- Religion, ethnicity, and conflict
- Institutional development
- State- and peacebuilding
- Aid allocation
- Social and political trust
- Migration and refugees
- Quantitative methods
- Spatial data
Email: patsch@prio.org
Mobile phone: +47 900 59 485
Patrick left PRIO in the spring of 2026.
Patrick was a Research Assistant focusing on data cleaning, spatial data, and quantitative methods with Stata, R and Python.
For EMPOW, he built a python package for querying Factiva API for analytics and data extraction for building the Agency Dataset on women in conflict. For MigrationRhythms, Patrick worked with spatial analysis and survey data on how migration affects middle class mobility. As part of POLIMPACT, he has leveraged supervised machine learning for a large-N systematic literature review on how conflict and political dimensions impact climate change mitigation and adaptation efforts. He has also previously worked on a pilot study to obtain disaggregated operator data on aid allocations for mine action which he presented at the UN during the 21st meeting of the States Parties to the APBMC. He has worked on the TRUST project with data quality and researching how farmland quality surrounding refugee settlements impacts host-community-refugee relations, and the viability of exporting the 'Ugandan model' for refugee self-reliance for Sub-Saharan countries.
As an external MA-student part of the TRUST Project, his MA Thesis investigated how ethnic composition and refugee arrivals affect attitudes of social trust in African host-communities, titled "Distrusting Ethnic Changes? A quantitative study on the moderating role of ethnic group change in the refugee population for refugee-hosting communities' social trust in Uganda, Tanzania, and Zambia".
PRIO Paper
PRIO Policy Brief
Women’s Empowerment in Peace Processes (EMPOW) and Women’s Activities in Armed Rebellion (WAAR) research teams met for a workshop on the role of data in promoting gender-equal peace.
A new PRIO Paper offers in-depth documentation of the MigrationRhythms survey, shedding light on urban middle classes, social mobility and internal & international migration across four major Asian cities.
A new analysis of gender trends in Norwegian academia shows that gender balance has been largely achieved among researchers, with professorships now the final step toward parity.