8 episodes

Governance Loop is a podcast about cutting-edge governance innovations and social science research. Specifically, it focuses on collaborative, policy-relevant studies conducted by teams of academic researchers and practitioners. This podcast is produced by Evidence in Governance and Politics (EGAP), a global research and learning network. EGAP promotes knowledge accumulation that advances an understanding of good governance and citizen accountability. Learn more at egap.org.

Governance Loop EGAP

    • Government

Governance Loop is a podcast about cutting-edge governance innovations and social science research. Specifically, it focuses on collaborative, policy-relevant studies conducted by teams of academic researchers and practitioners. This podcast is produced by Evidence in Governance and Politics (EGAP), a global research and learning network. EGAP promotes knowledge accumulation that advances an understanding of good governance and citizen accountability. Learn more at egap.org.

    Ep.008 - Climate change adaptation interventions in Costa Rica and the United States

    Ep.008 - Climate change adaptation interventions in Costa Rica and the United States

    Today’s episode is part of our Seminar Series, in which we facilitate discussions on work conducted by teams of academic researchers and practitioners that relates to one of four thematic topics: 1) Crime Reduction & Police Accountability, 2) Climate Change Governance, 3) Displacement, Migration, & Integration, and 4) Democracy, Conflict, & Polarization.

    This episode focuses on Climate Change Governance, presenting a conversation between Paul Ferraro (Johns Hopkins) and EGAP member Tara Slough (NYU). Prof. Ferraro's research incorporates insights in the behavioral sciences into the design of interventions and measures program effects on the environment and human welfare. We ask him about four recent experiments that evaluate several climate change adaptation interventions in both Costa Rica and in the United States.

    • 37 min
    Ep.007 - Reshaping Locals’ Attitudes toward Migrants during Wartime in Afghanistan

    Ep.007 - Reshaping Locals’ Attitudes toward Migrants during Wartime in Afghanistan

    Today’s episode is part of our Seminar Series, in which we facilitate discussions on work conducted by teams of academic researchers and practitioners that relates to one of four thematic topics: 1) Crime Reduction & Police Accountability, 2) Climate Change Governance, 3) Displacement, Migration, & Integration, and 4) Democracy, Conflict, & Polarization.

    This episode focuses on Displacement, Migration, and Integration,  presenting a discussion with researchers Yang-Yang Zhou (University of British Columbia) and Jason Lyall (Dartmouth College) about the results from a randomized controlled trial conducted during a period of conflict in Kandahar, Afghanistan. The study analyzed whether prolonged contact improved relationships between local residents and IDPs, through a vocational skills training program that emphasized hands-on collaborative learning. Bret Barrowman (International Republican Institute) serves as a discussant and Alexandra Scacco, EGAP member and Senior Research Fellow in the Institutions and Political Inequality unit at WZB, moderates the conversation. 

    • 58 min
    Ep.006 - COVID-19 and Maternal Mental Health Among Internally Displaced Persons in Colombia

    Ep.006 - COVID-19 and Maternal Mental Health Among Internally Displaced Persons in Colombia

    Today’s episode is part of our Seminar Series, in which we facilitate discussions on work conducted by teams of academic researchers and practitioners that relates to one of four thematic topics: 1) Crime Reduction & Police Accountability, 2) Climate Change Governance, 3) Displacement, Migration, & Integration, and 4) Democracy, Conflict, & Polarization.

    This episode focuses on Displacement, Migration, and Integration,  presenting a discussion with researcher Andrés Moya (UniAndes), along with Cristina Gutierrez de Piñeres (United Way Colombia) and Diana María Pineda Ruiz (Fundación Éxito), representatives from the organizations that implemented the project's program in Tumaco, Colombia—a territory rife with armed conflict due to the drug trade. The study analyzed how the pandemic affected mental health and parenting stress among caregivers, many of whom are internally displaced persons (IDPs), through a psychosocial program that seeks to restore maternal mental health and improve early childhood development among violence-exposed families. Rosario Aguilar, EGAP member and Senior Lecturer of Comparative Politics at Newcastle University, moderates the conversation. 

    • 59 min
    Ep.005 - Misinformation and Irregular Migration in Nigeria

    Ep.005 - Misinformation and Irregular Migration in Nigeria

    Today’s episode is part of our Seminar Series, in which we facilitate discussions on work conducted by teams of academic researchers and practitioners that relates to one of four thematic topics: 1) Crime Reduction & Police Accountability, 2) Climate Change Governance, 3) Displacement, Migration, & Integration, and 4) Democracy, Conflict, & Polarization.

    This episode focuses on Displacement, Migration, and Integration,  presenting a discussion with researchers Alexandra Scacco (WZB) and Bernd Beber (RWI), along with Emeka Eluemunor (Country Director) of Innovations for Poverty Action (IPA) Nigeria, the research and policy nonprofit that implemented the survey. IPA Nigeria recently worked with the researchers to run a field experiment conducted in the Nigerian states of Delta and Edo—epicenters of irregular migration—that provided detailed information about the migration journey to a representative sample of households and measured impacts on actual migration. Gareth Nellis, EGAP member and Assistant Professor of Political Science at UC San Diego, moderates the conversation. 

    • 59 min
    Ep.004 - Depolarizing America: A Study of Mediated Group Reflection

    Ep.004 - Depolarizing America: A Study of Mediated Group Reflection

    Today’s episode is part of our Seminar Series, in which we facilitate discussions on work conducted by teams of academic researchers and practitioners that relates to one of four thematic topics: 1) Crime Reduction & Police Accountability, 2) Climate Change Governance, 3) Displacement, Migration, & Integration, and 4) Democracy, Conflict, & Polarization.

    This episode focuses on Democracy, Conflict, & Polarization, presenting a discussion with researchers Hannah Baron (Brown University), Robert Blair (Brown University), and Jessica Gottlieb (University of Houston). Along with the research team, we are joined by Bill Doherty, co-founder of Braver Angels, a citizens’ organization uniting red and blue Americans in a working alliance to depolarize America. Braver Angels recently worked with the researchers to run a randomized controlled trial of workshops to study one model of depolarizing partisans—reciprocal group reflection, inspired by marital counseling—to find out whether it significantly reduces polarization according to explicit and implicit measures and increases participants’ support for depolarization. David Broockman, EGAP member and Associate Professor of Political Science at UC Berkeley, moderates the conversation. 

    • 58 min
    Ep. 003 - Understanding and Confronting Latin American Gangs

    Ep. 003 - Understanding and Confronting Latin American Gangs

    Today’s episode is part of our Seminar Series, in which we facilitate discussions on work conducted by teams of academic researchers and practitioners that relates to one of four thematic topics: 1) Crime Reduction & Police Accountability, 2) Climate Change Governance, 3) Displacement, Migration, & Integration, and 4) Democracy, Conflict, & Polarization.
    This episode focuses on Crime Reduction and Police Accountability, presenting a discussion with Joana Monteiro (FGV/EBAPE), Santiago Tobón (Universidad EAFIT), and Andrés Tobón (Universidad EAFIT). Together, the panelists bring expertise studying the structure, operations, and societal impact of gangs in different contexts, including Brazil, Colombia, El Salvador, Mexico, and Peru. In this episode, they discuss what we know and don’t know about gangs, the challenges faced by policymakers in confronting these organizations, and the ways in which researchers and practitioners can come together to address these difficult issues. Lucia Tiscorina (CIDE) moderates the conversation.

    • 1 hr 2 min

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