Sebastian Heilmann
Sebastian Heilmann (born 1965 in Offenbach am Main, Germany) is a German political scientist and sinologist. He currently serves as the founding director of the Mercator Institute for China Studies (MERICS) in Berlin,[1] a think tank that was established in 2013 by the Mercator Foundation (Stiftung Mercator) to promote research and knowledge about contemporary China in Europe.[2] Prior to this position, he was a professor for the political economy of China at the University of Trier (Germany) that is located close to Luxembourg.[3] He currently is on leave from his professorship. Heilmann has published extensively on China’s political system, political economy and economic policy making. With Elizabeth J. Perry he co-edited the volume Mao’s Invisible Hand: The Political Foundations of Adaptive Governance in China (Harvard University Press, 2011). Heilmann has years of experience as policy advisor to the German federal government, state-level governments, non-profit foundations and NGOs.
Education and academic career
From 1984 to 1990, Heilmann studied Political Science, Chinese Studies and Comparative Linguistics at the University of Tuebingen, Germany, and at Nanjing University, People’s Republic of China (PRC). In 1990, he received a master's degree (M.A.) in Political Science from the University of Tuebingen. Several research fellowships in the United States of America (Stanford University and University of California, Berkeley) and in East Asia (Beijing and Taipei) followed. In 1993, he was awarded his PhD from the Faculty of Law and Economics at the Saar University, Saarbruecken, Germany.
From 1994 to 1999, Heilmann worked as senior researcher for Chinese politics at the German Institute for Asian Affairs in Hamburg (today GIGA German Institute of Global and Area Studies). During this time he was the principal investigator in several research projects that were funded through third-party grants. In 1999, he completed his second thesis (“habilitation” that was required for senior professorial positions in Germany then) on “The Politics of Economic Reform in China and Russia” at the University of Muenster, Germany. He briefly taught at this university as a lecturer. In the same year, he was offered a position as full university professor for comparative government at the department of political science at the University of Trier.[3]
From 2000 to 2006, Heilmann headed the multi-disciplinary “Research Group on Equity Market Regulation (REGEM)” dealing with the political economy of equity markets in a comparative perspective.[4] From 2005 to 2006, he stayed as a visiting fellow at the Fairbank Center of Harvard University. His research there focused on distinctive patterns of the Chinese policy process and China’s economic governance in particular. In a multi-year research and publication project about the foundations of “adaptive authoritarianism” in China he collaborated with Elizabeth J. Perry (Harvard University) as a Harvard-Yenching Coordinate Research Scholar in 2007 and 2009.[5] In the years 2011 and 2012, he was a visiting fellow at the University of Oxford (Merton College and University of Oxford China Centre). As principal investigator from 2010 to 2013, Heilmann headed the project group “China’s industrial and technology policies” within the national research network on “Governance in China” sponsored by the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research.[6] In 2009 and 2012 he was appointed member of the editorial boards of the academic journals Modern China and The China Quarterly, respectively. Since 2000, he has been the editor of the study series China Analysis, an academic online publication dealing with contemporary political and economic developments in the Greater China region.[7] Since 2013, he serves as the founding director of the Mercator Institute for China Studies (MERICS) in Berlin,.[1] In 2014, Sebastian Heilmann was appointed as one of 15 German representatives to the German-Chinese Dialogue Forum. This high-level consultative forum was established through a joint German-Chinese initiative in 2005. It is intended to foster non-governmental exchanges and bilateral confidence-building.
Current fields of research
- Political system and economic governance in China
- Political foundations of economic development
- Policy experimentation in comparative perspective
Selected publications
- China’s Foreign Political and Economic Relations: An Unconventional Global Power (co-authored with Dirk H. Schmidt). Lanham, Maryland: Rowman &Littlefield, 2014.
- “National Planning and Local Technology Zones: Experimental Governance in China’s Torch Programme” (co-authored with Lea Shih and Andreas Hofem), The China Quarterly, December 2013.
- “The Reinvention of Development Planning in China, 1993-2012” (co-authored with Oliver Melton), Modern China, November 2013.
- Mao’s Invisible Hand: The Political Foundations of Adaptive Governance in China (co-edited with Elizabeth J. Perry). Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 2011.
- “Policy Experimentation in China’s Economic Rise”, Studies in Comparative International Development, March 2008.
- The Political System of the PRC [in German]. Wiesbaden: Springer VS, two editions, 2002 and 2004.
- The Politics of Economic Reform in China and Russia [in German]. Hamburg: German Institute for Asian Affairs, 2000.
References
- 1 2 Mercator Institute for China Studies, President: Sebastian Heilmann
- ↑ Mercator Institute for China Studies, Official Website
- 1 2 University of Trier, Chair in Government: Politics and Economy of China
- ↑ Research Group on Equity Market Regulation, REGEM
- ↑ Harvard University, Alumnus: Sebastian Heilmann
- ↑ "Governance in China" research network, Official Website
- ↑ China Analysis [in German], Editor: Sebastian Heilmann
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