Courtney Blackington

  • Teaching Assistant Professor & Advisor

Courtney Blackington a Teaching Assistant Professor and Academic Advisor in the Department of Political Science at the University of Pittsburgh. She also serves on the Faculty Advisory Board for the Center for Russian, East European & Eurasian Studies at Pitt. Her research focuses on how emotions, political socialization, and religious socialization shape the likelihood that people will mobilize in defense of—or against—liberal democratic institutions and rights. She also studies what makes some conspiracy theories spread widely, and how conspiratorial beliefs affect people’s willingness to tolerate democratic backsliding. Her research has been supported by the U.S. Department of State, American Councils, the European Union, the BEAR Network, the University of North Carolina, and the University of Pittsburgh. She earned her PhD in Political Science at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, her MA in Political Science from Columbia University, and her BA in Government from the College of William and Mary. She spent the 2021-2022 academic year as a Fulbright and Title VIII Scholar at the Polish Academy of Sciences and the University of Warsaw.  Her work has been published in Perspectives on Politics, Government and Opposition, East European Politics, East European Politics and Societies, and Politics, Religion, and Ideology. She has also published in The Monkey Cage and The LoopThe Washington Post has covered her research. 

 

Courses Taught

  • Politics of East Central Europe
  • Introduction to Comparative Politics 

Education & Training

  • PhD: University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 2024

Representative Publications

To Dog-Whistle or To Bark? Elite Communication Strategies when Invoking Conspiracy Theories

Forthcoming at Government and Opposition, with Frances Cayton

 

The Effects of Religious Group Engagement on Anti-Abortion Protest Participation

Forthcoming at Politics, Religion, and Ideology

 

How to Stay Popular: Threat, Framing, and Conspiracy Theory Longevity.

Perspectives on Politics, with Frances Cayton, 2024.

 

Why do some conspiracy theories stay popular on social media?

The Loop: ECPR’s Political Science Blog, with Frances Cayton, 2024.

 

In Defense of Liberal Democracy: Who Protests against Populists and Why?

East European Politics and Societies, 2024.

 

Mobilizing against Democratic Backsliding: What Motivates Protestors in Central Europe?

East European Politics and Societies, with Antoaneta Dimitrova, Iulia Ionita, and Milada Vachudova, 2024.

 

Angry and Afraid: Emotional Drivers of Protest for Abortion Rights in Poland.

East European Politics, 2023.

 

Partisanship, Populists, and Plane Crashes: Can Populist Partisanship Drive Conspiratorial Beliefs?

East European Politics, 2021.

 

“Two Polish women died after being refused timely abortions. Many Poles are outraged — and protesting.”

The Monkey Cage, Washington Post, February 18, 2022.

Research Interests

  • Protest
  • Conspiracy Theories
  • Disinformation
  • Democratic backsliding
  • Political Behavior

CV

Area of Study