Hande Eslen-Ziya
Social psychologist and sociologist
Hande Eslen-Ziya's AcademicInfluence.com Rankings
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Sociology Psychology
Hande Eslen-Ziya's Degrees
- PhD Social Psychology Koç University
Why Is Hande Eslen-Ziya Influential?
(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, Hande Eslen-Ziya is a Turkish-born, Norway-based sociologist and psychologist. She is Professor of Sociology and Director of the Populism, Anti-Gender and Democracy Research Group at the University of Stavanger in Norway. She has an established interest in gender and social inequalities, transnational organizations and social activism, and has a substantial portfolio of research in this field. Her research has been published in Gender, Work and Organisation, Emotion, Space and Society, Social Movement Studies, European Journal of Women’s Studies, Culture, Health and Sexuality, Leadership, Men and Masculinities, and Social Politics, as well as in other internationally recognized journals. She is known for her work on the concept of "troll science," that she describes as an alternative discourse created by right-wing populist ideologies such as the anti-gender movement in opposition to established scholarly discourse.
Hande Eslen-Ziya's Published Works
Published Works
- The differential impact of COVID‐19 on the work conditions of women and men academics during the lockdown (2020) (122)
- Social Media and Turkish Feminism: New resources for social activism (2013) (41)
- The Discursive Governance of Population Politics: The Evolution of a Pro-birth Regime in Turkey (2016) (39)
- Political Religion and Politicized Women in Turkey: Hegemonic Republicanism Revisited (2010) (35)
- The Impact of Conservative Discourses in Family Policies, Population Politics, and Gender Rights in Poland and Turkey (2011) (31)
- Being a gay man in Turkey: internalised sexual prejudice as a function of prevalent hegemonic masculinity perceptions (2016) (29)
- Toward postheroic leadership: A case study of Gezi's collaborating multiple leaders (2015) (26)
- The symbol of social media in contemporary protest: Twitter and the Gezi Park movement (2020) (25)
- Beyond the iconic protest images: the performance of ‘everyday life’ on social media during Gezi Park (2019) (22)
- New waves for old rights? Women’s mobilization and bodily rights in Turkey and Norway (2017) (21)
- From anger to solidarity: The emotional echo-chamber of Gezi park protests (2019) (12)
- Politics and Gender Identity in Turkey: Centralised Islam for Socio-Economic Control (2017) (11)
- Introduction: The Aesthetics of Global Protest : Visual Culture and Communication (2019) (9)
- De-democratization under the New Turkey? Challenges for women’s organizations (2020) (8)
- Understanding ‘New Turkey’ Through Women’s Eyes: Gender Politics in Turkish Daytime Talk Shows (2018) (7)
- Right-wing populism in New Turkey: Leading to all new grounds for troll science in gender theory (2020) (7)
- Perceptions of gendered‐challenges in academia: How women academics see gender hierarchies as barriers to achievement (2021) (6)
- The Aesthetics of Global Protest (2019) (6)
- Looking for truth in absurdity: Humour as community-building and dissidence against authoritarianism (2020) (4)
- Domestic Work, Gender, and Migration in Turkey: Legal Framework Enabling Social Reality (2013) (4)
- Establishing networked misogyny as a counter movement: The analysis of the online anti-Istanbul convention presence (2022) (4)
- Humour and sarcasm: expressions of global warming on Twitter (2022) (3)
- Equal but Separate? LGBTI Rights in Contemporary South Africa (2015) (3)
- Everyday gendered performances at home: Masculine domesticity? (2021) (3)
- From discontent to action: #quarantinehotel as not just a hashtag (2022) (3)
- SOUTH AFRICAN PSYCHOLOGICAL WORK ON BOYS, MEN AND MASCULINITIES: TWO DECADES OF MASCULINITY RESEARCH POST FIRST DEMOCRATIC ELECTIONS (1994 – 2011) (2017) (3)
- Discursive Construction of Population Politics:Parliamentary Debates on Declining Fertility Rates in Turkey (2021) (2)
- DISCURSIVE GOVERNANCE OVER PRO-POPULATION POLITICS IN TURKEY (2020) (2)
- Immigrants in Norway: Resilience, challenges and vulnerabilities in times of COVID-19 (2022) (1)
- Persuasive narrative during the COVID-19 pandemic: Norwegian Prime Minister Erna Solberg’s posts on Facebook (2022) (1)
- How do public narratives in hutbe texts serve for neoliberal governmentality (2017) (1)
- THE EUROPEAN UNION’S INFLUENCE ON WOMEN’S ACTIVIST GROUPS’ NETWORKING: A COMPARISON BETWEEN TURKEY AND GREECE (2007) (1)
- Music Videos as Protest Communication: The Gezi Park Protest on YouTube (2019) (1)
- Deliberation, contestation, and the boundaries of neoliberal governmentality (2017) (0)
- Persuasive narrative during the COVID-19 pandemic: Norwegian Prime Minister Erna Solberg’s posts on Facebook (2022) (0)
- Understanding ‘New Turkey’ through women’s eyes (2020) (0)
- Manipulation, discipline, and regulation (2017) (0)
- Music Videos as Protest Communication: (2019) (0)
- Domestic Work, Gender, and Migration in Turkey (2013) (0)
- The search for alternative knowledge in the post-truth era: Anti-vaccine mobilization during the COVID-19 pandemic in Turkey (2022) (0)
- Acknowledgements (2019) (0)
- 10 Music Videos as Protest Communication: The Gezi Park Protest on YouTube (2019) (0)
- Online disclosure, a mechanism for seeking informal justice? (2023) (0)
- From offline to online violence: new challenges for the contemporary society (2022) (0)
- Introduction: (2019) (0)
- Academic women’s voices on gendered divisions of work and care: ‘Working till I drop . . . then dropping’ (2022) (0)
- Humour and sarcasm: expressions of global warming on Twitter (2022) (0)
- Moral politics, neoliberal governmentality, and gender (2017) (0)
- Discourse to emotion framework (2017) (0)
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What Schools Are Affiliated With Hande Eslen-Ziya?
Hande Eslen-Ziya is affiliated with the following schools: