The Working Group in African Political Economy (WGAPE) brings together faculty and advanced graduate students in Economics and Political Science who combine field research experience in Africa with training in political economy methods. It is co-led by Brian Dillon (Evans School of Public Affairs, University of Washington), Edward Miguel (Department of Economics, UC Berkeley), and Daniel Posner (Department of Political Science, UCLA). We are collaborating with partners at NYU — Abu Dhabi, J. Andrew Harris, Melina Platas Izama and Peter van der Windt to host a special WGAPE meeting with a research discussions component and training module. We look forward to inviting a larger group of African scholars who can benefit from these meeting objectives. Thanks to NYU-AD, WGAPE will be able to provide funding for travel, accommodation, and related expenses to accepted WGAPE participants.
WGAPE meetings are held in four regional sub-groups each fall and in a national meeting each spring. This call for papers is for a special, supplementary WGAPE meeting, which will be held January 6-8, 2016 at New York University – Abu Dhabi.
The meeting will begin on Friday, January 6, and end on Sunday, January 8, 2016. This meeting will expand upon the WGAPE model to include both research discussion sessions on papers in progress, as in previous years (see an archive of papers from past WGAPE meetings), and a short training workshop to expose African/developing country scholars to the newest tools and approaches to conducting rigorous research on political economy of Africa.
January 3-5: EGAP Learning Days
January 6:
Ryan Jablonski, “How Transparency Affects Distributional Politics: A Field Experiment among Elected
Politicians in Malawi”
Elizabeth Carlson, “Honor among Chiefs: An Experiment on Transparency and Leakage in Malawi”
Joan Ricart-Huguet, “Who Governs? Education as Colonial Revenue Maximization”
Jennifer Brass, “Power to the People: The Politics of Electricity Service Provision and Citizenship in Africa”
Michael Seese, “Political Mobilization and the Market for Authority in East Africa”
January 7:
Wayne Sandholtz, “Do voters reward policy? Evidence from a public‐private partnership in education in Liberia”
Andrew Miller, “State versus Syndicate: Civilian Compliance in Lagos’s Contested Territory”
Felix Hartmann, “Getting Ahead Collectively: Using Positive Psychology to Improve Civic Engagement”
Desert Tour
January 8:
Wolfgang Stojetz, “On the Legacies of Wartime Governance”
Manuela Travaglianti, “Civic Education in Violent Elections: Evidence from Côte d’Ivoire’s 2015 Election”
Mathilde Emeriau, “Do anti‐poverty programs sway voters? Experimental evidence from Uganda”
Horacio Larreguy, “A Market Equilibrium Approach to Reduce the Incidence of Vote‐Buying: Evidence from Uganda”
Applications to present at the 2024 WGAPE Meeting have now closed. This is a closed event. The Working Group in African Political Economy (WGAPE) Annual Meeting will be held this year in Accra, Ghana from March 20-23, 2024. WGAPE brings together faculty and advanced graduate students in...
The deadline to submit has closed. The Working Group in African Political Economy (WGAPE) invites interested scholars to submit a paper to present at the Annual WGAPE Meeting, held this year in Nairobi, Kenya from June 22-23, 2023 (following the Africa Evidence Summit which will be held June...
OVERVIEW WGAPE invited eight scholars to present at a meeting at University of California, Berkeley from March 3rd-4th, 2023. The Working Group in African Political Economy (WGAPE) brings together faculty and advanced graduate students in Economics and Political Science who combine field...
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