Stanford University
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Bernadette Liu
Executive Director, Finance, Facilities & Planning, University Librarian's Office
BioBernadette Liu oversees management of multiple administrative areas within the Stanford University Libraries, including financial operations, annual consolidated budget planning, research administration, capital planning, and facilities services. Reporting directly to the University Librarian, Bernadette serves as a member of the Libraries’ executive leadership team, providing input and guidance on the Libraries’ overall financial position and strategic direction.
Bernadette’s more than twenty years of experience at Stanford spans numerous, diverse areas of the enterprise. She has held financial leadership roles in the Office of the Vice Provost for Undergraduate Education and the Department of Psychiatry. During a six-year stint at the Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital (now Stanford Children’s Health), Bernadette played a key role in the planning and implementation of major strategic initiatives, including the complete redesign of the professional services funds flow model between the hospital and the School of Medicine. She also served for four years in the Office of Sponsored Research, holding both pre-award and post-award staffing positions.
Bernadette holds a BS from Stanford University and an MBA from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. -
Bingxiao Liu
Ph.D. Student in Chinese, admitted Autumn 2020
BioBingxiao Liu is a Ph.D. student in the Department of East Asian Languages and Cultures at Stanford University. Her research interests include premodern Chinese literature, cultural and intellectual history; gender and sexuality; emotions, literary and political culture. Her research examines how emotions are invoked or invented to constitute interpersonal ties in 3rd - 6th century China. Working with official histories, commentaries, inscriptions, and literary works, her project explores the reconceptualization of identity and community in emotive terms and the signification of emotion as the legitimizing basis for a new social order in medieval China.