Rithika Kumar

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SURF Mentoring

Potential projects/topics: In this project we will investigate the rise of South Asian local political candidates in the United States. We plan to explore: Who South Asian candidates are; Why they choose to run for office; and What campaign and mobilization strategies they employ. For this project we will conduct a large data collection exercise to create a novel dataset of south asians and other minorities running for local office in the united states (over the last five years) in addition to fielding a large mail-in survey of candidates and citizens. We seek research assistants to help us create this dataset that will involve collecting data from different sources, verifying information, and coding this data for our analysis. Applicants interested in this topic and those who want to learn more about data management, data cleaning and survey design – the first step in the research process – will get hands on training in doing so. This project is ideal for first year students with a keen interest in asking interesting questions and figuring out how to answer them.

Potential skills gained: Data management, coding, using observational data for research, survey design, literature review

Required qualifications:

  • Required skills: This is an entry level task and no prior knowledge of coding or data management is required. A keen interest in the topic and/or a desire to learn the nuts and bolts of research is desired.

Direct mentor: Faculty/P.I.

Research Areas

Rithika Kumar is an Assistant Professor at Rice University whose research lies at the intersection of gender, urbanization and politics with a regional specialization on South Asia, specifically India. Her research examines how development processes, from economic migration to political decentralization, transform patterns of local political engagement by mediating the relationship between the private and the public. She utilizes a wide array of methods, from intensive qualitative fieldwork to original surveys, quasi-experimental and experimental analyses in my research. Her work has received multiple awards including the Best Graduate Student Paper from APSA’s Migration and Citizenship Section, and the National Science Foundation Dissertation Improvement Grant.