Economics
Accepted and Revision Requested
1. The Effect of Education on Civic and Political Engagement in Non-Consolidated Democracies: Evidence from Nigeria. Horacio Larreguy and John Marshall. 2017.
Review of Economics and Statistics, 99(3):387-401 [Journal] [Replication Files from Dataverse] [PDF] [Appendix]
2. Social Networks as Contract Enforcement: Evidence From a Lab Experiment in the Field. Arun Chandrasekhar, Cynthia Kinnan, and Horacio Larreguy. 2018.
AEJ: Applied Economics,10(4):43-78. [Journal] [Download Replication Files from Journal] [PDF] [NBER Working Paper #20259]
3. Leveling the Playing Field: How Campaign Advertising Can Help Non-Dominant Parties. Horacio Larreguy, John Marshall and James Snyder. 2018
Journal of the European Economic Association, 16(6):1812–1849. [Journal] [Replication Files] [PDF] [NBER Working Paper #22949]
4. Testing Models of Social Learning on Networks: Evidence from two Experiments, with Arun Chandrasekhar, Horacio Larreguy, and Juan Pablo Xandri. [Journal] [Replication Files from Journal] [PDF]
Econometrica, 88(1), January 2020:1-32
5. Publicising Malfeasance: When the Local Media Structure Facilitates Electoral Accountability in Mexico. Horacio Larreguy, John Marshall and James M. Snyder, Jr. 2020. The Economic Journal, 130(631):2291–2327. [Journal] [Replication Files] [PDF] [Appendix][NBER Working Paper #20697]
6. Priors rule: When do malfeasance revelations help and hurt incumbent parties?, with Eric Arias, John Marshall, and Pablo Querubin. July 2022. [Journal] [PDF][NBER Working Paper #24888] [Pre-registration] [EGAP Metaketa Page] [EGAP Policy Review]
In the press [NiemanLab] [Global Anticorruption Blog]
Journal of the European Economic Association, 20(4):1433-1477.
7. Political Competition and State Capacity: Evidence from a Land Allocation Program in Mexico. Leopoldo Fergusson, Horacio Larreguy, and Juan Felipe Riaño. August 2022. [Open Access PDF] Economic Journal, 132 (648): 2815–2834.
8. Mass Political Information on Social Media: Facebook Ads, Electorate Saturation, and Electoral Accountability in Mexico. José Ramón Enríquez, Horacio Larreguy, John Marshall, and Alberto Simpser. 2024. [Download PDF] [Journal] [Pre-registration] [EGAP Policy Review]
Journal of the European Economic Association, 22(4):1678–1722.
9. Network Centrality and Institutional Design: Evidence from a Lab Experiment in the Field. Arun Chandrasekhar, Emily Breza, and Horacio Larreguy. August 2019. [PDF] [NBER Working Paper #20309] Revise and Resubmit to the Journal of Public Economics.
10. Brokering Votes with Information Spread Via Social Networks. Raúl Duarte, Frederico Finan, Horacio Larreguy, and Laura Schechter. September 2024 [Download PDF] [NBER Working Paper] Revised and Resubmitted to the Review of Economic Studies
Book, Handbook Chapters, Policy Papers, and Special Issues
11. “Clientelism in Emerging Democracies,. Horacio Larreguy and Pablo Querubin, 2015. Forthcoming in the North Holland Handbook of Political Economy. D. Acemoglu and J. Robinson (editors). North Holland Publishing Co.
12. "Political Polarization: US Lessons for Latin America." Horacio Larreguy and Ernesto Tiburcio. 2024. UPPER Policy Brief Series. [Policy Report]
13. Does the Content and Mode of Delivery of Information Matter for Electoral Accountability? Evidence from a Field Experiment in Mexico. Eric Arias, Horacio Larreguy, John Marshall, and Pablo Querubin. [Download PDF] Revised and Resubmit for Special Issue on Experimental Economics at the Latin American Economic Review