I study how social identity affects electoral accountability, the functioning of government, and political behaviour. My work lies at the intersection of Political Economy, Political Behaviour, Experimental Methods, and Political Psychology. In my research I build on strategic and behavioural theories of principal-agent relationships and voting. I implement experiments to analyse how individuals evaluate their politicians’ performance, when they discriminate in favour of their social group, how they make redistributive allocation decisions, or how they coordinate their choices with their peers.
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Personal Details

Lecturer (Assistant Professor)
United Kingdom

Academic Area

Economics, Political Science, Psychology

accountability, discrimination, political economy, voting

Geographic Area

Asia and Oceania, Western Hemisphere

Central Europe, Eastern Europe, North America, Oceania, Southern Europe, United States

Career