Work-in-Progress Workshop Series, Spring 2025

The GLD Work-in-Progress Workshop is designed to help scholars with ongoing papers or projects by providing feedback, suggestions, and advice during a one-hour-long workshop. And all participants are, of course, encouraged to attend several workshops to reciprocate the helpful feedback.

 


Zoom Link (same for all sessions): https://gu-se.zoom.us/j/62260547087

All sessions start at 1600 CET (CEST from March 30).

 


30-Jan-25 Anjali Thomas

Associate Professor in the Sam Nunn School of International Affairs at Georgia Institute of Technology.

(When) Can Politicians Influence Citizens’ Uptake of Government Welfare Programs? Evidence from an Experiment in North India.
13-Feb-25 Shelley Liu Assistant Professor of Public Policy and Political Science at Duke University. Weathering the Storm: How Climate Change Encourages Labor Formalization
27-Feb-25 Blair Welsh Postdoctoral Associate at New York University — Abu Dhabi. After Rebel Rule: Rebel Governance and Post-Conflict Development
13-Mar-25 Ana Isabel Lopez Garcia Assistant Professor of Global Migration in the Department of Politics at Maastricht University. Aid Preferences under Criminal Governance  : Evidence from a Survey Experiment in Haiti
27-Mar-25 Elif Sari Genc Assistant Professor of Politics and Global Affairs, Portland State University. Symbolic Leverage: Nominating (Un)veiled Women as an Electoral Competition Strategy in Polarized Turkey
10-Apr-25 Ariana Salas Castillo Postdoctoral Researcher at Columbia University's Climate School. Who do Latin American public transportation reforms serve?- Understanding the decline of bus public transport ridership in Latin America
24-Apr-25 Ariel Ahram Professor and Chair of the Government and International Affairs Program in Virginia Tech's School of Public and International Affairs Hydrosocial Conflict in Iraq’s Internal Frontier
8-May-25 Adam Auerbach Associate Professor in the School of Advanced International Studies, Johns Hopkins University. The Political Economy of Local Journalism and Democratic Accountability: Evidence from India