Guadalupe Tuñón is an Assistant Professor in Princeton's Department of Politics and School of Public and International Affairs. She studies comparative politics and political economy with a regional focus on Latin America. Her first book project investigates how religious ideas about inequality and redistribution shape the electoral and policy influence of religious actors. She received a PhD in Political Science from UC Berkeley in 2019. Before coming to Princeton, she was an Academy Scholar at Harvard's Weatherhead Center for International Affairs as well as a predoctoral fellow at the Identity & Conflict Lab (University of Pennsylvania) and the Center for the Study of Religion and Society (University of Notre Dame).
Event Details
“Prosecution: Theory and Evidence from Corruption Probes in Argentina”
- Event Date: 2026-04-16
- Event Start Time: 10:30 AM
- Event End Time: 12:00 PM
- Event Type: Seminar
- Presenter(s): Guadalupe Tuñón
- Event Location: Hickman Hall, Roberta Siegel Lounge Rm. 612