Marco Widodo

Marco Widodo

Marco Widodo

  • CDDRL Honors Student, 2025-26
  • CDDRL Undergraduate Communications Assistant, 2024-25
  • Master's in International Policy Class of 2027

Biography

Marco is a coterminal M.A. candidate in International Policy on the Governance and Development track. He is concurrently finishing his B.A. in Political Science at Stanford with concentrations in Political Economy & Development and Data Science. Marco is also currently writing an honors thesis with the Center on Democracy, Development, and the Rule of Law (CDDRL), leveraging survey experiments to investigate how different conceptualizations of democracy influence public responses to democratic backsliding in Indonesia.

He has previously worked at the World Bank’s Development Impact Evaluation (DIME) unit and the National Endowment for Democracy’s International Forum for Democratic Studies (IFDS). His research interests lie at the intersection of comparative governance, international political economy, and democratic resilience, having served as a research assistant with both the Stanford Next Asia Policy Lab and the Hoover Institution. In his spare time, he enjoys listening to jazz, going camping, and trying out new recipes.

In The News

Hanging gold charm with greek letters "Phi Beta Kappa" on blue background
News

Six CDDRL Honors Students Elected to Phi Beta Kappa

Katya Bigman, John Churchill, Elizabeth Jerstad, George Porteus, Emma Wang, and Marco Widodo are among the newest members of this prestigious academic honors society.
Six CDDRL Honors Students Elected to Phi Beta Kappa
CDDRL Fisher Family Honors Class of 2026
News

Introducing Our 2025-26 CDDRL Honors Students

We are thrilled to welcome twelve outstanding students, who together represent fourteen different majors and minors and hail from seven different states and four countries, to our Fisher Family Honors Program in Democracy, Development and the Rule of Law.
Introducing Our 2025-26 CDDRL Honors Students
Marc Lynch
News

The Middle East as a Transnationalized Warscape

Marc Lynch, Professor of Political Science at George Washington University and the Director of the Project on Middle East Political Science, applies a framework of “Warscape Theory” to better understand patterns of state failures, recurrent conflict, and authoritarian rule across the region.
The Middle East as a Transnationalized Warscape