Author

Name:
Pedro Vicente
Educations:
Ph D: U Chicago, Economics, 2005
Master: LSE, Economics, 2000
Bachelor: UCP, Economics, 1998
e-mail:
vicentep@tcd.ie
URL:
http://www.pedrovicente.org/
FCT research center:
Nova School of Business and Economics (2015)
REBIDES institution:
Universidade Nova de Lisboa - Faculdade de Economia (2015)
Ideas:
http://ideas.repec.org/e/pvi115.html
Articles 21:
Ranking: CEF.UP+NIPE (average of all rankings) (2012).

Motivating Volunteer Health Workers in an African Capital City 14.46
Mattia Fracchia, Teresa Molina Millan, Pedro Vicente
Journal of Development Economics, vol. 163, 2023, p. .

Can ATMs Get Out the Vote? Evidence from a Nationwide Field Experiment 15.91
Joao Pereira dos Santos, José Tavares, Pedro Vicente
European Economic Review, vol. 134, 2021, p. .

Information, Get-Out-the-Vote Messages, and Peer Influence: Causal Effects on Political Behavior in Mozambique 21.69
Matilde Gracio, Pedro Vicente
Journal of Development Economics, vol. 151, 2021, p. .

Does Information Break the Political Resource Curse? Experimental Evidence from Mozambique 21.75
Alex Armand, Alexander Coutts, Pedro Vicente, Ines Vilela
American Economic Review, vol. 110, 2020, p. 3431-3453.

Improving Access to Savings through Mobile Money: Experimental Evidence from African Smallholder Farmers 17.55
Cátia Batista, Pedro Vicente
World Development, vol. 129, 2020, p. .

Knowledge of Vitamin A Deficiency and Crop Adoption: Evidence from a Field Experiment in Mozambique 10.64
Rute M. Caeiro, Pedro Vicente
Agricultural Economics, vol. 51, 2020, p. 175-190.

Voting and Peer Effects: Experimental Evidence from Mozambique 10.94
Marcel Fafchamps, Ana Vaz , Pedro Vicente
Economic Development And Cultural Change, vol. 68, 2020, p. 567-605.

Does Electoral Observation Influence Electoral Results? Experimental Evidence for Domestic and International Observers in Mozambique 17.55
Stefan Leeffers, Pedro Vicente
World Development, vol. 114, 2019, p. 42-58.

Do Migrant Social Networks Shape Political Attitudes and Behavior at Home? 11.7
Cátia Batista, Julia Seither, Pedro Vicente
World Development, vol. 117, 2019, p. 328-343.

Foreign Aid Preferences and Perceptions in Donor Countries 12.49
Daniel Kaufmann, Eoin F. McGuirk, Pedro Vicente
Journal Of Comparative Economics, vol. 47, 2019, p. 601-617.

Is Information Power? Using Mobile Phones and Free Newspapers during an Election in Mozambique 20.12
Jenny C. Aker, Paul Collier, Pedro Vicente
Review of Economics and Statistics, vol. 99, 2017, p. 185-200.

Return Migration, Self-Selection and Entrepreneurship 12.46
Cátia Batista, Tara McIndoe-Calder, Pedro Vicente
Oxford Bulletin of Economics and Statistics, vol. 79, 2017, p. 797-821.

Is Vote Buying Effective? Evidence from a Field Experiment in West Africa 49.57
Pedro Vicente
Economic Journal, vol. 124, 2014, p. F356-87.

Votes and Violence: Evidence from a Field Experiment in Nigeria 24.79
Paul Collier, Pedro Vicente
Economic Journal, vol. 124, 2014, p. 327-355.

Political Violence and Social Networks: Experimental Evidence from a Nigerian Election 21.69
Pedro Vicente, Marcel Fafchamps
Journal of Development Economics, vol. 101, 2013, p. 27-48.

Violence, Bribery, and Fraud: The Political Economy of Elections in Sub-Saharan Africa 17.07
Pedro Vicente, Paul Collier
Public Choice, vol. 153, 2012, p. 117-147.

Do Migrants Improve Governance at Home? Evidence from a Voting Experiment 20.51
Cátia Batista, Pedro Vicente
World Bank Economic Review, vol. 25, 2011, p. 77-104.

Legal Corruption 13.09
Daniel Kaufmann, Pedro Vicente
Economics And Politics, vol. 23, 2011, p. 195-219.

Testing the Brain Gain Hypothesis: Micro Evidence from Cape Verde 14.46
Cátia Batista, Aitor Lacuesta, Pedro Vicente
Journal of Development Economics, vol. 97, 2011, p. 32-45.

Does Oil Corrupt? Evidence from a Natural Experiment in West Africa 43.38
Pedro Vicente
Journal of Development Economics, vol. 92, 2010, p. 28-38.

Clientelism and Vote Buying: Lessons from Field Experiments in African Elections 15.14
Pedro Vicente, Leonard Wantchekon
Oxford Review Of Economic Policy, vol. 25, 2009, p. 292-305.

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