Summary
Ronggui Huang is an associate professor at Fudan University with 18 years of research and academic experience focused on contentious politics, internet studies, social networks, social capital, and neighbourhood governance in China. He earned his doctorate at City University of Hong Kong and has published in international SSCI journals such as Information, Communication and Society and British Journal of Social Work, as well as leading Chinese journals. His recent monograph, From Participation to Rights-protection, examines homeowners’ collective actions and reflects a practical interest in how grassroots mobilization translates into rights claims. Currently he leads a Chinese National Social Science Foundation–funded project on Social Media and Collective Action, blending digital trace data with field research. Based in Yangpu District, Shanghai, he combines rigorous quantitative and qualitative methods and maintains an up-to-date academic profile and corpus via his personal homepage and Google Scholar. Colleagues describe him as a scholar who bridges theoretical insight with real-world governance dilemmas in contemporary China.
18 years of coding experience
3 years of employment as a software developer