Jung Choi

Her research focuses on interactions between art and technology, and contemporary visual and media culture, especially on the ways in which artistic and creative practices provide constructive criticism on our contemporary media environments. Her teaching interests at Duke Kunshan include contemporary art and visual culture, media studies and aesthetics. She is a cross-disciplinary theorist and curator who has worked at renowned institutions including Art Center Nabi and the ZKM Karlsruhe. She experiments with different creative methods in digital humanities and arts. Choi has an M.A.

Jaehee Choi

Her core research agenda centers on understanding how social policies can address labor market inequality and how they can be provided. As a member of the University of Texas Inequality Project (UTIP), she also studies the measurement and movement of global income inequality as well as its political implications. Her teaching fields include policy analysis, U.S. and international social policy, income inequality, and program evaluation. Choi has a B.A. in economics from the University of Chicago and a Ph.D. in public policy from the University of Texas, Austin.

Chi-Yeung (Jimmy) Choi

Chi-Yeung Choi is an applied ecologist with expertise in animal ecology, conservation biology, wetland ecology and environmental management. He studies the relationship between animals and their environment. Current study systems include the ecology of migratory birds, with a focus on their foraging and movement ecology within and between coastal intertidal wetlands. This requires extensive fieldwork in many places ranging from Alaska and East Asia to Australia and New Zealand.

Seongkyung Cho

Her primary research interests lie at the intersection of housing policy, public policy process, and marginalized populations. She is especially interested in how different policy actors and contexts affect public policy processes and outcomes, with a special focus on housing policy in the U.S. and East Asian countries. Her teaching interests at Duke Kunshan include computational social science and public policy analysis. Methodologically, she has employed a wide range of analytical approaches to understanding complex processes of public policy. In her doctoral dissertation, she examined U.S.

Mengtian Chen

Her research focus lies in the intersection among psychology, language learning and teaching. She is especially interested in how the acquisitional processes of Chinese as a second language can be explained from a psychology perspective. Recently, her research interests have expanded into multilingual identities of learners and foreign language teacher education. Chen has a B.A. in teaching Chinese to speakers of other languages and a M.A. in linguistics and applied linguistics from Beijing Language and Culture University, and a Ph.D.

Meifang Chen

Her research aims to promote holistic wellbeing and prevent chronic diseases, especially among underrepresented and underserved populations. She is particularly interested in using mixed methods and GIS mapping and modeling to investigate the root causes of chronic diseases, develop and evaluate health programs and policies.

Dangxing Chen

His research focuses on mathematical modeling and computation in quantitative finance and efficient numerical algorithms for?partial differential equations?and integral equations arising in science and engineering. Chen has a B.Sc. in financial mathematics from the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, and a Ph.D. in applied mathematics from the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. He held?postdoctoral positions at the University of California, Berkeley, from 2017 to 2021.

Charles Chang

His research interest hinges on the intersections between computation and design. With the rise of smartphones and other internet-connected devices, design choices become increasingly data-driven and dependent on information's credibility in the construction of the human habitat. Chang's research focuses on human habitat's design, environmental impact, and information's credibility in the big-data age.

Titas Chakraborty

Her research focuses on South Asian and world history, with special attention to labor, migration and gender. Her teaching interests at Duke Kunshan include global China studies, global history and South Asian history. Chakraborty has a B.A. and M.A. in history from Jadavpur University, India, and an M.A. and Ph.D. in history from the University of Pittsburgh. Previously, she was a visiting assistant professor at Oberlin College and a postdoctoral research fellow at the Institute for Historical Studies, University of Texas, Austin.