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Employment Education Honors Tali Mendelberg Department of Politics Princeton University [email protected] Princeton, NJ 08544-1012 http://scholar.princeton.edu/talim EMPLOYMENT Professor, Dept. of Politics, Princeton University (2013 – present) Associate Professor (tenured), Dept. of Politics, Princeton University (2002 – 2013) Assistant Professor, Dept. of Politics, Princeton University (1994 – 2002) EDUCATION University of Michigan, Ph.D. in Political Science (December 1994) University of Wisconsin, B.A. with Honors (1985) Graduated with Distinction (Psychology) Phi Beta Kappa HONORS Best paper award, APSA class and inequality section, 2015 Robert E. Lane Award, APSA Political Psychology section, 2015 Best book in political psychology published in the last year Best Book Award, APSA Experimental Research Section, 2015 Best book published in the previous year that uses or is about experimental research methods in the study of politics David O. Sears Book Award, International Society for Political Psychology, 2015 For the best book published in the field of political psychology of mass politics, including political behavior, political values, political identities, and political movements, during the previous calendar year. Befitting the far-reaching contributions to scholarship of David Sears, the award winning work should be one that demonstrates the highest quality of thought and makes a major substantive contribution to the field of political psychology Stanley Kelley, Jr. Teaching Prize, Princeton University, Department of Politics, 2015 Best Paper Award Honorable Mention, APSA Race and Ethnic Politics Section, 2015 Best Paper Award, APSA Political Psychology Section, 2014 Lazarsfeld Best Paper Award, APSA Political Communication Section, 2014 Best Paper Award, APSA Political Psychology Section, 2012 Lazarsfeld Best Paper Award, APSA Political Communication Section, 2012 Carrie Chapman Catt Prize for Research on Women and Politics, Hon. Mention, 2011 Woodrow Wilson Foundation Award, American Political Science Association, 2002 Best book published in the United States during the prior year on government, politics or international affairs Erik H. Erikson Early Career Award for Excellence and Creativity in the Field of Political Psychology, International Society of Political Psychology, 2002 Goldsmith Research Award, Joan Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics and Public Policy, John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University, 1996 GRANTS AND FELLOWSHIPS Russell Sage Foundation Visiting Scholar fellowship, 2015-16. University Center for Human Values research grant, Princeton University, 2014-2016. Center for the Study of Democratic Politics, Princeton University, various. Bobst Center for Peace and Justice, research grants, 2006-08, 2013-14, 2014-15. Fellow, Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences, 2005-06. NSF-funded survey module in Time-Share Experiments in the Social Sciences (TESS), 2003, with Adam Berinsky. Center for Arts and Cultural Policy Studies, Princeton University, 1999-2000. Annenberg Fellowship, Annenberg School for Communication, University of Pennsylvania, 1996-97. 250th Anniversary Fund for Innovation in Undergraduate Education, Princeton University, 1997, 2014-15. Committee on Research in the Humanities and Social Sciences, Princeton University, various. BOOKS The Silent Sex: Gender, Deliberation and Institutions. With Christopher Karpowitz. Princeton University Press (2014). Sears book award, Lane book award, Experimental book award Featured in Princeton University home page, Princeton Alumni Weekly, covered in New York Times, Washington Post, Slate, Huffington Post, Dallas News, Canadian Broadcasting Corporation The Race Card: Campaign Strategy, Implicit Messages, and the Norm of Equality. Princeton University Press (2001). APSA Woodrow Wilson Foundation Award Featured in New York Times, LA Times, Washington Post, Huffington Post, Boston Globe, Boston Review, New York magazine, New Republic, USA Today, Princeton University home page, Princeton Alumni Weekly, The Atlantic, CBS news PEER-REVIEWED ARTICLES “College Socialization and the Economic Views of Affluent Americans”. With Adam Thal and Katherine McCabe. AJPS. Version of Record online: 14 JUL 2016 | DOI: 10.1111/ajps.12265 Best paper award, APSA class and inequality section, 2015 “Women’s Authority in Political Decision-Making Groups,” Special Issue: Gender and Leadership, ed. Alice H. Eagly and Madeline E. Heilman, Leadership Quarterly 27: 487–503, 2016. With Christopher Karpowitz. “Power, Gender, and Group Discussion,” Advances in Political Psychology, Vol. 3, ed. Howard Lavine. 2016. With Chris Karpowitz. [official citation: Political Psychology, 37: 23–60. doi:10.1111/pops.12320] “Countering Implicit Appeals: Which Strategies Work?” Political Communication, October- December 2015, 648-672. With Matt Tokeshi. Best Paper Award Honorable Mention, APSA Race and Ethnic Politics Section, 2015 "Why women's numbers elevate women's influence, and when they do not: rules, norms, and authority in political discussion." Politics, Groups, and Identities 3, no. 1 (2015): 149-177. With Chris Karpowitz and Lauren Mattioli. [Reprinted in Gender and Political Psychology, Ed. Zoe Oxley, Routledge 2016, chapter 9] "How group forces demonstrate the malleability of gendered behavior." Politics, Groups, and Identities 3, no. 1 (2015): 203-208. With Chris Karpowitz and Lauren Mattioli. [Reprinted in Gender and Political Psychology, Ed. Zoe Oxley, Routledge 2016, chapter 14] “Gender Inequality in Deliberation: Unpacking the Black Box of Interaction”, Perspectives on Politics 2 (1), 18-44 (2014). With Chris Karpowitz and Baxter Oliphant Nominated for APSA Burdette best paper award, 2014 Selected for Harvard JFK School Gender Gap case studies in experiments Lazarsfeld Best Paper Award, APSA Political Communication Section, 2014 Best Paper Award, APSA Political Psychology Section, 2014 Lead article featured on the cover “Does Descriptive Representation Encourage Women to Deliberate with a Distinctive Voice?” American Journal of Political Science 58 (2) (2014). With Nicholas Goedert and Christopher Karpowitz. Lazarsfeld Best Paper Award, APSA Political Communication Section, 2012 Best Paper Award, APSA Political Psychology Section, 2012 “Gender Inequality in Deliberative Participation.” American Political Science Review 106 (3) 533-547 (2012). With Christopher Karpowitz and Lee Shaker. Ranked in the top-ten most downloaded articles from the APSR in 2013 Featured in articles in New York Times (twice), Huffington Post (various), Dallas News, UPI, Monkeycage.org, Toronto Star, Buzzfeed, The Telegraph, Jezebel, Psychology Today “Sex and Race: Are Black Candidates More Likely to be Disadvantaged by Sex Scandals?” Political Behavior August (2010). With Adam Berinsky, Vincent Hutchings, Lee Shaker, and Nicholas Valentino. “Racial Priming Revived.” Perspectives on Politics 6 (1) 109-123 (2008). “Racial Priming: Issues in Research Design and Interpretation.” Perspectives on Politics 6 (1) 135-140 (2008). “Groups and Deliberation.” With Christopher Karpowitz. Swiss Political Science Review December 13 (4) 645-662 (2007). “The Indirect Effects of Discredited Stereotypes.” American Journal of Political Science 49 (4) 846-865 (2005). With Adam Berinsky. “Bringing the Group Back into Political Psychology.” Political Psychology 26(4): 637-649 (2005). “Reconsidering the Environmental Determinants of Racial Attitudes.” American Journal of Political Science 44: 574-589 (July 2000). With J. Eric Oliver. “Race and Public Deliberation.” Political Communication 17: 169-191 (April-June 2000). With John Oleske. “Executing Hortons: Racial Crime in the 1988 Presidential Campaign.” Public Opinion Quarterly: Special Issue on Race 61: 134-157 (Spring 1997). “Cracks in American Apartheid: The Political Impact of Prejudice among Desegregated Whites.” Journal of Politics 57: 402-424 (May 1995). With Donald Kinder. NON-REFEREED CHAPTERS “The Political Psychology of Deliberation”. Forthcoming. The Oxford Handbook of Deliberative Democracy, eds. Andre Baechtinger, John Dryzek, Jane Mansbridge, Mark Warren. With Chris Karpowitz. “Race and the Group Bases of Public Opinion”. Revised edition. In New Directions in Public Opinion, ed. Adam J. Berinsky. Routledge (2016). With Jane Junn and Erica Czaja. “Gender and Women’s Influence in Public Settings”, in Emerging Trends in the Social and Behavioral Sciences (eds.) Robert Scott and Stephen Kosslyn, Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley and Sons (2015). With Chris Karpowitz and Lauren Mattioli. “Political Deliberation." Oxford Handbook of Political Psychology, 2nd ed. Leonie Huddy, David Sears and Jack Levy, eds. Oxford University Press (2013). With C. Daniel Myers. “An Experimental Approach to Citizen Deliberation.” In Cambridge Handbook of Experimental Political Science, ed. James N. Druckman, Donald P. Green, James H. Kuklinski, and Arthur Lupia, Cambridge University Press (2011). With Christopher Karpowitz. APSA Robert E. Lane Book award; Best Book award for experimental research methods “Race and the Group Bases of Public Opinion”. In New Directions in Public Opinion, ed. Adam J. Berinsky. Routledge (2011). With Jane Junn and Erica Czaja. “Deliberation, Incivility, and Race.” In Democratization in America, ed. Desmond King, Robert Lieberman, Gretchen Ritter, and Laurence Whitehead. Johns Hopkins University Press (2009). “How People Deliberate About Justice.” In Can the People Govern? Edited by Shawn Rosenberg. Basingstoke, UK: Palgrave Macmillan
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