Huang Fei, a student at Tsinghua Journalism School, has successfully completed a semester at The Washington Center’s Prudential Foundation Global Citizen’s Program with students from other countries such as Brazil, India, Japan and South Korea. She says it was a great opportunity for her to encounter with professionals working for government, for profit and non-profit organizations in Washington D.C., which, in her words, was a magnificent experience.
During her semester working with Council on Hemispheric Affairs (COHA), she was published on wide range of issues in verities of publications including Eurasia Review. One of her major publications was on Cuban Doctor Diplomacy, which was published by COHA itself. Fei has made a mark by delving into the issues such as free speech in Mexico, Sino-Latin American relations and Sino-Canadian relations.
She thanks to the Tsinghua Journalism School for pushing her to the edge of her potential while doing courses and practicing on the field. “I think I have been able to better handle challenges and work under pressures by now with the experience that I gained from my semester at the Center’s program and Tsinghua’s intense and quality education,” she said. She is careful to details and has skills such as qualitative research, interview reporting. Apart from that, Fei is familiar with her peers and Tsinghua community as a critical thinker and hard working person.
Fei’s publications topic are such as, ‘Closer Ties Raise Questions: LAC and China’, ‘Canada Country Brief’, ‘Veld Truth, Damaged Trust’, ‘Is Cuba Caring Too Much’, and ‘The Paradox of Free Speech in Mexico’. (Editing by Bhoj Raj Poudel )
About Council on Hemispheric Affairs:Founded in 1975, the Council on Hemispheric Affairs (COHA), a nonprofit, tax-exempt independent research and information organization, was established to promote the common interests of the hemisphere, raise the visibility of regional affairs and increase the importance of the inter-American relationship, as well as encourage the formulation of rational and constructive U.S. policies towards Latin America.