Encourages open-minded and thoughtful discussions.
Encourages students to think creatively.
Always patient and encouraging to students.
Always positive and motivating in class.
Dr. Hui Feng is a Senior Lecturer in the School of Government and International Relations at Griffith Business School, Griffith University, and a member of the Griffith Asia Institute. He holds an Australian Research Council (ARC) Future Fellowship, recognizing his expertise in international political economy. Throughout his career at Griffith University, Feng has progressed from Research Fellow at the Griffith Asia Institute to his current senior lecturing position. His research specializations encompass political economy, Chinese politics, international relations, globalization, and institutional dynamics in China's financial sector, with a particular emphasis on banking reforms, central banking, stock markets, and trade policies.
Feng has authored and co-authored influential works that have shaped scholarly understanding of China's economic transitions. Key publications include the book 'The Rise of the People's Bank of China: The Politics of Institutional Change' with Stephen Bell (Harvard University Press, 2013) and 'Banking on Growth Models' with Stephen Bell (Cornell University Press, 2022). Prominent journal articles feature 'The Politics of China's Accession to the World Trade Organization: The Dragon Goes Global' (2006, 139 citations), 'How Proximate and Meta-Institutional Contexts Shape Institutional Change: Explaining the Rise of the People's Bank of China' (2014, 55 citations), 'Rethinking Critical Juncture Analysis: Institutional Change in Chinese Banking and Finance' (2019, 28 citations), 'Reforming China's Stock Market: Institutional Change Chinese Style' (2009, 30 citations), and 'Made in China: IT Infrastructure Policy and the Politics of Trade Opening in Post-WTO China' (2007, 35 citations). In 2015, he received the Political Studies Harrison Prize for his contributions to political studies. Feng serves as a Contributing Editor for Central Banking, regularly contributing to its Viewpoint column on China's economic policies, and has engaged in public discourse through analyses in The Conversation and other outlets, enhancing global insights into China's political economy and financial developments.
