Kate Hunt
Social Sciences · Indiana University
Publications
21
Citations
237
Est. group size
—
Recurring co-author estimate
Active years
39
Publishing since 1987
Kate Hunt studies the politics of gender and reproductive rights, with a particular focus on how social movements campaign around abortion and how they use social media platforms like Twitter to organize and build support. Her work examines political messaging, activism during events such as the COVID-19 pandemic, and campaigns in countries including the United States and Ireland. She also publishes on teaching methods for political science and international studies courses.
Publication activity was steady in the late 2010s and around 2020-2021, then slowed to roughly one output per year in recent years.
Generated by claude-opus-4-8 from public bibliographic data · Jul 11, 2026
- I Understood the Assignment: Short-Form Videos in the International Studies Classroom
International Studies Perspectives · 2025
- Benevolent sexism competed with hypermasculinity in high-stakes campaigns in the U.S. and Ireland
2024
- Exploiting a Crisis: Abortion Activism and the COVID-19 Pandemic
Perspectives on Politics · 2021
- ‘You can’t repeal regret’: targeting men for mobilisation in Ireland’s abortion debate
European Journal of Politics and Gender · 2021
- Social movements and human rights language in abortion debates
Journal of Human Rights · 2020
- Replication Data for: Exploiting a Crisis: Abortion Activism and the COVID-19 Pandemic
Harvard Dataverse · 2020
- Replication data for: [Social Movements and Human Rights Language in Abortion Debates]
Harvard Dataverse · 2020
- Twitter, social movements, and claiming allies in abortion debates
Journal of Information Technology & Politics · 2019
- Zombies, Gender, and Student Active Learning
Journal of Political Science Education · 2018
- Harvard Dataverse×2
- Journal of Information Technology & Politics×1
- Politics & Gender×1
- Information Communication & Society×1
- Perspectives on Politics×1
This profile was generated automatically from public scholarly data (OpenAlex). Group size and activity levels are estimates derived from co-authorship patterns.
Last updated Jul 11, 2026.
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