Jennifer R. Garcia is Assistant Professor in the Politics Department at Oberlin College. Her work has been published in several journals, including Political Communications, Legislative Studies Quarterly and Political Research Quarterly. Christopher T. Stout is Professor of Political Science at the University of California, San Diego. He researches how US voters respond to race-based political messages. His previous work has earned multiple awards, including Best Book in US Electoral Politics (APSA) and the W.E.B. DuBois Best Book Award (NCOBPS) along with appearing in dozens of peer-reviewed journals. Katherine Tate is Professor of Political Science at Brown University. She is the author of several books, including the award-winning Black Faces in the Mirror: African Americans and Their Representatives in the US Congress (2004).
'Black Voices in the Hall of Power transcends typical accounts of descriptive, symbolic, and substantive representation with a commanding, multi-method analysis of interviews, survey experiments, legislative activity, and hundreds of thousands of press releases and tweets to demonstrate how Black legislators' rhetorical representation reshapes the legislative landscape for Black constituents.' LaGina Gause, University of California, San Diego 'This book is a must-read for those who care how communication shapes politics in Congress and in America. The authors persuasively argue that legislators, especially marginalized Black and Latino legislators, engage in rhetorical representation strategies to uplift the voices of Black and Latino constituents. The book shows that words are meaningful, as legislative rhetoric on race is connected to public policy outcomes and to voter opinions. The book is methodologically sophisticated, relying upon interviews with congressional communications staff, quantitative text analysis, observational data, and experimental data. I thoroughly enjoyed reading the book, and this is one of the most significant contemporary works on race and representation in the United States.' Christian Grose, University of Southern California 'This book is a must-read for scholars and public policymakers concerned with understanding how the presence of African Americans in political institutions leads to the effective representation of African American interests. Using an array of data sources, the authors demonstrate that diversity in Congress is key to providing a voice for underrepresented groups.' Michael Minta, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities