St Antony's is built on an incredibly diverse and passionate global research community. In the Research Reflections series, we sit down with College Members, students and Fellows to discover the motivation behind their research and the impact they hope their work will have.
RESEARCH REFLECTIONS at St Antony’s
St Antony's is built on an incredibly diverse and passionate global research community. In the Research Reflections series, we sit down with College Members, students and Fellows to discover the motivation behind their research and the impact they hope their work will have.
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Academic Visitors
DPhil students
ACADEMIC VISITORS
Dr Jonathan Liljeblad’s research studies the complexities of promoting international norms in developing countries, with a focus on Indigenous rights, international human rights, and international environmental law. During his term as an Academic Visitor at St Antony’s he will be working on monograph regarding ‘Indigenous Rights to the Environment’ and a co- edited book project on ‘Indigenous Theories of International Law.’
Dr Alex Gath’s work spans the fields of sociocultural anthropology, psychology and philosophy with particular emphases on religious culture as well as issues in clinical psychology and psychotherapy. As an Academic Visitor at St Antony’s, he aims to crystallise three decades of fieldwork investigating how pilgrimage practice, principally Hindu and Christian, has developed.
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ACADEMIC VISITORS
Tomoya Terao is a Japanese career diplomat at the Embassy of Japan in the UK. Before being despatched to the UK, he devoted several years to establishing Japan’s foreign policy towards the Middle East. As an Academic Visitor at St Antony’s, his current interest lies in how Arab media has influenced regional society.
Maxim Bouev has returned to St Antony’s as an Academic Visitor while taking leave from his duties at the New Economic School (NES) in Moscow, where he is professor and vice-rector for corporate projects. He is working on producing a history of the New Economic School, and exploring a new financial market design that could provide safeguards against the potential destabilisation of the world economy due to climate change.
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ACADEMIC VISITORS DPHIL STUDENTS
Read Dr Xiang’s interview
Dr Chen Xiang is an assistant professor of climate policy at Shanghai Jiao Tong University. She is also research associate at Harvard-China Project on Energy, Economy, and Environment at Harvard University. Her research focuses on the politics of climate change, aiming to bridge the gap between science and effective policymaking.
Vladimiro Bocchino presents an informal summary of his ongoing DPhil research into hybrid peace mediation, which assesses the role and value of articial intelligence and open source intelligence in intractable conflicts.
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DPHIL STUDENTS
Anding Shi presents an informal summary of her ongoing DPhil research into the ‘publish or perish’ culture in Chinese sociological PhD studies and the impact that she hopes her research will have.
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