Kellogg Work-In-Progress Session: Tina Lee

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Location: Hesburgh Center C103

"Collusion without Corruption: Conflicting Personalities and Organizational Redundancy in the Private and Public Sectors in China"

Tina Lee (PhD, Princeton University), a 2016–17 Kellogg visiting fellow, is a sociologist specializing in economic and bureaucratic organization. She explores how economic actors resolve uncertainty in a market where the state serves as both a competitor and a regulator, with her current research tracing the ways in which actors in China manage political and legal uncertainty in the form of shifting policy mandates and regulatory enforcement.


Work-in-Progress sessions allow members of the Kellogg scholarly community to gather valuable, in-depth input on current research through an interdisciplinary discussion of their projects.

A Work-in-Progress Session is limited to no more than 20 faculty members and graduate students, with participants preparing by reading a paper or other material circulated in advance. Guidelines for presenters, discussants, and participants can be found here.

To register for one of the sessions below and receive the pre-circulated paper, write to: kievents@nd.edu.