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职称:Assistant Professor of Public Policy
所属学校:University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
所属院系:Public Policy
所属专业:Public Policy Analysis, General
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Zimmerman is a scholar of comparative politics, focusing on the political economy of development. Her research agenda examines the relationship between citizens and political officials, with a particular emphasis on accountability in consolidating democracies. Her dissertation analyzed the strategic responses of political officials to anti-corruption interventions, concluding that politicians engage in predictable corruption substitution. To study this topic, she focused on district government in Malawi, where she conducted a survey experiment on a representative sample of current district officials, held structured interviews with nearly 50 government officials, completed a content analysis of the primary media outlets, executed a survey of citizens across the country, and analyzed observational panel data obtained from the Malawi Anti-Corruption Bureau. Other current research addresses discrimination in petty corruption, the relationship between corruption and democracy, expert survey research methods (with the Varieties of Democracy Project), and the ethics of field research, specifically regarding governance interventions. Her research typically focuses on Sub-Saharan Africa. She obtained her PhD in Political Science from the University of California, San Diego in 2014. For the 2014-2015 academic year, she was a Post-Doctoral Research Fellow with the Varieties of Democracy (V-Dem) Project. She joined the faculty of the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill as an Assistant Professor of Public Policy in July 2015.
Zimmerman is a scholar of comparative politics, focusing on the political economy of development. Her research agenda examines the relationship between citizens and political officials, with a particular emphasis on accountability in consolidating democracies. Her dissertation analyzed the strategic responses of political officials to anti-corruption interventions, concluding that politicians engage in predictable corruption substitution. To study this topic, she focused on district government in Malawi, where she conducted a survey experiment on a representative sample of current district officials, held structured interviews with nearly 50 government officials, completed a content analysis of the primary media outlets, executed a survey of citizens across the country, and analyzed observational panel data obtained from the Malawi Anti-Corruption Bureau. Other current research addresses discrimination in petty corruption, the relationship between corruption and democracy, expert survey research methods (with the Varieties of Democracy Project), and the ethics of field research, specifically regarding governance interventions. Her research typically focuses on Sub-Saharan Africa. She obtained her PhD in Political Science from the University of California, San Diego in 2014. For the 2014-2015 academic year, she was a Post-Doctoral Research Fellow with the Varieties of Democracy (V-Dem) Project. She joined the faculty of the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill as an Assistant Professor of Public Policy in July 2015.