Race, Ethnicity, and Gender
The Invincible Gender Gap in Political Ambition
Who Is "On Welfare"? Validating the Use of Conjoint Experiments to Measure Stereotype Content
The Politics of Reparations for Black Americans
U.S. Sanctuary Policies and Mexicans’ Migration Preferences: A Conjoint-Experimental Study
Toni Morrison: Imagining Freedom
“What about the Rapists?” The Political Psychology of Women’s Policing Attitudes
Carter
Christopher Carter is a John L. Nau III Assistant Professor of the History and Principles of Democracy in the Politics Department. His primary research agenda examines how indigenous populations mobilize to make demands on the state. In his book project, he investigates the formation of ethnic and class identities in Latin America.
State Building in Crisis Governance: Donald Trump and COVID-19
Hostile Sexism, Benevolent Sexism, and American Elections
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