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Chak Sang Chan: Latest PhD graduate at the Department of Economics

Department of Economics is proud to present its latest PhD graduate: Chak Sang Chan has successfully defended his thesis on October 10th, and we congratulate him on this momentous achievement. Congratulations Chak Sang!

Jeanet Bentzen, Professor at Copenhagen University acted as Opponent at the Defense.

This doctoral dissertation "Essays in Political and Cultural Economics: Faith, Inequality, and Institutional Persistence" consists of three self-contained essays:

“The Rich and the Righteous: Conservative Coalitions in an Unequal Society”: where inequality is higher, Republican legislators who vote more conservatively on economic bills also use more religious language, especially references to ‘God’, using congressional speeches and roll-call votes. The pattern is consistent with the bundling of economic conservatism and religious appeals.

“Faith in the Storm: Disaster Risks and Shifts in Protestant Membership in the U.S.”: evangelical churches expand more in disaster-prone areas than mainline churches, based on county-level panels of membership and attendance. The results align with differences in organization and relief orientation.

“Confucianism and the Persistence of Son Preference”: places with more historical academies show stronger modern son preference, using a new countylevel dataset linking academy locations to contemporary demographic indicators. The findings point to durable cultural effects.

Together, the chapters show how religion and culture interact with inequality and institutions to shape political behavior, community responses, and demographic norms.

Dept. of Economics Economics Dissertation Research