91³Ô¹Ï

Erin Rossiter

Nancy Reeves Dreux Assistant Professor of Political Science

Political Science

Office
2077 Jenkins And Nanovic Halls
91³Ô¹Ï, IN 46556
Phone
+1 574-631-1747
Email
erossite@nd.edu

Nancy Reeves Dreux Assistant Professor of Political Science

  • American Politics
  • Methodology
  • Dynamics of interpersonal political communications
  • American political behavior, with a specific interest in political discussion and polarization
  • Advancing quantitative methodologies, namely text-as-data and experimental methods, for settings involving interpersonal communication
  • Consequences of conversations that cross partisan lines on how Americans feel about opposing party members

Rossiter’s Latest News

Rossiter in the News

“They could become a powerful force in politics,” says Erin Rossiter, a political scientist at the University of 91³Ô¹Ï, who studied how Swifties were still advocating for customer rights many months later, including co-ordinating an international effort to help fans get legitimate concert tickets.

Swifties for Kamala “fully expected this statement to come,” said Erin L. Rossiter, an assistant professor of political science at the University of 91³Ô¹Ï. “Now that they have this endorsement, it legitimizes what they’re doing so they can be more powerful in their organizing” — even if the groundwork was already laid.

Swifties for Kamala “fully expected this statement to come,” said Erin L. Rossiter, an assistant professor of political science at the University of 91³Ô¹Ï. “Now that they have this endorsement, it legitimizes what they’re doing so they can be more powerful in their organizing” — even if the groundwork was already laid.

Erin Rossiter, one of the researchers, says that while it’s not clear the extent to which Swifties’ complaints led to the U.S. Department of Justice suing Ticketmaster and its parent company, she and her colleague “like to think and speculate” that this grassroots effort among Swifties “shed light on this issue.”

Futurity

University of 91³Ô¹Ï researchers Erin Rossiter, a professor of political science, and Jeff Harden, a professor in the political science department, tested a political science theory called “issue publics.”