Dawn Brancati
Biography
Dawn Brancati is a Senior Lecturer in International and public affairs at Brown University. Her research focuses on peacebuilding, primarily on democratic tools to prevent and resolve violent conflicts within states. In her research, Brancati has examined the conditions under which decentralization and elections are likely to result in or mitigate violence, as well as the factors that lead people to challenge authoritarian regimes, demand independence, seek democratic reforms, and support democracy abroad, among other issues.
Brancati is the author of two monographs, "Peace by Design and Democracy Protests: Origins, Features, and Significance," as well as a textbook on research methods entitled "Social Scientific Research." She has also authored numerous articles in leading academic journals, including the American Political Science Review, British Journal of Political Science, Comparative Political Studies, International Organization, Journal of Conflict Resolution, and Journal of Politics and others.
Brancati has received numerous prestigious grants and fellowships supporting her research from institutions including the German Marshall Fund and National Science Foundation, as well as Harvard, Yale and Princeton universities. She has also consulted and advised various governmental, intergovernmental and non-governmental agencies on her research, such as the U.S. Department of State, CIA, USAID and World Bank. Brancati earned her Ph.D., M.Phil. and MA in political science from Columbia University and a BA in government from Cornell University.
How does your research, teaching, or other work relate to data or computational science?
I use quantitative methods (observational studies, experiments (field, survey, lab), natural language processing in my research. I build large original datasets, including most notably the Global Elections Database (used by 5-7K users per year) and currently lead a team of 10 students collecting quantitative data for a new book.