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Geopolist | Istanbul Center for Geopolitics > HNC Resident Professor of International Politics

HNC Resident Professor of International Politics

Last updated: February 18, 2026 1:33 pm
By GEOPOLIST | Istanbul Center for Geopolitics Published February 18, 2026 4 Min Read
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  • Contract
  • Nanjing, China
  • Posted 2 weeks ago
Johns Hopkins University

Johns Hopkins University


Position description

Johns Hopkins University’s School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS) is seeking a Resident Professor of International Politics, to be based at its Hopkins-Nanjing Centre campus in Nanjing, China. This is a term faculty appointment that can run on a multi-year contract subject to negotiation. HNC is a unique partnership between Johns Hopkins University and Nanjing University, founded in 1986 as the oldest educational joint venture in contemporary China. It has a robust tradition of academic freedom and combines the global perspective that comes from close integration with SAIS’s other two campuses in Washington and Bologna, and Nanjing University’s deep roots in the Chinese context. Most HNC students are proficient in both English and Chinese, and take graduate-level courses in both languages. The campus community is tightly knit and largely residential. To learn more about SAIS and the Hopkins Nanjing Center, please visit www.sais-jhu.edu.
Qualifications

The HNC Resident Professor of International Politics must hold a PhD and have an academic profile appropriate to SAIS’s three-campus reputation for excellence in teaching, research, and public engagement. He or she will teach courses in English that serve students on multiple pathways through HNC, whether for the two-year MA in International Studies (MAIS) done entirely in Nanjing, the one-year Certificate, or sequences that combine a year in Nanjing with completion of the MA in International Relations (MAIR) in Washington or the MA in International Affairs (MAIA) in Bologna. Teaching responsibilities include advising of MAIS theses.

For this appointment, expertise is sought in topics involving China’s global engagements. Themes may include, for example, China’s relations with its neighbours, geopolitics and security, or China and the Global South. The ability to integrate coverage of China with functional expertise on global issues and/or expertise on other regions of the world is especially welcome. Given HNC’s interdisciplinary flavour, expertise bridging politics and adjacent fields such as political economy can enhance the curriculum. As at other SAIS campuses, this faculty appointment requires proven competence in teaching in a globally oriented setting, as well as excellence in research and/or policy-relevant practitioner experience. As HNC has a strong bilingual tradition, with faculty from abroad and from China, proficiency in spoken and written Chinese to facilitate engagement across all aspects of academic programming and the campus community is desirable though not required. HNC, as one of the three SAIS campuses, also offers opportunities for research collaboration and hybrid teaching with colleagues in Washington and Bologna. The location in Nanjing provides a platform for China-oriented research and engagement with Chinese academic and policy universes.

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