http://cddrl.stanford.edu/events/the_geography_of_governance_evidence_from_slums_satellites_and_foreign_aid/

STANFORD CDDRL RESEARCH SEMINAR

Geography of Governance: Evidence from Slums, Satellites and Foreign Aid  

DATE AND TIME

April 24, 2014
12:00 PM - 1:30 PM

AVAILABILITY

Open to Stanford faculty, students, staff, and visiting scholars
 RSVP required by 5PM April 23

SPEAKER

Erik Wibbles - Associate Professor of Political Science at Duke University

ABSTRACT

It is almost too obvious to state, but access to public services and the nature 
of governance varies hugely within countries, regions and cities. Nevertheless, 
most work on the “quality of government”, rule of law, corruption, etc. focuses 
on between-country comparisons. After providing some evidence that 
within-country variation belies any notion of a national “quality of 
government”, I lay out a framework for explaining why outcomes vary so much 
across localities within countries. I explore the usefulness of the framework 
by providing evidence from three ongoing projects. The first relies on surveys 
designed to examine the role of slum-level social and political networks in 
conditioning access to basic public services in Udaipur, India. The second 
project relies on four post-civil war settings to understand why authorities 
target some localities with electrification projects but not others.  The third 
project involves a field experiment embedded in an aid program that compares 
alternative means of improving accountability in Ghana’s district governments. 
I will conclude with some reflections on the costs and benefits of working with 
donors on governance programming.

BIO

Erik Wibbels is an Associate Professor of Political Science at Duke University. 
His research focuses on development, decentralized governance and other areas 
of political economy. He has also spent considerable time working with USAID's 
Center of Excellence on Democracy, Human Rights and Governance in an effort to 
improve the quality of aid programs aimed at decentralized governance and 
service provision.

LOCATION

Encina Ground Floor Conference Room
Encina Hall
616 Serra St., E008 (Ground floor)
Stanford University
Stanford, CA 94305

FSI CONTACT

Audrey McGowan <[email protected]>
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