NAOMI F. SUGIE Department of Criminology, Law and Society University of California, Irvine 3319 Social Ecology II, [email protected]

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NAOMI F. SUGIE Department of Criminology, Law and Society University of California, Irvine 3319 Social Ecology II, Nsugie@Uci.Edu NAOMI F. SUGIE Department of Criminology, Law and Society University of California, Irvine 3319 Social Ecology II, [email protected] Education Princeton University Ph.D. Sociology and Social Policy, 2014 Specialization in Demography Dissertation: Finding Work: A smartphone study of job searching, social contacts, and wellbeing after prison Committee: Devah Pager (chair), Sara McLanahan, Matthew Salganik M.A. Sociology, 2010 General Exams in Demography, Inequality, and Crime and Punishment Columbia University B.A. Urban Studies, 2003 Appointments 2020 - Associate Professor, Department of Criminology, Law and Society (and by courtesy, Department of Sociology), University of California, Irvine 2014 -2020 Assistant Professor, Department of Criminology, Law and Society, University of California, Irvine 2008 - 2011 Research Consultant. Vera Institute of Justice, New York, NY 2009, 2010 Visiting Junior Research Fellow, Keio University, Tokyo, Japan 2005 - 2007 Research Analyst. Vera Institute of Justice, New York, NY Selected Grants and Fellowships 2019 U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (Co-I, with PI Keith McInnes) 2019 Facebook, Economic Opportunity and Digital Platforms RFP (Co-PI, with PI Julia Ticona) 2018 Department of Labor Scholars Program 2016 National Science Foundation, Sociology and Law and Social Sciences: “Do Welfare Drug Offender Bans Affect Recidivism?” 2015 UCLA Institute for Research on Labor and Employment award (with Noah Zatz) 2015 Multi-Investigator Research Grant, Council on Research, Computing, and Libraries, UC Irvine (with Geoff Ward and Alfred Kobsa) 2015 Crime and Justice Summer Research Institute Fellow, Racial Democracy, Crime and Justice Network 2013 National Institute of Justice Graduate Research Fellowship 2012 National Science Foundation Doctoral Dissertation Research Improvement Grant, Law and Social Sciences 2011 National Institute on Aging, National Institutes of Health 2011 Fahs-Beck Fund for Research and Experimentation 2011 Horowitz Foundation for Social Policy 2011 Center for Information Technology Policy, Princeton University 2011 Center for African American Studies, Princeton University 2008 National Science Foundation Graduate Fellowship Peer-Reviewed Articles Sugie, Naomi F. and Emma Conner. Forthcoming. “Marginalization or Incorporation? Receipt of Welfare and Political Participation.” Social Problems. Sugie, Naomi F., Noah D. Zatz, and Dallas Augustine. 2020. “Employer Aversion to Criminal Records: An Experimental Study of Mechanisms.” Criminology. 58:5-34. Gottlieb, Aaron and Naomi F. Sugie. 2019. “Marriage, Cohabitation, and Crime: Differentiating Associations by Partnership Stage.” Justice Quarterly. 36(3):503-531. Sugie, Naomi F. 2018. “Work as Foraging: A Smartphone Study of Job Search and Employment after Prison.” American Journal of Sociology. 123(5):1453-1491. Sugie, Naomi F. 2018. “Utilizing Smartphones to Study Disadvantaged and Hard-to-Reach Groups.” Sociological Methods and Research. 47(3):458-491. Sugie, Naomi F. and Kristin Turney. 2017. “Beyond Incarceration: Criminal Justice Contact and Mental Health” American Sociological Review 82(4):719-743. Sugie, Naomi F. and Michael C. Lens. 2017. “Daytime Locations in Spatial Mismatch: Job Accessibility and Employment at Reentry from Prison.” Demography 54(2):775-800. Sugie, Naomi F. 2017. “When the Elderly Turn to Petty Crime: Revisiting the Age-Crime Relationship in an Aging Population.” International Criminal Justice Review 27(1):19- 39. Society for the Study of Social Problems Crime and Juvenile Delinquency Division Graduate Student Paper Award (2011) Sugie, Naomi F. 2015. “Chilling Effects: Diminished Political Participation among Partners of Formerly Incarcerated Men.” Social Problems 62(4):550-571. American Society of Criminology Gene Carte Student Paper Award, Second Place (2012) Sugie, Naomi F. 2012. “Punishment and Welfare: Paternal Incarceration and Families’ Receipt of Public Assistance” Social Forces 90(4):1403-27. Pager, Devah, Bruce Western, and Naomi Sugie. 2009. “Sequencing Disadvantage: Barriers to Employment Facing Young Black and White Men with Criminal Records.” The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 623(1):195-213. Ortiz, Christopher W., Nicole J. Hendricks, and Naomi Sugie. 2007. “Policing Terrorism: The Response of Local Police Agencies to Homeland Security Concerns.” Criminal Justice Studies 2(2):91-109. Hendricks, Nicole J., Christopher W. Ortiz, Naomi Sugie, and Joel Miller. 2007. “Beyond the Numbers: Hate Crimes and Cultural Trauma within Arab American Immigrant Communities.” International Review of Victimology 14(1):95-113. Other Publications Sugie, Naomi F. and Dallas Augustine. Forthcoming. “Social Support in Daily Life at Reentry.” In Moving Beyond Recidivism: Expanding Approaches to Research on Prisoner Reentry and Recidivism. Edited by A. Leverentz, E. Chen, and J. Christian. New York, NY: New York University Press. Epstein, Daniel A. and Naomi F. Sugie. 2019. “Designing to Provide Social Support to Job Seekers After Prison Release. CSCW 2019 Workshop (Life Transitions and Social Technologies). Sugie, Naomi F. 2017. “Criminal Record Questions, Statistical Discrimination, and Equity in a “Ban the Box” Era.” Policy Essay. Criminology and Public Policy 16(1):167-175. Sugie, Naomi F. 2014. “Families.” The Encyclopedia of Criminology and Criminal Justice. Wiley-Blackwell. Henderson, Nicole J., Christopher W. Ortiz, Naomi Sugie, and Joel Miller. 2006. Law Enforcement and Arab American Community Relations After September 11, 2001: Engagement in a Time of Uncertainty. New York: Vera Institute of Justice. daCosta Nuñez, Ralph and Naomi Sugie. 2004. Beyond the Shelter Wall: Homeless Families Speak Out. New York: White Tiger Press. Book Reviews Sugie, Naomi F. 2020. Charged: The New Movement to Transform American Prosecution and End Mass Incarceration, by Emily Bazelon. Criminal Law and Criminal Justice Books, Rutgers University. Sugie, Naomi F. 2020. On the Outside: Prisoner Reentry and Reintegration, by David J. Harding, Jeffrey D. Morenoff and Jessica JB Wyse. Punishment and Society. Sugie, Naomi F. 2016. Trading Democracy for Justice, by Traci Burch. Contemporary Sociology. Sugie, Naomi F. 2015. Get a Job: Labor Markets, Economic Opportunity, and Crime, by Robert Crutchfield. Social Forces. Media Sugie, Naomi F. 2015. “Smartphone Research in Crime, Law and Deviance.” Newsletter for the Crime, Law and Deviance section of the American Sociological Association. Lead article. Spring/Summer. Sugie, Naomi F. 2015. “Using Smartphones for Research.” The Society Pages. Retrieved: http://thesocietypages.org/methods/2015/02/27/naomi-sugie-on-using-smartphones-for- research/ Reprinted in Green, Kyle and Sarah Lageson. 2017. Give Methods a Chance. Series Ed. Doug Hartmann and Christopher Uggen. New York: W.W. Norton & Co. Sugie, Naomi F. 2011. “Chilling Effects: The Influence of Partner Incarceration on Political Participation” (abbreviated). Reentry Advocate. November/December: 5(11-12) Invited Talks 2019 “Work as Foraging: A Smartphone Study of Job Search and Employment after Prison.” Sociology Department, Stanford University. Palo Alto, CA. Feb 7. 2018 “Smartphones as Tools for Research and Practice.” The Impact of Incarceration and Reentry on Community Health and Well-Being: A Workshop, Roundtable on the Promotion of Health Equity, National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. June 6. 2017 “Work as Foraging: A Smartphone Study of Job Search and Employment after Prison.” Racial Democracy, Crime and Justice Network, Rutgers University-Newark. Newark, NJ. July 13. 2017 “Utilizing Smartphones to Study Hard-to-Reach Groups: The Newark Smartphone Reentry Project.” California Center for Population Research. University of California, Los Angeles. Los Angeles, CA. January 25. 2016 “Utilizing Smartphones to Study Hard-to-Reach Groups: The Newark Smartphone Reentry Project.” Population, Education, and Health Seminar. University of Missouri, Columbia. Columbia, MO. December 9. 2016 “Daytime Locations, Employment, and Crime after Prison: Analyzing GPS estimates from the Newark Smartphone Reentry Project.” Demography Brown Bag Seminar. University of California, Berkeley. Berkeley, CA. September 7. 2016 “Promoting Real-Time Information Sharing and Peer Support Through Online Job Clubs.” Behavioral Interventions for Child Support, Learning Community Webinar. June 20. 2016 “Utilizing Smartphones to Study Disadvantaged and Hard-to-Reach Groups.” Prisoner Reentry and Reintegration Workshop. Rutgers Center for Law and Justice. Newark, NJ. April 15. 2015 “Using smartphones as data collection tools: A case study of prisoner reentry.” MDRC. New York, NY. May 18. 2014 “Going it Alone? A Smartphone Study of Social Connectivity and Employment after Prison.” City University of New York, Hunter College. New York, NY. April 9. Selected Conferences 2018 “Employer Aversion to Criminal Records: An Experimental Study of Mechanisms.” American Sociological Association. Philadelphia, PA (with Noah Zatz and Dallas Augustine) 2016 “Beyond Incarceration: The Consequences of Criminal Justice Contact for Mental Health.” American Sociological Association. Seattle, WA. (with Kristin Turney). 2015 “Daytime Locations in Spatial Mismatch: Job Accessibility and Employment at Reentry from Prison.” American Society of Criminology. Washington, DC. (with Michael Lens). 2015 “Reconceptualizing Neighborhoods of Marginal Men: A New Measure of Spatial Exposure.” Population Association of America. San Diego, CA. (with Wade
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