PEOPLE

Oeindrila Dube

New York University and Center for Global Development
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Oeindrila Dube is an assistant professor of politics and economics at New York University, and a post-doctoral fellow at the Center for Global Development. She holds a Ph.D. in Public Policy from Harvard University, a M.Phil in Economics from the University of Oxford, and a B.A. in Public Policy from Stanford University. She also received the Rhodes Scholarship in 2002. Dube’s research focuses on the political economy of conflict and development.  One strand of her work is on access to basic services in post-conflict nations. She is currently implementing a national-level randomized evaluation to examine how financial and non-financial incentives affect health service delivery in Sierra Leone. A second strand of her research seeks to understand the economic causes and consequences of violent conflict in developing nations. Focusing on Colombia, she has analyzed how international price shocks to agricultural and natural resource exports have affected civil war dynamics and assessed how U.S. military aid affects political violence and electoral participation. She is also researching how armed conflict shape economic activity including firm investment, and assessing how local-level reconciliation efforts affect poverty and violence through a field experiment in Sierra Leone.
 

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IGC PROJECT

Incentivising service delivery in Sierra Leone

Improving the delivery of public services is a pressing policy concern for governments in the developing world. Presently, little is known about the role non-financial incentives could play. This project, a partnership between the IGC, the Government of Sierra Leone (GoSL), and the World Bank, constitutes two interventions into health services in Sierra Leone. The first intervention tackles worker motivation by introducing yardstick competition among health clinics, and providing non-financial awards to facilities that show the largest improvement in performance.