Lea Hartwich

Social Psychology

Political Ideology, Neoliberalism, Collective Action, Social and Economic Inequality, Intergroup Relations and Conflicts

Member of the IMIS since May 2021. Since July 2020: Postdoc at the Department of Social Psychology, Osnabrück University; September 2019-December 2019: Research stay at the University of Queensland, Australia; October 2016-June 2020: Doctorate in Social Psychology, Osnabrück University; 2015-2016: Master's degree in Sociology and Social Psychology at the University of Göttingen; 2013-2014: Master's degree in Clinical Psychology at the University of Warwick, UK; 2010-2013: Bachelor's degree in Politics, Psychology & Sociology at the University of Cambridge, UK.

Dr. rer. nat. Lea Hartwich

Foto, Lea Hartwich
© Martina Stange

Osnabrück University
Institute of Psychology
Seminarstraße 20
49074 Osnabrück

Office: 15/238

 +49 541 969-4090

 lea.hartwich@uni-osnabrueck.de

Becker, J.C., Hartwich, L., & Haslam, S.A. (2021). Neoliberalism can reduce well-being by promoting a sense of social disconnection, competition and loneliness. British Journal of Social Psychology, 60(3), 947-965.  https://doi.org/10.1111/bjso.12438

Hartwich, L., & Becker, J.C. (2019). Exposure to neoliberalism increases resentment of the elite via feelings of anomie and negative psychological reactions. Journal of Social Issues, 75(1), 113-133.  https://doi.org/10.1111/josi.12311

Hartwich, L., Becker, J.C. (2019). Nur ein Kompliment? Warum auch positive Geschlechter-Stereotype sexistisch sein können. In-Mind.

Nonte, S., Hartwich, L., & Willems, A.S. (2018). Promoting reading attitudes of girls and boys: a new challenge for educational policy? Multi‑group analyses across four European countries. Large-scale Assessments in Education, 6(1):5.  http://doi.org/10.1186/s40536-018-0057-y