Last updated: January 9, 2017

Jennifer A. Jones

Sociology Department Institute for Latino Studies University of Notre Dame Ph: 574-631-3224 749 Flanner Hall Fax: 574-631-9238 Notre Dame, IN 46556 [email protected]

ACADEMIC APPOINTMENTS

2013-present Assistant Professor, Department of Sociology, University of Notre Dame.

Faculty Fellow, Institute for Latino Studies, University of Notre Dame.

Concurrent Faculty, American Studies, University of Notre Dame.

2016-2017 Visiting Scholar, University of Illinois at Chicago, Latin American and Latino Studies Program.

2011-2013 Social and Behavioral Sciences Diversity Postdoctoral Fellow, The Ohio State University, Department of Sociology.

2008-2009 Visiting Scholar, Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, NC.

AREAS OF SPECIALIZATION

Racial formation, racial and ethnic relations, immigration, political sociology, Latin America and the Caribbean, qualitative methods

EDUCATION

PhD (2011) University of , Berkeley, Sociology Making Race in the New South: Mexican Migration and Race Relations in Winston-Salem, North Carolina Sandra Smith (chair), Michael Burawoy, Irene Bloemraad and Michael Omi

MA (2006) University of California, Berkeley, Sociology Thesis: Beyond Recognition: Searching for Meaning within Multiracial Categorization Sandra Smith (chair) and Dawne Moon

BA (2003) Pomona College, International Relations; Minors in Black Studies and Spanish Fall 2001, Visiting Student, Universidad de La Habana, Habana, Cuba

Thesis: Black and White: The Differential and Detrimental Impacts of Contemporary U.S. Policy on Afro-Cubans

Recipient of the Agnes Moreland Jackson Senior Thesis Award Recipient of the Cordell Hull Prize in International Relations

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BOOKS

Petra Rivera-Rideau, Jennifer A. Jones and Tianna Paschel, eds. 2016. Afro-Latinos in Movement: Critical Approaches to Blackness and Transnationalism in the Americas. Palgrave MacMillan Press.

JOURNAL ARTICLES

Brown, Hana and Jennifer A. Jones. 2016. “Immigrant Rights are Civil Rights.” Contexts Magazine Vol. 15(2):34-39, Spring.

Brown, Hana, Jennifer A. Jones, and Taylor Dow. 2016. “Unity in the Struggle: Immigration and the South’s Emerging Civil Rights Consensus.” Law and Contemporary Problems (79) 5-27.

Brown, Hana and Jennifer A. Jones. 2015. “Panethnicity and Racialization: An Integrated Framework.” Sociology of Race and Ethnicity 1:1 (181-191).

Jones, Jennifer A. 2013. “Mexicans Will Take the Jobs that Even Blacks Won’t Do”: An Analysis of Blackness and Invisibility in Contemporary Mexico. Ethnic and Racial Studies, 36 (10).

Jones, Jennifer A. 2012. “‘Blacks May Be Second Class, but They Can’t Make Them Leave’: Mexican Racial Formation and Immigrant Status.” Latino Studies, 10 (1-2): 60-80.

Recipient of the 2013 Latino Studies Section of LASA Award for Best Article, Honorable Mention.

Smith, Sandra S. and Jennifer A. Jones. 2011. “Intraracial Harassment on Campus: Explaining Between- and Within-Group Differences.” Ethnic and Racial Studies, 34 (9): 1567-1593.

Jones, Jennifer A. 2011. “Who are We? Producing Group Identity through Everyday Practices of Conflict and Discourse.” Sociological Perspectives, Vol. 54, Issue 2, pp. 139–162. Lead Article.

Reprinted in: Beyond Black and White: A Reader on Contemporary Race Relations. Edited by Zulema Valdez. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications, 2016.

Co-recipient of the 2012 Distinguished Contribution to Sociological Perspectives Award.

UNDER REVIEW AND IN PROGRESS

Majority Minority: Race, Immigration, and the Browning of the New South. (Under Contract at University of Chicago Press).

“Intragenerational Reverse Incorporation: Downward Mobility and Racialization in the New South.” (Under Review).

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“‘We Don’t Have Any Problems’: Race, Class, and Intergroup Relations in the New South .” (Under Review).

“Making Race and the State: Racialization and the Production of Anti-Immigrant Policy in .” (With Hana Brown) (Under Review at Ethnic and Racial Studies).

“Afro-Latinos: From Invisibility to Visibility and the Transnational Turn” (In Progress for The Cambridge Handbook of Afro-Latin American Studies, under contract, Cambridge University Press).

“The Racialization of Latinos in New Immigrant Destinations: Criminality, Ascription, and Counter-Mobilization.” (With Hana Brown and Andrea Becker) (In Progress).

“Enforcement or Embrace? The Determinants of State-Level Immigration Policy in New Immigrant Destinations.” (With Hana Brown) (In Progress).

“The Cultural Effects of Social Movements: Racial Transformation and the Mississippi Struggle for Immigrant Rights.” (With Hana Brown) (In Progress).

“Intraracial Conflict and Conceptualizations of Blackness: How Black Students Negotiate What it means to be Black at the University.” (With Sandra Smith) (In Progress).

BOOK CHAPTERS

Rivera-Rideau, Petra, Tianna Paschel and Jennifer Jones. 2016. “Introduction: Theorizing Afro-Latinidades.” Afro-Latinos in Movement: Critical Approaches to Blackness and Transnationalism in the Americas. Edited by Petra Rivera-Rideau, Jennifer Jones and Tianna Paschel. Palgrave MacMillan Press.

Jones, Jennifer A. and Hana Brown. 2014. “Contradictions and Complications: Trafficking Protections and Immigration Enforcement in Local Practice.” In Open Society IDEAS: Human Trafficking Reconsidered: Rethinking the Problem, Envisioning New Solutions, edited by Kimberly Hoang and Rhacel Parrenas. New York, NY: Open Society Institute.

Jones, Jennifer A. 2014. “Making Minorities: Mexican Racialization in the New South.” In The Nation and Its Peoples: Citizens, Denizens, Migrants. University of California Center for New Racial Studies. Edited by Shannon Gleeson and John Park. New York: Routledge.

Jones, Jennifer A. 2013. “Redrawing the Lines: Understanding Race and Citizenship through the Lens of Afro-Mexican Migrants.” In Migrant Marginality: A Transnational Perspective, edited by Jorge Capetillo-Ponce, Glenn Jacobs and Philip Kretsedemas. New York, NY: Routledge.

OTHER PUBLICATIONS

2016. Review of Skills of the ‘Unskilled’: Work and Mobility among Mexican Migrants by

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Hagan, Jacqueline, Ruben Hernandez-Leon, and Jean-Luc Demonsant. Oakland CA: University of California Press. International Migration Review.

2015. Brown, Hana and Jennifer Jones. “The Hidden Politics of Immigration” Scalawag Magazine. Volume 1, Issue 3. http://www.scalawagmagazine.org/articles/hidden-politics- immigration-enforcement

Jones, Jennifer A. 2015. Review of Making Hispanics: How Activists, Bureaucrats & Media Constructed a New American, by G. Cristina Mora (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2014). Ethnic and Racial Studies.

Jones, Jennifer A. 2014. Review of Latinos Facing : Discrimination, Resistance and Endurance by Joe R. Feagin and Jose A. Cobas (Boulder, CO: Paradigm Publishers, 2014) in Social Forces.

Jones, Jennifer A. 2013. “Undocumented Immigrants.” In Multicultural America, edited by Carlos E. Cortes and J. Geoffrey Golson. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.

Jones, Jennifer A. 2013. “Intermarriage, History of.” In Multicultural America, edited by Carlos E. Cortes and J. Geoffrey Golson. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.

Jones, Jennifer A. 2013. “The 2010 Census: Multiple Race Categorization (history).” In Multicultural America, edited by Carlos E. Cortes and J. Geoffrey Golson. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.

Jones, Jennifer A. and Sarah Quinn. 2008. Writing for Sociology, 1st Edition. Department of Sociology, University of California, Berkeley. (2nd Edition published in 2011, with Hana Brown and Sarah Quinn).

RESEARCH GRANTS

Institute for Scholarship in the Liberal Arts Bi-Annual Spring 2016 Small Social 2016 Sciences Research Grant ($2,500)

Institute for Scholarship in the Liberal Arts Bi-Annual Spring 2015 Small Social 2015 Sciences Research Grant ($2,500)

Institute for Scholarship in the Liberal Arts Bi-Annual Spring 2015 Large Social 2015 Sciences Research Grant (co-PI Hana Brown, $15,000)

Wake Forest University Collaborative Pilot Grant (co-PI Hana Brown, $8,834) 2014

Russell Sage Foundation Presidential Authority Award (co-PI Hana Brown, 2014 $22,954)

Institute for Latino Studies Supplementary Grant Award ($5000) 2014

The Ohio State University Office of Diversity and Inclusion Faculty Research 2012

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Grant (co-PI Reanne Frank, $5,500) National Science Foundation (NSF) Dissertation Improvement Grant ($10,000) 2010 University of California Center for New Racial Studies Research Grant ($3,000) 2010 Berkeley Department of Sociology Lynnea Stephens Memorial Research Grant, 2009 University of California, Berkeley ($2,000) University of California Diversity Initiative for Graduate Study in the Social 2009 Sciences (UC DIGSSS) Faculty Mentored Research Award ($3,000) University of California, Berkeley Center for Race and Gender Graduate 2008 Student Grant Award ($500) Berkeley Department of Sociology Research Grant, University of California, 2007-2008 Berkeley ($1,000)

FELLOWSHIPS, HONORS AND AWARDS

2016-2017 AAUW American Postdoctoral Fellowship, Alternate 2016

Nancy Weiss Malkiel Junior Faculty Fellowship Semi-finalist 2016

Atlantic Coast Conference Inter-institutional Academic Collaborative (ACCIAC) 2016 Summer Collaborative Research Award Program with mentee Alexandra Reyes, Wake Forest University ($4,830.00)

Institute for Scholarship in the Liberal Arts Henkels Small Conference Grant 2014 For Afro-Latinos in Movement ($5,000)

Institute for Scholarship in the Liberal Arts Interim Travel to International 2014 Conferences Grant ($2,030)

Institute for Latino Studies at the University of Notre Dame Conference Award, 2014 Bestowed by Tom McNeil ($10,000)

Inter-University Program for Latino Research Afro-Latino Working Group Award 2014 ($5000)

2013 Latino Studies Section of LASA Award for Best Article, Honorable Mention 2013

2012 Distinguished Contribution to Sociological Perspectives Award 2012 Abigail Hodgen Publication Award, University of California, Berkeley ($500) 2011 SAGE/Pine Forge Teaching Innovations & Professional Development Award 2009 Ford Foundation Dissertation Fellowship Finalist/Alternate 2009 Dean’s Normative Time Fellowship, University of California, Berkeley 2007-2008 Jacob K. Javits Foundation Fellowship 2004-2008 Berkeley Sociology Department Block Grant Fellowship 2003-2004 William Lincoln Honnold Fellowship, Pomona College 2003

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Agnes Moreland Jackson Senior Thesis Award, Pomona College 2003 President’s Prize in Women’s Studies, Pomona College 2003 Cordell Hull Prize in International Relations, Pomona College 2003

INVITED TALKS AND PRESENTATIONS

““We Don’t Have Any Problems”: Black-Brown Relations in the New South.” University of Illinois at Chicago, April, 2017.

“The New Civil Rights Coalition: Reshaping Policy, Public Discourse, and Racial Formation in the New South.” Sociology Department Colloquia Series. University of Southern California, November 9, 2016.

“From Nuyoricans to Afro-Mestizos: Making the Invisible Visible and the Importance of Afro- Latino Diasporas.” Williams College Symposium on Afro-Latino Studies. Williams College, November 5, 2016.

“From Boundaries to Brotherhood: The Feedback Effects of Immigration Enforcement on Inter-Minority Relations.” Race and Ethnicity Workshop. University of Illinois at Chicago, April 22, 2016.

“Impact of Latinos on Indiana: Young Latinos in the Hooiser State.” Indiana State Museum. Indianapolis, IN, September 26, 2015.

“Afro-Latinos and Afro-Latin America: The Transnational Turn.” Radcliffe Institute and the Afro-Latin American Research Institute at Harvard University. Cambridge, MA, May 8-9, 2015.

“Black-Brown Relations in the New South: Shifting Color-lines and Coalitions.” Race Workshop. Duke University, Durham, NC. October 21, 2014.

“From Open Doors to Closed Gates: Reverse Incorporation in the New South.” Race and Ethnicity Workshop. University of Chicago, Chicago IL, May 2014.

“Enforcement or Embrace? The Determinants of State-Level Immigration Policy in New Immigrant Destinations.” Institute for Latino Studies Faculty Colloquia Series. University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame IN, April 2014.

“Battling Juan Crow: Black/Brown Coalitions and Immigration Politics in the New South.” Conference on the Church and Immigration. University of Notre Dame Institute for Latino Studies, Notre Dame IN, March 2014.

“Beyond Contact and Conflict: Untangling the Role of Status in Interminority Relations.” Sociology Department Colloquia Series. University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame IN, February 2014.

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“Immigrants and Incarceration.” Center for Social Concerns Series on Hyper-Incarceration. University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame IN. February 2014.

“We Don’t Have Any Problems: Black-Brown Relations in the New South.” Africana Studies Colloquia Series. Virginia Tech University, Blacksburg VA, February 2014.

“We Don’t Have Any Problems: Black-Brown Relations in the New South.” SBS Diversity Fellows Brown-Bag Lecture. The Ohio State University. Columbus, OH, March 2012.

“Making Minorities in the New South: Intergroup Relations in Black, White and Brown.” Ethnography Workshop, Northwestern University Sociology Department. Evanston, IL, February 2012.

“Discovering Blackness? Understanding Racial Identity and the Migration Process among Afro- Mexicans in Mexico.” Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, NC, October 2008.

“Reconstituting Blackness” and “Intraracial Harassment on America’s College Campuses.” Co- authored with Sandra Smith. Papers presented at the Center for the Study of Race and Gender Colloquia series at the University of California, Berkeley. Berkeley, CA, December, 2007.

CONFERENCE PRESENTATIONS

2016 “Criminality, Racialization, and News Coverage of Immigrants in New Destination States.” Social Science History Association, Chicago, IL, November 17.

“Race, Immigration and Civil Rights: The Role of Interracial Coalitions in Shaping Immigration Policy in the New South” Newberry Library Borderlands Series, Chicago, IL, September 23.

“From Boundaries to Brotherhood: The Feedback Effects of Immigration Enforcement on Inter-Minority Relations.” Law and Society Annual Meetings, New Orleans, LA, June 2-5.

“The Social Construction of Natural Disasters: Reframing Hurricane Katrina as an Immigrant Rights Struggle.” Southern Sociological Association Annual Meetings, Atlanta, GA, April 13-16.

“Panethnicity and Racialization: An Integrated Framework.” Southern Sociological Association Annual Meetings, Atlanta, GA, April 13-16.

2015 “How Immigrant Rights Became Civil Rights: Black-Latino Coalitions, Migration, and the Struggle for Justice in the Deep South.” "The Present and Future of Civil Rights Movements: Race and Reform in 21st Century America," Duke Law School on November 20-21, 2015.

“Race, Immigration and Civil Rights: The Role of Interracial Coalitions in Shaping Immigration Policy in the Deep South.” Transnational Migration in Comparative Perspective: Italy and the U.S. Notre Dame Rome Center, Rome, Italy, October 21-23.

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"Enforcement or Embrace? The Determinants of State-Level Immigration Policy in New Immigrant Destinations," American Sociological Association Annual Meeting, Chicago, IL, August 23, 2015.

“Identity in Black and Brown: Racializing Mexicans, Minority Identity and Intergroup Coalitions in the New South.” Annual Meeting of the Association for Black Sociologists, Chicago, IL, August 21, 2015.

“Why Do States Criminalize Undocumented Immigrants? Race, Citizenship, and the Politics of Exclusion in New Immigrant Destinations”, Law and Society Annual Meeting, Seattle, WA, May 28-31.

“New Latinos: Racializing Mexicans, Minority Identity and Intergroup Coalitions in the New South.” Inter-University Program for Latino Research Siglo XXI Conference. University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame IN, April 23-25.

“When Blacks Lives Matter: and the Upside of Hegemony.” Closed panel on Race Relations. Northcentral Sociological Association Annual Meeting, Cleveland, OH, April 10-11.

“The Cultural Effects of Social Movements: Racial Transformation and the Mississippi Struggle for Immigrant Rights.” SSS Paper Session: Immigrants, Political Efficacy, and Civil Society - Paper Session. Annual Meeting of the Southern Sociological Society, New Orleans, LA March 26-29.

2014 “Making Latinos: Racializing Mexicans in the Twenty-first Century.” Annual Meeting of the Social Science History Association, Shifts in Racial Classification: Self-identification and Ascription. Toronto, ON, Canada, November 6-9.

“From Open Doors to Closed Gates: Reverse Incorporation in the New South.” • Second Annual Crimmigration Control Conference, Leiden, Netherlands. October 9-10. • Imagining Latina/o Studies: Past, Present, and Future Conference, Chicago, IL July 17-19.

“Why do State Criminalize Undocumented Immigrants? Race Citizenship and the Politics of Exclusion in New Immigrant Destinations.” Second Annual Crimmigration Control Conference, Leiden, Netherlands. October 9-10.

“Panethnicity and Racialization: An Integrated Framework.” Annual Meetings of the American Sociological Association. International Migration Section Session on New Directions in Migration Theory. San Francisco, CA August 16-18.

“Is Brown the New Black? The Effects of Minority Coalitions in New Immigrant Destinations.” • Annual Meetings of the World Congress of Political Science, Montreal, Canada, July 19- 24. 8-JJ

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• SSS Thematic Panel: Political Economy, Social Movements, and the South. Annual Meeting of the Southern Sociological Society, Charlotte, NC April 2-5.

“Afro-Latinos in Movement: Critical Approaches to Blackness and Transnationalism in the Americas” Roundtable organizer and presenter (with Tianna Paschel and Petra Rivera-Rideau) Imagining Latina/o Studies: Past, Present, and Future Conference, Chicago, IL July 17-19.

2013 “Panethnicity and Racialization: An Integrated Framework.” • Annual Meeting of the Southern Sociological Society, Atlanta GA, April 24-27. • Annual Meeting of the Social Science Historical Association, Chicago, IL, November 21- 24.

“ ‘Mexicans will Take the Jobs that Even Blacks Won’t Do’: An Analysis of Blackness, Regionalism, and Invisibility in Contemporary Mexico.” 2013 Lozano Long Conference Refashioning Blackness: Contesting Racism in the Afro-Americas. University of at Austin, February 20-22.

2012 Critic on Author Meets Critic Panel of Tanya Golash-Boza's Yo Soy Negro: Blackness in Peru. Annual Meeting of the Social Science History Association, Vancouver, BC, November (Invited).

“From Jim Crow to Juan Crow: Black-Brown Relations in the New South.” Immigrants and Natives: Social Mobility, Intergroup Conflict, and Cooperation Panel. American Sociological Association Annual Meeting, Denver, CO, August.

“ ‘Mexicans will Take the Jobs that even Blacks Won't Do’: An Analysis of Afro-Mexican Regional Identity in Contemporary Mexico.” Constructing Blackness Across the Americas Panel. Latin American Studies Association (LASA) Annual Meeting, San Francisco, CA, May.

“From ‘Me’ to ‘We’: Achieving Multiracial Identity Formation as a Collective.” Pacific Sociology Association 2012 Annual Meeting, San Diego, CA, March.

2011 “Fear and Loathing in North Carolina: Mexican Migration to the Post 9/11 South.” Local Responses to Immigrant Populations Panel. American Sociological Association 106th Annual Meeting, Los Vegas, NV, August.

“Salsa and Soul: Racial Conflict and Closeness in Winston-Salem.” Research Report. Panel on Identities and Cultural Studies. Race, Nation, Identity: The 1st Annual Conference of the UC Center for New Racial Studies, Los Angeles, CA, April.

2010 “Soul and Salsa: Social Exclusion and Linked Fate among Afro-Mexicans and Mestizo Mexicans in North Carolina.” • Latin American Studies Association XXIX International Congress, Toronto, Canada, October.

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• Special Session. American Sociological Association Annual Meeting, Atlanta, GA August (Invited). • Pacific Sociological Conference 2010 Annual Meeting, Oakland, CA, April.

“ ‘Blacks May Be Second Class, but They Can’t Make Them Leave’: Mexican Racial Formation and Immigrant Status.” • Latinos and Latinas in the South: Immigration, Integration and Identity Conference, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, AL, February. • Race Working Group, University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, May.

2009 “Redrawing the Lines: Understanding Race and Citizenship through the Lens of Afro-Mexican Migrants.” • Sixth Annual Social Theory Forum: Integration, Globalization and Racialization. University of Massachusetts, Boston, MA, April. • Race Working Group, University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, October.

2008 “Beyond Recognition: Searching for Meaning Within Multiracial Categorization.” American Sociological Association 103rd Annual Meeting. Boston, MA, August.

“Re-Making Latin America? Theorizing Contemporary Global Flows, State Formation and Racial Projects.” Co-authored with Tianna Paschel. Congreso de Veracruz “Diáspora, Nación y Diferencia.” Veracruz, México, June.

“Choosing Blackness? Understanding Racial and Ethnic Trajectories among Afro-Mexicans in the US.” Presented at the Latin American Studies Association’s first Conference on Ethnicity, Race, and Indigenous Peoples in Latin America and the Caribbean. San Diego, CA, May.

2007 “Beyond Recognition: Searching for Meaning Within Multiracial Categorization.” • University of California, Berkeley Race Working Group. Berkeley, CA, October. • Pacific Sociological Association Annual Meeting. Panel on Multiethnic Identity and Ethnic Work. Oakland, CA, March.

2006 “Beyond Recognition: Searching for Meaning Within Multiracial Categorization.” Hawaii International Conference on Social Sciences, Honolulu, Hawaii, June.

“Fear of Selling Out and Performance of Race Consciousness.” Co-authored with Sandra Smith. Paper presented at the Pacific Sociological Association 2006 Annual Meeting, Los Angeles, CA, April, 2006.

PUBLIC SOCIOLOGY

2016. “What Nativist and Pro-Immigrant Groups Have in Common.” (With Hana Brown). In a series on immigrants and refugees. Mobilizing Ideas Blog. 10-JJ

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https://mobilizingideas.wordpress.com/2016/01/05/what-nativist-and-pro-immigrant- movements-have-in-common/

2015. “Black Latino Coalitions in the South.” The State of Things. Hosted by Frank Stasio. North Carolina Public Radio, WUNC. November 20, 2015. (With Hana Brown). http://wunc.org/post/black-latino-coalitions-south#stream/0

TEACHING EXPERIENCE

Instructor (Graduate) Race and Ethnicity University of Notre Dame, Fall 2014.

(Undergraduate) Race and Ethnicity: Constructing Identity and Difference. University of Notre Dame, Fall 2013, Spring 2014, Spring 2015, Spring 2016.

(Undergraduate) Making Latinos: The Complexities of Latino Identity in the . University of Notre Dame, Fall 2013, Fall 2015.

(Undergraduate) Understanding Societies. University of Notre Dame, Spring 2015, Fall 2015, Spring 2016.

Directed Undergraduate Thesis: Independent Study. Katie Cobian, Sociology. University of Notre Dame, Spring 2016. Amanda Varela, Sociology. University of Notre Dame, Spring 2015. Annie Rhodes, Sociology. University of Notre Dame, Fall 2013-Spring 2014.

(Undergraduate) Supervised Research. Lily Falzon, Sociology. University of Notre Dame, Spring 2016. Maria Manzur Martinez, Sociology. University of Notre Dame, Fall 2015.

Graduate Student Instructor Head Teaching Assistant. Field Study Practicum Analysis Seminar. Professor Dan Lewis, Northwestern University, San Francisco, Summers 2005, 2006 and 2007.

Graduate Student Instructor. Sociology of Race and Ethnic Relations. Professor Sandra Smith, University of California. Berkeley, Fall 2005.

Mentorship Dissertation Committees Mary Kate Blake, Sociology (committee member). Karen Hooge, Sociology (committee member). Nicole Perez, Sociology (committee member).

Qualifying Exams Committees Race and Ethnicity (chair, 2015-2016)

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• Nicole Perez (Fall 2015) • Eve Bjerre (Fall 2016)

MA Theses 2015. Deanna Childress, Sociology (committee member). 2015. Andrew Hoyt, Sociology (committee member). 2014. Nathan Reed, Sociology (committee member).

Senior Theses 2016. Katie Cobian, Sociology (advisor). 2016. Maria Do, American Studies (2nd Reader). 2015. Amanda Varela, Sociology (advisor). 2014. Annie Rhodes, Sociology (advisor). 2014. Cait Ogren, American Studies (2nd Reader).

Other Graduate Mentoring 2016-2017. ASA Section on Race and Ethnicity Mentoring Program (Mentor).

Other Undergraduate Mentoring 2016. Atlantic Coast Conference Inter-institutional Academic Collaborative (ACCIAC) Summer Collaborative Research Award Program, Alexandra Reyes, Wake Forest University.

Guest Lectures and Teaching “Making Multiracials and Understanding Race.” Sage Publications Case Study Educational Video. 2016.

“Doing Qualitative Methods.” Sage Publications Tutorial Educational Video, 2016.

“Interviewing: Techniques and Strategies.” Guest Lecture for Thesis Writing Seminar. University of Notre Dame, Sociology. Notre Dame, IN, March 2016.

“Studying Race.” Guest Lecture for Pro-Seminar. University of Notre Dame, Sociology. Notre Dame, IN, March 2016.

“Immigration Politics” Guest Lecture for ND Votes series. March 2016.

“Black, Latino, and Afro-Latino: A Research Agenda in Contemporary Politics.” Guest Lecture for Seminar on African Diaspora Studies. Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, VA, November 2015.

“Afro-Mexican Identity: Research and Practice.” Guest Lecture on Comparative Black Politics for Graduate Seminar on Race Representation and Politics. With Tianna Paschel. University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame IN, November 2013.

“The Afro-Mexican Experience: Black Identity among Afro-Mexicans in the US and Mexico.” Guest Lecture for Undergraduate Seminar on U.S. Latino Spirituality, Theology Department. University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame IN, September 2013.

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“Immigration and Demographic Change in the Contemporary US.” Guest lecture for Graduate Seminar on Demography, The Ohio State University Sociology Department. Columbus, OH, November 2012.

“Afro-Mexicans in the New South.” Guest Lecturer for Undergraduate Seminar on Afro-Latino Identities. University of Richmond, Department of Latin-American and Iberian Studies, March 2012.

“Immigration, Enforcement and Racial Identity in the New South.” Guest lecture for Graduate Seminar on Immigration, The Ohio State University Sociology Department. Columbus, OH, February 2012.

Guest Lecture on Sociology and social science research for high school students at the Escuela Prepatoria Popular Heloya Herrera Monteval. Miguel Aleman, Guerrero, Mexico, May 2008.

Guest panelist on teaching undergraduate writing for graduate instructors. With Kristen Gray and Sarah Quinn. University of California, Berkeley, October 2007.

Pedagogy Fellowship Participant in the ASA’s Section on Teaching & Learning in Sociology Annual pre- conference on Preparing Future Faculty, August 2009.

Co-writer, co-editor and Project coordinator of the Writing for Sociology project. Produced the department handbook “Writing for Sociology” on writing for undergraduates in the social sciences with Sarah Quinn, under the supervision of Professor Kim Voss, 2007.

OTHER ACADEMIC WORK EXPERIENCE

Student Affairs Officer for the Graduate Diversity Office, Division of Social 2009-2010 Sciences, University of California Berkeley. Assisted in increasing the presence and success of underrepresented groups in the Division’s graduate programs.

Research Assistant, University of California Berkeley. Assisted Professor 2005 Sandra Smith in the revision of the undergraduate race and ethnicity course.

Rockridge Institute Research Associate, Berkeley, CA. Conducted research 2004-2005 and wrote original pieces addressing American politics and framing issues under the guidance of Professor Jerome Karabel.

Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Program in Latin American Sociology 2004 Research Assistant, University of California-Berkeley. Assisted Ethnic Studies Professor Ramon Grosfoguel’s research on in the labor force regarding ethnic migrants in Europe and North America, Spring.

Research Assistant, Northwestern University, Evanston IL. Assisted Professor 2002 Eric Klinenberg’s research on media consolidation and media responses to 9/11. Assisted Professor Mary Pattillo’s research for Black on the Block, Summer. 13-JJ

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Program Assistant, Joint Center for Poverty Research, University of Chicago 2000-2001 Harris Graduate School for Public Policy Studies and the Institute for Policy Research at Northwestern University, Chicago and Evanston, IL. Summer and Winter.

SERVICE TO THE DISCIPLINE

American Sociological Review, Editorial Board. 2016-2018.

Panel Organizer. Making Racialized Subjects: Race, Immigration, and the Politics of Hierarchy and Belonging. Social Science History Association, Chicago, IL, November 2016.

Discussant. Race and Memory. Social Science History Association, Chicago, IL, November 2016.

Discussant. ASA Panel on race, ethnicity and social movements. Annual Meeting of the American Sociological Association, Seattle, WA, August 2016.

Panel Organizer and discussant. Afro-Latinos In Movement: Critical Approaches to Blackness And Transnationalism In The Americas (Imagining Afro-Latinidades and Diasporic Politics). Annual Meeting of the Latin American Studies Association, New York, May 2016.

Discussant. Graduate Student Ethnography Conference. DePaul University, Chicago, IL, April, 2016 (Invited).

Respondent. Institute for Latino Studies Young Scholars Symposium. April, 2016.

Panel Organizer. Latinos, Racial Identity, and Linked Fate. Annual Meeting of the Association of Black Sociologists. Chicago, IL, August, 2015.

Presider. Section on Racial and Ethnic Minorities / Rethinking Race and Nation: Transnational and Comparative Approaches. Annual Meeting of the American Sociological Association. Chicago, IL, August, 2015.

Presider. Section on Latino Sociology Mentoring Workshop. Chicago, IL, August, 2015.

Presider and Discussant. Inter-University Program for Latino Research Fifth Biennial Siglo XXI Conference. Negotiating Afro-Latinidades. Notre Dame, IN, April, 2015.

Respondent. Institute for Latino Studies Young Scholars Symposium. April, 2015.

Discussant. Beyond Black and White: Latino and Asian Identities. Annual Meeting of the Social Science History Association, Toronto, ON, Canada, November 6-9, 2014.

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Discussant. Becoming Black Political Subjects: Movements, Global Alignments and Black Rights in Colombia Brazil. Tianna Paschel Book Workshop, University of Chicago, 2014.

Inter-University Program for Latino Research Afro-Latino Working Group Coordinator. 2014- 2017.

American Sociological Association Section on Racial and Ethnic Minorities Committee for the Oliver Cromwell Cox Article Award, 2013-2014.

Society for the Study of Social Problems Division on Racial and Ethnic Minorities 2014 Eduardo Bonilla-Silva Book Award Committee.

Discussant. Graduate Student Ethnography Conference. Northwestern University, Evanston IL. March 15, 2014 (Invited).

Discussant. Bodies, Leisure, and the Media: Redefining Racial, Ethnic, and National Communities Paper Session. Annual Meeting of the Social Science Historical Association, Chicago, IL, November 21-24, 2013.

Panel Organizer. Constructing Blackness Across the Americas Panel. Latin American Studies Association (LASA) Annual Meeting, San Francisco, CA, May 2012.

Discussant. “Local and Global Connections.” UC Berkeley Afro-Latino Working Group Conference. Global Movements, Local Identities: Race, Space, and the African Diaspora in Latin America. Los Angeles, CA, March, 2008.

Co-coordinator for the “Global Movements, Local Identities: Race, Space, and the African Diaspora in Latin America” Conference. Sponsored by the Afro-Latino Working Group, 2008.

Co-coordinator for the “Beyond Visibility: Rethinking the African Diaspora” Inaugural Conference. Sponsored by the Afro-Latino Working Group, 2007.

Reviewer: American Sociological Review, American Journal of Sociology, DuBois Review, Ethnic and Racial Studies, Identities, Latino Studies, Identities, Social Currents, Social Problems, Sociology of Race and Ethnicity, Sociological Quarterly, Qualitative Sociology, Oxford University Press, Sage Press, and W.W. Norton Press.

PROFESSIONAL AFFILIATIONS

American Sociological Association Section Memberships: International Migration; Political Sociology; Racial & Ethnic Minorities; Latino Studies Southern Sociological Society Association of Black Sociologists Latin American Studies Association Section Memberships: Ethnicity, Race and Indigenous Peoples; Latino Studies Latina/o Studies Association

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Law and Society Association Social Science Historical Association Section Memberships: Sociology; Migration and Immigration; Politics; Race and Ethnicity Society for the Study of Social Problems

DEPARTMENT AND UNIVERSITY SERVICE

University of Notre Dame Colloquia Organizer. Inaugural Sociology Colloquia Series, David FitzGerald. Notre Dame, IN, September 2016.

Notre Dame Women’s Postdoctoral Fellow Group, Junior Faculty Panel participant, 2015.

Afro-Latinos in Movement Conference Convener and chair, 2014.

African American Recognition Ceremony Keynote speaker, 2014.

Graduate Studies Committee, 2013-2015.

Panelist on qualitative methods in sociology lunch workshop for graduate students, 2014.

University of California, Berkeley Graduate Student Representative, Department of Sociology Graduate Admissions Committee, 2009-2010.

Student Coordinator, University of California, Berkeley Race Workshop, 2009-2011.

Member, University of California, Berkeley Race Working Group, 2007-2012.

Member, UC Berkeley Afro-Latino Interdisciplinary Working Group, 2005-2011.

Coordinator, chair, and department liaison for the UC Berkeley Diversity Working Group, Department of Sociology, 2005-2007.

Editorial Board, Berkeley Journal of Sociology, 2003-2005.

SERVICE TO THE COMMUNITY

Pomona College Alumni Interviewer, 2003-present.

Berkeley High School Community Partnership Academy, volunteer director and instructor of college preparation program, 2004-2006.

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