Harry is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow working on the Government Outcomes Lab’s Global Systematic Review of Outcomes-Based Contracting. Outputs from the review so far have addressed the use of outcomes contracts in education and in environmental policy. He is currently developing a research agenda on public service provision in fragile and conflict-affected contexts, including the role of outcomes partnerships for building capacity in such settings.
Harry’s research background is in geopolitics and political theory, with a particular focus on United Nations peace operations. He co-convenes the Oxford Network of Peace Studies.
Harry joined the Government Outcomes Lab after completing a PhD at the University of Bristol’s School of Geographical Sciences. He also holds an MSc from Bristol and a BSc from Queen’s University Belfast.
Z. Fang, M. Arana-Catania, F.-A. Van Lier, J. O. Velarde, H. Bregazzi, M. Airoldi, E. Carter, and R. Procter. (2024). SyROCCo: enhancing systematic reviews using machine learning, Data & Policy, 6.
J. Outes Velarde, M. Airoldi, J. Baster, H. Bregazzi, M. Chauhan, E. Grennan, G. L. Lourenço Caetano, J. Ng, J. N. Rezende Ikawa, and P. Rousseau. (2023). INDIGO Hack and Learn: Technical and Learning Report – September 2023, Government Outcomes Lab.
J. Outes Velarde, H. Bregazzi, S. Nagarajan, O. Paul, A. Anastasiu, and E. Carter. (2023). INDIGO Impact Bond InsightsReport - February 2023, Government Outcomes Lab.
H. Bregazzi, R. Wooldridge, A. Pangalos, E. Carter, J. Ronicle, and M. Airoldi. (2022). Using outcomes-basedcontracting to tackle the climate crisis: A review of the evidence, Government Outcomes Lab.
H. Bregazzi, R. Wooldridge, A. Pangalos, E. Carter, J. Ronicle, M. Airoldi (2022) Using outcomes-based contracting to tackle the climate crisis: A review of the evidence. Government Outcomes Lab, Blavatnik School of Goverment, University of Oxford
H. Bregazzi (2019) “Testimony Against the Whole”: Examining the Limits of Peace with Irigaray and Derrida. Towards a New Human Being
H. Bregazzi, M. Jackson (2018) Agonism, critical political geography, and the new geographies of peace. Progress in Human Geography