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  1. Richard Nielsen is an Associate Professor of Political Science at MIT. He completed his PhD (Government) and AM (Statistics) at Harvard University, and holds a BA from Brigham Young University. He studies and teaches on Middle East politics, International Relations, religion, gender, political violence, quantitative methodology, and ...

    • Richard A. Nielsen

      Department of Political Science Massachusetts Institute of...

    • Bio/CV

      I am an Associate Professor in the Department of Political...

  2. Jun 24, 2024 · Department of Political Science Massachusetts Institute of Technology 77 Massachusetts Avenue Room E53-455 Cambridge, MA 02139 USA. Massachusetts Institute of Technology. E-mail: rnielsen@mit.edu. Web: htp:/w.mit.edu/~rnielsen/ Associate Professor of Political Science (with tenure), 2020 - current.

  3. www.mit.edu › ~rnielsen › bioBio/CV - MIT

    I am an Associate Professor in the Department of Political Science at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. I study and teach on Middle East politics, International Relations, religion, gender, political violence, quantitative methodology, and interpretive methodology.

  4. The sector-by-sector effectiveness of foreign aid. M Findley, D Hawkins, R Nielsen, D Nielson, S Wilson. Aid Data Oxford Conference. , 2010. 20. 2010. บทความ 1–20. ‪Associate Professor, MIT‬ - ‪‪อ้างอิงโดย 4,902 รายการ‬‬ - ‪Political Science‬ - ‪International Relations ...

  5. Nielsen, Richard. 2017. Deadly Clerics: Blocked Ambition and the Paths to Jihad. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge Studies in Comparative Politics series. | cambridge.org | amazon.com | google books | Summary, replication materials, and photos. | cited by 137 |.

  6. Richard Nielsen is an Associate Professor of Political Science at MIT who studies jihadi clerics, human rights, and political violence. He has a PhD from Harvard and a book on radicalization in Arab mosques.

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  8. Feb 3, 2017 · Richard Nielsen is an MIT assistant professor of political science who writes on international law, the political economy of human rights, political violence, and political methodology. His current book project, Deadly Clerics, explores why some Muslim clerics adopt the ideology of militant jihad while most do not.