Research

The perils of plurality rule in democratic presidential systems: A replication and extensionPLOS ONE. 2022; 17(1): e0262026.

When justice answers to the president: Reexamining the effect of cabinet partisanship on human rights in presidential democracies. The Social Science Journal. 2021; 58(2): 237-246.

The effect of two-round presidential elections on human rights. PLOS ONE. 2020; 15(12): e0243094.

The effect of copartisan justice ministers on human rights in presidential democracies. PLOS ONE. 2020; 15(9): e0234938.

Nationalism and human rights: A replication and extension. PLOS ONE. 2019; 14(8): e0219409.

Reevaluating the presidential runoff rule: Does a provision promote the protection of human rights? PLOS ONE. 2019; 14(5): e0217650.

Measuring presidential centrism and its effect on repression: does ideology influence whether democratic governments respect human rights? Political Science. 2018; 70(3): 253–264.

Democratic presidential elections and human rights: does a runoff round reduce repression? The International Journal of Human Rights. 2018; 22(8): 1087–1110.

The perils of plurality rule and the major(itarian) effect of cabinet composition on human rights in presidential democracies. Research & Politics. 2018; 5(3): 2053168018794753.