Project Title: Measuring Indigenous Protest during Allotment
Emily Ritter, Vanderbilt University
Dr. Emily Ritter is an associate professor of political science and the Director of Graduate Studies at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee. Her research centers on the strategic relationship between government repression and dissent activities, with particular attention to the methodological implications for causal inference that stem from strategic conflict behavior. Different projects contribute to scholarship on international human rights institutions, law, and practice; domestic conflict between national governments and groups from the population; bureaucratic mechanisms of state repression; institutional solutions to bargaining and cooperation problems; and political methodology.
Jennifer Barnes, Vanderbilt University
Dr. Barnes is a research professional at the Center for the Study of Global Issues at the University of Georgia, a member of the Methodology, Research, and Design Team for the Human Rights Measurement Initiative, and a principal researcher for the Political Terror Scale Project. She is a Ph.D. candidate at Vanderbilt University and holds a B.A. in political science from the University of North Carolina at Asheville. Her research focuses on state repression, human rights, and how these concepts can be best measured and evaluated.
Kai Keltner, Vanderbilt University
Kai Keltner is an undergraduate student at Vanderbilt University with majors in public policy and economics and a minor in data science. He has worked on this project for two years and is currently applying to PhD programs in political science and political economy.
About the APSA Advancing Research Grants for Indigenous Politics Recipients
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