Stephen Jolly (academic)

The Much Hon. William Jolly (born 1960), known professionally as Stephen Jolly, is a Fellow Commoner of St Edmund's College, Cambridge.[1] A former Fellow of the Cambridge Judge Business School, he was a Fellow and Bye-Fellow of Clare College, Cambridge, between 2005–17. Jolly served two distinguished Vice-Chancellors – Professor Dame Alison Richard DBE and Professor Sir Leszek Borysiewicz FRS – as the University's Director of External Affairs & Communications between 2005–13.[2]

Stephen Jolly
Academic background
Alma materChrist's College, Cambridge
Academic work
Sub-disciplineCommunications, linguistic science
InstitutionsMinistry of Defence
Cabinet Office
University of Cambridge
Cambridge Judge Business School
Clare College, Cambridge
St Edmund's College, Cambridge

Appointments

Jolly is currently an Honorary Fellow of the Institute for Statecraft. A former senior British Defence official, he has been a Visiting Research Fellow at RAND Europe (2019-2020), a Visiting Fellow at the International Centre for Security Analysis, King's College, London (1999–2002),[3] a Senior Research Fellow at the Defence Academy of the United Kingdom (2015-6), a Fellow of RAND Europe (2016), a Visiting Fellow at the Centre for Strategic Communications, War Studies Department, King's College, London[4] (2015-18) as well as a Visiting Fellow at the British think-tank ResPublica (2016-19).

Pro bono

Jolly is a member of the Appeal Board for the UK’s new national Museum of Military Intelligence. He has been a member of the editorial board of The Journal of Intelligence & Cyber Security since 2017.

Recent developments

From 2016, Jolly worked as Director of the Saatchi Institute, a private think-tank headquartered in London, and as a director in M&C Saatchi's global behavioural change practice.

Articles

Articles published include:[5]

  • "Understanding the Drivers of Organisational Capacity", with Kate Cox, Simon Van Der Staaij, Christian Van Stolk, RAND Europe research report published in collaboration with the Saatchi Institute (March 2018)
  • "Who's Afraid of Viktor Shklovsky? On The Nature of Persuasion and the Work of an Unjustly Neglected Russian Formalist", Impact: The Magazine of the Association of Commonwealth Universities PR, Marketing and Communications Network, 6–7: No 11 (August 2011)
  • "We are all Marketeers Now", CAM: Cambridge University Alumni Magazine, 39: Issue 63 (Easter 2011)
  • "Crimes of Coercive Persuasion: Rectification under the Khmer Rouge", Falling Leaf: The Journal of the Psywar Society, 173, 52–55 (2001)
  • "Ungentlemanly Warfare: A Reassessment of British Black Propaganda Operations 1941–1945", Falling Leaf: The Journal of the Psywar Society, 171, 148–156; 172, 23–37 (2001)
  • "From SOB to I/OPs: The Unwritten History of British Black Propaganda 1947–97", Falling Leaf: The Journal of the Psywar Society, 171, 130–134 (2001)
  • "The Mardin Essay: Psychological Warfare and Public Relations", Frontline: The Global Public Relations Quarterly, 22 (4), 22–30 (2000)
  • "Wearing the Stag's Head Badge: British Combat Propaganda since 1945", Falling Leaf: The Journal of the Psywar Society, 170, 86–89 (2000)
  • "Morale Operations: The Cinderella of Covert Propaganda Operations?", Falling Leaf: The Journal of the Psywar Society, 170, 114–116 (2000)
  • "Understanding Body Language: Birdwhistell's Theory of Kinesics", Corporate Communications: An International Journal, 5 (3), 133–139 (2000)
  • "Delmer's Maxims of Subversion: British Black Propaganda Techniques in WW2", Falling Leaf: The Journal of the Psywar Society, 169, 64–70 (2000)
  • "Text or Context: Östman's Theory of Persuasion", The Journal of Communication Management, 4 (2), 159–163 (1999)
  • "Corporate Advocacy in Public Affairs: Winning a Voice in the Marketplace of Ideas", International Public Relations Review, 21 (3), 10–13 (1999)

References

  1. Stephen Jolly, Fellow Commoner, St Edmund's College http://www.st-edmunds.cam.ac.uk/people/mr-stephen-jolly
  2. "Stephen Jolly". University of Cambridge. Archived from the original on 13 November 2013. Retrieved 9 January 2015.
  3. "International Centre for Security Analysis". King's College London. Retrieved 9 January 2015.
  4. "Visiting staff: Stephen Jolly, Visiting Senior Research Fellow". Centre for Strategic Communications, Dept of War Studies King's College, London. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016.
  5. "Stephen Jolly". LinkedIn. Retrieved 4 March 2017.
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