Jennifer Heerwig
Associate Professor
Ph.D. 2013, NYU
(631) 632-7714
Jennifer.Heerwig@stonybrook.edu
www.jenheerwig.com
Areas of Interest
political sociology, campaign finance, public opinion, causal inference
Bio
My work uses innovative data sources and econometric methods to examine the American campaign finance system and political inequality more broadly. I'm particularly interested in how individual donors allocate their monetary contributions in national elections and what these patterns tell us about how donor motivations have changed over time. My work has been funded by the National Science Foundation and the Russell Sage Foundation.
Selected Publications
Heerwig, Jennifer A. and Brian J. McCabe. Forthcoming 2020. "High-Dollar Donors and
Donor-Rich Neighborhoods. Representational Distortion in Financing a Municipal Election
in Seattle." Urban Affairs Review.
Heerwig, Jennifer A. and Joshua Murray. 2019. "The Political Strategies and Unity
of the American Corporate Inner Circle: Evidence from Political Donations, 1982 -
2000." Social Problems 66(4): 580-608
Brian J. McCabe and Jennifer A. Heerwig. 2019. “Diversifying the Donor Pool: Did Seattle’s Democracy Voucher Program Help Reshape Participation in Municipal Campaign Finance?” Election Law Journal 18(4): 323-341.
Heerwig, Jennifer A. and Katie Gordon. 2018. "Buying a Voice: Gendered Contribution
Careers Among Affluent Political Donors to Federal Elections, 1980 - 2008." Sociological Forum 33(3): 805-825
Herrnson, S. Paul, Jennifer A. Heerwig and Douglas M. Spencer. 2018. "The Impact of
Organizational Characteristics on Super PAC Financing." pp 248 - 262 in The State
of the Parties: The Changing Role of Contemporary American Political Parties, edited
by John C. Green, Daniel J. Coffey, and David B. Cohen. New York: Rowman & Littlefield
Publishers.
Heerwig, Jennifer A. 2018. “Money in the Middle: Contribution Strategies among Affluent
Donors to Federal Elections, 1980-2008.” American Journal of Sociology 123: 1004-1063.
Heerwig, Jennifer A. 2016. “Donations and Dependence: Individual Contributor Strategies in House Elections.” Social Science Research 60: 181-198.
Heerwig, Jennifer A. and Katherine Shaw. 2014. “Through a Glass, Darkly: The Rhetoric and Reality of Campaign Finance Disclosure.” Georgetown Law Journal 102: 1443-1500.
Conley, Dalton and Jennifer A. Heerwig. 2012. “The Long-Term Effects of Military Conscription on Mortality: Estimates from the Vietnam-Era Draft Lottery.” Demography 49: 841-855.
Heerwig, Jennifer A. and Brian J. McCabe. 2009. “Education and Social Desirability Bias: The Case of a Black Presidential Candidate.” Social Science Quarterly 90: 674-686.