STUDENTS

      Sheng ZHOU 周胜

      PhD Student (Admitted in 2025 – 2026)
      Field Area: Economic History

      Overview

      Zhou Sheng is PhD student in the Hong Kong Institute for the Humanities and Social Sciences (IHSS) at The University of Hong Kong. He received his Bachelor degree in Management at Sun Yat-sen University and Master’s degree in Sociology at Zhejiang University. His Master’s degree thesis entitled “Power Sharing Revisited: Social Mobility and Ethnic Conflict in Southwest China, 1646 – 1905” investigates the Qing dynasty’s political integration process in the southwestern regions that seeks to understand the origins of ethnic conflicts through a mixed-method approach. The thesis distinguishes between horizontal and vertical dimensions of power sharing, emphasizing the crucial role of the vertical one, which is closely linked to social mobility. By moving beyond a purely elite-focused perspective, this research draws attention to the complex social structures in frontier societies and clarifies the specific mechanisms through which power-sharing operates.

      Contact

      Room 206, May Hall, The University of Hong Kong
      Email:  zhou_sheng@connect.hku.hk

      Sharing & Experiences

      Zhou Sheng has a keen interest in understanding the specific processes of state-building, particularly the role of social mobility within them. He has rich research experiences, and that includes working on a project that analyses the influence of capacity and social relations on the social-political mobility of jinshi (top-ranking graduates of the imperial civil service examination) within imperial China’s bureaucracy. Building upon this foundation, he further his investigation with his Master’s degree thesis that focuses on the southwestern regions, expanding the scope to include ethnicity and further exploring the role of social mobility in the context of state frontier governance. With a background of multiple disciplines, Zhou Sheng is especially interested in interdisciplinary research that combines diverse perspectives and research methods.

      Research Interests

      Economic history, Historical sociology

      Thesis Supervisors

      Primary supervisor: Professor Zhiwu Chen

      Co-supervisor: Professor Ji Li