The Doctoral Fellows program with the Cook Center offers a distinct platform for aspiring doctoral scholars across academic institutions to deepen their expertise, collaborate on groundbreaking projects, and contribute significantly to social equity research.
Current and Former Doctoral Scholars
Arko Dasgupta
Arko Dasgupta is a PhD candidate in history at Carnegie Mellon University and an Associate in Research in the Samuel DuBois Cook Center on Social Equity. His research interests include empire, race, Modern India, early Indian immigration in the United States, and the Civil Rights Movement. He is currently working on his dissertation titled The Colour of Anticolonialism: Locating Antiracism in the Indian Freedom Struggle, 1893-1964. He is a Prafulla C Mukerji Fellow and a Kedia-Tayur Fellow in South Asian American History at Carnegie Mellon University. He has an MPhil in International Studies from Jamia Millia Islamia, an MA in Conflict Analysis & Peace Building from Jamia Millia Islamia, and a BA in Economics, Political Science, Sociology from St Joseph’s College, Bangalore. Access Arko’s website here: arkodasgupta.com
Dayea Oh
Dayea Oh is an Assistant Professor of Public Policy at the School of Public Policy at Pepperdine University. Her works commonly study the causal impacts of desirable social changes and policy designs. In one line of work, Oh focuses on gender by studying the impact of women running for office on her competitors’ campaign finances as well as their voting patterns later in Congress. She also studies how newly exporting Chilean firms change their labor structure and gender composition around the time of entry into the export market, given the gender pay gap. In a different research study , she uses a field experiment to find negative behavioral transmission from school to home and home to school among school-aged children in rural Bangladesh. Most recently, Oh is exploring the patterns of campaign donations in the local and state governments. Oh graduated with a BA in economics from Rice University and holds a MA in applied economics from Cornell University. She received a PhD in public policy from Harvard.