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Katelyn E. Stauffer, "The Politics of Perception: How Beliefs About Women’s Inclusion Shape Democratic Legitimacy in the U.S." (Oxford UP, 2025)

Mar 12, 2026
Katelyn E. Stauffer, Associate Professor of Political Science at the University of Georgia and author of The Politics of Perception, explores how beliefs about women’s presence in elected bodies shape trust and legitimacy. She discusses public misperceptions about representation. The conversation covers gendered stereotypes, partisan differences in reactions, and how collective views of institutions change political evaluations.
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ANECDOTE

Book Born From A Classroom Survey

  • Katelyn Stauffer traced the book's origin to a grad-school survey exercise that asked people to estimate how many women are in Congress.
  • The single classroom question evolved into a dissertation and then a book over more than a decade of research and revisions.
INSIGHT

Perception Trumps Knowledge For Institutional Views

  • People hold gendered beliefs about institutions even when they lack accurate factual knowledge of membership like how many women are in Congress.
  • Stauffer combines a comparative collective perspective with U.S. public opinion to show perceptions (not reality) drive attitudes about institutions.
INSIGHT

Average Guesses Hide Wide Misperceptions

  • Survey respondents wildly misestimate the share of women in Congress; averages can be close but individual guesses vary extremely.
  • Estimates ranged from 2% to near parity, showing broad public inaccuracy and variance in beliefs.
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