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Last Update April 6, 2012
Professor David P. Redlawsk
Co-Editor, Political Psychology

Prof. of Political Science
& Dir., Rutgers-Eagleton Poll
Eagleton Institute of Politics, Rutgers University
191 Ryders Ln. New Brunswick, NJ 08901
redlawsk@rutgers.edu
(732) 932-9384 ext. 285


My Courses Spring 2012

790:599 Experimental Methods (Grad)

790:307 Survey Research (Undergrad)

Why is it hard for voters to make decisions in a primary? Associate Press science writer Malcolm Ritter has a story about this, quoting me, as well as my colleague and co-author Rick Lau.


Our book on the role Iowa plays in the presidential nominating process is now available. In Why Iowa? How Caucuses and Sequential Elections Improve the Presidential Nominating Process, my co-authors Caroline Tolbert and Todd Donovan and I explore the place of Iowa in a sequential system. We conclude that despite its problems and limitations, the Iowa Caucuses provide significant benefits in the existing presidential nominating system. The book can be ordered now on Amazon and you can see a preview of it on Google Books. It's published by the University of Chicago Press. My co-author Caroline Tolbert and I published a piece in the New York Times online "Room for Debate" late in 2011 about what Iowans wanted from their caucus candidates.

THE RUTGERS-EAGLETON POLL: Follow our blog at http://eagletonpollblog.wordpress.com. You can also learn more about the poll at http://eagletonpoll.rutgers.edu.

A short piece I published in the New York Times online edition about how motivated reasoning effects can help explain resistance to facts showing President Obama was born in Hawai'i.


Research, Vita, and Personal Stuff
Updated 7/15/2011

Looking for the Lau/Redlawsk Dynamic Process Tracing System? CLICK HERE!

My Courses

Recent Books and Papers

Why Iowa? (University of Chicago Press, 2011)
Framing Labels and Immigration Policy Attitudes (2011, Political Behavior 33:433-455)
Voters, Emotions, and Race in 2008 (2010, PRQ 53(4): 875-889)
The Affective Tipping Point (2010, Political Psychology 31(4): 563-593)


Copyright 1999-2012, David P. Redlawsk