Welcome! I am an interdisciplinary social scientist and currently work as an assistant professor of political science & public administration at Montana State University. I received my PhDfrom the Graduate School of Public and International Affairs (GSPIA), University of Pittsburgh, with concentrations inpublic administration and political economy. I have been selected as an American Political Science Association (APSA) Asia Fellow, a Public Administration Theory Fellow (PA Theory Network), aSEED Fellow for Social Innovation, and a Yenching Scholar.My research and teaching interests include Public Administration & Policy, Digital Politics & Policy, Political Economy of Development, Comparative Politics, and Interdisciplinary Studies, with a primary focus on development, governance, resilience, and the overall well-being of communities (rural, urban, and online communities). I am particularly interested in interdisciplinary development studies (sustainable & inclusive development;domestic & international development, esp. poverty,public health, sustainability, and welfare),collaborative governance, local governance, community development, and crisis management in various contexts. The real-world issues I care about revolve around the evolving human-human, human-AI, and human-nature interactions, state-market-society relations, mobilization, social and political engagement, digital self-governance, community engagement, and collective action.Please visitmy Google Scholar, Faculty Profileat MSU, and the NSF-funded Project:DigiCARES.My current research focuses on how institutions (particularly the interplay between formal and informal institutions), technologies (esp. digital platforms, online community-building, human-AI interaction), and inter-group interactions (human-human interaction, cross-culture, cross-national, bureaucrat-citizen, urban-rural diversity and engagement, and zero-contact or lockdown) influence economic, political, and social outcomes for development, governance, policy processes, public goods, and service delivery in the short and long term. In my research, I've used qualitative (interviews, participant observation, archives, digital ethnography), quantitative (OLS, DiD, survey experiments), and mixed-methods (interview-survey-online observation) strategies. My dissertation investigates why and how the same state campaign produces different development outcomes in local communities, despite their similar starting conditions. My ongoing book project, Interacting for Development: State Mobilization and Social Embeddedness, explores how top-down state intervention and bottom-up public participation evolve and interact in shaping development outcomes across different settings, particularly during state-led development campaigns.