Jonathan Rodden: A Model of Political Demonization

Date: 

Monday, December 9, 2019, 12:00pm to 1:30pm

Location: 

Bell Hall—Belfer 500

Jonathan Rodden, Professor of Political Science, Stanford University.


Jonathan RoddenAbout the speaker

Jonathan Rodden is a professor of political science at Stanford University and a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution.  His research and teaching interests are at the intersection of political science, public economics, and geography.

For over 20 years he has been working on issues related to federalism and various forms of fiscal and political decentralization around the world.  In addition to academic research, he has been engaged in policy debates in North America, Europe, Latin America, and Africa in collaboration with the IMF, World Bank, European Central Bank, and OECD.  He recently collaborated with USAID on an edited volume on fiscal decentralization.

Why Cities Lose, by Jonathan RoddenMuch of his recent research focuses on political and economic geography.  He published a book on the topic in 2019, Why Cities Lose: The Deep Roots of the Rural-Urban Political Divide, and has written a series of papers on the ways in which electoral districts, when superimposed on patterns of residential geography, can shape representation and public policy.  

Rodden has also been involved in policy debates about redistricting. He has written amicus briefs for the Supreme Court of the United States and testified in a number of trials in federal and state court related to redistricting and voting rights.

He is the founder and director of the Stanford Spatial Social Science Lab—a center for research and teaching focusing on geospatial analysis in the social sciences. 


Learn more about Jonathan Rodden's work
jonathanrodden.com

 

 

See also: Fall 2019