(Translated by https://www.hiragana.jp/)
Prof. Dr. Pieter de Wilde | WZB

Prof. Dr. Pieter de Wilde

Bild
Portrait Foto Prof. Dr. Pieter de Wilde (Dr. Pieter de Wilde)
Dr. Pieter de Wilde

Kontakt

Reichpietschufer 50
D-10785 Berlin

Druckfähiges Pressefoto

Bild
jpeg, 564.7 KB
Copyright
Foto Pieter de Wilde
Ehemaliger Mitarbeiter der Abteilung

Forschungsthemen

Methoden der Sozialforschung
Europäische Integration | Repräsentative Demokratie | Vergleichende Politikwissenschaft | Politische Kommunikation

Lebenslauf

Pieter de Wilde ist seit September 2016 außerordentlicher Professor für Europäische Politik an der Technisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Universität Norwegens (NTNU) in Trondheim. Von 2006 bis 2011 war er Doktorand am ARENA Center für Europäische Studien an der Universität von Oslo (Dissertationstitel: „How Politicisation Affects European Integration: Contesting the EU Budget in the Media and Parliaments of the Netherlands, Denmark and Ireland“). Während seiner Zeit am WZB (2011–2016) arbeitete er am Brückenprojekt „Die politische Soziologie des Kosmopolitismus und Kommunitarismus“ und in der Abteilung Global Governance. Im Rahmen des WZB–Harvard Merit Stipendiums verbrachte er die ersten sechs Monate des Jahres 2016 am Minda de Gunzburg Center für Europäische Studien (CES) an der Harvard Universität.

Ausgewählte Publikationen

Pieter de Wilde/Anna Leupold/Henning Schmidtke (2016) 'Introduction: The Differentiated Politicisation of European Governance', West European Politics, 39(1): 3−22.

Pieter de Wilde/Christopher Lord (2016) 'Assessing Actually-Existing Trajectories of EU Politicisation', West European Politics, 39(1): 145−63.

Pieter de Wilde/Wiebke Junk/Tabea Palmtag (2015) 'Accountability and Opposition to Globalization in International Assemblies', European Journal of International Relations, OnlineFirst.

Asimina Michailidou/Hans-Jörg Trenz/Pieter de Wilde (2014) The Internet and European Integration. Pro- and Anti-EU Debates in Online News Media, Opladen: Barbara Budrich.

Pieter de Wilde (2014) 'The Operating Logics of National Parliaments and Mass Media in the Politicisation of Europe', Journal of Legislative Studies, 20(1): 46−61.

Pieter de Wilde/Asimina Michailidou/Hans-Jörg Trenz (2014) 'Converging on Euroscepticism: Online Polity Contestation During European Parliament Elections', European Journal of Political Research, 53(4): 766−83.

Céline Teney/Onawa Lacewell/Pieter de Wilde (2014) 'Winners and Losers of Globalization in Europe: Attitudes and Ideologies', European Political Science Review, 6(4): 575−95.

Pieter de Wilde/Asimina Michailidou/Hans-Jörg Trenz (2013) 'Contesting Europe. Exploring Euroscepticism in Online Media Coverage', Colchester: ECPR Press.

Pieter de Wilde (2013) 'Representative Claims Analysis: Theory meets Method', Journal of European Public Policy, 20(2): 278−94.

Pieter de Wilde/Hans-Jörg Trenz (2012) 'Denouncing European Integration: Euroscepticism as Polity Contestation', European Journal of Social Theory, 15(4): 537−54.

Pieter de Wilde (2012) 'Politicisation of the EU Budget: Conflict and the Constraining Dissensus', West European Politics, 35(5): 1075−94.

Pieter de Wilde/Michael Zürn (2012) 'Can the Politicization of European Integration be Reversed?', in Journal of Common Market Studies, Vol. 50, No. S1, 137−53.

Pieter de Wilde (2011) 'Ex Ante vs. Ex Post: The Trade-off Between  Partisan Conflict and Visibility in Debating EU Policy-Formulation in National Parliaments', in Journal of European Public Policy, Vol. 18, No. 5, 672−89.

Pieter de Wilde (2011) 'No Effect, Weapon of the Weak, or Reinforcing Executive Dominance? How Media Coverage Affects National Parliaments’ Involvement in EU Policy-formulation', in Comparative European Politics, Vol. 9, No. 3, 123−44.

Pieter de Wilde (2011) 'No Polity for Old Politics? A Framework for Analyzing the Politicization of European Integration', in Journal of European Integration, Vol. 33, No. 5, 559−75.

Pieter de Wilde (2009) 'Welcome Sceptics!' A Pro-European Argument in Favour of Eurosceptics in the European Parliament', in Hamburg Review of Social Science, Vol. 4, No. 2, 59−73.