Alice Xu
alicexu.bsky.social
Alice Xu
@alicexu.bsky.social
Assistant Professor at UPenn | Comparative inequality, urban & distributive politics, environmental politics, Latam | https://alicezxu.com/
Thanks, Catherine! Big congrats too on this paper! Super cool– excited to read. Paula Rettl was also just here visiting Philadelphia this weekend :)
April 10, 2025 at 12:19 AM
Same pattern observed using an alternative measure: the share of jobs that can’t be done remotely (“teleworkability”).
April 3, 2025 at 5:53 PM
We leverage staggered timing of COVID business closures in the U.S.—a rare economic shock decoupled from race. Using an event study design, we find lockdowns boosted Trump support in states with more low-education workers, but had no effect in high-education ones.
April 3, 2025 at 5:51 PM
🚨New paper out in @cpsjournal.bsky.social with Torben Iversen: doi.org/10.1177/0010...
We empirically separate economic factors from cultural backlash as competing explanations for right-wing populism, and find evidence for the former. We define the concept of “unfunded public goods.” 🧵
April 3, 2025 at 5:45 PM
The paper introduces self-interest in reducing intergroup externalities as a mechanism for cooperation for p.g. Using mechanism vignettes, I show social affinity or racial tolerance cannot explain the results. Integration even generates middle-class aversion toward the poor.
October 16, 2023 at 4:20 PM
The analysis draws on a mixed methods approach that includes focus groups w/ neighborhood associations, a proposed identification strategy for estimating segregation, and a large-scale door-to-door survey of over 4,000 residents across 420 neighborhoods in São Paulo, Brazil.
October 16, 2023 at 4:19 PM
Why do cities of comparable capacity and size provide different levels of public goods? Why is Brasília, the capital of Brazil, so deficient in public goods? Why does the city of Belo Horizonte provide more? I argue that class-based segregation explains this difference. (2/n)
October 16, 2023 at 4:16 PM
Excited that this project (JMP!) is now FirstView @APSR!

doi.org/10.1017/S000...

I show that segregation encourages the privatization of urban services. Conversely, integrated cities produce intergroup externalities that align the middle class w/ the poor in coalitions for public goods 🧵
October 16, 2023 at 4:14 PM