John D. Skrentny Department of Sociology 0533 UC-San Diego
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Last update: May, 2021 John D. Skrentny Department of Sociology 0533 UC-San Diego 9500 Gilman Dr. La Jolla, CA 92093-0533 [email protected] Education 1994 Harvard University, Ph. D., Sociology 1990 Harvard University, A.M., Sociology 1988 Indiana University, B.A., Philosophy and Sociology Professional Experience 2002-present Professor of Sociology, University of California, San Diego 2012-2021 Co-Leader, San Diego Region, Scholars Strategy Network 2017-2020 Director, Yankelovich Center for Social Science Research, University of California, San Diego 2009-2018 Co-Director, Center for Comparative Immigration Studies, University of California, San Diego 2000-02 Associate Professor of Sociology, University of California, San Diego 2001 Visiting Professor, Yonsei University, Seoul, South Korea 1999-00 Assistant Professor of Sociology, University of California, San Diego 1998 Janice and Julian Bers Assistant Professor of the Social Sciences, University of Pennsylvania 1994-1998 Assistant Professor of Sociology, University of Pennsylvania 1991-94 Teaching Fellow, Harvard University, 1991-1994 Participation in Research Networks 2019-present Non-Degree Credential Research Network, based at George Washington University 2019 Working Group on Non-Cognitive/Social and Emotional Learning, based at American Enterprise Institute Awards, Honors, and Grants 2020 UC-San Diego Academic Senate Distinguished Teaching Award 2019 With Hal Salzman, Michelle Van Noy, Jason Owen-Smith, Jennifer Cleary, and Ron Hira. Subcontract for “Pathways to Science and Engineering Professions: Persistence and Career Choice for Bachelors and Masters Graduates—Research Experiences, Decision Points, and Labor Market Transitions” 2016 With Minh Phan-Ho and Susan Yonezawa. Price Philanthropies Grant (for “Evaluation of the Price Scholarship Program”) 2016 With Mary L. Walshok. Yankelovich Center Grant (for “America’s Shadow Training System: University Extension Schools in Regional Tech Economies”) 2015 With Mary L. Walshok. Spencer Foundation Grant (for “America’s Shadow Training System: University Extension Schools in Regional Tech Economies”) 2015 With Mary L. Walshok. Smith-Richardson Foundation Grant (for “America’s Shadow Training System: University Extension Schools in Regional Tech Economies”) 2015 Rockefeller Foundation Bellagio Center Writing Residency (for book manuscript, tentatively titled Will Scientists Save Us?) 2015 Richard A. Lester Award for the Outstanding Book in Industrial Relations and Labor Economics, Princeton University (for After Civil Rights) 2015 Western Social Science Association Distinguished Book Award (for After Civil Rights) 2015 Oliver Cromwell Cox Book Award from the ASA Section on Racial and Ethnic Minorities, Honorable Mention (for After Civil Rights) 2015 Benjamin L. Hooks Institute for Social Change Book Award, Finalist (for After Civil Rights) 2015 Author-Meets-Critics session at meeting of the American Sociological Association for After Civil Rights 2 2014 Co-Investigator, University of California Multi-Campus Research Programs and Initiatives Grant (for “California Immigration Research Initiative”) 2014 Consultant, Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, “Culture of Health” Initiative 2013 With Kevin Lewis. National Science Foundation Grant (for “Who Leaves and Who Arrives? Mapping the Connections between Universities and the Science and Engineering Workforce”) 2012 With Kevin Lewis. Alfred P. Sloan Foundation Grant (for “Falling Behind, Moving Up or Moving Out? Worker Training in Science and Engineering”) 2011 With David FitzGerald. Institute for International, Comparative and Areas Studies Faculty Workshop Grant (for “Law and the Advent of Multicultural Society: Global Variations in the Family Reunification Rights of Migrants”) 2010 Japan Foundation Center for Global Partnership grant (for “Is Immigration Necessary? Work, Growth and the Future in the U.S. and Japan”) 2010 Institute for International, Comparative and Areas Studies Faculty Conference Grant (for “Is Immigration Necessary? Work, Growth and the Future in the U.S. and Japan”) 2010 UCSD Guardian “Best Social Sciences Professor” 2009 Panhellenic Council of the University of California, San Diego Outstanding UCSD Professor Award 2006 With Dong-Hoon Seol. Social Science Research Council Korean Migration and Development Postdoctoral Fellowship 2006 Guggenheim Fellowship, John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation (for the project that became After Civil Rights) 2005 Mentor Recognition Award, University of California-San Diego 2005 Author-Meets-Critics sessions at meetings of American Sociological Association, Midwest Political Science Association, Western Political Science Association for The Minority Rights Revolution 2003 The Minority Rights Revolution, Outstanding Book, Political Sociology Section of the American Sociological Association; Liberty Legacy Foundation Award, Organization of American Historians, Finalist 3 2002 Institute of Labor and Employment Targeted Research Grant for “The Social and Political Bases of Equal Employment Opportunity Law” 2001 University of California-San Diego Committee on Research Grant for “The Twilight of Asian Exceptionalism?” Part II 2000 University of California-San Diego Committee on Research Grant for “The Twilight of Asian Exceptionalism?” Part I 1998 Janice and Julian Bers Assistant Professorship, University of Pennsylvania (endowed chair) 1998 Moody Research Grant, Lyndon B. Johnson Presidential Library 1997-98 Laurance S. Rockefeller Visiting Fellow at the Princeton University Center for Human Values 1997 Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars Fellowship (declined) 1996 University of Pennsylvania Faculty Research Fellowship 1996 University of Pennsylvania Research Foundation Grant 1996 Claire Levy Schwartz and Cary M. Schwartz Foundation Grant for Course Development (Law and Society Program) 1993 Mark DeWolfe Howe Fund Research Grant, Harvard Law School 1991-93 Derek Bok Certificate of Distinction Teaching Award; Harvard University 1988-91 National Science Foundation Fellow 1990 Winner, Society for the Study of Social Problems student paper competition in environment and technology 1988 Phi Beta Kappa Works in Progress A book project, tentatively titled Will Scientists Save Us?, that is based on the Sloan Foundation and National Science Foundation grants. Focusing on STEM workers in comparison with non-STEM, the book will examine NSF survey data linking educational experiences and work-related training with workforce outcomes, as well as placing these processes in larger historical, political and legal contexts. With Mary Walshok. A book project based on Spencer Foundation and Smith-Richardson Foundation grants, exploring how research university extension/continuing education 4 schools add value to their campuses and city/regional tech economies, while also helping workers improve their skills and employability, and thus stave off obsolescence. With Michael Roach. A project to understand the transitions of native and foreign STEM PhDs to jobs in the innovation economy, especially the factors that shape decisions to move to established firms or startups. Books 2021 editor, with David Fitzgerald. Immigrant California: Understanding the Past, Present, and Future of U.S. Policy, Stanford University Press 2014 After Civil Rights: Racial Realism in the New American Workplace, Princeton University Press. Distinguished Book Award, Western Social Science Association; Richard A. Lester Award for the Outstanding Book in Industrial Relations and Labor Economics, Princeton University; Oliver Cromwell Cox Book Award from the ASA Section on Racial and Ethnic Minorities, Honorable Mention; Benjamin L. Hooks Institute for Social Change Book Award, Finalist 2002 The Minority Rights Revolution, the Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. Outstanding Book, Political Sociology Section of the American Sociological Association; Finalist, Liberty Legacy Foundation Award, Organization of American Historians. Reviewed in Washington Post Book World, The Nation, and The Boston Globe 2001 editor, Color Lines: Affirmative Action, Immigration, and Civil Rights Options for America, University of Chicago Press 1996 The Ironies of Affirmative Action: Politics, Culture and Justice in America, University of Chicago Press. Reviewed in American Journal of Sociology, Social Forces, American Political Science Review, New York Review of Books, The New Yorker, Philadelphia Inquirer, Publishers Weekly (starred review), Booklist (starred review), Kirkus. A recommended book in Society Guest editor 2012 With the Center for Comparative Immigration Studies. “Is Immigration Necessary? Work, Growth and the Future in Japan and the United States,” American Behavioral Scientist 56(8) 1998 “Affirmative Action: Dynamics of Policy Development,” American Behavioral Scientist 41(7) Scholarly Articles and Book Chapters 5 forthcoming With Kevin Lewis. “Beyond the ‘STEM Pipeline’: Expertise, Careers, and Lifelong Learning,” Minerva. 2021 With Michael Roach. “Rethinking Immigration Policies for STEM Doctorates.” Science 371(2021): 350-352 2021 With Natalie Novick. “The Innovation Economy.” In David Fitzgerald and John D. Skrentny, eds., Immigrant California: Understanding the Past, Present, and Future of U.S. Policy, Stanford University Press, 116-146 2021 With David Fitzgerald. “Lessons from California.” In David Fitzgerald and John D. Skrentny, eds., Immigrant California: Understanding the Past, Present, and Future of U.S. Policy, Stanford University Press, 1-19 2020 With