1. Jeremy Bowles and Horacio Larreguy, "Who Debates, Who Wins? At-Scale Experimental Evidence on the Supply of Policy Information in a Liberian Election. ". American Political Science Review, pages 1-20. 2025.
2. Raúl Duarte, Frederico Finan, Horacio Larreguy, and Laura Schechter. "Brokering Votes with Information Spread Via Social Networks". Forthcoming at the Review of Economic Studies, 2025.
3. Horacio Larreguy and Pia J. Raffler. "Accountability in Developing Democracies: The Impact of the Internet, Social Media, and Polarization". Annual Review of Political Science, Volume 28, Early publication, 2025.
4. Eric Arias, Horacio Larreguy, John Marshall, and Pablo Querubin. "Does the Content and Mode of Delivery of Information Matter for Electoral Accountability? Evidence from a Field Experiment in Mexico". Forthcoming in the Special Issue on Experimental Economics at the Latin American Economic Review.
5. Bruno Calderón-Hernández, Horaico Larreguy, John Marshall, and José Luis Pérez-Castellanos. "Electoral precinct-level database for Mexican municipal elections". Scientific Data, Article number: 582 (2025).
6. Jeremy Bowles, Kevin Croke, Horacio Larreguy, Shelley Liu, and John Marshall. "Sustained exposure to fact-checks can inoculate citizens against misinformation in the Global South". American Political Science Review, First view, pages 1-14 (2025).
7. Jackson Dorsey, Ashley Langer and Shaun McRae,"Fueling Alternatives: Gas Station Choice and the Implications for Electric Charging." American Economic Journal: Economic Policy 17 (1), February 2025, pp. 362-400.
8. Lucas Davis, Shaun McRae, and Enrique Seira. "Competitive Effects of Entry in Gasoline Markets." Accepted at the Journal of Industrial Economics, 2025.