Gregory Huber is professor of Political Science at Yale University, where he is also a faculty in residence at the Institution for Social and Policy Studies, the associate director of the Center for the Study of American Politics, and the director of the ISPS Behavioral Research Lab. His research is broadly focused on understanding the interactions between mass and elite behavior as shaping and being shaped by political institutions. His recent work includes papers on how partisanship shapes economic and social behaviors, the appropriate measurement of citizen preferences and factual beliefs, and how citizens perceive and are affected by interactions with the criminal justice system.
Gregory Huber is professor of Political Science at Yale University, where he is also a faculty in residence at the Institution for Social and Policy Studies, the associate director of the Center for the Study of American Politics, and the director of the ISPS Behavioral Research Lab. His research is broadly focused on understanding the interactions between mass and elite behavior as shaping and being shaped by political institutions. His recent work includes papers on how partisanship shapes economic and social behaviors, the appropriate measurement of citizen preferences and factual beliefs, and how citizens perceive and are affected by interactions…