
Xiaojun Li
Xiaojun Li is an Associate Professor of Political Science at the University of British Columbia and a non-resident scholar at the 21st Century China Centre at UC San Diego School of Global Policy and Strategy. Previously, he was a Princeton-Harvard China and the World Fellow at Harvard University’s Fairbank Center for Chinese Studies, a POSCO Visiting Scholar at the East-West Center in Honolulu, and an inaugural Wang Gungwu Fellow at the ISEAS–Yusof Ishak Institute in Singapore.
Xiaojun's research lies at the intersection of international relations and comparative politics. Some of his previous and ongoing work has explored the impact of domestic politics on the process and content of foreign economic and security policies, as well as how global supply chains reshape the politics of trade and investment. Using China as the primary case of inquiry and employing a variety of methods, including interviews, archival research, survey experiments, and large-N analysis, his research aims to shed light on China’s multifaceted global engagements and impacts, as well as the domestic drivers behind them.
Recent Publications
Coleman, K. P., & Li, X. (2022). Token Forces: How Tiny Troop Deployments Became Ubiquitous in UN Peacekeeping. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Han, E., & Li, X. (2024). Erosion of International Organizations’ Legitimacy under Superpower Rivalry: Evidence on the International Court of Justice. Canadian Journal of Political Science, 57(1), 21–42.
Li, X., & Xu, L. (2024). Understanding Public Perceptions of Chinese Law and the Legal System: Legal Experiences Matter (external link) . China: An International Journal 22(1), 164-181.