Nina Barzachka
Assistant Professor

Biography
Nina Barzachka鈥檚 research explores the topic of institutional change. She is especially interested in the effects that institutions exert on actors and, conversely, in how actors succeed or fail in changing the very same institutional structures that constrain them. Her research agenda consists of three distinct areas of inquiry: party politics and electoral system reform in Western and Eastern Europe; mass protests movements鈥 capacity to produce tangible change in Eastern Europe; and the politics of Brexit. Prof. Barzachka鈥檚 current book project examines why sometimes powerful political parties involved in electoral system reform forgo seat-maximization. The fieldwork for the project was generously funded by the IREX (International Research and Exchanges Board), as well as the Society of Fellows and the Raven Society at the University of Virginia.
She has published original research articles in Comparative Politics, Europe-Asia Studies, The British Journal of Politics and International Relations, and Politics of the Low Countries. She also has multiple contributions to The Monkey Cage blog at The Washington Post.
Prof. Barzachka鈥檚 interest in European politics stems from having lived and/or conducted fieldwork in Belgium, Bulgaria, Finland and France. Her extensive experience in teaching political science in U.S. liberal arts institutions and believe strongly in the benefits of international education. At 51小黄车, she teaches E.U. Politics; European Politics (Comparative Politics of Europe); Political Parties in Europe (Representation & Participation), Introduction to International Relations, and a Montserrat course entitled Democracy at Work (part of a two-semester multi-disciplinary course sequence 鈥淲ork, Art & Politics.鈥 She serves on the boards of International Studies and Peace and Conflict Studies.
Selected Publications
Barzachka, Nina S. (2025). 鈥淯sing Process-Tracing to Evaluate Competing Accounts of Proportional Representation in Belgium,鈥 Politics of the Low Countries, 5(2). Doi: . (Published online, 2023).
Barzachka, Nina S. (2024). 鈥淭he Case of Brexit: How to Open a Critical Juncture without an Exogenous Shock?鈥 British Journal of Politics and International Relations, 26(4), 1299-1321. Doi:
Barzachka, Nina S. (2020). 鈥淭o Resign or Not to Resign: Why Incumbents Ignore Peaceful Mass Protests?鈥 Europe-Asia Studies, 75(5), 763-791. Online at:
Barzachka, Nina Simeonova. (2014). 鈥淲hen Winning Seats is Not Everything: Tactical Seat-Loss during Democratization,鈥 Comparative Politics, 46(2), 209-229. Doi:
Other Publications
Barzachka, Nina S. and Stefka P. Yordanova. 鈥淏ulgaria Has Not Been Able to Form Government. What Happens Next? The Washington Post, The Monkey Cage, , April 29, 2021.
Barzachka, Nina S. and Stefka P. Yordanova. 鈥淲hy Bulgaria鈥檚 Government Has Survived Months of Anti-Corruption Protests,鈥 The Washington Post, The Monkey Cage, , December 17, 2020.
Barzachka, Nina S. 鈥淎ustria Now Holds the EU Presidency. Expect a Tougher Stance on Immigration,鈥 The Washington Post, The Monkey Cage, , August 2, 2018.
Barzachka, Nina S. 鈥淎nalyzing Politics through the Lens of Institutional Change,鈥 Clio: Newsletter of Politics & History, Vol. 26, No. 2, Summer 2017.
Barzachka, Nina S. 鈥淏ulgaria鈥檚 Government Will Include Far-Right Nationalist Parties for the First Time,鈥 The Washington Post, The Monkey Cage, April 25, 2017.
Barzachka, Nina S. 鈥淢echanisms of Electoral System Choice: Bulgaria, 1990, 1991, 2009,鈥 International Research and Exchanges Board (IREX), research brief, 2009.