Cecilia Hyunjung Mo

Nonresident Scholar
Carnegie California
Dr. Cecilia Hyunjung Mo is a nonresident scholar at Carnegie California and is the Judith E. Gruber associate professor of political science and public policy at University of California, Berkeley.
Education

PhD, Political Economics, Stanford University
MA, Political Science, Stanford University
MPA, International Development, Harvard University
MA, Education, Loyola Marymount University

Languages
  • English

Dr. Cecilia Hyunjung Mo is a nonresident scholar at Carnegie California and is the Judith E. Gruber associate professor of political science and public policy at University of California, Berkeley. She is also a former W. Glenn Campbell and Rita Ricardo-Campbell national fellow and the Robert Eckles Swain national fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University. 

She is concerned with basic research on behavioral political economy and aspirations-based models of politics, and her applied work focuses on understanding and addressing important social problems related to human trafficking, immigration, migration, inequality, and prejudice. 

Dr. Mo has significant experience with experimental methods, impact evaluations, quantitative methods, and survey methods. She has conducted field research in Hong Kong, Indonesia, Nepal, Rwanda, Trinidad and Tobago, and the United States. Dr. Mo has acted as the managing director of research and evaluation for Teach For America and has provided expert opinion to develop research protocols and research instruments for the USAID EDGE-IE Guatemala Knowledge, Attitudes, and Practices and Human Trafficking Victim Identification Survey. 

She has been working on Humanity United, U.S. Department of Labor, USAID, Stanford University, Terre des Hommes, and Vanderbilt University. She has also supported research on human trafficking vulnerability and public opinion around human trafficking policies in China, Guatemala, Jamaica, Nepal, and the United States, as well as at the World Bank supporting projects on national service programs. 

She has published research in numerous outlets, including the American Political Science Review, American Journal of Political Science, the Journal of Experimental Political Science, Journal of Politics, Journal of Public Policy, Journal of Theoretical Politics, Political Behavior, and the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. She is also the recipient of the American Political Science Association's (APSA) 2015 Franklin L. Burdette/Pi Sigma Alpha Award, the 2018 Roberta Sigel Early Career Scholar Award, a three-time winner of APSA’s Best Paper Award in Political Behavior (2016, 2018, and 2019), and the Emerging Scholar in Elections, Public Opinion and Voting Behavior Award (2020).

Areas of Expertise

Please note...

You are leaving the website for the Carnegie-Tsinghua Center for Global Policy and entering a website for another of Carnegie's global centers.

请注意...

你将离开清华—卡内基中心网站,进入卡内基其他全球中心的网站。