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Jaap van Ginneken


Jaap van Ginneken (born September 8, 1943 in Hilversum) is a Dutch psychologist and communication scholar.

Van Ginneken completed a bachelor’s degree at the Radboud University Nijmegen, a master’s at the University of Amsterdam, followed by a brief stint at the École pratique des Hautes études en sciences sociales in Paris, and finally a Ph. D. with distinction on mass psychology and crowd psychology. He taught at various universities, ultimately as a long-time associate professor at the International School and Communication Science Department of the University of Amsterdam.

For most of the 1970s, he worked as a Paris-based newspaper correspondent and roving reporter on third world affairs for Dutch media, with isolated contributions to foreign newspapers such as the French Le Monde and the British The Guardian. In line with the spirit of May 1968 in France and widespread opposition to the U.S. involvement in the Vietnam war, he adhered to the unequal exchange and dependency theory, and came to sympathize with liberation movements and third world revolutions. Two of his early books then focused on the new conflicts arising from them. The rise and fall of Lin Piao (and the so-called ‘Gang of Four’) dealt with ultraleftism during the Chinese cultural revolution. The third Indochina war dealt with the subsequent confrontation between China, Laos, Vietnam and Cambodia.

In the course of the 1980s, however, Van Ginneken recognized that he had become too much of a fellow traveler, and returned to academic work in his original fields. On the one hand, he published a series of studies on the history of political psychology,crowd psychology,mass psychology and social psychology. As well as on new approaches to mass psychology and collective behavior sociology, in line with complex adaptive systems and chaos theory in Collective behavior and public opinion – Rapid shifts, with a further Dutch title on self-organization and swarming. On the other hand, he published a series of studies on media psychology, and stereotypes about cultural identity. In the international news media: with Understanding global news. In movies: with Screening difference – How Hollywood blockbusters imagine race, ethnicity and culture. As well as on the clash of civilizations, with further Dutch titles on classical comic strips, interpersonal communication and the immigration debate.


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