
Andrew J. Clarke, Ph.D.
Associate Professor, Department of Government & Law
Website
Andrew Clarke is an an associate professor in the Department of Government & Law and an affiliate of the Center for Effective Lawmaking. His research focuses on American political institutions, civic engagement, and public policy. He founded Gov Lab in Summer 2020.

Caleb Gallemore, Ph.D.
Associate Professor, International Affairs Program
Website
Caleb Gallemore is an Associate Professor in the International Affairs Program. He holds a Ph.D. in Geography and a Master’s degree in Political Science with a concentration in International Relations, both from The Ohio State University. Previously, he was an Assistant Professor in the Department of Geography and Environmental Studies at Northeastern Illinois University.

Dylan W. Groves, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor, Department of Government & Law
On Parental Leave Fall 2025
Website
Dylan W. Groves is an Assistant Professor of Government and Law at Lafayette College. His research focuses on comparative politics, political economy, African politics, and the media.

Stephanie Chan, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor, Department of Government & Law
On Research Leave AY 2025-26
Website
I am an Assistant Professor in Lafayette College’s Department of Government and Law. Substantively, my interests involve race, immigration, political participation, and public opinion and I use methods ranging from interviews to survey experiments and network analysis. I earned my PhD in Politics from Princeton University with specializations in American Politics, Comparative Politics, and Formal and Quantitative Methods. My dissertation, Creative Citizenship: The Impacts of Racialized Incorporation on Political Participation, won the 2023 American Political Science Association Race, Ethnicity, and Politics Section Best Dissertation Award. With Sonya Chen, I have won the Western Political Science Association Asian Pacific American Caucus 2023 Best Paper Award. My work has been published in International Migration Review, Politics, Groups, and Identities, and American Political Research.
Before coming to Lafayette College, I was a co-organizer for Princeton Women in Politics and a graduate fellow in Princeton Research in Experimental Social Science. I graduated summa cum laude with a B.A. in Political Science from the University of Massachusetts Amherst (UMass). At UMass Amherst, I was a fellow in UMass Women into Leadership, a fellow of SBS Rise (formerly Academic Fellows Program), and a Commonwealth Honors College Scholar with Greatest Distinction.