Publications & Resources

AAPOR Profile: Patricia Moy

11/18/2022

Moy_-AAPOR-2011-Election-photo_021011-(1).JPGPatricia Moy is an accomplished scholar and a dedicated public servant in our profession. She is a committed leader who has spent considerable time furthering the field of public opinion and communication research. Anyone who knows Patricia well will say she is an inquisitive thinker and taskmaster who enjoys a good intellectual challenge, and whose professional commitments find her traveling often. It’s a good thing she can fall asleep easily on planes, one of her many superhuman skills.
 
In her day job, Patricia is the Associate Vice Provost for Academic and Student Affairs at the University of Washington, where she holds the distinguished title of Christy Cressey Professor of Communication, and is an adjunct professor of political science. Patricia’s research on political communication focuses on how communication can shape public opinion, what individuals know about their social and political world, and how they choose to engage with that world. At the UW, her teaching portfolio includes courses in communication theory, public opinion, political communication, and statistics and methodology. She has held additional faculty appointments at Hebrew University, the University of Milan, the University of Mannheim, and the Mannheim Center for European Social Research.
 
Whether on campus in Seattle or elsewhere in the world, this New York Times crossword puzzle enthusiast thrives on her work with professional associations and colleagues from around the globe. In her home discipline of communication, she is currently President-Elect of the International Communication Association and editor-in-chief of Oxford Bibliographies in Communication. AAPOR members will know Patricia best as editor of Public Opinion Quarterly and her service to the organization over the years — as membership and chapter relations chair, conference chair, and councilor-at-large. She is also a past president of both the World Association for Public Opinion Research and MAPOR (“Midwest… it’s a state of mind”).
 
Across all her professional responsibilities, Patricia fully enjoys collaborating – with students, colleagues and intellectual partners, and her editorial team and authors at POQ. Patricia says that, “Editing POQ has been nothing but enriching,…I’m always learning from others’ research, and there’s nothing quite like working with an author to make a strong manuscript even stronger.” Patricia strongly believes in interdisciplinarity, which challenges people to think differently and which has infused her work since her graduate days at the University of Wisconsin, where she earned her PhD in Communication.
 
Her inspirational figures run a gamut of past and present scholars, but she most appreciates those who ask research questions that turn conventional thinking on its head. More notably, she models her professional citizenship from very different mentors, all of whom were incredibly generous with their time, spirit, and advice.
 
Patricia loves AAPOR, and her commitment to the organization is truly a model of excellence.