People

F David Rueda

Professor of Comparative Politics, DPIR
Fellow, Nuffield College
AFFILIATION
Government and Politics Network
College
N/A

I am a Professor of Comparative Politics in the Department of Politics and International Relations, Oxford University and a Fellow of Nuffield College.

For details about my research or teaching, see my webpage.

Research

My research interests include:

Constitutions, Institutions and Governments, Comparative Politics and Government, Institutions and organisations, Political economy and international political economy, Equality, Ideology, Political Parties, Social movements.

F. David Rueda

Publications

Journal Articles

2024

Pahontu, R., Hoojier, G. and Rueda, D. (2024) “Insuring Against Hunger? The Long-Term Political Consequences of Exposure to the Dutch Famine”, Journal of Historical Political Economy [Preprint].

2023

Lindvall, J., Rueda, D. and Zhai, H. (2023) “When parties move to the middle: the role of uncertainty”, British Journal of Political Science, 53(4), pp. 1208–1229.

2017

Thewissen, S. and Rueda, F. (2017) “Automation and the welfare state: technological change as a determinant of redistribution preferences”, Comparative Political Studies, 52(2), pp. 171–208.
Rueda, D. (2017) “Food comes first, then morals: redistribution preferences, parochial altruism, and immigration in Western Europe”, Journal of Politics, 80(1), pp. 225–239.
Dimick, M., Rueda, D. and Stegmueller, D. (2017) “The altruistic rich? Inequality and other-regarding preferences for redistribution”, Quarterly Journal of Political Science, 11(4), pp. 385–439.

2015

Rueda, D. and Stegmueller, D. (2015) “The Externalities of Inequality: Fear of Crime and Preferences for Redistribution in Western Europe”, American Journal of Political Science, 60(2), pp. 472–489.
Rueda, D. (2015) “The State of the Welfare State: Unemployment, Labor Market Policy, and Inequality in the Age of Workfare”, Comparative Politics, 47(3), pp. 296–314.

Books

2019

Rueda, D. and Stegmueller, D. (2019) Who Wants What? Redistribution Preferences in Comparative Perspective. Cambridge University Press.