Fall 2024: Wednesday 1-3 pm on Zoom (or in person by appointment)
Merrill/Crown Faculty Services
Stanford University, B.A. International Relations, 1990
Yale University, Ph.D. Political Science, 1998
Kent Eaton's research examines the interplay between politics and territory, focusing on the territorial (re)organization of states in the world today. His work explores how territorial interests and identities impact political outcomes -- including democracy, development and security -- and how political conflict in turn shapes the logic of territorial institutions. Specializing in comparative politics, Prof. Eaton's current projects include the design and performance of federal institutions, the causes and consequences of decentralization, and the formation and evolution of movements for territorial autonomy. Beginning in 1990 he has conducted field research in a number of Latin American countries, including Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, and Uruguay.
Daniel Elazar Distinguished Scholar Award from the American Political Science Association (2021)
Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars Fellowship (2015)
UCSC Division of Social Sciences Distinguished Teaching Award (2008)
"Mayors Unchecked: Vertical and Horizontal Dimensions of Local Autonomy in Latin American Municipalities," with Tomas Dosek, Urban Affairs Review, forthcoming 2024
"Decentralization and Criminal Gangs in El Salvador: Impacts on Municipal Finances and Local Economic Development," with José Larios and Silvana Huanqui, Journal of Development Studies, forthcoming 2024
"Autonomy in the Pursuit of Peace: Negotiating Territorial Accommodation in Indonesia and the Philippines," with Sarah Shair-Rosenfield, Peacebuilding, forthcoming 2024
Politicians and Economic Reform in New Democracies: Argentina and the Philippines in the 1990s (Penn State University Press, 2002), part 1, part 2, and part 3