Claudine Gay

Claudine Gay

Wilbur A. Cowett Professor of Government and of African and African-American Studies
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I am professor of Government and of African and African-American Studies. Previously I had served as the Dean of Social Science for the Faculty of Arts and Sciences.

My research and teaching interests are in the fields of American political behavior, public opinion, minority politics, and urban and local politics. My research has considered the effects of descriptive representation on political engagement and citizens' orientations toward their government; how neighborhood environments shape racial and political attitudes among Black Americans; the roots of competition and cooperation between minority groups, with a particular focus on relations between Black Americans and Latinos; the effects of majority-minority districting on legislative responsiveness; processes of immigrant political incorporation; how political knowledge and policy cross-pressures shape partisan attachments among Black Americans; and the consequences of housing mobility programs for political participation among the poor, drawing on evidence from the Moving To Opportunity demonstration program. My current research projects include a study of the distributive politics, and downstream political consequences, of the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit program; a study of the Great Migration and shifts in the political representation of black voters; and a collaborative project with Jennifer Hochschild and Ariel White examining the effects of survey context on the measurement of linked fate.

Before joining the Department of Government in September 2006, I was an assistant professor of political science at Stanford University from 2000 to 2005, and an associate professor (tenured) from 2005 to 2006. From 1999 to 2000, I was a Visiting Fellow at the Public Policy Institute of California where I conducted research and published a monograph that examined voter participation in minority-dominated congressional districts. I earned my PhD from the Department of Government at Harvard University in 1998 and was awarded the department’s Toppan Prize for the best dissertation in political science. I earned a Bachelor’s degree in Economics from Stanford University, where I graduated in 1992 with Honors and Distinction and was awarded the Anna Laura Myers Prize for the best senior thesis in Economics.

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Contact Information

CGIS Knafel 431
Harvard University
1737 Cambridge St. Department of Government
Cambridge, MA 02138

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