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    • Assistant Professor of Government at American University

      • Tongtong Zhang is an Assistant Professor of Government at American University. Her research examines authoritarian institutions (with a focus on participatory institutions and information control) and their effects on political attitudes and behavior, especially in the context of China.
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  2. Tongtong Zhang joins the Walter H. Shorenstein Asia-Pacific Research Center (APARC) as APARC Predoctoral Fellow for the 2021-2022 academic year. She is a Ph.D candidate at the department of Political Science at Stanford University.

    • Data Science

      Tongtong Zhang. Tongtong is a PhD candidate in the...

  3. I am an Assistant Professor of Government at American University. M y research examines how authoritarian regimes use institutions (e.g., participatory institutions, information control) to sustain their rule over society and how attitudes and behaviors of societal actors are shaped as a result, particularly in China.

  4. datascience.stanford.edu › people › tongtong-zhangTongtong Zhang - Data Science

    Tongtong Zhang. Tongtong is a PhD candidate in the Department of Political Science at Stanford University. Her dissertation examines the sources of variation in participatory institutions across authoritarian regimes in East Asia (China, Vietnam, and Singapore), as well as the consequences of these institutions on mass opinion and regime ...

  5. www.tongtongzhang.com › uploads › 1/2/1TONGTONG ZHANG

    TONGTONG ZHANG. www.tongtongzhang.com. 616 Jane Stanford Way, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305 ttzhang7@stanford.edu +1-917-680-0004. ACADEMIC APPOINTMENTS. American University, School of Public A airs. Assistant Professor of Government, August 2024|. Stanford University, Cyber Policy Center.

  6. Tongtong Zhang is a PhD candidate in political science at Stanford University, concentrating on comparative politics and methodology. Her research focuses on participatory institutions and public opinion in authoritarian regime, with a regional focus on China.

  7. At Stanford University: Political Economy of China, 2021 and 2022 (TA for Andrew Walder) Machine Learning for Social Scientists, 2018 (TA for Rochelle Terman) Data Science for Politics, 2017 (TA for...

  8. To prevent rebellions and coups, autocrats wish to implement policies that the majority of people are in favor of. Because autocratic regimes have trouble understanding the public’s true opinion, this project uses computational methods to examine how governments strategically release feelers of policy ideas to the public, monitor discussion about the feelers on social media, and choose to confirm, deny, or adjust the policies based on the public discussion.