MELISSA R. MICHELSON [email protected] 650.888.4810 (CELL)

DEAN OF ARTS & SCIENCES, MENLO COLLEGE (JULY 2020-PRESENT) PH.D., Political Science, (1994) M.PHIL., Political Science, Yale University (1994) M.A., Political Science, Yale University (1991) B.A., Political Science, Columbia University (1990) Professor of Political Science, Menlo College (2010-present) Adjunct Lecturer, (2010-present)

LEADERSHIP EXPERIENCE (HIGHLIGHTS) 4/16-1/20 Chair, Menlo College Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Committee 8/18-8/19 & 8/09-8/10 President, Latino Caucus, American Political Science Association (APSA) 4/15-4/17 Chair, LGBT Caucus, Midwest Political Science Association (MPSA) 8/14-8/15 President, APSA LGBT Caucus 8/14-7/15 & 8/11-7/12 President, Menlo College Faculty Senate 2/16-present Founding Executive Committee member, Women Also Know Stuff 2013-present Co-organizer, Women of Color in Political Science Workshop 4/11-4/12 & 4/04-4/06 President/Founder, MPSA Latino Caucus

PREVIOUS ACADEMIC EXPERIENCE 9/09-6/10 Visiting Faculty Fellow, Stanford University Research Institute for Comparative Studies in Race and Ethnicity (RICSRE) 2004-2010 Department of Political Science, California State University, East Bay Associate Professor (tenured), 9/07-8/10 Assistant Professor, 9/04-8/07 1999-2004 Department of Political Science, California State University, Fresno Associate Professor (tenured), 08/03-08/04 Assistant Professor, 08/99-8/03 1995-1999 Assistant Professor of Political Science, University of Illinois, Chicago 1994-1995 Visiting Assistant Professor of Government, Lawrence University, Appleton, WI

SCHOLARSHIP BOOKS (7) PEER-REVIEWED JOURNAL ARTICLES (50) BOOK CHAPTERS (23) OTHER PUBLICATIONS (53)

Melissa R. Michelson page 1 of 26 o BOOKS 1. Melissa R. Michelson and Brian F. Harrison. LGBTQ Life in America: Examining the Facts. Under contract; anticipated publication, 2021. Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO. 2. Melissa R. Michelson and Brian F. Harrison. 2020. Transforming Prejudice: Fear, Identity, and Transgender Rights. New York, NY: Oxford University Press. 3. Michelson, Melissa R., J. Theodore Anagnoson, Gerald Bonetto, J. Vincent Buck, Jolly Emrey, James J Kelleher, Nadine Koch. Forthcoming, Feb. 2021. Governing California in the Twenty-First Century, 8th ed. (New York: W.W. Norton & Company). • Anagnoson, Theodore J., Gerald Bonetto, J. Vincent Buck, Jolly Emrey, James J. Kelleher, Nadine Koch, and Melissa R. Michelson. 2019. Governing California in the Twenty-First Century, 7th ed. (New York: W.W. Norton & Company). 4. Harrison, Brian F., and Melissa R. Michelson. 2017. Listen, We Need to Talk: How to Change Attitudes about LGBT Rights. New York, NY: Oxford University Press. 5. Calfano, Brian R., Elizabeth A. Oldmixon, and Melissa R. Michelson. 2017. A Matter of Discretion: The Politics of Catholic Priests in the and Ireland. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield. 6. Chávez Pringle, Maria, Jessica Lavariega Monforti, and Melissa R. Michelson. 2014. Living the Dream: New Immigration Policies and the Lives of Undocumented Latino Youth. Boulder, CO: Paradigm Publishers. 7. García Bedolla, Lisa, and Melissa R. Michelson. 2012. Mobilizing Inclusion: Transforming the Electorate Through Get-out-the-Vote Campaigns. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press. • 2013 American Political Science Association (APSA) Ralph Bunche Award • 2013 APSA Best Book Award in the Field of Race, Ethnicity, and Politics

o PEER-REVIEWED JOURNAL ARTICLES 1. Melissa R. Michelson, and Jessica L. Lavariega Monforti. “Elusive Inclusion: Persistent Challenges facing Women of Color in Political Science.” Forthcoming, PS: Political Science & Politics. 2. Mann, Christopher B., Melissa R. Michelson, and Matt Davis. 2020. “What is the impact of bilingual communication to mobilize Latinos? Exploratory evidence from experiments in New Jersey, North Carolina, and Virginia” Electoral Studies 65: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.electstud.2020.102132 3. Chambers, Stefanie, and Melissa R. Michelson. 2020. “School Satisfaction Among Low- Income Urban Parents.” Urban Education 55, 2 (Feb.): 299-321. 4. Lavariega Monforti, Jessica L., and Melissa R. Michelson. 2019. “Building Our Communities: Women of Color Workshops in Political Science.” PS: Political Science & Politics 52, 4 (Oct.): 1-5. 5. Tafoya, Joe R., Melissa R. Michelson, Maria Chávez, and Jessica L. Lavariega Monforti. 2019. “I Feel Like I Was Born Here: Social Identity, Political Socialization, and DeAmericanization.” Latino Studies 17, 1 (March): 48-66.

Melissa R. Michelson page 2 of 26 6. Harrison, Brian F., and Melissa R. Michelson. 2019. “Gender, Masculinity Threat, and Support for Transgender Rights: An Experimental Study.” Sex Roles. 81, 1 (Jan.): 63-75. 7. Calfano, Brian, Nazita Lajevardi, and Melissa R. Michelson. 2019. “Trumped Up Challenges: Limitations, Opportunities, and the Future of Political Research on Muslim Americans.” Politics, Groups, and Identities 7, 2: 477-487. 8. Michelson, Melissa R., and Jessica L. Lavariega Monforti. 2018. “Back in the Shadows, Back in the Streets.” PS: Political Science & Politics 51, 2 (April): 282-287. 9. Pringle, Lisa, Melissa R. Michelson, Jennifer Merolla, and Deborah Brown McCabe. 2018. “Calling all Neighbors: Mobilizing Turnout for a Local Housing Referendum.” Journal of Political Marketing 17, 4 (Dec.): 418-441. 10. Beaulieu, Emily, Amber Boydstun, Nadia Brown, Kim Yi Dionne, Andra Gillespie, Samara Klar, Yanna Krupnikov, Melissa R. Michelson, Kathleen Searles, and Christina Wolbrecht. 2017. “Women Also Know Stuff: Meta-Level Mentoring to Battle Gender Bias in Political Science.” PS: Political Science & Politics 50, 3 (July): 779-783. • Reprinted in Kent Worcester, ed., Navigating Political Science: Professional Advancement and Success in the Discipline (Washington, DC: American Political Science Association, 2018), pp. 31-37. 11. Harrison, Brian F., and Melissa R. Michelson. 2017. “What’s Love Got to Do With It: Emotion, Rationality, and Framing LGBT Rights” New Political Science: A Journal of Politics and Culture 39, 2 (April): 177-197. 12. Harrison, Brian F., and Melissa R. Michelson. 2017. “Using Experiments to Understand Public Attitudes towards Transgender Rights.” Politics, Groups, and Identities 5, 1 (April): 152- 160. • Reprinted in Nadia E. Brown and Sarah Allen Gershon, eds., Body Politics (New York: Routledge, 2019), pp. 152-160. 13. Moura, Mauricio, and Melissa R. Michelson. 2017. “WhatsApp in Brazil: Mobilising Voters Through Door-to-Door and Personal Messages.” Internet Policy Review 6, 4 (Dec. 2017). DOI: 10.14763/2017.4.775 14. Valenzuela, Ali A., and Melissa R. Michelson. 2016. “Turnout, Status, and Identity: Mobilizing Latinos to Vote with Group Appeals.” American Political Science Review 110, 4 (Nov.): 615-630. 15. Michelson, Melissa R. 2016. “Healthy Skepticism or Corrosive Cynicism? New Insights into the Roots and Results of Latino Political Cynicism” RSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences 2, 3 (June): 60-77. 16. Michelson, Melissa R. 2016. “The Danger of Overreliance on IRB: An Approved Project is not always an Ethical Project.” PS: Political Science & Politics 49, 2 (April): 299-303. 17. Harrison, Brian F., and Melissa R. Michelson. 2016. “More than a Game: Football Fans and Marriage Equality.” PS: Political Science & Politics 49, 4 (Oct.): 782-787. 18. Harrison, Brian F., and Melissa R. Michelson. 2015. “God and Marriage: The Impact of Religious Identity Priming on Attitudes toward Same-Sex Marriage.” Social Science Quarterly 96, 5 (Nov.): 1411-1423.

Melissa R. Michelson page 3 of 26 19. McCabe, Deborah Brown, and Melissa R. Michelson. 2015. “Pushing Too Hard: Using Door-in-the-Face to Get Voters out the Door.” Journal of Political Marketing 14, 4 (Oct.): 613- 322. 20. Teresi, Holly, and Melissa R. Michelson. 2015. “Wired to Mobilize: The effect of social networking messages on voter turnout.” Social Science Journal 52, 2 (June): 195–204. 21. Michelson, Melissa R. 2014. “Memory and Voter Mobilization.” Polity 46, 4 (Oct.): 591- 610. 22. Michelson, Melissa R., and Lisa García Bedolla. 2014. “Mobilization by Different Means: Nativity and GOTV in the United States.” International Migration Review 48, 3: 710-727. 23. Lavariega Monforti, Jessica, Melissa R. Michelson, and Annie Franco. 2013. “¿Por Quién Votará? Experimental Evidence about Language, Ethnicity and Vote Choice (among Republicans).” Politics, Groups and Identities 1, 4: 475-487. 24. Sinclair, Betsy, Margaret McConnell, and Melissa R. Michelson. 2013. “Local Canvassing: The Efficacy of Grassroots Voter Mobilization.” Political Communication 30, 1 (Jan.): 42-57. 25. Michelson, Melissa R., Neil Malhotra, Andrew Healy, Donald P. Green, Allison Carnegie, and Ali Adam Valenzuela. 2012. “The Effect of Prepaid Postage on Election Turnout: A Cautionary Tale for Election Administrators.” Election Law Journal 11, 3 (Sept.): 279-290. 26. Malhotra, Neil, Melissa R. Michelson, and Ali Adam Valenzuela. 2012. “Research Note: Emails from Official Sources Can Increase Turnout.” Quarterly Journal of Political Science 7, 3 (June): 321-332. 27. Harrison, Brian F., and Melissa R. Michelson. 2012. “Not That There’s Anything Wrong with That: The Effect of Personalized Appeals on Marriage Equality Campaigns.” Political Behavior 34, 2 (June): 325-344. 28. Gillespie, Andra, and Melissa R. Michelson. 2011. “Participant Observation and the Political Scientist: Possibilities, Priorities, and Practicalities.” PS: Political Science and Politics 44, 2 (April): 261-265. 29. Malhotra, Neil, Melissa R. Michelson, Todd Rogers, and Ali A. Valenzuela. 2011. “Text Messages as Mobilization Tools: Implications for Theories of Political Participation” American Politics Research 39, 4 (July): 664-81. 30. Michelson, Melissa R., Lisa García Bedolla, and Margaret A. McConnell. 2009. “Heeding the Call: The Effect of Targeted Two-Round Phonebanks on Voter Turnout.” Journal of Politics 71, 4 (Oct.): 1549-1563. 31. García Bedolla, Lisa, and Melissa R. Michelson. 2009. “What Do Voters Need to Know? Testing the Role of Cognitive Information in Asian American Voter Mobilization.” American Politics Research 37, 2 (March): 254-274. 32. Lavariega Monforti, Jessica, and Melissa R. Michelson. 2008. “Diagnosing the Leaky Pipeline: Continuing Barriers to the Retention of Latinas and Latinos in Political Science.” PS: Political Science and Politics 41, 1 (Jan.): 161-166. 33. Michelson, Melissa R. 2007. “All Roads Lead to Rust: How Acculturation Erodes Latino Immigrant Trust in Government.” Aztlán: A Journal of Chicano Studies 32, 2 (Fall): 21-46. 34. Michelson, Melissa R. 2006. “Mobilizing the Latino Youth Vote: Some Experimental

Melissa R. Michelson page 4 of 26 Results.” Social Science Quarterly 87, 5 (Dec.): 1188-1206. 35. Michelson, Melissa R. 2006. “APSA Fund Successfully Mentoring Latino Scholars.” PS: Political Science and Politics 39, 4 (Oct.): 949-951. 36. Michelson, Melissa R. 2006-2007. “Mobilizing Latino Voters for a Ballot Proposition.” Latino(a) Research Review 6, 1-2 (Summer): 33-49. 37. Michelson, Melissa R. 2005. “Does Ethnicity Trump Party? Competing Vote Cues and Latino Voting Behavior.” Journal of Political Marketing 4, 4 (Nov.): 1-25. 38. Michelson, Melissa R. 2005. “Meeting the Challenge of Latino Voter Mobilization.” Annals of Political and Social Science 601 (Sept.): 85-101. 39. Michelson, Melissa R., and Scott J. Susin. 2004. “What’s in a Name: The Power of Fusion Politics in a Local Election.” Polity 36, 2 (Jan.): 301-323. 40. Michelson, Melissa R. 2003. “The Corrosive Effect of Acculturation: How Mexican- Americans Lose Political Trust.” Social Science Quarterly 84, 4 (Dec.): 918-933. 41. Michelson, Melissa R. 2003. “Getting Out the Latino Vote: How door-to-door canvassing influences voter turnout in rural Central California.” Political Behavior 25, 3 (Sept.): 247-263. 42. Michelson, Melissa R. 2003. “Political Efficacy Among California Latinos.” Latino(a) Research Review 5, 2-3 (Summer-Fall): 5-15. 43. Michelson, Melissa R. 2003. “Boricua in the Barrio: Political Trust Among Puerto Ricans.” Centro: Journal of the Center for Puerto Rican Studies 15, 1 (Spring): 138-151. 44. Michelson, Melissa R. 2002. “The Black Reparations Movement: Public Opinion and Congressional Policymaking.” Journal of Black Studies 32, 5 (May): 574-587. 45. Michelson, Melissa R., and Amalia Pallares. 2001. “The Politicization of Mexican- Americans: Naturalization, the Vote, and Perceptions of Discrimination.” Aztlán: A Journal of Chicano Studies 26, 2 (Fall): 63-85. 46. Michelson, Melissa R. 2001. “Political Trust Among Chicago Latinos.” Journal of Urban Affairs 23, 3/4 (Fall): 323-334. 47. Michelson, Melissa R. 2001. “The Effect of National Mood on Mexican-American Political Opinion.” Hispanic Journal of Behavioral Sciences 23, 1 (Feb.): 57-70. 48. Michelson, Melissa R. 2000. “Political Efficacy and Electoral Participation of Chicago Latinos.” Social Science Quarterly 81, 1 (March): 136-150. 49. Michelson, Melissa R. 1998. “How Americans Think About Foreign Military Involvement: The Case of Bosnia.” International Studies Notes 23, 2 (Spring): 1-9. 50. Michelson, Melissa R. 1998. “Explorations in Public Opinion-Presidential Power Linkages: Congressional Action on Unpopular Foreign Agreements.” Political Communication 15, 1 (Jan-Mar): 63-82.

o BOOK CHAPTERS

Melissa R. Michelson page 5 of 26 1. Michelson, Melissa R. Forthcoming, July 2020. “Real Moms of Palo Alto, Real Takeaways from Hillary’s Candidacy.” Ivy A.M. Cargile, Denise Davis, Jennifer Merolla, and Rachel VanSickle-Ward, eds., The Hillary Effect: Perspectives on Clinton’s Legacy. Bloomsbury Publishing. 2. Lavariega Monforti, Jessica, and Melissa R. Michelson. 2020. “They See Us, But They Don’t Really See Us.” In Yolanda Flores Niemann, Gabriella Gutierrez y Muhs, and Carmen G. Gonzalez, eds., Presumed Incompetent II: Race, Class, Power, and Resistance of Women in Academia. Logan, UT: Utah State University Press, pp. 59-72. 3. Michelson, Melissa R. Forthcoming, 2020. “Mobilizing Latinos in ’08.” In Louis DeSipio and David L. Leal, eds., Latino Politics in the 2008 Elections: The Politics of Winning Coalitions. New York: Routledge. 4. Schmitt, Elizabeth JoAnn, and Melissa R. Michelson. 2020. “Party Politics and LGBT Issues in the United States.,” in Donald Haider-Markel, editor in chief, Oxford Encyclopedia of LGBT Politics and Policy. DOI: 10.1093/acrefore/9780190228637.013.1208 5. Michelson, Melissa R. 2020. “Mobilization Strategies and Get Out the Vote.” Elizabeth Suhay, Bernie Grofman, and Alex Trechsel, eds., Oxford Handbook of Electoral Persuasion. New York: Oxford University Press, pp. 243-257. 6. Harrison, Brian F., and Melissa R. Michelson. 2019. “Contact theory and the distinct case of LGBT people and rights.” In Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Politics. New York: Oxford University Press. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780190228637.013.1174 7. Lajevardi, Nazita, Marianne Marar Yacobian, and Melissa R. Michelson. 2019. “The Unbearable Whiteness of Being Middle Eastern: Causes and Effects of the Racialization of Middle Eastern Americans.” In Brian R. Calfano and Nazita Lajevardi, eds., Understanding Muslim Political Life in America: Contested Citizenship in the Twenty-First Century. Philadelphia, PA: Temple University Press, pp. 52-68. 8. Teresi, Holly, and Melissa R. Michelson. 2018. “Field Experiments: Wired to Mobilize: The effect of social networking messages on voter turnout.” In Akan Malici and Elizabeth S. Smith, eds., Political Science Research in Practice, 2nd ed. New York: Routledge, pp. 172-192. 9. Michelson, Melissa R. 2017. “Get-Out-the-Vote Efforts.” In Fathali M. Moghaddam, ed., The SAGE Encyclopedia of Political Behavior. Thousand Oaks, CA: SAGE, pp. 329-330. 10. Anoll, Allison P., and Melissa R. Michelson. 2016. “Revisiting Recruitment: Insights from Get-Out-the-Vote Field Experiments.” In Casey A. Klofstad, ed., Resources, Engagement, and Recruitment: New Advances in the Study of Civic Voluntarism. Philadelphia, PA: Temple University Press, pp. 165-178. 11. Michelson, Melissa R. 2016. “Latino Immigration Politics.” In Stephen Schechter, et al., eds, American Governance, Vol. 3. Farmington Hills, MI: Macmillan Reference, pp. 175-178. 12. Lavariega Monforti, Jessica, and Melissa R. Michelson. 2014. “Multiple Paths to Cynicism: Social Networks, Identity, and Linked Fate among Latinos.” In Tony Affigne, Evelyn Hu- DeHart, and Marion Orr, Latino Politics en Ciencia Política. New York University Press, pp. 92- 112. 13. Michelson, Melissa R., and Joe Tafoya. 2013. “The Latino Politics of Proposition 19: Criminal Justice and Immigration.” In Katherine Tate, James Lance Taylor, and Mark Q. Sawyer, eds., Something’s In the Air: Race and the Legalization of Marijuana. New York: Routledge

Melissa R. Michelson page 6 of 26 Press, pp. 115-125. 14. Michelson, Melissa R. 2013. “The Growth and Consolidation of Latino Political Power in Chicago.” In Sharon Navarro and Rodolfo Rosales, eds., The Roots of Latino Urban Agency. Denton, TX: University of North Texas Press, pp. 67-80. 15. Lavariega Monforti, Jessica, Adam J. McGlynn, and Melissa R. Michelson. 2011. “Perspectives on Using Team Based Learning to Teach Introductory U.S. Government Courses.” In Michael Sweet and Larry K. Michaelsen, eds., Team-Based Learning in the Social Sciences and Humanities: Group Work that Works to Generate Critical Thinking and Engagement. Sterling, VA: Stylus Publishing, pp. 265-277. 16. Michelson, Melissa R. 2011. “Latino Voters in the 2008 Elections.” Clark Archer, Stan Brunn, Fred Shelley, Gerald Webster, and Steve Lavin, eds., Atlas of the 2008 Election. Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield, pp. 225-226. 17. Michelson, Melissa R. 2011. “The Latino (Hispanic) Voter.” In Robert Mann and David D Perlmutter, eds., The Manship School Guide to Political Communication, 2nd ed. Baton Rouge, LA: Louisiana University Press, pp. 248-256. 18. Michelson, Melissa R., and David Nickerson. 2011. “Voter Mobilization” In James N. Druckman, Donald P. Green, James H. Kuklinski and Arthur Lupia, eds., Handbook of Experimental Political Science. New York: Cambridge University Press, pp. 228-240. 19. Green, Donald P., and Melissa R. Michelson. 2009. “ACORN Experiments in Minority Voter Mobilization.” In Robert Fisher, ed., 'The People Shall Rule': ACORN, Community Organizing, and the Struggle for Economic Justice. Nashville, TN: Vanderbilt University Press, pp. 235-248. 20. Michelson, Melissa R., Lisa García Bedolla, and Donald P. Green. 2008. “Mobilizing the Registered: Tactics for Improving Voter Turnout.” In Morgan E. Felchner, ed., Voting in America. Westport, CT: Praeger Publishers, pp. 198-211. 21. Michelson, Melissa R. 2008. “Immigration” (pp. 816-821) and “Naturalization” (pp. 186- 189) chapters in Michael A. Genovese and Lori Cox Han, eds., Encyclopedia of American Government and Civics. New York: Facts on File. 22. Geron, Kim, and Melissa R. Michelson. 2008. “Latino Partisanship, Political Activity, and Vote Choice.” In Havidán Rodríguez, Rogelio Saenz, and Cecilia Menjivar, eds., Latinas/os in the United States: Changing the Face of América. New York: Springer, pp. 325-339. 23. Michelson, Melissa R. 2006. “Politics at the Grassroots: Mobilizing Latino Voters.” In William E. Nelson, Jr. and Jessica Lavariega Monforti, eds., Black and Latina/o Politics: Issues in Political Development in the United States. Miami, FL: Barnhardt and Ashe, pp. 235-248.

o OTHER PUBLICATIONS 1. Melissa R. Michelson. 2020. “The Older White Male Ticket and How We Got Here.” Forthcoming, Generations Today, American Society on Aging. 2. Melissa R. Michelson. 2020. “Teaching the Power of Local Political Participation.” Political Science Now, American Political Science Association, July 15, 2020. https://politicalsciencenow.com/teaching-the-power-of-local-political-participation/

Melissa R. Michelson page 7 of 26 3. Christopher B. Mann, Melissa R. Michelson, and Matt Davis. 2020. “Latino voters could be pivotal in November. Here’s how mailers mobilize them to vote.” Washington Post, Monkey Cage, July 9, 2020. https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2020/07/09/latino-voters- could-be-pivotal-november-heres-how-mailers-mobilize-them-vote/ 4. Michelson, Melissa R. 2020. Book review in Choice 57, 9 (May) of Edward E. Curtis (2019), Muslim American Politics and the Future of US Democracy (New York University). 5. Michelson, Melissa R. 2020. Book review in Choice 57, 8 (April) of Benjamin Francis- Fallon (2019), The Rise of the Latino Vote: A History (Harvard). 6. Michelson, Melissa R. and Brian F. Harrison. 2020. “What Does Buttigieg’s Success Mean for Gender Progress in American Politics?” Center for American Women and Politics blog, Feb. 11, 2020. https://cawp.rutgers.edu/election-analysis/what-does-buttigiegs-success-mean- gender-progress-american-politics 7. Michelson, Melissa R. 2020. Book review in Choice 57, 5 (Jan.) of James Lindley Wilson (2019), Democratic Equality (Princeton). 8. Michelson, Melissa R. 2019. Book review in Journal of Race, Ethnicity, and Politics 4, 2 (Sept.): 402-404 of Andrea Benjamin (2017), Racial Coalition Building in Local Elections: Elite Cues and Cross-Ethnic Voting (Cambridge). 9. Michelson, Melissa R. 2019. Book review in Choice 57, 1 (Sept.) of Daniel M. Shea (2019), Why Vote? Essential Questions about the Future of Elections in America (New York: Routledge). 10. Michelson, Melissa R. 2019. Book review in Perspectives on Politics 17, 2 (June): 571-573 of Jami K. Taylor, Daniel C. Lewis, and Donald P. Haider-Markel (2018), The Remarkable Rise of Transgender Rights. 11. Michelson, Melissa R. 2019. “The Power of Visibility: Advances in LGBT Rights in the United States in Europe.” Book review essay for Journal of Politics 81, 1 (Jan.): e1-e5. 12. Michelson, Melissa R. 2019. Book review in Sexualities of Heath Fogg Davis (2017), Beyond Trans: Does Gender Matter? https://doi.org/10.1177/1363460718811237 13. Michelson, Melissa R. 2019. Book review in Choice 56, 9 (May) of Bernard L. Fraga (2018), The Turnout Gap: Race, Ethnicity, and Political Inequality in a Diversifying America (New York: Cambridge). 14. Michelson, Melissa R. 2019. Book review in Choice 56, 5 (Jan.) of Thomas Brudholm and Birgitte Schepelern Johansen, eds. (2018), Hate, Politics, Law: Critical Perspectives on Combating Hate (Oxford). 15. Michelson, Melissa R. 2018. Book review in Choice 56, 1 (Sept.) of Shauna Reilly and Stacy G. Ulbig (2018), The Resilient Voter: Stressful Polling Places and Voting Behavior (Lexington Books). 16. Michelson, Melissa R. 2018. Book review in Choice 55, 12 (Aug.) of Gwyneth H. McClendon (2018), Envy in Politics (Princeton). 17. Michelson, Melissa R. 2018. Book review in Choice 55, 9 (May) of Matt Qvortrup, ed. (2017), Referendums Around the World (Palgrave Macmillan). 18. Michelson, Melissa R. 2018. Book review in Choice 55, 5 (Jan.) of Julian Maxwell Hayter (2017), The Dream is Lost: Voting Rights and the Politics of Race in Richmond, Virginia (Lexington,

Melissa R. Michelson page 8 of 26 KY: University Press of Kentucky). 19. Michelson, Melissa R., and Jessica L. Lavariega Monforti. 2018. “Latinos now trust politicians even less than before, but have become more politically active.” LSE USAPP blog, http://blogs.lse.ac.uk/usappblog/2018/07/26/latinos-now-trust-politicians-even-less- than-before-but-have-become-more-politically-active/ 20. Bennion, Elizabeth A., and Melissa R. Michelson. 2018. “How to get more college students to vote.” Washington Post, Monkey Cage Sept. 18, 2018. https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/monkey-cage/wp/2018/09/18/how-to-get-more- young-people-to-vote/ 21. Harrison, Brian F., and Melissa R. Michelson. 2017. “Our Academic Book Tour,” blog post for The Chronicle of Higher Education, Aug. 6, 2017. http://www.chronicle.com/article/Our-Academic-Book-Tour/240847 22. Michelson, Melissa R. 2017. “5 Great Books on LGBT Politics,” blog post for Choice360, July 19, 2017. http://www.choice360.org/blog/faculty-picks-july-2017-lgbt-politics 23. Michelson, Melissa R. 2017. Book review in Choice 54, 12 (Aug.) of J. Kevin Corder and Christina Wolbrecht (2017), Counting Women’s Ballots: Female Voters from Suffrage through the New Deal (New York: Cambridge University Press). 24. Michelson, Melissa R. 2017. Book review in Choice 54, 12 (Aug.) of David W. McIvor (2016), Mourning in America: Race and the Politics of Loss (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press). 25. Michelson, Melissa R. 2017. Book review in Choice 54, 8 (April) of Austin Hart (2016), Economic Voting: A Campaign-Centered Theory (New York: Cambridge University Press). 26. Michelson, Melissa R. 2017. Book review in Choice 54, 6 (Feb.) of Monika L. McDermott (2016), Masculinity, Femininity, and American Political Behavior (New York: Oxford University Press). 27. Michelson, Melissa R. 2017. Book review in Choice 54, 5 (Jan.) of Dan Usher (2015), The Economics of Voting: Studies of Self-Interest, Bargaining, Duty and Rights (New York: Routledge). 28. Valenzuela, Ali A., and Melissa R. Michelson. 2016. ““Here’s how to mobilize Latinos to vote.” Washington Post, Monkey Cage, October 18, 2016. https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/monkey-cage/wp/2016/10/18/heres-how-to- mobilize-latinos-to-vote 29. Michelson, Melissa R. 2016. Book review in Choice 53, 11 (July) of Lyle L. Kreider and Thomas J. Baldino, eds., (2015), Minority Voting in the United States (Westport, CT: Praeger). 30. Michelson, Melissa R. 2016. Book review in Choice 53, 9 (May) of Shauna Reilly (2015), Language Assistance Under the Voting Rights Act: Are Voters Lost in Translation (New York: Routledge). 31. Harrison, Brian F., and Melissa R. Michelson. 2015. “How to change minds about same- sex marriage.” Washington Post, Monkey Cage May 26, 2015. https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/monkey-cage/wp/2015/05/26/how-to-change- peoples-minds-about-same-sex-marriage/ 32. Michelson, Melissa R. 2015. Book review in Political Science Quarterly 130, 3 (Sept): 559-560, of Han, Hahrie (2014), How Organizations Develop Activists: Civic Associations and Leadership in the

Melissa R. Michelson page 9 of 26 21st Century (New York: Oxford University Press). 33. Michelson, Melissa R. 2015. Book review in Choice 53, 4 (Dec.) of Gabriel R. Sanchez, ed. (2015), Latinos and the 2012 Election: The New Face of the American Voter (Ann Arbor, MI: Michigan University Press). 34. Michelson, Melissa R. 2015. Book review in Choice 53, 1 (Sept.) of Barreto, Matt and Gary M. Segura (2014), Latino America: How America’s Most Dynamic Population is Poised to Transform the Politics of the Nation (New York: PublicAffairs). 35. Michelson, Melissa R. 2015. Book review in Choice 53, 1 (Sept.) of Flores, Henry (2015), Latinos and the Voting Rights Act: The Search for Racial Purpose (Lanham, MD: Lexington Books). 36. Michelson, Melissa R. 2015. Book review in Choice 52, 11 (July) of Wolfson, Todd (2014) Digital Rebellion: The Birth of the Cyber Left (Chicago: University of Illinois Press). 37. Michelson, Melissa R. 2015. Book review in Choice 52, 8 (April) of Uscinski, Joseph E. and Joseph M. Parent (2014) American Conspiracy Theories (New York: Oxford University Press). 38. Michelson, Melissa R. 2015. Book review in Choice 52, 2 (January) of Rocco, Raymond A. (2014), Transforming Citizenship: Democracy, Membership, and Belonging in Latino Communities (East Lansing, MI: Michigan State University Press). 39. Michelson, Melissa R. 2014. Book review in Perspectives on Politics 12 (4): 924-926 of Ramírez, Ricardo (2013) Mobilizing Opportunities: The Evolving Latino Electorate and the Future of American Politics (Charlottesville, VI: University of Virginia Press). 40. Melissa R. Michelson. 2014. “How to mobilize reluctant voters.” Washington Post, Monkey Cage July 15, 2014. https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/monkey- cage/wp/2014/07/15/how-to-mobilize-reluctant-voters/ 41. Michelson, Melissa R. 2014. “How to Increase Voter Turnout in Communities Where People Have Not Usually Participated in Elections,” Scholars Strategy Network, http://www.scholarsstrategynetwork.org/sites/default/files/ssn_key_findings_michelson_on_increa sing_voter-turnout_in_low-propensity_communities.pdf 42. Michelson, Melissa R. 2014. “Waking the Sleeping Hispanic Giant.” Campaigns & Elections, Oct. 21, https://www.campaignsandelections.com/campaign-insider/waking-the-sleeping- hispanic-giant 43. Michelson, Melissa R. 2011. Book review in American Review of Politics 32: 291-294 of Beltrán, Cristina (2010), The Trouble with Unity: Latino Politics and the Creation of Identity (New York: Oxford University Press). 44. Michelson, Melissa R. 2011. Book review in CENTRO: Journal of the Center for Puerto Rican Studies 23 (1): 275-278 of García Bedolla, Lisa (2009), Latino Politics (Malden, MA: Polity Press). 45. Michelson, Melissa R. 2010. “Majority-Latino Districts and Latino Political Power.” Duke Journal of Constitutional Law and Public Policy 5: 159-175. 46. Michelson, Melissa R. 2010. Book review in Perspectives on Politics 8, 3 (Sept.): 909-911, of Hajnal, Zoltan L. (2009), America’s Uneven Democracy: Race, Turnout, and Representation in City Politics (New York: Cambridge University Press). 47. Michelson, Melissa R. 2010. “Transforming Racial Identity, Transforming Racial Politics.”

Melissa R. Michelson page 10 of 26 Book review in Journal of American Ethnic History 29, 3 (Spring): 94-98, of Jane Junn and Kerry L. Haynie, eds., (2008), New Race Politics in America: Understanding Minority and Immigrant Politics (New York: Cambridge University Press) and Robin Dale Jacobson (2008), The New Natives: Proposition 187 and the Debate Over Immigration (Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press). 48. Michelson, Melissa R., Lisa García Bedolla, and Donald P. Green. 2009. “New Experiments in Minority Voter Mobilization: Final Report on the California Votes Initiative” (San Francisco, CA: The James Irvine Foundation). 49. Michelson, Melissa R., Lisa García Bedolla, and Donald P. Green. 2008. “New Experiments in Minority Voter Mobilization: Second in a Series of Reports on the California Votes Initiative” (San Francisco, CA: The James Irvine Foundation). 50. Michelson, Melissa R. 2001. Book review in the American Political Science Review 95, 2 (June): 471-472, of Marie T. Henehan (2000), Foreign Policy and Congress: An International Relations Perspective (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press) and Cecil V. Crabb, Jr., Glenn J. Antizzo and Leila E. Sarieddine (2000), Congress and the Foreign Policy Process: Modes of Legislative Behavior (Baton Rouge, LA: Louisiana State University Press). 51. Michelson, Melissa R., Lisa García Bedolla, and Donald P. Green. 2007. “New Experiments in Minority Voter Mobilization: A Report on the California Votes Initiative” (San Francisco, CA: The James Irvine Foundation). 52. Michelson, Melissa R. 2004. Book review in Latino Studies 2, 2 (June): 270-271, of Márquez, Benjamin (2003), Constructing Identities in Mexican-American Political Organizations: Choosing Issues, Taking Sides (Austin, TX: University of Texas Press). 53. Michelson, Melissa R. 2003. “Mobilizing the Latino Youth Vote.” CIRCLE Working Paper #10 (August 2003). http://www.civicyouth.org/research/areas/race_gender.htm

AWARDS AND GRANTS

AWARDS 2019. Distinguished Career Award, Latino Caucus of the Midwest Political Science Association. 2018. Dean’s Scholarship Award, Menlo College. 2017. American Political Science Association’s Adaljiza Sosa-Riddell Award for Exemplary Mentoring of Graduate Latino/a Students in Political Science. 2016. Jane Mansbridge Award, for improving conditions for women in political science (with Women Also Know Stuff Executive Board). 2016. Best Paper Award, Midwest Political Science Association’s LGBT Caucus (with Brian F. Harrison). 2015. Visiting Scholar, Havens Center for the Study of Social Justice, University of Wisconsin, Madison, April 2015. 2015. Dean’s Scholarship Award, Menlo College. 2013. Ralph Bunche Award, American Political Science Association (with Lisa García Bedolla).

Melissa R. Michelson page 11 of 26 2013. Best Book Award, American Political Science Association’s Race, Ethnicity and Politics Section (with Lisa García Bedolla). 2013. Dean’s Scholarship Award, Menlo College. 2013. SocialSci Participant Pool Award, for field experiment on religion and same-sex marriage. (with Brian F. Harrison) 2012. Charles Redd Center Award for the best paper on the politics of the American West presented at the previous Western Political Science Association Meeting, for “Turnout, Status and Identity in Los Angeles: Mobilizing Latinos to Vote in Two Contrasting Neighborhoods.” (with Ali A. Valenzuela) 2012. Outstanding Service Award, Menlo College. 2011. American Political Science Association’s Adaljiza Sosa-Riddell Award for Exemplary Mentoring of Latino/a Junior Faculty in Political Science. 2010. Outstanding Reviewer Award, Political Research Quarterly. 2009. Visiting Fellow at the Research Institute for Comparative Studies in Race and Ethnicity (RICSRE) at Stanford University, Sept. 2009-June 2010 (with $45,000 stipend). 2003. Western Political Science Association Best Paper Award in Chicana/o Politics for “Getting out the Latino Vote: How door-to-door canvassing influences voter turnout in rural Central California” 2001. Field Faculty Question Credits. Inclusion of my research questions about motivations for voting in the California Field Polls conducted in September and December 2001. 2000. Field Faculty Question Credits. Inclusion of my research questions about political efficacy in the California Field Polls conducted in June and September-October 2000.

GRANTS 2020 American Political Science Association for Women Also Know Stuff (with WAKS board) for “Broadening the Impact of Women Also Know Stuff.” $25,000 2019 Democracy Fund for Women Also Know Stuff (co-PI, with WAKS board). https://www.democracyfund.org/portfolio/entry/menlo-college-women-also-know-stuff $50,000 2019 National Science Foundation (SES-1918063) for “Workshop: Women of Color in Political Science 2019” (with Jessica Lavariega Monforti) $49,817 2018 National Science Foundation (SES-1836072) for “NSF EAGER Collaborative Research— The Women Also Know Stuff Initiative (PI, with WAKS board). $269,602 2018 American Political Science Association for Women Also Know Stuff (with WAKS board). $2,000 2018 American Political Science Association for “Looking Back and Moving Forward: The 20th anniversary Workshop of APSA Latino Caucus.” (with Valerie Martinez Ebers, Mario Guerrero, Tony Affigne, and Jessica Lavariega Monforti)

Melissa R. Michelson page 12 of 26 $25,000 2018 American Political Science Association for “#MeTooPoliSci: Addressing Gender Discrimination in Political Science.” (with Nadia E. Brown, Rebecca Gill, Jenn Merolla, Elizabeth Sharrow, Patricia Stapleton, and Dara Strolovitch) $25,000 2018 American Political Science Association for “Looking Back and Moving Forward: The 20th Anniversary Workshop of the Founding of the APSA Latino Caucus.” (with Mario Guerrero, Valerie Martinez Ebers, Tony Affigne, and Jessica Lavariega Monforti) $24,487 2018 Latino Center for Leadership Development-Southern Methodist University Tower Center Policy Institute Research Partnership Grant for “Revisiting DACA: DREAMers in the Trump Era” (with Jessica Lavariega Monforti) $6,481 2017. Dr. Philip M. Kayal Fund for Arab American Research for “Public Opinion toward Arab and Muslim Americans” (with Brian R. Calfano and Nazita Lajevardi) $1,000 2017 National Science Foundation (SES-1727645), $45,093; plus $10,000 from the American Political Science Association, $5,500 from the Scholars Strategy Network; $1,500 from the Office of the Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences at Columbia University, and $400 from Politics, Groups, and Identities, for “Workshop: Women of Color in Political Science 2017” (with Jessica Lavariega Monforti) $63,303 2017 National Science Foundation for “Workshop: Researching Muslim America and Muslim Americans.” SES-1661827. (with Brian R. Calfano and Nazita Lajevardi) $49,623 2017 American Political Science Association for “Elephant in the Room: Opening Minds to Change on Transgender Rights.” (with Brian F. Harrison and Logan S. Casey) $2,000 2015 Menlo College for “Increasing Voter Participation in Huron, CA” $3,000 2015 National Science Foundation, and $10,000 from the American Political Science Association, for Mini-Conference for Women of Color in Political Science (with Jessica Lavariega Monforti) $49,902 2014 Menlo College for “The Unbearable Whiteness of Being Middle Eastern” (with Marianne Marar Yacobian) $4,000 2013 For the Mini-Conference for Women of Color in Political Science. Includes $11,500 from the American Political Science Association; $1,500 from Stanford University’s Research Institute of Comparative Studies in Race and Ethnicity; $1,000 each from the UC Berkeley Center for Latino Policy Research; Emory University; the University of Texas, Pan- American; the University of California, San Diego; the University of Chicago; and Menlo

Melissa R. Michelson page 13 of 26 College; $750 from Stanford University; $500 each from the University of Maryland and the University of Washington. (with Jessica Lavariega Monforti) $20,250 2013 Small Research Grant Award from the Williams Institute of the UCLA School of Law, for field experiments on partisanship and same-sex marriage. (with Brian Harrison) $1,500 2013 Menlo College for “Getting Out the Arab American Vote.” (with Marianne Marar Yacobian) $3,000 2012 Menlo College: $3,000 for “Turnout, Status and Identity” and $2,000 for “African-American Support for Marriage Equality in Georgia.” $5,000 2011 Menlo College: $2,000 for “The Power of Prose: How Framing Affects African-American Support for Marriage Equality” and $1,000 (with Deborah Brown McCabe) for “Pushing Too Hard: Using Extreme Requests to Mobilize Voters.” $3,000 2010 Menlo College: $1,200 and Yale University Institution for Social and Policy Studies: $2,500, for “Changing the Cost of Voting.” $3,700 2010 Stanford University for “The Mobilizing Effect of Volunteer GOTV Calls in Two Latino Neighborhoods” (with Ali A. Valenzuela). $1,200 2009 James Irvine Foundation to continue evaluation of voter mobilization activities from their California Votes Initiative, April 2009-September 2009. $40,000 2007 James Irvine Foundation to continue evaluation of voter mobilization activities from their California Votes Initiative, July 2007-June 2009. $435,000 2006 CSU Faculty Support Grant to create a student journal of politics, East Bay Politica. $5,650 2005 James Irvine Foundation to design and conduct an evaluation of voter mobilization activities from their California Votes Initiative, March 2005-June 2007. ($50,000 to design evaluation plan; $300,000 for implementation). $350,000 2003. Title V program to develop a web-based version of PL SI 02, American Government and Institutions. $7,000 2003 Kenneth L. Maddy Institute of Public Affairs research grant for “Immigrant Political Attitudes in the Central Valley.” $2,500 2002 Center for Information and Research on Civic Learning and Engagement (CIRCLE) research grant for experimental door-to-door get-out-the-vote drive aimed at increasing Latino youth participation.

Melissa R. Michelson page 14 of 26 $41,628 2002 Affirmative Action Faculty Development Award for “The Corrosive Effect of Assimilation: How Immigrants Lose Political Trust.” $1,000 2002 CSU Research, Scholarship and Creative Activity Award for “Mobilizing the Latino Vote: The Effect of Personal Canvassing Efforts.” $5,000 2001 Pew Charitable Trusts subcontract to conduct an experimental door-to-door get-out-the- vote drive focused Latino participation. $20,000 2001 Affirmative Action Faculty Development Award, plus three units of release time to study “Attitudinal Predictors of the Latino Vote.” $1,150 2001 CSU Research, Scholarship and Creative Activity Award for “Competing Vote Cues and the Authenticity of Representation.” $5,000 2001 Faculty Professional Development grant for release time to develop a Multicultural/ International General Education course on race, ethnicity, and political tolerance. $4,442 2000 CSU Research, Scholarship and Creative Activity Award to study the political attitudes and behavior of Fresno Latinos. $5,000 2000 Affirmative Action Faculty Development Award for release time to study the political attitudes and behavior of Fresno Latinos. $4,442 1999 CSU Fresno College of Social Sciences Research Grant for, “Latino Voting Behavior in California's 20th District: Partisanship vs. Ethnicity.” $1,999 1998 Great Cities grant for survey research on the politicization and voting behavior of Chicago Latinos. $6,000 1997 Great Cities grant for survey research on the politicization and voting behavior of Latinos in Chicago (with Amalia Pallares). $6,500 1995 UIC Office of Social Science Research seed grant to expand dissertation research on the effect of public opinion on presidential power in Congress. $1,575 1994 Dissertation Year Fellowship, Yale University.

CONFERENCE PRESENTATIONS

Melissa R. Michelson page 15 of 26 AMERICAN POLITICAL SCIENCE ASSOCIATION 2019. “The Halloween Experiment” (with Brian F. Harrison); “Pushing Back Against Prejudice: An Examination of the Effects of Elite Rhetoric and In-Group Identity on Individuals’ Immigration Policy Stances” (with Betina Cutaia Wilkinson) 2018. “Opening Minds to Change on Transgender Rights” (with Logan S. Casey & Brian F. Harrison) 2017. “Mobilizing Turnout among Chronic Non-Voters” (with William Marble); “When Rights are Unpopular: LGBT Realities in a Right-Wing Populist World” (with Brian F. Harrison) 2016. “He Said, She Said: Public Opinion toward Transgender Rights” (with Brian F. Harrison) 2015. “DREAMers, DeAmericanization, and the Stickiness of Identity” (with Maria Chavez, Jessica Lavariega Monforti, and Joe Tafoya); “Revisiting Recruitment: Insights from Get-Out-the-Vote Field Experiments.” (with Allison P. Anoll) 2014. “Listen, We Need to Talk: Strategic Identity Priming and Same-Sex Marriage” (with Brian F. Harrison); “Religious Elite Cues and LGBT Rights: A Public Opinion Field Experiment” (with Brian F. Harrison and Liz Lebrón); “The Unbearable Whiteness of Being Middle Eastern: Causes and Effects of the Racialization of Middle Eastern Americans” (Poster presentation, with Marianne Marar Yacobian and Nazita Lajevardi) 2013. “Listen, We Need to Talk: Opening Minds to Attitudinal Change through In-Group Identity Activation” (with Brian F. Harrison) 2012. “Turnout, Status and Identity: Mobilizing Latinos to Vote in Contrasting Contexts” (with Ali A. Valenzuela) 2011. “Mobilizing Inclusion: Redefining Citizenship Through Get-out-the-vote Campaigns” (with Lisa García Bedolla) 2008. “The Power of Follow-up Phone Calls: New Experimental Discoveries” 2007. “Strangers vs. Neighbors: The Efficacy of Grassroots Voter Mobilization” (with Betsy Sinclair, Margaret McConnell and Lisa García Bedolla) 2006. “New Experiments in Minority Voter Mobilization” 2004. “How Immigrants Lose Trust in Government: Results from Preliminary Focus Groups with Hmong Immigrants” 2002. “Turning Out Latino Voters” 2001. “Attitudinal Predictors of the Latino Vote”; “The Corrosive Effect of Assimilation: How Mexican-Americans Lose Political Trust” 2000. “Assimilation or Ethnic Consciousness: Discrimination and Political Trust in Chicago’s Mexican-descent Population”; “Exploring Latino Political Efficacy and Electoral Participation in California and Chicago” 1996. “The Political Rhetoric of U.S. Military Actions: the case of Bosnia” 1995. “Explorations in Public Opinion-Presidential Power Linkages: Congressional Action on Unpopular Foreign Agreements” 1994. “The Effect of Public Approval on Presidential Power”

Melissa R. Michelson page 16 of 26 1993. “When Does Self-Interest Matter? Public Opinion and Campaign Contributions toward a Rent Control Ballot Measure” (with Donald P. Green)

MIDWEST POLITICAL SCIENCE ASSOCIATION 2019. “Pushing Back Against Prejudice: An Examination of the Effects of Elite Rhetoric and In- Group Identity on Individuals’ Immigration Policy Stances in North Carolina.” (with Betina Cutaia Wilkinson) 2017. “Elephant in the Room: Opening Minds to Change on Transgender Rights” (with Logan S. Casey and Brian F. Harrison); “Source Effects in Pro-Transgender Persuasive Appeals” (with Logan S. Casey and Brian F. Harrison) 2016. “He Said, She Said: Public Opinion toward Transgender Rights” (with Brian F. Harrison); “The Politics of the Bathroom: Transgender Rights and Public Opinion” (with Brian F. Harrison) 2015. “Author Meets Critics: Living the Dream” (with Maria Chávez and Jessica Lavariega Monforti); “Come Join the Party” (with Brian F. Harrison); “More than a Game” (with Brian F. Harrison) 2014. “God and Marriage: Activating Religious Identity to Influence Attitudes on Same-Sex Marriage” (with Brian F. Harrison and Liz Lebrón) 2012. “Turnout, Status and Identity: Mobilizing Latinos to Vote in Contrasting Contexts” (with Ali A. Valenzuela); “It Does Matter if You’re Black or White: Race-of-Canvasser Effects on Black Support for Marriage Equality” (with Brian F. Harrison) 2011. “Turnout, Status and Identity in Los Angeles: Mobilizing Latinos to Vote in Two Contrasting Neighborhoods” (with Ali A. Valenzuela) 2010. “Numbers Don’t Lie, But People Do” (with Lisa García Bedolla) 2009. “When Quality Comes Knocking: Exploring Variation in the Effectiveness of Door-to-Door Voter Mobilization Drives” (with Lisa García Bedolla, D. Xavier Medina, Jonathan Sarpolis and Stephanie Loera) 2007. “Mobilizing Minorities: New Lessons from California Field Experiments” (with Lisa García Bedolla and Don Green) 2006. “The Fight For School Equity in Chicago's Latino Neighborhoods” 2004. “Mobilizing Minorities Using Partisan Propaganda” 2003. “Dos Palos Revisited: Testing the Lasting Effects of Voter Mobilization” 2002. “Competing Vote Cues and the Authenticity of Representation: Latino Support for Anglo Democrats and Latino Republicans” 2001. “Mexican-American Political Attitudes and Behavior in Fresno, California” 2000. “Assimilating the American Dream: The Political Opinions of Mexican-descent Citizens and Non-Citizens” 1998. “The Politicization of Latinos: Naturalization, the Vote and Perceptions of Discrimination” (with Amalia Pallares) 1997. “Presidential Power and Vote Visibility: Lessons from the Clinton Administration” 1996. “Presidential Rock Soup: Going Public with Poor Approval Ratings”

Melissa R. Michelson page 17 of 26

WESTERN POLITICAL SCIENCE ASSOCIATION 2017. “Using Experiments to Understand Public Attitudes toward Transgender Rights” (with Brian F. Harrison) 2016. “Moving the Unmovable: Mobilizing Turnout among Chronic Non-Voters” 2015. “Everybody Wants Somebody to Love: Emotion, Rationality, and Framing LGBT Rights” (with Brian F. Harrison) 2014. “More than a Game: How Primed Identities as Sports Fans Can Influence Social Attitudes” (with Brian F. Harrison) 2013. “Language, Identity and Vote Choice: A Survey Experiment among Texas Republicans” (with Jessica Lavariega Monforti and Annie Franco) 2012. “Increasing African-American Support for Marriage Equality” (with Brian F. Harrison) 2011. “Turnout, Status and Identity in Los Angeles: Mobilizing Latinos to Vote in Two Contrasting Neighborhoods” (with Ali A. Valenzuela) 2010. “Cold Text Messages as Mobilization Tools” (with Neil Malhotra, Ali Adam Valenzuela and Todd Rogers) 2009. “Heeding the Call: The Effect of Targeted Two-Round Phonebanks on Voter Mobilization” (with Lisa García Bedolla and Margaret A. McConnell) 2007. “New Experiments in Minority Voter Mobilization” (with Lisa García Bedolla and Don Green) 2006. “Looking Back, Looking Forward: Getting Out the Latino Vote” 2005. “Getting Out the Vote in East Palo Alto: A Voter Registration Experiment” 2004. “The Power of Partisanship: A Latino Voter Mobilization Experiment” 2003. “Mobilizing the Latino Youth Vote” (with Herbert Villa); “Assimilating Cynicism: How Immigrants Lose Political Trust” (with Maria Garcia) 2002. “Getting out the Latino Vote in Fresno, CA” 2001. “Does Ethnicity Trump Party? Latino Voting Behavior in California’s 20th District” 2000. “The Effect of National Mood on Mexican-American Political Opinion”

WESTERN SOCIAL SCIENCE ASSOCIATION 2002. “Curanderos and Congress: How Lobbying Influences U.S. Appropriation of Latin American Plant Medicines” (with Lynn Sikkink)

OTHER CONFERENCE ACTIVITY

AMERICAN POLITICAL SCIENCE ASSOCIATION

Melissa R. Michelson page 18 of 26 2019: Panelist, Roundtable, “University Initiatives on Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion,” Discussant, “Intersectional Identities and Politics within LGBTQ Communities;” Discussant, “Identity and Politics” 2018: Panelist, Roundtable, “Improving Diversity in Political Methodology”; Discussant, “Intersections of Race, Gender, and Sexuality”; Chair, “Queer Politics in the US: Allies & Antagonists” 2017: Co-organizer (with Jessica Lavariega Monforti), Women of Color in Political Science Workshop; Participating Author, Roundtable, “A Discussion of Notable LGBT Rights Books from 2016”; Chair, “One Step Forward, One Step Back? LGBT Rights Advances and Backlash” 2015: Co-organizer (with Jessica Lavariega Monforti), Women of Color in Political Science Workshop; Roundtable panelist, “Ethics of Field Research;” Discussant, “Latinas in American Politics: Bridging the Gap Between Intersectionality and Electability” 2013: Organizing Committee, Women of Color in Political Science Workshop; Discussant, “Race and Candidate Evaluation” 2010: Chair, Latino Politics Short Course 2007: Discussant, “Race, Context, and Participation;” Roundtable panelist, “A Leaking Pipeline? Losing Women of Color in the Discipline.” 2006: Panel chair and discussant, “Immigration and Political Incorporation.” 2003: Panel chair, “Democracy, Immigration and Identity;” Roundtable panelist, “Latino Politics Research: Theory in Practice.” 2002: Discussant, “Context and History in the Interpretation of Latino Politics: Innovations and Insights.”

MIDWEST POLITICAL SCIENCE ASSOCIATION 2018: Chair, “Mobilization Field Experiments”’ Discussant, “Experiments on Citizenship and Inclusion”; Participant, Roundtable: “Author Meets Critics: Discussing Heather Silber Mohamed’s The New Americans? Immigration, Politics, and the Politics of Latino Identity”; Participant, Roundtable: “MPSA Latino/a Caucus Distinguished Career Award Roundtable for Christine Sierra.” 2017: Section Chair, “LGBT Caucus,” Participant, Roundtable: “Expanding and Fortifying the Pipeline”; Discussant and Chair, “Experiments on Race, Ethnicity, and Economic Inequality”; Discussant and Chair, “Political Attitudes across the Intersections.” 2016: Section Chair, “LGBT Caucus”; Participant, Roundtable: “Quantitative Queers”; Discussant, “Methodological Advances in the Study of LGBTQ+ Politics;” chair, “Author meets Critics: Flores’ Latinos and the Voting Rights Act.” 2015: Section Chair, LGBT Caucus; Discussant, “Abortion, guns, and other topics only academics could make boring” and “JSS on National Identity;” Roundtable participant, “The Ethics of Field Experiments” and “Finding and Maintaining Work-Family Balance,” and “Author Meets Critics: Betina Wilkinson’s Partners or Rivals?” 2014: Discussant, “LGBT Issues in a Global Context” and “Race, Gender and Immigration;” Panel Chair, “Race, Religion, and Education.” 2013: Participant, Roundtable, “Mobilizing Inclusion: GOTV and the Social Cognition Model.”

Melissa R. Michelson page 19 of 26 2012: Discussant, “Cyber-participation.” 2010: Panel chair and co-discussant, “Latino Political Participation.” 2009: Discussant, “Race, Ethnicity, and Political Participation.” 2006: Section Chair, “Midwest Latino Caucus;” Discussant, “Social Capital, Place, and Incorporation.” 2005: Section Chair, “Midwest Latino Caucus;” Roundtable panelist, “Latinos and the 2004 Elections;” Panel chair and discussant, “Immigrant Political Participation;” Discussant, “Voter Mobilization in the 2004 Presidential Elections.” 2004: Panel chair and discussant, “Minority Participation and Partisanship.” 2003: Panel chair and discussant, “Diffusion of Attitudes Within Racial/Ethnic Groups.” 2001: Discussant, “Race, Place and Peace of Mind: Connecting Racial Politics and Mental Health.” 2000: Panel chair and discussant, “Immigration in Comparative Perspective.”

WESTERN POLITICAL SCIENCE ASSOCIATION 2020: Chair & Discussant, “Queer Ayes in the Scientific Gaze: Behavior, Framing, and Representation.” (online) 2018: Participant, Latino Politics Workshop Session, “Professionalization—Latinos in the Profession”; Chair, “Immigration in the Media and On People’s Minds: Framing and Public Attitudes”; Discussant, “Race, Place, and Political Participation.” 2017: Discussant, “Turnout and Participation”; Chair, “Race, Immigration, Gender, and Voting.” 2016: Discussant, “Representation and Turnout,” Roundtable panelist, “LGBTQ Politics Post- Obergefell;” chair and discussant, “Elections and Identity Politics.” 2015: Panel chair, “Emerging Issues in LGBT Politics;” Discussant, “Emerging Issues in Sexuality and Politics;” Discussant, “Immigration in U.S. Politics;” Roundtable panelist, “The REP Section and its Impact;” Roundtable panelist, “Social Media.” 2014: Discussant, “Latino Identity, Opinion, and Representation” 2013: Discussant, “Voter Turnout and Mobilization” 2012: Roundtable panelist, “America’s Abandoned Youth” 2010: Panel chair and discussant, “Local Resistance to Incorporation.” 2009: Discussant, “Latino Partisanship, Attitudes, and Political Behavior;” Latino Politics Workshop panelist, “Roundtable on the 2008 Latino Vote: Ballots Past & Policy Future.” 2008: Section Chair, “Voting and Elections”; Chair and Discussant, “Gender, Race, & Ballots: Gender & Electoral Representation.” 2007: Discussant, “Latinos and Political Participation.” 2006: Discussant, “Immigration, Immigrants, and Urban Politics;” Roundtable panelist, “Ahora Que? Prospects for Latino Political Incorporation in the Villaraigosa Era;” Panel chair, “Issues, Candidate Positions, and Vote Choice: A Comparative View.” 2005: Section Chair, “Voting and Elections.”

Melissa R. Michelson page 20 of 26 2004: Panel chair, “Race and Politics in California;” Discussant, “Racial Identity, Attitudes and Political Participation.” 2002: Panel chair, “Current Policy Issues in Latino Politics: The Census, Education, Affirmative Action and Immigration.” 2001: Panel chair, “Immigration, Mobility, and Coalition Building.”

INVITED LECTURES 2020. “Transforming Prejudice,” Occidental College, April 6. 2019. “The Latino Vote: Identity, Status, and Turnout.” Latino Leadership Alliance 10th Anniversary Forum at Stanford University, Aug. 3. 2019: “Mexican-American Social Movements.” U.S.-Mexico Forum for Cooperation, Understanding, and Solidarity (US-MEX FoCUS) at Stanford University, April 16. 2019: “Rolling with the Polling: Immigrant Responses to Changing Immigration Politics.” Immigration: The Politics of Inclusion and the Politics of Threat conference, organized by the Anxieties of Democracy program at the Social Science Research Council (SSRC), March 29. 2018: “Workshop: Survey Experiments,” University of New Mexico, May 17; UC Irvine, May 31. 2018. “Mobilizing the Youth and Latino Vote: New Tactics and New Technologies,” and “How to Get Out the Vote in 2018: Transforming the Electorate, Transforming Politics,” University of Florida, March 21. 2018. “Mobilizing the Latino Vote,” University of Arizona, Feb. 1; San Francisco State University, April 4. 2017. “Mobilizing in the Interim: Sustaining Civic Engagement among Low-Propensity Latino Voters,” New American Electorate Symposium, Ohio State University, December 1. 2017. “Listen, We Need to Talk,” North Texas University, Feb. 13; Texas Christian University, Feb. 14; University of Houston, Feb. 15; Rice University, Feb. 15; Louisiana State University, Feb. 16; Mills College, Feb. 21; Pace University, Feb. 27; Syracuse University, Feb. 28; Skidmore College, Mar. 1; Dartmouth College, Mar. 2; University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Mar. 6; Lehigh University, Mar. 7; Princeton University, Mar. 8; Yale University, Mar. 9; University of Maryland, College Park, Mar. 10; UCLA, Mar. 13; Drake University, Mar. 20; Iowa State University, Mar. 22; Wake Forest University, Mar. 28; University of Cincinnati, Mar. 29; University of Pittsburgh, Mar. 30; Purdue University, Apr. 4; University of Illinois, Chicago, Apr. 5; Oberlin College, Apr. 17; University of Toledo, Apr. 18; University of Michigan, Apr. 19; Michigan State University, Apr. 20; Indiana University, Apr. 21; CSU Fresno, Apr. 26; California Lutheran University, Sept. 18; University of Iowa, Sept. 29; Portland State University, Oct. 18. 2017. “Latino Civic Engagement.” Latino Leadership Council, College of San Mateo, March 24. 2017. “DACA, DAPA and Deportation Threat,” panel at Documenting the Immigrant: U.S. Immigration Policy Past, Present, and Future, UC Davis, January 27. 2016. “Disruptive Technologies,” Connect16, Box, November 16. 2016. “Mobilizing Inclusion,” UC Berkeley, April 18; UC Riverside, May 26, Sept. 30; Arsalyn Youth Forum, Sacramento, CA, June 28.

Melissa R. Michelson page 21 of 26 2015. “The Effect of Using In-Group Identities on LGBT Rights Support,” Analyst Institute, Seattle, WA, March 26. 2015. “Mobilizing Voters Online and on their Mobile Phones,” Vanderbilt University, Feb. 19; Stanford University, Feb. 24; St. Norbert College, April 20. 2015. “Living the Dream,” University of North Carolina, Feb. 20; Wake Forest University, Feb. 20. 2014. “Living the Dream,” Texas A&M University, Oct. 27; University of Houston, Oct. 28, Texas Southern University, Oct. 28, University of Texas, Austin, Oct. 29; the Claremont Colleges, Nov. 13; University of California, Los Angeles, Nov. 13. 2014. “Mobilizing Inclusion: Transforming Citizenship Through Get-Out-the-Vote Campaigns,” Stanford University, May 6. 2013. “Mobilizing Inclusion: Getting Out the Latino Vote.” OLLAS Cumbre, University of Nebraska at Omaha, November 9. 2013. “Mexican Born, American Raised, Deportation Deferred.” University of Illinois, Chicago, August 27. 2013. “Mobilizing Inclusion: Increasing Latino Participation Through Get-out-the-Vote Campaigns.” University of Texas-Pan American, April 12. 2011. “Mobilizing Inclusion: Redefining Citizenship Through Get-out-the-Vote Campaigns.” Texas A&M University, February 11. 2010. “Majority-Latino Districts and Latino Political Power.” Duke Journal of Constitutional Law and Public Policy conference, Drawing Lines: The Future of Redistricting in America, Feb. 26. 2010. “Mobilizing Inclusion: Getting Out the Vote among Low-Propensity Voters.” Santa Clara University, Jan. 13; Stanford University, Jan. 27; Loyola Marymount University, Oct. 19. 2010. “Latino Voter Turnout in the Central Valley, 2008.” Latino Civic and Political Participation conference, Fresno, CA, July 16. 2009. “Multiple Paths to Cynicism: Social Networks, Identity, and Linked Fate among Latinos.” National Conference on Latino Politics, Power, and Policy, Brown University, Oct. 24 (with Jessica Lavariega Monforti). 2009. “Are you asking me? Mobilization and inclusion among low-propensity voters in California” University of California, Berkeley Institute of Governmental Studies, Jan. 30 (with Lisa García Bedolla). 2008. “Heeding the Call: The Effect of Targeted Two-Round Phonebanks on Voter Turnout.” ISPS @40 Celebration and Conference, Yale University, Nov. 14. 2007. “Closing the Voter Turnout Gap.” Media/Public Briefing on results from the first phase of the California Votes Initiative, Fresno, CA on Nov. 13, Sacramento, CA on Nov. 14, Los Angeles, CA on Nov. 15. 2007. “The Nuts and Bolts of Door-to-Door Canvassing.” Pacific Institute for Community Organization statewide convening, Sacramento, CA, Nov. 6. 2007. “Immigration: Myths and Facts Panel Discussion.” League of Women Voters, Eden Area, CA, Oct. 26. 2007. “Contemporary Immigration Politics.” San Ramon Valley Democratic Club, San Ramon, CA, Sept. 27.

Melissa R. Michelson page 22 of 26 2007. “Promoting Civic Engagement among Young Voters.” GO Grant Retreat, Sonoma, CA, August 14. 2007. “Field Experiments in Latino Voter Turnout.” Working Assets, San Francisco, May 30. 2007. “Promoting Civic Engagement among Low-Propensity Voters.” At the Funders’ Committee for Civic Participation conference: “Peril, Potential and Opportunity: A Donor Strategy Session on the Future of Elections.” Preservation Park, Oakland, CA, May 21 (with Lisa García Bedolla & Don Green). 2006. “Meeting the Challenge of Latino Voter Mobilization.” American Academy of Political and Social Science symposium on voter mobilization, Washington, DC, April 24. 2006. “Looking Back, Looking Forward: Getting Out the Latino Vote.” SEIU California Vice Presidents Meeting, Burlingame, CA, April 10. 2005. “Increasing Civic Engagement among Immigrants.” Great Valley Center Conference, “Growing a Community,” Sacramento, CA, May 12. 2005. “The Power of the Latino Vote.” Chabot College, Hayward, April 14; Alameda County Democratic Party monthly meeting, San Leandro, CA, May 4. 2005. “Latino and Asian Americans: Why Don’t They Vote?” CSUEB Political Science Club, Feb. 24. 2005. “Vote or Die? Viva Bush? Youth, Latinos and Turnout in the 2004 Presidential Election.” Scholar-OLLI Lecture at CSU Hayward, Concord campus, Jan. 12. 2004. Panelist, “Post-Election Panel,” California State University, Hayward, Nov. 3. 2004. “The 2004 Midterm Elections and the California Budget.” Presentation to two classes at University High School, Mar. 30. 2004. “Getting Out the Latino Vote.” Presentation at the Pew Charitable Trusts’ Youth Voting Research Meeting, Washington, DC, Jan. 5. 2003-2004. “Getting Out the Vote.” Bakersfield League of Women Voters, Nov. 19; Working Families Party, NYC, NY, Jan. 7, 2004; Fresno League of Women Voters, Feb. 11, 2004. 2003. “Recall.” Presentation to three classes at Edison High School, Oct. 7. 2003. “Mobilizing the Latino Vote.” Department of Political Science Lecture Series, CSU Fresno, March 11. 2003. “Increasing Immigrant Civic Participation in the Central Valley.” Central Valley Partnership Immigrant Leaders Fellowship seminar, Feb. 13. 2001. Organizer and panelist for “Dialogue: Social Justice and Reparations” panel, part of the College of Social Sciences “Hot Topics in Society” series, Oct. 18. 2001. “Political Attitudes and Behavior among Fresno Latinos.” CSU Fresno, Oct. 10. 2001. “How Math Contributes to Research on Latino Politics.” Presentation to four mathematics department courses at Sequoia Academy, a high school for at-risk youth, Oct. 1. 1999. “Latino Political Power.” At the annual meeting of the Northern California Political Science Association, UC Davis, April 24.

Melissa R. Michelson page 23 of 26 1997. “Voter Perceptions on Presidential Leadership.” At “Perspectives on Leadership: A Roundtable on Current Research.” Sponsored by the Office of Social Science Research at the University of Illinois at Chicago, Feb. 13. 1995. “The President at Midterm: Clinton and the Republican Congress.” Sponsored by Mortarboard, the Lawrence University student honor society, Feb. 16.

SERVICE

EDITOR – JOURNALS March 2019-present Politics, Groups, and Identities

PEER REVIEWER – JOURNALS American Journal of Political Science Party Politics American Political Science Review Perspectives on Politics American Sociological Review Political Behavior American Politics Research Political Communication British Journal of Political Science Politics Centro Politics & Gender Election Law Journal Politics, Groups and Identities Electoral Studies Political Research Quarterly Ethnicities Political Psychology International Journal of Communication Political Science Quarterly International Migration Review PS: Political Science & Politics Journal of Communication Religion and Politics Journal of Elections, Public Opinion, & Parties Research and Politics Journal of Experimental Political Science Social Forces Journal of Homosexuality Social Problems Journal of Politics Social Influence Journal of Political Marketing Social Science Quarterly Journal of Urban Affairs Social Science Research Journal of Women, Politics & Policy Sociological Forum Latino(a) Research Review Sociological Perspectives Latino Studies State Politics & Policy Quarterly Mass Communication and Society

PEER REVIEWER – PRESSES Congressional Quarterly Cornell University Norton Notre Dame University Oxford University Polity Routledge Stanford University SUNY

Melissa R. Michelson page 24 of 26 Temple University Yale University

PROFESSIONAL MEMBERSHIPS & SERVICE • Board Member, Women Also Know Stuff, 2016-present • Editorial Board Member, State Politics & Policy Quarterly, 2014-2020 • Editorial Board Member, Journal of Politics, 2016-2018 • Editorial Board Member, Political Behavior, 2014-2018 • National Board Member, American National Election Study, 2014-2017 • Steering Committee Member, “Voices of Reform: Improving California Governance Project,” Commonwealth Club of California, 2004-2009 American Political Science Association (APSA), 1993-present • Member, APSA Presidential Task Force on Systemic Inequalities, Working Group on Climate and Context, May 2020-present • Member, Political Psychology Best Paper Award, 2019-2020 • Member, APSA Siting and Engagement Committee, 2014-16 • Member, APSA Race, Ethnicity and Politics Section o Executive Council member, 2006-2008 o Best Book Committee, 2010-2011, 2014-15 o Journals and Presses Committee, 2013-2014 o Best Dissertation Committee, 2016-2017 • Member, APSA Sexuality and Politics Section o Chair Elect, 2015-2016 o Program Chair, 2016-2017 o Chair, 2017-2018 • APSA Committee on the Status of Latinas y Latinos, 2004-2007 o Chair, subcommittee on Latino graduate student & faculty retention • APSA Latino Caucus o Secretary, 2003-2004 o President, 2009-2010; 2018-2019 o Member, F. Chris Garcia Book Award Committee, 2010-2011 o Secretary, 2013-2014 o Chair, Fund for Latino Scholarship Grant Committee, 2016 o Vice President, 2017-2018 • APSA LGBT Caucus o Chair, 2014-2015 o Chair, Bailey Award Committee, 2017-2018 • APSA Minority Fellowship Committee, 2002-2003 • Reviewer, APSA Centennial Center Grants, 2016

Western Political Science Association, 2000-present

Melissa R. Michelson page 25 of 26 • Member, WPSA Executive Council, 2020-2023, 2008-2011 o Member, Publications Committee, 2019-present • Member, Nominations Committee, 2017-2018 • Chair, Politics, Groups, and Identities editor search committee, 2015-2016 • Member, Political Research Quarterly editor search committee, 2012-2013 • Local Arrangements Coordinator 2017-18 (for 2018 meeting) & 2009-10 (for 2010 meeting) • Dissertation Award Committee, 2011-2012 • Chair, Voting & Elections Section (for 2005, 2008 and 2011 programs), 2004-2005; 2007-2008; 2010-2011. • Best Paper in Latino/a Politics Committee, 2003-2006 o Chair, 2003-2004; 2005-2006

Midwest Political Science Association, 1996-2020 • Member, Best 2019 AJPS Best Article Award, 2018-2019 • Member, MPSA Committee on Ethics, 2016-present • Member, MPSA Executive Council, 2008-2011 • Member, Midwest Latino Caucus, 2004-2020 o Founder and Chair, 2004-2006 o President 2011-2012 • Member, Midwest LGBT Caucus, 2012-2020 o Member, LGBT Caucus Best Undergraduate Paper Committee, 2014-2015 o Chair, 2015-2017

Melissa R. Michelson page 26 of 26