Curriculum vitae


You can find an up-to-date PDF version of my CV here (opens in a new tab).


Education

2021 – present

Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)

Doctoral program in Political Science

Editorial assistant for the American Journal of Political Science (2025-present)

Comparative Politics and Political Economy workshop coordinator (2023-present)

Graduate Student Council president (2023-24)

Graduate Student Work-In-Progress workshop coordinator (2022-23)

Spring 2020

New York University (NYU)

International exchange program

16 credits in the Department of Politics (4.0 GPA)

2016 – 2020

Pontifical Catholic University of Chile (PUC-Chile)

BA in Political Science (Título profesional, five year degree)

Graduated 1\(^{st}\) out of an incoming cohort of 59, maximum distinction

Academic research

Working papers

2025

“Zealots, or the administrative microfoundations of the rule of law.” Presented at APSA 2025, Vancouver BC. Available upon request.

“Forbearance forgone: the electoral cost of enforcing the law.” Presented at APSA 2024, Philadelphia PA. Under review. Available upon request.

“Can you stand the heat? Ideology and individual-level climate adaptation in Brazil.” Presented at MPSA 2025, Chicago IL. With Preston Johnston.

2024

“Eyes beneath the canopy: co-enforcing environmental crackdowns in the Brazilian Amazon.” Presented at MPSA 2024, Chicago IL. Available upon request.

Published

2023

“Two paths towards the exceptional extension of national voting rights to non-citizen residents.” Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 49(10), pp. 2541-2560. With David Altman and Sergio Huertas-Hernández. LINK.

2021

“Citizens at the polls: direct democracy in the world, 2020.” Taiwan Journal of Democracy, 17(2), pp. 85-106. With David Altman. LINK.

Fellowships and grants

2021 - present

Luksic Fellowship, Luksic Scholars Foundation

2024 - 2025

MIT Center for International Studies Fellowship (USD$5,000)

MIT GovLab Seed Grant (USD$5,000)

Adam Smith Fellowship, George Mason University (USD$4,000)

2024

MIT MISTI support for field research (USD$7,000)

Teaching assistant

Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)

2024

2023

17.802 - Quantitative Research II: Causal Inference, PhD level (F. Daniel Hidalgo)

17.801 - Political Science Scope and Methods (Fotini Christia)

Pontifical Catholic University of Chile (PUC-Chile)

2019

ICP0101 - Introduction to Political Science (Carla Alberti)

ICP0114 - Indigenous Politics In Latin America (Carla Alberti)

ICP0147 - Political Processes in Latin America (Valeria Palanza)

2018

ICP0101 - Introduction to Political Science (Carla Alberti)

ICP0103 - Introduction to Comparative Politics (Julieta Suárez)

ICP0505 - Qualitative Research Methods in Political Science (Julieta Suárez)

ICP0601 - Writing in Political Science (Maria de la Calle)

2017

ICP0601 - Writing in Political Science (Maria de la Calle)

Research assistant

Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)

2024-2025

2022

PI: Mai Hassan.

PI: F. Daniel Hidalgo.

Chilean National Agency for Research and Development (ANID)

2021

FONDECYT grant. Fiscal Origins of Democracy: How Different Sources of Income Affect Democratization. PI: Diego Díaz.

2020

FONDECYT grant. The impact of migratory waves and the extension of suffrage in contemporary democracies. PI: David Altman.

FONDECYT grant. Becoming parties: indigenous social movements and party politics in Latin America. PI: Carla Alberti.

FONDECYT grant. The paradoxical adoption of citizen-initiated mechanisms of direct democracy. PI: David Altman.

Millennium Institute For Foundational Research on Data (IMFD)

2021

Millennium Science Initiative grant. Data for the study of highly complex social problems. PI: Juan Pablo Luna.

Skills and certificates

Language proficiency: Spanish (native), English (fluent), Portuguese (four graduate courses).

Software proficiency: (advanced), (intermediate), (intermediate), (beginner).