PABLO BERAMENDI Duke University Office: (919) 660-4336 Department of Political Science Fax: (919) 660-4330 140 Science Drive, Gross Hall pablo.beramendi@duke.edu Box 90204 http://people.duke.edu/ pb45 Durham, NC 27708-0097 ACADEMIC APPOINTMENTS Duke University Professor of Political Science 2018- Associate Professor of Political Science 2011 to 2018 Assistant Professor of Political Science 2007 to 2009 University of Oxford 2009 to 2011 Associate Professor in Political Science & Tutorial Fellow of University College Maxwell School of Syracuse University 2004 to 2007 Assistant Professor in Political Science & Research Fellow, Center for Policy Research Wissenschaftszentrum Berlin 2003 to 2004 Research Fellow Fellowships and Associations Research Associate, CAGE (Center for Competitive Advantage in the Global Economy), University of Warwick, 2013-present Associate Member, Nuffield College, University of Oxford, 2013-present Research Fellow, Instituto Juan March-Carlos III, Madrid, 2014-present EDUCATION D.Phil. Nuffield College, University of Oxford: Decentralization and Income Inequality (1999-2003) [Advisors: Prof. Anthony B. Atkinson; Prof Gosta Esping-Andersen] MA in the Social Sciences: CEACS, Juan March Institute, Madrid (1996-1998) BA Hons in Political Science: University of Santiago de Compostela (1991-1996)
RESEARCH Books Geography, Capacity, and Inequality (with Melissa Rogers), Elements in Political Economy, Cambridge University Press, revisions in progress Economic and Political Inequality: Competition, Spending, and Turnout (with Francesc Amat), accepted for publication and under contract, Cambridge University Press. (final version due March 2019) 2015 The Politics of Advanced Capitalism, New York, Cambridge University Press (co-edited with Silja Häusermann, Herbert Kitschelt, and Hanspeter Kriesi). 2012 The Political Geography of Inequality: Regions and Redistribution, New York, Cambridge University Press. Winner of the 2013 Best Book Award by the European Politics and Society section of the American Political Science Association. Honorable Mention for the 2014 Luebbert Best Book Award by the Comparative Politics section of the American Political Science Association. 2008 Democracy, Inequality, and Representation, New York, Russell Sage Foundation (co-edited with Christopher J. Anderson). Peer-reviewed Journal Articles 15. 2019 Democracy under High Inequality: Capacity, Spending, and Participation (with Francesc Amat), Journal of Politics, conditionally accepted 14. 2019 The Long Shadow of Economic Geography: Political Inequality and Public Goods Provision in the Original 13 US states (with Jeff Jensen), Comparative Political Studies, forthcoming 13. 2018 Disparate Geography and the Origins of Tax Capacity (with Melissa Rogers), Review of International Organizations, published online 12. 2018 Intra-Elite Competition and Long Run Fiscal Development (with Mark Dincecco and Melissa Rogers), Journal of Politics, published online 11. 2018 Barriers to Egalitarianism: Distributive Tensions in Latin American Federations, Latin American Research Review,(with Melissa Rogers and Alberto Díaz Cayeros), published online 10/23/2017 10. 2016 Who gains, who gives? Progressivity and Preferences, Comparative Political Studies, 49: 1010-1034 (with Philipp Rehm) 9. 2016 Globalization, Public Finance, and Poverty, International Studies Review 17-4:677-685 (with Erik Wibbels) 8. 2014 Inequality and Institutions: The Case of Economic Coordination, Annual Review of Political Science 17: 251-271.(with David Rueda) 7. 2013 The Behavioral Foundations of Social Politics, Comparative Political Studies 46(10): 1155-1189. (with Benjamin Barber IV and Erik Wibbels) Winner of the 2012 Fiona McGillvray Award for the best paper in Political Economy presented at the 2011 APSA meetings 6. 2012 Left Parties, Poor Voters and Electoral Participation in Advanced Industrial Societies Comparative Political Studies 45(6):714-746. (with Christopher J. Anderson) 5. 2009 Diverse Disparities: The Politics and Economics of Wage, Market, and Disposable Income Inequalities Political Research Quarterly 62(2): 257-275. (with Thomas R. Cusack) 4. 2007 Inequality and the Territorial Fragmentation of Solidarity International Organization 61, Fall: 783-820.
3. 2007 Social Democracy Constrained: Indirect Taxation in Industrialized Democracies British Journal of Political Science 67: 619-641.(with David Rueda) 2. 2006 Taxing Work European Journal of Political Research 45: 43-73. (with Thomas R. Cusack) 1. 1997 Regional Decentralization and Health Policy in Spain: Social Capital does not tell the whole story West European Politics 21 (4):180-199 (with A. Rico and M. Fraile) Peer-reviewed Chapters 9. 2019 Stability in Political Unions: Inequality, Borders, and Welfare in M. Keating et al. eds. Borders, Sovereignty, and Self-determination in Europe, Routledge/UACES Contemporary European Studies, pp. 58-79 8. 2015 Constrained Partisanship and Economic Outcomes in The Politics of Advanced Capitalism, New York, Cambridge University Press. 7. 2015 The Politics of Advanced Capitalism: An Introduction in The Politics of Advanced Capitalism, New York, Cambridge University Press. (with Silja Häusermann, Herbert Kitschelt, and Hanspeter Kriesi) 6. 2015 Advanced Capitalism in Crisis in The Politics of Advanced Capitalism, New York, Cambridge University Press. (with Silja Häusermann, Herbert Kitschelt, and Hanspeter Kriesi) 5. 2008 Income Inequality and Democratic Representation in Pablo Beramendi and Christopher J. Anderson (eds) Democracy, Inequality and Representation New York, Russell Sage Foundation. (with Christopher J. Anderson) 4. 2008 Economic Institutions, Partisanship, and Inequality in Pablo Beramendi and Christopher J. Anderson (eds) Democracy, Inequality and Representation New York, Russell Sage Foundation. (with Thomas R. Cusack) 3. 2008 Income, Inequality, and Electoral Participation in Pablo Beramendi and Christopher J. Anderson (eds) Democracy, Inequality and Representation New York, Russell Sage Foundation. (with Christopher J. Anderson) 2. 2008 Inequality and Democratic Representation: the road travelled and the path ahead in Pablo Beramendi and Christopher J. Anderson (eds) Democracy, Inequality and Representation New York, Russell Sage Foundation. (with Christopher J. Anderson) 1. 2004 Spain: Unfulfilled Federalism in Nancy Bermeo and Ugo Amoretti (eds.) Federalism and Territorial Cleavages, John Hopkins University Press. (with Ramón Maiz) Work at different stages of the review process 1. The Political Geography of the Euro Crisis (with Daniel Stegmueller), World Politics, R&R 2. Fiscal Decentralization and the Distributive Incidence of the Great Recession (with Melissa Rogers) Regional Studies, R&R Discussion Pieces and Editor-reviewed Publications 1. 2015 Federalism in J. Gandhi and R. Ruiz-Rufino (eds) Routledge Handbook of Comparative Political Institutions, London, Routledge. (with Sandra León) 2. 2014 State Capacity and Inequality PE Newsletter, American Political Science Association, Fall 2014 3. 2007 Federalism in Carles Boix and Susan Stokes (eds.) Oxford Handbook of Comparative Politics, Oxford, Oxford University Press: 752-782 4. 2001 The Politics of Income Inequality: the Role of Second Order Effects LIS Working Paper series (#284)
In Progress 1 1. On Industrialization, State Capacity, and Redistribution: The Electoral Origins of the Fiscal State (with Didac Queralt)** Economic Geography, Industrialization, and Redistribution: (with Melissa Rogers and Soomin Oh)** Malapportionment as Compensation Commodity Shocks, State Capacity, and the Politics of Redistribution (with Melissa Rogers and Victoria Paniagua)** The Politics of Death: Colonial Legacies and Water Provision around the World (with Soomin Oh and Melissa Rogers) Limits to Equality(with Melissa Rogers), book manuscript 2. Taxation, Fiscal Incidence, and Income Mobility: Progressive Taxation and Redistribution (with Mathew Dimmick and Daniel Stegmueller)** The Causes and Consequences of Life-time Progressivity (with Daniel Stegmueller) The Distributive Basis of Tax Compliance (with Raymond Duch and Asli Cansunar)* The Politics of Income Mobility (with Ben Ansell)* Causes and Distributional Implications of Illicit Financial Flows (with Erik Wibbels, and Marco Morucci)* Progressivity, Information and Preferences (with Asli Cansunar) 3. On Inequality, Democracy, and Representation: GRANTS Foundational Bargains: Distributive Conflict and Representation in Federations (with Erik Wibbels)** Capacity Building as an Electoral Strategy: Evidence from Brazil (with Marta Arreche and Victor Araujo)* Generational Misfortunes and the Two Faces of Populism (with David Rueda and Ignacio Sánchez Cuenca)* Fiscal Decentralization and Democracy: Electoral Survival in Federations (with Sandra León and Amuitz Garmendia)** Crises, Parties, and Conflict in Europe (with Simon Weschle)* Endogenous Borders (with Melissa Rogers, Kristoffer Wikstrom and Dong Wook Lee) How Inequality Shapes Political Participation: The Role of Spatial Patterns of Political Competition (w. Miriam Hortas, Vicente Rios, Francesc Amat) National Research Foundation of Korea Political Economy of Inequality and Democracy (PI: Hyeok Yong Kwon) (2017-2021)[$36000] CO-PI: Geospatial Impact Evaluation of Local Government and Infrastructure Project and Infrastructure Needs Program in the West Bank (Aid Data-USAID, 2016-2017) (with Erik Wibbels and Soomin Oh) [$139395]. The full report is published by USAID and AIDDATA under the title Evaluation of the Local Government and Infrastructure Program. CO-PI: World Bank Initiative to Develop a Tool Assessment for Illicit Financial Flows (with Erik Wibbels and Marco Morucci)[$167810] PI: Information, Compliance, and Governance Improvement: A Field Intervention in Brazil funded by Duke s Office of Global Affairs (with Filipe Campante, George Avelino) [$25000] 1 * Denotes the existence of a completed paper/draft. ** denotes pieces that are close to submission/re-submission
TEACHING AND SUPERVISION Areas of Interest: Comparative Development, Comparative Political Institutions, Inequality, Political Economy, Political and Economic Geography, Politico-Economic History, Methods Teaching Offerings Core Seminar in Political Economy (G) The Political Economy of Inequality (G) Political Geography (G) Quantitative Political Analysis (LM, MLE) (G) The Wealth and Poverty of Nations (U) Inequality and Politics (U) Political Development of Western Europe (U) Introduction to Political Inquiry: Causal Inference and RD (U) PPE (University of Oxford): Introduction to Politics, Comparative Government, Political Sociology (U) Comparative Political Economy (University of Oxford) (G) Graduate Student Mentoring Duke: Chair/ Co Chair: Benjamin Barber IV (2014), Asli Cansunar (2018), Victoria Paniagua (2018), Noa On (2018), Jeremy Spater, Soomin Oh, Brett Gall Committee Member: Daniel Kselman (2009), Kent Freeze (2012), Kiril Kolev (2011), Christina Cordueanu-Huci (2011), Florian Hollenbach (2015), Simon Weschle (2015), Thomas Gift (2016), Anna Schultz (2017), Guadalupe Rojo (2017), Fenming Lu (2018), Haohan Chen Oxford: Francesc Amat (Co-chair, D.Phil 2013), Irene Menéndez (Co-chair, D.Phil 2014), Daniel de Kadt (M.Phil 2011), Guillermo Toral (M. Phil 2011), Christopher Wratil (M.Phil 2011). Maxwell School of Syracuse University: Srikrishna Ayyangar (2007) SERVICE Duke University only Security, Peace, Conflict Search Committee (Fall 2017) Co-director of Master in Analytical Political Economy (July 2016-) Co-convener of the Social Mobility Working Group, Duke Consortium for Equality (2014-) Political Economy Search Committee (Fall 2015) Director of Graduate Studies (July 2013- July 2016) PE Field Chair (2011-2012; 2015-2016; 2016-2017) Duke University Library Faculty Council (2012-2015) Convener/Co-convener of PE Seminar (2011-present) Political Theory Search Committee (Fall 2011) Admissions Committee (2009, 2012, 2014, 2015, 2016) Political Economy Preliminary Examinations Committee (2011-present) Discipline APSA Comparative Politics Section- Executive Committee (2018-)
Editorial Board Member: Comparative Political Studies (2013-present), Political Science Research and Methods (2012-present) Best Book Award Committee, European Politics and Society Section, American Political Science Association (2014) Gregory Luebbert Best Book Award, Comparative Politics Section, American Political Science Association (2015) William Riker Best Book Award, Political Economy Section, American Political Science Association (2017) Panel Discussant: regularly at APSA, MPSA, CES, EPSA, and multiple theme specific and book manuscript workshops (list available upon request) Co-organizer of conferences and workshops: Geography of Peace and Conflict (Juan March, Spring 2009), The Politics of Advanced Capitalism (Duke Fall 2012), Understanding Income Mobility: An Interdisciplinary Perspective (Duke, Spring 2017) Organizer of the I Workshop on Interdisciplinary Approaches to Inequality and Mobility, Duke University March 31st-April 1st 2017, co-sponsored by the Samuel Dubois Center on Social Equity and the Department of Political Science. Manuscript Reviewer for: American Political Science Review, American Journal of Political Science, British Journal of Political Science, Brazilian Political Science Review, British Journal of Industrial Relations, Cambridge University Press, Comparative Political Studies, Comparative Politics, Electoral Studies, Empirica (Journal of European Economics), European Journal of Political Research, Hacienda Publica Española, International Organization, Journal of Comparative Economics, Journal of Economic Inequality, Journal of European Public Policy, The Journal of Politics, Nations and Nationalism, Oxford University Press, Political Science Research and Methods, Publius, Quarterly Journal of Political Science, Revista Española de Ciencia Política, Revista de Estudios Politicos, Socio-Economic Review, West European Politics, and World Politics. Grant Reviewer for: NSF, European Commission, ANECA, British Academy, Leverhulme Trust, ESRC INVITED SEMINARS and WORKSHOPS (since 2012) 2019: NYU-Department of Politics (schd.), IAS-Toulouse (schd.), CEBRAP-USP Sao Paulo (schd.), ITAM- Mexico (schd.) 2018: UC-Riverside, Nuffield College-University of Oxford, Paris School of Economics, Science-Po, University of Seoul, Juan March-Carlos III, CIPPEC-Buenos Aires, Duke Law School 2017: Universidad San Andrés (Buenos Aires), Texas A&M, SAIS John Hopkins, University of Chicago, Rutgers University, IBEI-UPF (Barcelona),Institut d Economia de Barcelona, NYU-Abu-Dhabi, Harvard University, McGill University, Juan March-Carlos III 2016: UNC Chapel Hill, Duke, SUNY-Buffalo(Law), University of Sao Paulo, University of Vienna 2015: Indiana University, Washington University St. Louis, University of Zurich/ETH, University of Sao Paulo, University of Maryland, University of Wisconsin (Madison), MIT, Princeton University, Beijing University, Bocconi University 2014: UBC (Vancouver), Yale University, Zurich, Washington University St. Louis,Lund University, Hertie School (Berlin), Humboldt University (Berlin), UNC Chapel Hill, University of Washington, Harvard University 2013: UNC Chapel Hill, WZB (Berlin), Gothenburg, University of Minnesota, Hebrew University (Jerusalem), EUI (Florence), Brown University 2012: Paris (Sorbonne), EUI (Florence), University of Konstanz, Columbia University, Yale University
POLICY AND OUTREACH 1. Co-convener and host of an interdisciplinary working group at Duke on Social Mobility and its determinants. This group is part of the Duke Consortium for Social Equity, it meets at the Sanford School of Public Policy, and it has as one of its key goals to issue informed recommendations on how to confront barriers to social mobility, particularly in the context of the United States. 2. October 2013 University of Toronto. Speaker at the Fall Institute at the School of Government and Public Policy: Key issues on the Politics and Policy of Inequality 3. Co-convener of a special seminar on the crisis and the necessary reforms to be adopted, organized by the ASPEN INSTITUTE in Spain and the Universidad Carlos III, October 2013. 50+ participants, including many leading figures in politics, the private sector, international organizations, and academia. 4. 2010- : Occasional participant in policy debates in Spain, addressing issues such as territorial conflicts, economic policy, and inequality. See Opinion in http://sites.duke.edu/beramendi/) MISCELLANIA: 2009 M.A. University of Oxford, by Resolution 2005-2006 Appleby Mosher Faculty Research Grants, Syracuse University (various years) 2003 Economic and Social Research Council (UK): Postdoctoral Fellowship at STICERD/London School of Economics and Political Science for 2003-2004 (declined) 2002 Luigi Einaudi Fellowship, Institute for European Studies, Cornell University, April 2001 IRISS-I Fellowship at CEPS / Luxembourg Income Study, February 2000-2002 Nuffield Funded Studentship, Nuffield College, Oxford University 1999 Visiting Scholar at Queen s University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada, January-July 1996-2001 Graduate Fellowship at the Center for the Advanced Study in the Social Sciences, Juan March Institute, Madrid REFERENCES Carles Boix Robert Garrett Professor of Politics, Princeton University Princeton, NJ +(609) 258 2139 cboix@princeton.edu Margaret Levi Director CASBS, Stanford University Palo Alto, CA +(650) 736 0100 mlevi@stanford.edu Herbert Kitschelt George V. Allen Professor of Political Science, Duke University Durham, NC +(919)6604343 h3738@duke.edu 7