Welcome

Let me introduce myself…
by WhatsApp.

I study how messaging platforms like this one are reshaping politics, how they spread misinformation, deepen polarization, and move votes across Brazil and the Global South.

Read more about my work
01

About

Political Scientist

Fernando B. Mello

Postdoctoral Researcher · ERC "POLARCHATS" · University Carlos III, Madrid & Instituto Juan Linz

Portrait of Fernando B. Mello FM
Recent & forthcoming work in
  • American Political Science Review
  • The Journal of Politics
  • Latin American Politics & Society

I am a Postdoctoral Researcher on the ERC-funded POLARCHATS project at University Carlos III, Madrid and the Instituto Juan Linz. My research sits at the intersection of comparative politics, political communication, and political economy, with a focus on misinformation, polarization, lobbying, elections, and public policy.

I study key challenges of the digital democracy era: how political (mis)information spreads in the Global South, how polarization and partisanship structure citizens' behavior in Brazil, and how organized interests and messaging platforms such as WhatsApp shape what politicians do. Methodologically, I combine large-scale data with original field and survey experiments, often run in collaboration with political parties, legislators, and civil-society organizations, alongside qualitative interviews and causal inference.

Before academia I worked in journalism: I co-founded JOTA, a leading Brazilian legal-and-political data platform, and reported on national politics for Folha de S. Paulo and VEJA. That background still shapes how I think about evidence, accountability, and the public sphere.

I hold a Ph.D. in Political Science and an M.S. in Statistics from UCLA, and an M.A. in Latin American Studies and Government from Georgetown University.

Fields Comparative Politics · Political Communication · Political Economy
Methods Field & survey experiments · Causal inference · Mixed methods
Regions Brazil · Latin America · Global South
Based in Madrid, Spain
02

Research

Research agenda

Misinformation & political communication

How political (mis)information spreads through social and messaging platforms in the Global South, what makes it persuasive, how its style shapes its effects, and how rules like anti-misinformation laws reshape the way candidates campaign.

Tap for an example →

An example

Does the style of misinformation condition its effects? An experiment in Brazil

with Rodrigo Fernández Caba & Simon Chauchard

The Journal of Politics · 2025

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Research agenda

Lobbying & the policymaking process

How organized interests shape policy, when and why legislators respond to business and digital lobbying, and how shifts in the balance of organized competition can make once-infeasible reforms suddenly possible.

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An example

When business speaks, legislators listen: Experimental and qualitative evidence from Brazil

single-authored

American Political Science Review · 2026

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Research agenda

Polarization & partisanship in Brazil

The roots and consequences of affective polarization in Brazil, partisan stereotyping, perceptions of status gain and loss, and how race, class, and gender structure the country's partisan divide.

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An example

Partisan stereotyping and polarization in Brazil

with David Samuels & Cesar Zucco

Latin American Politics and Society · 2024

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Research agenda

Elections, accountability & democracy

How voters hold leaders accountable, or fail to. Support for leaders who undermine democracy, credit-claiming without attribution, and how fears about migration and instability shape political attitudes.

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An example

Following the leader against democracy? Evidence from the 2022 Brazilian presidential election

with Ignacio Jurado

Politics and Governance · 2026

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03

Publications

Peer-reviewed articles

  1. 2026

    When business speaks, legislators listen: Experimental and qualitative evidence from Brazil

    single-authored

    American Political Science Review Forthcoming

  2. 2026
  3. 2025

    Does the style of misinformation condition its effects? An experiment in Brazil

    with Rodrigo Fernández Caba & Simon Chauchard

    The Journal of Politics

  4. 2024

    Partisan stereotyping and polarization in Brazil

    with David Samuels & Cesar Zucco

    Latin American Politics and Society

  5. 2016

    To democracy through anocracy

    with Josep Colomer & David Banerjea

    Democracy & Society

Books, chapters & datasets

  1. 2023

    Lobbying Uncovered: Corruption, Democracy, and Public Policy in Brazil

    with Milton Seligman

    Wilson Center (book)

  2. 2020

    Grupos organizados, corrupção e anticorrupção no Brasil

    with Daniel Marcelino · in Corrupção: Diálogos Interdisciplinares

    Almedina, São Paulo (chapter)

  3. 2017

    O jornalismo como ferramenta de controle da corrupção

    with Laura Diniz · in 48 Visões sobre a Corrupção

    Quartier Latin, São Paulo (chapter)

  4. n.d.

    States and Institutions of Governance in Latin America

    with Diana Kapiszewski et al.

    Georgetown University · SIGLA dataset

A complete, up-to-date list is on Google Scholar.

04

Teaching

Instructor of record

  • Applied Quantitative Methods for the Social Sciences · UC3M
  • Comparative Politics · UC3M
  • Latin American Government & Politics · Georgetown
  • States & Society · Georgetown
  • Introduction to Comparative Politics · UCLA

Teaching assistant · UCLA

  • Game Theory
  • Data Analysis
  • Russian Politics
  • Introduction to Comparative Politics
4.7/5
Average teaching evaluation
Teaching Excellence Acknowledgement · UC3M, 2025
05

Journalism & impact

Before my academic career I worked as a political and investigative journalist in Brazil. I co-founded and served as Data Director of JOTA, a leading legal-and-political data platform named Best Digital Media Startup in the World by WAN-IFRA (2019), and covered the Presidency and National Congress for Folha de S. Paulo and VEJA.

06

Selected media appearances

A selection of interviews, talks, and opinion writing across the Brazilian and international press.

Fernando B. Mello during a television interview

Television · TV Cultura

Roda Viva

Panelist on Brazil's flagship public-television interview program, questioning Supreme Court justice Luís Roberto Barroso on the consolidation and resilience of Brazilian democracy.

Watch

Podcast

Fora da Política

Guest on "Fora da Política Não há Salvação," discussing new empirical findings on petismo, antipetismo, and status-driven polarization in Brazil, with David Samuels and César Zucco.

Listen

Interview · Canal Meio

Reading the polls

On polling methodology and models to aggregate thousands of vote-intention surveys and read the odds of an election outcome.

Watch

Magazine · revista piauí

A psicologia afeta concretamente a política

A long-form feature on how psychology, status, and emotion concretely shape political behavior.

Read

Event · Atlantic Council

Lessons from Brazil: fighting corruption

Panel at the Atlantic Council in Washington, DC, on Brazil's fight against corruption and its judicial cooperation with the United States during the Lava Jato era.

Watch

Interview

Impeachment as a political weapon

A conversation with Aníbal Pérez-Liñán (Notre Dame) and Marcus André Melo (UFPE) on impeachment as a political weapon in Latin America.

Watch

Interview

Steven Levitsky: how democracies die

A conversation with Steven Levitsky, co-author of "How Democracies Die," on democratic crises amid pandemic and economic turmoil.

Watch

Book launch · Insper

Lobby Desvendado

The Insper launch of Lobby Desvendado, book with Milton Seligman on lobbying, public policy, and corruption in Brazil.

Watch
07

Let's get in touch

I'm always glad to discuss research collaborations, data, and the politics of the digital age. The fastest way to reach me is by email.