Jane Junn is Associate Professor of Political Science at Rutgers University. She holds a joint appointment with the Eagleton Institute of Politics. She received her A.B. from the University of Michigan, and her M.A. and Ph.D. from the University of Chicago. Her primary interests are political participation and elections in the U.S., political behavior and attitudes among American minorities and immigrants, theories of democracy, survey research, and social science methodology. Her research has been supported by the Russell Sage Foundation, CIRCLE, the National Science Foundation, the Social Science Research Council, the Spencer Foundation, and the Educational Testing Service. In 1998 she was a Fulbright Senior Scholar at Hanguk University of Foreign Studies in Seoul, Korea. She has been a member of the 2004 Social Science Research Commission on National Elections following the contested 2000 election, and a member of a National Academies of Science panel evaluating the redesign of the U.S. Naturalization test. 

Her latest book is New Race Politics in America: Understanding Minority and Immigrant Politics, (edited with Kerry Haynie), published by Cambridge University Press in 2008. Her book, Education and Democratic Citizenship in America (with Norman Nie and Ken Stehlik-Barry) won the 1997 Woodrow Wilson Foundation Book Award from the American Political Science Association for the best book published in political science in 1996. She is the author of Civic Education: What Makes Students Learn (Yale University Press, 1998) with Richard Niemi, along with articles and chapters on political participation. She is currently at work on a book on race and political participation in the U.S., with emphasis on the dynamics of immigration and racial diversity.