Yi-hao Su (蘇翊豪)

I am an Assistant Professor in the Department of Political Science at National Taiwan University (NTU). Before my current appointment, I conducted cybersecurity research in the Division of Cyberwarfare and Information Security at Taiwan’s Institute for National Defense and Security Research (INDSR). My research interests include international political economy, economic statecraft, foreign policy analysis, and cybersecurity. My most recent research project focuses on the determinants of successful sanctions cooperation between senders and third-party states. Specifically, I investigate why some countries are more likely to comply with the United States in enforcing targeted sanctions in the context of China-U.S. great power competition.

At NTU, I teach a variety of undergraduate and graduate courses, including Comparative Government, International Trade, and Dissertation and Thesis Preparation. In these courses, I employ a team-based learning approach to stimulate students’ interest in learning and cultivate their teamwork skills. Through group exercises, students learn how to apply theories to analyzing political behavior. Using this approach, I received the Undergraduate Teaching Award as an Adjunct Instructor at the College of Emergency Preparedness, Homeland Security, and Cybersecurity (CEHC), State University of New York in Albany.