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Stephen Jolly

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Stephen Jolly
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Stephen Jolly (b. 1960) is an Adjunct Professor (Professeur Agrégé) at the ESC Rennes School of Business, Grande École and 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.[2] Jolly served two 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.[3] Educated in England and Canada, Jolly studied at the Universities of Cambridge and Sussex and at the Sauder Business School, University of British Columbia where he was a Commonwealth Scholar and Killam Fellow.

Influence[edit]

A former senior British Defence official and propagandist, Jolly developed the Rainbow in the Dark doctrine which "led to a radical overhaul of Defence stratcom capability and governance."[4]

Jolly has held a variety of academic fellowships. He was a Senior Research Fellow at the Defence Academy of the United Kingdom and a Fellow of RAND Europe (2015-6). He has held Visiting Fellowships at the International Centre for Security Analysis, King's College, London, (1999–2002),[5] at the Centre for Strategic Communications, War Studies Department, King's College, London (2015–18),[6] at the British think tank ResPublica (2016–19), at RAND Europe (2019-2020), and was a Visiting Scholar at the University of Cambridge Centre for Film & Screen(2021).

In 2020, Jolly was elected an Honorary Member of the Pen & Sword Club in recognition of his contribution to UK media operations.

Pro bono[edit]

Jolly is a trustee of a family charity, Edward Jolly's Charity, founded in 1784. The charity focuses on the relief of child food poverty.

Recent developments[edit]

Jolly has a long history of involvement in the corporate affairs and communications industries.[7] Between 2016-20, he worked as Director of the Saatchi Institute, Lord Saatchi’s private think tank headquartered in London. He was also a director in M&C Saatchi’s global behaviour change practice before joining a start-up geopolitics firm as its first CEO.

Jolly was appointed to an Adjunct Professorship at ESC Rennes School of Business, a French business school, in 2021.

Articles[edit]

Articles published include:

  • "Rainbow in the Dark Revisited: The Rise and Fall of Full Spectrum Communications", Scratchings: Journal of the Pen & Sword Club (To be published in 2022)
  • "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[edit]

  1. Stephen Jolly, Fellow Commoner, St Edmund's College http://www.st-edmunds.cam.ac.uk/people/mr-stephen-jolly
  2. Stephen Jolly, Clare News, Fellow Feature, p. 8: https://www.clarealumni.com/file/ClareNews_Edition31.pdf
  3. "Stephen Jolly". University of Cambridge. Archived from the original on 13 November 2013. Retrieved 9 January 2015.
  4. Lee Richards,"Assessing a century of British military information operations", Defence Strategic Communications: Journal of the NATO Strategic Communications Centre of Excellence, 1:1: 41-66, March 2016.
  5. "International Centre for Security Analysis". King's College London. Retrieved 9 January 2015.
  6. "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.
  7. "Stephen Jolly". LinkedIn. Retrieved 4 March 2017.


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