Fellowships: 2015 Second Round
CARI Fellowship program
December 3, 2015
Winners Announced
We are excited to announce the winners of the second round of the 2015 SAIS-CARI Fellowship Program.
SAIS-CARI Fellowships are awarded on a competitive basis or by invitation to researchers, policy-makers, or journalists who wish to spend a concentrated period of time (1 to 2 months) writing or doing field research on an under-explored policy issue related to China’s African engagement. Research projects will start between January and April 2016. The SAIS-CARI Fellows Program is supported by a grant from Carnegie Corporation of New York.
Wilmot Allen, Georgetown University
Jinghao Lu, Sino-Africa Centre of Excellence Foundation
Weiyi Wang, The World Bank Group
The East Africa Shift in Textile and Apparel Manufacturing: China-Africa Strategies, AGOA, and How Africa Wins
Lucy Baker, Science Policy Research Unit, the University of Sussex and Energy Research Centre, the University of Cape Town
Wei Shen, Institute of Development Studies, the University of Sussex
China’s Involvement in South Africa’s Renewable Energy Sector
Yunnan Chen, Johns Hopkins SAIS
David G. Landry, Johns Hopkins SAIS
Blessing or Damnation? A Comparative Analysis of Dam Projects in Cameroon
Yanning Chen, Boston University
Safeguard Provisions in Chinese Financed Renewable Energy Projects in Ethiopia – Comparative Study of Gennalle Dawa III Hydropower Plant and Adama II Wind Farm
Sergio Chichava, Instituto de Estudos Sociais e Económicos (IESE), Mozambique
Shubo Li, Chr. Michelsens Institute, Norway
Unfulfilled Encounters between a Chinese Heavy Sands Mining Company and a Rural Mozambican Community in Angoche
Zhou Hang, Ecoles Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales
China and the United Kingdom in Uganda: Trilateral Development Cooperation
Hezron Makundi, University of Leuven (KU Leuven)
An Analysis of the Sino-Tanzania Agro-Technology Demonstration and Training Center in Dakawa
Zander Rounds, China House
Huang Hongxiang, China House
Chinese and American Labor Relations in Kenya: A Comparative Analysis
Alexander Wang, Shanghai International Studies University
David G. Landry, Johns Hopkins SAIS
A Re-Investigation of the Sicomines Resources-for-Infrastructure Deal between China and the Democratic Republic of Congo