Ellen Mickiewicz, James R. Shepley Professor of Public Policy  

Ellen Mickiewicz

Office Location: 117 Sanford Inst Building
Office Phone: (919) 613-7340
Email Address: ellen.mickiewicz@duke.edu

Mailing Address

Education:
PhD, Yale University, 1965
B.A., Wellesley College, 1960

Curriculum Vitae

Expertise:
Comparative Politics
Political Science/Government
Political Institutions

Teaching (Spring 2012):

  • Pubpol 150s.01, Global democratization Synopsis
    Sanford 102, TuTh 02:50 PM-04:05 PM

Representative Publications   (More Publications)

  1. E. Mickiewicz, Television, Power, and the Public in Russia (2008), Cambridge University Press .
  2. E. Mickiewicz, Changing Channels: Television and the Struggle for Power in Russia (1997), Oxford University Press (Revised and Expanded Paperback Edition: Duke University Press, 1999.) .
  3. E. Mickiewicz, Split Signals: Television and Politics in the Soviet Union (1988), Oxford University Press .
  4. E. Mickiewicz, The Conundrum of Memory, Birgit Beumers, Stephen Hutcheson and Natalya Ryulova, The Post-Soviet Russian Media: Change and Conflicting Messages (February 1, 2008), Routledge .
  5. E. Mickiewicz, Icon Anchors, Doris Graber, Denis McQuail, Pippa Norris, The Politics of News, The News of Politics (2007), Congressional Quarterly Press .
  6. E. Mickiewicz, The Election News Story on Russian Television: A World Apart from Viewers, Slavic Review (Spring 2006), pp. 1-23  [author's comments].
  7. E. Mickiewicz, Does 'Trust' Mean Attention, Comprehension and Acceptance? Paradoxes of Russian Viewers' News Processing, Katrin Voltmer, Mass Media and New Democracies (2006), Routledge .
  8. E. Mickiewicz, Excavating Concealed Tradeoffs vol. 22:3, (July-September 2005), 355-380., Political Communication, vol. 22 no. 3 (Fall, 2005), pp. 355-380  [abs] [author's comments].

Research Categories: Mass Media, Democratization, and Former Soviet Union

Research Description: Research: Viewers' processing of television news; media and democratization in countries in transition