RICHARD SNYDER
  • Home
  • Research
    • Craft and Methodology of Comparative Research
    • Comparative Political Economy and Development
    • Political Regimes and Institutions
    • Comparative Politics of COVID-19
    • Unpublished And Working Papers
    • Interviews and Research Presentations
    • Google Scholar Profile
    • CV
  • Media and Music
    • On Music
    • Podcasts
    • Ivy League Rumba Film
    • Cultural Exchanges: Brown University Jazz Band in Cuba
    • YouTube
  • Contact
COMPARATIVE POLITICAL ECONOMY AND DEVELOPMENT
Picture
Picture
  • Modes of Lithium Extraction in Argentina: Mining Politics in Catamarca, Jujuy, and Salta (with Lucas González), Pp. 211-233 in Giovanna França, Danilo Freire and Umberto Mignozzetti, eds. Natural Resources and Policy Choices in Latin America (Berlin: Konrad Adenauer Stiftung, 2021).   
  • Producing Knowledge in South America: The Political Economy of Social Science in Argentina, Colombia and Peru (with Angelica Duran-Martinez and Jazmin Sierra).  2016.  
  • Who Sets the Intellectual Agenda? Foreign Funding and Social Science in Peru (with Kelly Bay and Cecilia Perla) Pp. 99-118 in Martín Tanaka and Eduardo Dargent, eds. ¿Qué implica hacer ciencia política desde el sur y desde el norte? (Lima: Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú, Escuela de Gobierno y Políticas Públicas, 2015).  
  • Globalization, Money and the Social Science Profession in Latin America (with Lachen Chernhya and Jazmin Sierra) Latin American Studies Association Forum 43:4 (Fall 2012): 3-6.  
  • Dependency and Development in a Globalized World: Looking Back and Forward (with Patrick Heller and Dietrich Rueschemeyer) Studies in Comparative International Development 44:4 (December 2009): 287-295.  Introduction to a special issue on the challenges of development in a globalized world.  See here for the full special issue. 
  • Does Illegality Breed Violence? Drug-Trafficking and State-Sponsored Protection Rackets (with Angelica Duran-Martinez) Crime, Law and Social Change​ 52:3 (September 2009): 253-73.  
  • ​Does Lootable Wealth Breed Disorder? A Political Economy of Extraction Framework Comparative Political Studies 39:8 (October 2006): 943-968.   
    • "Best Article Prize," Comparative Democratization Section, American Political Science Association, 2007. ​
  • Diamonds, Blood and Taxes: A Revenue-Centered Framework for Explaining Political Oder (with Ravi Bhavnani) Journal of Conflict Resolution 49:4 (August 2005): 563-597. 
  • Politics after Neoliberalism: Reregulation in Mexico.  New York: Cambridge University Press, 2001.  Paperback edition 2006.   To purchase: Amazon.  
  • After Neoliberalism: The Politics of Reregulation in Mexico World Politics 51:2 (January 1999): 173-204. 
  • Strategies for Resource Management, Production and Marketing in Rural Mexico (co-edited with Guadalupe Rodriguez Gómez) La Jolla, CA: The Center for US-Mexican Studies, University of California, San Diego, 2000.
  • Institutional Adaptation and Innovation in Rural Mexico ​​(editor and co-author) La Jolla, CA: The Center for US-Mexican Studies, University of California, San Diego, 1999.​
  • The Future Role of the Ejido in Rural Mexico (co-edited with Gabriel Torres).  La Jolla, CA: The Center for US-Mexican Studies, University of California, San Diego, 1998.
Proudly powered by Weebly
  • Home
  • Research
    • Craft and Methodology of Comparative Research
    • Comparative Political Economy and Development
    • Political Regimes and Institutions
    • Comparative Politics of COVID-19
    • Unpublished And Working Papers
    • Interviews and Research Presentations
    • Google Scholar Profile
    • CV
  • Media and Music
    • On Music
    • Podcasts
    • Ivy League Rumba Film
    • Cultural Exchanges: Brown University Jazz Band in Cuba
    • YouTube
  • Contact