We study favoritism via hometown ties, a common source of favor exchange in China, in fellow selection of the Chinese Academies of Sciences and Engineering. Hometown ties to fellow selection committee members increase candidates' election probability by 39 percent, coming entirely from the selection stage involving an in-person meeting. Elected hometown-connected candidates are half as likely to have a high-impact publication as elected fellows without connections. CAS/CAE membership increases the probability of university leadership appointments and is associated with a US$9.5 million increase in annual funding for fellows' institutions, indicating that hometown favoritism has potentially large effects on resource allocation
This study examines interrelationships between Chinese students' associations with each other, with ...
China’s global influence in the realm of science and technology (S&T) has increased dramatically in ...
We argue that leadership promotion in China's political elite relies on homophily for signals of tru...
We study patronage politics in authoritarian Vietnam, using an exhaustive panel of ranking officials...
When do personal ties matter? Studies of political elite’s rise to power stress the importance of pe...
International cooperation is increasingly important for the growth of specialized knowledge in Econo...
The dataset contains coded information on 204 full CC CCP members' biographies and professional ties...
We study patronage politics in authoritarian Vietnam, using an exhaustive panel of 603 ranking offic...
There is increasing evidence that citations to Chinese research publications are rising sharply. A s...
We study patronage politics in authoritarian Vietnam, using an exhaustive panel of ranking officials...
This paper analyzes the role of connections in academic promotions. We exploit evidence from central...
"Over the past three decades, China's fast economic development has induced considerable changes in ...
We argue that leadership promotion in China’s political elite relies on homophily for signals of tru...
We provide evidence for the causal impact of social status on longevity by exploiting a natural expe...
Based on primary survey data collected over two election cycles in a mountainous area in China, wher...
This study examines interrelationships between Chinese students' associations with each other, with ...
China’s global influence in the realm of science and technology (S&T) has increased dramatically in ...
We argue that leadership promotion in China's political elite relies on homophily for signals of tru...
We study patronage politics in authoritarian Vietnam, using an exhaustive panel of ranking officials...
When do personal ties matter? Studies of political elite’s rise to power stress the importance of pe...
International cooperation is increasingly important for the growth of specialized knowledge in Econo...
The dataset contains coded information on 204 full CC CCP members' biographies and professional ties...
We study patronage politics in authoritarian Vietnam, using an exhaustive panel of 603 ranking offic...
There is increasing evidence that citations to Chinese research publications are rising sharply. A s...
We study patronage politics in authoritarian Vietnam, using an exhaustive panel of ranking officials...
This paper analyzes the role of connections in academic promotions. We exploit evidence from central...
"Over the past three decades, China's fast economic development has induced considerable changes in ...
We argue that leadership promotion in China’s political elite relies on homophily for signals of tru...
We provide evidence for the causal impact of social status on longevity by exploiting a natural expe...
Based on primary survey data collected over two election cycles in a mountainous area in China, wher...
This study examines interrelationships between Chinese students' associations with each other, with ...
China’s global influence in the realm of science and technology (S&T) has increased dramatically in ...
We argue that leadership promotion in China's political elite relies on homophily for signals of tru...