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Directory
John Fuh-sheng Hsieh
| Title: | Professor | 
                                 
| Department: | Political Science McCausland College of Arts and Sciences  | 
                                 
| Email: | jfhsieh0@mailbox.sc.edu | 
| Phone: | 803-777-3109 | 
| Office: | Gambrell, 311 | 
| Resources: | Curriculum Vitae [pdf] | 

Bio
John Fuh-sheng Hsieh received his Ph.D. in political science from the University of Rochester in 1982. Currently, he is Professor at the Department of Political Science, University of South Carolina.
 He has been active in scholarly activities, having served as secretary-general of
                                 the Chinese Association of Political Science (Taipei), chairman of the Comparative
                                 Representation and Electoral Systems Research Committee in the International Political
                                 Science Association, coordinator of the Conference Group on Taiwan Studies (a related
                                 group in the American Political Science Association), and president of the American
                                 Association for Chinese Studies.
 His teaching and research interests include rational choice theory, constitutional
                                 choice, electoral systems, electoral behavior, political parties, democratization,
                                 foreign policy, and East Asian politics. He is the author or co-author of Positive
                                 Political Theory [in Chinese], A Comparative Study of Referendums [in Chinese], Party-List
                                 Proportional Representation [in Chinese], Popular Will, Checks and Balances, and Efficiency:
                                 On the Values of Democracy [in Chinese], On the Participation of Interest Groups in
                                 the Political Process [in Chinese]. He is the editor of Confucian Culture and Democracy,
                                 and co-editor of The Scope and Methods of Political Science [in Chinese], How Asia
                                 Votes, and Democratic Governance in Taiwan. His English works appeared as chapters
                                 in many books and in such journals as International Political Science Review, Electoral
                                 Studies, Party Politics, Public Choice, Representation, Cambridge Review of International
                                 Affairs, Asian Survey, Asian Perspective, China Quarterly, Journal of Contemporary
                                 China, Journal of Asian and African Studies, American Asian Review, Issues & Studies,
                                 and Chinese Political Science Review.