Ph.D. Political Science, Indiana University, 2006
B.A. History Tulane University, 2000
Hall of Letters
312
P: 909.748.8347
E:
eric_mclaughlin@redlands.edu
African Politics
Electoral Institutions
Political Parties
Ethnicity and Identity
Eric McLaughlin received his Ph.D. from Indiana University in 2006 and joined the Redlands faculty in Fall 2008. He taught previously at the University of Illinois and served as a tenure-track faculty member at the University of New Mexico before coming to Redlands. Eric McLaughlin's research focuses on institutions in new democracies and the politics of ethnicity and identity, primarily in sub-Saharan Africa. His dissertation analyzed the democratic consequences of language policies designed to accommodate ethnic diversity in South African provinces. He has published articles on various aspects of the South African electoral process and ongoing projects examine the dynamics of party-switching in legislatures and the effect of institutions on "nation-building" in Africa.
POLI 123 Introduction to World Politics
POLI 200 The Study of Politics
POLI 328 Comparative Politics
POLI 362 Playing Politics
POLI 400 African Politics
Visiting Assistant Professor, University of Illinois-Urbana/Champaign (2006-7)
Assistant Professor, University of New Mexico (2007-8)
At Redlands since Fall 2008
McLaughlin, Eric and Steve Wuhs (2019). “Explaining German Electoral Geography: Evidence from the Eastern States.” German Politics and Society 37(1): 1-23.
McLaughlin, Eric S. (2008). "Racial, Ethnic, or Rational Voters? Splitting Tickets in South Africa," Politikon: South African Journal of Political Studies, 35(1), 23-41.
McLaughlin, Eric S. (2007). "Beyond the Racial Census: The Political Salience of Ethno-Linguistic Identities in South Africa," Comparative Political Studies, 40(4), 435-56.
McLaughlin, Eric S., (2006). "Language, Governance, and Democracy in South Africa" In Eds. V.N. Webb and T. du Plessis. The Politics of Language in South Africa. Pretoria, South Africa: Van Schaik, 118-37.