Research
Publications
The Enemy of My Enemy: When Firms Support Climate Change Regulation. International Organization, 74.2 (2020). Supplementary Materials.
2020 Robert O. Koehane award for best paper published in International Organization by an untenured scholar
APSA Science, Technology, and Environmental Policy (STEP) award for best paper published in the last two years
My Brother's Keeper: Other-Regarding Preferences and Concern for Global Climate Change. Review of International Organizations, 16.2 (2021).
Global Climate Policy and Collective Action: A Comment (with Keith Schnakenberg), Global Environmental Politics, 23.1 (2023).
Who Controls the Past: Far-Sighted Bargaining in International Regimes. American Journal of Political Science, 67.3 (2023). Supplementary Materials.
Working Papers
Do International Bureaucrats Matter? Evidence from the International Monetary Fund (with Diana Stanescu), Conditionally accepted, Journal of Politics.
Economic Competition and Civilian Support for Rebel Reintegration (with Austin L. Wright and Konstantin Sonin), Revise and Resubmit, International Organization.
Climate Change and Political Mobilization: Theory and Evidence from India (with Felipe Balcazar, under review).
European reliance on Russian gas imports has null effects on UNGA vote alignment (under review).
The Political Economy of Climate Adaptation in Latin America (with Eric Arias), under review.
The Impacts of Globalization on Political Knowledge: Evidence from Climate Knowledge in Sub-Saharan Africa (with Felipe Balcazar).
The Green Divide: Political Cleavages and Energy Transition in the Global South (Pre-Analysis Plan; with Fiona Bare).
Automated Survey Harmonization (with Brandon de la Cuesta and Dawson Verley).
Works in Progress
Coalition Building in Multilateral Climate Bargaining.
Will Carbon Border Taxes Promote or Undermine Decarbonization in Global South? (with Fiona Bare)
The Impacts of Climate Change on Political Beliefs: Evidence from across the Global South (with Felipe Balcazar and Brandon de la Cuesta).
Incumbent Advantage: What Does Technological Change Mean for Firm Lobbying on Climate Change?