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Rebekah Jones

Incoming Assistant Professor, School of Government and Policy

  • Hopkins Bloomberg Center
    555 Pennsylvania Ave NW
    Washington, DC
  • Faculty
  • Ph.D. Political Science , University of California, Berkeley
  • M.A. Political Science , University of California, Berkeley
  • B.S. Development Sociology , Cornell University

Rebekah Jones is a political scientist who studies how local political institutions shape the allocation of public goods—and how those distributions, in turn, affect how groups experience and participate in democratic systems.

Jones’ dissertation investigates these dynamics within the context of the American criminal legal system. Specifically, Jones examines 1) the political economy and incentives of local governments to understand how the United States has remained a global leader in incarceration while also outpacing other advanced industrial democracies in rates of violence, and 2) the democratic consequences of such state failures. She does this by using a mix of quantitative and qualitative methods, including spatial analysis, interviews, and causal inference designs. This project has been recognized with the Harry Frank Guggenheim Emerging Scholar Award.

More broadly, Jones is interested in local politics, comparative political economy, political geography, and public policy. Jones’s research has either been published or is forthcoming in the American Journal of Political Science, Perspectives on Politics, and State Politics and Policy Quarterly.

Jones is a Ph.D. candidate at University of California, Berkeley’s Department of Political Science and will be a Postdoctoral Fellow at the Center for the study of Democratic Politics at Princeton University. 

  1. Enclaves of Isolation: Violence and Political Participation in U.S. Cities

    Enclaves of Isolation: Violence and Political Participation in U.S. Cities

    The unequal psychological burden of fear, shaped by an individual’s perception of their risk of victimization, may drive social isolation and the observed negative effects.

    07.15.2025

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  2. Lethal Violence and the Radicalized Failure of the American State

    Lethal Violence and the Radicalized Failure of the American State

    Forced localism reinforces the jurisdictional authority of highly constrained state and local institutions in violence attenuation. The consequence is exceptionally high rates of serious violence and a harsh and exclusionary criminal justice system, with Black Americans exceptionally vulnerable to both.

    01.21.2025

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  3. A validation and extension of state-level public policy mood: 1956-2020

    A validation and extension of state-level public policy mood: 1956-2020

    We generate a new measure of state policy mood building which has even better properties than the previous measure and relates to state presidential vote and state policy liberalism in similar ways to Caughey and Warshaw’s measure of state economic liberalism.

    12.01.2023

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