Skip to main content

Publications

Ajit Mishra and Andrew Samuel
This paper studies the self-control problem of a morally committed bureaucrat in choosing the optimal level of discretion. They show a novel tradeoff in the official’s moral commitment: more…

Mario Einaudi Center for International Studies

Mabel Berezin
With the spring 2024 primary upon us, social scientists can draw lessons from Europe’s past. Our task is to figure out which lessons are meaningful in the current American moment.

Institute for European Studies

By Our Faculty
Pengfei Zhang and Ji Li
In this paper, the authors argue that Section 512(c) notice-and-takedown regime provides a natural setting to study the signaling aspect of pretrial bargaining. A strong signal is short, easy to read…

Mario Einaudi Center for International Studies

Kyokutei Bakin, translated by Glynne Walley
Kyokutei Bakin's Nansō Satomi Hakkenden is one of the monuments of Japanese literature. This multigenerational samurai saga was one of the most popular and influential books of the nineteenth century…

East Asia Program

Chang Tan
The Minjian Avant-Garde studies how experimental artists in China mixed with, brought changes to, and let themselves be transformed by minjian, the volatile and diverse public of the post-Mao era.

East Asia Program

Thomas J. Mazanec
Poet-Monks focuses on the literary and religious practices of Buddhist poet-monks in Tang-dynasty China to propose an alternative historical arc of medieval Chinese poetry.

East Asia Program

Rachel Bezner Kerr
Farmer-managed seed systems and the conservation of agrobiodiversity are increasingly recognized as important components of food and seed sovereignty.

Institute for African Development

By Our Faculty
Ariel Rubinstein and Michele Piccione
This paper deals with a complex problem, that of aggregating conditionally independent signals to reach a final opinion. The authors show how people have a propensity not to realize that two weak…

Mario Einaudi Center for International Studies

Rachel Beatty Riedl, Paul Friesen, and Kenneth Roberts
Democratic backsliding is occurring in an unprecedented number of wealthy countries once thought immune—the United States among them—finds a new analysis by Einaudi's DTR team.

Mario Einaudi Center for International Studies

By Our Faculty
Elizabeth F. Drexler
In Infrastructures of Impunity Elizabeth Drexler argues that the creation and persistence of impunity for the perpetrators of the Cold W

Southeast Asia Program