November 2014

Abbreviated CURRICULUM VITAE

KELLY MOORE

Department of Loyola University 1032 W. Sheridan Rd. Chicago, IL 60660 773-508-3488 (t) 773-508-7099 (f) [email protected]

EDUCATION

Ph.D., 1993, Sociology, University of Arizona M.A., 1988, Sociology, University of Arizona B.A., cum laude, 1984, Sociology, University of Arizona

EMPLOYMENT

2009-present: Associate Professor of Sociology, Loyola University-Chicago 2011-2012: Program Director, National Science Foundation Science, and Society Program and National Science Foundation Ethics Education in Science and Engineering Program 2008-2009: Associate Professor of Sociology and Affiliate of the Department of Women’s Studies, University of Cincinnati 2005-2008: Assistant Professor of Sociology and Affiliate of the Department of Women’s Studies, University of Cincinnati 2003-2005: Assistant Professor of Sociology, Brooklyn College, City University of New York 1993-2003: Assistant Professor of Sociology, Barnard College, Columbia University

AREAS OF INTEREST

Public debates over science and technology, neoliberalism, social movements, embodiment, health, gender and ethnorace.

Moore, p. 2

PUBLICATIONS

Books

Daniel L. Kleinman and Kelly Moore, eds. 2014 The Routledge Handbook of Science, Technology and Society. London and New York: Routledge Press.

Kelly Moore. 2008. Disrupting Science: Social Movements, American Scientists, and the Politics of the Military, 1945-1975. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press.

Reviews in Science, American Journal of Sociology, Contemporary Sociology, Mobilization, Social Forces, Canadian Journal of Sociology, International Review of Modern Sociology

Robert Merton Distinguished Book Prize, 2011. American Sociological Association Section on Science, Knowledge and Technology.

Honorable Mention, Charles Tilly Book Award, 2009. American Sociological Association Section on Collective Behavior and Social Movements.

Scott Frickel and Kelly Moore, eds. 2006. The New of Science: Organizations, Networks, and Institutions. University of Wisconsin Press.

Korean Translation: 과학의 새로운 정치사회학을 향하여:출간기념 스콧 프리켈 (Galmuri Press, 2013).

Articles and Book Chapters

Kelly Moore and Matthew J. Hoffmann. 2014. “’The Tip of the Day’: Field Theory and Alternative Nutrition in the US.” Political Power and 27: 223-258.

Kelly Moore and Judith A. Wittner. 2014. “Global Hunger and Global Obesity.” Controversies in Science and Technology, v. 4, D. L. Kleinman, K. Cloud-Hansen and J. Handelsman, eds. Oxford: .

Moore, p. 3

Kelly Moore, 2013. “Fear and Fun: Science and Gender, Emotion and Embodiment Under Neoliberalism.” The Scholar and the Feminist 11.1-11.2 http://sfonline.barnard.edu/gender-justice-and-neoliberal- transformations/fear-and-fun-science-and-gender-emotion-and-embodiment-under- neoliberalism/.

Alison Alkon, Daniel Block, and Kelly Moore, with Catherine Gillis, Nicole DiNuncio and Noel Chavez. 2013. “Foodways of the Urban Poor.” Geoforum 48: 126-135.

Kelly Moore, David Hess, Daniel K. Kleinman and Scott Frickel. 2011. “Science and Neoliberal .” Theory & Society 40: 505-532.

2012 Star-Nelkin Best Article Award, American Sociological Association Section on Science, Knowledge and Technology

Kelly Moore. 2006. “Powered By the People: Scientific Authority in Participatory Science.” Pp. 299-323 in Scott Frickel and Kelly Moore, eds., The New Political Sociology of Science: Organizations, Networks, and Institutions. Madison, Wisc.: University of Wisconsin Press.

Scott Frickel and Kelly Moore. 2006. “Prospects and Challenges for a New Political Sociology of Science.” Pp. 3-31 in Scott Frickel and Kelly Moore, eds., The New Political Sociology of Science: Organizations, Networks, and Institutions. Madison, Wisc.: University of Wisconsin Press.

Kelly Moore and Nicole Hala. 2002. “Organizing Identity: The Creation of Science for the People. Research in the Sociology of Organizations 19: 309-339.

Kelly Moore and Benjamin Shepard. 2002. “Reclaiming the Streets of New York.” Pp. 27-38 in Critical Mass: Bicycling’s Defiant Celebration, Chris Carlsson, ed. Oakland, CA: AK Press.

Lesley J. Wood and Kelly Moore. 2002. “Target Practice: Community Activism in a Global Era.” Pp. 21- 34 in From ACT-UP to the WTO: Urban Protest and Community Building in the Era of Globalization, Benjamin Shepard and Ronald Hayduk, eds. New York: Verso.

Kelly Moore. 1999. “Political Protest and Institutional Change: The Anti-Vietnam War Movement and American Science.” Pp. 97-115 in How Social Movements Matter, Marco Giugni, Doug McAdam, and Charles Tilly, eds. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.

Moore, p. 4

Kelly Moore. 1996. “Organizing Integrity: American Science and the Creation of Public Interest Science Organizations, 1955-1975.” American Journal of Sociology 101: 1592-1627.

Doug McAdam and Kelly Moore. 1988. “The Politics of Black Insurgency, 1930-1975.” Pp. 255-85 in Violence in America, Volume II, Ted Robert Gurr, ed. Newbury Park: Sage Publications.

Book Reviews:

2015 (forthcoming). “Uncage the Social!” Symposium on Charles Camic, Neil Gross and Michele Lamont. Eds., Social Knowledge in the Making (University of Chicago Press, 2011), Sociologica.

2014. Gwen Ottinger. Refining Expertise: How Responsible Engineers Subvert Challenges (NYU Press, 2013). Journal of Responsible Innovation 1:1.

2005. Bruno Latour. Politics of Nature: How to Bring The Sciences Into Democracy (Harvard University Press, 2004). Contemporary Sociology 34: 168-9.

2005. Matthias Gross. Inventing Nature: Ecological Restoration by Public Experiments (Lexington Books, 2003). Contemporary Sociology 34: 728.

2004. Gerhard Sonnert, with Gerald Holton. Ivory Bridges: Connecting Science and Society (MIT Press, 2001). Isis: The Journal of the History of Science Society 87: 112.

2002. Colin Barker, Alan Johnson and Michael Lavalette, editors. Leadership and Social Movements (Manchester University Press, 2001). Extremism & Democracy 3: 2.

1999. David J. Hess. Science Studies: An Advanced Introduction (New York University Press, 1997). Contemporary Sociology. 28: 108.

1998. Steven C. Ward. Reconfiguring Truth: , Science Studies, and the Search for a New Model of Knowledge (Rowman and Littlefield, 1996). Contemporary Sociology 27: 211-12.

1997. Steven Epstein. Impure Science: AIDS Activism and the Politics of Knowledge (University of California Press, 1996). American Journal of Sociology: 103: 769.

1997. James J. Farrell. The Spirit of the Sixties: The Making of Postwar Radicalism (Routledge, 1997). Mobilization 4: 112.

1996. Susan Leigh Star, ed. Ecologies of Knowledge: Work and Politics in Science and Technology (State University of New York Press, 1995). Contemporary Sociology 25: 680-681. Moore, p. 5

1996. Teresa Odendahl and Michael O'Neill, editors. Women and Power in the Nonprofit Sector (Jossey-Bass,1994). Voluntas 7: 444-5.

1993. Louise Krasniewicz. Nuclear Summer: The Clash of Communities at the Seneca a Women's Peace Encampment ( Press, 1992). Contemporary Sociology 22: 821.

Other Writing:

Kelly Moore. 2014. “Foodways of the Urban Poor.” Broad Magazine 70. http://issuu.com/broadmagazine/docs/broad_magazine_issue_70__august_2014

Kelly Moore and Matthew J. Hoffmann. 2012. “Science and Social Movements.” Pp. 1147-1152 in Encyclopedia of Social and Political Movements, David A. Snow, Donatella Della Porta, Bert Klandermans and Doug McAdam, eds. (Blackwell Publishing).

Kelly Moore and Benjamin Shepard. 2012. “Direct Action.” Pp. 353-357 in Encyclopedia of Social and Political Movements, David A. Snow, Donatella Della Porta, Bert Klandermans and Doug McAdam, eds. (Malden, MA: Blackwell Publishing).

Kelly Moore. 2011. “WIC User’s Views of Food and Service.” Prepared for Catholic Charities, Chicago IL.

Kelly Moore. 2009. “Travel Carbon Use.” Section 3 of the President’s Report on University , University of Cincinnati.

Kelly Moore. 2007. “Direct Action.” Pp. 1164-167 in The Encyclopedia of Sociology, George Ritzer, ed. (Malden, MA: Blackwell Publishing).

Kelly Moore. 2006. “Norms and Values in Science.” In Science, Technology and Society: An Encyclopedia, Sal Restivo, ed. Cambridge, Mass.: Oxford University Press

Accepted for Publication:

Kelly Moore and Kyle J. Whoolley. “Direct Action.” For inclusion in the Encyclopedia of Social and Political Movements, David A. Snow, Donatella Della Porta, Bert Klandermans and Doug McAdam, eds. (Malden, MA: Blackwell Publishing) (expected publication date: June 2015). Moore, p. 6

Work in Progress:

The New Political Sociology of Science, with Scott Frickel (proposal development; this volume was solicited by Polity Press).

Wellness (monograph; expected completion date: August 2015).

“The Political Sociology of Science” (with Sulfikar Amir, Scott Frickel, David J. Hess, Daniel L. Kleinman, Logan Williams (alphabetical order)). For inclusion in the Handbook of Science, Technology and Society, 4th ed. C. Miller, L. Smith-Doerr, R. Fouche, and U. Felt, eds. (MIT Press).

“When Scientists Culture Science: Scientists and Engineers for Social and Political Action and the Rise of Science Radicalism in the 1970s. For inclusion in a special issue of Science as Culture, Peter Taylor, ed.

“Groovy Science in the Seventies.” Review Essay, Historical Studies in the Natural Sciences

GRANTS, FELLOWSHIPS and LEAVES

Fellowships

Competitive Faculty Research Leave, Loyola University Chicago, 2014-2015.

Charles Phelps Taft Research Center Fellowship, University of Cincinnati. “Making the National Body: Science, Citizenship and American Nutrition Guidelines.” September 1, 2009-September 1, 2010 (Declined in order to take a position at Loyola University- Chicago).

National Endowment for the Humanities “The Origins and Legacies of the 1960s.” University of Arizona, June 24-August 9, 1996.

Indiana University Center on Philanthropy. “Dissertation Fellowship in Nonprofit Governance,” $12,000, 1991-1992.

Research Grants

Kunz Center for the Study of Gender, Work, and Family, Department of Sociology, University of Cincinnati. “Stuck in the Kitchen: Gendered Labor and the 1980 National Nutrition Guidelines.” $2000. June-July 2008.

Charles Phelps Taft Research Center, University of Cincinnati. Summer Research Fellowship for grant preparation “Feeding the Nation: Science, Institutional Politics, and the Development of National Nutrition Guidelines, 1941-2005.” $8000. June-July 2007.

Moore, p. 7 City University of New York Research Foundation. “Cultivating Nature: Native Habitat Restoration in New York and San Francisco,” $3000, 2004-2005.

Office of the Vice Provost for Research, Columbia University. “Science, Citizenship, and Professionalism in Early Twentieth Century America and Great Britain.” $23,700, 2001.

Institute for Social and Economic Research and Policy, Columbia University. “Science, Citizenship, and Professionalism in Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Century America and Great Britain.” $7600, 2000.

The Pew Charitable Trusts. Project Director: Christian Smith, Department of Sociology, University of North Carolina Department of Sociology. “Getting Rid of God?: Secularizing American Science, 1880-1930.” $48,000, 1998-2001.

National Science Foundation Doctoral Dissertation Improvement Grant, #9101174, $4000, 1992.

Travel Grants

Charles Phelps Taft Research Center, University of Cincinnati. International Travel Fellowship. $2400. Annual Meeting of the Society for Social Studies of Science, Rotterdam, Netherlands, August 18-24, 2008.

Charles Phelps Taft Research Center, University of Cincinnati, Center Travel Grant, $434, Annual Meeting of the Eastern Sociology Society, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, March 2007.

University of Cincinnati, Charles Phelps Taft Center Travel Grant, $2500, International Sociological Association, Durban, South Africa, July, 2006.

University of Cincinnati Charles Phelps Taft Center Travel Grant, $636, Annual Meeting of the Society for Social Studies of Science, Pasadena, California, October, 2005.

Brooklyn College. Stewart Travel Award. Annual Meeting for the Society for Ecological Restoration, Zaragoza, Spain, 2005, $300.

American Institute of Physics. Travel Grant for “Social Movements and Institutional Change.” $648, 1998.

Barnard College. “Between Science and Politics: The Political Capacity of the Third Sector, 1955-1985.” $2438, 1995.

Indiana University Center on Philanthropy Research Grant, $5000, 1993.

Moore, p. 8

ACADEMIC AND PROFESSIONAL HONORS

2014. Nominee, Sujack Family Teaching Award, Loyola University

2014. Nominee, St. Ignatius Loyola Award, Loyola University

2013. Sujack Family Master Researcher Award, Loyola University Chicago.

2012. Star-Nelkin Best Paper Award, American Sociological Association Section on Science, Knowledge and Technology, for “Science and Neoliberal Globalization.” 2011. (with David J. Hess, Daniel L. Kleinman, and Scott Frickel). Theory & Society 40: 505-532.

2011. Robert K. Merton Book Prize, American Sociological Association Section on Science, Knowledge and Technology, for Disrupting Science: Social Movements, American Scientists, and the Politics of the Military, 1945-1975 (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 2008).

2009. Charles Tilly Book Award, American Sociological Association Section on Collective Behavior and Social Movements, for Disrupting Science: Social Movements, American Scientists, and the Politics of the Military, 1945-1975 (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 2008).

2000. Gladys Brooks Junior Faculty Teaching Award, Barnard College.

1997, 1998, 2002. Students of Color Faculty Appreciation Award, Barnard College.

1996 and 2002. Faculty Marshal, Barnard College.

1992. Honors Program Graduate Student Teaching Award, University of Arizona.

INVITED LECTURES, WORKSHOP and CONFERENCE PRESENTATIONS

2014. Keynote Speaker. “Justice and Science for the People.” Conference on Science for the People: Then and Now, University of Massachusetts-Amherst (March 17, 2014).

2013. “Neoliberal Eating.” Invited Lecture, Department of Sociology Colloquium Series, University of Illinois-Chicago (September 11, 2013).

2013. Atomic Heritage Foundation Workshop, “Transforming the Relationship Between Science and Society: The Manhattan Project and Its Legacy.” Washington, DC (Feb. 14-15, 2013).

2012. “Money Deserts, Not Food Deserts.” Invited Lecture, Chicago Area Food Studies Group, University of Illinois-Chicago, November 7, 2012.

Moore, p. 9 2012. “Pleasure, Science, and Neoliberalism.” Invited Presentation, Conference on “Gender, Neoliberalism and Justice.” Barnard College-Columbia University Center for Research on Women, (September 21, 2012)

2011. “Bringing People Back in: Scientific Fields and The Devolution of Scientists’ Authority.” Conference on The Political Sociology of Science, Holtz Center for Science and Technology Studies, University of Wisconsin-Madison (February 6, 2012).

2011. “Missing Persons: Bringing People Back In to the “Overstructural” Analysis of Neoliberalism and Science.” Conference on Science and Neoliberalism, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, New York (June 304, 2011).

2010. “The Trouble With Greens: Community Solutions to Food Insecurity.” Invited Presentation, Walking a Fine Line: Scientists, Experts, and Civic Engagement Symposium, Dillard University, New Orleans, LA (November 3, 2010).

2010. University of Wisconsin Humanities Center, Madison, Wisconsin. “Pleasuring Science: Emotion and Health Practices in the U.S. (February 18, 2010).

2010. Klosteg Lecture, Science and Human Culture Lecture Series, Center for Science and Human Culture, Northwestern University. “Pleasuring Science: Emotion and Health Practices in the U.S. (January 25, 2010).

2009. Author Meets Critics Panelist, Phil Brown, Toxic Exposures: Contested Illnesses and the Environmental Health Movement (Columbia University Press, 2007), Annual Meeting of the American Sociological, San Francisco, CA (August 17, 2009).

2009. “Science, Neoliberalism and the Nourished Body.” Loyola University-Chicago Colloquium Series, (March 3, 2009).

2009. National Science Foundation, Symposium on Centers, Universities, and the Scientific Innovation Ecology, “Using Qualitative Methods to Study Downstream Effects.” (March 26-27, 2009).

2009. University of Washington Simpson Center for the Humanities Science Studies Network, “Democratizing Science” (February 9, 2009).

2009. University of Washington Science Studies Network Colloquium Series, “Living in the (Sub)Optimal Body: Science, Habitus, and the Nourished Self.” (February 10, 2009).

2009. University of California Davis, Science Studies Colloquium, “Living in the (Sub) Optimal Body: Science, Habitus, and the Nourished Self.” (February 11, 2009).

2009. Stanford University Science and Technology Studies Program “Living in the (Sub)Optimal Body: Science, Habitus, and the Nourished Self.” (February 12, 2009) Moore, p. 10

2009. Stanford University Center for International Security and Cooperation, “Democratizing Science” (February 13, 2009).

2009. Keynote Speaker, “The Politics of Refusal: Biologists, Anthropologists, and the Temptations of the Military.” University of Arizona Symposium on Science and War (January 22, 2009).

2008. Cornell University Departments of Sociology and Science and Technology Studies, “Standardizing the Body: The Citizen Scientist and Federal Nutrition Guidelines, 1933-2005” (April 8, 2008).

2008. Author Meets Critics Panelist, Michelle Murphy, Sick Building Syndrome: and the Problem of Uncertainty: Environmental Politics, Technoscience and Women Workers (Duke University Press, 2006), winner of the 2008 Society for Social Studies of Science Ludwig Fleck Prize (August 15, 2008)

2007. “The Failed National Body: Federal Nutrition Guidelines, 1933-2005.” Department of Sociology, Loyola University-Chicago (November 30, 2007)

2007. “The Failure of the ‘Information Provision’ Model of Health Education, and Some More Viable Alternatives.” Conference on Social Movements and Health, (October 10, 2007)

2004. “Naturalizing Social Life, Socializing Natural Life: Building Nature/Society in Urban Restoration Projects.” Department of Science and Technology Studies, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (April 11, 2004).

2004. “Scientists and Political Activism: Strategies for Professional and Political Impact.” Conference on “Building Bridges: Classrooms, Communities, Research.” Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (April 12, 2004).

2004. “The New Political Sociology of Science” (with Scott Frickel). Departments of Natural Resources, Cornell University (March 11, 2004)

2004. “Strategies for Media Recognition: Some Historical Lessons.” 22nd Annual Scholar and the Feminist Conference, Barnard College (September 23, 2004) 2003. “Origins of Feminist Science Studies in the United States.” Department of Women’s Studies, Hofstra University (February 11, 2003)

2003. “Doing Good While Doing Science: Activism in American Science, 1945-1975.” Department of Sociology, Fordham University (April 14, 2003)

2002. “Bringing Gender into Science and Technology Studies Classrooms.” Annual Meeting of the American Association of Colleges and Universities, Washington, DC (August 13, 2002) Moore, p. 11

1999. “The Physical Self and Social Movement Activism.” Department of Sociology, Manchester Metropolitan University (England) (January 13, 1999)

1999. “Teaching Using the World Wide Web.” Department of Sociology, Emory University (October 11, 1998)

1998. “Social Movements and Institutional Change.” Department of Sociology, University of North Carolina (October 12, 1998)

1996. “Speaking Truth to Power: The Changing Status of Science in American Political Life, 1955-1985.” Culture and Stratification Workshop, Princeton University (February 12, 1996)

1996. “Expertise and Democracy.” Conference on World Affairs, sessions on “Community,” “Public Life, “The ,” and “Radical Activism.” University of Colorado-Boulder (March 2,1996)

1996. “Social Movements as Agents of Institutional Change: The Women's Movement and American Science, 1969-1980.” Rutgers University Department of Sociology (September 22, 1996)

CONFERENCE PRESENTATIONS (2006-2014)

August 2014. (with Nathalia Vidal Hernandez). “Perpetual Motion.” Annual Meeting of the Society for Social Studies of Science, Buenos Aires, Argentina.

November 2013. “From Black Hunger to National Health: Race and Gender in USDA Eating Policy, 1955-1980.” Social Science History Association, Chicago, IL.

October 2013. “Teaching Embodied Calculation: Entrepreneurs of Neoliberalism.“ Society for Social Studies of Science, San Diego, CA.

October 2011. "Fear and Fun: Emotional Landscapes of Science under Neoliberalism." Presented at the Annual Meeting of the Society for Social Studies of Science, Cleveland, OH.

October 2011. “Embodied States: Consuming with Pleasure Under Neoliberalism." Presented at the Annual Meeting of the Society for Social Studies of Science, Cleveland, OH.

August 2011. American Sociological Association, with Catherine Gillis (graduate student): "Beyond the Market: Food Cultures Among the Poor." Presented at the Theory Section Paper Session: Sociological Theory and Inequalities.

August 2010. “How Low Income People Use Health Knowledge.” Presented that the Annual Meeting of the American Sociological Association, Atlanta, GA

Moore, p. 12 March 2010. “From Black Starvation to White Obesity: Neoliberalism and the Shift in National Food Policy, 1969-2005.” Presented at the Annual Meeting of Eastern Sociological Society Meeting, Boston, MA.

March 2010. “How Low Income People Think About Health and Food.” (with Catherine Gillis) Presented at the Annual Meeting of the Eastern Sociological Association, Boston, MA.

May 2010. “How Medical Researchers Construct “Normal” Pain.” (with Elizabeth Sweeney). Presented at the 27th Annual Qualitative Analysis Conference: Social Pragmatism as a Conceptual Foundation. Brantford, Ontario, Canada.

October 2009. “Pleasuring Science: Nutrition, Discipline and Embodiment.” Annual Meeting of the Society for Social Studies of Science, Washington, D.C.

August 2009, “Making Nutrition a Right: Social Movements and the Politics of Food, 1965- 1968.” Presented at the Annual Meeting of American Sociological Association Panel on Science, Food and Nutrition, San Francisco, CA

August 2008. “Failed Biogovernance?: How Scientists Explain Noncompliance with Nutrition Advice.” Annual Meeting of the Society for Social Studies of Science, Rotterdam, Netherlands.

October 2007. “Making the National Body: Markets, Gender, and the 2005 USDA MyPyramid.” Annual Meeting of the Society for Social Studies of Science, Montreal, Canada.

August 2007. (with Alan Wight) as Civic Network .” Annual Meeting of the American Sociological Association, August, 2007.

March 2007. (with Alan Wight) “Mediating Nature and Society Through the Machine: Ecovillages and the Making of a New Environmentalism.” Eastern Sociological Society, February, 2007.

PANELS ORGANIZED AND SERVICE AS A DISCUSSANT (2006-2004)

Panels Organized

2014. (With Sydney Halpern). “Science, Ethics and Justice.” Section on Science, Knowledge and Technology, Annual Meeting of the American Sociological Association, San Francisco, CA.

2012. Regular Session, “Technology.” Annual Meeting of the American Sociological Association, Las Vegas, NV.

2009. Regular Session, “Technology.” Annual Meeting of the American Sociological Association, San Francisco, CA.

Moore, p. 13 2007. Author-Meets-Critics. Scott Frickel, Chemical Consequences: Environmental Mutagens, Scientist Activism, and the Rise of Genetic Toxicology (Rutgers University Press, 2004) and Joseph Masco, Nuclear Borderlands: The Manhattan Project in Post-Cold War New Mexico (Princeton University Press, 2006) Annual Meeting of the American Sociological Association, New York City.

2007. “Resisting Political Repression.” American Sociological Association section on Collective Behavior and Social Movements mini-conference, August 9-10, Hofstra University

2006. Author-Meets-Critics: Jenny Reardon, Race to the Finish: Identity and Governance in a Genomic Age. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2005. Annual Meeting of the Society for Social Studies of Science, Vancouver, B. C., Canada.

2006. Roundtable Sessions, Section on Science, Knowledge, and Technology, American Sociological Association, Montreal, Canada.

2006. Author-Meets-Critics: Stefan Timmermans and Marc Berg, The Gold Standard: The Challenge of Evidence-Based Medicine. Philadelphia, Temple University Press, 2003. Section on Science, Knowledge, and Technology, Annual Meeting of the American Sociological Association, Montreal, Canada.

Discussant or Presider

2011. Panel Discussant. Collective Behavior and Social Movements Mini-Conference, American Sociological Association, Las Vegas, NV.

2011. Presider, Regular Session, Sociology of Science I: Politics and Discovery, American Sociological Association, Las Vegas, August 2011.

2007. Discussant. “New Perspectives on Science and Social Movements,” Annual Meeting of the Society for Social Studies of Science, Montreal, Canada, October, 2007.

2007. Discussant. “States and Social Movements.” Section on Collective Behavior and Social Movements of the American Sociological Association Conference on Social Movements and Strategy, Hofstra University, August, 2007.

COURSES TAUGHT

Undergraduate (LUC) Science, Technology and Society (SOCL 126) (LUC) Science and Society (HON 204) (Honors Course; Interdisciplinary, Core Curriculum) (LUC) The Sociology and Politics of Food (SOCL 276) (LUC) Internship (SOCL 380) Moore, p. 14

Environmental Sociology Introduction to Sociology Organizations in Modern Society Social Movements Sociology of Occupations Research Methods Senior Thesis Seminar People, Power and Politics (Core Curriculum) Sociology of Science Research Methods

Graduate (LUC) Knowledge, Expertise and Power (LUC) Social Movements

Sociology of Science Social Movements Qualitative Research Teaching Practicum

PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES

Service as a Program Officer Program Officer, National Science Foundation Science, Technology and Society Program (2011-2012) Program Officer, National Science Foundation Ethics Education in Science and Engineering Program (2011-2012)

Service as a Reviewer

Editorial Boards, Review Panels, and Ad Hoc Grant Reviews

Netherlands Society for Scientific Research (NWO) Reviewer, Postdoctoral Research in Science, Technology and Society (2013)

University of Wollongong, Australia, external reviewer, Ph.D. students (2013, 2104).

Editorial Board, Contemporary Sociology (2012-2013) Editorial Board, Science, Technology, and Human Values (2012-2015) Editorial Board, American Journal of Sociology (2008-2011) Editorial Board, Nature & Culture (2007-present) Editorial Board, American Sociological Review (1999-2003) Moore, p. 15 National Science Foundation: Cross-Directorate Review Panel, National Science Foundation (program title withheld to ensure confidentiality) (2013). Review Panel, National Science Foundation (program title withheld to ensure confidentiality) (2007-2010) Review Panel, National Science Foundation (program title withheld to ensure confidentiality) (2001) Consulting Editor, American Journal of Sociology (2000-2003)

Journals (last five years) American Journal of Sociology American Sociological Review Contexts Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion Minerva Nature and Culture Science and Culture Science and Public Policy Science, Technology, and Human Values Social Forces Social Movement Studies Social Problems Social Studies of Science Sociological Focus Sociological Forum Time and Society Theoretical Criminology

Academic Presses (2005-2014)

University of California Press University of Chicago Press Columbia University Press MIT Press University of Minnesota Press Routledge Press

Organizational Service

Society for Social Studies of Science, Elected Offices

Council Member (2013-2016)

2013: Publications Chair (oversaw creation of new open-access journal; oversaw publication of the association’s flagship book publication Handbook of Science and Moore, p. 16 Technology Studies; oversaw the editorship of the lead publication, Science, Technology and Human Values; Mullins Student Paper Award Committee Member (32 nominees); 2014: Publications Chair (oversaw building of website for new open-access journal and selection of editor and managing editor; oversaw the editorship of the Handbook of Science and Technology Studies; oversaw the editorship of the lead publication, Science, Technology and Human Values; Carson Book Prize Committee

American Sociological Association, Elected Offices

Section on Science, Knowledge, and Technology Past Chair (2009-2011) Chair (2007-2009) Chair-Elect (2005-2007) Council (1997-2000; 2001-2004) Section on Collective Behavior and Social Movements Council (2001-2004)

Editorial Board, Rose Monograph Series, published in conjunction with the Russell Sage Foundation (2011-2013)

American Sociological Association Distinguished Contribution to Teaching Award Committee (2002-2004)

American Sociological Association, Other Service

Section on Science, Knowledge, and Technology Hacker-Mullins Graduate Student Paper Award Committee (2012) Past Chair (2009-2011) Chair (2007-2009) Chair-Elect (2005-2007) Council (1997-2000; 2001-2004) Chair, Robert K. Merton Book Award and Hacker-Mullins Graduate Student Paper Awards Committees (2000-2001; 2001-2002) Book Award Committee (1999-2000) “Book Notes” editor for section newsletter (1998-2000) “Syllabus for Sociology of Science.” In Syllabi and Instructional Materials for the Sociology of Science, Knowledge, and Technology, 1st and 2nd editions. Edited by Steven Zehr. Washington, D.C.: American Sociological Association (1996 and 1997)

Section on Collective Behavior and Social Movements Workshop Committee Member (2010-2013) Best Article Award Committee (2001-2002) Best Book Award Committee (2002-2003) Graduate Student Paper Award Committee (2003-2004) Nominations Committee (1998-2001) Moore, p. 17 Editor. (1997). Social Movements Syllabi and Teaching Materials, 2nd edition Washington, D.C. Publications Committee (1994-1995; 1995-1996) Biannual Book Award Committee (1994-1995)

Section on Political Sociology Graduate Student Paper Award Committee (1992-1993; 1993-1994)

Section on the Sociology of the Body Graduate Student Paper Award Committee (2010-2012)

Section on Sociology of Culture Best Paper Award Committee (2011) Graduate Student Paper Award Committee (2010-2011)

Ethnogra-FilmFestival, Paris, France Film Judge (2013-2014)

University Service (Available on request)

PROFESSIONAL MEMBERSHIPS

American Sociological Association Section on Science, Knowledge and Technology Section the Body and Embodiment Section on the Sociology of Culture Section on Labor and Labor Movements

Eastern Sociological Society

Society for Social Studies of Science

Sociologists for Women in Society