Corrine M. McConnaughy is Assistant Professor of Political Science at Ohio State University. She was Assistant Professor of Government and was affiliated with the Center for Women's and Gender Studies at the University of Texas, Austin from 2004-7, and received her PhD in Political Science from the University of Michigan in 2004. McConnaughy's dissertation won a University-wide Honorable Mention as a Distinguished Dissertation at Michigan, as well as the Carrie Chapman Catt Award for research on women and politics from the Catt Center at Iowa State University. At Ohio State University, her work has been awarded a Coca-Cola Critical Difference for Women Research Grant from the Department of Women's Studies. She is the recipient of the Lucius Barker Award from the Midwest Political Science Association (2011), and was recognized with the Distinguished Alumni Award from Pi Sigma Alpha at DePaul University in 2010. McConnaughy is on the Executive Council of the Women and Politics Research section of the American Political Science Association, serving as its newsletter editor. Her work has appeared in the American Journal of Political Science, the Journal of Politics, Public Opinion Quarterly, Studies in American Political Development, Politics and Gender, and American Politics Research.
1. Bringing politics back in: suffrage supply and demand
2. Political meaning for woman suffrage
3. Programmatic enfranchisement: coalitional strategies for voting rights
4. Strong leverage: third party support
5. Coalitional impossibilities: race, class, and failure
6. The national story
7. From the outside in.