1 FABIO ROJAS Curriculum Vita April 7, 2015

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1 FABIO ROJAS Curriculum Vita April 7, 2015 FABIO ROJAS Curriculum Vita April 7, 2015 Work Home 761 Ballantine Hall 899 South College Mall Road, Ste. 349 1020 East Kirkwood Avenue Bloomington, Indiana 47401 Bloomington, Indiana 47405 Email: [email protected] Website www.fabiorojas.net EDUCATION Ph.D. Sociology, University of Chicago, 2003. M.A. Sociology, University of Chicago, 1999. Graduate Studies. Mathematics, University of California, Berkeley, 1993–1997. B.A. Major in Mathematics, Minor in Peace and Conflict Studies. University of California, Berkeley, 1993. ACADEMIC EMPLOYMENT Associate Professor of Sociology, Indiana University, Bloomington, 2010-present. Adjunct Professor of African and African Diaspora Studies, 2013-present. Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Scholar in Health Policy Research. University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. 2008-2010. Assistant Professor of Sociology, Indiana University, Bloomington. 2003-2010. (On leave 2008-2010). BOOKS Michael T. Heaney and Fabio Rojas. 2015. Party in the Street: The Antiwar Movement and the Democratic Party after 9/11. Cambridge University Press. Series: Cambridge Studies in Contentious Politics. Author meets critics session: April 2015 - Midwestern Political Science Association; August 2015 - General Conference of the European Consortium for Political Research; October 2015 – Social Science History Association. Book readings: March 2015 - Seminary Coop Bookstore, Chicago; Books and Culture, New York; Busboys and Poets, Washington, DC. Reviewed in The Washington Post’s political science blog, “The Monkey Cage.” 1 Fabio Rojas 2 Fabio Rojas. 2007. From Black Power to Black Studies: How a Radical Social Movement Became an Academic Discipline. Baltimore, Maryland: The Johns Hopkins University Press. Reviews: Teachers College Record (November 2007), Il Manifesto (Italian political newspaper, February 2008), Mobilization: An International Journal (March 2008), Diversity and Democracy: Civic Learning for Shared Futures (Spring 2008), Left History (Spring 2008), The Western Journal of Black Studies (Summer 2008), The Journal of Black Studies (September 2008), Contemporary Sociology (September 2008), Administrative Science Quarterly (September 2008), The American Journal of Sociology (May 2009), The Journal of American History (June 2009), Higher Education Review (UK journal, Spring 2009), History of Education (Summer 2009), Ricerche Di Storia Politica (Italian political science journal, 2009), Social Forces (June 2010), Inside Higher Education (June 2012). Panel Sessions: National Council for Black Studies. March 20, 2008, questions for the author on March 22, 2008; 40th Anniversary Celebration of African Studies at Cornell University. October 30, 2009; Author Meets Students - Center for African American Studies: the University of Illinois, Urbana- Champaign. November 11, 2009; Book Forum – Pennsylvania State University, Altoona. April 6 & 7, 2010. PEER REVIEWED JOURNAL ARTICLES Fabio Rojas, W. Carson Byrd, and Sanjay Saint. 2015. “The Institutional Origins of Infection Control Knowledge: Results of a Systematic Bibliographical Analysis from 1960 to 2009.” American Journal of Infection Control 43: 121-6. Michael T. Heaney and Fabio Rojas. 2014. “Hybrid Activism: Social Movement Mobilization in a Multi-Movement Environment.” American Journal of Sociology 119(4): 1047-1103. Fabio Rojas and Carson Byrd. 2014. “The Four Histories of Black Power: The Black Nationalist Sector and its Impact on American Society.” Black Diaspora Review 4(1): 113-56. McKelvey, Karissa, Joe DiGrazia, and Fabio Rojas. 2104. “Twitter Publics: How Online Political Communities Signal Electoral Outcomes in the 2010 U.S. House Election.” Information, Communication, and Society 17(4): 436-50. Joe DiGrazia, Karissa McKelvey, Fabio Rojas, and Johan Bollen. 2013. “More Tweets, More Votes: Social Media as a Quantitative Indicator of Political Behavior.” PLoS One. Discussed in The Washington Post, The Wall Street Journal, C-SPAN, The Daily Rundown, National Public Radio, The Times of India, and other sources (see below). Fabio Rojas and W. Carson Byrd. 2012. “Intellectual Change in Africana Studies: Evidence from a Cohort Analysis.” The Journal of African American Studies 16(3): 550-573. 2 Fabio Rojas 3 Michael T. Heaney and Fabio Rojas. 2011. “The Partisan Dynamics of Contention: Demobilization of the Antiwar Movement in the United States, 2007-2009.” Mobilization: An International Journal 16(1): 41-54. Discussed in The National Journal, The Daily Dish (Andrew Sullivan), The Atlantic, Business Insider, National Review Online, The Wall Street Journal, and other outlets (see below). Fabio Rojas. 2011. “Institutions and Disciplinary Beliefs about Africana Studies.” Western Journal of Black Studies 35(2): 92-103. Fabio Rojas. 2010. “Power Through Institutional Work: Building Academic Authority in the 1968 Third World Strike.” Academy of Management Journal 53:1263-80. Fabio Rojas and Amia Foston. 2010. “Using Graph Theory to Visualize Social Sequence Data.” The Journal of Social Structure. http://www.cmu.edu/joss/content/issues/2010jossviz/4_Rojas_Foston.htm Fabio Rojas. 2009. “Technology, Structure, and Heterogeneity among American Antiwar Organizations.” Research in the Sociology of Organizations 26: 221-247. Fabio Rojas and Donald Shaffer. 2009. “What Have We Learned from the Black Studies Experience?” Souls: A Critical Journal of Black Politics, Culture and Society 10(4): 442-7. Michael Heaney and Fabio Rojas. 2008. “Coalition Dissolution in the U.S. Antiwar Movement.” Research in Social Movements, Conflict, and Change 28: 39-82. Fabio Rojas. 2008. “One Field, Two Tracks: Publication Patterns of Professors in Doctoral Africana Studies Programs.” The Journal of Black Studies 39: 57-68. Michael T. Heaney and Fabio Rojas. 2007. “Partisanship, Non-Partisanship and the American Anti-War Movement.” American Politics Research 35: 431-464. Lead article. Republished in The Practice of Research, edited by Dana Fischer and Shamus Khan. Forthcoming. Oxford University Press. Figure 2 reprinted in Doug McAdam & Sidney Tarrow. 2010. “Ballots and Barricades: On the Reciprocal Relationship between Elections and Social Movements.” Perspectives on Politics, Vol. 8, No. 2 (June): 529-542. Fabio Rojas. 2006. “Social Movement Tactics, Organizational Change and the Spread of African-American Studies.” Social Forces 84 (4): 2139-2158. Michael T. Heaney and Fabio Rojas. 2006. “The Place of Framing: Multiple Audiences and Antiwar Protests Near Fort Bragg.” Qualitative Sociology 29(4): 485-505. 3 Fabio Rojas 4 Republished in Readings in the Rhetoric of Social Protest, edited by Charles E. Morris III and Stephen Brown. Third Edition. Strata Publications. Fabio Rojas. 2006. “Sociological Imperialism in Three Theories of the Market.” Journal of Institutional Economics 2 (3): 339-363. Nicholas Rowland and Fabio Rojas. 2006. “Bringing Technology Back in: A Critique of the Institutionalist Analysis of Museums.” Museum and Society 4(2): 84-95. Kirby D. Schroeder and Fabio Rojas. 2002. “A Game Theoretic Model of Sexually Transmitted Disease Epidemics.” Rationality and Society 14(3): 353-383. Winner – Outstanding Graduate Student Paper Award. ASA Mathematical Sociology Section. 2003. MANUSCRIPTS UNDER REVISION Fabio Rojas. All of Sociology in Four E-Z Steps!!!: Theory for the Working Sociologist. Princeton University Press. Revise and resubmit. Brayden King and Fabio Rojas. "Breaking the Machine: Social Movement Disruption and Authority Erosion in Organizations." Revise and resubmit at Administrative Science Quarterly. EDITED VOLUME CHAPTERS Fabio Rojas. 2015.“The Curriculum as a Site of Political and Cultural Conflict.” Emerging Trends in the Social and Behavioral Sciences. Wiley Publications. Fabio Rojas. 2014. “Activism and the Academy: Lessons from the Evolution of Ethnic Studies.” Pp. 243-66. Professors and Their Politics edited by Neil Gross and Solon J. Simmons. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press. Fabio Rojas. 2013. “Multiculturalism and Social Movements.” In The Wiley-Blackwell Encyclopedia of Social and Political Movements. Eds. David A. Snow, Donatella Della Ports, Bert Klandersmans, and Doug McAdam. Fabio Rojas. 2013. “Institutions.” Oxford Bibliographies in Sociology. Jeff Manza, editor-in-chief. Oxford University Press. See http://oxfordbibliographies.com Fabio Rojas. 2012. “Social Movements and Universities.” Pp. 256-77 in Organizing Higher Education. Edited volume by Michael Bastedo. Baltimore, MD: The Johns Hopkins University Press. 4 Fabio Rojas 5 Fabio Rojas. 2010. “Organization Theory.” The Encyclopedia of Political Theory, edited by Mark Bevir. Pp. 991-7. Sage Publications. Fabio Rojas. 2007. “Faculty Development Problems in a Department of African- American Studies.” Pp. 81-89 in Unleashing Suppressed Voices on Colleges Campuses: Diversity Issues in Higher Education and Student Affairs edited by Mary Howard- Hamilton and O. Gilbert Brown. Peter Lang Publishers: New York. Fabio Rojas. 2006. “The Cybernetic Institutionalist,” pages 61-78 in Wilson Carey McWilliams (ed.) The Active Society Reconsidered, edited by Wilson Carey McWilliams. Rowman and Littlefield: New York. INVITED COMMENTARIES, BOOK REVIEWS, ESSAYS, REPORTS, ETC. Fabio Rojas. 2015. Review of The Black Power Movement and American Social Work by Joyce Bell. Contemporary Sociology. Forthcoming. Fabio Rojas. 2014. Review of Missing Class: How Seeing Class Cultures Can Strengthen Social Movement Groups by Betsy Leondar-Wright. Administrative Science Quarterly. Published online - doi: 10.1177/0001839214565769
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