigan State University
2010, Master of Public Policy, Michigan State University
2009, Bachelor of Science in Environmental and Resource Science, Zhejiang University
Working Experience
2018.6-Present, Associate Professor of Public Administration, Shanghai University of Finance and Economics
Research Projects
1. Bodea,Cristina, and Fangjin Ye. “Investor Rights versus Human Rights: DoBilateral Investment Treaties Tilt the Scale?” at British Journal ofPolitical Science (Authors are listed alphabetically)
2. Chen, Jia,and Fangjin Ye. “Costly Benefits: Regime Time Horizon and InvestmentTreaty Formation in Autocratic Regimes” at Political Research Quarterly(Authors are listed alphabetically)
3. “The Dynamic Process of International Treaty Ratification: The Case of Bilateral Investment Treaties”
4. “The Impact of Ethnic Inequality on State Repression: A Global Analysis” (with Sung Min Han)
5. “The Impact of Bilateral Investment Treaties (BITs) on Labor Rights in Developing Countries”
6. “TheImpact of Bilateral Investment Treaties (BITs) on Income Inequality inDeveloping Countries” (with Cristina Bodea and Andrew Kerner)
Publications
1. Bodea, Cristina, Jia Chen, Andrew Kerner, and Fangjin Ye. “Global Treaties and Domestic Politics: Do BITs Constrain Fiscal Policy in Developing Countries?” forthcoming at International Studies Quarterly.
2. Chen, Jia, Ge Xin, and Fangjin Ye. “Do bilateral investment treaties help post-coup countries attract foreign investment?” forthcoming at International Political Science Review.
3. Han, Sung Min, and Fangjin Ye. 2022. “Labor Union, Between Group Inequality, and Individual Attitudes towards Redistribution” Social Science Quarterly 103(5):1248-1259.
4. Bodea, Cristina, and Fangjin Ye. 2020. “Investor Rights versus Human Rights: Do Bilateral Investment Treaties Tilt the Scale?” British Journal of Political Science 50(3):955-977.
5. Chen, Jia, and Fangjin Ye. 2020. “Costly Benefits: Regime Time Horizon and Investment Treaty Formation in Autocratic Regimes.” Political Research Quarterly 73(2):325-339.
6. Ye, Fangjin. 2020. “The Impact of Bilateral Investment Treaties (BITs) on Collective Labor Rights in Developing Countries.” The Review of International Organizations 15(4):899-921.
7. Wu, Wen-chin, and Fangjin Ye. 2020. “Preferential Trade Agreements, Democracy, and the Risk of Coups d’état.” Social Science Quarterly 101(5):1834-1849.
8. Ye, Fangjin, and Sung Min Han. 2019. “Does Ethnic Inequality Increase State Repression? Canadian Journal of Political Science 52(4):883-901.