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 |