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Lorrie Frasure Author

Todd Shaw has appointments in both the Department of Political Science and the Department of Political Science at the University of South Carolina, Columbia. He is the College of Arts and Sciences’ Distinguished Associate Professor of Political Science and African American Studies. From 2017 to 2021, Shaw was the department chair of Political Science and later the Interim Associate Dean for Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion in the College of Arts & Sciences. He researches and teaches in the areas of African American politics, urban politics, and public policy, as well as citizen activism and social movements. Louis DeSipio is professor of political science and professor of Chicano/Latino studies at the University of California, Irvine (UCI). His research interests include ethnic politics, Latino politics, immigration, naturalization, and U.S. electoral politics. He has designed and collected primary survey data that measure Latino political values, attitudes, and behaviors, and has designed and directed ethnographic research projects that added context and nuance to the survey data. DeSipio’s research has expanded the boundaries of the race and ethnic politics scholarship to inform other subfields, particularly immigration and immigrant settlement policy studies. Dianne Pinderhughes is Rev. Edmund P. Joyce C.S.C. Professor of Africana Studies and Political Science at the University of Notre Dame, where she is professor of political science and of Africana studies. She is author of Race and Ethnicity in Chicago Politics: A Reexamination of Pluralist Theory, and co-author of Contested Transformation: Race, Gender and Political Leadership in 21st Century America. Pinderhughes’s research addresses inequality, with a focus on racial, ethnic, and gender politics and public policy; explores the creation of American civil society institutions in the twentieth century; and analyzes their influence on the formation of voting rights policy. She served as president of the American Political Science Association from 2007 to 2008 and as President of the International Political Science Association from 2021-2023. Lorrie Frasure is the inaugural Ralph J. Bunche Endowed Chair and at the University of California-Los Angeles. She is a Professor of Political Science and African American Studies at the University of California-Los Angeles. She is and the Director of the Ralph J. Bunche Center for African American Studies and Faculty Director of the Center for the Study of Race, Ethnicity and Politics (CSREP) at UCLA. She is the author of Racial and Ethnic Politics in American Suburbs (Cambridge University Press, 2015), which won two national book awards from the American Political Science Association). Since 2008 she has served as the co-Principal Investigator of the Collaborative Multiracial Post-Election Survey (CMPS). Her research interests include racial/ethnic political behavior, African American politics, women and politics, immigrant political incorporation, and state and local politics. Toni-Michelle C. Travis is a professor of political science at George Mason University and a former fellow of the Rothermere American Institute at the University of Oxford. She has taught and conducted research on urban, racial and ethnic, and Virginia politics, and is coauthor of The Meaning of Difference. Travis has served as a political analyst on Virginia and national politics.