Skip to main content

ASU PhD candidate selected as Emerging Scholar by Network of Schools of Public Policy, Affairs and Administration


Fengxiu Zhang, a female with long dark hair and black-rimmed glasses faces the camera, smiling in a dark top

Fengxiu Zhang.

October 16, 2019

For the second time in three years, a doctoral candidate from Arizona State University’s School of Public Affairs has been named an Emerging Scholar of the Network of Schools of Public Policy, Affairs and Administration (NASPAA).

PhD student Fengxiu Zhang was chosen in 2019 because she shows “excellent promise in achieving a faculty position upon graduation,” according to the letter announcing the award.

“Fengxiu Zhang is a highly promising early career scholar with an impressive record,” said Professor Eric Welch, director of the school’s Center for Science, Technology and Environmental Policy Studies and Zhang’s academic adviser. “Her research, examining adaptation of public agencies in response to extreme events, will contribute significantly to the field of public management.”

The honor includes a $350 stipend and travel expenses paid for Zhang to attend the NASPAA Annual Conference on Oct. 16-19 in Los Angeles.

“I am deeply honored to receive this award,” Zhang said. “I study public organization adaptation to extreme events, which is an important, but rarely examined, topic in public administration. I see this award as an important recognition of the significance of my work.”

At a panel discussion held after receiving the award at an Oct. 18 luncheon, she will give a 10-minute presentation to educators, many of whom have hiring authority.

“The NASPAA presentation will be a great opportunity to showcase my work and myself as a researcher to leaders from many other schools in public administration,” Zhang said. “I particularly look forward to interactions with prospective employers to learn about opportunities where I can continue my research after completing my doctoral degree.”

Zhang is one of three students from 282 schools honored with the NASPAA Emerging Scholars Award this year. Others are Andrew Osorio, School of Public Affairs and Administration, University of Kansas, and David Schwegman, Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs, Syracuse University.

In 2017, School of Public Affairs then-doctoral candidate Federica Fusi, who is now an assistant professor at the University of Illinois at Chicago, won the Emerging Scholar Award from NASPAA. School of Public Affairs is an academic unit of the Watts College of Public Service and Community Solutions.

More University news

 

Portrait of Kaye Reed in an outdoor setting

ASU professor named AAAS Fellow

The American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), the world’s largest general scientific society and publisher of…

April 18, 2024
Four police officers stand raising their right hands in front of a seated audience.

ASU Police Department announces new assistant chief of police, promotions

Arizona State University Police Chief Michael Thompson announced the promotion of four veteran ASU Police Department officers…

April 17, 2024
A woman smiling with arms crossed and a desert landscape in the background.

ASU student wins Truman Scholarship to pursue public service career

An Arizona State University student who has spent years in service to her Mesa, Arizona, community has been named a Truman…

April 12, 2024