Umberto Mignozzetti is an Assistant Teaching Professor at the Department of Political Science and the Computational Social Sciences Program at University of California, San Diego. He uses comparative politics and political economy tools, with a regional focus in Latin America, to investigate how to improve public goods provision in developing democracies. His research combines formal modeling, experiments, elite and popular surveys, and computational social sciences methods. His papers have contributed to understanding the nexus between legislature size and welfare, the failures in bottom-up accountability, the effects of elite capturing, and the elite preferences toward climate change mitigation agreements. His research has been published or is forthcoming in the American Journal of Political Science, British Journal of Political Science, Journal of Experimental Political Science, Research and Politics, and Global Environmental Politics.
Umberto Mignozzetti is an Assistant Teaching Professor at the Department of Political Science and the Computational Social Sciences Program at University of California, San Diego. He uses comparative politics and political economy tools, with a regional focus in Latin America, to investigate how to improve public goods provision in developing democracies. His research combines formal modeling, experiments, elite and popular surveys, and computational social sciences methods. His papers have contributed to understanding the nexus between legislature size and welfare, the failures in bottom-up accountability, the effects of elite capturing, and the elite preferences toward climate change mitigation agreements. His research…