Comparative Politics
Nejat
The Stability and Growth Pact's "Unusual Events" Clause and the Funding of the Refugee Crisis in the European Union
Interpretivism versus Positivism in an Age of Causal Inference
CGU's Institutional Designs between 2001 and 2016
Tempering the Taste for Vengeance: Information About Prisoners and Policy Choices in Chile
Carter
Christopher Carter is a John L. Nau III Assistant Professor of the History and Principles of Democracy in the Politics Department. His primary research agenda examines how indigenous populations mobilize to make demands on the state. In his book project, he investigates the formation of ethnic and class identities in Latin America.
Taking Voice Seriously
Social Brokerage: Accountability and the Social Life of Information
Power Sharing and Authoritarian Stability: How Rebel Regimes Solve the Guardianship Dilemma
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