Carolin Hagelskamp

Prof. Dr. Carolin I. A. Hagelskamp

Prof. Dr. Carolin I. A. Hagelskamp
Professur für Sozialwissenschaften mit dem Schwerpunkt Forschungsmethoden

T +49 30 30877-2626

Campus Lichtenberg, Haus 1, Raum 1.3074
Alt-Friedrichsfelde 60, 10315 Berlin

Orcid-ID

Werdegang

Seit 2017 – Professorin an HWR Berlin

2011 – 2016 - Public Agenda, New York City, USA - Stellvertretende Leiterin und Forschungsdirektorin – Politische Meinungsforschung und Partizipation

2011 – 2012 - Yale University, USA – Postdoktorandin – Quantitative Evaluationsforschung, soziale Interventionen im Kontext Schule

2011 – New York University, USA – Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.): Community Psychology – Dissertation: Work-family linkages and adolescent parenting in ethnically diverse, urban families

2010 – Forschungsaufenthalt in Kenia – Mitarbeit im Projekt Health and Literacy Intervention (Harvard University, Kenyan Medical Research Institute-Wellcome Trust) – Quant. Evaluationsforschung, soziale Interventionen im Kontext Schule

2008 – 2011 – Freiberufliche Beraterin - Evaluationsforschung – u. a. tätig für United Nations Department of Peacekeeping Operations; Goethe Institut Washington D.C.

2004 – 2010 – New York University, USA – Center for Research on Culture, Development and Education - Wissenschaftliche Mitarbeiterin – Entwicklungspsychologische Längsschnittstudien mit ethnisch diversen Familien

2001 – London School of Economics and Political Science, UK – Master of Science (M.Sc.): Organizational and Social Psychology

2000 – University of Kent at Canterbury, UK – Bachelor of Science (B.Sc.): Psychology

Netzwerk

Forschungsprojekte

  • Bürgerbeteiligung und politische Partizipation
  • Diversität an Hochschulen und in der öffentlichen Verwaltung

Lehre

  • Empirische Forschungsmethoden (auch in Englisch)
  • Wissenschaftliches Arbeiten
  • Statistik für Sozialwissenschaften
  • Online und Blended-Learning
  • Projektbasierte Lehre; Forschendes Lernen

Veröffentlichungen

Hagelskamp, C.; Silliman, R., Godfrey, E. B. & Schleifer, D. (2020) Shifting Priorities: Participatory Budgeting in New York City is Associated with Increased Investments in Schools, Street and Traffic Improvements, and Public Housing , New Political Science, 42(2), 171-196.

Hagelskamp, C. (2020). Diversitätsklima im Kontext Hochschule: Konzeption, Bedingungen, Folgen und Gestaltungsansätze. In: T. Ringeisen; P. Genkova & F. T. L. Leong (Eds.) Handbuch Kultur und Stress. Wiesbaden: Springer Fachmedien. First online: 9.9.2020

Hagelskamp, C., Schleifer, D., Rinehart, C., and Silliman, R. (2018) Participatory Budgeting: Could It Diminish Health Disparities in the United States? Journal of Urban Health, 95(5), 766-771

Hagelskamp, C., & Hughes, D. L. (2016). Linkages between mothers’ job stressors and adolescents’ perceptions of the mother–child relationship in the context of weak versus strong support networks. Community, Work & Family,19 (1), 103-124.

Hagelskamp, C. & Hughes, D.L. (2014). Workplace discrimination predicting racial/ethnic socialization in African American, Latino and Chinese Families. Cultural Diversity and Ethnic Minority Psychology, Vol 20(4), 550-560.

Hagelskamp, C., Brackett, M.A., Rivers, S.E., & Salovey, P. (2013). Improving classroom quality with The RULER Approach to social and emotional learning: Proximal and distal outcomes. American Journal of Community Psychology, 51 (3/4), 530-543.

Rivers, S.E., Hagelskamp, C., & Brackett, M.A. (2013). Understanding and assessing the social-emotional attributes of classrooms. In J. McMillan (Ed.), Sage Handbook of Research on Classroom Assessments. 347-366. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage. 347-366.

Wiley, S., Deaux. K., & Hagelskamp, C. (2012). Born in the USA: Immigrant generation moderates the link between meritocracy and collective action. Cultural Diversity and Ethnic Minority Psychology, Vol 18(2), 171-180.

Hagelskamp, C., Hughes, D., Yoshikawa, H., & Chaudry, A. (2011). Negotiating motherhood and work: A typology of mother-worker role identity associations among low-income, urban women. Community, Work, Family, 14 (3), 335-366.

Hagelskamp, C., Suarez-Orozco, C., & Hughes, D. (2010). Migrating to opportunities: How parental migration motivations shape academic trajectories among newcomer immigrant youth. Journal of Social Issues, 66 (4), 717-739.

Hughes, D., Hagelskamp, C., Way, N., & Foust, M. (2009). The role of mothers’ and adolescents’ perceptions of ethnic-racial socialization in shaping ethnic-racial identity among early adolescent boys and girls. Journal of Youth and Adolescence, 38 (5), 605- 626.

Hughes, D., Rivas, D. Foust, M., Hagelskamp, C., Gersick, S., & Way, N. (2008). How to catch a moonbeam: A mixed-methods approach to understanding ethnic socialization in ethnically diverse families. In S. Quintana & C. McKnown (Eds.) Handbook of race,    racism, and child development. 226– 277. New Jersey: John Wiley and Sons.

Forschungsberichte

Hagelskamp, C., Rinehart, C., Silliman, R., &Schleifer, D., (2016). A process of growth. The Expansion of participatory budgeting in the United States and Canada in 2015-16. New York: Public Agenda. Online: https://www.publicagenda.org/media/a-process-of-growth 

Hagelskamp, C., Schleifer, D., Rinehart, C., & Silliman, R. (2016). Why let the people decide? Elected officials on participatory budgeting. New York: Public Agenda. Online: https://www.publicagenda.org/media/why-let-the-people-decide 

Hagelskamp, C., Rinehart, C., Silliman, R., & Schleifer, D. (2016). Public spending, by the people. Participatory budgeting in the United States and Canada in 2014 – 15. New York: Public Agenda. Online: https://www.publicagenda.org/pages/public-spending-by-the-people


Sonstige

Hagelskamp, C & Schleifer, D. (2020). Shifting Priorities: Participatory Budgeting in New York City means more money for schools, streets and traffic improvements and public housing. Blog auf Bürgerhaushalt.de. Online unter: https://www.buergerhaushalt.org/en/article/thad-calabrese-and-carolin-hagelskamp-are-debating; Zugriff am 14.9.2020.

Hagelskamp, C. (2020). Über die gesellschaftliche Schlagkraft von Bürgerbeteiligung – die USA als Vorlbild?. Interview der Bundeszentrale für Politische Bildung, Online: https://www.bpb.de/mediathek/314462/ueber-die-gesellschaftliche-schlagkraft-von-buergerbeteiligung-die-usa-als-vorbild; Zugriff am: 14.09.2020