Evaluations of a Religious but Corrupt Candidate in Muslim Majority Democracies: Experimental Evidence from Tunisia
M. Tahir Kilavuz and Nathanael Sumaktoyo
Kellogg Doctoral Student Affiliates
The Comparative Politics Workshop is a graduate student-led forum geared towards presenting and discussing papers and research projects. During the academic semester, regular sessions are held at the Hesburgh Center. These meetings are open to everyone, particularly students, faculty and Kellogg Institute Visiting Fellows. Participants have the chance to present their work and receive valuable, constructive feedback from their colleagues.
Organizer: Andrea Peña-Vasquez
More information: Comparative Politics Workshop Blog

M. Tahir Kilavuz
This profile was current as of 2019, when he was part of the on-campus Kellogg community. Tahir is a PhD candidate in the Department of Political Science at the University of Notre Dame. His research interests include authoritarian regimes, regime change and democratization, survey analysis, political Islam and Middle Eastern and North African (MENA) politics, concentrating on Algeria, Egypt and Tunisia...