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October 2019

Jennifer Earl

School of (520) 621-3296 [email protected] Tucson, Arizona 85721

Academic Positions

2012-Present Professor, School of Sociology, University of Arizona (and, by courtesy, Professor, School of Government and Public Policy, 2016-Present)

2011 Professor, Department of Sociology, University of California, Santa Barbara

2006-2011 Associate Professor, Department of Sociology, University of California, Santa Barbara

2006-2009 Director, Center for Information Technology and Society, University of California, Santa Barbara

2002-2006 Assistant Professor, Department of Sociology (with courtesy appointment in Law and Society), University of California, Santa Barbara

Education

University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona: Ph.D. in Sociology. 2002. Dissertation: The Banner vs. the Baton: Explaining Protest Policing in the United States from 1960-1975. Committee: Calvin Morrill (Co-Chair), Sarah Soule (Co-Chair), Ronald Breiger, Elisabeth Clemens, and Mayer Zald

University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona: M.A. in Sociology. 1998. M.A. Thesis: Legalized Inequality: Gays, Lesbians, and Deserts in the American Legal System. Committee: Douglas McAdam (Co-Chair), Calvin Morrill (Co-Chair) and Sarah Soule

Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois: B.S. in Human Development & Social Policy. 1996. Graduated with Highest Distinction. Minor in Sociological Studies. Certificate in Undergraduate Leadership. Senior Project Advisor: Carol Heimer

Research Focuses: Social Movements; Internet, Technology and Society; Sociology of Law

Additional Teaching Expertise: Statistics; Methods

Major External Grants and Fellowships (Over $1.25m in post-PhD grants)

2014-2017 National Science Foundation Regular Award #SES-1426721. “Police

1 October 2019

Professionalism and Changes in Police Protocols.” Funded by Law and Social Sciences, Sociology, and Science of Organizations Programs. $269,775. Includes an additional REU: $10,000 awarded for 2015-2016.

2013-2017 John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation. “Youth Activism Project.” Funded through a sub-contract with Mills College for participation in the MacArthur Network on Youth and Participatory Politics. $426,309.

2012-2015 National Science Foundation Regular Award # SES-1154896. “Collaborative Research: Collective Action Dynamics in the U.S., 1960-1995.” Funded by Science of Organizations, Political Science, and Sociology Programs. Lead site for a collaborative three site project. $399,999 across all three sites, including University of Arizona ($159,398, Award # SES-1154896, Lead Site), University of California, Irvine ($143,494, # SES-1155008), and University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill ($97,107, Award # SES-1153797).

2006-2012 National Science Foundation CAREER Award # SES-0547990. “The Internet, Activism and Social Movements.” Funded by Sociology Program and Ethics and Values of Science Engineering and Technology Cluster. 2006-2012. Included five REUs. $465,524.

2001-2002 National Science Foundation Dissertation Improvement Grant. Funded by Sociology Program. $7,403.

1997-2000 National Science Foundation Graduate Student Fellowship. Funded through Sociology Program. $15,000 and tuition and fees each year for 1997-2000.

Major Awards and Honors

William F. Ogburn Career Achievement Award, Communication, Information Technology and Media Sociology Section of the American Sociological Association, 2017. There are two awards given each year, one acknowledging lifetime achievement (for near retirement scholars) and one acknowledging substantial career achievement (for non-retiring scholars).

Elected member of the Sociological Research Association (SRA), 2016. SRA is a honor society for sociological researchers and inducts a maximum of 14 new members per year. Estimates of SRA membership suggest that there are less than 450 current members in this elite association.

Honorable Mention for the 2013 CITASA Book Award, from the Communication and Information Technologies section of the American Sociological Association. This award recognizes the top book(s) from the prior two calendar years.

Chancellor’s Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Research, 2010-2011. University of California, Santa Barbara. This award recognizes one faculty member annually for an exceptional record of mentoring undergraduates in research.

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NSF CAREER Award winner, 2006-2011. (See extramural funding section above for more details.)

Plous Award for 2005-2006 Academic Year, University of California, Santa Barbara. This award recognizes the most outstanding Assistant Professor in the College of Letters and Sciences at

Research Cited More than 100 Times (using Google Scholar, as of October 24, 2019; in order by citation count—15 publications with over 100 citations; Total citations: 5,679; H index: 27; i10 Index: 47; total: 1,566)

Earl, Jennifer and Katrina Kimport. 2011. Digitally Enabled Social Change: Activism in the Internet Age. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. 1,156 citations.

Hardback has been through two printings; Paperback released in Fall 2013. Reviewed in American Journal of Sociology, Social Forces, Mobilization, New Media and Society, Media and Culture, Choice, and Interface. It was the subject of the inaugural Essay Dialogues on Mobilizing Ideas Blog and received an honorable mention for the 2013 CITASA Book Award (from the Communication and Information Technologies section of the American Sociological Association).

Earl, Jennifer, Andrew Martin, John D. McCarthy and Sarah A. Soule. 2004. “The Use of Newspapers in Studying Collective Action.” Annual Review of Sociology 30: 65-80. http://www.jstor.org/stable/29737685. 939 citations. 393 Web of Science.

Earl, Jennifer. 2003. “Tanks, Tear Gas and Taxes: Toward a Theory of Movement Repression.” Sociological Theory 21(1): 44-68. http://www.jstor.org/stable/3108608. 386 citations. 162 Web of Science.

Earl, Jennifer, Sarah A. Soule and John D. McCarthy. 2003 “Protest under Fire? Explaining the Policing of Protest.” American Sociological Review 68(4): 581-606. http://www.jstor.org/stable/1519740. 352 citations. 149 Web of Science.

REPRINTED in McAdam, Doug and David A. Snow. 2010. Readings on Social Movements: Origins, Dynamics, and Outcomes. New York: Oxford University Press. Pp. 547-567.

Earl, Jennifer. 2011. “Political Repression: Iron Fists, Velvet Gloves, and Diffuse Control” Annual Review of Sociology 37: 261–284. http://www.jstor.org/stable/41288608. 218 citations. 89 Web of Science.

Earl, Jennifer. 2004. “The Cultural Consequences of Social Movements.” Pp. 508-530 in The Blackwell Companion to Social Movements edited by David A. Snow, Sarah A. Soule and Hanspeter Kriesi. Malden, MA: Blackwell. 216 citations.

Earl, Jennifer and Alan Schussman. 2003. “The New Site of Activism: On-line Organizations, Movement Entrepreneurs, and the Changing Location of Decision-

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Making.” Research in Social Movements, Conflicts and Change 24: 155-187. 196 citations. 64 Web of Science.

Earl, Jennifer, Katrina Kimport, Greg Prieto, Carly Rush, and Kimberly Reynoso. 2010. “Changing the World One Webpage at a Time: Conceptualizing and Explaining ‘Internet Activism” Mobilization 15(4):425-446. http://www.metapress.com/content/W03123213LH37042. 168 citations. 68 Web of Science.

Earl, Jennifer and Katrina Kimport. 2009. “Movement Societies and Digital Protest: Fan Activism and Other Non-Political Protest Online” Sociological Theory 23(3): 220-243. http://stx.sagepub.com/content/27/3/220. 148 citations. 43 Web of Science.

Earl, Jennifer and Sarah A. Soule. 2006. “Seeing Blue: A Police-Centered Explanation of Protest Policing” Mobilization 11(2): 145-164. (Lead article) http://www.metapress.com/content/ U1WJ8W41N301627U. 145 citations. 67 Web of Science.

Soule, Sarah A. and Jennifer Earl. 2001. “The Enactment of State Level Hate Crime Law in the United States: Intrastate and Interstate Factors.” Sociological Perspectives 44: 281-305. http://ssc.sagepub.com/content/24/3/362. 138 citations. 55 Web of Science.

Soule, Sarah A. and Jennifer Earl. 2005. “A Movement Society Evaluated: Collective Protest in the United States, 1960-1986.” Mobilization 10(3): 345-364. http://www.metapress.com/content/730350353753L022. 138 citations. 57 Web of Science.

Earl, Jennifer. 2006. “Pursuing Social Change Online: The Use of Four Protest Tactics on the Internet.” Computer Review 24(3): 362-377. http://ssc.sagepub.com/content/24/3/362. 119 citations. 47 Web of Science.

Earl, Jennifer. 2000. “Methods, Movements and Outcomes: Methodological Difficulties in the Study of Extra-Movement Outcomes.” Research in Social Movements, Conflicts and Change 22: 3-25. (Lead article) 116 citations.

Earl, Jennifer, Heather McKee Hurwitz, Analicia Mejia Mesinas, Margaret Tolan, and Ashley Arlotti. 2013. “This Protest Will Be Tweeted: Twitter and Protest Policing during the Pittsburgh G20.” Information, Communication & Society 16(4): 459-478. 115 citations. 54 Web of Science.

Additional Books and Special Issues (Google Scholar citations: http://tinyurl.com/Earl-cites)

Earl, Jennifer and Deana Rohlinger, eds. 2017. Social Movements and Media. Emerald Studies in Media and Communication, volume 14. UK: Emerald Publishing. (Reviewed in Mobilization.)

Earl, Jennifer and Katrina Kimport, eds. 2014. Special issue on 2013 ASA Annual Meetings.

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Information, Communication & Society. 17(4).

Reprinted as: Earl, Jennifer and Katrina Kimport, eds. 2014. Current Research on Information Technologies and Society. New York: Taylor & Francis.

Earl, Jennifer and Deana Rohlinger, eds. 2012. Special issue on Media, Movements, and Political Change. Research in Social Movements, Conflicts, and Change, volume 33.

Earl, Jennifer, ed. 2006. Special Issue of Mobilization on Repression and the Social Control of Protest. Mobilization 11(2).

Additional Peer Reviewed Articles

Maher, Thomas V., Morgan Johnstonbaugh and Jennifer Earl. Forthcoming. “One Size Doesn’t Fit All: Connecting Views of Activism with Youth Activist Identification.” Forthcoming in Mobilization. Pre-prints available at: https://osf.io/preprints/socarxiv/qatgc/

Maher, Thomas V. and Jennifer Earl. Forthcoming. “Barrier or Booster? Digital Media, Social Networks, and Youth Micromobilization.” Forthcoming in Sociological Perspectives. Available OnlineFirst at: https://doi.org/10.1177/0731121419867697

Earl, Jennifer. 2019. “Audience, Persuasion, and Influence.” Forthcoming in Symposium on Political Communication and Social Movements in Information, Communication, & Society. Available online at: https://doi.org/10.1080/1369118X.2019.1568519

Reynolds-Stenson, Heidi and Jennifer Earl. 2018. “Clashes of Conscience: Explaining Counterdemonstration at Protests.” Mobilization 23(3): 263-284. http://mobilizationjournal.org/doi/pdf/10.17813/1086-671X-23-3-263

Elliott, Thomas and Jennifer Earl. 2018. “Online Protest Participation and the Digital Divide: Modeling the Effect of the Digital Divide on Online Petition Signing.” New Media & Society 20(2): 698-719. http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/1461444816669159

Earl, Jennifer. 2018. “Youth Protest’s New Tools and Old Concerns.” Contexts 17(2): 15-17. https://contexts.org/articles/resist-or-what/

Rohlinger, Deana and Jennifer Earl. 2018. “CITAMS at Thirty: Learning from the Past, Plotting a Course for the Future.” Emerald Studies in Media and Communication 17: 3-24. https://www.emeraldinsight.com/doi/pdfplus/10.1108/S2050-206020180000017001

Earl, Jennifer. 2018. “The Promise and Pitfalls of Big Data and Computational Studies of Politics.” Partecipazione e Conflitto 11(2): 484-496. In From Big Data in Politics to the Politics of Big Data Symposium, edited by Alice Mattoni and Elena Pavan. http://siba- ese.unisalento.it/index.php/paco/article/view/19559/16641

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Earl, Jennifer. 2018. “I Say It is the Moon: Taming the American Political Will?” PS: Political Science & Politics 51(1): 22-23. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S104909651700141X

Elliott, Thomas and Jennifer Earl. 2018. “Organizing the Next Generation: Youth Engagement with Activism Inside and Outside of Organizations.” Social Media + Society Jan-Mar: 1- 14. DOI: http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1177/2056305117750722

Maher, Thomas V., and Jennifer Earl. 2017. “Pathways to Contemporary Youth Protest: The Continuing Relevance of Family, Friends, and School for Youth Micromobilization.” Emerald Studies in Media and Communication 14: 55-87.

Elliott, Thomas, Jennifer Earl, and Thomas V. Maher. 2017. “Recruiting Inclusiveness: Intersectionality, Social Movements, and Youth Online.” Research in Social Movements, Conflicts, and Change 41: 279-311 http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/S0163- 786X20170000041019

Earl, Jennifer, Thomas V. Maher, and Thomas Elliott. 2017. “Youth, Activism, and Social Movements.” Sociology Compass 11(4): http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/soc4.12465.

Earl, Jennifer, and R. Kelly Garrett. 2017. “The New Information Frontier: Toward a More Nuanced View of Social Movement Communication.” Social Movement Studies 16(4): 479-493. https://doi.org/10.1080/14742837.2016.1192028.

Reprinted in: Fominaya, Cristina Flesher and Kevin Gillan, eds. 2019. Technology, Media and Social Movements. Routledge.

Earl, Jennifer, Lauren Copeland, and Bruce Bimber. 2017. “Routing around Organizations: Self- Directed Political Consumption.” Mobilization 22(2): 131-153. (Lead Article)

Earl, Jennifer. 2015. “CITASA: Intellectual Past and Future.” Information, Communication & Society 18(5): 478-491.

Earl, Jennifer. 2015. “The Future of Social Movement Organizations: The Waning Dominance of SMOs Online.” American Behavioral Scientist 59(1): 35-52.

Ring-Ramirez, Misty, Heidi Reynolds-Stenson, and Jennifer Earl. 2014. “Culturally Constrained Contention: Mapping the Meaning Structure of the Repertoire of Contention.” Mobilization 19(4): 489-504.

Earl, Jennifer and Jessica L. Beyer. 2014. “The Dynamics of Backlash Online: Anonymous and the Battle for WikiLeaks.” Research in Social Movements, Conflicts and Change 37: 207-233.

Earl, Jennifer. 2013. “Studying Online Activism: The Effects of Sampling Design on Findings.” Mobilization 18(4): 389-406. http://www.metapress.com/content/54261246R8W05865

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Earl, Jennifer. 2013. “Spreading the Word or Shaping the Conversation: “Prosumption” in Protest Websites.” Research in Social Movements, Conflicts, and Change 36: 3-38. (Lead Article)

Earl, Jennifer. 2012. “Private Protest? Public and Private Engagement Online.” Information, Communication & Society 15(4): 591-608.

Earl, Jennifer. 2011. “Protest Arrests and Future Protest Participation: The 2004 Republican National Convention Arrestees and the Effects of Repression.” Studies in Law, Politics, and Society 45: 141-173.

Earl, Jennifer. 2010. “The Dynamics of Protest-Related Diffusion on the Web.” Information, Communication & Society. 13(2): 209-225.

Earl, Jennifer and Sarah A. Soule. 2010. “The Impacts of Repression: The Effect of Police Presence and Action on Subsequent Protest Rates” Research in Social Movements, Conflicts, and Change, 30: 75-113.

Earl, Jennifer. 2009 “Information Access and Protest Policing Post-9/11: Studying the Policing of the 2004 Republican National Convention” American Behavioral Scientist 53(1): 44- 60. http://abs.sagepub.com/content/53/1/44

Earl, Jennifer. 2009 “When Bad Things Happen: Toward a Sociology of Trouble.” Sociology of Crime, Law, and Deviance 12: 231-254.

Earl, Jennifer and Katrina Kimport. 2008. “The Targets of Online Protest: State and Private Targets of Four Online Protest Tactics.” Information, Communication & Society 11(4): 449-472. (Lead Article)

Earl, Jennifer. 2007. “Leading Tasks in a Leaderless Movement: The Case of Strategic Voting” Special Issue on Social Movement Leadership in the American Behavioral Scientist 50(10): 1327-1349. http://abs.sagepub.com/content/50/10/1327

Earl, Jennifer. 2006. “Introduction: Repression and the Social Control of Protest” Mobilization 11(2): 129-143. http://www.metapress.com/content/B55GM84032815278

Earl, Jennifer. 2005 “You Can Beat the Rap, But You Can’t Beat the Ride: Bringing Arrests Back into Research on Repression.” Research in Social Movements, Conflicts and Change 26:101-139.

Earl, Jennifer. 2004. “Controlling Protest: New Directions for Research on the Social Control of Protest.” Research in Social Movements, Conflicts, and Change, Special Issue on Authority in Contention 25: 55-83.

Schussman, Alan and Jennifer Earl. 2004. “From Barricades to Firewalls? Strategic Voting and

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Social Movement Leadership in the Internet Age.” Sociological Inquiry 74(4): 439-463. (Lead article) http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1475-682X.2004.00100.x

Earl, Jennifer and Alan Schussman. 2004. “Cease and Desist: Repression, Strategic Voting and the 2000 Presidential Election.” Mobilization 9(2): 188-202. http://www.metapress.com/content/J1UQ072540827Q77

Earl, Jennifer. 2003. “The Gay 90’s? Models of Legal Decision-Making, Change and History.” The Journal of Historical Sociology 16:111-134. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1467- 6443.00197

Earl, Jennifer and Sarah A. Soule. 2001. “The Differential Protection of Minority Groups: The Inclusion of Sexual Orientation, Gender, and Disability in State Hate Crime Laws, 1976- 1995.” Research in Political Sociology 9: 1-31. (Lead article)

Additional Book Chapters and Invited Works

Earl, Jennifer. 2019. “The Process is the Punishment Revisited: Forty-Year Anniversary Review.” Pp. 24-31 in The Lower Criminal Courts, edited by Alisa Smith and Sean Maddan. New York: Routledgte.

Thomas Elliott and Jennifer Earl. 2019. “Kids These Days: Supply and Demand for Youth Online Political Engagement.” Pp. 69-100 in Digital Media and Democratic Futures, edited by Michael X. Delli Carpini. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.

Earl, Jennifer. 2018. “Technology and Social Media.” Pp. 289-305 in The Blackwell Companion to Social Movements, 2nd Edition edited by David A. Snow, Sarah A. Soule, Hanspeter Kriesi, and Holly McCammon. Malden, MA: Blackwell.

Beyer, Jessica L. and Jennifer Earl, 2018. "Backfire Online: Studying Reactions to the Repression of Internet Activism." Pp. 102-142 in The Paradox of Repression and Nonviolent Movements, edited by Lester R. Kurtz and Lee A. Smithey. Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University Press. (In Syracuse Studies on Peace and Conflict Resolution series.)

Rohlinger, Deana and Jennifer Earl. 2017. “The Past, Present, and Future of Media and Social Movements Studies: Introduction to the Special Issue on Media and Social Movements.” Emerald Studies in Media and Communication 14: 1-20.

Earl, Jennifer. 2017. Possibilitando Digitalmente a Mudança Social: Aproveitando Affordances e Promovendo A Mudança.” Pp. 53-64 in Net-Ativismo: Redes Digitais e Novas Práticas de Participação, edited by Massimo Di Felice, Erick Roza, and Eliete Pereira. Papirus: Brazil. (Chapter translation by Julliana Cutolo Torres.)

Earl, Jennifer. 2016. “Protest Online: Theorizing the Consequences of Online Engagement.” Pp. 363-400 in The Consequences of Social Movements, edited by Lorenzo Bosi, Marco Giugni, and Katrin Uba. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

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Earl, Jennifer, Jayson Hunt, R. Kelly Garrett, and Aysenur Dal. 2015. “New Technologies and Social Movements.” Pp. 355-366 in Oxford Handbook of Social Movements, edited by Donatella Della Porta and Mario Diani. Cambridge: Oxford University Press.

Earl, Jennifer, Jayson Hunt, and R. Kelly Garrett. 2014. “Social movements and the ICT Revolution.” 2014. Pp. 359-383 in Handbook of Political Citizenship and Social Movements, edited by Hein-Anton van der Heijden. Massachusetts: Edward Elgar Publishing.

Earl, Jennifer and Katrina Kimport. 2014. “Hitting Middle Age Never Felt So Good: Introduction to the ASA Communication and Information Technologies Section 2013 Special Issue.” Information, Communication & Society, 17(4): 391-397.

Reprinted in: Earl, Jennifer and Katrina Kimport, eds. 2014. “Hitting Middle Age Never Felt So Good.” Pp. 1-7 in Current Research on Information Technologies and Society, Jennifer Earl and Katrina Kimport, eds. New York: Taylor & Francis.

Earl, Jennifer and Deana A. Rohlinger. 2012. “Introduction: Media, Movements, and Political Change.” Special issue of Research in Social Movements, Conflicts and Change, 33:1-13.

Earl, Jennifer. 2011. “A Lawyers Guide to the Repression Literature.” National Lawyers Guild Review 67(1): 3-36.

Earl, Jennifer and Katrina Kimport. 2010. “The Diffusion of Different Types of Internet Activism: Suggestive Patterns in Website Adoption of Innovations.” Pp. 125-139. in Dynamics of Diffusion in Social Movements, edited by Becky Givans, Kenneth Roberts and Sarah Soule. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Earl, Jennifer. 2008. “The Process is the Punishment: 30 Years Later” Law and Social Inquiry 33(3): 737-778. http://www.jstor.org/stable/20108780

Earl, Jennifer and Alan Schussman. 2007. “Contesting Cultural Control: Youth Culture and Online Petitioning” Pp. 71-95 in Digital Media and Civic Engagement, edited by W. Lance Bennett. Cambridge: MIT Press. http://mitpress2.mit.edu/books/chapters/0262294222chap4.pdf

Comments

Earl, Jennifer. 2014. “Something Old and Something New: A Comment on ‘New Media, New Civics’” Policy and Internet 6(2): 169-175. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/1944-2866.POI357

Earl, Jennifer. 2008. “An Admirable Call to Improve, But Not Fundamentally Change, Our Collective Methodological Practices: A Comment on MTT and Methods” Qualitative Sociology 31(4): 355-359. http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11133-008-9105- 1/fulltext.html

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Encyclopedia Entries and Newsletter Entries

Earl, Jennifer. Forthcoming. “Social Movements, Repression of.” Forthcoming in the Blackwell Encyclopedia of Sociology, 2nd Edition, George Ritzer, ed. New York: Blackwell.

Earl, Jennifer. 2018. “Message from the Chair.” Critical Mass Bulletin 43(1): 1-2.

Earl, Jennifer. 2017. “Updates from Your New Section Chair.” Critical Mass Bulletin 42(2): 1-2.

Earl, Jennifer. 2013. “Outcomes, Cultural.” Pp. 884-889 in The Blackwell Encyclopedia of Social and Political Movements, edited by David A. Snow, Donatella Della Porta, Bert Klandermans, and Doug McAdam. New York: Blackwell.

Earl, Jennifer. 2013. “Social Control.” Pp. 1182-1185 in The Blackwell Encyclopedia of Social and Political Movements, edited by David A. Snow, Donatella Della Porta, Bert Klandermans, and Doug McAdam. New York: Blackwell.

Earl, Jennifer. 2013. “The Repression of Social Movements.” Pp. 1083-1089 in The Blackwell Encyclopedia of Social and Political Movements, edited by David A. Snow, Donatella Della Porta, Bert Klandermans, and Doug McAdam. New York: Blackwell.

Earl, Jennifer. 2011. “Social Movements, Repression of” Pp. 569 in The Concise Encyclopedia of Sociology, George Ritzer, ed. New York: Blackwell.

Earl, Jennifer and Carroll Seron. 2009. “Some Thoughts on Mentoring.” Amici: Newsletter of the Sociology of Law Section of the American Sociological Association 17(2): 6-7. Reprinted in 2017 newsletter.

Earl, Jennifer. 2007. “Law, Elections, and Protest.” Amici: Newsletter of the Sociology of Law Section of the American Sociological Association 15(2): 8-9.

Earl, Jennifer. 2006. “Social Movements, Repression of” Pp. 4475-4479 in the Encyclopedia of Sociology, George Ritzer, ed. New York: Blackwell.

Book Reviews

Earl, Jennifer. 2016. “Book Review: How Social Movements Die: Repression and Demobilization of the Republic of New Africa by Christian Davenport.” American Journal of Sociology 121(5): 1605–1607.

Earl, Jennifer. 2015. “Book Review: The Logic of Connective Action: Digital Media and the Personalization of Contentious Politics.” Mobilization 20(3): 410-411.

Earl, Jennifer. 2014. “Book Review: Anduiza, Jensen, and Jorba’s Digital Media and Political Engagement Worldwide: A Comparative Study.” Contemporary Sociology 43(5): 651-

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653.

Earl, Jennifer. 2014. “Book Review: Democracy's Fourth Wave?: Digital Media and the Arab Spring.” Political Science Quarterly 129(2):377-378.

Earl, Jennifer. 2013. “Book review: Manuel Castells’s Networks of Outrage and Hope: Social Movements in the Internet Age.” American Journal of Sociology 119(2): 565-567.

Earl, Jennifer. 2013. “Book Review: Rasmus Kleis Nielsen’s Ground Wars: Personalized Communication in Political Campaigns.” Mobilization 18(1): 494-495.

Earl, Jennifer. 2011. “Book Review: Davenport’s Media Bias, Perspective, and State Repression: The Black Panther Party.” American Journal of Sociology 116(5): 1687- 1689.

Earl, Jennifer. 2011. “Book Review: Lovell’s Crimes of Dissent: Civil Disobedience, Criminal Justice and the Politics of Conscience.” Law and Society Review 45(1): 224-225.

Earl, Jennifer. 2007. “Book Review: Davenport’s State Repression and the Domestic Democratic Peace.” Mobilization 12(4): 431-432.

Earl, Jennifer. 2005. “Book Review: Doyle’s Arresting Images.” Mobilization 10(2): 311-312.

Earl, Jennifer. 2004. “Book Review: Cunningham’s There's Something Happening Here.” Critical Mass Bulletin 29: 1-3.

Earl, Jennifer. 2002. “Review Essay: Gender and Social Movements.” Contemporary Sociology 31:745-746.

Public Teaching Tools

Earl, Jennifer, Thomas V Maher, and Thomas Elliott. 2018. “Youth, activism, and social movements.” Syllabus published in TRAILS: Teaching Resources and Innovations Library for Sociology. Washington DC: American Sociological Association. (http://trails.asanet.org)

Public Sociology

Co-founder and co-organizer, Informing Activists Video Series. Founded in 2015, the is a series of over 3 dozen videos (and growing) that are located on the Mobilizing Ideas blog. The videos feature social movement scholars translating research on social movements into questions and answers that can benefit young people interested in activism and/or starting, participating in, or lead social movements in short segments, generally 5 minutes or less. While the series was launched with an initial cache of videos, it now grows by releasing new videos corresponding to the monthly dialogues that occur on the Mobilizing Ideas Monthly Dialogues series.

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Earl, Jennifer. 2019. “What’s In a Name: Dialogue with Zizi Papacharissi.” Published on http://henryjenkins.org/, available at: http://henryjenkins.org/blog/2019/4/21/participatory-politics-in-an-age-of-crisis-jennifer- earl-amp-zizi-papacharissi

Earl, Jennifer. 2018. “Collateral damage or a direct hit? Democratic ideals in the age of Trump.” Published on Democratic Audit UK, London School of Economics, available at: http://www.democraticaudit.com/2018/05/14/collateral-damage-or-a-direct-hit- democratic-ideals-in-the-age-of-trump/

Earl, Jennifer. 2017. “Even Female Supreme Court Justices are Interrupted When Speaking.” Published on The Hill, available at: http://thehill.com/blogs/pundits-blog/the- administration/331770-even-female-supreme-court-justices-interrupted-when#bottom- story-socials

Earl, Jennifer. 2017. “Civil Asset Forfeiture: Fund Public Defenders Instead of the Police.” Published on The Hill, available at: http://thehill.com/blogs/pundits-blog/crime/319632- civil-asset-forfeiture-fund-public-defenders-instead-of-the-police

Earl, Jennifer. 2016. “‘Slacktivism’ that Works: ‘Small Changes’ Matter.” Published with a creative commons license on The Conversation, available at: http://theconversation.com/slacktivism-that-works-small-changes-matter-69271. December 15, 2016. Viewed more than 37k times.

Republished in over 20 other online locations, including Salon, US News and World Report, San Francisco Chronicle, etc. Also, republished in a Finnish textbook, New Profiles (pp 89-92).

Earl, Jennifer. 2016. “I’m Wearing a Safety Pin and I Am with You.” Published on Huffington Post, available at: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/im-wearing-a-safety-pin-and-im- with-you_us_584b61c7e4b01713310510b0. December 12, 2016.

Public Voices Op-Ed Project Participant, 2016-2017.

Participant in “Government Surveillance: Finding the Right Balance for Democracy Panel” in the Conservations on Privacy Series. University of Arizona, November 16, 2016.

Participant in opening panel for art exhibit: “Boycott!! The Art of Economic Activism.” Amory Park Center. Sponsored by the American Friends Service Committee of Arizona. October 10, 2015.

Mobilizing Ideas Blog, Invited Essay Dialogues contributions. http://mobilizingideas.wordpress.com/ 2018. “Hiding in Plain Sight: The Role of Youth in Politics and Activism.” Posted May 30, 2018.

12 October 2019

2017. “Regimes versus Repression: The Unraveling of Democratic Institutions.” Posted October 18, 2017. 2016. “Digital Change-making: New Sources of Power and Hybrid Realities.” Posted November 28, 2016. 2014. “The Whole World is Texting.” Posted April 1, 2014. (with Heidi Reynolds- Stenson) 2012. “Women on the Verge.” Posted June 1, 2012.

Mobilizing Ideas Blog, Daily Disruption. http://mobilizingideas.wordpress.com/ 2015. “Informing Activists: How/When do movements affect culture?” Posted November 13, 2015 2015. “Informing Activists: When do I need an organization?” Posted November 13, 2015 2015. “It’s All in How You Use It.” Posted April 2, 2015 2014. “New Resource on Social Movement Outcomes.” Posted May 22, 2014 2014. “For any Stata folks out there…” Posted March 6, 2014 2014. “Please submit work on media and protest to the CITASA pre-ASA Symposium” Posted January 29, 2014 2014. “Feb 1 deadline for Internet Data CFP.” Posted January 6, 2014 2013. “Learning Something New in the Desert this January.” Posted December 4, 2013 2013. “Be 1 of the Final 34 People to Help CITASA Cross the 400 Member Mark!” Posted September 26, 2013 2013. “CFP for Use of Internet, Activism, and Social Movements Datasets.” Posted September 16, 2013 2013. “Memorial Session for Mayer Zald at ASAs.” Posted July 30, 2013 2013. “Post-Doc Opportunity on Youth Activism.” Posted May 15, 2013 2013 “I Wouldn’t Vote on Your Marriage.” Posted March 28, 2013. 2013 “Not Your Father’s Social Movements Studies.” Posted March 11, 2013 2012. “The (Fact) Challenge Flag: A New American Model for Debates.” Posted November 5, 2012 2012. “Arizona Methods Workshop.” Posted September 24, 2012 2012. “Updates from the Technology and Repression Front.” Posted September 11, 2012 2012. “Meet My Fiancé.” Posted August 23, 2012. 2012. “Be Careful What You Tweet.” Posted August 6, 2012. 2012. “Technology and Repression.” Posted July 27, 2012. 2012. “Protest, then Bend Over and Cough.” Posted April 11, 2012. 2012. “Our Way or the Highway? Policing ‘Activism’ from the Inside.” 2012. “Loan Fee Dropped After Online Protest.” Posted February 13, 2012. 2012. “SOPA Protests Show What a Flash Flood of Activism Can Look Like.” Posted January 30, 2012. 2011. “On the Militarization of Policing.” Posted December 19, 2011. 2011. “Pain Compliance.” Posted November 22, 2011.

Invited co-signer of an amicus brief in Iowa gay marriage case (Varnum v. Brien) as expert on social scientific research methodology. 2008.

13 October 2019

Earl, Jennifer. 2007. “Where Have all the Protests Gone? Online.” Washington Post, Outlook Section, page 1. Sunday, February 4, 2007.

REPRINTED in: McDonald, James C., ed. 2009. The Reader. NY: Longman/Prentice Hall. Pp. 457-459. [The volume is an English composition reader.]

Intramural and Minor Grants and Fellowships

Office of Diversity and Inclusive Excellence’s Grant, “All Gender Restroom, Social Sciences 3rd Floor.” University of Arizona, Tucson, 2019. $5,000 (submitted with Jennifer Carlson and Sam Scovill). This award partially funds the conversion of a bathroom in the building in which Sociology is housed into an all-gender restroom with baby changing tables.

Institute for Social, Behavioral, and Economic Research’s C-RIG Grant, “Collaborative Data Integration and Analysis: Toward a Social Movement Data Repository.” University of California, Santa Barbara, 2010. $4,000.

Academic Senate Faculty Research Grant, University of California, Santa Barbara, 2007. $4,862.

Academic Senate Faculty Research Grant, University of California, Santa Barbara, 2005. $6,361.

Institute for Social, Behavioral, and Economic Research’s Faculty Research Grant, University of California, Santa Barbara, 2005. $6,000.

Faculty Career Development Award, University of California, Santa Barbara, 2005. $6,662.

Instructional Mini-grant for Faculty, University of California, Santa Barbara, 2005. $311.

Academic Senate Junior Faculty Research Incentive Grant, University of California, Santa Barbara, 2004. $5,000.

Institute for Social, Behavioral, and Economic Research’s Faculty Research Grant, University of California, Santa Barbara, 2003. $7,500

Academic Senate Faculty Research Grant, University of California, Santa Barbara, 2003. $5,523.

Regents Junior Faculty Fellowship, University of California, Santa Barbara, 2002. $6,055.

Social and Behavioral Sciences Graduate Fellowship, University of Arizona, 1996. $12,000 per year for 1996-2000

University of Arizona, Department of Sociology’s Dissertation Grant Award, 2001. $725

Graduate Student Research Grant, Social and Behavior Sciences Research Institute, University of Arizona, 2001. $600

14 October 2019

American Sociological Association Student Travel Award, 2001. $200.

American Sociological Association Student Travel Award, 1999. $200.

American Sociological Association Honors Program Participant and Travel Award Recipient, 1997.

Additional Awards and Honors

Law and Society Summer Workshop Participant, Law and Society Association. 2003.

First Prize in the University of Arizona, Department of Sociology’s Bowers Graduate Student Paper Competition for “The New Site of Activism: On-line Organizations, Movement Entrepreneurs, and the Changing Location of Social Movement Decision-Making.” (with Alan Schussman). 2001.

Second Prize in the University of Arizona, Department of Sociology’s Bowers Graduate Student Paper Competition for “Legalized Inequality: Gays, Lesbians, and Deserts.” 1999.

First Prize in the Graduate Student Paper Competition, Sexual Behavior, Communities and Politics Section of the Society for the Study of Social Problems for “Considering Constructions: The Influence of Socially Constructed Identities on Legal Preferences.” 1997.

Undergraduate Courses Taught

Methods: Research Traditions (i.e., Undergraduate Methods; University of California, Santa Barbara) Research Methods for Studying Internet Technologies and Their Use (University of California, Santa Barbara)

Law: Sociology of Law (University of California, Santa Barbara) Criminal Justice and Community (University of California, Santa Barbara) Sociology of Rights, Law and Justice (University of Arizona)

Social Implications of Technology: The Internet and Communication Technologies (University of California, Santa Barbara) The Internet and Social Movements (University of California, Santa Barbara)

Gender and Sexuality: Sociology and Sexual Politics (University of California, Santa Barbara) Freshman Seminar on Gender and Sexuality (University of California, Santa Barbara) Sociology of Sexuality (University of Arizona) Sociology of Women (University of Arizona)

15 October 2019

Other Courses: Social Issues in America (University of Arizona) Managing Large Research Projects (University of California, Santa Barbara) Professional Seminar on Mentoring (University of California, Santa Barbara)

Graduate Courses Taught

Substantive: Sociology of Law (University of California, Santa Barbara) Social Movements (University of California, Santa Barbara; University of Arizona) The Internet and Communication Technologies (University of California, Santa Barbara) The Internet and Social Movements (University of California, Santa Barbara) Political Communication and Social Movements (University of Arizona)

Methods: Advanced Topics in Statistics: Event History Analysis (University of California, Santa Barbara) Data Management in Stata and Python (University of Arizona) Research Methods for Studying Internet Technologies and Their Use (University of Arizona; University of California, Santa Barbara)

Professional: Dissertation Preparation (University of Arizona) Managing Large Research Projects (University of California, Santa Barbara) Professional Seminar on Mentoring (University of California, Santa Barbara)

Students Advised

Selected In-progress MAs: Yiru Niu, Sociology, UA.

Selected Completed MAs: Jayson Hunt, Sociology, Washington State; Daraka Hall, Sociology, UCSB; Morgan Johnstonbaugh, Sociology, UA; Alex Kinney, Sociology, UA; Zeynep Korkman, Sociology, UCSB; Meltem Odabas, Sociology, UA (Chair); Jennifer Rogers, Sociology, UCSB. Sam Scovill, Sociology, UA (Chair).

Selected Completed PhDs and their Placements: Joe Conti, Sociology, University of Wisconsin, Madison; Cassandra Engeman, Postdoctoral researcher, Stockholm University; Lisa Leitz, Sociology, Chapman University (PhD); Katrina Kimport, ANSIRH, University of California, San Francisco (co-Chair); Veljko Pejovic, HCI Centre, University of Birmingham, UK (PhD); Heidi Reynolds-Stenson, Sociology, Colorado State University, Pueblo (Chair); Misty Ring- Ramirez, Sociology, Austin Peay State University (co-chair).

Selected In-progress PhDs: Trey Green, Sociology, UA (Chair);, Yongjun Zhang, Sociology, UA (Chair).

Honorary Visiting Scholar Appointments (or equivalent visiting short-term honors)

16 October 2019

Northwestern University, Socio-legal Studies, October 2019. Uppsala University, Political Science, September 2012.

Invited Presentations and Panels (selected)

“One Size Doesn't Fit All: Connecting Views of Activism with Youth Activist Identification” University of Crete Research Center Lecture Series, Greece, October, 2019.

“Benign Policing or Constitutional Deprivation: Arrest and the Control of Protest in the US” Constitution Day Lecture, Center for Legal Studies, Northwestern University, Evanston, October 2019.

“Did Police Become More Permissive, or Did Protesters Become Less Challenging? Explaining Variation in Police Presence and Action.” Crime, Law, and Society Workshop, Northwestern University, Evanston, October 2019.

“Explaining Changes in Model and Observed Protest Policing: Repertoires of Protest Policing and the Institutionalization of Protest in the US” Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN, September 2019.

Invited Panelist on Collective Action in the Digital Age Panel, CITAMS Media Preconference, LIM College, New York, August 2019.

“Using Digital and Social Media for Social Change.” Impact Speaker at the Arkansas Governor’s School. Arkansas Tech University, Russellville, Arkansas, July 2019.

“Quantifying Movement Trajectories: From Measurement to Meaning.” School of Government and Public Policy Colloquium. Tucson, Arizona, March 2019.

“Inequality and Youth Political Participation.” Keynote address at the EURYKA Summer School on Youth Political Participation. Scuola Normale Superiore (SNS), Florence, Italy, July 2018.

“Lessons on Youth Activism from US Protests.” Keynote address at the Campus of European Alternatives Summer Campus. Scuola Normale Superiore (SNS), Florence, Italy, July 2018.

“Innovations in Policing: Rethinking Changes in Protest Policing Protocols in the US.” American Bar Foundation, Chicago, IL. January 2018. (Paper co-authored with Heidi Reynolds- Stenson.)

“Core Tensions in (Studying) Digitally-Enabled Social Change.” Normative Orders of the Digital Interdisciplinary Conference, The Formation of Normative Orders Cluster of Excellence, Goethe University Frankfurt am Main, Frankfurt, Germany, July 2017.

17 October 2019

“Online Activism: From Niche to Mainstream.” Lecture at the Media and Political Participation and Mobilization Summer School, Scuola Normale Superiore (SNS), Florence, Italy, June 2017.

“The Puzzle of Protest Policing over Time: Stability and Change in Explanations of Social Movement Repression.” Democracy, the State And Protest: International Perspectives on Methods for the Study of Protest Conference. Mershon Center at The Ohio State University. Columbus, OH. May 11, 2017.

External Advisory Board Member for “Reinventing Democracy in Europe: Youth Doing Politics in Times of Increasing Inequalities (EURYKA),” Funded by the European Commission Research Executive Agency (REA) for 2,595,720 Euro. Attended project meetings in Florence (February 2017), Lecce (June 2017), Barcelona (December 2017), Geneva (April 2018), Florence (July 2018), Rethymno, Crete (October 2019).

“Digital Contention: Key Findings in the Study of Internet Activism.” Washington University in St. Louis Colloquium. St. Louis, MO. October 25, 2016.

“Barrier or Booster? Social Media, Social Networks, and Youth Micromobilization.” Voice, Technology & Impact Workshop. Seattle, WA. May 6, 2016. (Paper co-authored with Thomas V. Maher).

“Organizing The Next Generation: Youth Engagement with Activism Inside and Outside of Organizations.” Social Movements, Organizations and Activism Workshop (#SMOA15) Keynote Address. Goldsmiths, London, UK. November 6, 2015. (Paper co-authored with Thomas Elliott).

“Kids These Days: Supply and Demand for Youth Online Political Engagement.” Digital Media and the Future(s) of Democracy Series, sponsored by the 2015-2106 Faculty Workshop Series of the Penn Program on Democracy, Citizenship, and Constitutionalism. Annenberg, University of Pennsylvania, November 15, 2015. (Paper co-authored with Thomas Elliott).

“When Information Isn’t Scarce: Political Communication as a New Frontier in Social Movement Studies” Keynote address at Mobilisations, Changing Protest Cultures and Web 2.0 Technologies Conference, Goldsmiths, London, UK. May 15, 2015.

“Spillover as Movement Agenda Setting: A Methodological Roadmap to Studying Agenda- setting Spillover Online.” (With Misty Ring-Ramirez) Collective Action Network Between Online and Offline Interactions Workshop. University of Trento, Trento, Italy. March 17, 2015.

“From Ladders to Distributions: Understanding the Role of Low Cost Participation Engagement.” Democratizing Technologies Conference, University of California, Santa Barbara, November 14, 2014.

“Historicizing Explanations of Social Movement Repression.” (With Heidi-Reynolds Stenson) Department of Sociology, University of Pennsylvania, November 11, 2014.

18 October 2019

“From Batons to Bandwidth: Understanding Core Social Movement Processes Across Time.” Department of Sociology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, November 7, 2014.

“CITS and the Study of Information Technology.” Panel on CITS History. Center for Information Technology and Society, University of California, Santa Barbara, October 23, 2014.

“Computational Sociology.” Panel on New Methods in Sociology. School of Sociology, University of Arizona, October 3, 2014.

“On a Scale of 1-5, How Much Impact Do US Social Movements Have on Public Opinion?” (Neal Caren, Jennifer Earl, Edwin Amenta, and Sarah Soule). Voters, Protest and Policies Workshop, June 17, 2014, Leicester, England.

“Contentious Consumers: Political Consumerism and Self-Directed Political Action.” Department of Sociology’s Organizations and Social Movements Group, University of California, Los Angeles, May 16, 2014.

“Contentious Consumers: Political Consumerism and Self-Directed Political Action.” Department of Communication Studies, Northwestern University, May 8, 2014.

“Explaining Youth Engagement in Offline and Online Activism.” Department of Sociology, University of Illinois, Chicago. April 2, 2014.

“Trends in U.S. Based-Research on Online Activism.” International Congress on Net-Activism, Digital Networks, and New Practices of Democracy, School of Communication and Arts at University of São Paulo (ECA-USP), Brazil, November 8, 2013. (Presented via video conference due to scheduling conflicts.)

“The Future of Social Movement Organizations: The Waning Dominance of SMOs Online.” Collaborative Organizations and Social Media Workshop, Bowdoin University, April 12, 2013.

“Police Professionalism and the Development of Alternative Protest Policing Protocols, 1960- 1980.” Grant Writing Workshop, Department of Sociology, University of Illinois, Urbana- Champaign, April 5, 2013.

“Online Backlash: When Repression Online Backfires.” Paradox of Repression Workshop (public and scholarly presentations), George Mason University, March 8, 2013.

“Spillover as Movement Agenda Setting: A Methodological Roadmap to Studying Agenda- setting Spillover Online.” MoveOut Workshop on Movement Outcomes, Uppsala University, Sweden, September 8, 2012.

“Digital Contention: Emerging Trends in Web Activism.” Uppsala Forum for Peace, Democracy and Justice, Uppsala University, Sweden, September 4, 2012.

19 October 2019

Participant, “Big Data Workshop.” Science and Technology Policy Institute. Washington, DC, May 11, 2012.

“Digital Contention: Studying Web Activism.” Youth and Participatory Politics MacArthur Research Network Meeting. Los Angeles, California, February 23, 2012.

“Protest Online: Theorizing the Consequences of Online Engagement.” Outcomes of Social Movements and Protest Conference, Wissenschaftszentrum, Berlin, Germany, June 24, 2011.

“Digital Contention: New Findings in the Study of Web Activism.” Department of Sociology, University of Arizona. May 6, 2011.

“Digital Protest: Activism in the Internet Age.” The College of William and Mary, Virginia, March 17, 2011.

“Digital Contention: Emerging Trends in Web Activism.” Department of Sociology, University of California, Santa Barbara. April 14, 2010

“Changing the World One Webpage at a Time: Conceptualizing and Explaining ‘Internet Activism.” Culture, Law, and Technology Reading Group, University of California, Irvine, March 12, 2010.

“Using Old and New Media as Data Sources.” Center for the Study of Law and Society’s Miniseries in Empirical Research Methods, University of California, Berkeley, March 5, 2010.

“Spillover as Movement Agenda Setting: How Movement Issues Spillover Online.” MOVEOUT Workshop, Geneva, Switzerland, February 16, 2010.

“Societal Impacts of Internet Usage” RTI Workshop, Chapel Hill, NC, November 18-20, 2009.

Concluding Conference Panel. Media Infrastructures 2 Conference. University of California, Santa Barbara. April 10, 2009.

“Protest on the Information Highway: Trends in Online Activism.” Hamilton College, Levitt Center Age of Information Speaker Series. April 15, 2008.

“Understanding Radicalization: How Social Movement Theory Can Help Protect Civil Liberties While More Efficiently Preventing and Policing Terrorism.” Sandia National Laboratory. April, 2008.

“Protesting Online: What’s Different about Diffusion Online?” Presented at the Contentious Knowledge and the Diffusion of Social Protest Workshop, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, November 10, 2007.

Invited participant at Science and Technology for Intelligence Committee (STIC) of the National Intelligence Council Workshop on the “Social Dynamics of Activism and Radicalization III.”

20 October 2019

Edinburgh, Scotland. May 23-27, 2007.

“Arrests and Political Repression: Understanding the Policing of the 2004 Republican National Convention and Its Implications.” Plous Award Lecture, University of California, Santa Barbara. May 9, 2007.

“Arrests, Repression, and the 2004 Republican National Convention.” Policing American Politics: How Authorities Channel Social and Political Participation Workshop, Brandeis University, Gordon Center for Public Policy. May 3, 2007.

Leader of afternoon session on “Applying Social Movement Theory to the Muslim Brotherhood in Four Countries,” Science and Technology for Intelligence Committee (STIC) of the National Intelligence Council Workshop on the “Social Dynamics of Activism and Radicalization II.” Ypsilanti, MI. March 12-13, 2007.

“Arrests, Repression, and the 2004 Republican National Convention.” UCLA Law School Colloquium, Los Angeles, CA. March 5, 2007.

“Methods and Measurement in the Study of Social Movements.” Science and Technology for Intelligence Committee (STIC) of the National Intelligence Council Workshop on the “Social Dynamics of Activism and Radicalization I.” Philadelphia, PA. January 5-6, 2007.

“New Media, Emerging Leadership, and Online Communities.” State Department Conference on “New Media and Eurasia.” Washington, D.C. August 30, 2006.

“Movement Societies and Digital Protest: Non-traditional Uses of Four Protest Tactics Online.” (with Katrina Kimport), Invited Session on Digital Protest, American Sociological Association Meetings, Montreal, Canada. August 2006.

“Protest on the Information Highway: The Use of Four Protest Tactics Online.” University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona. February 2005.

“Cease and Desist: Repression, Strategic Voting and the 2000 and 2004 U.S. Presidential Elections” Center for Information Technology and Society, University of California, Santa Barbara. April, 2005.

“Seeing Blue: A Police-Centered Explanation of Protest Policing.” University of Pittsburgh. December 2004.

“E-movements and the Structure of Collective Action: Strategic Voting in the 2000 Presidential Election” Center for Information Technology and Society, University of California, Santa Barbara. November 2003.

“Seeing Blue: Going Behind the Baton to Explain Policing at Public Protest Events” University of California, Irvine. May, 2003.

21 October 2019

Conference Presentations (selected)

“Clashes of Conscience: Explaining Counterdemonstration at Protests.” (Presented by co-author Heidi Reynolds-Stenson). Annual Meetings of the American Sociological Association, Montreal, Canada, August 2017.

“Digitally Enabled Social Movement Participation.” (With Katrina Kimport; invited) Annual Meetings of the American Sociological Association, Montreal, Canada, August 2017.

“Privacy and Protest.” (invited) Annual Meetings of the American Sociological Association, Montreal, Canada, August 2017.

“The 1960s Version of Black Lives Matter: The Role of Brutality Allegations in Structuring Changes to Protest & Policing Protocols, 1960-1980.” (Presented by co-author Heidi Reynolds- Stenson). Annual Meetings of the Law and Society Association, Mexico City, Mexico. June 2017.

“Taking Youth Seriously: Four Provocations about Social Movement Research” (With Thomas V. Maher; invited). Annual Meetings of the American Sociological Association, Seattle, WA, August 2016.

“Media and Social Movements” Panelist (invited). Annual Meetings of the American Sociological Association, Seattle, WA, August 2016.

“From Boots to Bytes: Understanding Offline and Online Political Repression.” Four Corners Conflict Network Meeting. Phoenix, AZ. April 15, 2016. (Paper co-authored with Thomas V. Maher and Heidi Reynolds-Stenson).

“Contemporary Youth Movements and Social Movement Theory” Panelist (invited). Annual Meetings of the Pacific Sociological Association, Oakland, CA, March 2016.

“From Boots to Bytes: Understanding Offline and Online Political Repression around the Globe” (with Heidi Reynolds-Stenson and Thomas Maher; invited). Annual Meetings of the American Political Science Association, San Francisco, CA, September 2015.

“Historicizing Explanations of Social Movement Repression,” (with Heidi Reynolds-Stenson). Annual Meetings of the American Sociological Association, Chicago, IL, August 2015.

“Using Moving Regression to Historicize Protest Event Analysis” (with Heidi Reynolds- Stenson). CBSM Workshop 2015: Protesters and Their Targets. Chicago, IL, August 2015.

“CITASA: Where We Have Been and Where We Are Going.” (invited) Annual Meetings of the American Sociological Association, San Francisco, CA, August 2014.

22 October 2019

“Culturally Constrained Contention: Mapping the Meaning Structure of the Repertoire of Contention” (with Misty Ring-Ramirez and Heidi Reynolds-Stenson). Annual Meetings of the American Sociological Association, San Francisco, CA, August 2014.

“Studying Online Activism: The Effects of Sampling Design on Findings.” Annual Meetings of the American Sociological Association, New York, New York, August 2013.

“This Protest Will Be Tweeted: Twitter and Protest Policing during the Pittsburgh G20.” Annual Meetings of the American Sociological Association, Denver, Colorado, August 2012.

“Rethinking the Development of Protest Policing Protocols” Annual Meetings of the Law and Society Association, Waikiki, Hawaii, June 2012.

“The Internet, Occupy Wall Street, and the Tea Party” (invited) Annual Meetings of the International Communication Association, Phoenix, Arizona, May 2012.

“From Twitter to Online Petitioning: Comparing Styles of Online Protest Mobilization.” Annual Meetings of the American Sociological Association, Las Vegas, Nevada, August 2011.

“Private Protest? Public and Private Engagement Online.” Annual Meetings of the American Sociological Association, Las Vegas, Nevada, August 2011.

“Issue Industries: Social Movements and Their Online Political Ecologies.” (invited) Plenary Presentation at the Collective Behavior and Social Movements Section Pre-conference Workshop, Las Vegas, Nevada, August 2011.

“The Internet, Activism, and Social Movements: An NSF CAREER Award Project.” Collective Behavior and Social Movements Section Pre-conference Workshop, Las Vegas, Nevada, August 2011.

“Social Movements across Moving Borders.” West Coast Law and Society Retreat. Los Angeles, California, February 12, 2011.

“Spreading the Word versus Shaping the Conversation: The Use of Web 2.0 Tools in Protest Websites.” Annual Meetings of the American Sociological Association, Atlanta, GA, August 2010.

“Issue Industries Online: Social Movements and Their Online Political Ecologies.” Annual Meetings of the Association of Internet Researchers, Milwaukee, WI, October 2009.

“RNC Arrestees and Future Protest Participation: The Impact of Protest Arrests on Future Protest Participation.” Annual Meetings of the American Sociological Association, San Francisco, August 2009.

23 October 2019

“Changing the World One Webpage at a Time: Conceptualizing and Explaining 'Internet Activism.’” (with Katrina Kimport, Greg Prieto, Carly Rush, and Kimberly Reynoso) Annual Meetings of the American Sociological Association, San Francisco, August 2009.

“RNC Arrestees and Future Protest Participation: The Impact of Protest Arrests on Future Expected Protest Participation.” Law and Society Association Annual Meetings, Denver, Colorado. May 2009.

“Soft Repression? Understanding Arrest-based Protest Control at the 2004 Republican National Convention.” American Sociological Association Meetings, Boston. August 2008.

“Protesting Online: What’s Different about Diffusion Online?” (with Katrina Kimport) American Sociological Association Meetings, Boston. August 2008.

“Arrests, Repression, and the 2004 Republican National Convention.” American Sociological Association Meetings, New York. August 2007.

“The Targets of Online Protest: State and Private Targets of Four Online Protest Tactics.” (with Katrina Kimport) American Sociological Association Meetings, New York. August 2007.

“Civil Litigation, Seals, and Research: Getting Access to Police Records about the 2004 RNC.” CBSM Section Workshop, Hofstra University, August 2007.

“Arrests, Repression, and the 2004 Republican National Convention.” Annual Meetings of the Law and Society Association, Baltimore, Maryland. July 2006.

“A Movement Society Evaluated: Collective Protest in the United States.” (with Sarah A. Soule) American Sociological Association Meetings, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. August 2005.

“Seeing Blue: A Police-Centered Explanation of Protest Policing.” (with Sarah A. Soule) American Sociological Association Meetings, San Francisco, California. August 2004.

“Professionalism and the Policing of Protest: Explaining Protest Policing Protocols in the U.S., 1960-1980.” American Sociological Association Meetings, Atlanta, Georgia. August 2003.

“Biography, Leadership, and E-Movements: Strategic Voting and the Changing Face of Contention in the Internet Age.” (with Alan Schussman) American Sociological Association Meetings, Atlanta, Georgia. August 2003.

“Controlling Protest: New Directions for Research on the Social Control of Protest.” Authority in Contention: Collective Behavior and Social Movements Workshop 2002, , August 14-15, 2002.

“Behind the Baton: Explaining Police Presence and Action at Public Protest Events in New York State, 1968-1973.” American Sociological Association Meetings, Chicago, Illinois. August 2002.

24 October 2019

“Protests Under Fire: The Policing of Protest in New York State, 1968-1973.” (with Sarah A. Soule) American Sociological Association Meetings, Anaheim, California. August 2001.

“From Barricades to Firewalls: The Strategic Voting Movement and the Changing Face of Contention on the Internet.” (with Alan Schussman) American Sociological Association Meetings, Anaheim, California. August 2001.

“You Can Beat the Rap, But You Can't Beat the Ride: The Role of Arrests in Protest Policing and Repression.” Pacific Sociological Association Meetings, San Francisco, California. March 2001.

“The Differential Protection of Minority Groups: The Inclusion of Sexual Orientation, Gender, and Disability in State Hate Crime Laws, 1976-1995.” (with Sarah A. Soule) American Sociological Association Meetings, Chicago, Illinois. August 1999.

“Legalized Inequality: Gays, Lesbians, and Deserts.” Law and Society Association Meetings, Chicago, Illinois. May 1999.

“Wonder Women: The Women’s Movement and Comic Change.” American Sociological Association Meetings, San Francisco, California. August 1998.

“Legalized Inequality: Deserts and American Legal Inequality.” Law and Society Association Meetings, Snow Mass Village, Colorado. June 1998.

“Methods, Movements and Outcomes: Methodological Issues in Measuring Extra-Movement Outcomes.” Pacific Sociological Association Meetings, San Francisco, California. April 1998.

“Legal Deserts: Identity Politics and the Legal Arena.” University of Arizona’s Articulating Conflicts in Cultural Studies Conference, Tucson, Arizona. February 1998.

“Considering Constructions: The Influence of Socially Constructed Identities on Legal Preferences.” The Society for the Study of Social Problems Annual Meetings, Toronto, Canada. August, 1997.

Elected Offices and Leadership Positions in Professional Organizations

2019 Chair, Distinguished Contribution Article Award, Collective Behavior and Social Movements Section of the American Sociological Association.

2018 Chair, Charles Tilly Award for Best Book, Collective Behavior and Social Movements Section, American Sociological Association.

2017-2018 Chair, Collective Behavior and Social Movements Section, American Sociological Association. (2016-2017 Chair-Elect; 2018-2019 Past Chair)

25 October 2019

2017 Chair, Mayer Zald Outstanding Graduate Student Paper Award, Collective Behavior and Social Movements Section, American Sociological Association.

2015-2017 Chair, Committee on Sections, American Sociological Association

2015 Chair, Lifetime Achievement Award Selection Committee, Communication and Information Technologies Section of the American Sociological Association

2014 Chair, Student Paper Award Selection Committee, Communication and Information Technologies Section of the American Sociological Association

2013-2014 Chair, Communication and Information Technologies Section of the American Sociological Association (2012-2013 Chair Elect, 2014-2015 Past Chair)

2013 Chair, Article Award Selection Committee, Communication and Information Technologies Section of the American Sociological Association

2008-2010 Chair, Membership and Mentoring Committee, Sociology of Law Section of the American Sociological Association.

2008-2010 Member, Council for Sociology of Law Section of the American Sociological Association.

2007-2009 Member, Council for Communication and Information Technologies Section of the American Sociological Association.

2006-2009 Member, Council for Collective Behavior and Social Movements Section of the American Sociological Association.

2005-2006 Chair, Faculty Mentoring Program Committee, Collective Behavior and Social Movements Section of the American Sociological Association

Editorial Positions and Boards

2019-Present Associate Editor, Science Advances (AAAS Gold Open Access Journal)

2014-Present Editorial Board Member, Social Science Computer Review

2013-Present Editorial Board Member, Studies in Media and Communications

2007-Present Editorial Board member, Mobilization

2010-2012 Editorial Board member, American Sociological Review

2008-2011 Associate Editor, Social Problems, (Editor: Ted Chiricos, Florida State University)

26 October 2019

2007-2010 Editorial Board member, Law and Society Review

2003-2006 Editorial Board member, Sociological Theory

Other Professional Activities and Service

2019 Discussant, Innovating Contention and Repression in Comparative Perspective: East Asia and Africa, International Studies Association Annual Meeting, Toronto, Canada, March 2019.

2019 Program Committee Member, 2019 International Conference on Computational Social Science (IC2S2 2019), Amsterdam, Netherlands. July 2019.

2018 Discussant and Organizer, Social Movements and Political Communication Panel, Annual Meeting of the American Sociological Association. Philadelphia, PA, August 2018.

2018 Member, William F. Ogburn Career Achievement Award Selection Committee, Communication, Information Technologies and Media Sociology Section of the American Sociological Association.

2018 Program Committee Member, 2018 International Conference on Computational Social Science (IC2S2 2018), Evanston, IL. June 2018.

2017 Program Committee Member, 2017 International Conference on Computational Social Science (IC2S2 2017), Evanston, IL. June 2017.

2016 White House South By South Lawn Invited Attendee, White House, Washington, DC.

2016 Panelist, NSF-Organized Panel, “NSF Proposal Development, Merit Review and Funding Opportunities.” American Sociological Association Meetings, Seattle, WA.

2016 Program Committee Member, 2016 International Conference on Computational Social Science (IC2S2 2016), Evanston, IL. June 2016.

2016 Program Committee Member, Social Media & Society Conference, on July 11-13, 2016, London, UK.

2016 Participant, Conflict Consortium’s Virtual Workshop, February 15, 2016. (Online discussion group of faculty with young repression scholars, commenting on works in progress.) Viewable online: https://t.co/XwuS8eyJaH

2015 Program Committee Member, Social Media, Activism, and Organisations,

27 October 2019

November 6, 2015, London, England.

2015 Panelist, NSF-Organized Panel, “Policy and Research Workshop. NSF Funding Opportunities Merit Review Criteria and Proposal Preparation for Professional Sociologists and Graduate Students.” American Sociological Association Meetings, Chicago, IL.

2015 Discussant, Methodologies Panel, CBSM Workshop 2015: Protesters and Their Targets. Chicago, IL, August 2015.

2015 Discussant, The Effects of Policing and Authoritarianism on Social Movements Roundtable, Annual Meetings of the American Sociological Association, Chicago, IL, August 2015.

2015 Program Committee Member, Social Media & Society Conference, July 27-29, Toronto, Canada.

2014 Discussant, Panel at Voters, Protest and Policies Workshop, June 16-17, 2014, Leicester, England.

2014 Panelist, NSF-Organized Panel, “Policy and Research Workshop. National Science Foundation: Dispelling Myths about Proposal Submissions and Funding Opportunities for Sociological Research.” American Sociological Association Meetings, San Francisco, California, August 2014.

2014 Program Committee Member, Social Media & Society Conference, September 27-28, 2014, Toronto, Canada.

2014 Program Committee Member, Social Media and Social Movements Conference, September 18-19, 2014, St. Petersburg, Russia

2014 Member, Stan Wheeler Award Selection Committee, Law and Society Association.

2013 Panelist, NSF-Organized Panel, “Policy and Research Workshop. NSF Funding Opportunities Merit Review Criteria and Proposal Preparation for Professional Sociologists and Graduate Students.” American Sociological Association Meetings, New York, New York, August 2013.

2013 Session Organizer, Open session for Communication and Information Technologies Section of the American Sociological Association, August 2013 Annual Meetings.

2012-Present Contributing Editor and Writer, Mobilizing Ideas Blog (www.mobilizingideas.wordpress.com)

28 October 2019

2011-2012 Member, Senior Grant Panel, Sociology, National Science Foundation

2012 Discussant, Regular Session. Conflict and Redistributive Struggle Panel, Annual Meetings of the American Sociological Association Meetings, Denver, Colorado, August 2012.

2012 Panelist, NSF-Organized Panel, “Professional Workshop. Writing a Successful Grant Proposal.” American Sociological Association Meetings, Denver, Colorado, August 2012.

2012 Discussant, Law, Social Conflict, and Meaning Making Panel, Annual Meetings of the Law and Society Association, Waikiki, Hawaii, June 2012.

2011 Panelist, NSF-Organized Panel, “Professional Workshop. Writing a Successful Grant Proposal.” American Sociological Association Meetings, Las Vegas, Nevada, August 2011.

2010 Panelist, NSF-Organized Panel, “Professional Workshop. Writing a Successful Grant Proposal.” American Sociological Association Meetings, Atlanta, GA, August 2010.

2010 Panelist, ADVANCE Luncheon on Mentoring, University of California, Irvine, March 12, 2010.

2009 Panelist, NSF-Organized Panel, “Professional Workshop. Writing a Successful Grant Proposal” American Sociological Association Meetings, San Francisco, August 2009.

2008-2010 Member, Dissertation Improvement Award Panel, Sociology, National Science Foundation

2008-Present Mentor in Collective Behavior and Social Movements Section of the American Sociological Association’s Mentoring Program

2008-Present Mentor in Sociology of Law Section of the American Sociological Association’s Mentoring Program

2008-2009 Member, Best Article Award Committee, Collective Behavior and Social Movements Section of the American Sociological Association.

2008 Panelist, NSF-Organized Panel, “Professional Workshop. Writing a Successful Grant Proposal” American Sociological Association Meetings, Boston, August 2008.

2008 Organizer, “Law and Social Movements Panel.” American Sociological Association Meetings, Boston, MA. August 2008.

29 October 2019

2007-2008 Member, Outstanding Book Award Committee, Collective Behavior and Social Movements Section of the American Sociological Association.

2007 Panelist, NSF-Organized Panel, “Professional Workshop. Writing a Successful Grant Proposal” American Sociological Association Meetings, New York, August 2007.

2006-2007 Member, Best Article Award Committee, Collective Behavior and Social Movements Section of the American Sociological Association.

2006-2007 Member, Mentoring Committee, Collective Behavior and Social Movements Section of the American Sociological Association.

2006 Organizer, Invited Session for the Collective Behavior and Social Movements Section of the American Sociological Association, “Digital Protest,” American Sociological Association Meetings, Montreal, Canada. August 2006.

2006 Discussant, Thematic Session “Cultural Movements and the Impact of Social Movements on Culture,” American Sociological Association Meetings, Montreal, Canada. August 2006.

2006 Discussant, Coordinating People Online Session, the Santa Barbara Forum on Digital Transitions, April 2006.

2006 Discussant, Collaboration, Community, and Collective Action Session, the Santa Barbara Forum on Digital Transitions, April 2006.

2005-2006 Member, Nominations Committee for the Sociology of Law Section of the American Sociological Association.

2005-2006 Member, Conference Steering Committee for the 2006 Santa Barbara Forum on Digital Society hosted by the Center for Information Technology and Society (CITS) at the University of California, Santa Barbara.

2004-2005 Co-Organizer of the Junior Faculty Mentoring Program, Collective Behavior and Social Movements Section of the American Sociological Association

2004 Member, Student Paper Award Selection Committee, Sociology of Law Section, American Sociological Association

2004 Organizer and Discussant, CBSM Section Session: The Social Control of Movements, American Sociological Association Annual Meetings, San Francisco, California. August 2004

2003-2006 Member, Nominations Committee, Collective Behavior and Social Movements

30 October 2019

Section of the American Sociological Association.

2003 Member, Best Article Award Selection Committee, Sociology of Law Section, American Sociological Association

2003 Member, External Program Review Committee for the Department of Sociology at the University of Arizona (as the Alumni Member of the External Review Committee)

2003 Discussant, Regular Session: Social Movement Outcomes, American Sociological Association Annual Meetings, Atlanta, Georgia. August 2003

1999-2002 Web Manager for the Collective Behavior and Social Movements Section of the American Sociological Association.

1998 Co-Organizer of the Collective Behavior and Social Movements Section Refereed Roundtables (with Nella Van Dyke), American Sociological Association Meetings, San Francisco, California. Article Reviews Administrative Science Quarterly Law and Society Review American Behavioral Scientist Mobilization American Journal of Sociology New Media and Society American Journal of Political Science Partecipazione e Conflitto American Sociological Review Political Communication Annual Review of Sociology Research in Political Sociology Contexts Research in Social Movements, Conflicts, Emerald Studies in Media and and Change Communication Social Forces Human Communication Research Social Movement Studies Information, Communication, and Society Social Problems Journal of Communication Social Science Computer Review Journal of Computer-Mediated Sociological Forum Communication Sociological Methods and Research Journal of Conflict Resolution Sociological Perspectives Journal of Historical Sociology Sociological Quarterly Journal of Information, Technology, and Sociological Theory Politics Journal of Peace Research Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion Law and Social Inquiry

Grant Reviews National Science Foundation (past regular panel member for Sociology Program Dissertation Awards, regular panel member for Sociology Program Awards, ad-hoc panel participant for HSD; ad hoc reviewer for the Sociology Program, Political Science, the Law and Social Sciences

31 October 2019

Program, Science and Technology Studies, and the Science, Ethics, and Values Program) Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada

Professional Memberships

American Sociological Association (Member of Collective Behavior and Social Movements Section, Sociology of Law Section, and Communication and Information Technologies Section)

Law and Society Association

Occasional Member of Society for the Study of Social Problems, Society for Social Studies of Science (4S), and American Political Science Association.

University Service

Member, Faculty Advisory Committee, Computational Social Sciences Certificate, University of Arizona, 2018-present

Faculty Advisor, Gamma Rho Lambda at University of Arizona (GRL is an interest-based sorority for LGBTQ students). 2015-Present

Member, Center for Digital Society and Data Studies Faculty Advisory Committee, 2016-Present

CAREER Applicant Mentor, University of Arizona, 2016

Chair, SBS Tech Advisory Council, University of Arizona, 2015-2017

Member, SBS Faculty Advisory Committee, University of Arizona, 2014-2017 (Committee had no chair for 2014-2016, I served as Chair for Fall 2016, and another member chaired in Spring 2017)

Co-Chair, SBS Tech Advisory Council, University of Arizona, 2014-2015

Member, SBS Tech Advisory Council, University of Arizona, 2012-2014

Member, Faculty Grants Committee, Council on Research and Instructional Resources, Academic Senate, University of California, Santa Barbara, 2009--2011

Member, Steering Group on Digital Tools for Research Collaboration, Academic Technology Planning Group, University of California, Santa Barbara, 2010

Member, University Librarian Search Committee, University of California, Santa Barbara, 2010- 2011

Member, Advisory Committee for the L&S Instructional Technology Enhancement Initiative, University of California, Santa Barbara, 2009-2010, 2010-2011

32 October 2019

Director, Optional PhD Emphasis in Technology and Society, University of California, Santa Barbara. 2006-2010

Member, Bluesky Award Selection Committee for 2009, University of California, Santa Barbara, 2008

Member, Selection Committee for 2008-2009 Plous Award, University of California, Santa Barbara, 2008

Director, Center for Information Technology and Society (CITS), University of California, Santa Barbara, 2006-2009

Panelist on NSF CAREER Award Proposal Panel offered by Office of Research, University of California, Santa Barbara, 2006-2010

Presentation to the UCSB Affiliates. “Social Implications of the Internet and New Media: Understanding How People and Communities Relate to New Technologies.” April 17, 2007

Presentation to the UC Board of Regents during the UCSB Site Visit. “Center for Information Technology and Society.” June 9, 2006

Member, Search Committee for the Director of the Institute on Social, Behavioral, and Economic Research, University of California, Santa Barbara, 2006

Member, Faculty Steering Committee, Center for Information Technology and Society (CITS), University of California, Santa Barbara, 2004-2006

Co-Leader of the Social Collaboration and Dynamic Communities Initiative at the Center for Information Technology and Society (CITS) at the University of California, Santa Barbara, 2005-2010

Departmental Service

P&T Full Professor Committee Chair, School of Sociology, University of Arizona, Spring 2019 (2 cases prepared)..

Chair, Recruitment Committee, School of Sociology, University of Arizona, 2017-2018

Member, Executive Committee, School of Sociology, University of Arizona, 2017-2018

Member, Director Recruitment Committee, School of Sociology, University of Arizona, 2017- 2018

Member, Recruitment Committee, School of Sociology, University of Arizona, 2015-2016 (2 successful searches)

33 October 2019

Chair, Regents Professor Nominating Committee for Robin Stryker, School of Sociology, University of Arizona, 2015, 2016 & 2017 (Co-Chair in 2016 & 2017)

Arizona Methods Workshop Instructor, 2013-2015

Member, Regents Professor Nominating Committee for Ron Breiger, School of Sociology, University of Arizona, 2014

Faculty Chair, School of Sociology, University of Arizona, 2014-2015

Chair, Executive Committee, School of Sociology, University of Arizona, 2014-2015

Member, Graduate Studies Committee, School of Sociology, University of Arizona, Fall 2014. 2018-2019.

Human Subjects Departmental Representative, School of Sociology, University of Arizona, Spring 2014, Spring 2015, Spring 2016

Member, Undergraduate Program Committee, University of Arizona, Spring 2012, 2012-2013

Chair, Sociology Ad-Hoc Committee on Computing, Department of Sociology, University of Arizona, Spring 2012, 2012-2013, 2013-2014, 2014-2015

Brown Bag Series Organizer, Department of Sociology, University of Arizona, Fall 2012, 2016- 2017

Member, Senior Quantitative Search Committee, Department of Sociology, University of California, Santa Barbara, 2006-2007

Member, Affirmative Action and Recruitment Diversity Committee, Department of Sociology, University of California, Santa Barbara. 2002-2003. 2006-2007

Member, Undergraduate Program Committee, Department of Sociology, University of California, Santa Barbara. 2005-2006, 2008-2011

Member, Graduate Program Committee, Department of Sociology, University of California, Santa Barbara. 2002-2003. 2004-2005. 2007-2008

Member, Executive Committee, Department of Sociology, University of California, Santa Barbara. 2003-2004

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