Jennifer Hochschild, PhD

 

Jennifer L. Hochschild, PhD

Harvard University
Government Department
Cambridge, MA 02138

 

Jennifer Hochschild is the Henry LaBarre Jayne Professor of Government and Professor of African and African American Studies at Harvard University. She holds Lectureships in the Harvard Kennedy School and the Harvard Graduate School of Education, and is a former Harvard College Professor.  She taught at Princeton University as the William Steward Tod Professor of Public and International Affairs from 1981 through 2000.  She was Chair of Harvard’s Government Department from 2016 to 2019.

Recent books, both co-authored, are Do Facts Matter: Information and Misinformation in American Politics (University of Oklahoma Press, 2015), and Creating a New Racial Order: How Immigration, Multiracialism, Genomics, and the Young Can Remake Race in America (Princeton University Press, 2012).  Hochschild now studies the politics and ideology of genomic science (with support from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation), and political and policy disputes within racial and ethnic groups in American metropolitan areas (with support from the Russell Sage Foundation).

Hochschild held the John W. Kluge Chair in American Law and Governance at the Library of Congress in 2011, and was a Fellow of The Straus Institute for the Advanced Study of Law & Justice, NYU School of Law in 2013-2014. She is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and was a Phi Beta Kappa Visiting Lecturer in 2016-17.  She was founding editor of Perspectives on Politics and a co-editor of the American Political Science Review.  She was President of the American Political Science Association in 2016-2017.

Abstracts/Posters

SEQaBOO: (SEQuencing a Baby for an Optimal Outcome) – Charting a Path for Newborn Screening. Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston, MA. Discover Brigham, November 9, 2017

SEQaBOO: (SEQuencing a Baby for an Optimal Outcome). American Society of Human Genetics. Orlando, Florida, October 17-21, 2017