Chris Blattman

International development, politics, economics, and policy

Follow me on:
  • twitter
  • facebook
  • google
  • email
  • rss

Main menu

Skip to primary content
Skip to secondary content
  • Blog
  • Research
  • Teaching
  • About

Tag Archives: development

Post navigation

← Older posts
Newer posts →

The main problem with living on $2 a day…

4Sep2009

Are conditions in Africa medieval?

1Sep2009

Are local NGOs altruistic and sustainable?

1Sep2009

Collier and the libertarians, a conversation

31Aug2009

Probably the best economics blog in southern Sudan

26Aug2009

New York imports an anti-poverty program from Mexico

25Aug2009

Malaria and collective action

22Aug2009

Microfinance in the jungle

20Aug2009

A Marshall Plan for Africa: questions unanswered

17Aug2009

Microfinance: Damned with faint praise?

13Aug2009

Update on China vs India

12Aug2009

China, India and Africa: the big picture

11Aug2009

Obama and Africa (the podcast)

20Jul2009

On development experiments

16Jul2009

You say potato, I say…

14Jul2009

Democracy in dangerous places

8Jul2009

What aid workers can learn from missionaries

6Jul2009

Is poverty a human rights violation?

5Jun2009

Obama’s pro-poor policy for Africa?

3Jun2009

Business class debate, update

16May2009

Post navigation

← Older posts
Newer posts →
Chris Blattman

I’m an Assistant Professor of Political Science & International and Public Affairs at Columbia University. I use field work and statistics to study poverty, political participation, the causes and consequences of violence, and policy in developing countries. [Read more]

About

  • Bio
  • Contact me
  • CV
  • Office hours

My work

  • All research
  • Ongoing projects
  • Online data
  • Policy writing

Recent research

  • 2010: Civil war
  • 2010: War, gender and reintegration: Evidence from Uganda
  • 2011. Economic Shocks and Conflict
  • 2011: The logic of child soldiering and coercion
  • 2012: Children and War (Review)
  • 2013: Promoting order and property rights under weak rule of law
  • All

Policy

  • 2011: Cash transfers, employment, and social stability (Mid-term results)
  • 2011: Conflict trends in Liberia
  • 2011: Ex-combatant reintegration in Liberia
  • 2011: Impact Evaluation 3.0?
  • 2011: Post conflict civic education and peacebuilding in Liberia
  • 2012: Forecasting local-level conflict in Liberia
  • All

Advice: Development

  • Books development workers and academics should read
  • Development tourism
  • Getting a job in development
  • How to take advantage of an MA program
  • Research in war zones I
  • Research in war zones II
  • Should you become a field RA on an RCT?
  • So you want to be an impact evaluator?
  • What to bring for field work I
  • What to bring for field work II
  • What to bring to the sky
  • Why you should work in aid
  • Working in a developing country

Advice: Academic

  • Applying to PhDs
  • Courses: 10 things I tell undergrads
  • Courses: How much economics should you study?
  • How to ask for a recommendation letter
  • How to discuss a paper
  • How to email your professors and employers
  • How to get a PhD and save the world
  • MA or PhD?
  • Moving from RA to co-author
  • On quantitative field research
  • PhD students: Choosing a topic
  • PhD students: Don't lose hope
  • PhD students: Econ PhDs & the politics market
  • PhD students: Job market advice
  • PhD students: Job market advice II
  • PhDs: Picking a dissertation (and why it should not be a field experiment)
  • Writing PhD grant applications
  • Writing: How to write an essay
  • Writing: How to write like a Mad Man

Tags

Advice: Development Africa Barack Obama blogging blogging books Child soldiers China conflict crime democracy development DRC drivel economic growth economics education election Ethiopia field notes film foreign aid foreign policy history humanitarian aid humor India journalism Kenya Liberia links Nigeria political science politics poverty program evaluation research science Sudan Uganda Uganda United Nations United States violence Zimbabwe

Categories

Archives

Recent Comments

  • Steve on Standing desk updates: Evidently, victor Hugo wrote standing up (http://grammar.about.com/od/a dvicefromthepros/a/The-Pecu...
  • Karen on Getting a job in international development: Hey,so this may be random but i’m having troubles. I want to eventually go...
  • Jean-Christophe on In which a cat has more publications to his name than some academics: I remember a similar story from a friend at...
  • Kimberly Crossland on The standing desk: I am a convert: Great article! I too suffered from lower back pain that came as a result of...
  • andrew on Big development lessons from small questions: Hey Prof. Blattman, love the blog. You seem to have Scott’s “Seeing...
  • Samuel Clark on Does Bill Gates see too much like a state, and not like an entrepreneur?: Everyone complains about the accuracy of...
  • GW on Does Bill Gates see too much like a state, and not like an entrepreneur?: Gates’ views do seem very top-down, but I would say...
  • Jacob A. Geller on What happens if you give up the Internet for a year?: Your line about back patio culture vs. front porch culture is...
  • Jacob A. Geller on Does Bill Gates see too much like a state, and not like an entrepreneur?: I am reminded of the term “GDP...
  • Morten Jerven on Does Bill Gates see too much like a state, and not like an entrepreneur?: I think I kind of disagree and agree with both...

My Twitter feed

  • Bill Gates: ‘Death is something we really understand extremely well’ flip.it/6O6K6 20 hours ago
  • The New Science Behind Philanthropy | WSJ.Money Summer 2013 - WSJ.com flip.it/hNn7H 21 hours ago
  • Advice for young researchers flip.it/BePbX 3 days ago
  • Does big data have a future in economic analysis? chrisblattman.com/?p=9729 1 week ago
  • Tornado sucking up a rainbow i.imgur.com/EdYG6Nl.jpg 1 week ago
Follow me on:
  • twitter
  • facebook
  • google
  • email
  • rss

Copyright © 2007–2012 Chris Blattman. Site by Atlantic Signal Company.