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Faculty News March 05, 2025

Maria Micaela Sviatschi, assistant professor of economics and public affairs, wins 2025 Sloan Award

Maria Micaela Sviatschi, assistant professor of economics and public affairs at Princeton University, has been named a 2025 recipient of the Sloan Research Fellowship for early career researchers.

Sloan Research Fellows are selected annually by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation and represent “the most promising early-career scientists working today. Their achievements and potential place them among the next generation of scientific leaders in the U.S. and Canada,” per the Sloan Fellowship site. Sviatschi is one of four Princeton faculty to receive the award this year.

Sviatschi is a microeconomist working at the intersection of Political Economy and Development. She studies how individuals’ lives and well-being are shaped by the presence of non-state violence—a common threat across many parts of the developing world—and seeks to identify policies to reduce exposure to non-state violence. Her work spans three continents (Latin America, SubSaharan Africa, and South Asia) and combines innovative data with frontier empirical methods. One area of her research explores how children start a criminal career in drug trafficking and gangs, and the consequences of organized crime on economic development and state capacity. Another studies the role of norms and policing in reducing gender-based violence through various randomized control trials. Sviatschi received her bachelor’s degree in economics from the Universidad de San Andrés in Buenos Aires and her Ph.D. in economics from Columbia University in New York. 

 

Taking the Path Less Traveled

“It’s great to see the Sloan Fellowship recognize Mica’s important work. She has done groundbreaking research furthering our understanding of the economics of crime and violence, particularly the causes and consequences of organized crime in low and middle-income countries,” said Thomas Fujiwara, associate professor of economics at Princeton University and one of Sviatschi’s mentors. “These are hugely important issues affecting the lives of millions of people, but they had received relatively little attention from economists. Her rigorous empirical work uses data from multiple sources, spanning administrative data to randomized trials and fieldwork in places that most social scientists would find too dangerous.”

In a study on exposure to illegal labor markets in childhood, Sviatschi shows that this exposure leads to an increase of children starting down the criminal path. Using the timing of US anti-drug policies, Sviatschi shows that “when the return to illegal activities increases in coca suitable areas in Peru, parents increase the use of child labor for coca farming, putting children on a criminal life path.” By using administrative records, Sviatschi also shows that “affected children are about 30% more likely to be incarcerated for violent and drug-related crimes as adults.”
 
Another study evaluates the impact of an innovative police patrol program on sexual harassment in public spaces in Hyderabad, India. Sviatschi and her co-authors implemented a novel, high-frequency observation exercise to measure sexual harassment at 350 hotspots, where enumerators took note of all observed instances of sexual harassment and women’s responses in real time. “We find that although police patrols had no impact on overall street harassment, the visible policing patrols reduced severe forms of harassment (forceful touching, intimidation) by 27 percent and reduced the likelihood of women leaving the hotspot due to sexual harassment.”
 

The Work Continues

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