Chris Blattman

International development, economics, politics, 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: Uganda

Post navigation

← Older posts
Newer posts →

From the Mzee to the Mad Dog: Museveni on Qaddafi

26Mar2011

Idiosyncratic usage

4Mar2011

Uganda goes to the polls in 5 days

13Feb2011

Field notes

28Jan2011

Field notes from Uganda

19Sep2010

Why I never have to look at my job market paper ever, ever again

15Sep2010

Peacebuilding from the bottom up

13Sep2010

The awful origins of Uganda’s anti-homosexuality bill

25Aug2010

I bring you Ugollywood

23Aug2010

What explains the AIDS reduction in Uganda?

15Jul2010

Is Uganda a good place to be gay?

10Mar2010

Mules in the modern military

17Feb2010

The economics of child soldiering

25Jan2010

The history of Congo and Rwanda continues to be written

30Dec2009

The mango trees blossom with fruits

28Nov2009

Uganda: ticking time bomb?

24Oct2009

Return of the King

20Oct2009

Five years of data collection, all yours, online

9Sep2009

Are local NGOs altruistic and sustainable?

1Sep2009

Just in case you really want to do some good today

13Jul2009

Post navigation

← Older posts
Newer posts →
Chris Blattman

I'm a Professor in the Harris School of Public Policy at the University of Chicago. I use field work and statistics to study poverty, political engagement, the causes and consequences of violence, and policy in developing countries. [Read more]

GiveDirectly

About

  • Bio
  • Contact me & Office hours
  • CV
  • Google scholar profile

My work

  • All research
  • PhD advising
  • Policy writing
  • Subscibe to my favorite Twitteratti

Recent research

  • All
  • Do anti-poverty programs sway voters?
  • Does policing simply push crime around the corner?
  • Impacts of factory jobs on health and wealth
  • Reducing crime and violence via behavioral therapy

Policy

  • All
  • Bill Gates wants to give the poor chickens, but what they need is cash
  • Everything we knew about sweatshops was wrong
  • Strategies for reducing crime and violence in developing countries

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: Professional

  • Advice for new Asst Profs
  • Applying to PhDs
  • Choosing an MA, MPA or MIA
  • 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
  • Just say no
  • Moving from RA to co-author
  • Negotiating your academic job offer
  • 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
  • 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 blogging blogging books cash transfers China conflict crime development DRC economic growth economics education election elections Ethiopia field notes film foreign aid foreign policy gender health India jobs Kenya Liberia links Nigeria podcast podcasts political science politics poverty program evaluation randomized trials research science statistics Uganda Uganda United Nations United States violence Zimbabwe

Categories

Archives

Recent Comments

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

Copyright © 2007–2018 Chris Blattman.