Jay Huang
Assistant Professor
- Name
- Dr. Y. Huang
- Telephone
- +31 70 800 9596
- y.c.huang@luc.leidenuniv.nl
- ORCID iD
- 0000-0001-5153-3155
Yih-Jye Hwang (PhD, Aberystwyth) is Assistant Professor of International Relations at Leiden University. His research focuses on culture and identity politics in East Asia, East Asian approaches to human security, China’s strategic and just war thinking, post-Western IR, post-structuralism, and theories of nationalism. He has published widely on politics and international relations in the Asia-Pacific region.
Extension number: 8296
Biography
Yih-Jye Hwang is Assistant Professor of International Politics and Tutor at LUC. In 2008, he obtained his doctoral degree in International Politics from The University of Wales, Aberystwyth. His research interests include Foucault’s houghts, nationalism, national identity, cultural governance, human security, and IR theories.
Courses
- Global Challenges 1: Peace
- Introduction to International Relations
- Regionality in World Politics: The Rise of China
- Nations and Nationalism in World Politics
Assistant Professor
- Faculty Governance and Global Affairs
- Leiden University College
Work address
Anna van BuerenpleinAnna van Buerenplein 301
2595 DG The Hague
Room number 4.13
Contact
- Hwang Y.J., Bunskoek R. & Shih C.Y. (2022), Re-worlding the “West” in post-western IR: the “Theory Migrant” of Tianxia in the Anglosphere. In: Pan C.X. & Kavalski E. (Eds.), Theorizing China’s rise in and beyond International Relations. United Kingdom : Bristol University Press. 102-122.
- Hwang Y. (2022), International studies in China, Oxford Research Encyclopedias : 23.
- Hwang Y.J. & Frettingham E. (2021), Maritime and Territorial Disputes in the South China Sea: Faces of Power and Law in the Age of China’s Rise. London : Routledge.
- Hwang Y. & Frettingham E. (2021), Introduction . In: Hwang Y. & Frettingham E. (Eds.), Maritime and Territorial Disputes in the South China Sea: Faces of Power and Law in the Age of China’s Rise. London : Routledge . 1-23.
- Hwang Y. & Frettingham E. (2021), Sovereignty and Identity: Taiwan’s Claims in the South China Sea. In: Hwang Y. & Frettingham E. (Eds.), Maritime and Territorial Disputes in the South China Sea: Faces of Power and Law in the Age of China’s Rise. London : Routledge . 69-90.
- Hwang Y.J (2021), Reappraising the Chinese School of International Relations: a postcolonial perspective, Review of International Studies : 1-20.
- Hwang Y.J. (2021), Rethinking Chinese School of IR from the Perspective of Strategic Essentialism, E-International Relations : .
- Hwang Y.-J. & Black L.O. (2020), Victimized state and visionary leader? Questioning China’s approach to human security in Africa, East Asia 37(1): 1-19.
- Hwang Y.J. (2020), The Births of International Studies in China, Review of International Studies : 1-21.
- Shih C.Y., Huang C.C., Yeophantong P., Bunskoek R., Ikeda J., Hwang Y.J., Wang H.J., Chang C.Y. & Chen C.C. (2019), China and International Theory: The Balance of Relationships. London: Routledge.
- Cho Y.C. & Hwang Y. (2019), Mainstream IR Theoretical Perspectives and Rising China Vis-À-Vis the West: The Logic of Conquest, Conversion and Socialisation, Journal of Chinese Political Science : pp. 1-24.
- Black L.O. & Hwang Y. (2019), Empowering the subaltern? Critical approaches to Japan’s human security policy in Myanmar, Journal of Human Security Studies 8(1): 1-19.
- Nordin A.H.M., Smith G.M., Bunskoek R., Huang C.C., Hwang Y.J., Jackson P.T., Kavalski E., Ling L.H.M., Martindale L., Nakamura M., Nexon D., Premack L., Qin Y., Shih C.Y., Tyfield D., Williams E. & Zalewski M. (2019), Towards Global Relational Theorizing: A Dialogue between Sinophone and Anglophone Scholarship on Relationalism, Cambridge Review of International Affairs 32(5): 570-581 .
- Hwang Y. & Frettingham E. (2019), Ontological Security and the Disputes over Senkaku/Diaoyu Islands in the East China Sea. In: Teo V. & Satoh H. (Eds.), Japan’s Island Troubles with China and Korea: Prospects and Challenges for Resolution. London and New York: Routledge. 41-67.
- Frettingham E. & Hwang Y.J. (2018), The Tianxia System and the Search for a Common Ground in the Comparative Ethics of War, The Korean Journal of International Studies 16(2): 143-168.
- Shih C. & Hwang Y. (2018), Re-worlding the ‘West’ in post-Western IR: The reception of Sun Zi’s the Art of War in the Anglosphere, International Relations of the Asia-Pacific 18(3): 421–448.
- Frettingham E.J. & Hwang Y. (2017), Religion and National Identity in Taiwan: State Formation and Moral Sensibilities. In: Frettingham E.J. & Hwang Y. (Eds.), Religion and Nationalism in Chinese Societies. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press. 339-372.
- Hwang Y. (2015), Taiwan, Taiwan Studies, and Taiwanese Identity. London: EATS Newsletter, (6): 21-22.
- Schneider F. & Hwang Y.J. (2014), The Sichuan Earthquake and the Heavenly Mandate: Reaffirming China’s Developmental Mode Through Disaster Discourses, Journal of Contemporary China 23(88): .
- Hwang Y. (2014), The 2004 Hand-in-Hand Rally in Taiwan: “Traumatic” Memory, Commemoration, and Identity Formation, Nationalism and Ethnic Politics 20(3): 287-308.
- Hwang Y. (2014), Knowledge Production as “Bordering” Practices: Historical and Political Knowledge in the Discursive Constitution of Taiwanese National Identity. In: Liu J.C.H. & Vaughan-Williams N. (Eds.), European-East Asian Borders in Translation. Routledge Interventions. London: Routledge.
- Schneider F.A. & Hwang Y. (2014), China’s Road to Revival: “Writing” the PRC’s Struggles for Modernisation. In: Cao Q., Tian H. & Chilton P. (Eds.), Discourse, Politics and Media in Contemporary China. U.S.: John Benjamins. 145–170.
- Hwang Y. & Black L.O. (2014), Securitizing Threats to Human Beings: Self-identity in China’s Conceptions of Human Security. In: Chau D.C. & Kane T.M. (Eds.), China and International Security: History, Strategy, and 21st Century Policy. Santa Barbara, CA: Praeger.
- Schneider F.A. & Huang Y. (2014), The Sichuan Earthquake and the Heavenly Mandate: Legitimizing Chinese Rule through Disaster Discourse, Journal of Contemporary China 23(88): 636-656.
- Hwang Y. & Cerna L. (2013), Global Challenges: Peace and War. Leiden & Boston:: Brill.
- Hwang Y. & Cerna L. (2013), Law of War. In: Hwang Y. & Cerna L. (Eds.), Global Challenges: Peace and War. Leiden & Boston: Brill. 65-78.
- Hwang Y. & Cerna L. (2013), Introduction. In: Hwang Y. & Cerna L. (Eds.), Global Challenges: Peace and War. Leiden & Boston: Brill. 1-13.
- Black L.O. & Hwang Yih-Jye (2012), China and Japan’s quest for Great Power status – norm entrepreneurship in anti-piracy responses, International Relations 26(4): 431-452.
- Hwang Y. (2011), 北京奧運與人權論述建構 (The Discursive Constitution of “Human Rights” in the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games), 人文暨社會科學期刊 [Journal of Humanities and Social Science] 7(2): 35-49.
- Hwang Yih-Jye & Schneider F.A. (2011), Performance, Meaning, and Ideology in the Making of Legitimacy: The Celebrations of the People’s Republic of China’s Sixty-Year Anniversary, The China Review 11(1): 27-56.
- Hwang Yih-Jye (2010), Japan as "Self" or "the Other"? - The Turmoil over Yoshinori Kobayashi's On Taiwan, China Information 24(1): 75-98.
- Hwang Yih-Jye & Black L.O. (2010), East Asian Approaches to Human Security – The Concept and Practice of Human Security in Japan and China’s International Relations. Nagasaki Nobuko, Kent Pauline, Shimizu Kosuke, Sato Shiro & Demachi Kazue (Eds.), Conflict Resolution in the Afrasian Context: Examining More Inclusive Approaches. . Kyoto, Japan: Afrasian Centre for Peace and Development Studies, Ryukoku University. 77-94.
- Black L.O. & Hwang Yih-Jye (2010), Soft Power Paths to Great Power Status: Human Security in Japan and China’s Approaches to Tackling Piracy in Southeast Asia and East Africa. Nagasaki Nobuko, Kent Pauline, Shimizu Kosuke, Sato Shiro & Demachi Kazue (Eds.), Conflict Resolution in the Afrasian Context: Examining More Inclusive Approaches. . Kyoto and Shiga: Afrasian Centre for Peace and Development Studies, Ryukoku University. 95-110.
- Hwang Y. (2010), Olympiad, A Place of Linguistic Struggle: The Discursive Constitution of “Human Rights” in the 2008 Beijing Olympics, Sport in Society 13(5): 855-875.
- Hwang Yih-Jye (2006), ‘Historical and Political Knowledge in the Discursive Constitution of Taiwanese National Identity’. Perspectives, 7(3). 2006: 110-131, Perspectives : .