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Posts by Alice Xu

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The Politics of Climate Change in the Developing World Climate change politics in the developing world remains understudied, despite the region's acute vulnerability and centrality to climate futures. This article synthesizes emerging research across...

Excited to share our @annualreviews.bsky.social article, “The Politics of Climate Change in the Developing World," with @guygrossman.bsky.social and Audrey Sacks: www.annualreviews.org/content/jour...
It’s been amazing to watch this area of research grow so much in recent years. Let’s keep it up!

2 days ago 11 5 0 1
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Excited the first paper I worked on in grad school came out @thejop.bsky.social this fall: doi.org/10.1086/734242
I find political competition causally increases deforestation by prompting politicians to weaken bureaucratic capacity. 3 fieldwork rounds,many rejections,~a decade(?) later, it’s out! 🥲

4 months ago 19 2 1 0
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Hope for a Healthier World With a new book, Professor of Political Science Julia Lynch and colleagues offer legislators a roadmap for reducing health inequality.

Thanks to @ldattaro.bsky.social for this lovely write-up of Getting Better.

If this sparks your interest, you can get the book open access here: policy.bristoluniversitypress.co.uk/getting-better

@profkatsmith.bsky.social @profbambra.bsky.social @pennldi.bsky.social @pennaging.bsky.social

6 months ago 5 4 1 0

Thanks for your interest in the paper!! We actually find the opposite: certain class of public goods ("unfunded public goods"), e.g., protecting public health, induce support for right populism

1 year ago 0 0 0 0
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Thanks, Catherine! Big congrats too on this paper! Super cool– excited to read. Paula Rettl was also just here visiting Philadelphia this weekend :)

1 year ago 5 0 1 0

The challenge for the Left is to turn unfunded public goods into funded ones: redistribute their concentrated costs using
–Job retention schemes
–Training and reskilling
–Redistributive compensation

Without credible compensation, right populists will continue to exploit the gap.

1 year ago 4 1 2 0

We also show negative future expectations predict Trump support:
Counties w/ more pessimistic future economic outlooks voted more heavily for Trump in 2016.

This long-term pessimism, rather than immediate economic loss, fuels right-wing populism.

1 year ago 5 1 1 0
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Same pattern observed using an alternative measure: the share of jobs that can’t be done remotely (“teleworkability”).

1 year ago 2 1 1 0
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We leverage staggered timing of COVID business closures in the U.S.—a rare economic shock decoupled from race. Using an event study design, we find lockdowns boosted Trump support in states with more low-education workers, but had no effect in high-education ones.

1 year ago 2 1 1 0

These policies don’t require direct taxes. That’s precisely the problem:
They’re “cheap” for governments, yet disproportionately costly for certain workers—esp. those with lower educ or less flexible skills. Without compensation, these voters are vulnerable to populist appeals.

1 year ago 3 1 1 0
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Unfunded public goods, policies that benefit the public but impose concentrated economic costs on specific groups, without compensating them, drives right-wing populism.

Think:
– COVID lockdowns
– Trade liberalization
– Climate policies
– Innovation and competition policy

1 year ago 4 1 1 0
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🚨New paper out in @cpsjournal.bsky.social with Torben Iversen: doi.org/10.1177/0010...
We empirically separate economic factors from cultural backlash as competing explanations for right-wing populism, and find evidence for the former. We define the concept of “unfunded public goods.” 🧵

1 year ago 113 37 6 3

…So let me get this straight:

New Jersey is represented by legendary badass CORY BOOKER.

While New York is stuck with Chuck “obey in advance” Schumer, and Pennsylvania has John “next Kyrsten Sinema” Fetterman.

As regional rivalries go, that has really gotta sting.

1 year ago 376 41 25 6

Super happy to see this finally out! Coauthored with a dream team! @gustavodiaz.org Rebecca Weitz-Shapiro & Matthew S. Winters

Check it out! 👇🏼

*long thread with a summary of the argument may be coming soon

1 year ago 13 5 1 1
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2/6 🧵In @cpsjournal.bsky.social, @alicexu.bsky.social & Iversen ask if economic, rather than cultural factors, drive support for right-wing populists. Staggered DiD in the US & covid lockdowns. In states with less educated people (cannot work from home) lockdowns increase Trump support doi.org/pft7

1 year ago 4 2 1 0

Yesss! 🥳🥂🤘 Thrilled for you –congratulations, Chagai!!

1 year ago 1 0 1 0
From Territorial Consolidation to Bureaucratic Dominance: The Long Arc of State Development | Annual Reviews Our understanding of state development—a term that encompasses both state formation and state building—has grown significantly in the last two decades. In this review, I outline the foundations of the...

🚨New pre-print! It builds on the State Formation seminar that I teach at Yale, benefiting from rich conversations with brilliant students. The piece tackles state formation, state building, and outlines 3 paths of future research: civil wars, international constraints, and bureaucratic capacity.

1 year ago 23 6 1 0
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Excited to speak at Penn’s School of Social Policy & Practice’s webinar on climate’s influence on health, politics, and the labor force.

Register here: upenn.zoom.us/webinar/regi...

1 year ago 2 1 0 0

Hell yeeeee! 🥳🥂🤘

1 year ago 0 0 0 0
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Two of the most important books on climate politics, which need to be read (much) more widely.

1 year ago 18 3 0 0

This likely confirms that the decision to arrest him was made at the highest levels of government, a terrifying return to the policies of ideological exclusion last seen used during the heights of the Cold War. A very, very worrying precedent at the start of this government.

1 year ago 3631 1144 104 40
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New Broadstreet post up!

Highlighting some great work rethinking common assumptions about African borders!

@ricarthuguet.bsky.social @jackpaine.bsky.social and Christy Qiu

www.broadstreet.blog/p/african-bo...

1 year ago 28 14 1 2

🚨 Call for papers 🚨

Political Economy of Climate Change and the Environment (PECE) APSA 2024 mini-conference

Deadline soon: March 1st, 2024

Submit here: docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1F...
More information:
static1.squarespace.com/static/59bc8...
web.sas.upenn.edu/pece2024/

2 years ago 6 4 0 0
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I don't know how many of us (political scientists) read Cohen and Dawson (1993) during grad school, but it's still one of my all-time favorite papers in REP and beyond.

2 years ago 5 1 0 0

Two of the greatest cities on Earth — New York City and San Francisco — are getting absolutely wrecked by decades of local and regional political mismanagement, despite having so many other things going for them.

2 years ago 171 37 8 1
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Why did I do 7 survey experiments on the effects of racial priming on White Americans' ACA attitudes, and what can we learn from the heap of null results?

A 🧵, drawn from Chp. 6 of my new book "Stable Condition: Elites' Limited Influence on Health Care Attitudes"

Polisky

1/

2 years ago 13 8 1 0
At Any Cost: How Ukrainians Think about Self-Defense Against Russia

At Any Cost: How Ukrainians Think about Self-Defense Against Russia

How do Ukrainians think about self-defense against Russia? In a new paper out in the AJPS, @janinadill.bsky.social, Marnie Howlett and I find through a conjoint experiment that they are categorically against major concessions, even at very high costs of self-defense doi.org/10.1111/ajps... (1/6)

2 years ago 172 80 15 8

Thanks so much, Antonio! Means a lot from you:)

2 years ago 1 0 0 0

Thanks so much, Danny! And for all the great feedback too :)

2 years ago 1 0 0 0

Thanks, Nina!!!

2 years ago 1 0 0 0