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Cecily Darden Adams

cadams@socy.umd.edu

 

Previous Degrees:

B.A. in Economics, Spelman College, 1995

M.A. in Sociology, University of Maryland, College Park, 2006

 

Specialty Areas:

Demography and Stratification

 

My broad interests lie in the social reproduction of inequality, particularly at the intersections of race, caste, class and gender.  My previous work has looked spatially at racial inequality mostly through residential mobility and segregation.  For my dissertation, I am employing the well developed literature on the mechanisms that reproduce racial inequality in US schools in looking at caste-based educational inequality in India—engaging the ways these relationships may differ by social class and gender.  My dissertation takes a mixed-methods approach by analyzing survey data from the 2005 India Human Development Survey as well as qualitative interviews and focus groups.  In addition to my dissertation work, I am also examining hip hop as a space for a social movement for marginalized youth globally; specifically, engaging the conflict between hip hop identity and its perception in formal school settings.

 
 

 

 

 

Scott Albrecht

salbrecht@socy.umd.edu

 

Previous Degrees:

B.S. in Sociology, Brigham Young University

 

Specialty Areas:

Demography and Development

 

I am interested in the forces of economic development, inequality, and poverty reduction in the developing world, especially Latin America.  Although I have primarily examined job structures and age distributions, I am also interested in immigration and the role of multilateral development institutions in this context.

 
 

 

 

Chris Andrews

candrews@socy.umd.edu

 

Previous Degrees:

B.A. in Psychology & Sociology, Miami University, Oxford, 2000

M.A. in Sociology, University of Maryland, College Park, 2003

 

Specialty Areas:

Social Psychology and Stratification

 

My current interests focus on the economy, and specifically on the nature of jobs and work in the U.S. In particular, I have been studying how technology affects work and workers in our growing service economy, and how the nature of work in general has been changing as new technology becomes integrated in the workplace. I am also very interested in the growing role consumers play in the economy as active participants in the provision of goods and services, most notably being the increasing role of 'self-service' in the retail and service industries. Both of these interests are reflected in my current dissertation research, which examines the ‘self-service’ trend in retailing. Other interests include economic sociology, the sociology of emotions, the labor process, and the measurement and conceptualization of social class.

 

Dissertation Title:

“‘Do-It-Yourself’: Self-Checkouts and the Rise of the Self-Service Economy”

 

 

 

 

 

Lester Andrist

landrist@socy.umd.edu

 

Previous Degrees:

B.A. in Sociology, University of Minnesota-Twin Cities, 2001

 

Specialty Areas:

Demography and Comparative

 

I am interested in power--how it often inconspicuously operates, how it manifests, and how it is reproduced. I have approached the issue on several fronts. I have joined Sonal Desai in trying to shed some light on early age at marriage among women in India. In Taipei, I conducted in-depth interviews with human resource managers of medium- and large-size companies in order to discern the mechanics of an informal job market, and I have explored the dark side of social capital as it relates to women's autonomy in India.

 

M.A. Thesis Title:

"Social Capital's Dark Side and Patriarchy in India."

 

 

 

 

 

Zeynep Atalay

zatalay@socy.umd.edu

 

Previous Degrees:

B.A. in Sociology, Bogazici University (Turkey), 2002

M.A. in Critical & Cultural Studies, Bogazici University (Turkey), 2004

 

Specialty Areas:

Theory and Comparative

 
 

 

 

 

Manjistha Banerji

mbanerji@socy.umd.edu

 

Previous Degrees:

B.A. in Economics, University of Delhi (India), 1997

M.A. in Economics, Delhi School of Economics, University of Delhi (India), 1999

 

Specialty Areas:

Demography and Development

 

My primary interest areas are in the field of social and family demography with a particular focus on issues of gender autonomy and empowerment. Secondary interest areas are sociological theory (particularly those around race, gender and nationalism), discourses around development, sociology of education and statistical methods. Previous research work includes an examination of the barriers faced by children from socio-economically disadvantaged groups in accessing education in India and background research for the Chronic Poverty Report 2004-05 (CPRC, UK)

 
 

 

 

 

Kendra Barber

kbarber@socy.umd.edu

 

Previous Degrees:

B.A. in Sociology & Afro-American Studies, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, 2007

 

Specialty Areas:

Stratification

 

My broad interests are educational inequalities, particularly in inner city schools. as well as the racial achievement gap. I am also interested in how predominantly African American churches are presently addressing educational inequalities, given the historical role they have played in education and social justice movements. I have done previous research which examined the roles a few Black Baptist churches in Durham, NC, played in raising the achievement of black students.

 

  

 

 

 

Amy Baxter

abaxter@socy.umd.edu

 

Previous Degrees:

B.A. in Sociology & Psychology, University of Akron

 

Specialty Areas:

Social Psychology and Theory

 

I am interested in studying Group Processes using experimental methods.  Currently I am investigating factors that contribute to the wage and promotion gap between men and women and also exploring how gender and race interact with mental illness.

 
 

 

 

 

Melissa Buckmiller

mbuckmiller@socy.umd.edu

 

Previous Degrees:

B.A. in Sociology, Duke University

 

Specialty Areas:

Gender, Work and Family and Social Psychology

 

As an undergraduate, I focused my Honors thesis on the interplay between femininity and masculinity in Division I female athletes competing at Duke University. I was interested in the possible dissonance female athletes may experience in trying to achieve different roles that are often very distinct. My current research interests is to continue a focus on gender, but to broaden it through exploring other connections and correlations between class, race, and family roles.

 

 

 

 

 

Michelle Beadle

mbeadle@socy.umd.edu

 

Previous Degrees:

B.A. in Sociology, Ursinus College, 2003

M.A. in Sociology, George Washington University, 2006

 

Specialty Areas:

Demography and Theory

 

I am interested in examining how individuals and groups within marginal communities cope with the economic, mental, physical, and sociopolitical burdens of the HIV/AIDS pandemic. In the absence of adequate health care resources, I am interested in exploring the extent to which marginal groups build independent, viable health support systems. In addition, I ask, how do marginalized group disproportionately affected by AIDS simultaneously resist their subjugation within national and international social structures?

 
 

 

 

Ramu Bishwakarma

rbishwa@socy.umd.edu

 

Previous Degrees:

B.S. in Business, Tribhuvan University (Nepal), 1999

MBA, Tribhuvan University (Nepal), 2003

M.A. in Sociology, University of Arkansas, 2006

 

Specialty Areas:

Demography and Development

 

My research interest is in human capital in developing countries. Specifically, I am interested on children’s health differentiation along the line of gender, caste/race, class, education and income; and how the variation of health status in childhood affects life aspirations and motivation during the youth/adult. My research also links to the cultural structure and its effect on shaping the agency of the children to succeed in their adulthood.

 

 

 

 

 

Christopher Boccanfuso

cboccanfuso@socy.umd.edu

 

Previous Degrees:

B.A. in Sociology, St. Joseph's University, 2002

M.A. in Sociology, University of Maryland, College Park, 2005

 

Specialty Areas:

Stratification and Gender, Work, and Family

 
 

 

 

 

Kimberly Bonner

kbonner@socy.umd.edu

 

Previous Degrees:

B.A. in Sociology & African-American Studies, University of South Carolina, 2002

 

Specialty Areas:

Military and Theory

 

 

 

 

Kirby Bowling

kbowling@socy.umd.edu

 

Previous Degrees:

B.A. in Sociology, Iowa State University, 1996

M.S. in Sociology, University of Texas at San Antonio, 2002

 

Specialty Areas:

Military and Social Psychology

 

My specialty areas are Social Psychology and Military Sociology.  In addition to assisting in Intro to Sociology and Statistics, I have developed and taught Sociology of Combat, a micro-level approach to understanding combat over time by integrating social-psychology and organizational theory into the analysis of the warrior in conflict.  My current research topics revolve around Reserve and Guard issues relating to deployments, satisfaction, retention, family and support infrastructure, small group dynamics and leadership.

 

 

 

 

 

Stephanie Burres

sburres@socy.umd.edu

 

Previous Degrees:

B.A. in Sociology, Humboldt State University

 

Specialty Areas:

Military and Theory

 

So far, my research interests have centered around doing whatever it takes to get a good grade!  At Maryland, I hope to examine issues relating to military families and post-military transitions.

 

 

 

 

 

Guillermo Cantor

gcantor@socy.umd.edu

 

Previous Degrees:

Licenciado in Political Science, National University of Rosario (Argentina), 1995
Masters in Economic Sociology, National University of General San Martin (Argentina), 2001

 

Specialty Areas:

Development and Comparative

 
 

 

 

Nihal Celik

ncelik@socy.umd.edu

 

Previous Degrees:

B.A. in Sociology, Koc University (Turkey), 2003)

M.S. in Social Sciences, Middle East Technical University (Turkey), 2005

 

Specialty Areas:

Stratification and Theory

 

 

 

 

 

Chaowen Chan

cchan@socy.umd.edu

 

Previous Degrees:

B.A. in Sociology & Electrical Engineering, National Taiwan University, 2001

 

Specialty Areas:

Demography

 

I am interested on individual transition within and/or between family- how individual wellbeing could be measured in terms of poverty and material hardship, how different family composition might result in residential segregation by race, and how intergenerational characteristics might influence the tendency toward co-residence. 

M.A. Thesis Title:
"Are leavers and returners different? Co-residence Between Parents and Adult Children."

 
 

 

 

 

Valerie Chepp

vchepp@socy.umd.edu

 

Previous Degrees:

B.A. in Sociology & Women's Studies, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 2001

M.A. in Social Sciences, University of Chicago, 2004

 

Specialty Areas:

Theory and Comparative

 

My primary interests, while constantly evolving, lie predominantly in the areas of feminist and social theory, media and popular culture, and African American studies.  Most recently I have become interested in exploring different methodological approaches to ethnography, particularly how sociologists can use sounds (ranging from everyday conversation to oral histories to song lyrics) to create analyses about the social world, as well as how ethnographers and sociologists can employ different narrative strategies for documenting the social world.

M.A. Thesis Title:
"'Here's to a New Breed of Broad, Yeah We Like It Raw!' Black Feminism, Third Wave Feminism and the Sexual Politics of Contemporary Women's Rap Music"

 
 

 

 

 

Aleia Clark

alclark@socy.umd.edu

 

Previous Degrees:

B.A. in Sociology & French, Spelman College, 2005

 

Specialty Areas:

Stratification

 

 

 

 

 

Molly Clever

mclever@socy.umd.edu

 

Previous Degrees:

B.A. in Sociology, University of Pittsburgh

 

Specialty Areas:

Comparative

 

An an undergraduate, I focused on race, class, and gender stratification and women's studies. I recently completed research on barriers facing sexual/gender minorities in the health care system. My current research is on the growth and decline of civilizations with a focus on demographic changes.

 

 

 

 

 

Michelle Corbin

mcorbin@socy.umd.edu

 

Previous Degrees:

B.S. in Psychology & Women's Studies, Western Michigan University, 1997

M.S. in Clinical Psychology, Eastern Michigan University, 1999

 

Specialty Areas:

Theory and Gender, Work, and Family

 

 

 

 

Zsuzsa Daczo

zdaczo@socy.umd.edu


Previous Degrees:
B.A. in Physics, Berzsenyi Daniel College, Szombathely (Hungary) 1994
M.A. in Society and Politics, Central European University, Warsaw (Poland) 1996
M.A. in European Studies, Katholieke Universiteit, Leuven (Belgium) 1997
 
Specialty Areas:
Comparative Historical Sociology and Demography

 

 

 

Paul Dean

pdean@socy.umd.edu

 

Previous Degrees:

AAS in Business, Jamestown Community College, New York, 2000

B.A. in Sociology, Binghamton University, 2003

M.A. in Sociology, University of Maryland, College Park, 2007

 

Specialty Areas:

Political Economy; Stratification; Theory

 

My primary areas of interest are social inequality, political economy, and social theory. I am particularly interested in understanding the mechanisms by which social class produces inequality, and how theory and measurement influence our understanding of class. In collaboration with Dr. Bart Landry, my current research focuses on intersectional analyses of the black middle class by using qualitative research in PG County.  My other area of research focuses on political economic and cultural processes in ethical consumption, corporate social responsibility, and socially responsible investing.

 

 

 

 

Karin Modesto DeAngelis

kdeangelis@socy.umd.edu

 

Previous Degrees:

B.A. in Sociology, University of Chicago, 2000

 

Specialty Areas:

Military and Gender, Work, and Family

 

My fascination with military life began while growing up in a military family and living in such exotic locations as Hawaii and Texas.  Being a glutton for punishment, I attended Officer Training School and “crossed into the blue” by spending six years on active duty in the Air Force.  Upon separation from active duty, I joined Maryland to focus on military families, particularly dual-military couples, and diversity in the military.  My current research focuses on organizational change, institutional culture, and gender status processes at the military service academies. 

 

M.A. Thesis Title:

"Tokens and Organizational Change: A Content Analysis of Alumni Response to the U.S. Air Force Academy’s Agenda for Change."

 

 

 

 

Theo DeJager

ldejager@socy.umd.edu

 

Previous Degrees:

B.A. in Sociology, Rhodes University (South Africa), 1996

M.A. in International Affairs (African Studies), Center for International Studies, Ohio University, Athens, 1999

M.A. in Sociology, Ohio University, Athens, 2003

 

Specialty Areas:

Theory and Comparative

 

My primary interests include issues of consumption (particularly in the developing world), globalization (the spread of neo-liberal capitalism), poverty, and racial/ethnic identity formation. Secondary interests include deviance, criminological theory, and social marginality. I am particularly interested in processes of democratization in Africa, and in the related proliferation of forms of consumption typically associated with neo-liberal capitalist expansion.

 

 

 

 

 

Ismail Demirezen

idemirezen@socy.umd.edu

 

Previous Degrees:

B.A. Selcuk University (Turkey), 1997

M.A. in Religious Studies, Catholic University, 2001

M.A. in Sociology, Catholic University, 2002

 

Specialty Areas:

Comparative and Theory

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Diana Elliott

delliott@socy.umd.edu

 

Previous Degrees:

B.A. in Anthropology & French, Tufts University, 1994

M.A. in Sociology, University of Maryland, College Park, 2005

 

Specialty Areas:

Social Psychology and Gender, Work, and Family

 

 

 

 

 

 

Mehmet Atif Ergun

mergun@socy.umd.edu

 

Previous Degrees:

B.A. in Psychology, Bogazici University (Turkey), 2002

M.S. in Women's Studies, Towson University, 2005

 

Specialty Areas:

Theory, Stratification, and Gender

 

My teaching and research interests include sociological aspects of human sexuality, social context of women's sexuality, sexual deviance, ethnic conflicts and women's status, and neocolonialism.

 

 

 

 

 

Dawn Fitzelle

dfitzelle@socy.umd.edu

 

Previous Degrees:

 

Specialty Areas:

 

 

 

 

 

Anthony Hatch

ahatch@socy.umd.edu

 

Previous Degrees:

A.B. in Philosophy, Dartmouth College, 1999

M.A. in Sociology, University of Maryland, College Park, 2003

 

Specialty Areas:

Theory and Social Psychology

 

My current research interests lie at the intersections of critical race theory, sociology of health and medicine, and social studies of science and technology. I held an American Sociological Association and National Institute of Mental Health Minority Fellowship from 2004-2007. Prior to graduate school, I was intimately involved with multiple research projects in the behavioral sciences and public health education.  I am committed to producing social research that illuminates and fights conditions of social injustice.

My dissertation investigates how biomedical researchers, government health agencies, and pharmaceutical corporations have used social categories of race in the scientific study of a new biomedical and social construction called “the metabolic syndrome.”  I draw on insights from critical race studies, science and technology studies, and Foucault’s conception of “biopower” to argue that the metabolic syndrome has become a site of racial formation and new marker of racial inequalities.

 

 

 

 

Shinta Herwantoro Hernandez

shernandez@socy.umd.edu

 

Previous Degrees:

B.A. in Psychology, Brandeis University, 2000)

M.P.P. in Public Policy, Georgetown Public Policy Institute, 2002

 

Specialty Areas:

Demography and Gender, Work, and Family

 

My research interests include child and adolescent reproductive health, education, poverty, employment, and parental involvement. I worked at the Urban Institute's Labor, Human Services, and Population Center where I conducted quantitative and qualitative research studies on marriage and family, teenage reproductive health, adult education, and the No Child Left Behind Act. I also worked at Westat Inc. executing interviews with child service agencies throughout the nation to examine child abuse and neglect cases. I also teach a number of undergraduate sociology courses.

 

 

 

 

Wesley Huey

whuey@socy.umd.edu

 

Previous Degrees:

B.S. United States Naval Academy, 1987

MBA, Jacksonville University, 1996

 

Specialty Areas:

Military and Social Psychology

 

I am a career Naval Officer pursuing a PhD in Sociology. Upon degree I will report to the US Naval Academy in Annapolis, MD to teach Leadership as a "Permanent Military Professor" in the Department of Leadership, Ethics, and Law. I am a father of three young children and enjoy the time with my family that graduate school affords.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Nathan Jurgenson

njurgenson@socy.umd.edu

 

Previous Degrees:

B.A. in Sociology, Northern Illinois University-DeKalb, 2004

M.A. in Sociology, Northern Illinois University-DeKalb, 2007

 

Specialty Areas:

Theory and Social Psychology

 

I'm currently enjoying the theoretical possibilities provided by the bottom-up turn the Internet has taken -what has come to be known as Web 2.0. Sociological theory (especially postmodern thought) orients how we can understand what Web 2.0 means, and, in turn, Web 2.0 provides fertile ground to rethink Sociological theory in areas such as knowledge production, the presentation of self, consumption, authority, exploitation and so many others.

 

 

 

 

 

Nazneen Kane

nkane@socy.umd.edu

 

Previous Degrees:

B.S. in Psychology, Brigham Young University, 2001

M.S. in Sociology, Brigham Young University, 2004

 

Specialty Areas:

Theory and Gender, Work, and Family

 

I am interested in engaging with critical social theories through a sociology of knowledge lens. My thesis analyzed closely the work of a French Anarchist, Georges Sorel, particularly at the role of individual psychical myths in producing collective social transformation. In my dissertation work, I hope to further explore the nature of and processes of transformative knowledge.

 
 

 

 

Sarah Kendig

skendig@socy.umd.edu

 

Previous Degrees:

B.S. in Psychology, James Madison University, 2002

M.A. in Sociology, University of Maryland, College Park, 2007

 

Specialty Areas:

Demography and Social Psychology

 

My broad areas of interest include fertility, family, health, social psychology, and social inequality. I am particularly interested in the ways in which gender inequality impacts women's lives. My specific research interests include adolescence, women's health and bodies, and violence against women.  I am currently examining racial differences in the role of self-evaluation processes in the likelihood of pregnancy among adolescent girls.  

M.A. Thesis Title:

"Family Structure Differences in Maternal Time with Children: Disparate Social Structural Locations or Different Propensities Towards Mothering"

 

 

 

 

Stacey Keogh

skeogh@socy.umd.edu

 

Previous Degrees:

BA in History / BA in Spanish, George Fox University

MA in Sociology, University of New Mexico

 

Specialty Areas:

Comparative and Theory

 

A California native, I graduated from George Fox University (OR) with a double BA in History and Spanish, and later earned an MA in Sociology from the University of New Mexico. My MA thesis is based off of ethnographic data collected in El Salvador and Honduras and looks at contemporary methods of faith-based community organizing in Central America. My research interests include comparative political sociology, social theory, the sociology of religion and Latin America. I recently returned from Guatemala where I taught a course for undergraduates called, “Religion and Social Justice in Central America.”

 

Thesis

“Popular Protest to Community Organizing: Evolving Methods of Mobilization in the Central American Catholic Church, 1960-2006”

 

 

 

 

Megan Klein Hattori

mklein@socy.umd.edu

 

Previous Degrees:

B.A. in International Relations, American University, 2000

M.A. in Sociology, University of Maryland, College Park, 2004

 

Specialty Areas:

Demography and Social Psychology

 

I am interested in how young adults develop trust and commitment to their partners in a context where sexual relationships involve managing substantial risk. In addition to the hazards of union formation faced by young adults in the U.S., developing committed and trusting relationships is additionally complex for youth living with the daily realities and risks of the AIDS epidemic in Africa. I am using in-depth interviews and survey data to investigate how young adults develop committed and trusting relationships in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Mary Kniskern

mkniskern@socy.umd.edu

 

Previous Degrees:

B.S. in Elementary Education, Brigham Young University, 1988

M.A. in Leadership in Teaching, College of Notre Dame of Maryland, 2004

 

Specialty Areas:

Gender, Work and Family and Social Psychology

 

In my research, I intend to examine post-divorce parenting issues, the impact of parenting behaviors on children's well-being and success, and social support for positive parenting.

 

 

 

 

Veena Kulkarni

vkulkarni@socy.umd.edu

 

Previous Degrees:

B.A. in Economics, University of Delhi (India)

M.A. in Economics, Delhi School of Economics, University of Delhi (India)

 

Specialty Areas:

Demography and Development

 

My broad areas of interests comprise studying social and economic inequalities and the interaction between them with a specific focus on international migration, labor market outcomes, education, health, infrastructure. Previous work include assessment of economic viability of health insurance programs in rural India, examining the relationship between education inequality and affirmative action in India, validity of anthropometric indicators to measure poverty in India, studying the role of infrastructure in school enrollment in rural Nicaragua and Peru. My current research projects focus on the determinants of English language acquisition and intergenerational mobility in the United States for people of foreign birth and descent. In my dissertation I investigate the factors that are associated with the economic outcomes of employment and earnings in the United States and how these factors vary across the major Asian ethnicities by gender, nativity status, and relative to native born non-Hispanic whites at both the individual and household levels.

 

Dissertation title:

"Asians in the United States Labor Market: Winners or Losers?"

 

 

 

 

 

Chang Won Lee

clee@socy.umd.edu

 

Previous Degrees:

B.S. in Economics, Soongsil University (Korea), 1998

M.A. in Sociology, Sogang University (Korea), 2001

M.A. in Sociology, University of Maryland, College Park, 2006

 

Specialty Areas:

Stratification and Development

 

My primary areas of interest are inequality and migration, which stem from my interests in the life of minority groups (by race, gender, and class) in modern societies. I am particularly interested in comparative patterns of income inequality in East Asia and Latin America: for example, how South Korea maintains a low level of income inequality, why China experiences rapid increase in income inequality, and why income inequality remains high in Latin America. The impact of globalization and local institutions (not only as a cause and but also a consequence of income inequality) would be of primary concern in this comparative study. I am also interested in race relations, immigration, and transnationalism in the United States and South Korea.

 
 

 

 

Emily Mann

emann@socy.umd.edu

 

Previous Degrees:

B.A. in Psychology, Boston College, 1998

M.A. in Women's Studies, University College Dublin (Ireland), 1999

 

Specialty Areas:

Theory and Comparative

 

My research interests lie at the intersections of gender and sexuality studies and political sociology, although my training cuts across a range of areas, including social theory, comparative-historical sociology, and qualitative research methodologies.

 

In my dissertation, I examine how teenage sexuality has been problematized and regulated both historically and in the context of the contemporary United States, with particular attention paid to the intersectional dynamics of race, class, and gender. Drawing on federal and local government documents and in-depth interviews with state and nonstate actors, I explore the myriad ways in which state and nonstate actors make sense of and attempt to regulate teenagers’ sexualities and, more specifically, how nonstate actors working in nonprofit organizations negotiate the directives of social policy in the provision of sexual and reproductive healthcare and educational services to the young people they serve. Ultimately, I argue that the social regulation of teenage sexualities is one way in which sexual citizens are created.

 

 

 

 

 

Heather Marsh

hmarsh@socy.umd.edu

 

Previous Degrees:

B.A. in Sociology & Philosophy, St. Lawrence University, 2003

 

Specialty Areas:

Theory and Stratification

 

My overarching interest is theory especially as it relates to the areas of science and technology studies, social geographies, sex and gender and the sociology of knowledge.  I have been exploring the “greening of technoscience” in the form of green buildings to explore how sustainable buildings have become ontological sites that have material affects.  Current research focuses on the expanding discourse of green architecture and design to explore questions surrounding healthy bodies and healthy communities.

 

I am currently working on my M.A. Thesis regarding the meanings that give shape to sustainability and sustainable communities.  How do individuals incorporate sustainable building and in some cases, sustainable reconstruction after natural disasters, into narratives of community life?  I am particularly interested in the ways in which the green

(re)built environment provides opportunities to explore how individuals make sense out of sustainability and green technology as tools for rebirth, healing, stabilization and community revitalization. 

 

 

 

 

Carolina Martin

cmartin@socy.umd.edu

 

Previous Degrees:

B.A. in Cultural Studies, McGill University (Quebec), 1997

M.A. in Sociology, George Washington University, 2005

 

Specialty Areas:

Theory and Comparative

 

Broadly speaking, my interests lie in power relations-- power inequalities, the abuse of power, and struggles against domination. Currently I am working on theories and politics of resistance, with a focus on forms of “everyday resistance”. I am particularly intrigued by what have been characterized as “projects of autonomy” as challenges to political and economic structures, such as worker factory-takeovers, squatter movements, and community barter economies. Other interests include sociology of knowledge, anarchist theory, self-help, and the state monopoly of violence.

 

 

 

 

 

Brittany McGill

bmcgill@socy.umd.edu

 

Previous Degrees:

B.A. in Sociology and Women's Studies, Georgetown University, 2001

MPP in Social Policy, Georgetown Public Policy Institute, 2004

 

Specialty Areas:

Demography and Gender, Work, and Family

 

 

 

 

 

Nanae Nakamoto
nnakamoto@socy.umd.edu

Previous Degree:
B.A. in Policy Science, Ritsumeikan University (Japan), 2006

Specialty Areas:
Demography and Social Psychology

 

My primary interest is social psychology and demography, with a focus on issues of immigration. I was taking undergraduate classes at Maryland last 1 1/2 years after earning BA in Policy Science in Japan. I like to travel a lot and am interested in learning languages (especially Arabic and Spanish).

 

 

 

 

Amber Nelson

anelson@socy.umd.edu

 

Previous Degrees:

B.A. in Sociology & English, University of Nebraska at Lincoln, 2001

M.A. in Sociology, University of Maryland, College Park, 2007

 

Specialty Areas:

Theory and Social Psychology

 

My theoretical interests include sociology of knowledge, in particular Sociology of Scientific Knowledge (SSK), and feminist theories of bodies and embodiment. I enjoy reading theories that can shed light on medicine, science, the body and experiences or embodiments of trauma. My master's thesis research was on the scientific controversy of whether or not adolescents should be prescribed antidepressants, and the risks and benefits of doing so. I conducted discourse analysis of the FDA hearings which were convened to address the controversy that adolescents were having suicidal and homicidal side effects to antidepressants. My dissertation research will be an ethnographic study of community based residential treatment care for youth; including their various approaches to mental health --emotional and behavioral interventions. I am interested in how trauma is embodied by youth and how society responds.

 

 

 

 

Kyle Anne Nelson

knelson@socy.umd.edu

 

Previous Degrees:

B.A. in Sociology & Spanish, Colgate University, New York, 1996)

MPH, George Washington University School of Public Health and Health Services, 2000

M.A. in Sociology, University of Maryland, College Park, 2006

 

Specialty Areas:

Stratification and Demography