New Books in American Studies

Philip Rocco, "Counting Like a State: How Intergovernmental Partnerships Shaped the 2020 US Census" (UP Kansas, 2025)

Nov 27, 2025
Philip Rocco, a political scientist at Marquette University, dives into the complexities of the 2020 U.S. Census in his new book. He discusses how state and federal partnerships influenced census operations amid controversies and the COVID-19 pandemic. Rocco highlights the contrasting efforts of states like California, which invested heavily in outreach, versus Texas, which lagged behind. Legal battles and the citizenship question further complicated the process, leading to significant undercounts among marginalized groups. His insights reveal how intertwined politics and data collection truly are.
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INSIGHT

Census As Hidden Government Infrastructure

  • Philip Rocco found the census is an overlooked but crucial government infrastructure shaping democracy.
  • State and local actions meaningfully determine census accuracy despite constitutional federal responsibility.
INSIGHT

Why States Care About Census Data

  • Three shifts since the 1960s made states hungry for census data: federal grants, reapportionment rulings, and self-enumeration.
  • Those changes pushed the Census Bureau to recruit state and local partners to boost voluntary responses.
ADVICE

Build Pivotable Outreach Before Crises

  • Prepare flexible outreach channels before crises so campaigns can pivot quickly during emergencies.
  • Use existing trusted networks like food distribution or testing sites to reach residents when events stop.
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