Tali Mendelberg

Department of Politics [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 (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 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 . 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. , 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 (2007). With Christopher Karpowitz.

”The Deliberative Citizen: Theory and Evidence.” In Political Decision Making, Deliberation and Participation: Research in Micropolitics, Volume 6, edited by Michael X. Delli Carpini, Leonie Huddy, and Robert Y. Shapiro. Greenwich, CT: JAI Press (2002).

“Individualism Reconsidered: Principles and Prejudice in Contemporary American Public Opinion on Race.” In Racialized Politics: Values, Ideology, and Prejudice in American Public Opinion, edited by David Sears, Jim Sidanius and Lawrence Bobo. Press (2000). With Donald Kinder.

WORK IN PROGRESS

“Do Gender Enclaves Remediate Inequality?” With Chris Karpowitz. Revise and resubmit.

“Spending without Saying: Barack Obama’s descriptive representation”. With Bennett Butler and Pavielle Haines.

“When Poor Students Attend Rich Schools.” With Adam Thal, Vittorio Merola, and Tanika Raychaudhuri.

“Status: What it is and Why it Matters for Politics”.

OTHER ARTICLES:

Response to Kate Manne’s The Logic of Misogyny. Boston Review, July 11 2016. https://www.bostonreview.net/forum/logic-misogyny/tali-mendelberg-tali-mendelberg-responds- kate-manne

Are Women the Silent Sex? Boston Review 4/11/2016. With Chris Karpowitz. https://www.bostonreview.net/books-ideas/tali-mendelberg-christopher-f-karpowitz-are-women- silent-sex

Blog post, AJPS, “College Socialization and the Economic Views of Affluent Americans”, with Katherine McCabe and Adam Thal.

Blog post, AJPS, “Is there a different voice?”. http://ajps.org/2014/04/09/blog-posts-by-authors- of-forthcoming-ajps-articles/

“Is an Old-Boys’ Club Always Sexist?” MonkeyCage blog, Washington Post, October 23, 2014. With Chris Karpowitz. http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/monkey-cage/wp/2014/10/23/is- an-old-boys-club-always-sexist/

“Obama Cares. Look at the Numbers,” with Bennett Butler, New York Times op-ed, August 22 2014.  In top-ten most emailed and tweeted articles, in top twenty most viewed and most shared on Facebook (in 24 hours).  Featured on Princeton University Princeton Weekly Bulletin

Blog post, London School of Economics’ USApp American Politics and Policy blog (www.usappblog.com/), with Baxter Oliphant and Chris Karpowitz, summer 2014

“More Women, but Not Enough”, with Christopher Karpowitz, New York Times op-ed, November 9, 2012.  In top-ten most emailed (24 hours); Re-posted on TheMonkeyCage.com

Review of Oxford Handbook of Political Psychology. In Political Psychology 25(6): 969-984 (December 2004). With Adam Berinsky and Martha Crenshaw.

“Lott’s Lessons.” Princeton Political Quarterly, volume 1, issue 1, Winter 2003. Review of W. Lance Bennett and Robert M. Entman (eds.), Mediated Politics: Communication in the Future of Democracy. In APSR 96(2): 418-419 (June 2002).

Review of Steven A. Tuch and Jack K. Martin (eds.), Racial Attitudes in the 1990s: Continuity and Change. In Public Opinion Quarterly 63(1): 149-151 (Spring 1999).

EDITORIAL POSITIONS

Founder and editor of Princeton Studies in Political Behavior, Princeton University Press, 12/2014 to present

INVITED TALKS, CONFERENCE PAPERS

Yale University, September 2016 Columbia University, September 2016 Princeton University UCHV, September 2016 APSA Meeting, Philadelphia, September 2016  Gave two papers and an invited APSA Theme Panel presentation on higher education, and organized and moderated a panel on Democracy for Realists) ISPP Meeting, Warsaw, Poland, July 2016 University of Montreal, May 2016 U Texas-Austin, Communications, April 2016 Empire Lecture, invited by MPSA, April 2016 Porteous Endowed Lecturer, San Diego State University, February 2016 Cornell University, January 2016 Southern Political Science Association, Conference within a Conference on inequality, Jan 2016 Columbia University school of social work, December 2015 Russell Sage Foundation, Visiting Scholar presentation, November 2015 APSA Meeting, San Francisco, September 2015 ISPP Meeting, San Diego, July 2015 IPRG inaugural workshop, U Conn-Stamford, May 2015 Princeton University workshop on inequality, CSDP, May 2015 Harvard University Government Dept., April 2015 Princeton University Bobst Center, April 2015 Boston University, Pierce Lecture (campus-wide lecture), Feb 2015 University of California Berkeley, January 2015 University of Pennsylvania, December 2014 University of British Columbia, October 2014 Princeton University CSDP, October 2014 APSA Meeting, Washington DC, August 2014 (two papers and a round table) ISPP Meeting, Rome, July 2014 Chicago Area Social and Political Behavior (CAB) workshop, Northwestern U, May 2014 Conference on Identifying and Addressing Challenges in Survey Research, CSDP, Princeton University, May 2014 , Center for Political Studies, April 2014 MIT, April 2014 Columbia University, January 2014

[OLDER, SELECTED:] Biannual Political Psychology meeting, SUNY-Stony Brook, Nov 2013; Claremont Graduate School, November 2013; APSA Meeting, Chicago, August 2013; Gender and political psychology conference, Naperville, IL, August 2013; ISPP Meeting, Tel Aviv, July 2013; Jewish Center, Princeton NJ, June 2013; Present Day Club, Princeton NJ, April 2013, spring 2015; WPSA Meeting, Los Angeles, March 2013; Women and Public Policy Program, Kennedy School, Harvard University, March 2013.; IPSA Annual Meeting, Madrid, July 2012; Canadian Political Science Association, Workshop on Diversity, Edmonton, June 2012; WPSA meeting, Portland, Oregon, March 2012; Experimental Political Science Conference, NYU CESS Annual Meeting, March 2012; , November 2011; APSA Meeting, Seattle, September 2011; University of Southern California, February 2011; APSA Meeting, Washington DC, September 2010; ISPP Meeting, San Francisco, July 2010; Deepening Democracy as a Way of Life: Challenges for Participatory Democracy and Citizenship Learning in the 21st Century, Rosario, Argentina, May 2010; WPSA Meeting, San Francisco, March 2010; Rider University, Lawrenceville NJ, March 2010; Experimental Political Science Conference, NYU, February 2010; CSDP, Princeton, Roundtable: Democratic Deliberation, 2010; Princeton University Election 2008 Workshop, May 2009; Northwestern U Conf. on Experimentation in Political Science, 2009; Harvard University, November 2008; Vanderbilt University conference on the 2008 campaign, April 2008 ; WPSA Meeting, San Diego, March 2008; UC San Diego, February 2008; NYU Experimental Science conference, February 2008; Stanford, Berkeley, George Washington University, University of North Carolina, December 2006 - March 2007; Stanford, UCLA, UC-Irvine, and Columbia, spring 2006; Yale Department of political science, January 2005; University of Michigan Department of political science, January 2005; Harvard Government Department, March 2005; MIT Department of Political Science, May 2004; Harvard Inequality Seminar, May 2004; Washington University, St. Louis, conference on tolerance, April 2004; Oxford University conference on American Democratization, 2004; Color Lines Conference, Harvard, September 2003; University of Wisconsin Department of Political Science, May 2003; “Author Meets Critics: The Race Card”, forum at MPSA, April 2003; Harvard Government Department, March 2003; University of Minnesota, April 2002; Columbia University, 2001; Conference on Experimental Methods, CBRSS, Harvard University, 2001

TEACHING

Seminar in U.S. politics: Gender and politics (undergrad) Seminar in U.S. politics: Racial politics (undergrad) Race and American politics lecture course (cross-listed with African American Studies and the Community-Based Learning Initiative) (undergrad) Political psychology (graduate) Deliberation and cultural conflict (undergrad) Race and democratic discussion (undergrad) Public opinion: seminar (graduate, undergraduate), and undergraduate lecture course Research workshop for juniors (Young People in American Politics) Reading course: Psychological and sociological perspectives on class politics (graduate)

ADVISING

Senior thesis advising:  Inequality, race, ethnicity, gender, media, public opinion, campaigns and elections, political psychology, political communication  Thesis prizes for advisees: Zachary Savage 2008; Ryan Ebanks 2010

Dissertation advising: Gabriel Lenz, Amy Gershkoff, Chris Karpowitz (chair; ISPP Erikson award, APSA Emerging Scholar award), Jason Casellas, Jonathan Ladd, Deborah Schildkraut, Reuel Rogers, Shana Kushner Gadarian (chair; RWJ fellow), Aaron Strauss, Danielle Shani (political psychology section dissertation award, APSA 2010), Megan Francis, Melody Crowder-Meyer (co-chair; Breckenridge Award for best paper on gender, MPSA 2009), Andrew Owen (best experimental methods dissertation award, APSA 2011), C. Dan Myers (chair; best experimental methods dissertation award, APSA 2012; Jewell best graduate paper award, SPSA 2010; RWJ fellow), Steve Snell (chair), Erica Czaja (chair; NSF dissertation grant, RWJ fellow), Baxter Oliphant (chair), Matt Tokeshi (chair; 2015 APSA Timothy Cook Best Graduate Student Paper Award), Matt Tomkowiak, Herschel Nachlis, Kabir Khanna, Pavielle Haines, Meredith Sadin (NSF dissertation grant, RWJ fellow, APSA best experimental dissertation award), Adam Thal (Chair; Procter Honorific Fellow, typically given to one Politics student per year), Tanika Raychaudhuri (Chair)

UNIVERSITY SERVICE

--Acting Department Chair for faculty member in Gender and Sexuality Studies --Founding organizer, Princeton University conference on Identity and Inequality, co-sponsored by PU CSDP, PRESS, Bobst Center, October 2015; October 2016 --Organizer, mentorship lunch with faculty, for graduate students studying identity and inequality, Princeton University, October 2015 --Speaker, Princeton University Women’s Mentorship Program, “The Silent Sex on Campus,” April 2015 --Speaker, PU panel on women running for office, Women’s Mentorship Program, Dec. 2014 --Panel for Politics Dept. to recruit undergraduate majors, Rockefeller College, fall 2014 --Politics Dept. workshop on work/life issues for grad students, fall 2014 --Seminar for PU alumni club of Vancouver, Canada, fall 2014 --Advisory committee on women’s leadership, Princeton University, 2014-15 --Faculty mentor, Women’s Mentorship Program (WMP), PU, 2014-15 --University committee on SES diversity, 2014-15 --Organizer and faculty advisor, political behavior graduate student monthly research seminar, CSDP, 2014-15, 2016-17 --Reading course for graduate student in WWS, summer 2014 --Faculty mentor, PSURE summer program, Princeton University, summer 2014 --Moderator, alumni reunions panel on gender, Princeton University, May 2014 --Debate judge for alumni-day debates, Princeton University, February 2014 --Debate judge for debate club, June 2014 --Committee on graduate diversity, Department of Politics, 2013-14 --Advisory committee on women’s leadership, Princeton University, 2013-14 --Faculty mentor, Women’s Mentorship Program, PU, 2013-14 --Member (elected), Chair’s advisory committee, Politics Department, 2013-14 --Founder, organizer and faculty advisor, political behavior grad student monthly research seminar, CSDP, 2013-14 --Co-organizer, American Politics colloquium, CSDP, Princeton University, 2013-14 [OLDER, selected:] --Committee on graduate diversity, Department of Politics, 2010-11 --Participant, PU alumni conference, Williamsburg, VA --Director of PLESS lab for experimental social science, Princeton University --Director of the Bobst Political Psychology lab, Princeton University --Director of Graduate Studies, Politics Department, 2002-2005 --Departmental representative for juniors --Affirmative Action officer for Department of Politics searches, various years --Membership on other appointed committees at PU: Committee on tenure reform, Department of Politics, 2002-03 Search and personnel committees, yearly since 2006 Executive committee for CSDP Executive committee, Bobst Center University committee on diversity

PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES

APSA Task Force on Gender in the profession, 2016-17 UN speaker, ‘advancing women, peace, and security at home’, October 15 2015, UN, sponsored by the Thai Mission and International Peace Institute Chair, ISPP best book award committee 2015-16 Chair, APSA experimental section dissertation award committee, 2014-15 Chair, inaugural career award committee, APSA political psychology section, 2014-2015 Career award committee member, ISPP, 2014-2015 Best article award committee, APSA Political Communication, 2014-15 Editorial board, Journal of Politics, 2015- ISPP governing council, August 2014-July 2017 Miller Prize committee, APSA section on elections, public opinion and voting, 2014-15 Editorial Board, ISPP Advances in Political Psychology, 2014 - Participant, mentoring conference in gender and political psychology, NIU, August 2013 Chair, APSA Political Psychology section best paper award committee, 2012-13 Book manuscript workshop for junior faculty, Vanderbilt University, April 2013 Book manuscript workshop for junior faculty, U Maryland, 2012 Chair, ISPP Erikson award committee, 2010-11 NYU CESS conference, discussant, February 2011 Deliberation Round Table, CSDP, Princeton University, 2010 Conference co-organizer, Princeton Workshop on the 2008 Election, 2009 Panelist on the 2008 election, CSDP, Princeton University, October 2008 NYU workshop on measuring ethnicity comparatively, October 2008 Harvard University external tenure committee, Spring 2008 Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences review panel, 2008 Book conference for a junior faculty, Harvard, 2007 Conference co-organizer, Democratic Deliberation, Princeton University, 2006 Chair, Schattschneider Dissertation Award Committee, APSA, 2005 Editorial board, Journal of Politics, 2005-2007 Editorial board, Perspectives on Politics, 2005 - 2006 Editorial board, Political Psychology, 2005 - 2007 Erikson Award committee, ISPP, 2004 Conference on Civic Participation, Princeton University, discussant, 2004 APSA section chair, political psychology section, 2003 [OLDER activities omitted]

Referee: American Political Science Review, American Journal of Political Science, Journal of Politics, American Politics Quarterly, Political Research Quarterly, Public Opinion Quarterly, Communication Research, Political Communication, Political Psychology, Political Behavior, Perspectives On Politics, Cambridge University Press, University of Michigan Press, NSF, TESS, CASBS, Russell Sage Foundation, MacArthur nominator.

(September 2016)