Skip to main content
Home

Utility navigation

  • News
  • Events
  • Media Contacts
  • Departmental Directory
  • Contact
Princeton University

Main navigation

  • People
    • Current Faculty
    • Emeritus Faculty
    • Associated Faculty
    • Graduate students
    • Lecturers, Postdocs, Visitors
    • Staff
  • Undergraduate
    • Majoring in Politics
    • Courses
    • Independent Work
    • Resources
  • Graduate
    • Admissions & Financial Support
    • Courses
    • Plan of Study
    • Joint Degree Program in Social Policy
    • Job Placement
    • Research
    • Graduate Initiatives
  • Areas of Study
    • American Politics
    • Comparative Politics
    • International Relations
    • Formal Theory & Quantitative Methods
    • Political Economy
    • Political Theory
    • Public Law
    • Race, Ethnicity and Identity
  • Centers & Programs
  • About
    • Why Princeton Politics
    • History
    • 100th Anniversary
    • Department Awards
    • Profiles
    • Open Faculty & Academic Professional Positions

Quantitative Social Science Colloquium

Breadcrumb

  1. Home

Quantitative Social Science Colloquium

December 2025

Dec
12

QSSC: Jesse Shapiro (Harvard University): Pitfalls of Demographic Forecasts of US Elections

127 Corwin Hall
12:00 PM
Quantitative Social Science Colloquium
Many influential observers have forecast large partisan shifts in the US electorate based on demographic trends. Such forecasts are appealing because demographic trends are often predictable even over long horizons

February 2026

Feb
27

Quantitative Social Science Colloquium: Jon Mellon (West Point)

12:00 PM
Quantitative Social Science Colloquium

April 2026

Apr
10

QSSC: Matt Masten (Duke University)

127 Corwin Hall
12:00 PM
Quantitative Social Science Colloquium
Princeton University
Department of Politics

001 Fisher Hall, Princeton, NJ 08544-1012 T (609) 258-4760 F (609) 258-1110

Accessibility Diversity & Non-Discrimination © 2025 The Trustees of Princeton University

Social Media

  • Bluesky
  • Instragram
  • X