Adrian Shin
- Exchange rates and immigration policyBy: Adrian ShinAbstract:What explains cross-national and temporal variations in migrant rights? This article argues that policymakers implement more exclusionary or inclusive policies toward migrants in response
- Migration and Economic CoercionBy: Brendan J Connell, Samantha L Moya, Adrian J ShinAbstract: Sender costs of economic sanctions exacerbate the enforcement problem associated with multilateral coercive measures. When third-
- Professor Shin recently published a new article, "Inequality and the Partisan Political Economy". The article explores how inequality affects redistributive tax policies and the responses from both sides of the political spectrum. Learn
- Angin, M, Shehaj, A, & Shin, AJ. Inside job: Migration and distributive politics in the European Union. Econ Polit. 2020; 00: 1– 25. https://doi.org/10.1111/ecpo.12170.Published: 06 January 2021Abstract:
- Dorr, DC, Shin, AJ. War, inequality, and taxation. Econ Polit. 2020; 00: 1– 29. https://doi.org/10.1111/ecpo.12168Published: 30 October 2020Abstract:Existing studies highlight the importance of the
- Shehaj, A., Shin, A. J., & Inglehart, R. (2019). Immigration and right-wing populism: An origin story. Party Politics. https://doi.org/10.1177/1354068819849888Published: 17 May 2019Abstract:Previous studies of right-wing populist (RWP
- Shin, Adrian International Studies Quarterly, sqz033, https://doi.org/10.1093/isq/sqz033Published: 17 June 2019Abstract:This article argues that substantial natural resource wealth leads to more restrictive low-skill immigration policy in
- Several Boulder Political Science faculty and grad students attended the 2017 IPES Conference last week to present their most recent research. representatives included faculty Andy Baker, David Bearce, and Adrian Shin
- Assistant ProfessorJoining the faculty at Boulder is a dream come true for Professor Adrian Shin, who started here in the Fall of 2016.”I love being able to drive only 20 minutes and to be in the mountains,” he said, “and living near the
- Abstract:This article examines the determinants of immigration policy toward low-skilled workers across 13 relatively wealthy autocracies after World War II. I argue that authoritarian immigration policy is a consequence of an autocrat’s