Peer-reviewed
Can Americans Depolarize? Assessing the Effects of Reciprocal Group Reflection on Partisan Polarization (with Robert A. Blair, Donghyun Danny Choi, Jessica Gottlieb, Laura Gamboa-Gutierrez, Amanda Lea Robinson, Steven C. Rosenzweig, Megan M. Turnbull, & Emily A. West), forthcoming Political Behavior.
Overcoming America’s deep partisan polarization poses a unique challenge: Americans must be able to disagree on policy while nonetheless agreeing on more fundamental democratic principles. We study one model of depolarization—reciprocal group reflection—inspired by marital counseling and implemented by a non-governmental organization, “Braver Angels.” We randomly assigned undergraduate students at four universities either to participate in a Braver Angels workshop or simply to complete three rounds of surveys. The workshops significantly reduced polarization according to explicit and implicit measures. They also increased participants’ willingness to donate to programs aimed at depolarizing political conversations. These effects are consistent across partisan groups, though some dissipate over time. Using qualitative data collected during the workshops, we generate a new theory of depolarization that combines both informational and emotional components such that citizens, moved to empathize with an outgroup, become more likely to internalize new information about outgroup members.
Moral reasoning and support for punitive violence after crime (with Omar García-Ponce, Jorge Olmos Camarillo, Lauren Young, and Thomas Zeitzoff). 2024. Journal of Peace Research, OnlineFirst.
In contexts marked by high violence and widespread impunity, how do citizens articulate and justify their preferences about crime and punishment? What kind of moral logic and reasoning do they employ when discussing punishments? Does support for punitive punishment derive from moralistic and deontological concerns that perpetrators need to be punished because it is right and proper? Or do people support punitive punishments because they feel they are effective? To address this question, we document and analyze stated preferences for punishment in response to crime from 62 in-depth qualitative interviews with individuals affected by violence in the Mexican state of Michoacán. We conduct a quantitative analysis of how different forms of moral justifications are related to preferred punishments for specific crime events, and a qualitative content analysis to investigate possible mechanisms. We find that two types of moral reasoning are more likely to be used to justify punitive violence: (1) consequentialist reasoning which involves weighing the costs and benefits of an action; (2) and reasoning that dehumanizes accused criminals. Deontological justifications about the right or just action, while extremely common, are used fairly equally across arguments for and against punitive violence. Our study sheds light on the diverse moral frames employed to justify the endorsement of punitive violence.
An Events-Based Approach to Understanding Democratic Erosion (with Robert A. Blair, Jessica Gottlieb, & Laura Paler). 2024. PS: Political Science & Politics, FirstView: 1-8.
From Principles to Practice: Methods to Increase the Transparency of Research Ethics in Violent Contexts (with Lauren Young). 2022. Political Science Research and Methods, 10(4): 840-847.
Teaching Trump: Why Comparative Politics Makes Students More Optimistic About US Democracy (with Robert A. Blair and Shelby Grossman). 2019. PS: Political Science & Politics 52(2): 347-52.
Chapters
The Criminal Justice System in Mexico (with Matthew Ingram). 2022. Chapter for the Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Politics.
This chapter examines the criminal justice system in Mexico with a focus on the major constitutional reform to criminal procedure in 2008. Part 1 briefly situates the reform by providing background on Mexico’s political, legal, and security context. Part 2 discusses the reform’s de jure impact on the justice system and its de facto implementation. The reform touched every aspect of the criminal justice system, from police to prisons, and many elements of the reform promised to strengthen and democratize criminal justice with the aim of aligning institutional design and practices with principles of democratic governance and the rule of law. However, the reform’s implementation has been uneven and incomplete. Part 3 reviews the factors that helped reform implementation, and those that continue to hinder it. A group of legal practitioners, scholars and activists pushed for the reform, although, unsurprisingly, it has been challenging to advocate for due process and rights of the accused among both elites and the public amidst criminal wars. The forward and backward movement of criminal procedure reform is, we argue, an important part of the liberalizing and “illiberalizing” dynamics of democracy in Mexico. The chapter concludes with the reform’s implications for the quality of democracy in Mexico within the context of ongoing criminal wars, and suggests avenues for future research.
A Transformed Latin America in a Rapidly Changing World (with Abraham F. Lowenthal). 2015. In Jorge I. Domínguez and Ana Covarrubias (eds.). Routledge Handbook of Latin America in the World. Routledge: New York.
Working Papers
The limits of deliberation: A field experiment on criminal justice preferences in Mexico (with Omar García-Ponce, Lauren Young, and Thomas Zeitzoff).
Work in progress
The Causes and Effects of Lynchings in Mexico (with Sandra Ley & Lauren Young).
Ethically Measuring Violence (with Graeme Blair, Sandra Ley, Rebecca Littman, Andrés Moya, Elayne Stecher, & Lauren Young).
Political Science Research, Generalizability, and Policy Engagement (with Julie Weaver).
Empirical Evidence to Improve Informed Consent in the Social Sciences (with Sebastian Karcher, Dessislava Kirilova, and Derek Robey).
Related publications
Why Human Rights are Losing their Good Reputation. Political Violence @ a Glance, July 28, 2021.
Democratic Erosion in Comparative Perspective: Lessons from a Multi-University Consortium (with Robert A. Blair, Jessica Gottlieb, and Shelby Grossman). 2019. In Finkel, Eugene, Adria Lawrence and Andrew Mertha (eds.). The US in Comparative Perspective. Newsletter of the Organized Section in Comparative Politics of the American Political Science Association. 29(1): 77-84.
Look Beyond Our Borders (with Robert A. Blair and Shelby Grossman). Inside Higher Ed, March 6, 2019.