The Violence, Instability, and Peace (VIP) Workshop is a virtual forum for scholars studying conflict, protest, crime, peace, and related topics to receive feedback on research-in-progress, including working papers and well-developed pre-analysis plans. The workshop is open to scholars from political science and related disciplines (e.g., sociology, economics, psychology, communication), and from across subfields.
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Imrana Alhaji Buba (University of Oslo) “From Survival to Subjugation: Civilian Cooperation with Boko Haram in Nigeria”
Discussant: Antonia Juelich (Harvard University)
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Amanda Rizkallah (Pepperdine University) “Civil War Participation, Victimization, and the Development of Post-Conflict Partisan Identity: Evidence from Lebanon”
Discussant: Kristen Fabbe (European University Institute)
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Juan David Gelvez (University of Maryland), "The Politics of Crime Prevention: Evidence from Colombia"
Discussant: Danny Hirschel-Burns (Princeton University)
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Yu Mei (University of Rochester), "The Interplay of Military Intervention and Peacemaking"
Discussant: Kyle Beardsley (Duke University)
November 21, 2024 8am PST/11am EST/3pm GMT Register here for zoom link!
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Natalia Pia Guerrero Trinidad (University of Minnesota), "Non-State Social Structures and Social Capital: Evidence on Crime and Conflict"
Discussant: Andres Uribe (University of Wisconsin-Madison)
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Sally Shariff (Simon Fraser University and University of British Columbia) and Julio Zuluaga Jimenez (Pontifícia Universidad Javeriana), "What Causes a Reduction in Post-Conflict Violence?"
Discussant: MP Broache (UNC Greensboro)
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We consider submissions of full papers (e.g., to be submitted for publication in a peer-reviewed journal, a chapter in an edited volume, or a job market paper) and well-developed research designs or pre-analysis plans. If accepted, you will provide a short presentation (about 5 minutes) and receive about 25 minutes of feedback from a discussant and attendants.
We are open to work from scholars at all career stages, although we particularly aim to provide opportunities for junior scholars and early career researchers, including pre-tenure and non-tenure track faculty, post-docs, and graduate students. We are also committed to promoting opportunities for scholars from historically excluded communities.
Do you want to discuss your peers' work? Volunteer as a discussant here.
Scholars at varying stages of their careers (from advanced PhD candidates to tenured scholars) can serve as discussants, as long as they are willing to read research-in-progress and provide about 10 minutes of feedback. We will do our best to match you with a paper that fits your area of expertise.
Our workshops are one-hour-long sessions dedicated to providing feedback on two featured papers; accordingly, authors will only provide a short 5-minute presentation to provide an overview of the paper. Each paper will then receive 25 minutes of dedicated feedback from both a chosen discussant and other participants. Manuscripts will be circulated at least one week in advance, and all participants are expected to read them.
- Amélie Godefroidt (Post-doctoral Scholar, KU Leuven)
- Ankushi Mitra (PhD Candidate, Georgetown University)
- Ana Paula Pellegrino (PhD Candidate, Georgetown University)
- Frank Wyer (Naval Postgraduate School)
- Isabel Laterzo (PhD Candidate, UNC-Chapel Hill)
- MP Broache (Assistant Professor, UNC-Greensboro)
- Merve Keskin (PhD Candidate, University of Pittsburgh)
- Taylor Vincent (PhD Candidate, University of Maryland)
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Mariana V. Ramírez Bustamente (Vanderbilt University) “How Do Drug-trafficking Organizations Shape Political Attitudes? Evidence from Peru”
Discussant: Gabriella Levy, Brown University
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Elisa D’Amico (University of St. Andrews) “Beyond Borders: Humanitarian-Based Mediation in African Conflicts through Refugee Shocks”
Discussant: Chris Blair, Princeton University
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Kirssa Ryckman (University of Arizona) “Return to the Streets: The Recurrence of Civil Resistance Campaigns”
Discussant: Austin Mitchell (Norwegian University of Science and Technology)
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Carly Millerd (University of Iowa) “The Emergence of Networks of Women’s Civil Society Organizations During Civil Wars”
Discussant: Kathleen Gallagher Cunningham (University of Maryland)
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Madeleine Stevens (University of Chicago) “’Por Algo Será:’ Disappearances in Authoritarian Argentina”
Discussant: Jane Esberg (UPenn)
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Diego Sazo (London School of Economics) “The Violence Disconnection: Broken Societies and The Logic of Civil Disorder in South America (2017-2020)”
Discussant: Mason Moseley (University of West Virginia)
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Sean Paul Ashley (Dartmouth) "Wartime Institutions and the Durability of Rebel Regimes"
Discussant: Andres Uribe (Stanford University)
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Sigrid Weber (Stanford) "Where to flee? Exploring household-level destination choices and political integration during displacement in the Kasai, DRC"
Discussant: Mateo Villamizar Chaparro (Duke University)
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Frank Wyer (Naval Postgraduate School) "Who's to Blame? How Postconflict Violence Affects Public Support for Peace"
Discussant: Juan Albarracín (University of Illinois, Chicago)
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Lucía Tiscornia (University College Dublin), co-authors: Ines Fynn (Universidad Catolica del Uruguay), Veronica Perez Bentancur (Universidad de la Republica), Gustavo Diaz (McMaster University), "In the Crevices of the State: Criminal Governance in Contexts of High State Presence and Low Violence"
Discussant: Nicholas Barnes (University of St Andrews)
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Sule Yaylaci (UPenn), co-author: Chris Price (Bates College) "Collective Targeting of Violence and Identity Shift: Evidence From Bosnia"
Discussant: Baylee Harrell (University of Kentucky)
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Nihad Aboud (University of Essex) "Affiliation and Jihadist Rhetoric Dynamics: The Case of Boko Haram"
Discussant: Emma Boyle (Penn State Harrisburg)
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May 4, 8am PST/11am EST/4pm GMT
"The Inter-State Dilemma of Transnational Repression: Origin State Strategies and Host State Variation" by Connor Kopchick (The University of Maryland - College Park)
Discussant: Myunghee Lee (Nordic Institute of Asian Studies)
"Returning Home: Child Soldiers, Cleansing Rituals and Reintegration in Uganda" by Allen Kiconco (Wits University)
Discussant: Rebecca Tapscott (Geneva Graduate Institute)
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April 6, 8am PST/11am EST/4pm GMT
"Effects of Conflicts on Intimate Partner Violence: Evidence from Mexico" by Anousheh Alamir (European Centre for Advanced Research in Economics and Statistics)
Discussant: Marco Alcocer (Predoctoral Fellow, ITAM and Innovations for Poverty Action; PhD candidate, University of California, San Diego; Academy Scholar, Harvard University - fall '23)
"Addressing Contentious Variance: Networks, Urban Space, and Collective Action in a Syrian Uprising, 1979–1982" by Motasem Abuzaid (University of Oxford)
Discussant: Daniel Solomon (PhD Candidate, Georgetown University)
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March 9, 8am PST/11am EST/4pm GMT
"The Public Response to Threats of Violence Against Elected Officials" by Alexandra Filindra (The University of Illinois Chicago) & Laurel Harbridge-Yong (Northwestern University)
Discussant: Elsa Voytas (I.E. University)
"Political Assassination, Elite Cues and Trust in Institutions: Quasi-Experiment from Tunisia" by Mohamed-Dhia Hammami (Syracuse University)
Discussant: Mariana Carvalho (Brown University)
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February 9, 8am PST/11am EST/4pm GMT
"The Political Economy of the Heavy Hand: How Poverty Reduces Politicians' Incentives to Reform Security Policies" by Andrea Junqueira (Washington University in St. Louis)
Discussant: Jessie Trudeau (Brown University)
"Coercion and Capture in Democratic Politics" by Andres Uribe (The University of Chicago)
Discussant: Alex Braithwaite (The University of Arizona)
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December 8, 8am PST/11am EST/4pm GMT
"How Does the Geography of Surveillance Affect Collective Action in the Occupied Palestinian Territories?" by Sandra Penic (University of Geneva)
Discussant: Emily Ritter (Vanderbilt University)
"How Corporatist Institutions Shape Criminal Violence: Evidence from Mexico's Nucleos Agrarios" by Elena Barham (Columbia University)
Discussant: Alma Bezares Calderón (Whittier College)
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November 10, 12pm PST/3pm EST/8pm GMT
“The Economic Roots of Violence: The Unintended Consequences of Colombia's Close Peace Referendum” by Andrés Felipe Rivera-Triviño (Universidad Javeriana-Cali) & Paula Zamora-Raiño (Texas A&M University)
Discussant: Michael Weintraub (Universidade de los Andes)
“Support from Afar? The Logic of Diaspora Sponsorship to Rebel Organizations” by Sara Daub (University of Maryland & The Hertie School)
Discussant: Jessica Soedirgo (The University of Amsterdam)
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October 13, 8am PST/11am EST/3pm GMT
“Violence Against Women and Political Participation in Mexico” by Angie Torres-Beltran (Cornell)
Discussant: Jamie Shenk (Harvard University)
“Taking to Kill: The Lethality of Hostage-Taking in Civil War” by Blair Welsh (Essex)
Discussant: Jori Breslawski (Tel Aviv University)