Rosalyn Cooperman, associate professor of Political Science, presented her research on Democratic and Republican party activists in 2016, The Room Where it Happens: Party Activists and the 2016 Presidential Election, at the 2019 Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association in Washington, D.C.
Cooperman Publishes Co-Authored Article in American Politics Research
Associate Professor of Political Science Rosalyn Cooperman co-authored an article titled “Group Commitment Among U.S. Party Factions: A Perspective From Democratic and Republican National Convention Delegates” that was published in American Politics Research.
Republican Women Watch Their Numbers Decline in State Legislatures (Governing)
Cooperman Presents Research at Vanderbilt Symposium
Rosalyn Cooperman, Associate Professor of Political Science, presented a paper, “If He Can Run and Win, Surely She Can Too: (Re)Considering Gender and Political Candidacy in the Age of Trump” at the Oppenheimer Reconsidered conference sponsored by the Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions at Vanderbilt University.
How The Scandals In Richmond Could Affect Virginia Democrats This Fall (WAMU)
Cooperman Presents Research at Political Science Conference
Rosalyn Cooperman, Associate Professor of Political Science and International Affairs, presented “She Should (Not) Run: Party Activists and Women’s Place at the 2019 Annual Meeting of the Southern Political Science Association.
Women donors and PACs fueled political funding for Democratic women candidates in 2018—but they left GOP women behind (CNBC.com)
Cooperman Joins Editorial Board of “Political Behavior”
Associate professor of Political Science Rosalyn Cooperman has been invited to join the editorial board of Political Behavior, a peer-reviewed journal that publishes original research in the general fields of political behavior, institutions, processes and policies.
The journal is published in association with the Elections, Public Opinion and Voting Behavior section of the American Political Science Association.
Pink Wave: Record number of women to serve in Congress following midterms (WJLA)
Rosalyn Cooperman Research Featured on Vox
Rosalyn Cooperman, political science professor, co-authored an op-ed in Vox.com addressing why so few women candidates are Republican.
“Different party cultures mean that Democratic elites support women candidates often — and because of their gender — while Republican elites do not,” according to the piece.