Name: Jie (Jean)
Family Name: PAN
Nationality: Chinese
Residence country: Hong Kong, China
Organization: UNIVERSITY OF Hong Kong
Title: Ph.D Candidate
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/#!/jean.pan2
Blogs: http://blog.sina.com.cn/u/2503878300
Miss. Jie PAN is a Ph.D Candidate at the University of Hong Kong (HKU), majoring in Anthropology and Japanese Studies.
Before her study at HKU, she used to be a junior researcher at the Institute of sociology, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, researching on rural development, migrant workers and the rural re-constructing movement in China. Miss. Pan’s Ph.d thesis is a comparative study on the problem of food safety and the Alternative Food Network Movement between Japan and China, based on her fieldwork at KANSAI YOTSUBA Association (the biggest Alternative Food Network in Western Japan) and participative study on China’s on-going Alternative Food Network Movement. Through the research, she intends to carry out the discussion on alternative and sustainable development of small farmers and small companies, resisting the globalization, and further dialogue with Fukuyama’s “the end of history”. She is also a member of Chinese Sociology Association and was a
visiting fellow of LSE during 2006-2007.
Family Name: PAN
Nationality: Chinese
Residence country: Hong Kong, China
Organization: UNIVERSITY OF Hong Kong
Title: Ph.D Candidate
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/#!/jean.pan2
Blogs: http://blog.sina.com.cn/u/2503878300
Miss. Jie PAN is a Ph.D Candidate at the University of Hong Kong (HKU), majoring in Anthropology and Japanese Studies.
Before her study at HKU, she used to be a junior researcher at the Institute of sociology, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, researching on rural development, migrant workers and the rural re-constructing movement in China. Miss. Pan’s Ph.d thesis is a comparative study on the problem of food safety and the Alternative Food Network Movement between Japan and China, based on her fieldwork at KANSAI YOTSUBA Association (the biggest Alternative Food Network in Western Japan) and participative study on China’s on-going Alternative Food Network Movement. Through the research, she intends to carry out the discussion on alternative and sustainable development of small farmers and small companies, resisting the globalization, and further dialogue with Fukuyama’s “the end of history”. She is also a member of Chinese Sociology Association and was a
visiting fellow of LSE during 2006-2007.