Fiona Yap

Fiona Yap

BSC (Houston), MA (Rochester), PhD (Rochester)

Professor Fiona Yap’s main research interests are in policy and political economy in East and Southeast Asia, where she focuses on modeling and testing how key players, such as government and citizens, work strategically with one another to achieve large-scale policy success or political outcomes such as growth and development.

Her research work is available through journals such as the British Journal of Political ScienceComparative Political StudiesGovernment and OppositionAsian SurveyJournal of Theoretical PoliticsSocial Science QuarterlyJournal of East Asian StudiesJapanese Journal of Political ScienceKorea Observer, and Australian Journal of Political Science, as well as chapter contributions in edited volumes.

She is co-editor of the internationally ranked European Journal of Development Research, co-editor of Asia and the Pacific Policy Studies, managing editor of the Presidential-powers.net Academic blog, and serves as Advisory Board member of the internationally funded Korea Institute at The Australian National University

Professor Yap is also an editorial board member of the Journal of East Asian StudiesAsian SurveyKorea Observer and 21st Century Political Science Review, served as editor of Annual Editions: Comparative Politics for McGraw-Hill and is a reviewer for numerous journals, including American Political Science ReviewAmerican Journal of Political ScienceJournal of PoliticsBritish Journal of Political ScienceComparative PoliticsJournal of Public PolicyPolicy and PoliticsPolitical Research QuarterlyInternational Studies QuarterlyInternational Studies Perspective, Governance, Asian Survey, Social Science QuarterlyLegislative Studies Quarterly, and Journal of East Asian Studies. Prior to joining ANU, she was a tenured-faculty at the University of Kansas, US.

Research Interest

  • Political economy of democratization
  • Corruption
  • Government accountability and responsiveness
  • Strategic interaction in policy-making
  • Citizens’ responses to public policy
  • Government spending and policymaking
  • Economic growth
  • Comparative governments and politics
  • Government And Politics Of Asia And The Pacific
  • Political Science