Past Events

  • 2023 Dec 01

    GIS for Humanities and Social Sciences

    9:30am to 4:30pm

    Location: 

    CGIS South, room S020 (Belfer Case Study Room) and Online via Zoom

    Lead Instructor

    Jeff Blossom

    Description

    This full-day workshop offers hands on instruction on learning and applying several GIS and mapping techniques commonly used by those practicing in the Humanities and Social Sciences. The workshop will include discussion and interactive exercises aimed to contextualize the usage of geography and maps for each participant's individual research or teaching interests.

     

    Specifically,...

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  • 2023 Nov 30

    Chris Blattman (Alesina Seminar)

    4:30pm to 5:45pm

    Location: 

    Littauer 301 (Hansen-Mason Lounge)

    Today's Speaker

    Chris Blattman (University of Chicago), "Gang Rule: Understanding and Countering Criminal Governance" (link to paper)

    Abstract

    Criminal groups govern millions worldwide. Even in strong states, gangs resolve disputes and provide security. Why do these duopolies of coercion emerge? Often, gangs fill vacuums of official power, suggesting that increasing state presence should crowd out criminal governance. We show, however, that state and gang rule are sometimes complements. In particular, gangs could minimize seizures and arrests by keeping neighborhoods orderly and loyal. If true, increasing state presence could increase incentives for gang rule. In Medellín, Colombia, criminal leaders told us they rule to protect drug rents from police. We test gang responses to state presence using a geographic discontinuity. Internal border changes in 1987 assigned blocks to be closer or further from state security for three decades. Gangs exogenously closer to state presence developed more governance over time. They primarily did so in neighborhoods with the greatest potential drug rents. This suggests new strategies for countering criminal governance.... Read more about Chris Blattman (Alesina Seminar)

  • 2023 Nov 29

    Yi Zhang (Workshop in Applied Statistics)

    12:00pm to 1:30pm

    Location: 

    CGIS Knafel, room K354 or Online via Zoom

    This Week's Speaker

    Yi Zhang (Department of Statistics), "Optimal Individualized Treatment Rules under Clustered Network Interference"

    Abstract

    TBA

    The Applied Statistics Workshop (Gov 3009) meets all academic year, Wednesdays, 12pm-1:30pm, in CGIS K354. This workshop is a forum for advanced graduate students, faculty, and visiting scholars to present and discuss methodological or empirical work in progress in an interdisciplinary setting. The workshop features a tour of Harvard's statistical innovations and applications with weekly...

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  • 2023 Nov 29

    Dataverse Open Office Hours

    Repeats every week every Wednesday until Wed Aug 28 2024 except Wed Dec 27 2023, Wed Mar 13 2024, Wed Jun 19 2024.
    11:00am to 1:00pm

    Location: 

    Virtual via Zoom

    Weekly office hours are open to Harvard researchers and staff to provide support for Dataverse 6.0. Demo of 6.0 will begin promptly at 11am.

    Open Hours: Wednesdays, 11AM - 1PM

    RSVP required to: support@dataverse.org

    For any questions on how to share your data with Dataverse, contact: support@dataverse.org

     

  • 2023 Nov 28

    Marcel Roman (APRW)

    12:00pm to 2:00pm

    Location: 

    CGIS Knafel, room K354 or Online via Zoom

    Speaker

     Marcel Roman, "The Immigration-to-Reproduction Shift: Latino Population Growth and White Support for Legal Abortion"

    Abstract

    The literature on White Americans’ reaction to demographic change largely focuses on immigration policy at the expense of reproductive politics. We extend past research on White backlash against ethnic diversification to the domain of reproductive policy—testing the idea that prejudiced Whites will support abortion in response to growing minority populations as a means of slowing demographic change via non-White...

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  • 2023 Nov 22

    Dataverse Open Office Hours

    11:00am to 1:00pm

    Location: 

    Virtual via Zoom

    Weekly office hours are open to Harvard researchers and staff to provide support for Dataverse 6.0. Demo of 6.0 will begin promptly at 11am.

    Open Hours: Wednesdays, 11AM - 1PM

    RSVP required to: support@dataverse.org

    For any questions on how to share your data with Dataverse, contact: support@dataverse.org

     

  • 2023 Nov 21

    Jeremiah Cha (APRW)

    12:00pm to 2:00pm

    Location: 

    CGIS Knafel, room K354 or Online via Zoom

    Speaker

    Jeremiah Cha, "Political Deliberation in Local Politics"

    Abstract

    Since the birth of the American Republic, scholars have highlighted the pivotal role of local politics in shaping American civic life. Despite this fundamental role in the U.S. political system, the study of local policymaking remains a challenge due to its decentralized nature and the sheer number of governing bodies involved. This project introduces a novel dataset of city council minutes across 78 cities from 2016 to 2022. In total, the dataset contains 9,307 documents, which...

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  • 2023 Nov 16

    Awa Ambra Seck (Alesina Seminar)

    4:30pm to 5:45pm

    Location: 

    Littauer 301 (Hansen-Mason Lounge)

    Today's Speaker

    Awa Ambra Seck (HBS), “En Route: The French Colonial Army, Emigration, and Development in Morocco”

    Abstract

    Between 1830 and 1962, six million Africans living under colonial rule served in the French army.  Most were deployed internationally to maintain order or fight French wars.  After independence, all were repatriated and granted the right to move to France. We estimate the effect of military deployment on the soldiers' long-term outcomes,  as well as on their communities of origin,  using historical data on Moroccan soldiers, and exploiting the arbitrary assignment of troops to international locations. We show that, within a municipality,  cohorts with a higher share of soldiers deployed to France were more likely to relocate there after independence. In contrast, deployment to other locations did not affect emigration.  Consistent with the establishment of emigration networks, we find that the effects persist for decades after independence. Furthermore, communities with a higher share of soldiers deployed to France have experienced better economic outcomes and a shift from the agricultural to the service sector today. These results highlight the role that colonial rule played in shaping emigration networks from the colonies and in contributing to persistent changes in their patterns of economic development.... Read more about Awa Ambra Seck (Alesina Seminar)

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