It’s been my pleasure and honor to contribute to the fields of political science, Middle East studies, and the pedagogy of teaching and learning. I have especially loved co-authoring pieces with my colleagues, as collaboration with diverse fields of expertise (such as strategic communication, digital media studies, film history, museum studies, anthropology, public policy, and journalism) both strengthens and expands my research in new and relevant ways. And as the acknowledgements highlight, it takes a village to write each publication, with much appreciation for my undergraduate research assistants, grant funding, institutional support, input from colleagues, and of course constructive feedback from the anonymous reviewers!
My full academic CV can be found here, and my publications (dissertation, refereed journal articles, book chapters, encyclopedia articles, and book reviews) are listed with clickable links below. The OPEN ACCESS tag means you can access that publication without a paywall! You can also check my blog (category tag: publications) for additional insights.
Dissertation
- OPEN ACCESS: Jocelyn Sage Mitchell, “Beyond Allocation: The Politics of Legitimacy in Qatar,” Georgetown University (2013)
Refereed Journal Articles
- Calvert W. Jones and Jocelyn Sage Mitchell, “Women Reporters as Experts on Security Affairs in Jordan? Rethinking Gender and Issue Competency Stereotypes,” Mediterranean Politics (in print)
- OPEN ACCESS: Jocelyn Sage Mitchell, “Transnational Identity and the Gulf Crisis: Changing Narratives of Belonging in Qatar,” International Affairs (2021)
- Calvert W. Jones, Jocelyn Sage Mitchell, and Justin D. Martin, “Ambivalent Sexism? Shifting Patterns of Gender Bias in Five Arab Countries,” International Studies Quarterly (2021)
- OPEN ACCESS: Jocelyn Sage Mitchell and Mariam Ibrahim Al-Hammadi, “Nationalism and Identity in Qatar after 2017: The Narrative of the New National Museum,” Journal of Arabian Studies (2020)
- OPEN ACCESS: Jocelyn Sage Mitchell, “Return to the Isle of Ted: Simulating the Collective Action Problem of Climate Change,” PS: Political Science and Politics (2020)
- Jocelyn Sage Mitchell, “# Blockade: Social Media and the Gulf Diplomatic Crisis,” Review of Middle East Studies (2019)
- Jocelyn Sage Mitchell, “Virtual Integration in U.S. Senate Campaigns: An Active Learning Tool for Teaching American Government,” Journal of Political Science Education (2019)
- OPEN ACCESS: Jocelyn Sage Mitchell and Ilhem Allagui, “Car Decals, Civic Rituals, and Changing Conceptions of Nationalism,” International Journal of Communication (2019)
- OPEN ACCESS: Jocelyn Sage Mitchell and Justin J. Gengler, “What Money Can’t Buy: Wealth, Inequality, and Economic Satisfaction in the Rentier State,” Political Research Quarterly (2019)
- OPEN ACCESS: Jocelyn Sage Mitchell and Scott Curtis, “Old Media, New Narratives: Repurposing Inconvenient Artifacts for the National Museum of Qatar,” Journal of Arabian Studies (2018)
- Justin G. Gengler and Jocelyn Sage Mitchell, “A Hard Test of Individual Heterogeneity in Response Scale Usage: Evidence from Qatar,” International Journal of Public Opinion Research (2018)
- OPEN ACCESS: Jocelyn Sage Mitchell, Christina Paschyn, Sadia Mir, Kirsten Pike, and Tanya Kane, “In Majaalis Al-Hareem: The Complex Professional and Personal Choices of Qatari Women,” DIFI Family Research and Proceedings (2015)
- Jocelyn Sage Mitchell, “Beyond Bricks and Mortar: Creating Knowledge through Student–Faculty Partnerships,” Journal of General Education (2014)
- Jocelyn Sage Mitchell, “Political and Socioeconomic Transformation in the GCC: Image and Reality,” History Compass (2010)
Book Chapters
- GOOGLE BOOKS ACCESS: Jocelyn Sage Mitchell and Mariam Ibrahim Al-Hammadi, “Nationalism and Identity in Qatar after 2017: The Narrative of the New National Museum,” in Reflecting on the GCC Crisis: Qatar and its Neighbours (forthcoming)
- GOOGLE DRIVE ACCESS: Jocelyn Sage Mitchell, “The Domestic Policy Opportunities of an International Blockade,” in The Gulf Crisis: The View from Qatar (2018)
- GOOGLE DRIVE ACCESS: Jocelyn Sage Mitchell and Leslie A. Pal, “Policy Making in Qatar: The Macro-Policy Framework,” in Policy Making in a Transformative State: The Case of Qatar (2016)
- GOOGLE DRIVE ACCESS: Jocelyn Sage Mitchell, “We’re All Qataris Here: The Nation-Building Narrative of the National Museum of Qatar,” in Representing the Nation: Heritage, Museums, National Narratives, and Identity in the Arab Gulf States (2016)
- GOOGLE DRIVE ACCESS: Jocelyn Sage Weiner and Clyde Wilcox, “Bridging the Cultural Divide: Accommodating Religious Diversity,” in Perspectives on Race, Ethnicity, and Religion: Identity Politics in America (2010)
Encyclopedia Entries
- Jocelyn Sage Mitchell, Sean Foley, Jessie Moritz, and Vânia Carvalho Pinto, “Space: Female Space: Arabian Peninsula,” in Encyclopedia of Women & Islamic Cultures (2016)
Book Reviews
- Jocelyn Sage Mitchell, review of Qatar: Securing the Global Ambitions of a City-State (by David Roberts), Arab Studies Journal (2018)
- Jocelyn Sage Mitchell, review of The Wages of Oil: Parliaments and Economic Development in Kuwait and the UAE (by Michael Herb), Arab Studies Journal (2016)
- Jocelyn Sage Mitchell, review of Qatar and the Arab Spring (by Kristian Coates Ulrichsen), Cambridge Review of International Affairs (2015)
- Jocelyn Sage Mitchell, review of Qatar: Small State, Big Politics (by Mehran Kamrava), Democratization (2014)
- Jocelyn Sage Mitchell, review of Qatar: Politics and the Challenges of Development (by Matthew Gray), Review of Middle East Studies (2013)
- GOOGLE DRIVE ACCESS: Jocelyn Sage Weiner, review of Faith in Moderation: Islamist Parties in Jordan and Yemen (by Jillian Schwedler), Democracy & Society (2007)