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American Politics

American Politics/Public Policy

Comparative Politics

Prajakta Gupte

Comparative Politics, International Relations

Website: pgupte.com

Research Interests: : Civil-military relations | Democratization | Global South | Party systems | Authoritarian regimes

I am a Ph.D. Candidate at the Department of Political Science, University of
Florida. My dissertation focuses on how military entrepreneurship has influenced democratization in some Southeast Asian and Latin American countries. Broadly, my research deals with issues related to civil-military relations, persistence of authoritarian regimes and challenges to democratic consolidation in the Global South.

Sarah Snowmann (Hollmann)

Comparative Politics, American Politics

Website: sarahksnowmann.wixsite.com/website

Research Interests: Comparative Politics, ethnic politics, European politics, institutions, and political rhetoric.

Sarah Katherine Snowmann is a Ph.D. candidate in Political Science at the University of Florida. She received her BA from Stetson University. Her research addresses intra-ethnic political competition in Europe; in particular, the intersection of institutional design, within-group economic inequality, and ethnic political party rhetoric in Northern Ireland, the Basque Country in Spain, and Flanders in Belgium. Her broader research agenda focuses on the role of institutions in shaping ethnic party rhetoric within a comparative context, such as her publication in the Nationalities Papers on the role of Brexit in shaping nationalist party rhetoric on the European Union.

Anqi Yang

Comparative Politics, International Relations

Website: anqiyang.webnode.page/

Research Interests: Regime transition | State-building | Late-Development | Authoritarian Politics | Qualitative Methods | Comparative Historical Analysis | China

Anqi Yang is a Ph.D. candidate in Political Science at the University of Florida. She is a comparativist with a regional focus of East Asia and Western Europe. Her research agenda has been driven by three broad puzzles: What are the origins of democracy and dictatorship? What drives the formation of modern states, their success and failure? What explains successful development and the lack thereof? Her dissertation examines the distinct pathways and conditions of democratization in the late-developing world.

Before coming to UF, she obtained her master’s degrees in Social Sciences at the University of Chicago, U.S., and in Politics at Sun Yat-sen University, China. She received her BA in German at Zhejiang University, China, and did a one-semester exchange at Technische Universität Berlin, Germany.

International Relations

Mai Frndjibachian

International Relations, Comparative Politics

Website: maifrnd.com

Research Interests: National Identity | Narratives | Southeast Asia | Cultural
Politics

Mai Frndjibachian is a Ph.D. candidate in Political Science at the University of
Florida. Her research examines the shaping of national narratives in Southeast
Asia, especially post-war Vietnam, focusing on how theatre and multisensory
performance influence identity formation and state-building. Mai’s
interdisciplinary work draws on interpretive methods and qualitative inquiry to
investigate political communication, cultural politics, and Southeast Asian
international relations. In the classroom, she emphasizes active, collaborative
learning through Team-Based Learning, and her commitment to inclusive, high-impact teaching was recognized with the 2025 Best Graduate Teacher Award in Political Science.

Long Xiao

International Relations, Comparative Politics

Website: longxiao-lx.com

Research Interests: U.S.-China Relations | U.S. Foreign Policy | China Politics | Securitization | International Governance

Long Xiao is currently a PhD candidate in Political Science at the University of Florida. His research interests focus on U.S.-China relations and U.S. foreign policy, with particular emphasis placed on securitization. His dissertation has been devoted to examining the motivations and actors responsible for the heightened perception of China as a threat in U.S. congressional discourse over the past decade. His research has been published in the International Journal of Strategic Communication and Elementa: Science of the Anthropocene.

Long Xiao is originally from Shenzhen, China. He received a Bachelor of Arts degree from Pittsburg State University in Political Science and International Studies in 2019.

Political Theory

PhD Students in Alphabetical Order:

Mai Frndjibachian

International Relations, Comparative Politics

Website: maifrnd.com

Research Interests: National Identity | Narratives | Southeast Asia | Cultural
Politics

Mai Frndjibachian is a Ph.D. candidate in Political Science at the University of
Florida. Her research examines the shaping of national narratives in Southeast
Asia, especially post-war Vietnam, focusing on how theatre and multisensory
performance influence identity formation and state-building. Mai’s
interdisciplinary work draws on interpretive methods and qualitative inquiry to
investigate political communication, cultural politics, and Southeast Asian
international relations. In the classroom, she emphasizes active, collaborative
learning through Team-Based Learning, and her commitment to inclusive, high-impact teaching was recognized with the 2025 Best Graduate Teacher Award in Political Science.

Prajakta Gupte

Comparative Politics, International Relations

Website: pgupte.com

Research Interests: : Civil-military relations | Democratization | Global South | Party systems | Authoritarian regimes

I am a Ph.D. Candidate at the Department of Political Science, University of
Florida. My dissertation focuses on how military entrepreneurship has influenced democratization in some Southeast Asian and Latin American countries. Broadly, my research deals with issues related to civil-military relations, persistence of authoritarian regimes and challenges to democratic consolidation in the Global South.

Sarah Snowmann (Hollmann)

Comparative Politics, American Politics

Website: sarahksnowmann.wixsite.com/website

Research Interests: Comparative Politics, ethnic politics, European politics, institutions, and political rhetoric.

Sarah Katherine Snowmann is a Ph.D. candidate in Political Science at the University of Florida. She received her BA from Stetson University. Her research addresses intra-ethnic political competition in Europe; in particular, the intersection of institutional design, within-group economic inequality, and ethnic political party rhetoric in Northern Ireland, the Basque Country in Spain, and Flanders in Belgium. Her broader research agenda focuses on the role of institutions in shaping ethnic party rhetoric within a comparative context, such as her publication in the Nationalities Papers on the role of Brexit in shaping nationalist party rhetoric on the European Union.

Long Xiao

International Relations, Comparative Politics

Website: longxiao-lx.com

Research Interests: U.S.-China Relations | U.S. Foreign Policy | China Politics | Securitization | International Governance

Long Xiao is currently a PhD candidate in Political Science at the University of Florida. His research interests focus on U.S.-China relations and U.S. foreign policy, with particular emphasis placed on securitization. His dissertation has been devoted to examining the motivations and actors responsible for the heightened perception of China as a threat in U.S. congressional discourse over the past decade. His research has been published in the International Journal of Strategic Communication and Elementa: Science of the Anthropocene.

Long Xiao is originally from Shenzhen, China. He received a Bachelor of Arts degree from Pittsburg State University in Political Science and International Studies in 2019.

Anqi Yang

Comparative Politics, International Relations

Website: anqiyang.webnode.page/

Research Interests: Regime transition | State-building | Late-Development | Authoritarian Politics | Qualitative Methods | Comparative Historical Analysis | China

Anqi Yang is a Ph.D. candidate in Political Science at the University of Florida. She is a comparativist with a regional focus of East Asia and Western Europe. Her research agenda has been driven by three broad puzzles: What are the origins of democracy and dictatorship? What drives the formation of modern states, their success and failure? What explains successful development and the lack thereof? Her dissertation examines the distinct pathways and conditions of democratization in the late-developing world.

Before coming to UF, she obtained her master’s degrees in Social Sciences at the University of Chicago, U.S., and in Politics at Sun Yat-sen University, China. She received her BA in German at Zhejiang University, China, and did a one-semester exchange at Technische Universität Berlin, Germany.