Curriculum Vitae Summer 2020 Mixed-Methods Research

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Curriculum Vitae Summer 2020 Mixed-Methods Research Lorrie Frasure, PhD University of California, Los Angeles Department of Political Science Department of African American Studies [email protected] http://lorriefrasure.com @lorriefrasure ACADEMIC POSITIONS University of California, Los Angeles, Acting Director Ralph J. Bunche Center for African American Studies, July 2020-June 2021 University of California, Los Angeles, Vice Chair for Graduate Studies Department of Political Science, 2019-Present University of California, Los Angeles, Associate Professor (with tenure) Department of Political Science, 2015-Present Department of African American Studies, 2018-Present Social Science Inter-departmental Program (IDP), Faculty Affiliate, 2017-2019 University of California, Los Angeles, Assistant Professor Department of Political Science, 2007-2015 Cornell University, Postdoctoral Associate and Visiting Faculty Department of Government, January 2006-December 2007 EDUCATION University of Maryland-College Park, Department of Government and Politics Ph.D. in Government and Politics, December 2005 University of Maryland-College Park, Department of Government and Politics M.A. in Government and Politics, 2003 University of Chicago, Irving B. Harris Graduate School of Public Policy Studies M.P.P, 2001 University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Department of Political Science B.A. in Political Science, High Distinction, 1999 RESEARCH AND TEACHING INTERESTS Racial and Ethnic Politics, American Government and Politics, Urban Political Economy Racial/ethnic minority public opinion and political participation; African American politics; women and politics; immigrant political incorporation; state and local politics; public policy Lorrie Frasure Curriculum Vitae Summer 2020 Mixed-Methods Research Survey research: survey instrumentation and development, telephone and online modes, data analysis Qualitative research: in-depth interviews, native-language focus group discussions and participant observations (field-work in Washington, DC, Northern Virginia, Maryland, Chicago, Los Angeles, and Orange County, CA) PUBLICATIONS AND ORIGINAL SURVEY DATA COLLECTIONS Book 2015 (hardcover), 2016 (paperback). Racial and Ethnic Politics in American Suburbs. New York, NY: Cambridge University Press. Winner of two national book awards: Best Book about Race Relations in the United States by the Race, Ethnicity, and Politics (REP) Section and the Dennis Judd Best Book Award by the Urban and Local Politics Section of the American Political Science Association (APSA). Peer Reviewed Articles and Books Chapters Forthcoming. “The Obama Era and Black Attitudes towards Undocumented Immigration Policies” with Stacey Greene. In After Obama: Black Politics in a Post-Obama Era. Todd Shaw, Robert Brown and Joseph A. McCormick, II. (eds). Under contract with NYU Press. 2020. “Not in ‘Mixed-Company’?: Dialogues about Women and the Race Gap in American Politics.” In The Hillary Effect: Perspectives on Clinton’s Legacy, Ivy Cargile, Denise Davis, Jennifer Merolla, and Rachel VanSickle-Ward (eds). Bloomsbury Press. 2019. “The Collaborative Multiracial Post-Election Survey (CMPS): Building the Academic Pipeline through Data Access, Publication and Networking Opportunities” with Janelle Wong, Edward Vargas and Matt A. Barreto. PS: Political Science & Politics. 2019. “Geographic Identity and Attitudes toward Undocumented Immigrants,” with Bryan Wilcox- Archuleta. Political Research Quarterly (PRQ). 2019. “Introduction to Dialogues: Linked fate and the politics of groups and identities,” guest editor with Natalie Masuoka and Matt Barreto for Dialogues Symposium in Politics, Groups and Identities (PGI). Symposium features 7 short peer reviewed articles and a reflection from Michael C. Dawson on the 25th anniversary of Behind the Mule: Race and Class in African American Politics (1994). 2018. “Choosing the Velvet Glove: Women Voters, Ambivalent Sexism, and Vote Choice in 2016.” Journal of Race, Ethnicity, and Politics (JREP). 2018. “Best practices in collecting online data with Asian, Black, Latino, and White respondents: evidence from the 2016 Collaborative Multiracial Post-Election Survey.” with Matt A. Barreto, Edward D. Vargas and Janelle Wong. Politics, Groups and Identities (PGI). 2013. “Black Views toward Proposed Undocumented Immigration Policies: The Role of Racial Stereotypes and Economic Competition.” with Stacey Greene. In Black and Brown in Los Angeles: Beyond Conflict and Coalition. Josh Kun and Laura Pulido (eds.) University of California Press. Berkeley, CA: p.90-111 2012. “Holding the Borderline: School District Responsiveness to Demographic Change in Orange County, California” In The Resegregation of Suburban Schools. Erica Frankenberg and Gary Orfield (eds.) Harvard Education Press. p.69-90. 2 Lorrie Frasure Curriculum Vitae Summer 2020 2010. “The Logic of Institutional Interdependency: The Case of Day Laborer Policy in Suburbia.” with Michael Jones-Correa. Urban Affairs Review 45: 451-482. 2010. “The Burden of Jekyll and Hyde: Barack Obama, Racial Identity and Black Political Behavior.” In Whose Black Politics: Cases in Post-Racial Black Leadership. Andra Gillespie (ed.) Routledge Press p.133- 154. 2009. “Racial, Ethnic, and Gender Disparities in Political Participation and Civic Engagement,” with Linda Faye Williams. In Emerging Intersections: Race, Class, and Gender in Theory, Policy, and Practice. Bonnie Thornton Dill and Ruth E. Zambrana, (eds.), NJ: Rutgers University Press. p. 316-356. 2007. “Beyond the Myth of the White Middle-Class: Immigrant and Ethnic Minority Settlement in Suburban America.” in the National Political Science Review. p. 65-86. 2007. “Still at the Margins: The Persistence of Neglect of African American Issues in Political Science” with Ernest J. Wilson III. In African American Perspectives on Political Science, Wilbur Rich, (ed.) Philadelphia: Temple University Press. p. 7-23. Survey Datasets 2021. (forthcoming) Collaborative Multiracial Post-Election Survey (CMPS 2020). Co-Principal Investigator with Matt Barreto, Edward D. Vargas and Janelle Wong. A consortium of over 150 scholars, across over 70 universities/colleges joined to develop an online, national, cooperative, 100% user content driven, multiracial, multilingual, post-election survey of adults (projected N=20,000) and 16-17 year old youth (projected N=2,000), to be fielded after the 2020 Presidential election. Projected N=22,000. http://cmpsurvey.org (in development). 2017. Collaborative Multiracial Post-Election Survey (CMPS 2016). Co-Principal Investigator with Matt Barreto, Edward D. Vargas and Janelle Wong. A consortium of over 80 scholars, across 55 universities/colleges joined to develop the first online, national, cooperative, 100% user content driven, multiracial, multilingual, post-election survey of registered and non-registered adults in a presidential election. N=10,145. http://cmpsurvey.org. 2013. Collaborative Multiracial Post-Election Survey (CMPS 2012). Co-Principal Investigator with Ange-Marie Hancock, Jillian Anne Medeiros, Gabe Sanchez, and Ali Valenzuela. A national, multiracial and multilingual survey of registered voters in a presidential election, N=2,616. 2009. Collaborative Multiracial Post-election Survey (CMPS 2008). Co-Principal Investigator with Matt Barreto, Ange-Marie Hancock, Sylvia Manzano, Karthick Ramakrishnan, Ricardo Ramirez, Gabe Sanchez, and Janelle Wong. ICPSR35163-v1. Ann Arbor, MI: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor], 2014-08-21. http://doi.org/10.3886/ICPSR35163.v1 The first multiracial and multilingual survey of registered voters across multiple states and regions in a presidential election, N=4,563. 3 Lorrie Frasure Curriculum Vitae Summer 2020 Research Projects and Grants Under Review and in Progress “Destined to Run?: The Role of Civic Engagement on Black Women’s Decision to Run for Elected Office,” with Jamil Scott, Nadia Brown and Dianne M. Pinderhughes (under Revise and Resubmit with National Review of Black Politics). “Black and Female while Governing San Francisco: Mayor London Breed and the Limits of Deracialization” with Chelsea Jones and Chrystal Robertson, in Historic Firsts in US Elections: Gubernatorial, Congressional, and Mayoral Campaigns 2018-2019, Evelyn Simien (ed.) (under review Cambridge University Press) “The Social Justice Research Initiative (SJRI): Advancing the Student Pipeline from High School to Access to Higher Education through Ethnic Studies and Community Empowerment” (proposal in development for the Mellon Just Futures Initiative) “Understanding Crisis Across Different Identities: Collaborative Multiracial Post-election Survey (CMPS) COVID-19 Pilot Study (full proposal invited by Russell Sage Foundation) “Women, Geographic Identity and the Race Gap in American Electoral Politics” (Book-length manuscript in development). “Women of Color Research Collaborative (WOC-RC), Intersecting Identities Project (IIP)” (Field-research initiative, including in-depth interviews and focus groups, in development) “Federal Policies and Spending Priorities among American Women in the United States,” with Jessica Stewart and Christine Slaughter (Research article in development). AWARDS AND FELLOWSHIPS (since 2005) UCLA, 2018 Distinguished Teaching Award for Senate Faculty, with a special citation for “Distinction in Teaching at the Graduate Level.” UCLA’s highest teaching award. Since developed in 1961, only 10 political science faculty to receive university-wide honor. American Political Science Association (APSA), Best
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