New Books in Political Science

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 inclusion in legislatures shape trust in democratic institutions. She discusses public misperceptions about representation. She links gendered stereotypes to views of institutional competence, partisanship, and who responds to increased female presence.
Ask episode
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
ANECDOTE

From A Class Survey Question To A Book

  • The project began as a single survey question in a grad class about guesses of women in Congress.
  • Stauffer revisited it for course papers, a dissertation, then spent five more years turning it into a book.
INSIGHT

Collective Representation Shapes Institutional Evaluation

  • People evaluate institutions collectively, not just by individual officeholders.
  • Stauffer imports a comparative, party-list style lens to show perceptions of Congress depend on beliefs about the whole chamber's makeup.
INSIGHT

Widespread Misperceptions About Women In Congress

  • The public is broadly inaccurate about how many women serve in Congress despite reasonable aggregate averages.
  • Individual guesses vary wildly (some say 2%, others near parity), so most citizens hold incorrect concrete beliefs yet still use them to judge institutions.
Get the Snipd Podcast app to discover more snips from this episode
Get the app