Papers & Research Designs
Migration & Integration
Please read the below ahead of time and prepare to share your feedback during the session:
Friday December 5, 2025
- Session 1a: “Disrupted Aid, Displaced Lives: Unraveling the Impact of Refugee Aid Cuts,” Guy Grossman, University of Pennsylvania.
- Session 2a: “Social segregation in middle schools in France: Causes and Consequences,” Mathilde Emeriau, Sciences Po.
- Session 3a: “Small Business Groups for Refugees and Ugandans,” Thomas Ginn, Center for Global Development.
Saturday, December 6, 2025
- Session 4a: “Who Counts as a Swede? Boundaries of State and Nation Among Swedes and Forced Migrants Pre-Analysis Plan,” Kristen Kao, University of Gothenburg.
- Session 5a: “Selective Sympathy? Media Coverage, Public Opinion, and Mobilization in the Gaza War,” Ala Alrababah, Bocconi University.
- Session 6a: “The effect of cash transfers and information on asylum seekers’ access to state programs and services, and socioeconomic integration,” Antonella Bandiera, ITAM & Mateo Vasquez-Cortes, University of California, San Diego.
Open
Please read the below ahead of time and prepare to share your feedback during the session:
Friday December 5, 2025
- Session 1b: “Strengthening accountability for climate change: Experimental evidence on grassroots demand for government action in Mexico,” Alberto Simpser, ITAM.
- Session 2b: “How do anti-misinformation laws affect electoral campaigns? A field experiment with Brazil’s mayors,” Simon Chauchard, University Carlos III of Madrid.
- Session 3b: “Empowerment in the Shadow of Norms: Testing the Limits of Teenage Girl Programs,” Anna Wilke, New York University.
Saturday, December 6, 2025
- Session 4b: “New Evidence on the Effects of Randomly Assigned Reservations for Women Leaders in Indian Local Government,” Donald Green, Columbia University.
- Session 5b: “Collaboration across Group Lines: Evidence From Two Field Experiments in Jerusalem,” Roni Porat, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
- Session 6b: “Generating and then meeting demand: An intervention using journalists to increase demand and supply of health services in Tanzania,” John Marshall, Columbia University.