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DR. NANCY SNOW
Nancy Snow received her Ph.D. in International Relations
(magna cum laude) from the School of
International Service, American University,
Washington, D.C., and B.A. in Political
Science (summa cum laude) from Clemson University,
South Carolina. While a graduate student she
studied German politics and history at the University of
California, Berkeley as a Fellow of the German Academic
Exchange Service. A Fulbright Scholar to Germany, she
completed graduate study in German and Political Science
at the universities of Regensburg, Bayreuth, and
Freiburg.
In fall 2007 Dr. Snow was a Senior
Research Scholar and Visiting Professor at Tsinghua
University's School of Journalism and Communication,
Beijing, China.
Her doctoral dissertation,
Fulbright Scholars as Cultural Mediators, earned an
honorary "fourth best" dissertation of 1992 by the Speech
Communication Association (now National Communication
Association), Division of International
and Intercultural Communication.
Snow is tenured Associate Professor in the College of
Communications at California State University, Fullerton
where her research and teaching areas are global
communications, political communications, and persuasive
communications.
She is Adjunct Professor in the Annenberg
School for Communication, University of Southern
California and serves as Senior Research Fellow in
the USC Center on Public Diplomacy where she is
directing a research and teaching initiative on
international exchanges for the master's degree program in
public diplomacy. The spring 2008 course, "Minds Without
Borders: International
Exchanges and Public Diplomacy," and M.A. degree are the
first in the nation.
Snow is the author of The Arrogance
of American Power: What U.S. Leaders Are Doing Wrong and
Why It's Our Duty to Dissent (Rowman & Littlefield,
2006); Information War: American
Propaganda, Free Speech and Opinion Control Since 9/11
(Seven Stories Press, 2004), which is available in
Japanese and forthcoming in Chinese translation; and
Propaganda, Inc.: Selling America's Culture to the World
(Seven Stories Press, 2002), available
in Farsi, Japanese, Korean, and Portuguese translation. She is editor with Yahya
Kamalipour of War, Media and Propaganda: A Global
Perspective (Rowman & Littlefield, 2004).
Snow is lead editor with Philip M. Taylor
(University of Leeds, UK) of the Routledge Handbook
of Public Diplomacy for
publication in 2008. She is under
contract with Routledge to author Persuader-in-Chief:
American Propaganda by President.
Dr. Snow is a frequent media source to
popular and online media about American persuasion and
propaganda with over 300 appearances, including
CNN, ABC News, Fox News Channel, MSNBC, NPR,
BBC, CBC, Swiss Public
Radio, Japanese Radio and TV, German Radio and TV, Voice of America and
the Australian Broadcasting Corporation. She has
written op-eds for the Los Angeles Times and Newsday,
among other publications in scholarly journals including
the Journal of Communication and Peace Review. She is a contributing writer to
the Huffington Post, Common Dreams
and O'Dwyer's PR Daily and founding faculty associate
to the Academic Brain Trust,
a partnership of Free Press, media policymakers and
activists. She has served as a faculty associate to Media Channel, the Institute
for Public Accuracy, and the Mainstream Media Project.
Her documentary appearances include "The Brothers
Warner" (2008) and "War is Sell" (2004).
Other publications include
"Propaganda" in American Thought and Culture in the
Twenty-First Century, Martin Halliwell and Catherine
Morley (Eds.), Edinburgh University Press, 2008; “Invisible Ink: Women and Global
Communications,” in Women Across Borders, Jeffrey Klaehn (Ed.),
Black Rose Books, 2008; "Propaganda
Lies and Patriotic Journalism" in Impeach the
President: The Case Against Bush and Cheney, Dennis
Loo and Peter Phillips (Eds.), Seven Stories Press,
2006; "Public
Diplomacy as Propaganda" in Readings in Propaganda
and Persuasion: New and Classic Essays, Garth Jowett
and Victoria O'Donnell (Eds.), Sage, 2006; "Terrorism,
Public Relations, and Propaganda" in Media,
Terrorism, and Theory: A Reader, Anandam P. Kavoori
and Todd Fraley (Eds.), Rowman & Littlefield, 2006; "Confessions of a Hollywood Propagandist: Harry Warner,
FDR and Celluloid Persuasion," in Warners' War:
Politics, Pop Culture and Propaganda in Wartime
Hollywood, Martin Kaplan and Johanna Blakley (Eds.);
"Brainscrubbing: The Failures of Public Diplomacy After
9/11" in Tell Me Lies: Propaganda and Media
Distortion in the Attack on Iraq, David Miller
(Ed.); "Framing Globalization and Media Strategies for
Social Change" in Representing Resistance: Media,
Civil Disobedience, and the Global Justice Movement,
Andy Opel and Donnalyn Pompper (Eds.); “The Social
Implications of Media Globalization,” in
Media, Sex, Violence and Drugs in the
Global Village, Yahya
Kamalipour and Kuldip Rampal, (Eds.);
“The
Smith-Mundt Act of 1948,” Peace Review; and
“The
Crisis in Mobility,” in Invisible Crises, George
Gerbner, Herbert Schiller, and Hamid Mowlana (Eds.).
Snow's Fulbright scholarship to the Federal
Republic of Germany was at the height of the Cold War
during the Reagan, Kohl and Thatcher years of
the mid-80s. She was subsequently awarded a summer research
fellowship by the German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD)
to study German history and language at the University
of California, Berkeley. Doctoral studies in the School
of International Service at The American University focused
on international communication, intercultural communication,
and peace and conflict resolution. Snow holds
lifetime membership in the Fulbright Association and
remains a strong advocate for cultural and educational
exchange.
Dr. Snow has lectured at many
universities including the University of British
Columbia, Naval Postgraduate School, Cal Tech,
University of Michigan, UNC-Chapel Hill, University of
Wisconsin-Madison, UCLA, Clemson University, Principia College, Franklin
Pierce College as well as think tanks and organizations including the Foreign Affairs Association, International Visitors
Council of Los Angeles, Foreign Press Center of LA,
Women of Los Angeles, Women of Pasadena, World Affairs Council (Palm
Springs, San Francisco), Office of the Americas, League
of Women Voters, ACLU, and
German Fulbright Association. Her research and
consultancies have led to speaking invitations to
Athens, Berlin, London, Vancouver, Valencia, and Kuala
Lumpur.
Snow's professional experience
includes serving as a political consultant
to The History Channel and Douglas, Cohn and Wolfe
public relations. During Election 2000, Dr. Snow served as an online American
Politics expert for Hungry Minds, Inc. of San Francisco,
California, which also featured her in its national
advertising campaign in USA Today and the
Wall Street
Journal. In 2002, Snow received a Knight Foundation
Fellowship
to the University of Mississippi for an inaugural workshop on "The
Fourth Estate and the Third Sector: Press Coverage of
Nonprofits." Government service includes
two years in the Presidential Management Fellows Program
as cultural affairs and educational exchange specialist
at the U.S. Information Agency and refugee and migration
analyst at the U.S. State Department. She was co-chair of the Japan-America Leadership Exchange
Committee (JALEC) and traveled twice to Japan as USIA
representative.
She has served as a public diplomacy
advisor to the U.S. Advisory Commission on Public
Diplomacy and U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee
overseeing changes in U.S. public diplomacy legislation
since 9/11.
Nancy Snow was Assistant Professor of Political Science
at New England College in Henniker, New Hampshire (1995-2000),
where she was voted the "most enthusiastic and
engaging professor" of 1999 and received membership
in Who's Who Among America's Teachers. While pursuing
her tenure on the New England College faculty, she served
three years as Executive Director for Common Cause in
New Hampshire (1997-2000), a nonpartisan citizens' advocacy
organization that lobbies for greater accountability
and ethics in government. From 1990-1995, she taught
as Professorial Lecturer in intercultural communication,
global communications, and peace and conflict resolution
at American University's School of International Service.
She also served as an international exchange administrator
for the international nongovernmental organization Delphi
International before joining USIA.
From November 2001 until August 2002, Snow served
as a faculty associate to the UCLA Center for Experiential
Education and Service Learning, where she taught media
and social change as a lecturer in the Department of
Sociology. From June 2000 until November 2001,
Snow served as Associate Director of the UCLA Center for
Communications and Community, a research and training
organization that focuses on media coverage of diverse
neighborhoods and cities.
Snow's research, writing, and public
speaking center on U.S. foreign policy,
American persuasion, influence, and propaganda, entertainment
and media culture in American society, communications
in the public interest, and the impact of global communications
theory and practice on democratic participation and
community development. She is a strong advocate for media accountability and alternative/independent
media, a result of her experience as a member of the
Board of Directors and Vice President of the Cultural
Environment Movement (CEM), a national coalition of
more than 150 community-based organizations united to
advance gender equity and general diversity in media
employment, ownership, representation and perspective.
Teaching Experience
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American Foreign Policy (NEC)
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American Politics and Government (NEC)
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American Presidency and Executive Process (NEC)
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Anti-Americanism (USC)
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Cold War (NEC)
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Contemporary Politics (NEC)
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Communication and Global Organizations (USC)
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Feature Article Writing (CSUF)
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Global Media Systems (CSUF)
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Global Security & Human Rights (NEC)
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History and Philosophy of American Mass Communications
(CSUF)
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Human Rights and Global Wrongs (NEC)
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Ideology and Propaganda (USC)
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Intercultural Communication (AU, NEC)
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International Communication (AU, CSUF)
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International Exchanges and Public Diplomacy (USC)
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International Organization (NEC)
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International Politics (NEC)
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Media and Politics (NEC)
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Media and Social Change (UCLA)
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News Journalism (Tsinghua)
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Opinion Writing (CSUF)
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Peace and Conflict Resolution (AU, NEC)
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Political Communication and Elections (CSUF)
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Persuasion and Propaganda (NEC)
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Persuasive Communications (CSUF)
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Propaganda, Terrorism and Media (USC)
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Propaganda and Media in an Age of Terrorism and War
(CSUF)
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Public Diplomacy (Tsinghua)
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Women and Leadership (NEC)
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