Lucy Right, PhD
Department of Political Science
Duke University
Department of Political Science
Duke University
Email: lucille.right@duke.edu
I am an incoming Postdoctoral Associate in Political Economy at the Leitner Program at Yale University, and a Fellow at the Cambodia Development Resource Institute's Center for Governance and Inclusive Societies. I received my PhD in Political Science from Duke University in 2025.
My research studies the effects of pluralism in local authoritarian institutions, with a particular focus on Cambodia. Drawing on an original survey of elected local leaders, qualitative fieldwork, and original observational data, my book project examines the emergence, form, and effects of opposition party representation in Cambodia's commune councils. Employing a mixed-methods approach, I first draw on rich interview data to trace how opposition politicians use their elected positions to influence local governance within the de jure and de facto constraints of an authoritarian state. I then examine the systematic effects of the opposition's attempts at influence, using a novel quasi-experimental design to estimate the causal effect of opposition representation on competitiveness in procurement for local development projects.
My research has been supported by the World Bank in Cambodia, the Southeast Asia Research Group (SEAREG), the Center for Khmer Studies, and Duke's Asian/Pacific Studies Institute, among others. In addition to my dissertation research on pluralism and local governance, my research has also looked at civil society and foreign aid in repressive contexts.
Alongside my academic research, I have extensive experience carrying out field research, program evaluation, survey design and analysis, and research reporting for development organizations including the World Bank, USAID, the OECD, and UNDP, with a thematic focus on satisfaction with public services, social cohesion, trust in institutions, and community participation. I have advised on and implemented more than a dozen household and leader surveys in countries including the Kyrgyz Republic, Ghana, Cote d'Ivoire, and Cambodia.
Prior to graduate school, I worked with the German Marshall Fund of the U.S. in Washington, D.C., Brussels, and Paris, and obtained a B.A. in International Studies at Rhodes College in Memphis. Outside my professional life, I play an active role in the Afghan refugee community in Durham, NC. I originally hail from St. Louis, home of the best baseball and best pizza in the country.