Download Daniela Stockmann Assistant Professor Department of Political

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts
no text concepts found
Transcript
Daniela Stockmann - Page 1/5
Daniela Stockmann
Assistant Professor
Department of Political Science, Leiden University
Wassenaarse weg 52, 2333 AK Leiden, The Netherlands
Phone: +31 (0)71 527 3867
Fax: +31 (0)71 527 3815
E-mail: [email protected]
Website: www.daniestockmann.net
APPOINTMENTS
Leiden University, Leiden/The Netherlands
Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science, January 2007 Research Associate, Modern East Asia Research Centre,
Sinological Institute, January 2007 -
EDUCATION
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI/US
Ph.D. Political Science, April 2007
Dissertation: Propaganda for Sale: The Impact of Newspaper
Commercialization on News Content and Public Opinion in China
School of Oriental and African Studies, London/UK
M.A. Chinese Studies, (Distinction), December 2001
University of Rochester, Rochester, NY/US
B.A. Political Science, (Magna Cum Laude), May 2000
Ludwig-Maximilians University, Munich/Germany
Intermediate Exam, Political Science, July 1999
SPECIALIZATION
AND INTEREST
•
•
•
•
FELLOWSHIPS
AND HONORS
2009
2008
2008
2007
2006
2005
2005
2005
2005
2004
2004
2002
Chinese politics
Comparative politics of developing and transitional states
Political communication and public opinion research
Research methodology
Modern East Asia Research Centre Endowment Award, Leiden
University, € 2,000.
KNAW Joint Research Project, Principal Investigator, "Advertising Politics:
Rationales, Content, and Effects of Public Service Advertising in the
Chinese Media,” Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences (KNAW), €
45,415.
7th Framework Programme of the Commission of the European Union (FP-7),
Co-Investigator, "Chinese Views of the EU: Disaggregating Chinese Perceptions
of the EU and the Implications for the EU's China Policy," € 1,430,800.
Tim Cook Best Graduate Student Paper Award, Political Communication Division,
American Political Science Association.
One-Term Dissertation Grant, University of Michigan.
Regents Fellowship, University of Michigan.
E. Eugene Shelley Award, University of Michigan.
Rackham Discretionary Fund, University of Michigan.
Taiwan Familiarization Program, ROC Ministry of Education and Cheng-Chi
University.
The Peking University Harvard-Yenching Award, Harvard-Yenching Institute.
Center for Chinese Studies Field Research Support, University of Michigan.
Center for Chinese Studies Endowment Award, University of Michigan.
1
Daniela Stockmann - Page 2/5
2001
2000
1999
1999 - 2003
Regents Fellowship, University of Michigan.
Bernard Buckman Fellowship, School of Oriental and African Studies.
Genesee Scholarship, University of Rochester.
Studienstiftung des deutschen Volkes (German National Academic Foundation).
PUBLICATIONS
In peer-revie wed journals:
“Corporate Social Responsibility with Chinese Characteristics: Advertising as a
Means of Campaigning on Chinese Television,” Accepted for publication in
The China Quarterly.
“Remote Control: How the Media Sustains Authoritarian Rule in China” ( with Mary
E. Gallagher). Comparative Political Studies, June 2011.
“Who Believes Propaganda? Media Effects during the Anti-Japanese Protests in
Beijing.” The China Quarterly, 202, June 2010: 269-289.
“One Size Doesn’t Fit All: Measuring News Reception East and West.” The
Chinese Journal of Communication, 2(2), July 2009: 140-157.
In edited volumes:
“Information Overload? Collecting, Managing, and Analyzing Chinese Media
Content.” In Allen Carlson, Mary Gallagher, Kenneth Lieberthal, and Melanie
Manion, eds, 2010. Contemporary Chinese Politics: New Sources, Methods,
and Field Strategies. New York: Cambridge University Press.
“What Information Does the Public Demand? Getting the News during the 2005
Anti-Japanese Protests.” In Susan Shirk, ed, 2010. Changing Media,
Changing China. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
“Chinese Attitudes Toward the United States and Americans,” ( with A. Iain
Johnston). In Peter Katzenstein and Robert Keohane, eds, 2007. AntiAmericanisms in World Politics. Ithaca: Cornell University Press.
Other articles and revie ws:
Book Review. Young Nam Cho, Local People's Congresses in China: Development
and Transition. Perspectives on Politics (2010).
Book Review. Haiqing Yu, Media and Cultural Transformation in China. China
Information, 4(1), March, 2010:114-115.
Media Appearances:
Interviews with NRC-Handelsblad, March 26, 2008, NRC-Next, March 28, 2008,
Weekend Avisen, December 19, 2008.
IN PROGRESS
Propaganda for Sale: How Media Commercialization Sustains Authoritarian Rule
in China. Book manuscript. Under revie w.
2
Daniela Stockmann - Page 3/5
INVITED TALKS
“Media Effects on Chinese Attitudes Towards Japan,” The ‘Long Arc’ of SinoJapanese Relations: Perspectives on War, Cooperation, and Conflict Across
Three Eras, University of Oxford, June 2010.
“Propaganda for Sale: The Impact of Media Commercialization on Public Opinion in
China.” Friedrich-Alexander University of Erlangen, May 2010.
“Chinese Attitudes Toward the United States and Americans,” Breaking Down the
Walls, Arizona State University, April 2010.
“Corporate Social Responsibility with Chinese Characteristics: Advertising as a
Means of Campaigning on Chinese Television,” Chinese La w and Society
Colloquium, Columbia University, April 2010.
"Information Overload? Improving Content Analysis in Chinese Media Research"
(Xinxi Guozai Shidai Ruhe Kexue Chuli Yanjiu Ziliao), Tsinghua University,
December 2009. (In Chinese).
"Trends in the Study of Chinese Media in the United States" (Meiguo Xuejie dui
Zhongguo Meiti Yanjiu de Qushi Tanxi), Fudan University, Shanghai,
December 2009. (In Chinese)
"Information Overload? Improving Content Analysis in Chinese Media Research"
(Xinxi Guozai Shidai Ruhe Kexue Chuli Yanjiu Ziliao), Communication
University of China, Beijing, November 2009. (In Chinese)
"Trends in the Study of Chinese Media in the United States
" (Meiguo Xuejie dui Zhongguo Meiti Yanjiu de Qushi Tanxi), Communication
University of China, Beijing, November 2009.
“Political Voices in the Chinese Press: Does Media Commercialization Change the
Position of the Authoritarian State?” Workshop on Media in Contemporary
Chinese Politics, Fairbank Center, Harvard University, April 2009.
“Who Believes Propaganda? Media Effects during the Anti-Japanese Protests in
Beijing.” Chinese Politics Workshop at the University of Wisconsin, Madison,
April 2009.
“Propaganda for Sale: Choosing a Research Question, Hypotheses, and
Research Design.” Lecture delivered at the Asia Media Research Center,
Communication University of China, Beijing, November 2008.
“Propaganda for Sale: Choosing a Research Question, Hypotheses, and
Research Design.” Lecture delivered at the Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
University Frankfurt, June 2008.
“Propaganda for Sale: The Impact of Media Commercialization on Public Opinion in
China.” Lecture delivered at the Modern East Asia Research Centre, Leiden
University, November 2007.
“Propaganda for Sale: Choosing a Research Question, Hypotheses, and
Research Design.” Lecture delivered at the Social Science Methodology
Workshop, School of International Studies, Peking University, July 2007.
CONFERENCE
PAPERS
“Advertising Chinese Politics: The Effects of Public Service Announcements in
Urban China” ( with Ashley Esarey). 2010 Annual Meeting of the American
Association of Asian Studies, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, April 2010.
“Crisis Management in an Authoritarian Regime: Media Effects during the Sichuan
Earthquake” ( with Pierre Landry). 2009 Annual Meeting of the American
Political Science Association, Toronto, Canada, September 2009.
"Media Commercialization under Authoritarianism: Does Regime Type Matter for
Liberalization?" 2009 Annual Meeting of the Midwest Political Science
Association, Chicago, Illinois, April 2009.
"Does Media Commercialization Increase Negativity Toward the United States in
China?" 2008 Asia Communication and Media Forum on National Images,
Communication University of China, Beijing, November 2008.
“Political Voices in the Chinese Press: Does Media Commercialization Change the
(last three years)
3
Daniela Stockmann - Page 4/5
Position of the Authoritarian State?” 2008 Annual Meeting of the American
Political Science Association, August 2008.
“Who Believes Propaganda? How Media Commercialization Boosts Media
Credibility in Beijing.” 2008 Annual Meeting of the International Society for
Political Psychology, July 2008.
“Advertising Politics: Campaigning, Media Commercialization, and Legal Reform in
Contemporary China.” 2008 Annual Meeting of the American Association for
Asian Studies, April, 2008.
“Using Experiments to Study the Effects of Political Advertising in China.” General
Conference of the European Consortium for Political Research, Pisa,
September 2007.
“Mass Media Mobilization as a Means of Legal Reform in China.” With Mary E.
Gallagher. Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association,
Philadelphia, September 2007.
“The Chinese News Media and Public Opinion: Adaptation of a Propaganda
Machine or Instrument for Political Change?” Annual Meeting of the American
Political Science Association, Philadelphia, September 2006.
(APSA Best Graduate Student Paper Award in Political Communication).
TEACHING
At Leiden University:
“MA Thesis Seminar in Comparative Politics,” Spring 2010 and Spring 2011.
"Talking Politics," Bachelorproject in Political Psychology, Spring 2008.
“Political Reform in East Asia,” Spring 2008.
“Public Opinion and the Media,” Spring 2008, Winter 2008.
“Chinese Government and Politics,” co-taught with Richard Sherman, Winter
2007.
“Comparative Political Communication,” Winter 2007, Spring 2008, Winter 2008.
PhD Thesis Supervision (Co-Promoter): Li Zheng, Pan Wen, Jin Xi.
Master Thesis Supervision (First Reader): Annelise van Kleef, Anita Mikulic,
Julius van Geen, Mark Zuijder wijk, Ralf van Essen, Sebastiaan van Rijsweijk,
Yuan Cheng, Mingde Wang, Janet van Kling (2008 Best MA Thesis Awards,
Department of Political Science and Faculty of Social Sciences, Leiden
University).
Graduate Student Instructor, the University of Michigan:
“China’s Evolution under Communism,” undergraduate course, Professor
Kenneth Lieberthal (PS 339, AS 428, Soc 426), Fall 2002 and Fall 2003.
“American Political Processes,” upper-level writing course, Professor Arthur
Lupia (PS 460/311), University of Michigan, Winter 2003.
Training for Graduate Student Instructors, Fall 2002 and Winter 2003.
SERVICE
Co-organizer ( with Ashley Esarey and Mary E. Gallagher): Workshop on Media in
Contemporary Chinese Politics, Fairbank Center for Chinese Studies, Harvard
University, April 25, 2009.
Award Committees: Alexander George Book A ward Committee, International
Society for Political Psychology, 2008-2009; Best Graduate Student Paper
A ward Committee, Political Communication Section, American Political Science
Association, 2008-2009.
Section Co-Section Chair: Political Communication, 2008 Meeting of the
International Society for Political Psychology.
Reviewer: Journal of Politics, Political Communication, Asia Policy, China
Information, American Political Science Review, International Journal of Public
Opinion Research, China Quarterly, Journal of Applied Social Psychology,
China Aktuell, Information Society.
Member: American Political Science Association, American Association for Asian
4
Daniela Stockmann - Page 5/5
Studies, American Association for Public Opinion Research, European
Consortium for Political Research, International Society for Political
Psychology.
At Leiden University:
MIRD Admissions Committee, March 2009 – Present.
Research Committee, April 2007 – June 2009.
MIRD Education Committee, March 2008 – June 2009.
Faculty Respresentative of the Ph.D. seminar, February 2008 – April 2008.
Search Committee, October – November 2007.
Honours Program for advanced undergraduate students in Political Science and
Public Administration, co-organizer with Henk Wagenaar, June 2007 – June
2008.
At the University of Michigan:
Graduate Admissions Committee, January - April 2004
ADDITIONAL
WORKING
EXPERIENCE
Journalist, Sueddeutsche Zeitung and ARD German Television, Munich/Germany,
October 1997 - August 2000.
Project Management Assistant, Hanns-Seidel Foundation Development Aid
Project, Weifang, Shandong/PRC, March-April 1998.
LANGUAGES
German, native speaker
Mandarin, fluent speaker
- Five years of formal instruction
- Princeton Program in Beijing 2002
- Inter-University Program at
Tsinghua University Fall 2004
Latin, translation skills
REFERENCES
English, fluent speaker
French, conversational proficiency
- Five years of formal instruction
- Exchange program with Strasbourg
in 1996
Dutch, conversational proficiency
Kenneth G. Lieberthal, [email protected]
Dissertation Committee Chair, Department of Political Science, University of
Michigan
Mary E. Gallagher, [email protected]
Department of Political Science, University of Michigan
Donald R. Kinder, [email protected]
Department of Political Science, University of Michigan
Mark Tessler, [email protected]
Department of Political Science, University of Michigan
A. Iain Johnston, [email protected]
Governance Department, Harvard University
5