Anirudh Krishna, Associate Professor of Public Policy and Political Science

Office Location: 212 Sanford Inst Building
Office Phone: (919) 613-7337
Email Address: ak30@duke.edu
Web Page: http://www.pubpol.duke.edu/krishna/
Education:
PhD, Cornell University, 2000
M.P.S., Cornell University, 1995
M.A., Delhi School of Economics, 1980
B.A. (Honors), St. Stephens College, Delhi University, India, 1978
Expertise:
Comparative Politics
Political Science/Government
Political Institutions
Recent Publications (More Publications)
- Anirudh Krishna, Meri Poghosyan, and Narayan Das., “How Much Can Asset Transfers Help the Poorest? Evaluating the Results of BRAC’s Ultra-Poor Programme (2002-2008).”, Journal of Development Studies, vol. 48 no. 2 (February, 2012), pp. 184-97 .
- A. Krishna, Characteristics and Patterns of Intergenerational Poverty Traps and Escapes in Rural North India, Development Policy Review, vol. forthcoming (2012) .
- A. Krishna, Examining the Structures of Opportunity and Social Mobility in India: Who Becomes an Engineer? (Submitted, 2011) .
- Anirudh Krishna, Kripa Ananthpur, and Tulsi Patel, Radial Dissipation II: Health Outcomes in Villages at Different Distances to Towns (Submitted, 2011) .
- A. Krishna, Stuck in Slums (the Design of a Third-World City?): Investigating 14 Slum Settlements in Bangalore (Submitted, 2011) .
Research Categories: Poverty and Democracy in Developing Countries
Research Description: Research: Poverty; democracy; social capital; international development; South Asian politics; community organization; civil society; governance; empowerment tertiary: public-private partnerships; aid targeting and aid coordination
Areas of Interest:
Poverty dynamics
Inter-generational mobility
Participation in Democracy
Bio/Profile
ANIRUDH KRISHNA (Ph.D. in Government, Cornell 2000; Masters in Economics, Delhi 1980) is Assistant Professor of Public Policy and Political Science, Duke University. His research investigates how poor communities and individuals in developing countries cope with the structural and personal constraints that result in poverty and powerlessness.
Most recently, Krishna has been examining poverty dynamics at the household level, tracking movements into and out of poverty of over 25,000 households in a varied group of 225 communities of India, Kenya, Uganda, Peru and North Carolina, USA. In each community he found that while some households have escaped from poverty, other households have simultaneously fallen into poverty.
Escape and descent are concurrent everywhere – and they are asymmetric in terms of reasons. One set of reasons accounts for descents into poverty, but another and different set of reasons is associated with escapes. Two parallel policies are required to be in place. Policies to promote escapes are commonly considered, but policies to prevent descents have been largely overlooked.
Articles on these subjects published in Economic and Political Weekly, Development and Change, Foreign Policy, Journal of Development Studies, Journal of Human Development, World Development, and elsewhere can be viewed at www.pubpol.duke.edu/krishna. One article, published in Journal of Development Studies in October 2005, won the annual Dudley Seers Memorial Prize.
Earlier, Krishna examined how poor community groups interact with states and markets. Publications include Active Social Capital: Tracing the Roots of Development and Democracy (Columbia University Press, 2002); Reasons for Success: Learning From Instructive Experiences in Rural Development (Kumarian Press, 1998), with Norman Uphoff and Milton Esman; Changing Policy and Practice From Below: Community Experiences in Poverty Reduction (United Nations Press, 2000); and Reasons for Hope: Instructive Experiences in Rural Development (Kumarian Press, 1997) with Norman Uphoff and Milton Esman. An article on social capital and political participation published in Comparative Political Studies (May 2002) won the best article award of the American Political Science Association.
Other articles published in Agricultural Systems, Comparative Politics, Journal of Asian Studies, and World Development.
New integrative methodologies were developed for these investigations, including a Social Capital Assessment Tool and the Stages-of-Progress Method for tracking household poverty dynamics. Both methods have been adapted and used by other researchers.
Before turning to academia, Krishna worked for 14 years in the Indian Administrative Service, where he managed diverse initiatives related to rural and urban development. He has consulted with FAO, UNDP, the World Bank, and other international development agencies.
Krishna is married and has two children.
