Elise Blasingame

Assistant Professor of Political Science

Dr. Blasingame (Osage/𐓏𐒰𐓓𐒰𐓓𐒷) is a policy and research professional with over a decade of experience in public service. Her work focuses on representation, Native American politics, and American political institutions. Dr. Blasingame received her PhD in American Politics from the School of Public and International Affairs at the University of Georgia. Her research has been published in the American Political Science Review, Political Research Quarterly, Political Science Research & Methods, and the American Journal of Public Health

Prior to academia, Dr. Blasingame held leadership roles at several non-profit organizations. She served as Executive Director of Healthy Mothers, Healthy Babies Coalition of Georgia from 2015 to 2020, leading a team dedicated to improving maternal and infant health through advocacy, education, research, and direct service delivery. Earlier in her career, she worked with Georgia Watch and The Carter Center’s Mental Health Program and Global Access to Information Initiative, supporting projects in West Africa.

Dr. Blasingame also holds an MSW from the University at Buffalo (SUNY) and a BS in Industrial and Labor Relations from Cornell University.

She was recognized as one of Georgia Trend’s “40 Under 40” in 2020 and is an alum of MIT SOLVE Indigenous Communities Fellowship, the Eloise Cobell Foundation Dissertation Fellowship, New Leaders Council Atlanta, LEAD Atlanta, the Zell Miller Leadership Institute, and the Indigenous Leadership Academy at Arizona State University. From 2017 to 2020, she served as the District 3 At-Large Appointee to the City of Atlanta Commission on Women. In 2022, she was selected as a Udall Foundation Native American Congressional Fellow, where she served in the Office of Assistant Secretary for Indian Affairs Bryan Newland. From 2024-2025, Dr. Blasingame served as the Scholar in Residence at Advance Native Political Leadership.


Education

BS| Cornell University| 2010

MSW| University at Buffalo (SUNY)| 2013

PhD| University of Georgia| 2025

Courses Taught

Introduction to American Government

Native American Politics

Principles of Political Science

Research Methods

Publications

Blasingame, Elise, Eric Hansen, Richard Witmer. 2024. “Are Descriptive Representatives More Successful Passing Group-Relevant Legislation? The Case of Native American State Legislators.Political Research Quarterly, 78(1), 308-322.

Blasingame, Elise. “Holding Office in Native America: The Policy Choices of Native Women Legislators” in Distinct Identities: Minority Women in US Politics, 2nd edition, ed. Nadia E. Brown & Sarah Allen Gershon. 2023. New York, NY: Routledge.

Blasingame, Elise, Christina L. Boyd, Roberto F. Carlos, and Joe Ornstein. 2023. “How the Trump Administration’s Quota Policy Transformed Immigration Judging.” American Political Science Review, 118(4): 1-16.

Ornstein, Joseph, Elise N. Blasingame and Jake S. Truscott. 2025. "How to Train Your Stochastic Parrot: Deep Language Models for Political Texts." Political Science Research & Methods, 13(2): 264–281 . [R Package]

 

 

Public Media:

“Why more Native Americans are on U.S. ballots than ever before” NPR Morning Edition (2024, November 3)

“How Native women in state legislatures are changing politics”, Good Authority (2023, November 30)

“What Mary Peltola’s win in Alaska may mean for Indian country”, Washington Post (2022, September 13)

Research Interests

Native American Politics, Representation, Legislative Process, Bureacracy, American Institutions