Nikita Khokhlov

Teaching Fellow, University College Dublin

Work in Progress


Political Economy of COVID-19 Response in Autocracies: Evidence from Russian Regions (Accepted in Europe-Asia Studies)


The study develops a theory of subnational responses to the global pandemic in autocracies and tests it on original data on anti-COVID measures in Russian regions, demonstrating that political incentives determined the stringency of policy response.


Complexity of Political Speech in Autocracies: When do Authoritarian Elites Adapt Rhetoric to their Audience? (with A. Baturo, Revise & Resubmit)


Drawing on a dataset of Russian governors’ annual addresses in 2007-2021, we find that authoritarian elites from more developed regions speak simpler and more congruent with their role as politicians.


War, Rhetorical Adaptation, and Russia’s Members of Parliament on Social Media (with D. Romanov and A. Baturo, Under Review)


The study applies text-as-data methods to analyze public rhetoric of Russian deputies during the war in Ukraine. We find that elites from the ruling party and with security background communicate about the war more directly than their counterparts.