Elizabeth Baisley
Assistant Professor
PhD, MA (Princeton); MA (Queen鈥檚); Honours BA (Wilfrid Laurier)
Political Studies
Canadian Politics, Gender and Politics
Assistant Professor
Research Interests
Canadian politics; Canadian political institutions; Canadian political development; interest groups and social movements; political parties; gender and sexuality in Canadian politics; LGBTQ+ politics
Supervisory Interests
Dr. Baisley would be interested in supervising students in the following areas: diversity in Canadian politics; Canadian political institutions; Canadian political parties; Canadian interest groups and social movements; Canadian political development; gender in Canadian politics; LGBTQ+ politics; Canada in comparative perspective; and qualitative, multi- and mixed-method research. For more information, see Baisley鈥檚 supervision page:
Brief Biography
Dr. Elizabeth Baisley is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Political Studies. Broadly speaking, Baisley鈥檚 research focuses on issues of rights and representation in Canadian politics. This research often foregrounds the role of political parties, interest groups, and social movements in social and political change. Baisley draws on both qualitative and quantitative materials, including archival materials, interviews, observations of political events, survey data, roll-call data, and experiments.
Teaching
For detailed information about political studies courses and instructors, please refer to the Undergraduate and Graduate pages.
Service (2024/2025)
- Departmental Committee
- Field Convenor (Canadian; Gender & Politics - Fall 2024)
Selected Publications
Baisley, Elizabeth. 2023. 鈥淚nstitutional Opportunities and Party Position Change on LGBTQ+ Rights: The Case of Canada.鈥 Politics, Groups, and Identities.
Albaugh, Quinn M. and Elizabeth Baisley. 2023. 鈥淕ender and LGBT Affinity: The Case of Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne.鈥 Politics & Gender,&苍产蝉辫;1鈥24.&苍产蝉辫;
Baisley, E. 2016. 鈥淩eaching the Tipping Point? Emerging International Human Rights Norms Pertaining to Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity,鈥 Human Rights Quarterly, 38(1), 134-163.
Baisley, E. 2015. 鈥淔raming the Ghanaian LGBT Rights Debate: Competing Decolonisation and Human Rights Frames,鈥 Canadian Journal of African Studies, 49(2), 383-402.
Baisley, E. 2014. 鈥淕enocide and Constructions of Hutu and Tutsi in Radio Propaganda,鈥 Race & Class, 55(3), 38-59.
Baisley, E. 2012. 鈥淪tatus-Differentiated Rights,鈥 Journal of Human Rights, 11(3), 365-383.