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Harvard Sociology News
Lawrence D. Bobo was quoted in the New York Times op-ed piece "Blacks Ezra Vogel, Henry Ford II research professor of the social sciences emeritus, was one of four notables to receive a Centennial Medal, the GSAS alumni/ae achievement award. To read his comments, see the summer 2008 issue of the GSAS Alumni Quarterly, Colloquy. Helen B. Marrow (Ph.D. in Sociology and Social Policy, '07) has won the American Sociological Association's 2008 Dissertation Award. Helen's thesis, "Southern Becoming: Immigrant Incorporation and Race Relations in the Rural U.S. South," will be formally recognized at the 103rd ASA Annual Meeting, to be held in Boston Aug 1-4, 2008. Her dissertation committee consisted of Mary Waters, Chair; Jennifer Hochschild, and William Julius Wilson. This is the second consecutive year that one of our graduate students was awarded this distinction. Wendy Roth (Ph.D. 2006) received the prize in 2007 for her dissertation "Caribbean Race and American Dreams: How Migration Shapes Dominicans’ and Puerto Ricans’ Racial Identities and Its Impact on Socioeconomic Mobility." Theda Skocpol was one of eight Harvard researchers elected to the National Academy of Sciences. See the May 1, 2008 issue of the Harvard Gazette. A conference on “The Moynihan Report Revisited: Lessons and Reflections after Four Decades” was held at Harvard from September 27-29. For a summary of the conference see the October 4 issue of the Harvard Gazette or visit the conference website to download or listen to podcasts of the talks and panels. Of related interest see "Forty Acres and a Gap in Wealth" (New York Times Op. Ed., November 18, 2007 by Henry Louis Gates. Bruce Western was highlighted in the January-February 2008 issue of Harvard Magazine. See "Harvard Portrait: Bruce Western". His research was also featured in the article Life Sentence (Ideas, Boston Globe, September 23, 2007) Lauren A. Rivera was quoted in the New York Times ("The Falling-Down Professions," Style, January 6, 2008) about her research and the decline in status of traditionally prestigious professions such as medicine and law. "Living in disadvantaged neighborhood equivalent to missing a year of school" (HarvardScience) discusses findings of a recent study led by Robert Sampson, with Patrick Sharkey of New York University and Stephen Raudenbush of the University of Chicago. On facebook, scholars link up with data (New York Times, December 17) features the facebook research project of collaborators Nicholas Christakis, Jason Kaufman, Marco Gonzalez, and Kevin Lewis and UCLA's Andreas Wimmer. Nicholas Christakis was profiled in the "Meeting the Minds" feature of the Boston Globe of November 12, 2007. His latest study on the spread of obesity through social networks has received widespread major coverage in the media, including New York Times, Washington Post, Chicago Tribune, and Boston Globe. Jason Kaufman and Matt Kaliner presented their research on understanding the forces behind the cultural and political divergence of Vermont and New Hampshire in a lecture sponsored by Harvard's Center for American Political Studies. See "Vermont and New Hampshire, geographic twins, cultural aliens" (Harvard University Gazette, November 1, 2007). Frank Dobbin is featured in an article in the New York Times, November 1, 2007. "Is There Room at the Top for Black Executives?". Orlando Patterson on Jena, O. J. and the Jailing of Black America (September 30, 2007 New York Times) was selected as one of the top 16 op-eds of 2007. Michele Lamont's book The Dignity of Working Men (2000) was discussed by columnist David Brooks in his opinion column in the New York Times on Tuesday, August 14. A podcast of an interview with Mary Waters, coeditor of "The New Americans: A Guide to Immigration since 1965" is featured in the Harvard University Press. 5 New Sociologists at Harvard. We are delighted to announce the successful recruitment of five new sociologists (Jason Beckfield, Kathryn Edin, Filiz Garip, Jocelyn Viterna, and Bruce Western) to our faculty ranks, effective July of 2007 Sociological Methods and Research (SMR), edited by Christopher Winship since 1995, has been ranked second in terms of its impact factor among social science methods journals and fourth among sociology journals, according to the 2006 Journal Citation Reports (JCR) data report conducted by Thomson Scientific. The impact factor measures the relative number of citations to articles published in a journal over the last two years. This year's score for SMR is 2.355, which is more than double the 2005 score of 1.032. Research by Frank Dobbin is highlighted in the May 7, 2007 edition of Time Magazine (Vol. 169 No. 19). "Employee Diversity Training Doesn't Work" looks at the effect diversity training has had on the racial and gender mix of top ranked companies. The cover article of the May-June 2007 issue of Harvard Magazine entitled "End of the Melting Pot? The new wave of immigrants presents new challenges" features the research of Professors Mary C. Waters, William Julius Wilson, and Helen Marrow (Ph.D. 2007).
"Do Immigrants Make Us Safer?" in the "Idea Lab" section of the New York Times Magazine (Sunday, December 3, 2006) which highlighted the work of several ASA sociologists, including Robert J. Sampson. Featured in the "Right Now" section of the September-October 2006 issue of Harvard Magazine, is "Latinos Nix Violence," an article by Robert J. Sampson. The September 14, 2006 issue of the Harvard Gazette featured research of Frank Dobbin. See Diversity training fails to boost minorities into management. "France shows its true colors" is the title of an Op-Ed piece by Michèle Lamont and Éloi Laurent published in the June 3, 2006 issue of the Boston Globe.
"A Poverty of the Mind" (New York Times Op-Ed March 26, 2006) by Orlando Patterson offers a cultural explanation for the disconnect of black youth from the American mainstream. Patterson spoke on National Public Radio's "The Op-Ed Pages" on Monday, March 27. Click here to listen. The March-April 2006 issue of Harvard Magazine featured graduate student Nathan Fosse's ongoing ethnographic study of sexual and romantic relationships of inner-city black men conducted with Michèle Lamont. (See Sex and the Inner City) in the "Right Now" section of the magazine's current issue.
Research by Robert J. Sampson and Stephen Raudenbush (University of Michigan) was highlighted in an article "The Cracks in 'Broken Windows'" published in the February 19, 2006 Ideas section of the Boston Globe. A new study conducted by Nicholas Christakis and Paul Allison of the University of Pennsylvania Department of Sociology highlights the importance of social networks and health. See February 16 Harvard Gazette article "Ties that Bind". The New York Times Book Review of January 8, 2006 contained a review essay "Being and Blackness" by Orlando Patterson. The essay reviewed We Who Are Dark: The Philosophical Foundations of Black Solidarity by Tommie Shelby and Creating Black Americans: African-American History and Its Meanings, 1619 to the Present by Nell Irvin Painter. Robert J. Sampson's article "Social Anatomy of Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Violence" (authored with Jeffrey D. Morenoff, and Stephen Raudenbush (American Journal of Public Health, 2005), was also featured as Surprising Social Factors Linked to Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Youth Violence by the Population Reference Bureau. See also the story Good Waves in the Ideas section of the Boston Globe, January 1, 2006. Updated: June 16, 2009 Back to top
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