1. Parties, Brokers and Voter Mobilization: How Turnout Buying Depends Upon the Party's Capacity to Monitor Brokers. Horacio Larreguy, John Marshall and Pablo Querubin. 2016.
American Political Science Review, 110(1):160-179. [Journal] [Journal] [Replication Files] [PDF] [Appendix]
2. Deliberate Disengagement: How Education Can Decrease Political Participation in Electoral Authoritarian Regimes. Kevin Croke, Guy Grossman, Horacio Larreguy, and John Marshall. 2016.
American Political Science Review, 110(3):579-600 [Journal] [Replication Files] [PDF] [Appendix] [Afrobarometer Working Paper #156]
In the press [Africa Portal] [Mail & Guardian Africa] [Publico]
3. Political Brokers: Partisans or Agents? Evidence from the Mexican Teacher's Union. Horacio Larreguy, Cesar Montiel and Pablo Querubin. 2017.
American Journal of Political Science, 61(4): 877-891. [Journal] [Replication Files from Dataverse] [PDF] [Appendix]
In the press [Oraculus]
4. Agents of the Regime? Traditional leaders and Electoral Behavior in South Africa. Daniel de Kadt and Horacio Larreguy. 2018.
Journal of Politics, 80(2):382-399. [Website] [Replication Files from Dataverse] [PDF] [Appendix]
2015 Fiona McGillivray Award for the best Political Economy paper at APSA.
5. Information Provision, Voter Coordination, and Electoral Accountability: Evidence from Mexican Social Networks. Eric Arias, Pablo Balan, Horacio Larreguy, John Marshall, and Pablo Querubin.
American Political Science Review, 113(2), May 2019:475-498. [Journal] [Replication Files from Dataverse] [PDF] [Appendix]
6. A Signaling Theory of Distributive Policy Choice: Evidence From Senegal, with Jessica Gottlieb, Guy Grossman and Benjamin Marx. 2019.
Journal of Politics, (81)2: 631–647. [Journal] [Replication Files from Dataverse] [PDF]
7. How Weakly Institutionalized Parties Monitor Brokers in Developing Democracies: Evidence from Post-conflict Liberia. Jeremy Bowles, Horacio Larreguy, and Shelley Liu. 2020. [Journal] [Replication Files from Dataverse] [PDF]
American Journal of Political Science, 64(4):952-967.
8. An Informational Theory of Electoral Targeting in Young Clientelistic Democracies: Evidence from Senegal. Jessica Gottlieb. and Horacio Larreguy. 2020. [Journal][Replication Files] [PDF]
Quarterly Journal of Political Science, 15(1):73-104.
9. Diffusing Political Concerns: How Unemployment Information Passed Between Social Ties Influences Danish Voters. James E. Alt, Amalie Jensen, Horacio Larreguy, David D. Lassen, and John Marshall.
Journal of Politics, 84(1), January 2022: 383-404. [PDF] [Journal]
10. Able and Mostly Willing: An Empirical Anatomy of Information's Effect on Voter Efforts to Hold Politicians to Account in Senegal. Abhit Bhandari, Horacio Larreguy, and John Marshall.
American Journal of Political Science, 67 (4), October 2023: 1040-1066. [Journal] [PDF] [Pre-registration]
11. When does education increase political participation? Evidence from Senegal. Horacio Larreguy and Shelley Liu. 2024. Political Science Research and Methods, 12(2):354-371. [Journal] [Download PDF]
12. Who Gets Hired? Political Patronage and Bureaucratic Favoritism. Mai Hassan, Horacio Larreguy and Stuart Russell. American Political Science Review, 118(4):1913-1930. [Download PDF] [Journal]
13. Who Debates, Who Wins? At-Scale Experimental Evidence on the Supply of Policy Information in a Liberian Election. Jeremy Bowles and Horacio Larreguy. April 2025. American Political Science Review [Journal] [Download PDF]
In the press [Behavioural Science Uncovered Podcast] [VoxDev] [EGAP Policy Review] [JPAL Policy Review] [Internews Website]
14. Family Ties, Social Control, and Authoritarian Distribution to Elites. Antonella Bandiera, Horacio Larreguy, and Jorge Mangonnet. 2025. [Journal] [Download PDF] American Political Science Review
15. Sustained exposure to fact-checks can inoculate citizens against misinformation in the Global South. Jeremy Bowles, Kevin Croke, Horacio Larreguy, Shelley Liu, and John Marshall. May 2025. American Political Science Review [Journal] [Download PDF] [Pre-registration]
In the press [EGAP's post]
16. Missionary Activity, Education, and Long-run Political Development: Evidence Across Regime Types in Africa. Soeren Henn, Horacio Larreguy, and Carlos Schmidt-Padilla. February 2025. [Download PDF] Forthcoming at Comparative Political Studies
17. "When Does Information Increase Electoral Accountability? Lessons from a Field Experiment In Mexico." Arias, Eric, Horacio Larreguy, John Marshall and Pablo Information, Accountability, and Cumulative Learning: Lessons from Metaketa I. Dunning, T., G. Grossman, M. Humphreys, S. Hyde, C. McIntosh, and G. Nellis (editors). 2019.
Cambridge University Press. [Buy the Book]
18. “Social Network Effects in Developing Countries." Ceci Cruz, Horacio Larreguy, and John Marshall. In the Oxford Handbook of Electoral Persuasion. Grofman, B., E. Suhay, and A. H. Trechsel (editors).
Oxford University Press. [Handbook] [Download PDF]
19. “The Incentives and Effects of Independent and Government-Controlled Media in the Developing World.” Horacio Larreguy and John Marshall. In the Oxford Handbook of Electoral Persuasion. Grofman, B., E. Suhay, and A. H. Trechsel (editors).
Oxford University Press. [Handbook] [Download PDF]
20. ““Accountability in Developing Democracies: The Impact of the Internet, Social Media, and Polarization" Horacio Larreguy and Pia Raffler. 2025. Annual Review of Political Science, 28:413-434. [Journal]
21. "Electoral precinct-level database for Mexican municipal elections." Bruno Calderón-Hernández, Horaico Larreguy, John Marshall, and José Luis Pérez-Castellanos. Scientific Data, 12(85):1-11 [Journal]