SUNDAY Sunday, 7:00 Am Sunday, 8:30 Am
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
This workshop is designed to help department and program leaders SUNDAY develop strategies that will help sociology students prepare to enter the labor force successfully. Specific objectives include developing strategies to: ● Sunday, 7:00 am Support faculty who would like to develop new courses ● Support faculty who are looking to integrate activities into existing courses ● Win over 2007. Meeting. Section on Medical Sociology Council skeptical faculty Our orientation is to suggest that faculty can make these Meeting modifications in courses and curricula without reducing the rigor and analytical focus of the undergraduate major and without committing to Pennsylvania Convention Center, 103B, Street Level, 7:00- revisions that are highly taxing in terms of faculty time or the mastery of new 8:15am material. The workshop draws on research that focuses on skills that employers want (e.g., Hart Research Associates 2015, National Association of 2017. Affiliated Group. Society and Mental Health Editorial Colleges and Employers 2015), students’ goals and objectives (e.g., Eagan et Board Meeting al. 2017) and sociology graduates’ first labor market experiences (e.g., Senter Pennsylvania Convention Center, 110AB, Street Level, 7:00- et al. 2015). This workshop builds on the material published in The Sociology Major in the Changing Landscape of Higher Education (Pike et al. 2017) and 8:15am much of it draws from an article forthcoming in Teaching Sociology , “Sociology Majors and Labor Market Success” (Ciabattari et al. under review). 2037. Meeting. 2019 Cox-Johnson-Frazier Award Selection Committee 2110. Section on Consumers and Consumption. New Philadelphia Marriott Downtown, 302, Level 3, 7:00-8:15am Approaches to Inequality and Consumption Pennsylvania Convention Center, 104B, Street Level, 8:30- 2038. Meeting. 2019 Public Understanding of Sociology 10:10am Award Selection Committee Session Organizers: Amanda Koontz, University of Central Philadelphia Marriott Downtown, 303, Level 3, 7:00-8:15am Florida 2039. Meeting. 2019 Dissertation Award Selection Daniel G. Fridman, University of Texas - Austin Committee Presider: Amanda Koontz, University of Central Florida Philadelphia Marriott Downtown, 304, Level 3, 7:00-8:15am ‘Are you sure you want that beer?’: gendered gatekeeping mechanisms within craft beer culture Megan Nanney, 2087. Affiliated Group. Sociologists for Women in Society Virginia Tech; Nathaniel Gray Chapman, Arkansas Tech Summer Meeting 3 University; John Slade Lellock, Virginia Tech; Julie Mikles- Philadelphia Marriott Downtown, Salon K, Level 5, 7:00am- Schluterman, Arkansas Tech University 11:55pm Food Desert Myths: When Scholarly Consensus and 2088. Affiliated Group. Sociologists for Women in Society Conventional Wisdom Part Ways Kenneth H. Kolb, Furman Summer Meeting 4 University Philadelphia Marriott Downtown, Salon L, Level 5, 7:00am- Selecting a School in Santiago, Chile: Local Education 11:55pm Markets, Churning, and Social Reproduction via Consumption Joel P. Stillerman, Grand Valley State Sunday, 8:30 am University 2105. Meeting. Committee on Committees The Peruvian foodie crowd and the fields of ethical Pennsylvania Convention Center, 102B, Street Level, 8:30am- consumption Nino Bariola, The University of Texas at 4:10pm Austin Who Gets What It takes to be “Culinary Omnivores”? Ruilin 2106. Meeting. Committee on Publications Chen, Boston College Pennsylvania Convention Center, 103A, Street Level, 8:30am- 4:10pm 2111. Section on Comparative and Historical Sociology. War, States, Money and Culture: New Approaches to Classic 2109. Departmental Management and Leadership Concerns in Comparative and Historical Sociology Workshop. Linking Sociology Programs to Students' Pennsylvania Convention Center, 105AB, Street Level, 8:30- Career Readiness: Strategies from Practice 10:10am Pennsylvania Convention Center, 104A, Street Level, 8:30- Session Organizer: Stephanie L. Mudge, University of 10:10am California-Davis Session Organizer: Jeffrey Chin, Le Moyne College Anti-Catholicism to Anti-Trumpism: Collaborations and Leader: Jeffrey Chin, Le Moyne College Cleavages on the Christian Right Alex DiBranco, Yale Co-Leaders: Mary Scheuer Senter, Central Michigan University University Hammers for Nails, Screwdrivers for Screws: Identifying the Renee A. Monson, Hobart and William Smith Colleges Right Tool for the Job in Historical Institutionalism Pierre- Teresa Ciabattari, Pacific Lutheran University Christian Fink, Columbia University Rethinking Popular Involvement in Money Politics--Revisiting 2113. Meeting. Honors Program Graduate School Briefing "The Color of Money" (Carruthers and Babb) Jakob Feinig, Pennsylvania Convention Center, 107AB, Street Level, 8:30- Binghamton University 10:10am Rethinking Revolutions through the Turkish Case: A Critical 2114. Thematic Session. The Emotional Consequences of Overview of the Establishment of the Turkish Republic Vasfiye Betul Toprak, University of Virginia Proactive Policing Pennsylvania Convention Center, 108A, Street Level, 8:30- Why Wars Made States Only in the West. Revisiting Tilly’s 10:10am Bellicist Thesis Yuval Feinstein, University of Haifa; Andreas Session Organizer: Nikki Jones, Univ of California, Berkeley Wimmer, Columbia University "I'd rather they get it from me...": And Other Lessons that 2112. Section on Animals and Society Refereed Roundtable Black Parents Teach their Children about Avoiding Lethal Session Encounters with Police Erin Kerrison, UC-Berkeley Pennsylvania Convention Center, 106AB, Street Level, 8:30- You cannot Rat: Race, Policing and the Challenging 9:30am Circumstances of Black Officers Akwasi Owusu-Bempah, Session Organizer: Elizabeth Grauerholz, University of Central University of Toronto Florida Doubly Surveilled: Race, Immigration, and Emotional and Table 01. Animals, Culture and Capital Physical Well-Being Risks of Neighborhood Policing Table Presider: Elizabeth Grauerholz, University of Central Patterns Abigail A. Sewell, Emory University Florida Current research on emotions, race, and policing. Inside the Yellow Rectangle: An Analysis of Nonhuman 2115. Thematic Session. Exposing Invisible Burdens: Critical Animal Representations on National Geographic Kids Race Theory and Racialized Emotion Covers Stephen Patrick Vrla, Michigan State University; Pennsylvania Convention Center, 108B, Street Level, 8:30- Cameron Thomas Whitley, Rutgers University-Camden; 10:10am Linda Elizabeth Kalof, Michigan State University Session Organizer: Wendy Leo Moore, Texas A&M University The Limitations of Applying Cartesian Dualism to the What! I Can't Discriminate? I'm Crushed: A Law-and- Prosecution of Wolf Murderers Alexander Thomas economics and Critical Race Theory Analysis of the Simon, Utah Valley University Comparative Emotional Costs of Hate Speech and Hate- Constructed Lives: How Human Culture Shapes the Lives of speech Regulation to the Speaker and His Target Richard Companion Animals Erin Nicole Kidder, University of Delgado and Jean Stefancic, University of Alabama Central Florida Normalizing Hate in Immigration Law Enforcement: Making Table 02. Animals and Identities America White Again Mary Romero, Arizona State Table Presider: Andrea Laurent-Simpson, Southern University Methodist University Interracial Relationships, Stigma, and Emotion Russell Fur, Feathers, And Scales of Identity: Awarding The Non- Robinson, University of California-Berkeley Human Animal His Own Identity Theory Marie Carmen Discussant: Wendy Leo Moore, Texas A&M University Abney, Michigan State University Critical race theory (CRT) is a theoretical tradition born in the legal Stigmatizing Sin City Bully Culture: Pit Bull Pariahs? academy in the post-civil rights era; this theoretical frame arose as an Genevieve Minter, University of Nevada Las Vegas intellectual response to the failure of the legal changes resulting from the Who Let the Dogs In? Anti-black Racism, Social Exclusion Civil Rights Movement to meaningfully create structural racial equity in the United States. Central to the CRT tradition is attention to the mechanisms and and the Question of Who is "Human" Lynette Parker discourses that function to reproduce white domination throughout the U.S. Table 03: Animals, Work and Social Movements social system. Emotion is a core mechanism in that reproduction; this Table Presider: Elizabeth Cherry, Manhattanville College Thematic Session explores the multiple ways in which emotions function and Earning their Trust: How Animal Rescue NPOs Retain get deployed in the protection and reproduction of white power, privilege, and wealth. Racialized emotional manipulations take a variety of forms. On Regular Volunteers Seven Mattes the one hand, for example, whites manipulate emotional tropes to normalize Negotiating Legitimacy: Neoliberal and Agrarian Strategies racial hierarchy and white power, deploying white fragility in the form of to Resolve the Enigma of Animal Welfare Robert shock, anger, denial or sadness to shut down discussions about white racism. Magneson Chiles, The Pennsylvania State University; On the other hand, people of color must navigate emotional responses to white racism creating a heavy and generally unrecognized burden for people Scott Cameron Lougheed, Queen's University of color in white spaces—for example people of color often engage in Gross National Happiness and the Well-being of Bhutan's emotionally stressful battles to challenge the dehumanizing characterizations Street Dogs Marion C. Willetts, Illinois State University of people and communities