Regina Bateson
- Voting for a Killer: Efraín Ríos Montt's Return to Politics in Democratic GuatemalaBy: Regina BatesonAbstract:From 1982 to 1983, General Efraín Ríos Montt presided over an especially bloody period of the Guatemalan civil war. Under Ríos Montt'
- Balancing Pregnancy, Parenthood, and Graduate SchoolBy: Kimberly McManaway, Regina Bateson, Marty Jordan, Karen Kedrowski, Kyle HarrisAbstract:While some scholarly articles and reports examine the needs of faculty parents(Bassett 2005;
- The 2016 election and America’s standing abroad: quasi-experimental evidence of a Trump effectBy: Regina Bateson, Michael WeintraubAbstract:Global favorability toward the United States declined by more than 10 percentage points from 2016 to
- Perceptions of Pandemic Resume Gaps: Survey Experimental Evidence from the United StatesBy: Regina BatesonAbstract:As a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, millions of people found themselves out of work in 2020 and 2021. Going forward, will
- Finding Meaning in Politics: When Victims Become ActivistsBy: Regina BatesonAbstract:Victimization is often associated with increased political participation, and victims are influential political actors in many countries around the world. Yet
- Research ethics and state power: access vs. integrity in the study of armed actorsBy: Regina Bateson, Christine ChengAbstract:In the study of armed actors, the state poses significant – yet often unrecognised – ethical challenges for researchers.
- Democratic Institutions in Guatemala: Theory and PracticeBy: Omar Sanchez-Sibony, Michael E Allison, Dinorah Azpuru, Regina Bateson, Rachel E Bowen, Jonatán Lemus, Christopher A Martínez, Annabella España-Nájera, Mar Martínez Rosón, Harald
- The Criminal Threat to Democracy in GuatemalaBy: Regina BatesonAbstract:As the Guatemalan civil war waned in the early 1990s, Guatemala began a transition to democracy. With the brief exception of the “Democratic Spring” of 1944–1954, 1
Regina Bateson, explores "strategic discrimination," where voters hesitate to support diverse candidates due to concerns that others might reject them based on race or gender. This bias, rooted in misperceptions, persists despite date showing that
Dr. Regina Bateson has always harbored a very keen interest in civil and especially human rights. As an undergrad, she was a history major but took a lot of political science classes, enticed by the human-focused