open e-mail in browserunsubscribe
EASP Bulletin www.easp.eu     @easpinfo

European Bulletin of Social Psychology 38,1 (May, 2026)


Welcome

We are happy to share this next edition of the Bulletin. You will find the President's Corner, our usual announcements about upcoming EASP meetings, previous meetings, grant reports, and an announcement of the new grants that we have recently awarded to our members.

Please also read an important notice about the upcoming election of new Executive Committee members. 

We are also very happy to welcome a large group of new EASP members to our community.

We very much look forward to seeing many of you at the General Meeting this summer!

With best wishes,

The EASP Executive Committee


President's Corner

Dear EASP members, colleagues, and friends,

As I write this corner, our General Meeting (GM) in Strasbourg is drawing near. Like all EASP members, we on the Executive Committee (EC) are very excited and feel a great sense of gratitude toward ADRIPS (the French-speaking social psychology association) for organizing this major event. In particular, we would like to thank the organizing committee, headed by Marie-Pierre Fayant, Maja Becker, and David Vaidis, and the scientific committee, chaired by Konstantinos Kafetsios, for their dedication.

Beyond the social gathering and scientific exchange, the GM includes the Members Meeting, where the EC reports about the associations’ activities, finance situation, etc., and we collectively make decisions regarding the management and future of the association. This time, the EC plans to put two major issues to a vote. The first is a proposed change to the fee structure, intended to benefit scholars from underrepresented regions as well as junior scholars. The second involves changes to our Standing Orders, as recommended by the Ethics Committee (established in 2023), to ensure a healthy professional climate and adherence to our Code of Conduct.

Because explaining, discussing, and voting on these major issues requires significant time, we have decided to hold online voting for relatively minor matters prior to the Members Meeting. As a reminder, at our meeting in Krakow, we voted for changes to the Standing Orders that allow for online voting. Please look out for further communication from us: each member in good standing will soon receive an individualized link to a survey to cast their vote. As an example of a change that we believe does not require extensive discussion, we are proposing an amendment to the admission policies for postgraduate members that would allow applicants to provide a single recommendation letter from their doctoral advisor instead of two letters from full members. In the survey, we will also provide the rationale for the major changes that will be voted on in person in Strasbourg.

For me personally, this is also a moment of farewell after three years that proved to be more turbulent than I expected, due to local and global events both within and outside the association. I would like to take this moment to thank the outgoing EC members – Nina Hansen (Treasurer), Roland Imhoff (Journals’ Officer), and also Karen Douglas (Secretary) who brought this bulletin to you over the last six years. I wish the incoming president, Gülseli Baysu, together with the old and new members of the EC, every success in maintaining EASP as a thriving scientific community.

I very much look forward to welcoming you all to the General Meeting,

Nurit Shnabel


Election of New Executive Committee Members

Dear EASP voting members,

You will soon receive information and a link to vote for the new members of the Executive Committee who will take up their positions at the General Meeting in Strasbourg.

The new Executive Committee will continue the path toward greater professionalisation of the association and consolidation of its legal status as an official association registered under Dutch law.

This status as an association registered in the Netherlands - which is held by many scientific associations, mostly for historical reasons due to lower bureaucratic hurdles in the Netherlands than other European countries - comes with growing demands to comply with increasingly strict rules (e.g., against money laundering). Especially in the last three years we have been busy to develop an administration system for the EASP which is in line with these Dutch requirements. This is also why we have now an external bookkeeping firm and a supervisory board.

These changes, however, also place new demands on the current and all future Executive Committees. Specifically, they require knowledge of the Dutch context and also Dutch language skills to be able to communicate with relevant stakeholders such as the tax authorities, chamber of commerce, and bank.

Thus, although EASP is an international association and its daily business is run by an elected Executive Committee from members of different countries, the current setup requires Dutch representation to comply with Dutch laws.

The future Executive Committee needs to ensure a sustainable way for the daily administration of EASP, and we are making our members aware of the situation in advance of the next election.

With best wishes,

The EASP Executive Committee 


Candidates for Election to the EASP Executive Committee

We are pleased to present the self-descriptions of the candidates below, in alphabetical order. Please read these carefully. More information will follow about how to vote for the new Executive Committee members. 


Theodore Alexopoulos

I completed my PhD at the University of Paris Descartes in 2007, followed by a postdoc at the University of Heidelberg. After ten years as Assistant and Associate Professor at Paris Descartes, I became Full Professor at the University of Poitiers. Since 2021, I have been Professor of Social Psychology at the University of Bordeaux. My research examines how affective states and emotional cues shape social judgment, decision-making, and behavior, with a focus on the regulatory functions of affective stimuli and their role in approach–avoidance tendencies. More recently, my research has addressed societal issues such as social exclusion, educational inequalities, misinformation, and pro-environmental behavior, aiming to connect fundamental research with real-world impact. I have also held several key roles, including co-heading the Social Psych Lab at Paris Descartes (2019) and leading the Social Psych team at LabPsy Bordeaux since 2022. At Bordeaux, I served as Head of the Bachelor’s Program in Psychology (2022–2025) and as a Faculty Board member, and I am an alternate member of the French National Council of Universities (CNU).
Throughout my career, I have felt a strong connection to the EASP, shaped by my multicultural background (Belgian, Greek, French) and collaborations across Europe. Attending the General Meetings has been a constant in my academic life, providing both intellectual and personal enrichment. I have also actively contributed to the community, notably as associate editor of the European Journal of Social Psychology, and for the General Meeting: as a reviewer (Stockholm 2011), and as a member of the Scientific Committees (Krakow 2023, Strasbourg 2026) and the Organizing Committee for Strasbourg 2026. I also helped organize the most recent EASP elections.
Key issues for EASP and its Executive Committee to consider in the future include supporting early career researchers by expanding mentoring, networking, and visibility opportunities across Europe, fostering the next generation of social psychologists. Continuing to promote a diverse and inclusive community is also essential, ensuring fair representation across countries, institutions, and backgrounds, in all EASP activities. Strengthening engagement within the community and building vibrant networks that connect researchers at all career stages is also important. At the same time, we are living in extraordinary times, facing societal challenges that threaten core European values—including conflict, ecological crises, rising polarization, and pressures on democratic institutions. Within this context, social psychology, and the Association, can play a key role by promoting transformative social change.
Three representative publications
- Lankester, L.-A., & Alexopoulos, T. (2023). Black Lives Matter… but to Whom? An Examination of Nationally-Grounded Determinants of Black Lives Matter Support. International Review of Social Psychology, 36(1), doi: https://doi.org/10.5334/irsp.824.
- Rougier, M., Muller, D., Ric, F., Alexopoulos, T., Batailler, C., Smeding, A., & Aubé, B. (2018). A new look at sensorimotor aspects in approach/avoidance tendencies: The role of visual whole-body movement information. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 76, 42-53. doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jesp.2017.12.004
- Fiedler, K., Jung, J., Wänke, M., & Alexopoulos, T. (2012). On the relations between distinct aspects of psychological distance: An ecological basis of Construal-Level Theory. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 48, 1014-1021. doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jesp.2012.03.013

Adi Amit

Summary of academic positions and current research interests. I received my PhD from the Hebrew university of Jerusalem in 2011. I then joint the Open University of Israel (tenure track, promoted to associate professor in 2025). I had the pleasure and honor of practicing research in two European countries, in my postdoc at the University of Amsterdam and as a visiting scholar on my sabbatical at the University of Kent, UK. In my research I examine psychological processes in an era of social instability and information overload, focusing on perceptions and attitudes related to tolerance and cooperation in workplace settings and geopolitical contexts. I integrate three complementary domains: values and morality; roles and social identities; and intuitive thinking.
Administrative experience. For the past couple of years, I have served as Head of the MA Program in Social Psychology, managing a team of teachers (researchers and practitioners) and liaison with the Ministry of Health on professional and regulatory matters. I have organized numerous symposia at international conferences and am co-convening a pre-conference for the forthcoming EASP meeting. I have served as a committee member of the Israeli Science Foundation and provided reviews to several funding agencies. In addition to these academic-administrative roles, I co-chaired a small labor union (of the Senior Academic Staff) for four years and am a social activist and head of a small public nonprofit association, working with and vis-à-vis municipal authorities, engaging with journalists, and representing the organization in legal proceedings.
Looking ahead, I see three central issues for EASP. First, strengthening the pivotal role of the association in maintaining European contribution to basic social psychological science while reinforcing meaningful links between basic and applied research. Second, consolidating the role of a broad, general association of social psychology alongside more specialized associations. Third, creating space for critical reflection on the field’s underlying conceptual and methodological assumptions. I would be honored to contribute to advancing these priorities within EASP’s Executive Committee.
Three representative publications
Venzhik, E., Ruisch, B., & Amit, A. (2025) Own or Other Integrity in Expected Moral Judgement? Moral Pluralism and Political Partisanship. Social Psychological and Personality Science. https://doi.org/10.1177/19485506251375514
Amit, A., Oppenheim-Weller, S. & Karmel, Y. (2025) The role of perceived self-transcendence values in forming functional relationships with professionals. British Journal of Social Psychology, 63(3), e12897. https://doi.org/10.1111/bjso.12897
Mentser, S. & Amit, A. (2024) The added value of perceived values: Partner’s perceived values predict own behavior in interdependent interactions. European Journal of Social Psychology. http://doi.org/10.1002/ejsp.3034

Konrad Bocian

Konrad Bocian is an Associate Professor of Psychology at SWPS University in Sopot, Poland. His research focuses on moral judgment, fairness, and motivated cognition, with particular emphasis on egocentric and self-interest biases in moral evaluations. His work examines how individuals’ personal and group interests shape perceptions of justice, responsibility, and moral character. In recent years, he has extended this research to algorithmic decision-making and artificial intelligence, investigating how people evaluate fairness and moral responsibility in decisions made by algorithms versus those made by humans. He currently serves as Associate Editor for the European Journal of Social Psychology and Social Psychological Bulletin. In addition to his editorial work, he has experience in organizing international scientific meetings, including the EASP Meeting “Current Trends, Neglected Issues, and Future Directions of the Psychology of Morality” (2025). He is also actively involved in mentoring doctoral students and developing international research collaborations. From my perspective, EASP plays a crucial role in sustaining a strong and collaborative European research community in social psychology. Looking ahead, key challenges include strengthening collaboration across countries and institutions, supporting early-career researchers, and increasing the visibility and societal relevance of social psychological research. In particular, I believe that EASP can play an important role in fostering research that connects fundamental social psychological theory with pressing societal issues, including technological change, political polarization, and trust in institutions.
Three representative publications
Bocian, K., & Wojciszke, B. (2014). Self-interest bias in moral judgments of others’ actions. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 40(7), 898–909. https://doi.org/ 10.1177/0146167214529800
Bocian, K., Baryla, W., & Wojciszke, B. (2020). Egocentrism shapes moral judgments. Social and Personality Psychology Compass, 14, e12572. https://doi.org/10.1111/spc3.12572
Dong, M., & Bocian, K. (2024). Responsibility gaps and self-interest bias: People attribute moral responsibility to AI for their own but not others’ transgressions. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 111, 104584. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jesp.2023.104584

Ana Figueiredo

I am a psychologist and hold a PhD in Social Psychology from the Universidade de Coimbra (Portugal) in collaboration with the Universiteit van Amsterdam (the Netherlands). Currently, I am Associate Professor at the Universidad de O’Higgins (Chile) and Principal Investigator (PI) at the Millenium Institute for Authority and Social Regulation. My research has mainly focused on analyzing collective memories of historical conflicts and their relation to present day intergroup relations, through a contextually situated perspective, while also focusing on dynamics of state and political violence, collective action, and ideology, mostly from the perspective of minoritized social groups. In 2025, I was awarded a 4-year project to work on police-minority group interactions, focused on the experiences and perceptions of indigenous Mapuche and migrant communities, as well as youths from low socioeconomic backgrounds in Chile (2025-2029). I have also played a leading role in shaping the field internationally through editorial roles. I have recently co-edited a special section at EJSP titled “Social Cohesion in (Post-)Conflict and Divided Societies” (Vol. 55, Issue 6) and I was Consulting Editor of EJSP between 2021-2023. Presently, I am co-Editor-in-Chief at the Journal of Social and Political Psychology and one of the co-founders of the International Journal of Psychology and Public Policy. I currently serve as Member-at-Large of the Executive Committee of the Society for the Study of Peace, Conflict and Violence (Division 48, APA), and I have recently finished a 3-year term as elected member of the Governing Council of the International Society of Political Psychology (2021-2024).
I am a social and political psychologist originally from Portugal and have been an active EASP Member for close to fifteen years. Over the course of my career, I have worked across different contexts in Europe, and, for the past decade, I have been based in Chile. This has given me first-hand insight into how many contexts and communities remain underrepresented in mainstream social psychology, and how much the field stands to gain from engaging more deeply with them. I would like to serve in EASP’s Executive Committee to contribute to a more inclusive, connected, and socially engaged association. First, I am committed to strengthening EASP’s core mission of advancing research excellence within our field by building strong networks, both within Europe and globally, and encouraging meaningful exchange across diverse contexts. Broadening the range of perspectives in our research is essential to better understand the complexities of the social realities we research. Second, I want to support stronger connections between early career and more established academics. Creating spaces for dialogue and collaboration across career stages can enrich our science and help build a more supportive and sustainable academic community. Third, I believe EASP should actively engage with present-day societal challenges, including the rise of populism, nationalism and the far-right, among others: our research has an important role to play in understanding and responding to these developments. Fourth, I aim to enhance the visibility and societal relevance of our academic work, supporting efforts to connect social psychological research with social and public policies that foster social justice. Fifth, I would support strengthening EASP’s efforts to assist Scholars at Risk. Finally, I am committed to fostering a strong democratic culture within EASP, through participatory efforts that actively engage with the membership’s concerns and aspirations regarding the association’s mission and goals.
Three representative publications
- Figueiredo, A., Baysu, G., Uluğ, Ö. M., & Psaltis, C. (2025), Social Cohesion in (Post)Conflict and Divided Societies: Recent Advances and Future Directions. European Journal of Social Psychology, 55, 967-978. https://doi.org/10.1002/ejsp.70024
- Figueiredo, A., Rocha, C., & Montagna, P. (2020). Data collecfon with indigenous people: Fieldwork experiences from Chile. In Y. G. Acar, S. M. Moss, & O. M. Uluğ, Researching peace and conflict: Field experiences and methodological reflectons. New York: Springer Peace Psychology Series.
- Figueiredo, A., Oldenhove, G., & Licata, L. (2018). Collective memories of colonialism and acculturation dynamics among Congolese immigrants living in Belgium. International Journal of Intercultural Relations, 62, 80-92. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijintrel.2017.03.004

Theofilos Gkinopoulos

Academic positions, administrative experience, and research interests
I am an Associate Professor in Social Psychology at the University of Nicosia Athens Campus (since November 2025), where I also serve as Dean of the School of Humanities and Social Sciences, member of the Quality Assurance Committee, and member of the Academic Council. Previously, I held postdoctoral positions at the University of Greenwich (UK), where I also served as Early Career Researcher representative (2019 – 2020). and the University of Crete (Greece), and next was appointed Assistant Professor at Jagiellonian University in Krakow (Poland). In June 2026, I will co-organise a preconference on individual and collective victimhood at the EASP General Meeting in Strasbourg. Last year I was invited as teacher at the EASP 2025 Summer School at the University of Kent (Conspiracy theories and misinformation workstream). My research focuses on intergroup beliefs and intergroup relations in contexts of crisis and uncertainty, with emphasis on conspiracy beliefs, institutional and political trust, and collective victim beliefs.
Perspective on future priorities for EASP
Having built my career across European countries, I am acutely aware of the uneven landscape in which social psychologists operate across the continent. I believe the Executive Committee should prioritise three interconnected goals. First, strengthening geographic inclusivity by expanding support structures and visibility for researchers in smaller and less centrally positioned European academic communities. Second, enhancing the societal impact of European social psychology, particularly in addressing contemporary challenges such as misinformation, eroding institutional trust, and political polarisation, areas where our discipline can offer unique, evidence-based contributions to public policy. Third, fostering sustainable career pathways for early and mid-career scholars through mentoring networks and collaborative initiatives that span institutional and national boundaries.
Three representative publications
• Gkinopoulos, T., Kossowska, M., & Walther, E. (2026). "A community of unknowledge": A social-psychological model of the self -reinforcing cycle of social identity-driven willful ignorance and conspiracy beliefs. Current Opinion in Psychology, 67, 102193. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.copsyc.2025.102193
• Pummerer, L., Gkinopoulos, T., Douglas, K. M., Jolley, D., & Sassenberg, K. (2024). The Appraisal Model of Conspiracy Theories (AMCT): Applying appraisal theories to understand emotional and behavioral reactions to conspiracy theories. Psychological Inquiry, 35(3-4), 159 – 178. https://doi.org/10.1080/1047840X.2024.2442906
• Gkinopoulos, T., Pagliaro, S., Pacilli, M.-G., Bilewicz, M., Teresi, M., & Ballone, C. (2023). Does personal relative deprivation mediate the relationship between passive social media use and beliefs in conspiracy theories? European Journal of Social Psychology, 53(7), 1623 – 1640. https://doi.org/10.1002/ejsp.3002 (funded by the EASP Seedcorn Grant, 2022)

Rita Guerra

I completed my PhD in Social Psychology at ISCTE in 2007. I then held a Postdoctoral Fellowship at the University of Delaware (2008–2010), followed by several research positions (2011–2022), supported through competitively awarded national and international grants that I coordinated. Since 2022, I have been a tenure-track Researcher at the Centre for Psychological Research and Social Intervention (CIS-Iscte, Portugal). My commitment to Social Psychology has guided my programmatic line of research aimed at advancing theory while applying evidence-based findings to address pressing societal challenges, including discrimination, immigrant integration, and hate speech. In 2025, I was elected Fellow of the Society for the Psychological Study of Social Issues (SPSSI), in recognition of the contributions of my work to psychology and to the study of social issues, in particular.
Two core principles underpin my work as a researcher: collaboration and supportive mentoring. I strongly believe that collaboration is central to high-quality, impactful social psychological research. It must be cultivated both within our scholar community, across disciplines, and in engagement with civil society, given the complexity of the societal challenges we currently face. Throughout my career, I have coordinated or participated in 14 funded projects, all resulting from strong collaborative effort with over 40 scholars across social, personality, and political psychology, as well as computational linguistics and data science. Collaboration is equally essential for fostering a rigorous, supportive, and inclusive mentoring environment for junior scholars, who represent the future of our field. I supervised and mentored over 60 researchers at the master’s, doctoral, and postdoctoral levels, securing funding to support their research in all projects that I coordinated. In addition to my research and mentoring activities, I have contributed to institutional service, including roles as Vice-Director of CIS-Iscte (2016–2020), elected member of its Scientific Committee (2021–2025), and Vice-President of the Scientific Council of Iscte Knowledge & Innovation (2023–2025). I have also served as member of SPSSI Early Career Scholars Committee (2015–2018), ISPP Awards Committee (2021) and currently as a member of the Executive Committee of the International Contact Research Network.
I have been a member of EASP since 2011 and have regularly participated in its General Meetings, as well as in several Small Group Meetings, which I must admit are my favourite. I would be honoured to contribute to the future of EASP by serving on its Executive Committee. If elected, I would work with fellow colleagues at the EC to strengthen EASP’s commitment to supporting the training of junior scholars and to fostering equitable cooperation both within and beyond our discipline. I believe it is essential for our community to acknowledge the persistent asymmetries in resources, training, and opportunities, and to actively and collaboratively work toward a more equitable and inclusive field, one that ensures broad representation and amplifies diverse voices at all levels.
Three representative publications
Guerra, R., Golec de Zavala, A., Bierwiaczonek, K., Ciesielski, P., Abakoumkin, G., Wildschut, T., & Sedikides, C. (2026). A case of mistaken identity: Miscategorisation of the ingroup as a historically rivalrous outgroup triggers collective narcissism. Group Processes & Intergroup Relations, 29(1), 78-96. https://doi.org/10.1177/13684302251345405
Guerra, R., Broekhuizen, M. L., Francot, R. J. R. M., & Kolancali, P. (2025). Intergroup relations, acculturation orientations, and adaptation of Turkish immigrant descent parents across Europe. Cultural Diversity & Ethnic Minority Psychology, 31(2), 209–220. https://doi.org/10.1037/cdp0000627
Carmona, M., Sindic, D., Guerra, R., Hofhuis, J. (2020). Human and Global Identities: different prototypical meanings of all-inclusive identities. Political Psychology, 41(5), 961–978. https://doi.org/10.1111/pops.12659

Evangelos Ntontis

I am an Assistant Professor of Social and Organisational Psychology at the Department of Psychology at Panteion University of Social and Political Sciences, Greece (2026–). Previously I held positions as Lecturer and Senior Lecturer at the Open University (2021-2026) and Canterbury Christ Church University (2018–2021). I study collective phenomena, mainly group behaviour and disaster resilience, and crowd psychology and identity leadership in relation to authoritarian movements. Throughout my career, I have taken on several administrative and leadership roles. I am Deputy Chief Editor of the British Journal of Social Psychology (2025-). Between 2017-2020 I was Committee Member of the Social Psychology Section of the British Psychological Society. At Canterbury Christ Church University I served as Erasmus Lead. At the Open University, I co-led the Culture and Social Psychology research group. I serve as External Examiner for postgraduate courses and have participated in PhD supervision committees. Ι have been an active member of EASP since 2016, presenting my work in general meetings and supporting the organisation of general meetings by acting as abstract reviewer.
EASP was founded on the principle that rigorous research is essential for understanding the complexities of social life, which led to the emergence of scientific networks, collaborative research, and a shared intellectual foundation in a rapidly changing social landscape. Today, societies are again facing profound challenges at an unprecedented level: polarisation and misinformation, threats to democracy, mass violence and the ethnic cleansing of peoples, migration pressures, inequalities, and the climate crisis. My vision for EASP is that, while it continues to promote excellent basic and applied research, it will strengthen our discipline’s public profile, render us expert participants in ongoing dialogues on social issues, and enhance how members of the public understand social psychology and use it to make sense of social problems. More specifically, first, my goal is to ensure that research grants that fund basic and applied research continue. It is mandatory to support both pillars in a balanced manner since applied research helps develop theory, but good theory helps enhance our understanding of social issues and develop rigorous empirical work. Meeting grants for both interdisciplinary but also interdisciplinary meetings must be sustained. Second, our scientific work needs to better inform policy makers, practitioners, and the public. I want to enhance EASP’s visibility to be seen as a trusted scientific voice on pressing issues. This can be achieved via task forces, expert groups and new outlets (e.g. a scientific blog) which will help to create and establish a form of “public social psychology”. In other words, our discipline is notably missing from discussions of social issues, which needs to change. Third, EASP must be seen as academically relevant but also as an academic home by its members, listening to and reflecting on social issues important to them and the wider society. Thus, for me, it is mandatory that our organisation maintains a moral architecture which will provide voice and will not alienate its members, reflecting EASP’s core values. Fourth, the organisation must be seen not only as relevant by its members but also as inclusive and accessible.
My goal is to strengthen equitable access and funding for key events, and also to introduce hybrid and digital participation formats for those of us who face access constraints (e.g. visa or passport problems) or whose institutions lack funds.
Three representative publications
1. Ntontis, E., Drury, J., Amlôt, R., Rubin, J.G., & Williams, R. (2019). What lies beyond social capital? The role of social psychology in building community resilience to climate change. Traumatology. http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/trm0000221
2. Ntontis, E., Drury, J., Amlôt, R., Rubin, J.G., Williams, R., & Saavedra, P. (2020). Collective resilience in the disaster recovery period: Emergent social identity and observed social support are associated with collective efficacy, wellbeing, and the provision of social support. British Journal of Social Psychology, 60, 1075–1095. https://doi.org/10.1111/bjso.12434
3. Ntontis, E., Jurstakova, K., Neville, F., Haslam, S.A. & Reicher, S.D. (2024). A warrant for violence? An analysis of Donald Trump’s speech before the U.S. Capitol attack. British Journal of Social Psychology, 63(1), 3 – 19. https://doi.org/10.1111/bjso.12679

Félice van Nunspeet

I obtained my PhD at Leiden University in 2014, and continued to work there as a postdoctoral researcher till 2016, after which I became an assistant professor at Utrecht University (both in the Netherlands). Here, I’m currently being considered for appointing the position of Associate Professor. In the Organisational Behaviour Group at Utrecht University, I am a member of the management team and research coordinator: positions in which I have gained extensive experience with all administrative, budgetary, and logistic aspects of organizing research, academic teaching and related activities, such as interdisciplinary collaborations, science-for-practice projects, stakeholder events, and scientific meetings. I am also a member of several committees, such as the Faculty Appointment Advisory Committee of Utrecht University, and the multi- and transdisciplinary teaching committee of the SOCION research consortium – expanding four universities and different research institutes across the Netherlands. Previously, I have been a research track coordinator in the Kurt Lewin Institute (the Dutch centre for graduate training and research in social psychology), and was a co-editor of the Routledge International Handbook of the Psychology of Morality.
My research focuses on the role of morality in social judgments, how moral motives affect behaviour, and how people respond to and deal with change and moral threats. Moral values can bring people together, but they can also cause divide – along a broad range of topics. The research I conduct therefore addresses different domains and themes, including social bias and intergroup behaviour, sustainability and environmental behaviour, and ranges from external rule compliance to internalized responsibility. I also apply interdisciplinary perspectives and use a multi-method approach, combining explicit and implicit behavioural measures with psychophysiological or neuroscientific techniques. Furthermore, my goal is to provide insights about the more fundamental psychological processes to complement applied scientific research on, for instance, ethical organizational climates or the development of public policies. To this end, I collaborate with stakeholder outside of academia such as organizations and societal research institutes.
I have been a member of the EASP since 2010, and throughout my career, the EASP has allowed me to expand my horizon by helping to fund international research visits within and outside of Europe. In my opinion, it is important that the EASP continues and further strengthens its facilitating role in enhancing open, fair, and collaborative scientific research within and across Europe (and beyond). Moreover, I hope to broaden the scope and strengthen the acknowledgement of the different aspects of what our scientific work entails and has to offer. This includes offering mentorship and guidance in supportive training and coaching of postgraduate members, and showcasing ways in which (transdisciplinary) research can contribute to science and society.
Three representative publications
▪ Van Nunspeet, F., & Ellemers, N. (2024). Regulating other people’s moral behaviors: Turning vicious cycles into virtuous cycles. Group Processes & Intergroup Relations, 27(1), 196-213. https://doi.org/10.1177/13684302231159577
▪ Van Nunspeet, F., Veenstra, E. M., Monteiro Graca Casquinho, B., … & Organizational Behaviour Group. (2025). Overcoming the threat of anti-bias interventions: Combining self-report and psychophysiological measures to capture the process of change. PloS One, 20(1). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0314813
▪ Pang, J. Y-C., Pankowska, P., Van Nunspeet, F., & Buskens, V. (in press). Five shades of green: Uncovering consumption profile heterogeneity and the role of socioeconomic status in the Netherlands. Discover Sustainability.


EASP General Meeting 2026

We are looking forward to seeing many of you in Strasbourg this summer!

The Scientific Committee recently met in Strasboug to put together the program for the General Meeting, and here are some photos of their time there.

We thank them very much for their service to the association.

Scientific Committee in Strasbourg

Scientific Committee in Strasbourg


Recent Complaint Considered Under the EASP Code of Conduct

The EASP Executive Committee recently received a complaint of academic misconduct which was considered by the Ethics Committee under the EASP Code of Conduct.

The established procedure was followed and our decisions will be made public once the appeal period is complete.

We thank the Ethics Committee for their thorough work on this case and we will be in touch with members in due course with further information.  


New Editorial Team of EJSP

The EASP Executive Committee is incredibly happy and proud to announce the next incoming editorial team for the European Journal of Social Psychology.

Kasia Cantarero, Tomás Palma, and Loris Vezzali will take over the helm of EASP's flagship journal on January 1st, 2027.

***

Goals for our tenure as Editors-in-Chief of EJSP (2027-2029)

We are honoured to take over the editorship of the European Journal of Social Psychology (EJSP) and grateful to the EASP Executive Committee for their trust. Our starting point is that EJSP should serve as a home for the full breadth of social psychology. We come from different traditions within the field, namely interpersonal processes, intergroup relations, and social cognition, and we see this diversity as a genuine strength of our team. We want it to be visible in the journal as well, and while continuing to welcome the full range of work that has long found a home at EJSP, we will actively encourage contributions from areas that have been comparatively underrepresented in recent years.

Methodological rigor will be the common standard we apply across all submissions. We welcome experimental and non-experimental work, quantitative and qualitative approaches, and we equally value research on socially consequential phenomena and research that advances understanding of basic social processes. What we do require, regardless of approach, is that claims are calibrated to what the design and data can support, and that scope conditions are stated honestly.

During our tenure, we intend to formally launch Registered Reports at EJSP, to actively encourage high-quality meta-analyses and systematic reviews, and to build on the journal’s existing commitments to open science. We will also work to sustain the review process in which authors receive timely and decisive feedback and associate editors take genuine ownership of the papers they handle.

Kasia Cantarero, Loris Vezzali, and Tomás Palma

Kasia Cantarero, Loris Vezzali, and Tomás Palma


Upcoming EASP Meetings

Obedience to authority
9–11 September, 2026
Regensburg, Germany
https://www.easp.eu/news/itm/deadline_extended_easp_meeting_o-2263.html

Manipulating social context: Conducting valid and informative experiments
13-14 October, 2026
Université Clermont Auvergne in Clermont-Ferrand, France
https://www.easp.eu/news/itm/deadline_extension_easp_small_gr-2253.html

Co-producing an agenda for a social psychology of prefigurative politics
9-11 September 2026
Klagenfurt, Austria
https://www.easp.eu/news/itm/easp_group_meeting_co_producing_-2181.html

Social dynamics of climate policy and sustainable transformation
27–29 June 2026
University of Hohenheim, Stuttgart, Germany
https://www.easp.eu/news/itm/easp_small_group_meeting_on_soci-2138.html


Reports from Previous EASP Meetings

In the following links, you can read reports from previous meetings sponsored by EASP:

Report of the Second Social Identity Summer School (SISS)
https://www.easp.eu/news/itm/?id=2240


Other Announcements

Call for Papers in Journal of Community and Applied Social Psychology
"Anti-LGBTQ+ Policies Worldwide: Psychosocial Processes and Community Impact Across Cultural Contexts"
Submission Deadline: Monday, 30 November 2026
https://www.easp.eu/news/itm/call_for_papers_in_journal_of_co-2252.html


Grants Awarded

The following grants have been awarded by the Executive Committee:

Collaborative Grant:

Michal Główczewski (Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń) and Theofilos Gkinopoulos (University of Nicosia), “Our history is great and we know it! Need for historical significance, ingroup entitlement and support for institutional historical policies”.

Seedcorn Grants:

Adrian Lüders (University of Hohenheim), “What to Do in Case of Fire? Online Science Activism between Impact and Backlash”.

Carsten Sander (University of Hamburg), Laura Docampo (University of Santiago de Compostela), Eszter Hadnagy (ELTE Eötvös Loránd University), and Amy S. G. Lee (University of Melbourne), “When Criticism Becomes Threat: Does Moral Rhetoric Fuel Political Disidentification and Populist Support?”.

Feiteng Long (University of Edinburgh), “Inequality, Physiological Synchrony and Social Decision-Making”.

Julien Barbedor (UCLouvain), “Contextual Modulation of Moral Face Perception: Threat, Assertiveness, and the Role of the Perceiver”.

Monika Golab (Jagiellonian University) and Linnea Nöth (Leibniz University Hanover), “The role of entertainment and humorous framing in the perception of conspiracy theories and the willingness to share them”.

Tomás Palma and Francisco Cruz (University of Lisbon), “Metacognition and the cross-race recognition deficit: The role of study time and performance beliefs”.

Toni Schmader (University of British Columbia), “Cross-Cultural Mismatch?
Investigating the Experiences of First-Generation College Students Around the World”.


Grant Reports

In the following links, you can read reports from previous grants awarded by EASP:

Seedcorn Grant Report
Understanding Ingroup Heterogeneity and Outgroup Homogeneity through the Evaluative Information Ecology Model
https://www.easp.eu/news/itm/easp_seedcorn_grant_report-2207.html

Seedcorn Grant Report
How Online and Offline Valenced Contact Affects Highly Prejudiced Individuals
https://www.easp.eu/news/itm/seedcorn_grant_report-2208.html


New Members of the Association

We are delighted that our membership continues to grow. Here is a list of colleagues who have applied for EASP membership. If we receive no objections within the next four weeks (see Article 2 of the Statutes), they will automatically become members.

The names of referees appear below each new member's name.

Postgraduate Membership: 

Elsa Boulard (Aix-Marseille Université)
Luca Andrighetto, Cristina Baldissarri

Jazmin Kane (University of Sussex)
Ayşe K. Üskül, Matthew Easterbrook

Alana Daly (University of Granada)
Ana Urbiola, Soledad de Lemus

Julie Navelier (Université Clermont Auvergne)
Céline Darnon, Annique Smeding

Roy Rave (University of Haifa)
Guy Itzchakov, Nurit Shnabel

Elif Mestanli Sari (University of Surrey)
Erica Hepper, Fabio Fasoli

Kine B. Olsen (UiT the Arctic University of Norway)
Sarah E. Martiny, Natasza Kosakowska-Berezecka

Elian Hermes (University of Cologne)
Joris Lammers, Annika Scholl

Loïc Fierens (UCLouvain)
Pierre Bouchat, Olivier Klein

Siyu Zhang (Durham University)
Patrick Kotzur, Mark Rubin

Lydia Camacho García (University of Granada)
Soledad de Lemus, Alexandra Vázquez

Zarnab Zahoor (University of Illinois Chicago)
Tabea Hässler, Lusine Grigoryan

Sylvia Xu (Maastricht Univesity)
Naomi Ellemers, Jan-Willem van Prooijen

Qi Zhao (VU Amsterdam)
Jan-Willem van Prooijen, Karen Douglas

Ye Yao (University of Southampton)
Pascal Burgmer, Nicholas J. Kelley

Taranah Gazder (University of Edinburgh)
Alexandra Vázquez, Karen Douglas

Charmaine Utzig (Saarland University)
Malte Friese, Kathi Diel

Sindi Fitnete Sina (Sapienza University)
Ankica Kosic, Mauro Giacomoantonio

Reko Elovainio (University of Helsinki)
Inga Jasinskaja-Lahti, Matilde Tassinari

Hasan Adar Sağnıç (Eastern Mediterranean University)
Shenel Husnu, Yasemin Acar

Oxana Mroczek (University of Lausanne)
Christian Staerklé, Paul Bertin

Nora Feline Becker (University of Hamburg)
Juliane Degner, Roland Imhoff

Zhiwei Zhou (University of Southampton)
Constantine Sedikides, Nicholas Kelley

Leoni S. Masroujah (University of Aberdeen)
Neil Macrae, Devin Ray

Ece Tunç (University of Bath)
Greg Maio, Gosia Goclowska

Firuze E. Mullaoğlu (Friedrich Schiller University Jena)
Thomas Kessler, Mete Sefa Uysal

Zhenghanxiao Wang (University of Exeter)
Karen Douglas, Christopher T. Begeny

Clemens Lindner (Friedrich Schiller University Jena)
Thomas Kessler, David F. Urschler

Hadi Azad (University of Kent)
Roger Giner-Sorolla, Jean Monéger

Rrita Bajraktari (Université libre de Bruxelles)
Olivier Klein, Paul Bertin

Ian Danton (University of Derby)
Alexandra Vázquez, Karen Douglas

Dorothea Glaesser (Ernst-Abbe-University of Applied Sciences Jena)
Nicole Harth, Philipp Jugert

Nelida Planamente (University of Geneva)
Juan Manuel Falomir-Pichastor, Vincenzo Iacoviello

Alexander Carter (University of Exeter)
Nadira Faber, Mete Uysal

Eleanor Shao (University of Melbourne)
Yoshihisa Kashima, Frank Eckerle

Liang Wu (Durham University)
Patrick Kotzur, Mark Rubin

Sarah Fontanellaz (University of Lausanne)
Paul Bertin, Christian Staerklé

Anna Lambrich (University of Basel)
Melissa Jauch, Rainer Greifeneder

Anna Manfredi (University of Milano-Bicocca)
Alessandro Gabbiadini, Inga Jasinskaja-Lahti

Pooja Kulkarni (Saarland University)
Malte Friese, Kathi Diel

Yahel Nudler (Tel Aviv University)
Tal Moran, Tal Eyal

Katie Webb (Royal Holloway, University of London)
Hirotaka Imada, Shuxian Jin

Yihua Chen (University of St Andrews)
Nicole Tausch, Anna Stefaniak

Wenjin Liu (University of Southampton)
Constantine Sedikides, Nicholas J. Kelley

David Colledge (Heriot-Watt University)
Mioara Cristea, Katharina Addington-Lefringhausen

Ling Ding (Durham University)
Patrick Kotzur, Mark Rubin

Leonie Alice Ludwig (University of Limerick)
Ann-Christin Posten, Aisling O’Donnell

Lukas Robert Braun (University of Groningen)
Karen Douglas, Martijn van Zomeren

Ayşe Gül Efe (University of Amsterdam)
Suzanne Oosterwijk, Bastiaan Rutjens

Aaron Lauterbach (Western Sydney University)
Maria-Therese Friehs, Sylvie Graf

Jessica Bagnall Guerreiro (University of New England)
Gregory Maio, Mark Rubin

Emmanuela Osei-Asemani (University of Bath)
Adam Hahn, Gregory Maio

Marta Sih Wei Macaluso (University of Padua)
Alberto Voci, Francesca Prati

Victoria Martins Mendonca (Simon Fraser University)
Alexandra Vázquez, Karen Douglas

Dana Godžáková (Slovak Academy of Sciences)
Jakub Šrol, Vladimíra Čavojová

Hodaya Levy-Schulman (The Hebrew University of Jerusalem)
Tali Kleiman, Yochanan Bigman

Eric Nkurunziza (Université Libre de Bruxelles)
Laurent Licata, Olivier Klein

Rose Bern (University of California, Davis)
Alexandra Vázquez, Tabea Hässler

Neharika Nair (University of Illinois Chicago)
Tabea Hässler, Boaz Hameiri

Sol Corral (The University of Kansas)
Camille Sanrey, Christian S. Crandall

Vlada Trofimchuk (University of Illinois Chicago)
Boaz Hameiri, Tabea Hässler

Tobias Schrimpf (University of Hohenheim)
Adrian Lüders, Kevin Winter

Beyza Tepe (Mef University)
Cillian McHugh, Zeynep Ecem Piyale

Ekaterina Stepaniak (University of Lausanne)
Clara Kulich, Franciska Krings

Aaron Lang (GESIS - Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences / University
Mannheim)
Axel Burger, Michaela Wänke

Camilla Boggia (University of Basel)
Rainer Greifeneder, Melissa Jauch

Nina Le Compte (KU Leuven)
Batja Mesquita, Colette van Laar

Zoé Szczepaniak (Université Grenoble Alpes)
Annique Smeding, Dominique Muller

Ece Sezen Bağcı (Middle East Technical University / Çankaya University)
Mete Sefa Uysal, Yasemin Acar

Kaiyuan Chen (University of Salzburg)
Lukas Thürmer, Michael Hogg

Somidha Ray (University of St Andrews)
Anna Stefaniak, Nicole Tausch

Valentina Tei (University of Groningen)
Kai Epstude, Luciana Carraro

Aline Kelber (GESIS - Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences)
Axel Burger, Vera Vogel

Anna Kubelková (Masaryk University)
Sylvie Graf, Mirjana Rupar

Sophie Stephan (University of Zurich)
Tabea Hässler, Urte Scholz

Emily Raubach (University of Bern)
Sabine Sczesny, Sylvie Graf

Anna Lázníčková (Masaryk university)
Mirjana Rupar, Sylvie Graf

Fran Cavanagh (Durham University)
Patrick Kotzur, Mark Rubin

Liliyana Sari (University of Exeter)
Andrew Livingstone, Mete Sefa Uysal

Anna Mukhina (Trnava University)
Vladimíra Čavojová, Jana Papcunová

Lavinia Miriam Pedretti (University of Trieste)
Mauro Bianchi, Andrea Carnaghi

Sila Mutaf (University of Michigan)
Ayse K. Uskul, Vivian L Vignoles

Iwona Dudek (Jagiellonian University)
Giovanni Telesca, Maciej Sekerdej

Florian Scholten (Eberhard Karls University Tübingen)
Mandy Hütter, Zachary A. Niese

Mia Brady (University of Sussex)
Gillian Sandstrom, Karen Long

Mª Teresa Guzmán (University of Granada)
Inmaculada Valor Segura, María Alonso Ferres

Ivana Jakubová (Trnava University)
Vladimíra Čavojová, Jakub Šrol

Luca Cussigh (University of Padua)
Luciana Carraro, Margherita Guidetti

Agnieszka Siry (Jagiellonian University in Kraków)
Wiktor Soral, Karolina Hansen

Rida Bano (Constructor University Bremen)
Ulrich Kühnen, Sabine Sczesny

Sümeyye Ergün (Leiden University)
Daan Scheepers, Ruthie Pliskin

Tim-Dorian Knöchel (University of Kent)
Jim A. C. Everett, Rob Holland

Jeremias Braid (University of Salzburg)
Lukas Thürmer, Kai Sassenberg

Yan Dubois (Université Paris Cité)
Virginie Bonnot, Aurélien Graton

Nataliia Zaika (American University Kyiv)
Gülseli Baysu, Pierre Bouchat


Full Membership:

Tobias Vogel (Darmstadt University of Applied Sciences)
Oliver Genschow, Michaela Wänke

Anna Baumert (University of Wuppertal)
Roland Imhoff, Tobias Rothmund

Andreas Glockner (University of Cologne)
Christian Unkelbach, Joris Lammers

Lena Hahn (Trier University)
Kai Sassenberg, Benjamin Buttlar

Dolores Albarracín (University of Pennsylvania)
Nira Liberman, Nurit Shnabel

Pinar Ugurlar (Özyeğin University)
Ann-Christin Posten, Angela Dorrough

Gabriella Kengyel (Eötvös Loránd University)
Monika Kovacs, Boglarka Nyul

Andrés R. Riquelme (University of Surrey)
Fabio Fasoli, Francesca Guizzo

Mustafa Biber (Manisa Celal Bayar University)
Joanne Smith. Miriam Koschate-Reis

Juan Antonio Matamoros Lima (University of Huelva)
Guillermo Willis, Miguel Moya

Aydın Bayad (Bielefeld University)
Elif Sandal-Önal, Meral Gezici Yalçın

Marija Petrović (University of Belgrade)
Iris Žeželj, Marija Branković

Sebastian Bürgler (University of Zurich)
Veronika Brandstätter, Marie Hennecke

Ruri Takizawa (ETH Zurich)
Clara Kulich, Vincenzo Iacoviello

Ocyna Rudmann (University of Geneva)
Fabrizio Butera, Benoît Dompnier

Laetitia Mulder (University of Groningen)
Alexandra Vázquez, Jan-Willem van Prooijen

Gali Pesin-Michael (University of Southampton)
Melanie Steffens, Nurit Shnabel

Lina Nacheva (Bulgarian Academy of Sciences)
Marco Brambilla, Valery Todorov

Christina Mühlberger (University of Salzburg)
Katja Corcoran, Johannes Klackl

Anneloes Kip (Maastricht University)
Kai Jonas, Thorsten M. Erle

Zi Ye (Durham University)
Wilco van Dijk, Feiteng Long

Sandra Geiger (Princeton University)
Timur Sevincer, Hirotaka Imada

Léïla Eisner (University of Zurich)
Tabea Hässler, Johannes Ullrich

Laura Carlotta Hoenig (Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam)
Paul van Lange, Jan-Willem van Prooijen

Elliana Lamprianidou (Université Libre de Bruxelles)
Johanna Falbén, Sara Panerati

Andrew McNeill (Queen's University Belfast)
Lee Shepherd, Gülseli Baysu

Robin Wollast (UCLouvain)
Olivier Klein, Olivier Luminet

Mar Montoya Lozano (Universidad de Costa Rica)
Guillermo B. Willis, Rosa Rodríguez Bailón

Béatrice Sternberg (Université Paris 8)
Constantina Badea, Camille Sanrey

Terence Dores Cruz (Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam)
Paul van Lange, Paul Conway

Bojana Većkalov (Radboud University)
Karen Douglas, Bastiaan T. Rutjens

Stefan Schilling (University of Exeter)
Juliet Wakefield, Mete Uysal

Z. Ferguson (RPTU University of Kaiserslautern-Landau)
Melanie Steffens, Thekla Morgenroth

Banu Cingöz Ulu (Middle East Technical University)
Reşit Kışlıoğlu, Nevin Solak

Ji Hye Kim (Sogang University)
Alexandra Vázquez, Karen Douglas

Michael Donner (Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam)
Paul Conway, Christian T. Elbaek

Laila Elina Nockur (Aarhus University)
Janis Zickfeld, Tina Venema

Chiara Sparascio (University of Milano-Bicocca)
Simona Sacchi, Marco Brambilla

Adrian Rothers (Philipps-Universität Marburg)
Christopher Cohrs, Tijana Karić

Pauline Grippa (Université libre de Bruxelles)
Laurent Licata, Olivier Klein

Elianne Albath (Basel University)
Rainer Greifeneder, Christiane Büttner

Shani Oppenheim-Weller (Jerusalem Multidisciplinery College)
Amit Adi, Sharon Arieli

Jack Klein (The Chinese University of Hong Kong)
Alexandra Vázquez, Ana Leal

Julia Köbrich (German Institute for Global and Area Studies)
Borja Martinović, Patrick F. Kotzur

Gosia Mikolajczak (Australian National University)
Anna Stefaniak, Julia C. Becker

Larissa Knöchelmann (Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin)
Christopher Cohrs, Tijana Karić

Manuel Teresi (Macerata University)
Stefano Pagliaro, Ilaria Giovannelli

Michal Pitoňák (Charles University)
Karen Douglas, Melanie Steffens

Frank Gootjes (University of Amsterdam)
Toon Kuppens, Maarten van Bezouw

Hilary Bergsieker (University of Waterloo)
Vincent Yzerbyt, Stéphanie Demoulin

Annette Malapally (Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg)
Nicole Methner, Susanne Bruckmüller

Noga Sverdlik (Ben Gurion University of The Negev)
Nurit Shnabel, Tal Eyal

Chiara Parisse (Roma Tre University)
Mauro Giacomantonio, Fridanna Maricchiolo

Giulia Zoppolat (Amsterdam University Medical Centers)
Francesca Righetti, Alexandra Vázquez

Aurore Gaboriaud (University Grenoble Alpes)
Annique Smeding, Konrad Bocian

Victor Auger (University of Lausanne)
Alice Normand, Céline Darnon

Mariman Mabrouk (University of Lausanne)
Christian Staerklé, Paul Bertin

Plamen Petkov (Institute for Population and Human Studies - Bulgarian Academy of
Sciences)
Valery Todorov, Alexandra Vázquez

André Vaz (Ruhr-Universität Bochum)
Hans Alves, Moritz Ingendahl

Jessica Morton (UCLouvain)
Pierre Bouchat, Olivier Klein

Vukasin Gligoric (New York University Abu Dhabi)
Bastiaan Rutjens, Alexandra Vázquez

Laura Henn (University of Hohenheim)
Adrian Lüders, Kevin Winter

Anne Speer (University of Bremen)
Patrick Kotzur, Ulrich Kühnen

Chantal D'Amore (University of Amsterdam)
Martijn van Zomeren, Gerben van Kleef

Heidi Mauersberger (Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin)
Konstantinos Kafetsios, Stefanie Hechler

Lukas Loreth (Kiel University)
Daniela Renger, Hilmar Grabow

Esmee Veenstra (Utrecht University)
Félice van Nunspeet, Naomi Ellemers

Claudia Niedlich (RPTU University Kaiserslautern-Landau)
Melanie C. Steffens, Muireann O‘Dea

Olivier Dujols (Université Grenoble Alpes)
Dominique Muller, Nuel Ivane

Ipek Guvensoy (Sabancı University)
Sabahat Cigdem Bagci, Sofia Stathi

Gregory Webster (University of Florida)
Dominique Muller, Vincent Yzerbyt

Michal Olszanowski (SWPS University)
Konrad Bocian, Monika Wróbel

Marta Garrido-Macías (University of Granada)
Eva Moreno-Bella, María Alonso-Ferres

Marta Beneda (New York University Abu Dhabi)
Marta Witkowska, Julia Spielmann

Julien Bakchich (Université Savoie Mont Blanc)
Annique Smeding, Dominique Muller

Maria Babinska (Université Libre de Bruxelles)
Laurent Licata, Michał Bilewicz

Aya Adra (Universitat Pompeu Fabra)
Soledad de Lemus, Marcos Dono

Laura Torres-Vega (University of Granada)
Eva Moreno Bella, Andrea Velandia Morales

Zea Szebeni (University of Helsinki)
Inga Jasinskaja-Lahti, Katarina Pettersson

Sofía Schwartz-Salazar (University of Málaga)
Eva Moreno Bella, Andrea Velandia Morales

Emine Bilgen (Bursa Technical University)
Patrick Kotzur, Xenia Daniela Poslon

Lope Tejero Peregrina (University of Granada)
Guillermo Willis, Rosa Rodríguez Bailón

Jean-Félix Hamel (Université de Tours)
Cristina Baldissarri, Luca Andrighetto

Volodymyr Vakhitov (American University Kyiv)
Gülseli Baysu, Pierre Bouchat

Welcome!

Welcome!


Executive Committee

President
Nurit Shnabel
Tel Aviv University, Israel
shnabeln@tauex.tau.ac.il

Secretary, Grants & Membership Officer
Karen Douglas
University of Kent, United Kingdom
k.douglas@kent.ac.uk

Meetings Officer
Claudia Manzi
Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Italy
claudia.manzi@unicatt.it

Journals Officer
Roland Imhoff
Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz, Germany
roimhoff@uni-mainz.de

Treasurer
Nina Hansen
University of Groningen, The Netherlands
n.hansen@rug.nl

Diversity Officer
Gülseli Baysu
Queens University Belfast, United Kingdom
G.Baysu@qub.ac.uk

Grants & Membership Officer
Alexandra Vázquez Botana
Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia, Spain
alx.vazquez@psi.uned.es

Wendy Rulkens - van den Hoogen (Executive Officer), office@easp.eu

Executive Officer
Wendy Rulkens - van den Hoogen

Email: office@easp.eu

Secretary
Karen Douglas
University of Kent
United Kingdom
Email: k.douglas@kent.ac.uk

Media Manager
Email: media@easp.eu

You are receiving this message because you are subscribed to the EASP Bulletin mailing list. If you no longer wish to receive this mailing please click here to unsubscribe. Please do not forward this email without removing this paragraph, as otherwise your recipient(s) may inadvertently unsubscribe you from the mailing list.