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Jacob N. Shapiro
Nonresident Scholar, Technology and International Affairs

about


Jacob Shapiro is a nonresident scholar in the Carnegie Technology and International Affairs Program. He is also professor of politics and international affairs at Princeton University. Shapiro co-founded and directs the Empirical Studies of Conflict Project, a multi-university consortium that studies politically motivated violence in countries around the world. He also leads Princeton’s Accelerator initiative, which is working with consortium partners on three continents to build shared research infrastructure to radically increase the pace of scientific progress on understanding the information environment.

Shapiro has published research on conflict, economic development, and security in a wide range of peer reviewed journals, as well as more than 100 policy articles, reports, and book chapters. He is author of The Terrorist’s Dilemma: Managing Violent Covert Organizations and co-author of Small Wars, Big Data: The Information Revolution in Modern Conflict. Shapiro has conducted field research and large-scale policy evaluations in Afghanistan, Colombia, India, and Pakistan. He received the 2016 Karl Deutsch Award from the International Studies Association, given to a scholar younger than 40, or within 10 years of earning a Ph.D., who has made the most significant contribution to the study of international relations.

Shapiro has advised government agencies, NGOs, and large technology companies on issues related to transparency, support to academic research, foreign malign influence, and disinformation. He earned a Ph.D. in political science and M.A. in economics at Stanford University and a B.A. in political science at the University of Michigan. Shapiro is a veteran of the United States Navy.


education
Ph.D., Stanford University, M.A., Stanford University, B.A., University of Michigan

All work from Jacob N. Shapiro

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6 Results
research
Current Engagement With Unreliable Sites From Web Search Driven by Navigational Search
  • +4
  • Kevin Greene
  • Nilima Pisharody
  • Lucas Meyer
  • Mayana Pereira
  • Rahul Dodhia
  • Juan Ferres
  • Jacob Shapiro
· October 30, 2024
Science Advances
In The Media
in the media
Great Power Competition Will Drive Irregular Conflicts

If the United States is drawn into a new war in the next few years, what will that look like? Will the government deploy troops and heavy arms to a front in Eastern Europe or naval forces to the Taiwan Strait?

· April 8, 2024
War On The Rocks
paper
A CERN Model for Studying the Information Environment

For nearly seventy years, CERN has been a center of gravity for physics and a model for how to support large-scale research collaboration across numerous different countries. Given the challenges facing democracy today related to the information environment, a similar level of effort is required for research on the information environment.

· November 17, 2022
research
Measuring the Efficacy of Influence Operations Countermeasures: Key Findings and Gaps From Empirical Research

Research shows that fact-checking can reduce the harmful impacts of false information. But beyond that, we know relatively little about the efficacy of counter-influence measures being implemented or considered by platforms, governments, and civil society.

  • +2
· September 21, 2021
research
Measuring the Effects of Influence Operations: Key Findings and Gaps From Empirical Research

Influence operations can have measurable effects on people’s beliefs and behavior, but empirical research does not yet adequately answer the most pressing questions facing policymakers.

  • +2
· June 28, 2021
paper
Research Collaboration on Influence Operations Between Industry and Academia: A Way Forward

Research on influence operations requires effective collaboration across industry and academia. Federally funded research and development centers provide a compelling model for multi-stakeholder collaboration among those working to counter influence operations.