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112TH ASA ANNUAL MEETING

FINAL PROGRAM

ASA Annual Meeting Services 1430 K Street NW, Suite 600 • Washington, DC 20005-2529 202.383.9005 ext. 305 • 202.638.0882 fax [email protected] • www.asanet.org

CULTURE, INEQUALITIES, AND SOCIAL INCLUSION ACROSS THE GLOBE

112th ASA Annual Meeting August 12-15, 2017 Montréal, Québec, Canada Palais des Congrès de Montréal

STAY CONNECTED! ACCESS THE ANNUAL MEETING APP #ASA17 @ASANEWS

FINAL PROGRAM

ASA 2017 Mobile Program App Download the ASA 2017 Program app to seamlessly navigate the Annual Meeting. To download the app, go to the App Store or Google Play and search for “ASA Annual Meeting” OR scan the QR code to the right. To access program content and much more, select the 2017 Meeting under “Upcoming Meetings.” For all other device types (including BlackBerry, Windows, and other web browser-enabled devices), point your mobile browser to m.core-apps.com/asaannual to be directed to the proper download version for your phone. Should you have any questions about downloading the app, please contact [email protected]. With the ASA 2017 mobile app, you can: • Stay organized with up-to-the-minute Exhibitor, Speaker, and Event information • Sync the app across all of your devices with Multi-Device Sync • Receive important real-time communications from the ASA • Build a personalized schedule and bookmark exhibitors • Take notes • Locate sessions and exhibitors on the maps • Find attendees and connect with your colleagues through Friends • Stay in-the-know and join in on social media with #asa17 • Watch ASA videos • And much, much more

Cover art Bharti Kher View from 6000 ft, 2010 Bindis on painted board 183 x 244 cm Courtesy of the artist and Hauser & Wirth

See You Next Year!

112th Annual Meeting

August 12-15, 2017 Palais des congrès de Montréal Montréal, Quebec

Culture, Inequalities, and Social Inclusion across the Globe 2017 Program Committee Michèle Lamont, President and Committee Chair, Harvard University Sada Aksartova, United States Government Accountability Office Kathleen Gerson, New York University David Grusky, Stanford University David Harding, University of California-Berkeley Sally T. Hillsman, American Sociological Association Graziella Moraes Silva, Graduate Institute in Geneva – IHEID Ann Morning, New York University Mary Romero, Arizona State University Kristen Schilt, University of Chicago Yasmin Soysal, University of Essex Anna Sun, Kenyon College David Takeuchi, Boston College

Table of Contents ASA Annual Meeting Policies.....................................................................................................................................................................................................3 ASA Council....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................... 4 ASA Executive Office Staff......................................................................................................................................................................................................... 4 Welcome from the ASA President...........................................................................................................................................................................................5 Acknowledgements.........................................................................................................................................................................................................................6 Navigating the Annual Meeting.................................................................................................................................................................................................8 Accessibility Resources and Services........................................................................................................................................................................8 ASA Meeting Information Desk...................................................................................................................................................................................8 ASA Store.............................................................................................................................................................................................................................8 Comfort Zone......................................................................................................................................................................................................................8 Emergency Information..................................................................................................................................................................................................8 Employment Fair...............................................................................................................................................................................................................8 Frangrance-Free Environment.....................................................................................................................................................................................8 Gender-Inclusive Restrooms.........................................................................................................................................................................................8 Gender Pronouns...............................................................................................................................................................................................................8 Health and Wellness.........................................................................................................................................................................................................8 Hotel Information..............................................................................................................................................................................................................9 Lactation Room..................................................................................................................................................................................................................9 Mobile App...........................................................................................................................................................................................................................9 Registration/Membership Services............................................................................................................................................................................9 WiFi.........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................9 Maps......................................................................................................................................................................................................................................10 Programming Highlights Special Events .................................................................................................................................................................................................................. 14 Featured Sessions........................................................................................................................................................................................................... 14 ASA Meetings ASA Business Meeting................................................................................................................................................................................................... 16 ASA Governance Meetings.......................................................................................................................................................................................... 16 ASA Editorial Meetings................................................................................................................................................................................................. 17 ASA Advisory, Task Force, and Related Meetings.............................................................................................................................................. 18 Section Information...................................................................................................................................................................................................................... 19 Student Training and Programs Student Forum................................................................................................................................................................................................................ 25 Honors Program.............................................................................................................................................................................................................. 26 Minority Fellowship Program..................................................................................................................................................................................... 28 Affiliated Organizations.............................................................................................................................................................................................................30 Exhibits............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................... 32 Program Schedule Friday, August 11.............................................................................................................................................................................................................. 35 Saturday, August 12.......................................................................................................................................................................................................45 Sunday, August 13..........................................................................................................................................................................................................99 Monday, August 14........................................................................................................................................................................................................145 Tuesday, August 15........................................................................................................................................................................................................189 Wednesday, August 16...............................................................................................................................................................................................225 Index of Session Participants................................................................................................................................................................................................226 Subject Index.................................................................................................................................................................................................................................262 ASA Officers...................................................................................................................................................................................................................................270

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Annual Meeting Policies ASA Council Policy Statement on Social Media during the Annual Meeting In ASA sessions, some members of the audience may use twitter or other forms of social media to share the results of papers presented. In rare instances people will record sessions; if you prefer that audio recordings or video recordings not occur, please share your request with the audience. ASA encourages all program participants to be sensitive to the requests of others. Anti-Harassment Policy ASA has received notice from several sources that graduate students and faculty have experienced racial and sexual harassment at various conference venues. ASA reminds everyone: Our Annual Meeting is convened for the purposes of professional development and scholarly educational interchange in the spirit of free inquiry and free expression. Harassment of colleagues, students, or other conference participants undermines the principle of equity at the heart of these professional fora and is inconsistent with the principles of free inquiry and free expression. Consequently, harassment is considered by ASA to be a serious form of professional misconduct. The following Anti-Harassment Policy outlines expectations for all those who attend or participate in ASA meetings. It reminds ASA meeting participants that all professional academic ethics and norms apply as standards of behavior and interaction at these meetings. 1. Purpose ASA is committed to providing a safe and welcoming conference environment for all participants, free from harassment based on age, race, ethnicity, national origin, religion, language, sexual orientation, gender identity or gender expression, disability, health conditions, socioeconomic status, marital status, domestic status, or parental status (hereafter, simply harassment). “Participant” in this policy refers to anyone present at ASA meetings, including staff, contractors, vendors, exhibitors, venue staff, ASA members, and all other attendees.

2. Expected Behavior All participants at ASA meetings are expected to abide by this Anti-Harassment Policy in all meeting venues including ancillary events as well as official and unofficial social gatherings. • Follow the norms of professional respect that are necessary to promote the conditions for free academic interchange. • If you witness potential harm to a conference participant, be proactive in helping to mitigate or avoid that harm. • Alert conference security personnel or law enforcement if you see a situation in which someone might be in imminent physical danger. 3. Unacceptable Behavior Harassment of any participant is unethical behavior under the American Sociological Association Code of Ethics. Harassment consists of a single intense and severe act or of multiple persistent or pervasive acts which are demeaning, abusive, offensive, or create a hostile professional or workplace environment. Harassment may include sexual solicitation, physical advance, or verbal or non-verbal conduct that is sexual in nature; it may also include threatening, intimidating, or hostile acts; circulation of written or graphic material that denigrates or shows hostility toward an individual or group; epithets, slurs, or negative stereotyping based on group identity. Attendees are encouraged to immediately report instances of harassment during the Annual Meeting to the ASA Executive Officer, Nancy Kidd, at [email protected], (646) 408-9063 or to the Director of Meeting Services, Michelle Randall, at [email protected]. To read the American Sociological Association Code of Ethics in its entirety, visit www.asanet.org and follow the link to “Ethics.”

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2016-2017 ASA Council Michèle Lamont, President, Harvard University   Kathleen Gerson, Vice President, New York University David Takeuchi, Secretary, Boston College Eduardo Bonilla-Silva, President-Elect, Duke University Chris Uggen, Vice President-Elect, University of Minnesota Ruth Milkman, Past President, City University of New York Graduate Center Barbara Risman, Past Vice President, University of Illinois at Chicago Nancy Kidd, Executive Officer  Nina Bandelj, Member-at-Large, University of California, Irvine Mabel Berezin, Member-at-Large, Cornell University Daniel Chambliss, Member-at-Large, Hamilton College Cynthia Feliciano, Member-at-Large, University of California, Irvine Tanya Maria Golash-Boza, Member-at-Large, University of California-Merced  Adia M. Harvey Wingfield, Member-at-Large, Washington University-St. Louis  Margaret Hunter, Member-at-Large, Mills College  Peter Kivisto, Member-at-Large, Augustana College  Monica McDermott, Member-at-Large, University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign Mignon R. Moore, Member-at-Large, Barnard College Wendy Ng, Member-at-Large, San Jose University  Andrew J. Perrin, Member-at-Large, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill

2017-2018 ASA Council Eduardo Bonilla-Silva, President, Duke University Chris Uggen, Vice President, University of Minnesota   David Takeuchi, Secretary, Boston College Mary Romero, President-Elect, Arizona State University Grace Kao, Vice President-Elect, University of Pennsylvania Michèle Lamont, Past President, Harvard University   Kathleen Gerson, Past Vice President, New York University  Nancy Kidd, Executive Officer  Nina Bandelj, Member-at-Large, University of California, Irvine Mabel Berezin, Member-at-Large, Cornell University Daniel Chambliss, Member-at-Large, Hamilton College Cynthia Feliciano, Member-at-Large, University of California, Irvine Kimberly Ann Goyette, Member-atLarge, Temple University Erin Kelly, Member-at-Large, MIT Monica McDermott, Member-at-Large, University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign Mignon R. Moore, Member-at-Large, Barnard College Wendy Ng, Member-at-Large, San Jose University  Andrew J. Perrin, Member-at-Large, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill Zulema Valdez, Member-at-Large, University of California-Merced Rhys H. Williams, Member-at-Large, Loyola University-Chicago

ASA Executive Office Staff Nancy Kidd, Executive Officer Margaret Weigers Vitullo, Director of Academic and Professional Affairs Nicole V. Amaya, Senior Research Associate Jaime Hecht, Academic and Professional Affairs Associate Jean Shin, Director of Minority and Student Affairs Brandon McCain, Minority and Student Affairs Assistant Carmen Russell, Director of Communications Johanna Olexy, Senior Communications Associate Alan Brain, Multimedia Producer Michelle Randall, Director of Meeting Services Jamie Arca, Senior Meeting Services Associate Karen Gray Edwards, Director of Membership and Publications Craig Schaar, Membership Manager Valerie Pines, Membership Assistant Jamie Panzarella, Publications Manager Rachel Pines, Publications Assistant Michael Murphy, Director of Governance and Administration David Matthews, Office Assistant Les Briggs, Director of Finance Girma Efa, Accountant

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Welcome from the ASA President Michèle Lamont ASA President Harvard University C’est avec grand plaisir que je vous acceuille dans mon bout de pays, “La Belle Province.” That we meet here to debate “Culture, Inequality and Social Inclusion across the Globe” is particularly fitting as these very topics have been at the center of the construction of the Canadian community since 1608, in the context of multiple ethno-national and colonial conflicts.1 Today, many perceive Canadian society as exemplary when it comes to collective wellbeing, immigration policy, and multiculturalism, while Quebec distinguishes itself by its remarkable (cooperative-based) social economy and vigorous anti- neo-liberalism. This, and much more, makes Canadian and Quebec societies particularly intriguing for curious sociologists. I invite you to learn about them in the four days ahead. The 2017 program committee has worked hard to assemble an intellectual feast that appeals to a range of palates. Whether you prefer to go for our “menu degustation” (the thematic program (!)), the comfort food (however you define it), or to nibble here or there, we have no doubt that you will leave the table satisfied (gastronomical metaphors being de rigueur in Quebec). The plenary and presidential session speakers include a number of prominent non-sociologists such as philosophers Nancy Fraser and Will Kymlicka, economists Robert Frank and Nobel Laureate Joseph Stiglitz, First Nations advocate Audrey Sampson, President of the Open Society Foundation Christopher Stone, political scientists Jacob Hacker and Paul Pierson, and law professor Joan Williams. Given our global theme, we have also invited prominent sociologists from around the world, including scholars such as Mike Savage (London School of Economics), Pierre-Michel Menger (Collège de France), Oleg Kharkhordin (European University at St Petersburg) and Laurent Thévenot (Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociale). We will hold twenty Author-Meets-Critics sessions on books carefully selected from nearly 300 new publications. The Saturday evening plenary featuring Ta-Nehisi Coates in conversation with Bruce Western and yours truly, has unfortunately been cancelled due to unavoidable circumstances. In addition, we have put together several “current events” sessions that address recent political and social developments in the United States and abroad. These will focus on the “Brexit/Trump” moment (organized by the British Journal of Sociology), Trump’s challenges to American democracy and American society, as well as social movements and protests in responses to recent developments. Another aspect of the program builds on a tradition started last year to host town hall meetings. We will have two such meetings. The first one is on Promoting Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion in Sociology (with the participation of Council members Tanya Golash-Boza, Monica McDermott, and Adia Harvey Wingfield and ASA staff member Jean Shin). The second one is on Sociology’s Response to Trump (featuring Executive Director Nancy Kidd, and ASA elected officials Ruth Milkman, Eduardo Bonilla-Silva and myself). There, we plan to discuss the ASA’s exciting new initiative, the Sociology Action Network (with ASA member Akos Rona-Tas, who came up with the idea). Of course, no one should miss the ASA business meeting (at 7:00 a.m. on Monday!). I hope that many of you will be able to participate in these sessions. Building on the work of past presidents, the program committee aims to make tools available to help members maximize the presence of sociology in the public sphere. We will host a number of sessions and workshops with this in mind, including one panel organized by our new Director of Communications, Carmen Russell, with the Scholars Strategy Network and The Conversation. Finally, I am delighted that the Canadian and Quebec sociological associations have enthusiastically responded to our invitation to organize regional panels, as has our local organization committee expertly chaired by Greg Nielson (Concordia) and JeanFrançois Coté (Université du Québec à Montréal). These bear on a range of topics including Latinos across North America, the criminal and legal systems of Canada and the U.S., and why labor and the left are so “left” in Canada. There will also be a special session celebrating the 75th anniversary of the publication of Everett Hughes’s classical book French Canada in Transition. A number of Canadian departments, foundations, and governmental agencies have made contributions that will allow us to bring Quebec performers to the Palais des congrès. Despite this abundance of activities, I hope that you will take advantage of the featured tours, hang out at cafés, and make time to register that Montréal is a very special place. And please do engage a few of my co-patriots. They love to hang out. You will discover for yourself how warm and welcoming Quebekers are. I have no doubt that they will be eager to share with you their own thoughts on their unique society and on why this is the best place on earth, especially in 2017! 1

Date of the foundation of Quebec city, the first French colony created along the St. Lawrence river.

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Acknowledgments Assembling the program that is now in your hands has been a considerable endeavor, which has required the professionalism and loving care of a great many colleagues. The challenge was particularly daunting given that the ASA meeting services staff went through major transitions as soon as we started planning the meeting. But everyone rose to the task unfailingly. Now that the adventure is coming to an end, I feel particularly fortunate to have been surrounded by so many amazing people. First I want to thank the visionary members of the program committee. You can see for yourself how much thought and creative thinking they have put into generating sessions that build on our theme in multiple and surprising ways. I am thrilled to be able to acknowledge their many contributions: Sada Aksartova, United States Government Accountability Office Kathleen Gerson, New York University David Grusky, Stanford University David Harding, University of California-Berkeley Sally T. Hillsman, American Sociological Association Graziella Moraes Silva, Graduate Institute in Geneva – IHEID Ann Morning, New York University Mary Romero, Arizona State University Kristen Schilt, University of Chicago Yasmin Soysal, University of Essex Anna Sun, Kenyon College David Takeuchi, Boston College Second, the ASA staff has simply been remarkable. Jamie Arca carried more than her usual share of the work until Michelle Randall joined her in the fall of 2017. This dynamo team made the impossible happen again and again. Nancy Kidd was extraordinary as she took on the reigns of the organization. Third, my Canadian friends and colleagues rose to the occasion in so many ways. The local committee, chaired by JeanFrançois Coté (Université du Québec à Montréal) and Greg Nielson (Concordia University) assembled a wonderful team that put together great sessions highlighting the breadth and depth of the sociological importance of the region. They also wrote informative pieces for Footnotes and put considerable thought into how to feature Montréal through tours and other activities. Many Canadian funders stepped forward when they were asked to support our meetings. I am particularly thrilled that the main sociology departments of Montréal stepped up: Concordia University, McGill University, Université de Montréal, Université du Québec à Montréal. My colleagues at Canadian Institute for Advanced Research (CIFAR) were also particularly generous with their help. Other supporters include Pearson, the Canadian Federation for the Humanities and Social Sciences, the Fonds de Recherche du Québec, the Social Science and Humanities Research Council of Canada, the Lucie and André Chagnon Foundation, and Harvard University’s Department of Sociology. I am tempted to single out a great many friends and colleagues who provided particular assistance in reaching out to potential speakers or convincing their institutions to contribute. I will not name names for fear of missing anyone and will thank people individually. But I am acutely aware that it takes a village… or a whole organization to pull together such a large and complex meeting. Finally I thank my family, and close friends and colleagues for being there. I could not have done it without you. You know who you are.

Michèle Lamont ASA President Harvard University

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ASA is pleased to acknowledge the supporting partners of the 112th Annual Meeting Canadian Institute for Advanced Research (CIFAR) Pearson Canadian Federation for the Humanities and Social Sciences Fonds de Recherche du Québec Social Science and Humanities Research Council of Canada Lucie and André Chagnon Foundation McGill University Concordia University Université du Québec à Montréal Université de Montréal Harvard University

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Navigating the Annual Meeting Accessibility Resources and Services. ASA is committed to making the Annual Meeting accessible to all. Should you encounter any problems during the meeting or need additional information about accessibility while at the Annual Meeting, please contact Meeting Services at the ASA Meeting Information Desk located in Viger Hall, Level 2, Palais des congrès de Montréal. Every reasonable effort will be made to assist registrants onsite. If you need services, equipment, or accommodations, but did not notify ASA in advance, ASA may not be able to provide appropriate services due to limited availability and the time required to locate such equipment and services. Staff at the ASA Meeting Information Desk will coordinate resources that were requested in advance by attendees. ASA will have a small inventory of scooters for use by registrants who need them, however if you prefer to rent your own wheelchair or scooter, please make arrangements with Scoot Around North America (888) 441-7575. If you have any problem or negative experience related to accessibility, including issues with housing, meeting sessions, travel throughout the city, restaurants, or any other accessibility related issue, please report the issue to the Meeting Information desk, which will be located in Viger Hall, Level 2 of the Palais des congrés de Montréal. An ASA Meeting Services team member will record the concern in our Accessibility Log and will be your advocates in working to resolve the issue whenever possible.  By informing us of any concerns that arise we can work toward making the ASA Annual Meeting more welcoming to sociologists with disabilities, and make the cities and hotels where ASA meetings are held more aware of accessibility issues. ASA Meeting Information Desk. The ASA Meeting Information Desk is staffed by ASA staff to assist if you have questions about meeting arrangements. The Meeting Information Desk is located in Viger Hall, Level 2, Palais des congrès de Montréal. ASA Store. The ASA Store features works published by the Association as well as ASA logo merchandise and the popular “Keep Calm and Fund Sociology” collection. All attendees are welcome to browse through this area filled with teaching resources, career publications, sociological practice materials, directories, reference volumes, and recent journal issues. The ASA Store is located in the ASA Exhibit Hall, Hall 220C, Level 2, Palais des congrès de Montréal.

Comfort Zone. A comfort room has been designated for use by attendees requiring a respite from meeting activities. The Comfort Zone is located in Room 440, Level 4, Palais des congrès de Montréal. Emergency Information. To report an emergency within the Palais des congrès de Montréal dial 555 from any house phone. This will connect you to onsite emergency team who can respond immediately. Dial 911 to report an emergency directly to the local authorities. In the case of a meeting-wide emergency, registrants will be emailed pertinent information. Employment Fair. The inaugural ASA Employment Fair assists sociologists and prospective employers by providing convenient opportunities for employers and job seekers to meet in an informal setting for informationsharing. The Employment Fair is located in Hall D, Level 2, Palais des congrès de Montréal and will be open to all registered attendees 10:00 a.m.- 4:00 p.m. on Saturday, August 12. Annual Meeting badges are required for entry. The Employment Fair area will be available to employers on Sunday, August 13 and Monday, August 14 to interview potential candidates. Interviews are by employer invitation only. Fragrance-Free Environment. ASA requests that all participants refrain from wearing perfume, cologne and other fragrances, and use unscented personal care products in order to promote a fragrance-free environment for the benefit of attendees with multiple chemical sensitivities. Gender-Inclusive Restrooms. ASA has designated all-gender restroom facilities on Level 5 of the Palais des congrès de Montréal. These restroom facilities are available for use by all persons, regardless of their gender identity. The facilities will be marked with green signage. Please help make these facilities and this meeting an inclusive space for transgender and gender non-conforming attendees by respecting the right of all genders to use them. Gender Pronouns. Meeting attendees will have the option of identifying preferred pronouns with badge stickers. Stickers will be available at the Meeting Information Desk. Health and Wellness. For information on the nearest pharmacy or walk-in clinic, please consult the Montréal Information Desk, staffed by visitor and tourism personnel, located in Viger Hall, Level 2, Palais des congrès de Montréal or your hotel concierge. Visit www.aa87.org/ for an AA meeting finder for Montréal.

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Navigating the Annual Meeting Hotel Information. The ASA housing block consists of seven hotels: Hyatt Regency Montréal 1255 Jeanne-Mance (514) 982-1234 Le Westin 270 Rue Saint Antoine Oest (514) 380-3333 Holiday Inn Montréal Centreville 999 Rue Saint-Urbain (514) 878-9888 Embassy Suites 208 Rue Saint Antoine Ouest (514) 288-8886 InterContinental Montréal 360 Rue Saint Antoine Oest (514) 987-9900 Fairmont the Queen Elizabeth 900 Rene Levesque Blvd. West (514) 861-3511 Marriott Chateau Champlain 1050 de la Gauchetiere West (514) 878-9000 Lactation Room. ASA has designated a room for parents with lactation needs. The lactation room is located in Room 446, Level 4, Palais des congrès de Montréal.

Mobile App. Download the ASA 2017 Program app to seamlessly navigate the Annual Meeting. To download the app, go to the App Store or Google Play and search for “ASA Annual Meeting” OR scan the QR code to the right. To access program content and much more, select the 2017 Meeting under “Upcoming Meetings.” For all other device types (including BlackBerry, Windows, and other web browser-enabled devices), point your mobile browser to m.core-apps.com/asaannual to be directed to the proper download version for your phone. Should you have any questions about downloading the app, please contact [email protected]. Registration/Membership Services. Attendees may register and join or renew their ASA membership onsite at the Registration/Membership services area located in Viger Hall, Level 2, Palais des congrès de Montréal. Registration/ Membership services will be open: Friday, August 11 Saturday, August 12 Sunday, August 13 Monday, August 14 Tuesday, August 15

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WiFi. ASA provides complimentary WiFi in all ASA meeting rooms at the Palais des congrès de Montréal. The bandwidth provided is sufficient for basic internet use including web access and email. Please refrain from streaming, downloading, or uploading large files. Select ASAMontreal as the available network and use ASAMontreal as the access code.

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Navigating the Annual Meeting

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Navigating the Annual Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal - Level 5

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Navigating the Annual Meeting

Palais des congrès and Hotel Locator Map

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Programming Highlights - Special Events Community College Coffee Hour. Colleagues teaching in community colleges are invited to Coffee Hour, Sunday, August 13, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m., room 520A. Join colleagues in a series of ice breaker activities and conversation. Departmental Alumni Night (DAN). This gathering will held 9:30 – 11:00 p.m., Saturday, August 12, in room 710B on Level 7 of the Palais des congrès de Montréal. All meeting attendees are invited to attend this event. Participating schools are Indiana University, Northeastern University, University of Minnesota, and University of Nebraska-Lincoln. Honorary Reception. After the conclusion of the ASA Awards Ceremony and Presidential Address, registrants are invited to attend the Honorary Reception at 6:30 p.m., Sunday, August 13, in room 710A on Level 7 of the Palais des congrès de Montréal to express appreciation and congratulations to President Michèle Lamont and the major ASA award recipients. The Honorary Reception is supported by the Department of Sociology at Harvard University. Just Desserts! Carla B. Howery Teaching Enhancement Grant Program Benefit Reception. Admission for this reception is by ticket only. Proceeds support the Teaching Enhancement Fund, a small grants program designed to support teaching-related projects that have long lasting and transferable impact. The reception is Sunday, August 13, 8:00 – 9:30 p.m. in the Creation Room of the Hyatt Regency Montréal. Those who preregistered for the event will have an indication on their name badge. Others may purchase a ticket at the Registration Services area. Minority Fellowship Program (MFP) Benefit Reception. Meet current Fellows and MFP alumni, and reaffirm your commitment to the MFP Program at this benefit reception. Admission is by ticket only. Proceeds will go to the Minority Fellowship Program, which supports pre-doctoral training for students of color. Those who preregistered for the event will have an indication on their name badge. Others may purchase a ticket at the Registration Services area. The reception will be held Sunday, August 13, 9:30 – 11:00 p.m. in room 710B on Level 7 of the Palais des congrès de Montréal.

Reception for Scholars with International Research and Teaching Interests. All meeting participants interested in international scholarly collaborations or in meeting colleagues from other countries and learning about sociology globally, are invited to attend this reception in honor of our international colleagues on Saturday, August 12, 7:00 - 8:00 p.m. in room 710B on Level 7 of the Palais des congrès de Montréal. Student Reception. All students registered to attend the Annual Meeting are invited to an open student reception on Saturday, August 12, 6:30 - 7:30 p.m. in room 710A on Level 7 of the Palais des congrès de Montréal. Student Book Giveaway. All students registered to attend the Annual Meeting are invited to a special book giveaway sponsored by ASA exhibitors on Tuesday, August 15. Please meet outside the entrance to the Exhibit Hall, Hall 220C, at 1:30 p.m. Welcome Reception. All meeting registrants are invited to the Welcome Reception on Friday, August 11, 7:00–8:00 p.m., in room 517A on Level 5 of the Palais des congrès de Montréal to celebrate the opening of the 112th Annual Meeting. This social hour follows the conclusion of the Opening Plenary and provides opportunities to renew past acquaintances, chat with old friends, and find a newcomer to guide. New members and first-time meeting attendees are particularly encouraged to attend. The Welcome Reception is generously supported by the Department of Sociology at McGill University, the Department of Sociology at the Université du Québec à Montréal, the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at Concordia University, the Université de Montréal, and the Fonds de recherche du Québec.

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Featured Sessions ASA Awards Ceremony and Presidential Address. All attendees are invited to attend the ASA Awards Ceremony and Presidential Address to honor award winners and share in President Michèle Lamont’s address Addressing the recognition gap: Destigmatization processes and the production of inequality. The ceremony and address will be held Sunday, August 13, 4:30 – 6:10 p.m. in room 517D, Level 5, Palais des congrès de Montréal. Session: 306 ASA Town Hall. The town hall format allows audience interaction and organic discussion on issues that are important to the ASA membership. There are two town hall sessions scheduled for 2017. Sessions: 77, 380 Author Meets Critics Sessions. Author Meets Critics sessions are designed to bring authors of recent books deemed to be important contributions to the discipline together with discussants chosen to provide different viewpoints. Sessions: 45, 46, 81, 125, 126, 158, 199, 236, 237, 275, 312, 349, 387, 423, 424, 425, 456, 492, 525, 555 First Time Attendees Orientation. If this is the first time you have attended an ASA Annual Meeting, please plan to attend this orientation session. This special session provides the opportunity to meet Association leaders and staff. Advice from ASA Officers and experienced attendees will help you chart a course through the myriad activities and substantive programming. The orientation is scheduled Saturday, August 12, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. in room 516C on Level 5, Palais des congrès de Montréal. Graduate Programs in Sociology Poster Session. A resource area for enrolled and prospective graduate students will be open for browsing in the Exhibit Hall during Exhibit Hall hours. School representatives will be available Saturday, August 12, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. to discuss their programs in person. Session: 87

and society, the consequences of the Trump election and Brexit, and the protest and social movement response to the Trump election. Sessions: 121, 122, 310, 346 Regional Spotlight Sessions. The local arrangements committee, co-chaired by JeanFrançois Côté, Université du Québec à Montréal, and Greg Nielsen, Concordia University, has organized a number of panels that capture some key regional history and issues of Montréal. Sessions: 47, 82, 200, 276, 350, 388, 493, 556 Research Funding Opportunities and Data Resources Poster Session. This poster session provides a unique opportunity to meet representatives of major research funding institutions and principal investigators, researchers, and managers of largescale, publicly available datasets. Each funding agency’s poster will display an overview of the research funding they offer, and representatives will be on hand to discuss the application process and potential research proposals. Data resource posters will feature datasets and analytic tools available to researchers, and attendees will learn how to gain access to the data and discuss potential uses of it. In addition to traditional posters, interactive digital posters will be on display Sunday, August 13, 1:00 – 4:00 p.m. in the Exhibit Hall. Session: 268 Roundtable Sessions. There are two types of roundtable sessions at the Annual Meeting. The Informal Discussion Roundtable session, Sunday, August 13, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m., Room 517C, is designed to facilitate discussion about specific topics including, but not limited to, methodology, policy, and professional concerns. Formal papers are not presented. The Open Refereed Roundtable sessions, Saturday, August 12, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m., and Monday, August 14, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m., room 517A, organizes papers around a central theme and allow authors to present and discuss. Sessions: 50, 203, 354

Plenary and Presidential Sessions. Plenary sessions are chosen by the ASA President as outstanding and compelling programming that elucidate the theme and are of interest to a large population of the membership. No other programming is scheduled against plenary sessions. The Presidential sessions are selected by the ASA President for their unique perspectives and spotlight top scholars in the field. Sessions: 5, 76, 77, 116, 192, 231, 269, 306, 340, 379, 380, 417, 488

Special Sessions. Special Sessions incorporate many of the session suggestions submitted by ASA members for invited panels. These sessions may be on topics that further investigate the meeting theme, contribute to the review of the discipline, or focus attention on other timely and important issues. Sessions: 10, 44, 121, 122, 123, 124, 157, 196, 197, 198, 235, 274, 310, 311, 346, 347, 348, 385, 386, 421, 422, 455, 524, 554

Presidential Sessions on Current Societal Challenges. Four sessions have been added to the program that highlight current events and the sociological response. Topics include the Trump administration challenges to American democracy

Thematic Sessions. The 2017 Program Committee developed a set of invited sessions to explore aspects of this year’s meeting theme. These sessions delve into important social and political issues, explore international and comparative viewpoints, and

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Featured Sessions discuss the importance of sociological contributions. Sessions: 6, 7, 8, 9, 39, 40, 41, 42, 43, 78, 79, 80, 117, 118, 119, 120, 154, 155, 156, 193, 194, 195, 232, 233, 234, 270, 271, 272, 273, 307, 308, 309, 341, 342, 343, 344, 345, 381, 382, 383, 384, 418, 419, 420, 453, 454, 489, 490, 491, 521, 522, 523, 552, 553 Visual Media Poster Session. This poster session, scheduled for Monday, August 14, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. in the Exhibit Hall, includes digital presentations, standard posters, and much more. Session: 353 Workshops. One of the strengths of the educational component of the Annual Meeting is the breadth and variety of workshops offered. These sessions provide opportunities for attendees to update their knowledge and skills in a variety of professional areas. Workshop topics focus on Professional Development,

Policy and Research, Departmental Management and Leadership, or Teaching. Workshops are open to all meeting registrants. Professional Development Workshop Sessions: 11, 84, 239, 277, 278, 389, 426, 457, 557 Policy and Research Workshop Sessions: 85, 128, 159, 202, 240, 279, 313, 314, 351, 390, 458, 526 Departmental Management and Leadership Workshop Sessions: 48, 83, 201, 238, 494, Teaching Workshop Sessions: 12, 49, 86, 129, 160, 352, 391, 459, 558

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ASA Meetings ASA Business Meeting Monday, August 14 7:00 – 8:15 a.m. Room 517B, Level 5, Palais des congrès de Montréal The ASA Business Meeting is an opportunity for members to raise issues, express opinions, and discuss important business policy of the Association. All members are encouraged to attend and share their insights, reactions, and suggestions. Resolutions and supporting background documentation must be submitted to the ASA Meeting Information Desk located in Viger Hall, Level 2, Palais des congrès de Montréal by 12:00 p.m. on Sunday, August 13.

I. Welcome – Michèle Lamont, ASA President



II. Status Reports – David Takeuchi, ASA Secretary



III. Financial Overview – Nancy Kidd, ASA Executive Officer

IV. Programmatic Updates: ASA Serving the Professional Needs of Sociologists

V. New and Expanding Public Engagement Initiatives

VI. Member Resolutions VII. Installation – Eduardo Bonilla-Silva, 2018 ASA President

ASA Governance Meetings 2016-17 ASA Council Tuesday, August 15

2:30-6:10 p.m.

Room 518A, Level 5, Palais des congrès de Montréal

2016-17 ASA Council Members-at-Large Tuesday, August 15 8:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m.

Room 518A, Level 5, Palais des congrès de Montréal

2017-18 ASA Council Wednesday, August 16

Room 518A, Level 5, Palais des congrès de Montréal

8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m.

2017-18 ASA Council Orientation for New Members Monday, August 14 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m.

Room 518A, Level 5, Palais des congrès de Montréal

Award Selection Committee Chairs with the Committee on Awards Monday, August 14 10:30-11:10 a.m. Room 523A, Level 5, Palais des congrès de Montréal Committee on Awards Monday, August 14

11:10 a.m.-12:10 p.m.

Room 523A, Level 5, Palais des congrès de Montréal

Committee on Committees Saturday, August 12

2:30-6:10 p.m.

Room 523A, Level 5, Palais des congrès de Montréal

Committee on Nominations Saturday, August 12

8:30 a.m.-2:10 p.m.

Room 523A, Level 5, Palais des congrès de Montréal

Committee on Publications Sunday, August 13

8:30 a.m.-4:10 p.m.

Room 524A, Level 5, Palais des congrès de Montréal

Committee on Sections Monday, August 14

4:30-6:10 p.m.

Room 523B, Level 5, Palais des congrès de Montréal

Section Officers with the Committee on Sections Monday, August 14 2:30-4:10 p.m.

Room 518B, Level 5, Palais des congrès de Montréal

17

ASA Meetings ASA Editorial Meetings American Sociological Review Editorial Board Tuesday, August 15 8:30-10:10 a.m.

Room 710A, Level 7, Palais des congrès de Montréal

Contemporary Sociology Editorial Board Tuesday, August 15 8:30-10:10 a.m.

Room 710B, Level 7, Palais des congrès de Montréal

Contexts Editorial Board Saturday, August 12

8:30-10:10 a.m.

Room 710A, Level 7, Palais des congrès de Montréal

Editors of ASA Publications Saturday, August 12

2:30-4:10 p.m.

Room 524A, Level 5, Palais des congrès de Montréal

Journal of Health and Social Behavior Editorial Board Tuesday, August 15 12:30-2:10 p.m.

Room 710A, Level 7, Palais des congrès de Montréal

Managing Editors Monday, August 14

8:30-12:10 p.m.

Room 523B, Level 5, Palais des congrès de Montréal

Rose Series in Sociology Editorial Board Saturday, August 12 8:30-10:10 a.m.

Room 524A, Level 5, Palais des congrès de Montréal

Social Psychology Quarterly Editorial Board Saturday, August 12 4:30-6:10 p.m.

Room 518A, Level 5, Palais des congrès de Montréal

Sociological Methodology Editorial Board Monday, August 14 8:30-10:10 a.m.

Room 524A, Level 5, Palais des congrès de Montréal

Sociological Theory Editorial Board Saturday, August 12 8:30-10:10 a.m.

Room 524B, Level 5, Palais des congrès de Montréal

Sociology of Education Editorial Board Monday, August 14 8:30-10:10 a.m.

Room 710A, Level 7, Palais des congrès de Montréal

Socius Editorial Board Saturday, August 12

8:30-10:10 a.m.

Room 518C, Level 5, Palais des congrès de Montréal

Teaching Sociology Editorial Board Saturday, August 12 8:30-10:10 a.m.

Room 518A, Level 5, Palais des congrès de Montréal

TRAILS Area Editors Saturday, August 12

Room 524A, Level 5, Palais des congrès de Montréal

4:30-6:10 p.m.

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ASA Meetings ASA Advisory, Task Force, and Related Meetings Committee on the Status of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, and Queer (LGBTQ) People in Sociology Saturday, August 12 4:30-6:10 p.m. Room 525A, Level 5, Palais des congrès de Montréal Committee on the Status of Persons with Disabilities in Sociology Sunday, August 13 12:30-2:10 p.m. Room 523B, Level 5, Palais des congrès de Montréal Committee on the Status of Racial and Ethnic Minorities in Sociology Sunday, August 13 12:30-2:10 p.m. Room 525A, Level 5, Palais des congrès de Montréal Committee on the Status of Women in Sociology Sunday, August 13 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m.

Room 523B, Level 5, Palais des congrès de Montréal

COPE Committee Meeting Tuesday, August 15

Room 523A, Level 5, Palais des congrès de Montréal

10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m.

COPE Revision Committee Meeting Tuesday, August 15 8:30-10:10 a.m.

Room 523A, Level 5, Palais des congrès de Montréal

Department Resources Group (DRG) Advisory Board Monday, August 14 5:30-6:10 p.m.

Room 516C, Level 5, Palais des congrès de Montréal

Department Resources Group (DRG) Business Meeting Monday, August 14 4:30-5:30 p.m.

Room 516C, Level 5, Palais des congrès de Montréal

Department Resources Group (DRG) Training Monday, August 14 8:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m.

Room 516C, Level 5, Palais des congrès de Montréal

Fund for the Advancement of the Discipline (FAD) Advisory Panel Sunday, August 13 7:00-10:10 a.m. Room 524B, Level 5, Palais des congrès de Montréal Honors Program Advisory Panel Tuesday, August 15 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m.

Room 525A, Level 5, Palais des congrès de Montréal

Minority Fellowship Program (MFR) Advisory Panel Sunday, August 13 8:30-10:10 a.m.

Room 523B, Level 5, Palais des congrès de Montréal

Student Forum Advisory Panel Saturday, August 12

2:30-4:10 p.m.

Room 524B, Level 5, Palais des congrès de Montréal

Task Force on Contingent Faculty Tuesday, August 15 7:00-8:15 a.m.

Room 523A, Level 5, Palais des congrès de Montréal

Task Force on Engaging Sociology Sunday, August 13 2:30-4:10 p.m.

Room 523B, Level 5, Palais des congrès de Montréal

Task Force on Membership Saturday, August 12

Room 522A, Level 5, Palais des congrès de Montréal

8:30-10:10 a.m.

19

Section Information Looking for a way to find colleagues with similar research interests? Section activities offer one convenient way to connect with like-minded scholars. Section sessions range in format from formal paper presentations to panels and discussion roundtables. Section-sponsored sessions are open to all meeting registrants. See below for a full listing of Section meetings and sessions. In addition to sponsoring substantive program sessions, ASA Sections often host receptions for their section members during the Annual Meeting. Section Index Section on Aging and the Life Course Sessions: 178, 215, 252, 293, 326 Business Meeting Sunday, August 13 3:30-4:10 p.m. Room 514B, Level 5 Reception (Offsite) Sunday, August 13 7:00-9:00 p.m. Intercontinental Montréal, 360 rue Saint-Antoine Ouest Section on Alcohol, Drugs, and Tobacco Sessions: 474, 506, 571 Business Meeting Tuesday, August 15 Reception (offsite) Monday, August 14

9:30-10:10 a.m. 6:30-8:10 p.m.

Room 520A, Level 5 TBD

Section on Altruism, Morality and Social Solidarity Sessions: 253, 294 Business Meeting Sunday, August 13

3:30-4:10 p.m.

Room 520A, Level 5

Section on Animals and Society Sessions: 62, 104 Business Meeting Saturday, August 12 3:30-4:10 p.m. Room 520A, Level 5 Reception (offsite) Saturday, August 12 6:30-8:10 p.m. InterContinental Montreal, 360 Saint-Antoine St. W Section on Asia and Asian America Sessions: 216, 254, 295 Business Meeting Sunday, August 13

11:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m.

Room 516C, Level 5

Section on Body and Embodiment Sessions: 28, 63, 105 Business Meeting Saturday, August 12 3:30-4:10 p.m. Room 520B, Level 5 Joint Reception (offsite) Monday, August 14 6:30-8:10 p.m. L’Assommoir N-D, 211 rue Notre-Dame Ouest Section on Collective Behavior and Social Movements Sessions: 29, 64, 106, 144, 217, 255 Business Meeting Saturday, August 12 Joint Reception (offsite) Sunday, August 13

3:30-4:10 p.m. 7:00-9:00 p.m.

Section on Communication, Information Technologies, and Media Sociology Sessions: 30, 65, 107 Business Meeting Saturday, August 12 9:30-10:10 a.m. Council Meeting Saturday, August 12 7:00-8:15 a.m. Reception Saturday, August 12 6:30-8:10 p.m.

Room 517B, Level 5 Bier Market-Montréal

Room 517B, Level 5 Room 517B, Level 5 Pub St. Paul, 124 St Paul E

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Section Information Section on Community and Urban Sociology Sessions: 327, 360, 403, 438 Business Meeting Monday, August 14 Reception (offsite) Monday, August 14

11:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. 6:30-8:10 p.m.

Room 517B, Level 5 Hambar Restaurant, 355 rue McGill

Section on Comparative and Historical Sociology Sessions: 361, 404, 439, 475, 507, 540, 572 Business Meeting Tuesday, August 15

11:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m.

Room 520A, Level 5

Section on Consumers and Consumption Sessions: 66, 145 Business Meeting Saturday, August 12 Joint Reception Saturday, August 12

5:30-6:10 p.m. 6:30-8:10 p.m.

Room 520A, Level 5 Room 520A, Level 5

Section on Crime, Law, and Deviance Sessions: 179, 218, 256, 296, 362 Business Meeting Sunday, August 13 Council Meeting Sunday, August 13 Joint Reception (offsite) Sunday, August 13

1:30-2:10 p.m. 7:00-8:15 a.m. 7:00-9:00 p.m.

Room 517B, Level 5 Room 520E, Level 5 Hotel William Gray, 421 rue Saint Vincent

Section on Disability and Society Sessions: 508, 541, 573 Business Meeting Tuesday, August 15 Reception (offsite) Monday, August 14

1:30-2:10 p.m. 6:30-8:10 p.m.

Room 516C, Level 5 TBD

Section on Economic Sociology Sessions: 180, 219, 257, 297, 328 Business Meeting Sunday, August 13 Joint Reception Saturday, August 12

9:30-10:10 a.m. 6:30-8:10 p.m.

Room 517B, Level 5 Room 520A, Level 5

Section on Environment and Technology Sessions: 405, 476, 509, 542, 574 Business Meeting Tuesday, August 15 Council Meeting Tuesday, August 15 Reception Monday, August 14

9:30-10:10 a.m. 7:00-8:15 a.m. 6:30-8:10 p.m.

Room 517B, Level 5 Room 517B, Level 5 Room 517A, Level 5

Section on Ethnomethodology and Conversational Analysis Sessions: 329, 363 Business Meeting Monday, August 14 11:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Reception (offsite) Sunday, August 13 7:30-9:30 p.m.

Room 515C, Level 5 Mechant Boeuf, 124 rue Saint-Paul Ouest

Section on Evolution, Biology and Society Sessions: 31, 67 Business Meeting Saturday, August 12 Reception (offsite) Saturday, August 12

Room 513D, Level 5 TBD

11:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. 6:30-8:10 p.m.

21

Section Information Section on Global and Transnational Sociology Sessions: 181, 220, 258, 298, 440 Business Meeting Sunday, August 13 Council Meeting Sunday, August 13

9:30-10:10 a.m. 7:00-8:15 a.m.

Room 517C, Level 5 Room 517C, Level 5

Section on History of Sociology Session: 364 Business Meeting Monday, August 14 Council Meeting Monday, August 14 Joint Reception Monday, August 14

9:30-10:10 a.m. 8:30-9:30 a.m. 6:30-8:10 p.m.

Room 512G, Level 5 Room 512G, Level 5 Room 517B, Level 5

Section on Human Rights Sessions: 330, 365 Business Meeting Joint Reception (offsite)

Monday, August 14 Sunday, August 13

9:30-10:10 a.m. 7:00-9:00 p.m.

Room 520A, Level 5 Hotel William Gray, 421 rue Saint Vincent

Section on Inequality, Poverty and Mobility Sessions: 366, 406, 441, 477, 510, 575 Business Meeting Tuesday, August 15 Council Meeting Tuesday, August 15

1:30-2:10 p.m. 12:30-1:30 p.m.

Room 513F, Level 5 Room 513F, Level 5

Section on International Migration Sessions: 32, 68, 108, 146, 182 Business Meeting Saturday, August 12 Reception (offsite) Saturday, August 12

11:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. 6:30-8:10 p.m.

Room 517B, Level 5 TBD

Section on Labor and Labor Movements Sessions: 183, 221, 259, 299 Business Meeting Sunday, August 13 Reception (offsite) Saturday, August 12

1:30-2:10 p.m. 6:30-8:10 p.m.

Room 516C, Level 5 TBD

Section on Latino/a Sociology Sessions: 331, 367, 407, 442 Business Meeting Reception (offsite)

Monday, August 14 Monday, August 14

11:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. 6:30-8:10 p.m.

Room 520A, Level 5 Tapas 24, 420 Notre-Dame Ouest, Local 4

Section on Marxist Sociology Sessions: 222, 260, 300 Business Meeting Reception

Sunday, August 13 Saturday, August 12

3:30-4:10 p.m. 6:30-8:10 p.m.

Room 520B, Level 5 Room 520D Level 5

5:30-6:10 p.m. 4:30-5:30 p.m. 6:30-8:10 p.m.

Room 520A, Level 5 Room 520A, Level 5 Room 520A, Level 5

Section on Mathematical Sociology Session: 368 Business Meeting Monday, August 14 Council Meeting Monday, August 14 Reception Monday, August 14

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Section Information Section on Medical Sociology Sessions: 33, 69, 109, 147, 184, 223, 261 Business Meeting Saturday, August 12 Council Meeting Saturday, August 12 Joint Reception Saturday, August 12

3:30-4:10 p.m. 7:00-8:15 a.m. 6:30-8:10 p.m.

Room 513E, Level 5 Room 520D, Level 5 Room 517A, Level 5

Section on Methodology Sessions: 185, 224, 262, 301 Business Meeting Sunday, August 13 1:30-2:10 p.m. Room 512H, Level 5 Reception Saturday, August 12 6:30-8:10 p.m. Hyatt Regency Montreal, Creation Room Section on Organizations, Occupations and Work Sessions: 332, 369, 408, 443, 478, 511, 543, 576 Business Meeting Tuesday, August 15 1:30-2:10 p.m. Room 513A, Level 5 Joint Reception (offsite) Monday, August 14 6:30-8:10 p.m. TBD Section on Peace, War, and Social Conflict Sessions: 479, 512, 544 Business Meeting Tuesday, August 15 Reception (offsite) Monday, August 14

9:30-10:10 a.m. 6:30-8:10 p.m.

Room 516C, Level 5 TBD

Section on Political Economy of the World-System Sessions: 34, 70, 110, 148 Business Meeting Saturday, August 12 Reception Saturday, August 12

11:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. 6:30-8:10 p.m.

Room 520A, Level 5 Room 520B, Level 5

Section on Political Sociology Sessions: 333, 370, 409, 444, 480, 513 Business Meeting Monday, August 14 Joint Reception Monday, August 14

5:30-6:10 p.m. 6:30-8:10 p.m.

Room 517B, Level 5 Room 517B, Level 5

Section on Race, Gender and Class Sessions: 35, 71, 111, 149, 225, 263 Business Meeting Saturday, August 12 Joint Reception (offsite) Saturday, August 12

9:30-10:10 a.m. 6:30-8:10 p.m.

Room 520A, Level 5 TBD

Section on Racial and Ethnic Minorities Sessions: 371, 410, 445, 481, 514, 545, 577 Business Meeting Tuesday, August 15 Joint Reception (offsite) Sunday, August 13

1:30-2:10 p.m. 7:00-9:00 p.m.

Room 517B, Level 5 Bier Market-Montreal

Section on Rationality and Society Sessions: 515, 546, 578 Business Meeting Tuesday, August 15

3:30-4:10 p.m.

Room 512G, Level 5

Section on Science, Knowledge, and Technology Sessions: 334, 372, 411, 446, 482 Business Meeting Monday, August 14

3:30-4:10 p.m.

Room 516C, Level 5

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Section Information Section on Social Psychology Sessions: 186, 226, 264, 302, 335 Business Meeting Sunday, August 13

3:30-4:10 p.m.

Room 512A, Level 5

Section on Sociological Practice and Public Sociology Sessions: 483, 516, 547, 579 Business Meeting Tuesday, August 15 Reception (offsite) Monday, August 14

9:30-10:10 a.m. 6:30-8:10 p.m.

Room 517C, Level 5 TBD

Section on Sociology of Children and Youth Sessions: 187, 227, 265, 303 Business Meeting Sunday, August 13 Council Meeting Sunday, August 13 Reception (offsite) Saturday, August 12

1:30-2:10 p.m. 7:00-8:15 a.m. 6:30 p.m.-8:10 p.m.

Room 520B, Level 5 Room 520D Level 5 Hambar Restaurant, 355 rue McGill

Section on Sociology of Culture Sessions: 188, 228, 266, 304, 336, 373, 412 Business Meeting Sunday, August 13 Council Meeting Sunday, August 13

1:30-2:10 p.m. 7:00-8:15 a.m.

Room 513C, Level 5 Room 520C, Level 5

Section on Sociology of Development Sessions: 36, 72, 112, 150 Business Meeting Saturday, August 12 Joint Reception Sunday, August 13

11:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. 7:30-9:30 p.m.

Room 520B, Level 5 Terrace, Level 7

Section on Sociology of Education Sessions: 37, 73, 113, 151, 189 Business Meeting Saturday, August 12 Reception Saturday, August 12

5:30-6:10 p.m. 6:30-8:10 p.m.

Room 517B, Level 5 Room 517B, Level 5

Section on Sociology of Emotions Sessions: 74, 114 Business Meeting Saturday, August 12 Council Meeting Saturday, August 12 Joint Reception (offsite) Saturday, August 12

3:30-4:10 p.m. 7:00-8:15 a.m. 6:30-8:10 p.m.

Room 513D Level 5 Room 520C, Level 5 La Vieux Dublin Pub, 636 Cathcart

Section on Sociology of Law Sessions: 337, 374, 413, 447 Business Meeting Joint Reception (offsite)

Monday, August 14 Sunday, August 13

3:30-4:10 p.m. 7:00-9:00 p.m.

Room 520A, Level 5 Hotel William Gray, 421 rue Saint Vincent

Section on Sociology of Mental Health Sessions: 338, 375, 448 Business Meeting Monday, August 14

9:30-10:10 a.m.

Room 514C, Level 5

24

Section Information Section on Sociology of Population Sessions: 376, 414, 449 Business Meeting Monday, August 14 Council Meeting Monday, August 14 Joint Reception (offsite) Monday, August 14

9:30-10:10 a.m. 8:30-9:30 a.m. 6:30-8:10 p.m.

Room 512H Level 5 Room 512H, Level 5 TBD

Section on Sociology of Religion Sessions: 484, 517, 548, 580 Business Meeting Tuesday, August 15 Council Meeting Tuesday, August 15 Reception Monday, August 14

11:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. 7:00-8:15 a.m. 6:30-8:10 p.m.

Room 516C, Level 5 Room 520B, Level 5 Room 520B, Level 5

Section on Sociology of Sex and Gender Sessions: 339, 377, 415, 450, 485, 518, 549 Business Meeting Monday, August 14

5:30-6:10 p.m.

Room 517C, Level 5

Section on Sociology of Sexualities Sessions: 451, 486, 519, 550, 581 Business Meeting Tuesday, August 15 3:30-4:10 p.m. Room 517B, Level 5 Planning Committee Tuesday, August 15 7:00-8:15 a.m. Room 523B, Level 5 Joint Reception (offsite) Monday, August 14 6:30-8:10 p.m. L’Assommoir N-D, 211, rue Notre-Dame Ouest Section on Teaching and Learning in Sociology Sessions: 190, 229, 267, 305, 378 Business Meeting Sunday, August 13 Council Meeting Sunday, August 13 Joint Reception Saturday, August 12

3:30-4:10 p.m. 7:00-8:15 a.m. 6:30-8:10 p.m.

Room 511F, Level 5 Room 520A, Level 5 Room 511C, Level 5

Section on Sociology of the Family Sessions: 416, 452, 487, 520, 551, 582 Business Meeting Tuesday, August 15 Council Meeting Tuesday, August 15

11:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. 7:00-8:15 a.m.

Room 517C, Level 5 Room 520C, Level 5

Theory Section Sessions: 38, 75, 115, 152, 191, 230 Business Meeting Saturday, August 12 Reception Saturday, August 12

9:30-10:10 a.m. 6:30-8:10 p.m.

Room 517C, Level 5 Room 520C, Level 5

25

Student Training and Programs ASA Student Forum ASA welcomes all undergraduate and graduate students to the Annual Meeting. Students who join ASA automatically become members of the ASA Student Forum. The Student Forum is the formal advocacy and governance arm for students and the Student Forum Advisory Board (SFAB). At the Annual Meeting, it arranges professional workshops aimed at students’ career concerns, student-only paper and roundtable sessions, the Student Forum Travel Awards, the Student Reception, a business meeting, and admission to the traditional book give-away at the end of the Annual Meeting (Tuesday). The Student Forum is also pleased to offer an annual Professional Development Certificate for its members, based on attendance at a number of particular sessions, events, or workshops. Please visit the ASA Information Desk in Viger Hall, Level 2, Palais des congrès de Montréal for details, including the necessary forms and instructions. ASA is pleased to recognize the 2016-2017 members of the Student Forum Advisory Board (SFAB): Kati Barahona-Lopez

University of California, Santa Cruz

Karen Okigbo

City University of New York, The Graduate Center

Uriel Serrano

University of California, Santa Cruz

Derek Silva

University of South Carolina

Irene Snyder

Elizabethtown College

Isabel Sousa-Rodriguez

City University of New York, The Graduate Center

Aisha Upton

University of Minnesota

Joseph Van Der Naald

City University of New York, The Graduate Center Annual Meeting Programming

Business Meeting Saturday, August 12

10:30 a.m.–12:10 p.m.

Room 514B, Level 5

Student Forum Roundtable Session Saturday, August 12

4:30-6:10 p.m.

Room 516C, Level 5

Student Reception Saturday, August 12

6:30-7:30 p.m.

Room 710A, Level 7

Workshop. A Ph.D. Timeline That Works for You Sunday, August 13 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m.

Room 512C, Level 5

Paper Session. Interrogating the Limits of Social Inclusion: An Intersectional Perspective Sunday, August 13 12:30-2:10 p.m. Room 512E, Level 5 Workshop. Teaching In Our Contemporary Moment Monday, August 14 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m.

Room 514A, Level 5

Paper Session. Resilience, Academic Success, and Indigenous Education Monday, August 14 4:30-6:10 p.m.

Room 512B, Level 5

26

Student Training and Programs ASA Honors Program The Honors Program has a more than four-decade history of involving talented sociology undergraduate students in the ASA Annual Meeting. It arranges participation in a series of events held at the Annual Meeting, including separate briefings on careers and graduate school. Students meet and interact with ASA leaders as well as the Honors Program Advisory Panel. As always, this year’s students are wearing ribbons showing their Honors Program affiliation. Please welcome them to their first Annual Meeting. Annual Meeting Programming Orientation Friday, August 11



3:00-5:00 p.m.

Room 518C, Level 5

Kickoff Saturday, August 12

8:30-10:10 a.m.

Room 710B, Level 7

Discussion Tables Saturday, August 12

10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m.

Room 710B, Level 7

Careers Briefing Monday August 14

10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m.

Room 514B, Level 5

Graduate School Briefing Monday, August 14

4:30-6:10 p.m.

Room 514B, Level 5

Wrap-up Tuesday, August 15

8:30-10:10 a.m.

Room 518B, Level 5



All of the 2017 Honors Program students, along with their institutions and faculty sponsors, are below: Honors Program Student Institution Faculty Sponsor Roberto Ackerman University of California, Los Angeles Tanya Stivers Elizabeth Anderson Wake Forest University Saylor Breckenridge Maria Arievitch New York University Ruth Horowitz Jose Aveldanes University of South Carolina Jennifer Augustine William Barr II State University of New York, Potsdam Heather Sullivan-Catlin Justina Beard Elizabethtown College Conrad Kanagy Yevangelina Berkovich Amherst College Jerome Himmelstein Erin Bisesti University of North Florida Jenny Stuber Amanda Bonam Howard University Tracy Perkins Amber Bunner University of Colorado, Boulder Stefanie Mollborn Samantha Castonguay Ithaca College Stephen Sweet Adriana Ceron Pitzer College Roberta Espinoza Jensen Collins Elon University Rena Zito Allison DellaMattera University of Maine Steven Barkan Anna Ellis Tufts University Freeden Oeur Ryan Fajardo Williams College Grant Shotffstall Max Farber Tufts University Freeden Oeur Julianna Ferguson University of Maine Steven Barkan Michella Fitzpatrick Oglethorpe University Natalie Delia Deckard Emily Fox DePauw University David Newman Luisa Gomez Illinois State University Tom Gerschick Laura Hillebrand Loyola University Chicago Marilyn Krogh Jessica Hoff Lycoming College Betty McCall

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Student Training and Programs Honors Program Student Institution Faculty Sponsor Spencer Huesken University of the Fraser Valley Katherine Watson HaRyung Kim Davidson College Natalie Delia Deckard Walker Lee Valdosta State University Anne Price Alejandra Londono Stockton University Jessie Finch Summer Lopez Colorado Cornell University Steven Alvarado Emily Maloney University of Georgia Dawn Robinson Deidra McCall Southwestern University Maria Lowe Jordana Palmer Macalester College Erik Larson Briana Payton Princeton University Tod Hamilton Chesterfield Polkey Macalester College Erik Larson Brittany Rabb Case Western Reserve University Jessica Kelley-Moore Zsuzsanna Regoczi University of the Fraser Valley Katherine Watson Kristyn Rohrer Kutztown University Joleen Greenwood Samantha Saucier University of Maine Steven Barkan Casey Schuller Colorado College Gail Murphy-Geiss Chance Smith University of Houston Shelia Katz Hycel Taylor Ithaca College Stephen Sweet Alyssa Vielee Elizabethtown College Michele Kozimor-King

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Student Training and Programs ASA Minority Fellowship Program (MFP) The ASA Minority Fellowship Program (MFP), a pre-doctoral training program in existence since 1974, has been a significant factor in recruiting members of under-represented racial/ethnic minority groups into faculty, administrative, and other professional roles in the discipline. To date, more than 500 scholars of color have received MFP Fellowship awards, and at this year’s Annual Meeting, MFP Cohort 44 will be introduced at the MFP Benefit Reception. MFP alumni continue to make important contributions to the growth and vitality of sociology, through their research, teaching, service, mentoring, and/or leadership. Annual Meeting Programming Current MFP Fellows Saturday, August 12

8:30 a.m.-10:10 a.m.

Room 525A, Level 5

MFP Benefit Reception Sunday, August 13

9:30-11:00 p.m.

Room 710B, Level 7

Orientation for 1st Year MFP Fellows Friday, August 11

8:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m.

Room 518C, Level 5

Professional Workshop. Who Climbs the Academic Ladder? Race and Gender in a World of Whiteness Monday, August 14 8:30-10:10 a.m. Room 513A, Level 5 Research Session. Issues in Race, Ethnicity, Gender, and Family Sunday, August 13 2:30-4:10 p.m.

Room 514A, Level 5

ASA is pleased to recognize the current and former Fellows who are participating in this year’s program: Edwin Ackerman, Syracuse University Sabrina Alimahomed-Wilson, California State University, Long Beach Amada Armenta, University of Pennsylvania Julia Arroyo, University of Florida Jasmón Bailey, University of South Florida Arturo Baiocchi, California State University, Sacramento Regina Baker, University of Pennsylvania Vilna Bashi Traitler, University of California, Santa Barbara Brittany Battle, Rutgers University, New Brunswick Zinobia Bennefield, University of North Carolina, Charlotte Lawrence Bobo, Harvard University Eduardo Bonilla-Silva, Duke University Clifford Broman, Michigan State University Tony N. Brown, Rice University Giovani Burgos, Adelphi University Jose Calderon, Pitzer College Celeste Campos-Castillo, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee Ana Campos-Holland, Connecticut College Stephanie Canziales, University of Southern California Ingrid Castro, Massachusetts College of the Liberal Arts Michael Chavez. California State University, Long Beach Margaret M. Chin, Hunter College and CUNY Graduate Center Obie Clayton, Clark Atlanta University Patricia Hill Collins, University of Maryland, College Park Jason Cummings, University of South Carolina Celeste Curington, University of Massachusetts, Amherst

Jessica Dunning-Lozano, Ithaca College David Embrick, University of Connecticut Christy Erving, University of North Carolina, Charlotte Louis Esparza, California State University, Los Angeles Roberta Espinoza, Pitzer College Yen Le Espiritu, University of California, San Diego Shani Evans, Reed College Joseph Ewoodzie, Davidson College Elisa Linda Facio, Washington University Joan Fujimura, University of Wisconsin, Madison Selina Gallo-Cruz, College of the Holy Cross San Juanita García, University of California, Riverside Andrea Gomez Cervantes, University of Kansas Bridget Goosby, University of Nebraska, Lincoln Anna Haskins, Cornell University Anthony Hatch, Wesleyan University Elaine Hernandez, Indiana University, Bloomington Cedric Herring, University of Maryland, Baltimore County Elizabeth Hordge-Freeman, University of South Florida Marcus Hunter, University of California, Los Angeles Kimberly Huyser, University of New Mexico Jackelyn Hwang, Princeton University Amy Irby-Shasanmi, University of West Georgia Michelle Jacob, University of Oregon Tomás Jimenez, Stanford University Verna Keith, Texas A&M University Yvonne Kwan, Dartmouth College

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Student Training and Programs Yader Lanuza, University of California, Irvine Jooyoung Lee, University of Toronto Krystale Littlejohn, Occidental College Freda Lynn, University of Iowa Rahsaan Mahadeo, University of Minnesota Ramiro Martinez, Jr., Northeastern University Ross Matsueda, University of Washington A. James McKeever, Los Angeles Pierce College Cecilia Menjivar, University of Kansas Aldon Morris, Northwestern University Dawne Mouzon, Rutgers University, New Brunswick Dana Nakano, California State University, Stanislaus Shondrah Nash, Morehead State University Wendy Ng, San Jose State University Emerald Nguyen, University of California, Davis Ethel Nicdao, University of the Pacific Gilda Ochoa, Pomona College Leslie Paik, City College, CUNY Anthony Paik, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Willie Pearson Jr., Georgia Institute of Technology Joanna Perez, California State University, Dominguez Hills Townsand Price-Spratlen, Ohio State University Janis Prince, Saint Leo University

Salvador Rangel, University of California, Santa Barbara Victor Ray, University of Tennessee, Knoxville Rashawn Ray, University of Maryland, College Park Deidre Redmond, Wayland Baptist University Robert Reece, University of Texas, Austin Victoria Reyes, University of Michigan Fernando Rivera, University of Central Florida Belinda Robnett, University of California, Irvine Mary Romero, Arizona State University Rebecca Romo, Santa Monica College Elena Shih, Brown University Firuzeh Shokooh-Valle, Northeastern University C. Matthew Snipp, Stanford University Forrest Stuart, University of Chicago David Takeuchi, Boston College Stacy Torres, University at Albany, SUNY Dolores Trevizo, Occidental College Gail Wallace, John Hopkins University Deadric Williams, University of Nebraska, Lincoln Johnny Williams, Trinity College David R. Williams, Harvard University David Yamane, Wake Forest University

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Affiliated Organizations The affiliated organizations holding concurrent meetings are: Association for the Sociology of Religion (ASR) August 13-14, 2017 InterContinental Montreal Hotel 360 Saint-Antoine Street West (514) 847-8550

Society for the Study of Symbolic Interaction (SSSI) August 11-13, 2017 Hotel Omni Mont-Royal 1050 Sherbrooke Street West (514) 284-1110

Society for the Study of Social Problems (SSSP) August 11-13, 2017 Montreal Bonaventure Hotel 900 De La Gauchetiere W. (514) 878-2332

Sociologists for Women in Society (SWS) August 12-14, 2017 Palais des congrès de Montréal 1001 Jean Paul Riopelle Place (514) 871-8122

Affiliated Organization Events Alpha Kappa Delta Council Meeting (Bethany Titus) Friday, August 11 8:00 a.m.-4:30 p.m.

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 523B, Level 5



American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) Reception (Philippa Benson) Monday, August 14 6:30-8:10 p.m. Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520F, Level 5



American Journal of Sociology Sunday, August 13 12:30-2:10 p.m.

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 524B, Level 5

Association of Korean Sociologists in America (AKSA) (Hyunjoon Park) Friday, August 11 1:00-6:00 p.m. Palais des congrès de Montréal, 519A, Level 5 CAPACS (Michael S. Fleischer) Monday, August 14

6:30-10:30 p.m.

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 523B, Level 5

Centenary Commemoration for Harold Garfinkel (Kenneth Liberman) Monday, August 14 6:30-8:10 p.m. Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514C, Level 5 Global Health and Development Interest Group (Joseph Harris) Monday, August 14 6:30-8:10 p.m. Palais des congrès de Montréal, 523A, Level 5 Group Processes (Gretchen Peterson) Friday, August 11 8:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m.

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 522abc, Level 5

Harvard Sociology Alumni Reception (Suzanne Ogungbadero) Saturday, August 12 6:30-8:10 p.m. Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520E, Level 5 Human Rights and Global Justice (TG03) (Mark Frezzo) Saturday, August 12 6:30-8:10 p.m.

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 524A, Level 5

Japan Sociologists Network (Patricia G. Steinhoff) Sunday, August 13 7:30-9:30 p.m.

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512A, Level 5

Memorial Event for James A. Davis (Tom W. Smith) Saturday, August 12 6:30-8:10 p.m.

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514A, Level 5

Network for the Social Scientific Study of Science and Religion (Elaine Howard Ecklund) Sunday, August 13 8:00-9:10 p.m. Palais des congrès de Montréal, 518A, Level 5 New York University, Department of Sociology Reception (Isaac Amad) Sunday, August 13 8:00-10:00 p.m. Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516C, Level 5 North American Chinese Sociologists Association (NACSA) (Xiaoling Shu) Friday, August 11 8:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m. Palais des congrès de Montréal, 525A & 525B, Level 5

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Affiliated Organizations Pennsylvania State University, Sociology Department Reception (John Iceland) Saturday, August 12 6:30-8:10 p.m. Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520F, Level 5 Section on Teaching and Learning Pre-conference. Thinking Matters: Critical Thinking, Active Listening, and Evidence-Based Writing (Melinda Messineo) Friday, August 11 8:30 a.m.-5:00 p.m. Palais des congrès de Montréal, 519B, Level 5 Self/Society Symposium (Lauren Langman) Friday, August 11 9:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m.

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 523A, Level 5

Society and Mental Health Journal (Elaine Wethington) Monday, August 14 7:00-8:15 a.m.

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520B, Level 5

Sociological Focus Editorial Board (Annulla Linders) Monday, August 14 6:30-8:10 p.m.

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 525A, Level 5

Sociologists’ AIDS Network (SAN) (Brooke S. West) Saturday, August 12 6:30-8:10 p.m.

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 523B, Level 5

Sociologists for Justice (Judy Lubin) Monday, August 14 6:30-8:10 p.m.

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520C, Level 5

Sociologists for Trans Justice (Eric Grollman) Sunday, August 13 8:30-9:30 p.m.

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 518C, Level 5

Sociologists’ Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender and Queer (LGBTQ) Caucus (Shantel Buggs) Sunday, August 13 7:30-8:30 p.m. Palais des congrès de Montréal, 518C, Level 5 Soon-to-be-Author-Meets-Non-Critics (Thomas DeGloma) Sunday, August 13 9:00-11:00 p.m. Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514A, Level 5 Stanford Center on Poverty and Inequality (Marybeth J. Mattingly) Saturday, August 12 6:30-8:10 p.m. Palais des congrès de Montréal, 525B, Level 5 The Ohio State University Reception (Kelly Renee Hopkins Malone) Sunday, August 13 8:00-10:00 p.m. Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520F, Level 5 The Sociology of Anti-Semitism (Arnold Dashefsky) Monday, August 14 6:30-8:10 p.m.

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 524A, Level 5

University of Chicago, Department of Sociology Reception (Gillian Griffin) Monday, August 14 6:30-8:10 p.m. Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520E, Level 5 University of Pennsylvania Reception (Aline Rowens) Sunday, August 13 8:00-10:00 p.m.

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520A, Level 5

University of Wisconsin-Madison Sociology Department Reception (Dana Rasmussen) Sunday, August 13 8:00-10:00 p.m. Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520B, Level 5 Wiley: Best Practices for the Publishing Process for Sociology Journals (Julia Bond) Saturday, August 12 6:30-8:10 p.m. Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514B, Level 5 Work/Culture Network (Joseph Klett) Monday, August 14 6:30-8:10 p.m.

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 524B, Level 5

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Exhibits The ASA Exhibit Hall is located in Hall 220C on Level 2 of the Palais des congrès de Montréal. Browse through the latest sociological publications, explore current computer software, chat with representatives of statistical resources and informational literature, meet the editor of your next publication, and visit the ASA Store. Exhibit Hall Hours Saturday, August 12 – 2:00 - 6:00 p.m. Monday, August 14 – 9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. Sunday, August 13 – 9:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m. Tuesday, August 15 – 9:00 a.m.-1:00 p.m. Exhibitor Booth(s) Website ASA Store 607 www.asanet.org Brill 913 www.brill.com Cambridge University Press 920 www.cambridge.org Columbia University Press 703 cup.columbia.edu Cornell University Press 719 www.cornellpress.cornell.edu Duke University Press 501 www.dukeupress.edu Emerald Publishing 923 emeraldgrouppublishing.com Frontiers 824 Journal.frontiersin.org/journal/sociology Harvard University Press 711 www.hup.harvard.edu/about Haymarket Books 825-826 www.haymarketbooks.org Ingram Academic Services 921 www.ingram.academic.com Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research -University of Michigan 519 www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb JSTOR 918 www.jstor.org Leibniz Institute for Educational Trajectories 910 www.leibniz-gemeinschaft.de/en/ institutes-museums/einrichtungen/lifbi Lexington Books 610 rowman.com/LexingtonBooks MacMillan 600-602 us.macmillan.com/ McGill-Queen’s University Press 521 www.asanet.org/node/www.mqup.ca Minnesota Population Center 818 www.asanet.org/node/pop.umn.edu National Longitudinal Surveys 720 www.bls.gov/nls/ New York University Press 801-803 nyupress.org/ Oxford University Press 915-919 global.oup.com/?cc=us Palgrave 618 www.palgrave.com/us Panel Study of Income Dynamics 802 us.sagepub.com/en-us/nam/the-panel study-of-income-dynamics/book3626 Penguin Random House 902 www.penguinrandomhouse.com Polity 511 www.polity.co.uk Princeton University Press 721 press.princeton.edu Provalis Research 800 provalisresearch.com Roper Center for Public Opinion Research 924 ropercenter.cornell.edu Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group 903-909 www.routledge.com Rowman & Littlefield 606-608 rowman.com/RLPublishers Russell Sage Foundation 701 www.russellsage.org Rutgers University Press 900 www.rutgersuniversitypress.org/ SAGE Publishing 601 us.sagepub.com/en-us/nam/home SONA Systems 911 www.sona-systems.com/default.aspx Springer Nature 620 www.springernature.com/us Stanford University Press 821 www.sup.org StataCorp LLC 807-811 www.stata.com/company Temple University Press 718 www.temple.edu University of British Columbia Press 521 www.ubcpress.com University of California Press 707-709 www.ucpress.edu University of Chicago Press 806-810 www.press.uchicago.edu/index.html University of Minnesota Press 819 www.upress.umn.edu University of North Carolina Press 718 www.uncpress.org University of Toronto Press 820 www.utpress.utoronto.ca Vanderbilt University Press 503 www.vanderbilt.edu/university-press W.W. Norton 906-908 books.wwnorton.com/books/index.aspx Westview Press 619-621 westviewpress.com Wiley 507-509 www.wiley.com/WileyCDA

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Visit us at the SAGE Booth #601 Proud publisher of the official journals of the American Sociological Association:

American Sociological Review • Contemporary Sociology • Contexts • Journal of Health and Social Behavior • Social Psychology Quarterly • Society and Mental Health • Sociological Methodology • Sociological Theory • Sociology of Education • Sociology of Race and Ethnicity • Socius • Teaching Sociology

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Graduate Studies in

SOCIOLOGY at McGill University

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Department of Sociology

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Program Schedule • Friday, August 11, 2017 Meetings

Alpha Kappa Delta Council Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 523B, 8:00 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Department Chairs Preconference. The Sociology Major in the Changing Landscape of Higher Education: Recommendations from the ASA Task Force on Liberal Learning Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520A, 8:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m.

and annoying trolls). And finally, we will touch upon some of the nuts and bolts of blogging, including possible platforms for blogging (e.g., setting up your own blog, blogging on other sites). By the end of the day, all participants will have a draft of a blog post, and some concrete ideas about where to pitch it and/or publish it. Who knows? Maybe some participants may even decide to collaborate!

1:00 p.m.

Meetings

Group Processes Palais des congrès de Montréal, 522ABC, 8:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m.

Association of Korean Sociologists in America (AKSA) Palais des congrès de Montréal, 519A, 1:00-6:00 p.m.

North American Chinese Sociologists Association (NACSA) Palais des congrès de Montréal, 525A, 8:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m.

Director of Graduate Studies Preconference. The Future of the PhD in Sociology Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520B, 1:00-4:30 p.m.

8:30 a.m.

Meetings

Orientation for 1st Year Minority Fellowship Program (MFP) Fellows Palais des congrès de Montréal, 518C, 8:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m. Section on Teaching and Learning Preconference. Thinking Matters: Critical Thinking, Active Listening, and Evidence-Based Writing Palais des congrès de Montréal, 519B, 8:30 a.m.-5:00 p.m.

9:00 a.m.

Meetings

Self/Society Symposium Palais des congrès de Montréal, 523A, 9:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m.

10:00 a.m.

Sessions

001. Course 01. Finding Your Voice: Experiential Course on Blog-writing as a Form of Public Sociology

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520E, 10:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. Session Organizer: Mindy L. Fried, Arbor Consulting Partners Leader: Mindy L. Fried, Arbor Consulting Partners Blogging has become an increasingly powerful vehicle for sociologists to write about critical social issues for both popular and academic audiences. The traditional repositories for our writing are professional journals or reports. Most often, this type of writing is vetted and judged, and there are fairly clear “guidelines” that frame what and how we write. Blogging takes us out of this realm, and provides a freer landscape for writing about what you know and what you care about. This one-day, hands-on workshop is for those who are interested in exploring blog-writing, as well as those who have already begun blogging and would like support in finding their voice and/or figuring out their focus. In a thoroughly nonjudgmental environment, participants will have an opportunity to clarify why they want to blog and what they want to blog about, particularly focusing on blogging as public sociology. We’ll look at the spectrum of blogs being published by sociologists, and will work on finding our unique “blog writing voices”. Through a series of fun, experiential exercises, we will focus on writing with a purpose, bringing our sociological eye to telling a story that includes sensory images, an arc and a resolved conflict; linking one’s personal experience to larger sociological issues; incorporating our - or other people’s - research in ways that are engaging; and more. We will also talk about some of the challenges of writing in a public format (e.g., concerns about colleagues’ responses, dealing with legitimate critics

1:00 p.m.

Sessions

002. Course 02. Media Preconference

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520C, 1:00-4:30 p.m. Session Organizer: Dustin Kidd, Temple University Leader: Dustin Kidd, Temple University The 2017 Annual Meeting will offer a special workshop aimed at increasing knowledge of both traditional and social media, as well as strategies for using these tools in sociological work. The Media Preconference is organized by Dustin Kidd (Temple University). Topics covered include: Creating a social media strategy Twitter for Academics Engaging with Journalists Social Media Techniques for the Classroom

003. Course 03. Advanced Regression Modeling: A Discrete Approach

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520D, 1:00-5:00 p.m. Session Organizer: Roger A. Wojtkiewicz, Ball State University Leader: Roger A. Wojtkiewicz, Ball State University This research workshop is directed to experienced users of regression analysis in their research. It provides advanced regression modeling tools that will be useful in producing stronger analysis for publication. The prerequisite for the workshop is knowledge of statistics and regression analysis as taught in a one-year graduate sequence. The workshop has five main parts: 1) explanation of key regression modeling concepts, 2) examination of strengths and weaknesses of four approaches for considering the influence of control variables; 3) discussion of alternative approaches for modeling interactions involving categorical and interval variables; 4) instruction of how to use spline variables to model linearity; and 5) specification of verbal hypotheses that con be tested with each modeling technique. There are generally four kinds of hypotheses which can be addressed with regression analysis. The simplest is whether there is an effect for an independent variable on a dependent variable. This effect is easily estimated by bivariate or multivariate regression. A second kind of hypothesis is about how other independent variables, often called control variables, explain the effect of an independent variable on a dependent variable. This hypothesis is modeled by adding control variables in some sequence to a baseline model. The third type of hypothesis is about how the effects of an independent variable on a dependent variable are contingent on the level of a second independent variable. Regression models with interaction variables address this kind of hypothesis.

Friday

8:00 a.m.

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Friday, August 11, 2017

Friday

Session 003, continued The fourth kind of hypothesis is about the degree to which an independent variable is linearly related to a dependent variable. Spline variables can be used to examine issues of linearity. The purpose of this methodological workshop is to expose participants to underlying conceptual issues behind using regression modeling to address the second, third, and fourth types of hypotheses. The topics that I intend to cover are as follows: Key Regression Modeling Concepts - Nestedness - Higher Order Differences - Constraints Control Modeling - Small and Big Models - Allocating Influence With Multiple Control Variables - One-at-a-Time Without Controls - Step Approach - One-at-a-Time With Controls - Hybrid Approach Modeling Interactions - Interactions Between Dummy Variables - Interactions Between Dummy Variables and Interval Variable Three-Way Interactions - Estimating Separate Models Modeling Linearity With Splines - Introduction to Knotted Spline Variables - Spline Variables Nested in Interval Variable - Regression Modeling Using Spline Variables Testing Research Hypotheses - Bivariate Hypothesis/No Controls - Bivariate Hypothesis/Unanalyzed Controls - Bivariate Hypothesis/Analyzed Controls - Hypothesis Involving Interactions - Hypothesis Involving Nonlinearity

004. Course 04. WIncorporating American Community Survey and U.S. Census Data into Undergraduate Courses

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520F, 1:00-5:00 p.m. Session Organizers: John Paul DeWitt, University of Michigan William H. Frey, Brookings Institution Leader: John Paul DeWitt, University of Michigan Co-Leaders: Jill Bouma, Berea College Katherine R. Rowell, Sinclair Community College Esther Isabelle Wilder, Lehman College This workshop will focus on how professors can integrate the analysis of U.S. Census and American Community Survey (ACS) data in relevant, user-friendly ways in such courses as Intro Sociology, Social Problems, Stratification, Race Relations, the Family, Sociology of Aging, Population, and more. Participants will learn about the Social Science Data Analysis Network (SSDAN) directed by Professor Frey at the University of Michigan. The course will begin with an overview of the SSDAN project and data analysis materials. Brief tutorials on the easy-to-use software tools will follow, with

examples drawn from existing U.S. Census and ACS access tools. In a “hands-on” session, two person teams will “play the role of students” and conduct analyses of pre-tailored 1950-2010 Census, and 20052015 ACS data.

3:00 p.m.

Meetings

Honors Program Orientation Palais des congrès de Montréal, 518C, 3:00-5:00 p.m.

5:30 p.m.

Sessions

005. Opening Plenary Session. Dignity and the Bridging of Group Boundaries

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517D, 5:30-7:00 p.m. Session Organizer: Michèle Lamont, Harvard University Presider: Michèle Lamont, Harvard University Dignity of an Individual vs. Dignity of a Group, with Examples from Russia and Beyond. Oleg Kharkhordin, European University at St. Petersburg Out, Damned Spot! The Troubling Evasion of Blackness in Sociological Theory and Research. Lawrence D. Bobo, Harvard University The Indignity of Reconciliation: The Experience of First Nations in Canada. Audra Simpson, Columbia University Advances and Setbacks in the Pursuit of Collective Dignity: The Case of Québec. Gérard Bouchard, Université du Québec à Chicoutimi The notion of dignity is at the center of claim-making in contemporary society. This session brings together scholars who reflect on this theme in different national contexts. The conversation will concern definitions of dignity as it manifests itself in space and time, how to weaken group boundaries and broaden the community of actors who are recognized as having full cultural membership, and the particular cases of indigenous people and African Americans as crucial social divides in North- American societies.

7:00 p.m.

Receptions

Welcome Reception Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517A, 7:00-8:00 p.m.

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PANEL STUDY OF INCOME DYNAMICS INSTITUTE FOR SOCIAL RESEARCH • SURVEY RESEARCH CENTER

www.psid.org

@umpsid

The Panel Study of Income Dynamics (PSID) is the world’s longest running national household panel survey. Begun in 1968, the study has collected 40 waves of data from the same families and their descendants over nearly 50 years. More than 10,000 families participate in the PSID, including a refresher sample of immigrant families added in 2017. Because PSID follows descendants of original sample members, the study is a unique source for studying the intergenerational transmission of health & economic wellbeing. Current Questionnaire Content Employment & Wages Income & Wealth Expenditures Education Mortgage Distress & Foreclosures Pensions Philanthropy

Marriage & Fertility Health Status & Behaviors Health Insurance Mortality Program Participation Computer & Internet Use Housing Characteristics Time Use

data from the 2016 Wellbeing and Daily Life Supplement (PSID-WB) are now available. PSID-WB provides data from PSID heads and spouses/partners on wellbeing, personality traits, and cognitive skills.

*NEW*

Child Development Supplement (CDS) & Transition into Adulthood Supplement (TAS) •Measures of child/adolescent cognitive, physical, social and behavioral development as well as unique comprehensive national time-use information on children and youth of all ages. Original CDS & TAS: Three waves of CDS data on 3,500 children aged 0-12 from PSID families who were first interviewed in 1997, re-interviewed in 2002 at ages 5-18, and again in 2007 at ages 10-18. •Six waves of TAS data were collected biennially from 2005-2015 for CDS young adults aged 18 years and older. Ongoing CDS & TAS: A *NEW* round of CDS (CDS-2014) with data from over 4,300 children and caregivers is now available. •The 7th wave of TAS will collect data in 2017 from young adults ages 18-28 from all PSID families, regardless of their CDS participation. The vast majority of data are freely accessible through the web-based Data Center which provides customized datasets Main sponsorship is provided by the National Science Foundation, the National Institute on Aging, and the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development

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New from

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Program Schedule • Saturday, August 12, 2017 7:00 a.m.

Meetings

Section on Communication, Information Technologies, and Media Sociology Council Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517B, 7:00-8:15 a.m. Section on Medical Sociology Council Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520D, 7:00-8:15 a.m.

8:30 a.m.

Meetings

2018 Cox-Johnson-Frazier Award Selection Committee Palais des congrès de Montréal, 523B, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Committee on Nominations Palais des congrès de Montréal, 523A, 8:30 a.m.-2:10 p.m. Contexts Editorial Board Palais des congrès de Montréal, 710A, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Current Minority Fellowship Program (MFP) Fellows Palais des congrès de Montréal, 525A, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Honors Program Kickoff Palais des congrès de Montréal, 710B, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Rose Series in Sociology Editorial Board Palais des congrès de Montréal, 524A, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Sociological Theory Editorial Board Palais des congrès de Montréal, 524B, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Socius Editorial Board Palais des congrès de Montréal, 518C, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Task Force on Membership Palais des congrès de Montréal, 522A, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Teaching Sociology Editorial Board Palais des congrès de Montréal, 518A, 8:30-10:10 a.m.

8:30 a.m.

Sessions

006. Thematic Session. Beyond the New Collaborative Creed in Health: Culture and Identities in Healthcare Practice and Research

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511C, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizers: Tania M. Jenkins, University of Chicago Mathieu Albert, University of Toronto Presider: Scott Frickel, Brown University Questioning Interdisciplinary Policy in Health Research: Fostering Inclusiveness or Reproducing Old Boundaries Between Epistemic Cultures? Mathieu Albert, University of Toronto; Suzanne Laberge, Université de Montréal Cultures of Evidence: Evidence-based Medicine as Boundary Object in Professional Status Hierarchies. Tania M. Jenkins, University of Chicago The Ties Between Physicians’ Status Competition and the Cultural Authority of Medicine. Daniel A. Menchik, Michigan State University

007. Thematic Session. Culture and Poverty from an Empirical Perspective

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511B, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Mario Luis Small, Harvard University Presider: Mario Luis Small, Harvard University Panelists: Mario Luis Small, Harvard University Orlando Patterson, Harvard University Jennifer Lee, University of California, Irvine There is a long and contentious history of research examininghow culture may reproduce poverty from one generation to the next. This session examines the possible role of culture and “disruptive narratives” in undermining reproduction rather than furthering it.

008. Thematic Session. Emotions and Inequalities

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511D, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: James M. Jasper, Graduate Center of the City University of New York Presider: James M. Jasper, Graduate Center of the City University of New York Emotional Domination and Charismatic Authority: Two Microtechniques of Power. Randall Collins, University of Pennsylvania Feeling Inequality. Deborah B. Gould, University of California, Santa Cruz Group Processes: Connecting Inequality and Emotions. Karen A. Hegtvedt, Emory University; Cathryn Johnson, Emory University

Saturday

Section on Sociology of Emotions Council Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520C, 7:00-8:15 a.m.

The Culture of Standardization in Newborn Screening. Stefan Timmermans, UCLA; Zachary Webster Griffen, UCLA Discussant: Scott Frickel, Brown University Collaboration has become the new creed of health research and health services policies in the U.S. and internationally. Interdisciplinarity and interprofessionalism are considered signposts of excellence and innovation in knowledge production and health care delivery. The subtext of this collaborative ideal is that the traditional social order, characterized by competition among disciplines and professions, should be replaced by new forms of interaction free from hierarchies. Researchers and health professionals should bracket their own internalised epistemic and professional identities to serve the common good. However, a growing body of work has shown that attempts to break down organizational boundaries between disciplines and professions do not always ensure that cultural boundaries will naturally fade away. Various concepts have emerged to describe the cultural dimensions of scientific and professional practices: “disciplinary habitus” (Bourdieu 2004), “epistemic culture” (Knorr-Cetina 1999), “academic tribes” (Becher and Trowler 2001), and “thought styles” (Fleck 1935). These concepts emphasize that scientists and professionals are embedded in community-specific (albeit porous) webs of significations. Disciplinary and professional cultures are thus defined as taken-for-granted ways of thinking about and/or doing science and professional tasks, including what constitutes “good” science or professional practice. These internalised and therefore durable cultural schemes can pose a challenge to the collaborative creed, by forming the basis for power struggles both among and within disciplines and professions. This session therefore explores how dominant taken-for-granted cultural schemes, or doxa, create cultural boundaries and are used by health professions and health research communities to maintain hierarchies and control access to resources.

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Saturday, August 12, 2017

Saturday

Session 008, continued Bereavement, Emotions, and Race Differences in Repeated Exposure to the Death of Family Members. Debra Umberson, The University of Texas at Austin Discussant: James M. Jasper, Graduate Center of the City University of New York For this thematic session I am enlisting scholars who specialize in different forms of inequality, but who have also written about emotions and morality. Each will discuss the emotional mechanisms that have sustained or challenged inequality along one dimension or another, including gender, race, class, and sexual orientation. Each presentation will combine a report on recent research and a response to several shared questions. Collins will address how public displays of emotions differ across social class. Gould will discuss the transformation of shame into pride in LGBTQ and other stigmatized groups. Hegtvedt and Johnson will address responses to injustice. Debra Umberson will use new research to discuss the different life chances that influence how members of different races develop emotional styles that stick with them through life.

009. Thematic Session. LGBTQ Culture, Inequalities, and Social Inclusion (cosponsored with Canadian Sociological Association)

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511F, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Tina Fetner, McMaster University Presider: Howard Ramos, Dalhousie University Performative Progressiveness in Gay Neighbourhoods. Amin Ghaziani, University of British Columbia; Adriana Brodyn, University of British Columbia Beyond Bullying, Toward New Sexual Possibilities: Reimagining the Social Landscapes of High School. Jessica Fields, San Francisco State University; Jen Gilbert, York University; Laura Mamo, San Francisco State University The Church and the Streets: Black LGBT Sexuality in the PreStonewall Era. Mignon R. Moore, Barnard College-Columbia University Competing Cultures of Exclusion and Inclusion: The Social Landscape of Attitudes toward LGBT Rights. Tina Fetner, McMaster University Cultural processes of inclusion and exclusion have long been arbiters of sexual hierarchies that place performances of heteronormativity in a dominant social position. As legal and political battles assign a greater share of civil rights to LGBTQ people, these cultural patterns of exclusion and inclusion carve inequalities into the social landscape. This panel examines LGBTQ culture(s), inequalities, and social inclusion, emphasizing the role of the state, communities, and activism.

010. Special Session. Access without Integration: The Logic, Forms, and Consequences of Segregated Inclusion Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511E, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizers: Fabien Accominotti, London School of Economics Shamus Rahman Khan, Columbia University Panelists: Angelina Grigoryeva, Princeton University Martin Ruef, Duke University Erin A. Cech, University of Michigan Anthony Abraham Jack, Harvard University Lauren Rivera, Northwestern University The session brings together recent and developing work showing how inclusion and exclusion can operate together – what we refer

to as segregated inclusion – in a variety of empirical settings. While scholars of inequality often hold the prior that exclusion means more inequality, and inclusion means less, this panel challenges this simple model. Reflecting on the logic, forms, and consequences of segregated inclusion across a range of cases, from urban settings to elite occupations and universities, will provide a fuller understanding of how the dynamics of different forms of boundary maintenance preserve, challenge, and transform inequality. Presentations will reflect on how measurements of inclusion or exclusion depend on how these phenomena are observed in urban settings; on the gender and class determinants of segregated inclusion in elite occupations; on the lived experience of it at elite universities; and on the consequences of segregated inclusion for social inequality. Such work both advances new theoretical ground and provides unique insights into empirical cases.

011. Professional Development Workshop. Constructive Reviewing: Tips for Writing the Kind of Manuscript Reviews You’d Like to Receive

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512D, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Claire M. Renzetti, University of Kentucky Leader: Claire M. Renzetti, University of Kentucky Panelists: Linda Renzulli, Purdue University David G. Embrick, University of Connecticut In this workshop, three journal editors will discuss the process of peer review, including the history, purpose and importance of peer review; how editors select reviewers; principles of ethical and responsible peer reviewing; how to write constructive feedback to authors and editors; making a publication recommendation; and reviewing the revised manuscript.

012. Teaching Workshop. Bringing Social Justice into the Classroom through Applied Sociology

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512E, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Jessica MacNamara, Keuka College Co-Leaders: Athena Elafros, Keuka College Sarah Glann, State University of New York-Buffalo This workshop will focus on class activities and assignments specifically designed to engage students in relevant social issues that bridge the classroom-community divide. The discussion will focus on the development, implementation, and debriefing of these activities and assignments. Specific topics that will be covered include, bullying, environmental justice, and gender inclusive housing on college campuses. The goal of this workshop is to create a space where the panelists and audience can share teaching resources and develop long-term networks.

013. Regular Session. Art and Money in Creative Living

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512F, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Phillipa K. Chong, McMaster University Old Cities, New Money, and Cultural Opportunity. Wendy Griswold, Northwestern University; Emily Handsman, Northwestern University; Kevin P. Loughran, Northwestern University Terra Pericolosa: Dualism and Beyond in Occupational Legitimacy. Alison Gerber, Uppsala University The Materialization of Institutional Logics in the Staging of Museums’ Permanent Exhibitions. Anna Zamora-Kapoor, Washington State University; Frederic Clement Godart, INSEAD; Yue Zhao, Paris School of Business Truffles and Take-Out: The (E)Valuative Consequences of Racial and Ethnic Categories in American Top Dining. Gillian Gualtieri, University of California Berkeley

Saturday, August 12, 2017 Gatekeeping in Cultural Fields: How Evaluation Processes Contribute to Social Inequality. Julian Hamann, University of Bonn; Stefan Beljean, Harvard University

014. Regular Session. Children/Youth/Adolescents: Parents, Guardians and Children’s Outcomes

015. Regular Session. Citizenship: Institutional Contexts and Citizenship Practice

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512H, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Sophia Woodman, University of Edinburgh “Part of the Literature of the Nation”: The Lambda Literary Awards’ Claim for Cultural Citizenship. Andrew Young, Temple University Citizenship: Action rather than Entitlement. Andreas Stefan Zaunseder, University of Aberdeen Communal Organization and Civic Solidarity: Political Participation in Guarding Rural Collective Land Rights in Contemporary China. Jundai Liu, Harvard University Citizenship Norms and Social Capital: Interpersonal Trust, Group Participation, and Daily Contact. Yang-Chih Fu, Academia Sinica Discussant: Sophia Woodman, University of Edinburgh

016. Regular Session. Critical Heterosexuality Studies

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513F, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Tom J. Waidzunas, Temple University Presider: Tom J. Waidzunas, Temple University The Gendered Meaning of Trust and its Role in Sexual DecisionMaking within American Hookup Culture. Rachel Kalish, SUNY College at Old Westbury The Social Construction of Sexuality: Flexible Heterosexuality and Shifting Sexual Identities. Tony Silva, University of Oregon; Clare Rosenfeld Evans, University of Oregon The Tragedy of Heterosexuality. Jane Ward, University of CaliforniaRiverside Pegging and the Heterosexualization of Anal Sex: An Analysis of Savage Love Advice. Jade Aguilar, Willamette University Discussant: Hector Carrillo, Northwestern University

017. Regular Session. Culture and Inequality: Aspirations, Cultural Imaginaries, and Self-Constructions Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514A, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Ruben A. Gaztambide-Fernandez, Ontario Institute for Studies in Education Presider: Ruben A. Gaztambide-Fernandez, Ontario Institute for Studies in Education

Genuine Passion: Extracurriculars and the Construction of Personal Authenticity. Tom Wooten, Harvard University Global Mobility and the Cultural Construction of Strangeness. Laura Desfor Edles, California State University-Northridge High-Achieving Students and College Choice: Questioning the Universal Appeal of Elite Status. Shani Adia Evans, Reed College Hosting the Comfortably Exotic: Cosmopolitan Aspirations in the Sharing Economy. Isak Ladegaard, Boston College “You Can Do a Lot Being Safe”: Celebratory Civics and the Promise of Multicultural Happiness. Zach Richer, University of Maryland Discussant: Ruben A. Gaztambide-Fernandez, Ontario Institute for Studies in Education

018. Regular Session. Diverse and Disparate Aging

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514B, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Corey M. Abramson, University of Arizona Everything is Falling Apart: Perceptions of Economic Status by LGBT Older Adults. Anna Muraco, Loyola Marymount University; Karen Fredriksen-Goldsen, University of Washington; Charles A. Emlet, University of Washington Racial Disparities in Disablement in the Time Before Death. Miles G. Taylor, Florida State University; Keshia Reid, Florida Department of Health; Stella Min, Florida State University Spousal Network Embeddedness and Social Isolation in Later Life. Rachel Leigh Behler, Cornell University; Alyssa W. Goldman, Cornell University Optimistic Positivity and Pessimistic Negativity among American Adults: Effects of Birth-Cohort, Age, Gender, and Race. William Magee, University of Toronto; Philippa J. Clarke, University of Michigan; Marilyn Sinkewicz, Institute for Social Research, University of Michigan; Michael R. Elliott, Department of Epidemiology, University of Michigan Discussant: Stacy Torres, University at Albany, SUNY

019. Regular Session. Economic Sociology 1: Markets and Morality

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514C, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Cristobal Young, Stanford University Presider: Cristobal Young, Stanford University Multiple Market Moralities: Three Different Logics of Fairness in Pricing. Erin Metz McDonnell, University of Notre Dame; Dustin S. Stoltz, University of Notre Dame; Marshall Allen Taylor, University of Notre Dame Moral Reactions to Obfuscated Disreputable Exchange. Gabriel Rossman, UCLA; Oliver Schilke, The University of Arizona To Lend or Not to Lend: Obfuscating Denials and Managing Negative Social Capital. Frederick F. Wherry, Yale University; Kristin Seefeldt, University of Michigan; Anthony Steven Alvarez, Cal State Fullerton Elite Mobility in an Unequal World: The Commodification of Citizenship. Kristin Surak, SOAS, University of London Networks and Professional Deviance in the Prescription Drug Abuse Epidemic. Shu Zhang, Yale University; Marissa King, Yale University

020. Regular Session. Engaging the Transnational: State, Social Movement, and Migrants

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 515A, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Jaeeun Kim, University of Michigan Presider: Jaeeun Kim, University of Michigan Domesticating a Dragon: The Contradictory Impact of Transnational

Saturday

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512G, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Sarah M. Ovink, Virginia Tech Presider: Qian He, University of Wisconsin-Madison Hurdles and Hopes: An Ecological Analysis of Migrant Children in China. Xiaorong Gu, National University of Singapore; Wei-Jun Jean Yeung, National University of Singapore Girls’ Self-Efficacy in the Context of Neighborhood Gender Stratification. Brian Soller, University of New Mexico; Aubrey L. Jackson, University of New Mexico Parents, Non-Parental Caregivers, and the School Readiness of Children of Latino/a Immigrants. Lilla Pivnick, University of Texas at Austin Teaching Autonomy: Parental Guidance in Child Play Choices in a Public Library. Maritza Mestre Steele, Indiana University The Impact of Family Adversity: Behavioral Outcomes of Having a Disabled Sibling during Childhood. Anna Penner, University of California, Irvine

47

48

Saturday, August 12, 2017

Saturday

Session 020, continued AIDS Institutions on State Repression in China, 1989-2013. Yan Long, Indiana University Divergent Trends in Homophobia and its Reflection in Public Attitudes. Markus Hadler, University of Graz; Jonathan Symons, Macquarie University Means of the Marginal: The Global Alliance of Waste Pickers and Transnational Strategies of Resistance. David M. Ciplet, University of Colorado Boulder Mobilizing Filial Piety: The Experience of Transnational Caregiving among Middle-Class Taiwanese Professionals in Los Angeles. YuKang Fan, University of Southern California Together and Apart: The Transnational Life of Mixed-Citizenship Couples in the Mexican Border Region. Jane Lilly Lopez, University of California- San Diego

021. Regular Session. Gender, Race, and Class in Cultural and Identity Processes

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 515B, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Vanina Leschziner, University of Toronto Presider: Larissa Buchholz, Northwestern University Establishing “Struggle Cred”: Affluence and Class Identity at Elite Colleges and Universities. Sam William Regas, Indiana University; Stephen J. Scanlan, Ohio University; Elizabeth M. Lee, Ohio University Local or Global? Unpacking the Role of Audience Composition on Conformity in Baby Names. Phech Colatat, Washington University of St. Louis; Tristan L. Botelho, Massachusetts Institute of Technology The Geometry of Culture: Tracing the Dimensions of Gender, Race, and Class with Massive Text Archives. Austin Kozlowski, University of Chicago; Matt Taddy, University of Chicago; James A. Evans, University of Chicago

022. Regular Session. Global Health Inequalities

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 515C, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Jennifer A. Ailshire, University of Southern California Presider: James Falconer, University of Alberta Fertility, Mortality and Childlessness at Old Age: Evidence from the 1959-1961 Famine of China. Donghui Wang, Penn State University Marital Status, Marital Satisfaction, and Risks of Mortality in South Korea. Hyun Sik Kim, Kyung Hee University; Keun-Tae Kim, University of Wisconsin - Madison The American Drug Overdose Epidemic in International Perspective. Jessica Y. Ho, Duke University World Health Inequality, 1950-2015: Examining the Distribution of Mortality Within and Between Countries. Rob Clark, University of Oklahoma; Kara Snawder, University of Oklahoma Discussant: Jennifer A. Ailshire, University of Southern California

023. Regular Session. Popular Culture: Spaces, Places, and Scenes Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511A, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Laura Grindstaff, University of California, Davis Presider: Laura Grindstaff, University of California, Davis Interstate Interstitials: Bumper Stickers and Spaces of Social Encounter on and beyond American Superhighways. Walter Goettlich, University of Kansas Local from Elsewhere: The Influence of Translocalism on Craft Beer Scenes. Michael Ian Borer, University of Nevada, Las Vegas

Metro Music: Networks and Meanings of Creative Scene Development in Toronto’s Queen Street West. Leonard Nevarez, Vassar College Repertoire Communities in American Popular Music 1895-1950. William G. Roy, University of California-Los Angeles The Diffusion of Music via YouTube: Comparing Asian and European Music Video Charts. Just Kist, Erassmus University Rotterdam; Marc Verboord, Erasmus University Rotterdam Hologram Performance as Commemoration. Andrea Cossu, University of Trento; Marta Mulas, University of Trento

024. Regular Session. Racism and Anti-Racism in the United States

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 510C, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Luisa Farah Schwartzman, University of Toronto Presider: Patricia Louie, University of Toronto Sanitizing “Segregation”: The Politics of Knowledge in Chicago’s Struggle over School Desegregation Reform. Fithawee Tzeggai, Univ of California Berkeley Serving Up Segregation: Examining the Racial Order of Congressional Cafeterias. James R. Jones, Rutgers University Symbolic Divisions and Attitudes toward the Confederate Flag: Examining Place and Ideological Transmission. Ryan Talbert, Vanderbilt University; Evelyn Joy Patterson, Vanderbilt University The Third Rail: Anti-Racism Strategies among Pro-Transit Advocacy Organizations. Erik Love, Emory University Discussant: Tianna S. Paschel, University of California - Berkeley

025. Regular Session. Sociology of Reproduction 4: Negotiating, Witnessing and Framing Reproductive Experiences, Care, and Policy

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 510D, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Susan Markens, City University of New YorkLehman College The Intimate Trial: Couple Interactions during Premarital Abortion in North China. Yuen Shan Lai, The Chinese University of Hong Kong Teen Pregnancy and Doula Care: A Space for Feminist Praxis? Jaime Nikolaou, University of Toronto Bearing Witness: U.S. and Canadian Maternity Support Workers’ Observations of Mistreatment of Women in Childbirth. Louise Marie Roth, University of Arizona; Megan Henley, University of Arizona; Marla Seacrist, California State University-Stanislaus; Christine H. Morton, Stanford University Department of Pediatrics I’m Trying to Create, Not Destroy: Protestant Women’s Moral Reasoning Surrounding the Use of ARTs. Danielle Czarnecki, University of Michigan Money Matters: Commerce and Altruism in the Mexican Surrogacy Industry. April Hovav, University of Southern California

026. Regular Session. The Cultural Politics of Narration

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 510A, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Poulami Roychowdhury, McGill University Presider: Ina Filkobski, McGill University It’s Just a Tool: How Gun Owners Justify Carrying their Guns. Harel Shapira, University of Texas at Austin; Samantha Jones Simon, University of Texas at Austin Accounting for Gift: Narrative and Indebtedness in Transnational Adoption Practice. Hosu Kim, College of Staten Island, CUNY Authenticity and Victimhood in Advocacy Storytelling. Francesca Polletta, University of California, Irvine; Tania Eileen DoCarmo, University of California Irvine; Kelly Marie Ward, University of California, Irvine; Jessica Callahan, University of California, Irvine

Saturday, August 12, 2017 The Curious Case of Cú Chulainn: Nationalism, Culture, and Meaning Making in Northern Ireland. Gregory Goalwin, University of California, Santa Barbara Threatened Privilege and Narrative Reconstruction: A Theory of Discursive Field Shift. David W. Everson, University of Notre Dame

027. Regular Session. Undocumented and DACamented Youth: Challenges and Prospects

028. Section on Body and Embodiment. Reproducing Bodies

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512A, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Miliann Kang, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Presider: Jialin Camille Li, University of Illinois at Chicago Embodiment, Loss, and the Reproduction of Social Purpose: Perspectives from Retired Olympic Athletes. Michelle Pannor Silver, University of Toronto The Demonization of Black Children in the McKinney TX Pool Party Incident. Barbara Harris Combs, Clark Atlanta University What’s So Scary About Designer Babies? The Myth of Meritocracy and the New Genetic Capital. Caitlin Taborda-Whitt, University of Minnesota; Kathleen E. Hull, University of Minnesota Which Risks, For Whom? Reframing “Maternal-Fetal Conflict” in American Childbirth. Kellie Owens, Northwestern University Discussant: Jialin Camille Li, University of Illinois at Chicago

029. Section on Collective Behavior and Social Movements. Comparative and Cross National Social Movement Research

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513B, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Ziad W. Munson, Lehigh University Asserting Land Rights: Rural Land Struggles in India and Brazil. Kurt Schock, Rutgers University How National Opportunities Shape Online Discontent: Comparing Right-wing Oopulist Facebook pages in Western Europe. Ofra Klein, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam; Jasper Muis, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam Mobilization for Rebellion and Relief: A Comparative Study of Immigrant Transnational Activism during the Arab Spring. Dana M. Moss, University of Pittsburgh Political Institutions and Medical Alliances in Abortion Rights

Movements. Drew Halfmann, University of California-Davis Repertoires of Resistance and Repression in the Authoritarian Governance Arena. Hank Johnston, San Diego State University

030. Section on Communication, Information Technologies, and Media Sociology Refereed Roundtable Session and Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517B, 8:30-9:30 a.m. Session Organizer: Mary Chayko, Rutgers University

Table 01. The 2016 U.S. Presidential Election: Political Communication, Discourse, and Debate Retweeting in an Echo ChAmber: A Social Network Analysis of the #NeverTrump and #NeverHillary Movements. Shawn Gaulden, Florida State University Politics beyond Ocean: The Ideological Turn in China’s Knowledge Sharing Media. Linzhuo Li, University of Chicago The public sphere vs. Breitbart: Mediated political gaffe construction from Trent Lott to Donald Trump. Ian Sheinheit, University at Albany SUNY Table 02. Community and Identity in Social Networks Presider: Anabel Quan-Haase, University of Western Ontario Can Users of Social Media Produce Enduring Social Ties? David G. Ortiz, New Mexico State University Managing the Culture Shock: Black Identity in a Pwi and the Role of Online Interactions. David A. Martin, University of Oregon Emerging and Diverging SNS Use: The Importance of Social Network Sites for Older Emerging Adults. Brian J. Miller, Wheaton College; Peter John Mundey, Calvin College Can I See More of You? Afropolitan Self-stylization on Grindr Profiles in Soweto. Nicholas Andrew Boston, City University of New York-Lehman College Table 03. Contemporary Issues in Journalism and Media Sociology: From Addiction to Advertising Presider: Stephen R. Barnard, St. Lawrence University A Comparative Study on the Media Coverage of Internet Addiction in South Korea and the United States. Arum Park, Princeton University Content Nausea: The Blurry Boundaries Between Native Advertisements and News Stories. Maxwell Lindquist, Independent Scholar Newsroom Workers’ Job Satisfaction Contingent on Position and Adaptation to Digital Disruption. Brock Ternes, University of Kansas; Laveda J. Peterlin, University of Kansas; Scott Reinardy, University of Kansas Table 04. Bridging Divides: Technological Access, Skills and Equality Digital Inequalities and Cyber-Security Behaviors: Digital Skills as the Main Determinant of Antivirus Use. Matias Dodel, Universidad Catolica del Uruguay; Gustavo S. Mesch, University of Haifa Online Opportunities and Risks for Children and Adolescents: An Integrated Model for the Case of Brazil. Tania CabelloHutt, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill; Patricio Cabello, School of Journalism, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Valparaíso; Magdalena Claro, Center for the Study of Educational Policy and Practice (CEPPE), Faculty of Education, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile. Using ICTs for Gender Inclusion and Sustainable Development in sub-Saharan Africa. Christobel Asiedu, Louisiana Tech University

Saturday

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 510B, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Tanya Maria Golash-Boza, University of California, Merced Mobility and Independence: DACA’s Consequences for Latino Recipients and their Families. Leisy Janet Abrego, University of California, Los Angeles Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals and its Implications for Young Undocumented Immigrants and their Families. Elizabeth M. Aranda, University of South Florida; Elizabeth Vaquera, The George Washington University Marriage as a Legalization Pathway: The Myths and Consequences for Undocumented Young Adults’ Romantic Relationships. Laura E. Enriquez, UC Irvine Effects of Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals on the Educational Outcomes of Undocumented College Students. Amy Hsin, Queens College, CUNY; Francesc Ortega, Queens College, CUNY Saving Face and the Road to being Undocumented for Chinese Immigrants in the United States. Jia-Lin Liu, New York University; Hua-Yu Sebastian Cherng, New York University

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Saturday

Session 030, continued Who is the “Information have-nots” in Smart Society? An Exploratory Study of Categorizing the Elderly. Joohyun Oh, Yonsei University Table 05. Games and their Consequences Presider: Deborah Jean Burris-Kitchen, Tennessee State University No More Games: An Intersectional Approach to Geek Masculinity and Marginalization in Video Games. Anna Cameron, University of Virginia Mapping Inspiration in Online Communities of Play. Pierson Avery Browne, University of Waterloo Who Plays Fantasy Sports and Why? Understanding the Community Dynamics of Season-long Fantasy Sports Participation. Samantha Nicole Jaroszewski, Princeton University Roger Ebert Versus Video Games: The Important Role Social Narratives Play in Artistic Legitimation. Brian McKernan, The Sage Colleges Table 06. Music, Bitcoin, and the Digitization of Information Presider: Apryl A. Williams, Texas A&M University Music Everywhere: Setting a Digital Music Trap. David Michael Arditi, University of Texas at Arlington Building the Blockchain World: The Rise of a Technological Commonwealth from the Agonies of Capitalism. Sarah Grace Manski, UC Santa Barbara What is Bitcoin? Adoption, Co-option, and the Robust Object of Digital Currency. Lynette Shaw, University of Michigan Table 07. Social Networks and Social Movements The Global Jihadist Movement and its Communicative Action Repertoire. Maxime Berube, Université de Montréal; Anthony Amicelle, Université de Montréal; Benoit Dupont, Université de Montréal Repression and Political Participation of Iranian Pro-democracy Supporters around the 2013 Presidential Elections. Ali Honari, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam; Jeroen Voerknecht, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam; Jasper Muis, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam Table 08. Shaping a More Just Society: The Role of Communication, Information Technologies, and Media Sociology Presider: Johnny E. Williams, Trinity College Building Social Legoland through Collaborative Crowdsourcing: Effect of Marginality on Collaboration and Task Outcomes. Rong Wang, Northwestern University Decolonial Options for Cultural Techniques and Inequalities in Digital Cultural Health Literacy. Alexander I. Stingl, Leuphana University Lüneburg Technological Tethering, Cohort Effects, and the Work-Family Interface. Andrew David Nevin, University of Toronto

031. Section on Evolution, Biology, and Society. Biological Consequences of Social Processes

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513A, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Colter Mitchell, University of Michigan Childhood Family Instability and Adult Health. Lauren M. Gaydosh, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Kathleen Mullan Harris, University of North Carolina Fear of Deportation and BMI in Mexican-origin Families from Phoenix, AZ: Relation to Salivary Uric Acid. Airin Denise Martinez, Arizona State University; Douglas A. Granger, University of California-Irvine; Lillian Ruelas, Arizona State University

Getting to the Heart of Masculinity Stressors: Masculinity Threats Induce Stress during a Speaking Task. Brandon Lee Kramer, Rutgers University; Kristen W. Springer, Rutgers University; Mary Himmelstein, University of Connecticut Is Fertility after the Demographic Transition Maladaptive? Rosemary L. Hopcroft, UNC Charlotte Racial/Ethnic Residential Segregation and Allostatic Load in the Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis. Madison Paige Leia, University of Washington; Margaret Hicken, University of Michigan; Ana Diez Roux, Drexel University; Hedwig Eugenie Lee, University of Washington

032. Section on International Migration. Gendered Processes of Immigration and Incorporation

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513D, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Patricia A. McManus, Indiana University Presider: Muna Adem, Indiana University The International Introduction Industry: An Alternative Route to Economic Development. Julia Meszaros, University of South Florida (Un)productive Citizens, Disciplined Bodies: The Effects of Gender, Age, and Migration Status on Deportee (Re)incorporation. Kelly Birch Maginot, Michigan State University Confronting “Illegality” through Gender Change: Women’s Participation as Political Strategy in Indigenous Migrant Communities. Abigail L. Andrews, University of California-San Diego The Cumulative Effect of Gender, Ethnic Visibility and Immigrant Status on Career Outcomes of Canadian Engineers. Alla Konnikov, University of Calgary Making it Work: Undocumented Women’s Strategies of Resistance and Survival in a Restricted Labor Market. Holly Straut Eppsteiner, University of North Carolina

033. Section on Medical Sociology. Immigrant Status and Health

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513E, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Tod G. Hamilton, Princeton University Presider: Tod G. Hamilton, Princeton University Age of Migration and Cognitive Impairment-Free Life Expectancy: 20 Year Findings from the Hispanic-EPESE. Marc Anthony Garcia, University of Texas Medical Branch-Galveston; Joseph Saenz, University of Texas Medical Branch; Chi-Tsun Chiu, Academia Sinica; Brian Downer, University of Texas Medical Branch; Rebeca Wong, University of Texas Medical Branch Health in Motion: Implications of U.S. Migration for the Health of Mexican Return Migrants. Joshua Thomas Wassink, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Neighborhood Social Interactions and Mental Health: Exploring Ethnic and Nativity Distinctions among Black Americans. Christy LaShaun Erving, University of North Carolina at Charlotte; Ornella Hills, University of Wisconsin-Madison Region of Origin Diversity in Immigrant Health: Moving beyond the Mexican Case. Megan M. Reynolds, University of Utah; Alla Chernenko, University of Utah Discussant: Brandon Michael Stewart, Harvard University

Saturday, August 12, 2017

034. Section on Political Economy of the World-System. Populist Politics in the World-System

035. Section on Race, Class, and Gender Refereed Roundtable Session and Business Meeting

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520A, 8:30-9:30 a.m. Session Organizers: Maria D. Duenas, University of California, Merced Sarah Adeyinka-Skold, University of Pennsylvania Emily Kazyak, University of Nebraska-Lincoln Table 01. Global Perspectives Table Presider: Yung-Yi Diana Pan, Brooklyn College - CUNY Gendered Livelihoods and Community Politics in Postapartheid South Africa. Jennifer Keahey, Arizona State University Global Race Regimes and the Accumulation of Capital on a World Scale. Rafael Mota, Binghamton University Run to the Gully: Structural Escape of Jamaican Queer Communities under Neoliberalism. Michael Lee Stephens, Binghamton University Table 02. Health and Healthcare Table Presider: Yuching J. Cheng, State Univesity of New York-Albany Healthcare Barriers, Racism, and Intersectionality in Australia. Joao Luiz Bastos, Federal University of Santa Catarina; Catherine E. Harnois, Wake Forest University; Yin Carl Paradies, Deakin University Race, Gender, and Social Control: Forced Sterilization during the Civil Rights Movement, 1937-1970. Amy V. D’Unger, Georgia Institute of Technology The Added Burdens of Color? Investigating the Health Consequences of Colorism among African Americans. Taylor Hargrove, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill It’s Food Security versus Food Structure: Class Discrimination at Food Assistance Agencies. Alia DeLong, University of Florida; Kelly Moore, University of Florida; Marilyn E. Swisher, University of Florida; Suzanna Smith, University of Florida Table 03. Identities in Educational Contexts Table Presider: Marcia Texler Segal, Indiana University Southeast All I’ve Known is White: Class Privilege and Racially Liminal Students’ Self-Identification as White. Brittany Lee Frederick, Boston University Geography of Race: Geographic Misplacement and Imagined Geographies of Women of Color in a Suburban High-School. Catherine Simpson Bueker, Emmanuel College

Table 04. Inequalities in Educational Contexts Table Presider: Andrew King, UMass Boston Children Left Behind: Understanding Racial Disparities in School Sanctioning. Marie-Dumesle Mercier, New York University Critical and Intersectional Understandings of Campus Sexual Assault. Ashley Rondini, Franklin and Marshall College Historical Change in Gender Differences in Mastery: The Role of Education and Employment. Andreea Mogosanu, University of Toronto Table 05. Law and Legal Issues Table Presider: Katherine Ainsley Morton, Memorial University of Newfoundland Talking Topics on Twitter: Does Gendered Issue Expertise Influence U.S. House Members’ Engagement on Twitter? Morgan Johnstonbaugh, University of Arizona The Supreme Court and Abortion Rights: Diminishing Protections for Abortion Rights Post Roe v. Wade. Kelly Godwin, NC State University Vying for Lead in the “Boys’ Club”: Exploring the Gender Gap in Multidistrict Litigation Leadership Appointments. Dana Alvare, University of Delaware Table 06. Policing Table Presider: Baishakhi Taylor, Middlebury College Competing Discourses in the McKinney Texas Pool Party Incident. Barbara Harris Combs, Clark Atlanta University Race, Politics, and the Black Lives Matter Movement. Colleen C. Butler-Sweet, Sacred Heart University Table 07. Relationships, Inequality, and Categorization Table Presider: Myron Strong, Community College of Baltimore County Creating Constructs Through Categorization: Gender and Race. Joshua Simpkins, Georgia State University Gender and Gender Socialization Measurement and (dis) Connections to Social Constructionism within Gender Studies: Meta-Analytic Review. Noel Jaime Strapko, Colorado State University Risk-Class and Contemporary Inequality. Dean Curran, University of Calgary Rules, Resources, and Relationships: How Organizations Shape Transgender People’s Reentry. Joss Taylor Greene, Columbia University The Gendered and Racialized Violence of Poverty. Anne R. Roschelle, State University of New York-New Paltz; Sunita Bose, State University of New York-New Paltz Table 08. Sports Table Presider: Isabelle Valérie Zinn, University of Lausanne / EHESS, Paris Gender ‘In Practice’: Rethinking the Use of Male Practice Players in NCAA Women’s Basketball. Laura Upenieks, University of Toronto; Ioana Sendroiu, University of Toronto Running as a Tool of Middle-Classness. Alicia Smith-Tran, Case Western Reserve University Sport and Intersectional Analysis. Joseph G. A. Trumino, St. John’s University Table 09. Stigma Table Presider: Joseph G. A. Trumino, St. John’s University Intersections on the Inside: Gender, Race, Class, Disability, and Identity in a Prison Art Studio. Laura Pecenco, San Diego Miramar College Sociodemographic Predictors of Personal and Perceived Stigma towards Depression, Anxiety, Alcohol Abuse, and Prescription Drug Misuse. Paula K. Miller, Ohio University

Saturday

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512C, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Jennifer L. Bair, University of Virginia Presider: Jennifer L. Bair, University of Virginia Crisis of Hegemony, Authoritarian Populism and Anti-Kurdish Riots in Turkey. Sefika Kumral, Johns Hopkins University The Two Faces of Populism. Gabriel Hetland, University at Albany Interpreting Divergent Anti-establishment Politics: Mexico, Venezuela and the World-System. Leslie C. Gates, Binghamton University A Departure from Political Ideologies: The Effects of Political Engagement and Economic Uncertainties in Europe. Kwan Woo Kim, Harvard University Discussant: Robert S. Jansen, University of Michigan

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Saturday

036. Section on Sociology of Development. Doing Development: Ethics, Actors, and Consequences

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512B, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Shai M. Dromi Presider: Logan Dawn April Williams, Michigan State University Financing Sustainable Development? How International Tax Reform is Failing Africa. Brian J. Dill, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign; Hebatallah Khalil, University of Illinois Side Effects: Program Implementation Challenges in AIDS Community Care Work in South Africa. Catherine van de Ruit, Ursinus College The Retreat to Method: The Aftermath of Elite Concession to Civil Society in India and Mexico. Trina Vithayathil, Providence College; Diana Graizbord, University of Georgia; Cedric de Leon, Providence College What Have We Studied and Found? A Systematic Review of the NGO Literature, 1980-2014. Jennifer Brass, Indiana University; Wesley Longhofer, Emory University; Rachel Sullivan Robinson, American University; Allison Youatt Schnable, Indiana University Discussant: Jeffrey Swindle, University of Michigan

037. Section on Sociology of Education. Effects of Bullying, School Discipline, and Restorative Justice Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513C, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Amy Gill Langenkamp, University of Notre Dame Presider: Gregory Clark Elliott, Brown University Mapping the Landscapes of Bullying. Todd Anthony Migliaccio, California State University-Sacramento; Schmidtlein Mathew, California State University-Sacramento Bad Trees, Not Apples: School-Level Influences on Bullying. Matt Rafalow, Google Questioning School Authority: How Race Shapes Students’ Perceptions of Student-Teacher Relationships and School Disciplinary Climates. Doreet Rebecca Preiss, New York University Between Autonomy and Structure: Parents of Color and Discipline at Montessori and No-Excuses Schools. Joanne W. Golann, Vanderbilt University; Mira Catherine Debs, Yale University; Anna Weiss, Vanderbilt University Implementation and Institutionalization of Policies and Routines: The Case of School-based Restorative Justice Practices. Eleanor Anderson, Northwestern University

038. Theory Section Refereed Roundtable Session and Business Meeting

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517C, 8:30-9:30 a.m. Session Organizer: Alvaro Santana-Acuña, Whitman College Table 01. Body and Identity Table Presider: Jessie K. Finch, Stockton University Dramaturgical Analysis of Alice in Wonderland: The Use of Front and Backstage in Identity Transformation. Adrianna K. Smell, Case Western Reserve University The Turn to Craft and the Sociology of Attention: Can Craftsmanship Save Us? Jesse Carlson Theoretical Developments on ‘Memory’ and ‘Identity’: An Integration between Mead and Halbwachs. Veridiana Domingos Cordeiro, University of São Paulo Toward a Unified Identity Theory: The Case of Entrepreneurial Identity Construction. Daniel Davis, University of California, San Diego

Table 02. Democracy, Nations, and State Formation Table Presider: Tatiana Samay Andia, Universidad de los Andes Beyond the Machiavellian Prince: Malaria, State and Action Models. Omri Tubi, Northwestern University Democratic Solidarity in Late Modernity: Nationalism, Cosmopolitanism, and the Yearning for Peoplehood in Democratic Societies. Mark H. K. Pharris, University of Minnesota The Epistemic Modes of ‘Making Space for Civil Society’. Michael Soto, University of Minnesota Table 03. Dialectics, Power, and Conflict Table Presider: Scott Schaffer, The University of Western Ontario Denial: A Sociological Theory. Christina Nadler, The Graduate Center, CUNY Doing Dialectics Differently. Ghazah Abbasi, UMass Amherst Power in Marx and Mumford’s Critical Social Theories. Bridget J. Littleton, University of Notre Dame The Birth of Society from the Symbolic Violence. Michael Corsten, University of Hildesheim Table 04. Field Theory and Beyond Table Presider: Kenneth M. Kambara, LIM College Applying Field Theory to Welfare State Regimes to Understand their Behaviour in a Foreign Policy Context. Amanda Marie Shriwise, University of Oxford Bourdieu in Hyperspace: From Social Topology to the Space of Flows. Jean-Sebastien Guy, Dalhousie University Historically Structured Structuring Structures: Bourdieu’s Roots and Implications for Social Theory. Jonathan David Shaffer, Boston University The Role of the Author in the Scientific Field in Bourdieu’s theory. Felipe Augusto Franke, Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina; Matheus Dallmman, Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina; Marcelo Cigales, Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina Operationalizing Cultural Capital: Dealing with the ambiguities in Bordieu. Jeffrey L. Sternberg, Northeastern University Table 05. Law, Authority, and Religion Table Presider: Theodore C. Wagenaar, Miami University Dharma and Natural Law: Max Weber’s Comparison of Hindu and Christian Legal Traditions. Laura R. Ford, Bard College Evolutionary Development, Religious Coding and Religious Modernity Updating Three Main Aspects of Durkheim’s Sociology of Religion. Jorge Galindo, Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana From Organization to Charisma: Meanings, Networks and the Emergence of Charisma. Chengpang Lee, University of Chicago Interaction Ritual Theory, Cultural Objects, and Commitment in an Activist Religious Movement. Justin C. Van Ness, University of Notre Dame Table 06. Perception, Language, and Rationality Table Presider: Kate Pride Brown, Georgia Institute of Technology Farewell to Genre: Plot, Meaning, and the Power of Eudaemonic Paths in Social Narratives. Todd Madigan, Yale University How Can We Talk to Each Other? Metaphor as a Solution. Steven Lauterwasser, University of California, Berkeley Inequality and Exclusion: The Problems of the Cognitive Rationality of Dichotomy as a Cultural Issue. Ezgi Bagdadioglu Reference and Perception: Towards a Reference Theory Perspective. Jie Zhang, SUNY College at Buffalo

Saturday, August 12, 2017

9:30 a.m.

Meetings

Section on Communication, Information Technologies, and Media Sociology Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517B, 9:30-10:10 a.m. Section on Race, Gender, and Class Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520A, 9:30-10:10 a.m. Theory Section Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517C, 9:30-10:10 a.m.

10:00 a.m.

Meetings

Annual Meeting Employment Fair Palais des congrès de Montréal, Hall 220D, 10:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m.

10:30 a.m.

Meetings

2018 Dissertation Award Selection Committee Palais des congrès de Montréal, 523B, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. First Time Attendees Orientation Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516C, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Honors Program Discussion Tables Palais des congrès de Montréal, 710B, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Student Forum Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514B, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m.

10:30 a.m.

Sessions

039. Thematic Session. Abolishing or Legitimizing Inequalities, What is the True Nature of Higher Education (cosponsored with Association Canadienne des Sociologues et Anthropologues de Langue Française)

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511A, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: André Tremblay, University of Ottawa Presider: Paul Sabourin, Université de Montréal Re-imagining Political Space(s): The 2012 Quebec Student Strike in its Global Context. Gilles Breton, University of Ottawa; Gabriel Arruda, University of Ottawa A University in Djibouti: Discussion about Moving Away from an Elitist Model. Daoud Nour, Université d’Ottawa and Université de Djibouti Revolution in Academe: Not for Everyone is Turning Red. JeanPhilippe Warren, Concordia University Student’s Strikes: Performance and Inequality. André Tremblay, University of Ottawa Discussant: Gilles Bibeau, Université de Montréal In 2012, an important student’s movement led Quebec universities to the longest strike ever. Access to Higher Education (HE) was at stake: The threat of a hike in (relatively low) tuition fees was perceived by students as a source of growing inequalities and a dangerous step toward the Americanization of Quebec’s society. While many sociologists see college degrees as the main markers of the new class structure, HE is also central to the operation of knowledge economies and provides access to recognition, power and wealth in an individualistic society. While many regard HE more as an individual investment in human capital, others view it as a

Saturday

Table 07. Pragmatism Table Presider: Matthew F. Hayes, St. Thomas University Conceptual Foundations for Inquiry into Urban Ethics. Vinay Kumar, State University of New York at Buffalo Sociology’s Contribution to Critical Theory as Holistic Social Science: A Study in Pragmatism and Rationality. Jerome Braun, Loyola University-Chicago Spinoza, Pragmatism, and Human Rights. Dmitri Shalin, University of Nevada, Las Vegas Table 08. Production of Cultural Objects Table Presider: Joshua Franklin Doyle, Duke University Art is a Vivid Foreground: Microsociology and the Making of Commercial Art. Gabrielle Raley, Knox College Podcasts, Serial and the Sociological Imagination. Andrea D. Miller, Webster University Sartorial denotative logistics: Fashion and Power in the Cuban 1960s. Maria A. Cabrera Arus Table 09. Race and Racism Table Presider: Taylor Houston, Mount Mercy University Critical Realism and Structural Racism. Daniel A. Sherwood, City University of New York Race and Racism: The Necessary Cultural and Theoretical Analysis. Beatriz Aldana Marquez, Texas A&M University “I’m Turkish, but... I am also Swedish somehow”: Cultural Sociology and the Global Racial Order. Anna Lund, Linnaeus University; Andrea M. Voyer, University of Connecticut Table 10. Social and Temporal Relations Table Presider: Fauzia Husain, University of Virginia Living with Best Friends? A Study of Social Capital in Housing for the Elderly. Gorgi Krlev, University of Heidelberg, University of Oxford The Tyranny of Clock Time? Benjamin Harrison Snyder, Victoria University of Wellington Table 11. Systems and Networks Table Presider: Gordon Gauchat, University of WisconsinMilwaukee New Developments on Elias’ Theory: An Integration between the Figurational Theory and the Social Network´s Theory. Hugo Neri, University of São Paulo Talcott Parsons’ Contribution to the Conceptualization of Cultural Systems. Victor Meyer Lidz, Drexel University College of Medicine; Helmut Staubmann, University of Innsbruck Taylor Goes Mobile: Circulating the Norm with Persuasive Technology. Carla Ilten, University of Illinois at Chicago The Morphogenesis of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America. Maren Freudenberg, Ruhr-University Bochum Table 12. Theorizing Economics After Polanyi: Sociological Theory, Social Mobilization and the New Great Transformation. Robert MacNeil Christie, California State University, Dominguez Hills Selection and Qualification: How Economics Frame Political Debates. Thomas Angeletti, Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies

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Session 039, continued means to lower inequality. Yet others are concerned that HE diverts public resources toward the elite at the expense of more universally accessible K-12 education. Against this background, this session will consider the potential impact of students’ movements on individual and collective social mobility. It will ask: How can HE contribute to equality instead of distinction?

Saturday

040. Thematic Session. Americanizing Islam? Social Inequality, Institutional Interaction, and the Question of a Muslim American Field

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511B, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Jeffrey Guhin, University of California, Los Angeles Presider: Kristine J. Ajrouch, Eastern Michigan University Durable Inequality in American Islam. Pamela Prickett, Rice University Who Knows a Muslim Personally, Why it Matters, and What Muslims are Doing about It. Besheer Mohamed, Pew Research Center The Impact of Corporate Modalities on American Islamic Institutions and Muslim American Perceptions of Islam. Saeed Khan, Wayne State University The Hijab’s Unwelcome Semiotics. Jeffrey Guhin, University of California, Los Angeles This panel examines the experiences of Americans Muslims through the conference’s theme of “Culture, Inequalities, and Social Inclusion across the Globe.” In these four papers, the presenters show how Muslims in the United States have experienced cultural inequality especially since September 11, 2001 and also how they have struggled to integrate their experience with the rest of the United States through both Muslim and American institutions. Besheer Mohamed uses survey data to show how Muslims continue to be distrusted by the American population, as well as how American Muslims navigate their relationship to mainstream America. Saeed Khan examines how American Muslim organizations navigate both the challenges of prejudice and the intricacies of Islamic finance as a means of establishing and maintaining financial stability. Pamela Pricket asks how and why African American Muslims experience inequality within American Islam through interrogating the intersection of race/religion/class and ongoing methods of boundary formation between theses identity categories. Finally, Jeff Guhin examines how and why the hijab becomes a morally salient part of Muslim Americans’ lives—and the lives of non-Muslims as well. Kristine Ajrouch, a scholar of American Islam, will serve as presider and discussant.

041. Thematic Session. Culture and Class

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511C, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Mike Savage, LSE Presider: Mike Savage, LSE How Cultural Class Analysis Helps to Explore Upper Middle Class Reproduction in a Mature Neoliberal Regime. Maria-Luisa Mendez, Universidad Diego Portales Culture and Class Reproduction: Why Are Our Children Likely to Be Professors Too? Kim Weeden, Cornell University Culture, Class and Economy: Some Critical Reflections. Craig Calhoun, Berggruen Institute Discussant: Mike Savage, LSE Over the past fifteen years there has been a remarkable revival of what is often termed ‘cultural class analysis’. This seeks to use Bourdieu’s concept of cultural capital to offer approaches to class

which differ from the more familiar occupational schemas. It is argued that these can give more purchase on how class relations are being reconfigured - especially through the pulling away of an ‘elite’ class, from a complex and fragmented set of middle classes, and with a distinct ‘precariat’ at the bottom. This form of sociological analysis has had considerable public interest in several nations, especially the UK where Social Class in the 21st Century (Mike Savage et al, Pelican 2015) has been widely reviewed and is a popular best seller. This current is an interesting case study of ‘public sociology’. Cultural class analysis is strongest in Europe, but is also being applied across the globe, and this session will bring together leading proponents and showcase important comparative research.

042. Thematic Session. Culture and Computational Social Science

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511D, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Christopher A. Bail, Duke University Presider: Christopher A. Bail, Duke University Panelists: Ann Swidler, University of California-Berkeley Paul J. DiMaggio, New York University Alix E Rule, Columbia University John W. Mohr, University of California-Santa Barbara More data were accumulated in 2002 than all previous years of human history combined. By 2011, the amount of data collected prior to 2002 was being collected every two days. This dramatic growth in data spans nearly every part of our lives from gene sequencing to consumer behavior data. While much of these data are binary or quantitative, text-based data is also being accumulated on an unprecedented scale. In an era of social research plagued by declining survey response rates and concerns about the reliability and generalizability of qualitative research, these data hold considerable potential to answer many of the most pressing questions within our discipline, yet sociologists lag behind scholars in other fields in learning how to collect, analysis, and interpret so-called “big data.” These questions have critical relevance to the “Culture, Inequalities, and Social Inclusion across the Globe” theme of the 2017 Annual Meetings. Despite an unprecedented amount of qualitative or text-based data, cultural sociologists have left this wellspring of information about the arguments, worldviews, or values of hundreds of millions of people from internet sites and other digitized texts to computer scientists who possess the technological expertise to extract and manage such data but lack the theoretical direction to interpret their meaning in situ. This panel brings together leading scholars in both cultural sociology and computational social science for an open-ended conversation about the potential for interdisciplinary synthesis in order to address questions about how big data might be used to study culture, inequalities, and social inclusion.

043. Thematic Session. Theorizing Frameworks and Methodologies for the Study of Intersectionality: Sociological and Interdisciplinary Conversations

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511E, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Miliann Kang, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Presider: Celeste Curington, University of Massachusetts- Amherst Notes on Intersectionality from an Interdisciplinary Interloper: Difference, Method and Intuition. Abigail Huston Boggs, Wesleyan University Categories in Motion. Maxine Leeds Craig, University of CaliforniaDavis From Intersections to Interchanges: New Metaphors for Theorizing

Saturday, August 12, 2017

044. Special Session. Behind the Scenes: A Discussion of Applying for and Being an Editor of an ASA Journal

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514C, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Douglas Hartmann, University of Minnesota Panelists: Stephen A. Sweet, Ithaca College Rory M. McVeigh, University of Notre Dame Jan E. Stets, University of California, Riverside Douglas Hartmann, University of Minnesota An open discussion with editors and former editors of ASA journals and members of the ASA Publication Committee on what it’s like to edit a journal and how editors are nominated and selected.

045. Author Meets Author Session. Evicted: Poverty and Profit in the American City (Crown Publishing Group; 2016) by Matthew Desmond and $2.00 a Day: Living on Almost Nothing in America (Mariner Books, 2016) by Kathryn J. Edin and H. Luke Shaefer Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511F, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Victor M. Rios, University of California, Santa Barbara Critics: William Julius Wilson, Harvard University Dylan Matthews-Vox, Vox Authors: Matthew Desmond, Harvard University Kathryn J. Edin, Johns Hopkins University H. Luke Shaefer, University of Michigan

046. Author Meets Critics Session. The National Origins of Policy Ideas: Knowledge Regimes in the United States, France, Germany, and Denmark (Princeton University Press, 2014) by John L. Campbell and Ove K. Pedersen Palais des congrès de Montréal, 510D, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Peter A. Hall, Harvard University Presider: Peter A. Hall, Harvard University Critics: Neil Fligstein, University of Californnia Stephanie L. Mudge, University of California-Davis Rosemary CR Taylor, Tufts University Authors: John L. Campbell, Dartmouth College Ove Pedersen, Copenhagen Business School

047. Regional Spotlight Session. Comparing Criminal Legal Systems: Canada and the United States

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514A, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Amy Swiffen, Concordia University Presider: Amy Swiffen, Concordia University Determinants of Municipal Police Force Size in Large Cities in Canada and the United States. Jason Thomas Carmichael, McGill University The Use of Lethal Force by Police Officers: Examining Social and Political Explanations for Trends Over Time in Canada and the United States. Stephanie L. Kent, Cleveland State University The Prison Oversight Experience in Canada: The Office of the Correctional Investigator. Howard Sapers, Independent Review of Ontario Corrections Cross Boarder Theorizing of Race, Risk and Harm in Penality. Kelly Hannah-Moffat, University of Toronto

048. Departmental Management and Leadership Workshop. Integrating “Real” Research into Programs for Undergraduates: Suggestions from Practice and Practical Suggestions

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512F, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Mary Scheuer Senter, Central Michigan University Leader: Mary Scheuer Senter, Central Michigan University Co-Leaders: Jan Marie Fritz, University of Cincinnati Edward L. Kain, Southwestern University Anita M. Waters Most sociology faculty would argue that majors should develop key research skills as they move through their programs. This workshop will provide participants with examples of ways of integrating “real” research into the undergraduate curriculum, with an emphasis on methods courses. Engaging students in data collection and analysis (“real” research) has the potential of increasing student interest in research and highlighting the links between undergraduate studies and post-baccalaureate employment and graduate study. Further, real research projects can provide valuable service to a variety of clients within our communities and within our colleges or universities. Workshop presenters come from diverse institutions and will provide examples from their own teaching and student mentoring. The practical issues of faculty time constraints, semester schedules, student skill levels, and funding for such projects will also be discussed.

049. Teaching Workshop. Facilitating Student Learning through Class Discussion

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512G, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Jay R. Howard, Butler University Faculty often wish to engage students in class discussion, but sometimes our efforts fall flat and we give up the effort. Why should we seek to engage students? What classroom norms sometimes undermine students’ participation? Which students are most likely to participate and to choose not to participate? How can an instructor manage both the dominant talkers and the non-talkers? We will engage each of these questions utilizing a review of the research to identify ways to structure class discussion to engage students and maximize learning. This workshop will help faculty recognize classroom norms related to participation in discussion and how to redefine the classroom in ways that facilitate students’ active engagement and thereby enhance learning

Saturday

Difference. Miliann Kang, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Methods of Intersectionality. Joya Misra, University of Massachusetts Over the last two decades, intersectionality has emerged as arguably the most significant, paradigm-shifting contribution of feminist theorizing, with many feminist sociologists at the forefront of this pioneering work. At the same time, intersectional theory and research has been critiqued on a number of fronts, and sociological frameworks in particular have been challenged by interdisciplinary debates and approaches. Ironically, the very research that has sought to challenge fixed categories has been taken to task for reifying these very categories, in both qualitative and quantitative research. While much research has focused on race, gender and class, other forms of difference have received less attention, including sexuality, nation, citizenship, and ability. Currently, the next generation of intersectional researchers is mapping out how to incorporate these critiques into concrete research projects. What are the possibilities, limitations and lessons of intersectional scholarship? What kind of methodologies can bridge theoretical critiques with new empirical findings? This panel provides an overview of current intersectional frameworks, situates sociological critiques in conversation with interdisciplinary approaches, and engages with cutting-edge research that is moving intersectionality forward in innovative ways.

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050. Open Refereed Roundtable Session

Saturday, August 12, 2017

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517A, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizers: Walda Katz-Fishman, Howard University Britany Gatewood, Howard University Table 01. Neoliberalism, Racism and Public Policy Table Presider: Robert Donald Francis, Johns Hopkins University The Conditions of the Legitimation Crisis of Global Neoliberalism. Alessandro Bonanno, Sam Houston State University Black-Public, Privatization, and the Segregated Welfare State. Randolph Hohle, SUNY Fredonia Child Support Matters: An Examination of Child Support Polices and Alternatives to Make Them Better. Ron Stewart, SUNYBuffalo State Effects of Marriage and Employment on Well-Being of TANF Participants. Joachim Singelmann, University of Texas-San Antonio; Marlene A. Lee Table 02. Ecological Crisis and Eco-Activism Table Presider: Jesse Card, Howard University Capitalist Growth and Ecological Crisis. Brian Rosenberg, University of Oregon Ecological Citizenship: How Navdanya is Aiming to Create Eco-literate Global Citizens. Angelique Ruiter, Humboldt Universitat zu Berlin Parenting as a Pathway to “Green” Living: A Qualitative Interview Analysis. Deborah Marie Auriffeille, College of Charleston The Reflexively Modern Ecopreneur: An Autoethnographic Lens. Sarah A. Stefanos, University of Wisconsin, Madison Table 03. Environmental Activism, Resilience, and Emotions Table Presider: Sherese Taylor, Howard University Toward Relational Resilience: Connecting Network Capabilities with Performance. James Weston Hale, Colorado State University Doing Good by Feeling Well? Socially Responsible Purchasing and the Experience of Shopping. Ethan D. Schoolman, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey The World is Closing in on Me: Emotions and Environmental (In) Action. Emily Huddart Kennedy, Washington State University; Kari Marie Norgaard, University of Oregon The Role of Negative Emotions in Shaping Response to Environmental Risk: A Cross-national Comparison. Allison Ford, University of Oregon; Kari Marie Norgaard, University of Oregon Table 04. Gender, Race, and Nationality: Resilience and Resistance Table Presider: Zoe Spencer, Virginia State University Gender, Class and Sexuality in Relational Precarity in the Work of Lauren Berlant. Ann Irene Brooks, Bournemouth University I am My Sisters’ Keeper: An Intersectional Analysis of African American Women in Religious Leadership. Cynthia Barbara Bragg, Morgan State University Multiracial Women: Resistance and the Body. Gabrielle Gonzales, University of California Santa Barbara Native American Women’s Community Activism: Personal Experience and Cultural Capital in Collective Identity. Noemi Linares Ramirez, University of California-Irvine Table 05. Political Activism, Organization, and Ideology Avoidance and Engagement in Organizational Responses to Activism. Aaron Horvath, Stanford University Meta-Power, Super PACs and the Use of Political Advertising. Nathan Katz, University of Missouri-Columbia The “Slow Boil” of the Alt Right: How Extremist Groups Benefit from Informality and Decentralization. Elissa Vaitkus,

University of Toledo Trust in Professionals and Political Ideology: Are Conservatives More Trusting of Business Professionals than Liberals? Marshall Schmidt, The University of Oklahoma Table 06. Political Action across Ethnicity, Nation, and Life Politics Table Presider: Curtis Webb, University of Cincinnati Community Organization Involvement and Protest Participation among Young Adult Children of New Immigrants. Chigon Kim, Wright State University Changes in National Pride across Time and Country. Tom W. Smith, National Opinion Research Center Individualism as Political Action: Restructuring the Modernist Model of Life-Politics. Oded Marom, University of Southern California Why Do We Participate in Social Movement Action? A Case of Online Petitions. Afife Idil Akin, State University of New YorkStony Brook Table 07. Community Narratives and Urban Struggles Table Presider: Anjerrika Raishawn Bean, Howard Universitty Told Not Sold: Storytelling and Branding as Strategies for Neighborhood Transformation and Preservation in Detroit. Nelson Travis Saldana, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor The Accessibility Paradox: The Difficulty of Finding Housing with a Disability. James Dalton Stevens, Syracuse University The Ups and Downs of the Elevator Community. Orlee Hauser, University of Wisconsin Oshkosh You’re Not from Around Here: Creating and Maintaining Group Boundaries in a College Town. Jennifer Stevens, Eastern Illinois University Table 08. Education and Teaching: Gender, Nationality, and Class Table Presider: Chantal Annise Hailey, New York University Schools as a Compensation Mechanism: Resilient Students in the United States and Canada. Christina Edmunds, Ohio State University Gender-Based High School Sociology Curriculum and Mexican Students’ Perceptions of Rape Culture, Abuse, and Harassment. Dennis Kass, Northeastern Illinois University/ LVLHS; Jonathan Grimaldo, University of Illinois at Chicago; Daniel Ruiz, University of Illinois at Chicago; Gerardo Flores, University of Illinois at Chicago; Joshua Wyatt, University of Illinois at Chicago The Quantitative Predictors for Teacher Tenure in Texas. Jerry L. Williams, Stephen F. Austin State University; Michelle Williams, Stephen F, Austin State University Table 09. Higher Education, Student Realities, and Teaching Tools Table Presider: Anthony Jerald Jackson, Howard University Food Security and Academic Disruption among College Students. Erica Phillips, Ohio State University; Anne McDaniel, Ohio State University; Alicia Croft, Columbus State Community The Benefits and Challenges of Incorporating Advocacy ServiceLearning in Undergraduate Courses. Fletcher Winston, Mercer University Chasing “Plan A”: Identity Development of First-Generation College Student-Athletes. Alexandra Warner, Independent Scholar Pathways through Education: Examining Educational Trajectories Using Sequence Analysis. Rebecca L. Boylan, University of Georgia

Saturday, August 12, 2017

Weaving a Sense of “Community” among Trans-Local Families in Post-Fukushima. Haruna Miyagawa Fukui, Okayama University Social Change through Food Trends. Sangyoub Park, Washburn University Table 16. Health, Alcohol, and Stress Across Contexts Table Presider: Marie Plaisime, Howard University Alcohol as Interactant: A Test of Three Theories. Adrian Good, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Alcohol Use and Cardiovascular Risk in a Cohort Study of Latino Adults. Sandra P. Arevalo, University of Southern California; Luis Falcon, Northeastern University; Katherine L. Tucker, Northeastern University The Impact of Stress and Depressed Mood on the Health of Mothers of Children with Autism. Paul R. Benson, University of Massachusetts-Boston Table 17. Aging and Health: Contexts and Measurements Table Presider: Frough Saadatmand, Howard University Comparative Study on Administration and Locality for Nursing Facilities in the United States and Japan. Shizuko Katagiri, Kagoshima University Developing an Aging in Place Measure. Joyce Weil, University of Northern Colorado; Rebecca Artzer, University of Northern Colorado Operationalizing Source of Social Support Using Add Health. Tze-Li Hsu, Sam Houston State University; Jin Young Choi, Sam Houston State University; James Stykes, Sam Houston State University Table 18. Mental Health, Religiosity, and Nationality Table Presider: Emerald Jones Forgiveness, Attachment to God, and Mental Health Outcomes in Older U.S. Adults: A Longitudinal Study. Blake Victor Kent, Baylor University; Matt Bradshaw, Baylor University Giving to God: Examining the Effect of Framing Processes on Religious Giving. Amelia Blume, University of Arizona; Justin Knoll, University of Arizona The Effects of Primary and Secondary International Migration on the Mental Health. Shirin Montazer, Wayne State University Plasma PLP Concentration and Depressive Symptomatology, Over Time, in Older Latino Adults. Sandra P. Arevalo, University of Southern California; Luis Falcon, Northeastern University; Katherine L. Tucker, Northeastern University Table 19. Theory and Measurement of Social Life and Knowledge Creation Table Presider: Sarah Wilkins-Laflamme, University of Waterloo The Rise of Rational Choice Theory as a Scientific/Intellectual Movement in Sociology. Steven Larrimore Foy, The University of Texas Rio Grande Valley; Edward A. Tiryakian, Duke University Predicting Participation in a Longitudinal Opt-in Survey. Cody Spence, Temple University The Use and Misuse of Interrater Reliability: A Case Involving the ACC&U Written Communication Rubric. Robert F. Szafran, Stephen F. Austin State University A Crowd Content Analysis Assembly Line: Scaling Up HandCoding with Text Units of Analysis. Nicholas Brigham Adams, University of California, Berkeley Table 20. Race, Migration, and Knowledge Creation Table Presider: Carlos Chapman, Howard University Race, Criminal Justice Contacts, and Health: Stress-Related Disparities in the Carceral State. Courtney Boen, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Saturday

Table 10. Higher Education: Teaching Contexts and Pedagogy Table Presider: Kennedy Turner, University of Michigan Advice for Teaching at a Small, Private Liberal Arts College. Kristjane Nordmeyer, Westminster College; Mark Rubinfeld, Westminster College From Institutional Support to the Practical Dynamics of Research and Teaching: Interdisciplinarity and Job Satisfaction. Amelia Blume, University of Arizona Speed Dating Faculty Session Participant. Elaina Kay Behounek, Mercer University Classifying Non-tenure-track Faculty. Chad Gregory Evans, University of Pennsylvania Table 11. Work and Occupations Across Contexts Table Presider: Tomas E. Encarnacion, U.S. Census Bureau On the Influence of Creativity on Job Satisfaction. Keith McIntosh, Temple University The Political Economy of Platforms and the Salience of Organizational Form. Carla Ilten, University of Illinois at Chicago Re-Examining the Role of Hospital Administrator: An Analysis of Hospital Administration as a Profession. Cory Cronin, Ohio University; Kristin A. Schuller, Ohio University; Doug Bolon, Ohio University Table 12. Crime, Delinquency, and College: Race, Nationality, Sexuality, and Community Table Presider: Hansel Alejandro Aguilar, George Mason University Immigration, Organization-based Resources, and Crime: An Analysis of Latino Neighborhoods in Chicago. Rodrigo D. Martinez Sexual Minorities’ Peer Network Characteristics and Delinquency Across Adolescence. Nayan Ramirez, Pennsylvania State University Racial Politics and Social Policy in Urban Canada. Anne-Marie Louise Livingstone, Johns Hopkins University Table 13. Art, Culture, Symbols, and Society A Lifestyle unto Itself: Reevaluating Class and Status in Arts Consumption. Noah Rankins, University of Notre Dame Athens Street Art – Exploring Tensions in the Field of Practice. Paul C. Fuller, Illinois College Learning to Listen: Textual Value Devices in Auditory Culture. Whitney D. Johnson, University of Chicago The Continuum of Making: What Kits, Craft, and DIY Tell Us About Technology and Artifacts. Steven Sacco, Loyola University Chicago Table 14. Religion and Religiosity: Culture and Contexts Table Presider: Shannell Thomas, Howard University From Leibniz to Lefty: Country Music as Theodicy. John Bernau, Emory University Religious Uncertainty and its effects on the Religiosity of Adolescents and Young Adults. Phil Davignon, Union University Social Character in the Study of Religion. Andrew Craig McNeely, Texas A&M University The Diversity Mandate: Counting the Cost for the Mainline Churches. J. Gary L’Hommedieu, University of Central Florida Table 15. Identity, Status, and Community: Asian Experiences Table Presider: Yukiko Furuya, George Mason University Cross-Cultural Comparisons on Status-Attainment. Keiko Nakao, Tokyo Metropolitan University Transnational identity formation of Japanese immigrants. Yuka Doherty, University of New Mexico

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Session 050, continued Understanding Racial Disparities in Program Completion and Post-Program Recidivism among Drug Court Participants. Lisa M. Shannon, Moorehead State University; Afton Jackson Jones, Morehead State University; Shondrah Tarrezz Nash, Morehead State University; Jennifer C. Newell, Morehead State University; Connie Payne, Kentucky Administrative Office of the Courts Muslim Income Disadvantage in Western Europe. Svenja Kopyciok, Brown University; Hilary Silver, Brown University The Internationalization of Knowledge Creation: A Comparative Analysis of 3 Scientific Disciplines. Crystal Peoples, Duke University

051. Regular Session. Affirmative Action and AntiDiscrimination Policy

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512H, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Daniel Sabbagh, Sciences Po The Defeat of Multiculturalism in Antidiscrimination: Comparing the United States and Europe. Christian Joppke, University of Bern Can Discrimination be Reduced by Inducing Compliance? A Quasi-experiment in Rental Housing Discrimination. PieterPaul Verhaeghe, Ghent University; Koen Van der Bracht, Ghent University Mismatch and Academic Performance at America’s Selective Colleges and Universities. Amy Lutz, Syracuse University; Pamela R. Bennett, University of Maryland, Baltimore County; Rebecca Wang, Syracuse University

052. Regular Session. Children/Youth/Adolescents: Institutions and the State

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 515A, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Sarah M. Ovink, Virginia Tech Presider: Ashley Brooke Barr, State University of New York, Buffalo Coping with Stigma: Experiences and Trajectories of Former Youth in Care. Christine Carey, McMaster University Only Child, Never Child: Vulnerability and Definitions of Rights in Post-Release Services for Unaccompanied Immigrant Children. Breanne L Grace, University of South Carolina; Benjamin Roth, University of South Carolina The Struggle is Real: Conflict as a Social Mobility Mechanism in Schools. Laura M. Callejas, Rutgers University Barring Progress: The Influence of Paternal Incarceration on Families’ Neighborhood Attainment. Christine Leibbrand, University of Washington; Erin Carll, University of Washington; Angela Bruns, University of Washington; Hedwig Eugenie Lee, University of Washington Neighborhood Inequality and the Concentration of Child Welfare Contact During Childhood. Kelley Fong, Harvard University

053. Regular Session. Collective Memory I: Remembering Violent and Conflictual Pasts Palais des congrès de Montréal, 515B, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Chana Teeger, London School of Economics Presider: Chana Teeger, London School of Economics Emerging Narratives by Diasporic Copts in Response to Sectarian Conflict in Egypt. Miray Hany Wadie Philips, University of Minnesota Healing Wounds or Reinstating Divisions? The Paradoxes of Genocide Memorialization. Alejandro Baer, University of Minnesota

Ruptures and Continuities in Collective Memory: Reconstructing the Nation through History Textbooks in Serbia and Croatia. Tamara Pavasovic Trost, University of Ljubljana Stratifying Collective Memory: Remembering and Forgetting of Gender-Based Violence. Nicole Fox, University of New Hampshire Discussant: Jeffrey K. Olick, University of Virginia

054. Regular Session. Continuities and Change in Contemporary Masculinities

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 515C, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Travis Beaver, Flagler College Presider: Travis Beaver, Flagler College Missing Histories: Bringing Men’s Lives Back into The Study of Masculinity Change. Max A. Greenberg, Boston University Using Men’s Narratives of Masculinity Threat to Trace the New Boundaries of Contemporary “Hybrid Masculinity.” Christin L. Munsch, University of Connecticut; Kjerstin Gruys, University of Nevada, Reno Working-class Young Men and Social Mobility in Contemporary Russia: Negotiating Successful Masculinities. Charlie Walker, University of Southampton “I Don’t Think They’d Be Comfortable:” Hegemonic Masculinity and Men’s Queer-Straight Friendships. William R. Rothwell, University of Michigan Discussant: C.J. Pascoe, University of Oregon

055. Regular Session. Culture and Inequality: Social Class and Group Boundaries

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516E, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Ruben A. Gaztambide-Fernandez, Ontario Institute for Studies in Education Presider: Ruben A. Gaztambide-Fernandez, Ontario Institute for Studies in Education A Story of Racial Capitalism: A Dialectics of Place and Imaginaries. Jordanna Chris Matlon, American University Political Socialization of Low-educated Class: A Case of Vocationaltechnical High Schools in Korea. Hye-won Yeon; Namjin Kim, Sogang University Other People’s Children: Relational Contexts for Raising “HighQuality” Children among Chinese Middle-Class Parents. Lily Liang, University of Wisconsin-Madison Separating the Wheat from the Chaff: Fragmentation and Cohesion of Interpersonal Relations in Post-socialist Capitalism. Till Hilmar, Yale University Social Capital as Distinction: The Symbolic Space of Upper-Class Clubs in Milan. Bruno Cousin, Sciences Po; Sebastien Chauvin, University of Lausanne Discussant: Ruben A. Gaztambide-Fernandez, Ontario Institute for Studies in Education

056. Regular Session. Economic Sociology 2: Economic Insecurity

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516A, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Cristobal Young, Stanford University From Paternalism to Precarity: Living the End of the Blue-Collar, Middle Class. Amanda McMillan Lequieu, University of WisconsinMadison Economic Expectations of Young Adults. Nina Bandelj, University of California, Irvine; Yader R. Lanuza, University of California-Irvine Basic Income and Work in Social Context. David Calnitsky, University of Manitoba Income Inequality and State Tax Policy 1980-2010. Rourke Liam

Saturday, August 12, 2017 OBrien, University of Wisconsin; Adam Silver Travis, Harvard University Discussant: Sarah Quinn, University of Washington

057. Regular Session. Marriage and Cohabitation

058. Regular Session. Political Sociology. Sociological Perspectives on Contemporary U.S. Politics

Constructing Oppositional Consciousness: Taaras, a Movement of Women in Sex Work. Mangala Subramaniam, Purdue University; Shama Karkal, Swasti; Kallan Gowda, Swasti Discussant: Glenn Edward Bracey, Villanova University

060. Regular Session. Sociology of Reproduction 5: The Context of Planning and Choosing Pregnancy, Parenthood and Family

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 510A, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Susan Markens, City University of New YorkLehman College A Political-Economic Approach to the Study of Palestinian Fertility Transition. Weeam Hammoudeh, Arab Council for the Social Sciences & Birzeit U Identity Shifts: Understanding Women’s Turning Points in the Procreative Realm. Joanna W. Neville, University of Florida Reproductive Planning Reconsidered: Women’s Incongruent Intentions, Actions, and Feelings about Pregnancy and Family. Lindsay M. Stevens, Rutgers University Does Postpartum Contraceptive Use Vary by Birth Intendedness and Planning Status? Karen Guzzo, Bowling Green State University; Kasey Eickmeyer, Bowling Green State University; Sarah R. Hayford, Ohio State University Discussant: Stacy Tiemeyer, University of Nebraska Lincoln

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516D, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Anthony S. Chen, Northwestern University Parties, Political Coalitions, and the Democratic Party: Making Sense of the 2016 Election. Nancy DiTomaso, Rutgers University Populism as Dog-Whistle Politics: Anti-Elite Discourse and Sentiments toward Minorities in the 2016 Presidential Election. Bart Bonikowski, Harvard University; Yueran Zhang, Harvard University Summon, Shield, and Sword: Demographic Futures and the Politics of Emotion in Latino Civil Rights. Michael Rodríguez-Muñiz, Northwestern University Occupy the Government: Analyzing Presidential and Congressional Discursive Response to Movement Repression. Joshua Mausolf, University of Chicago The Great Recession and Cohort Political Socialization: New Evidence from the GSS 2006 Panel Data. Andrew Wolf, University of Wisconsin-Madison Discussant: Jeff Manza, New York University

061. Regular Session. The Impact of “Talk” in Everyday Life

059. Regular Session. Social Movements

062. Section on Animals and Society. Animals and the Environment

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 510B, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Joyce M. Bell, University of Minnesota Presider: Glenn Edward Bracey, Villanova University The Gendering of Political Disillusionment: A Study of Former Female Violent White Supremacists. Kathleen M. Blee, University of Pittsburgh; Matthew DeMichele, University of Kentucky; Peter Simi, Chapman University; Mehr Latif, University of Pittsburgh Marriage Equality in Georgia: Feeling and Expression Rules in Online and Offline Activism. Arialle Kaye Crabtree, University of Georgia; Patricia Richards, University of Georgia Black Protest in U.S. News Wire Stories 1994-2010: Voices from the Doldrums. Pamela E. Oliver, University of Wisconsin, Madison; Alex Hanna, University of Toronto Righting Race: Trends in the Tolerance of Sexual Minorities Pre- and Post-DOMA. Abigail A. Sewell, Emory University; Yasmiyn Irizarry, University of Texas at Austin

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 510C, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Phillipa K. Chong, McMaster University Data Metaphors: Diving for Objective Truths. Claire D’Elia Maiers, University of Virginia Drawing Boundaries in a Transnational Cultural Field. Why PlaceBased Framing Prevails in Contemporary Art Exhibitions. Olav Velthuis, University of Amsterdam How People Think about Distinction: Using Digital Trace Data to Examine Cultural Hierarchies. Grant Blank, University of Oxford; Victoria D. Alexander, University of London-Goldsmiths; Scott Hale, University of Oxford Interpreting Economic Policymaking: The Role of Restaurants as Condensing Symbol. Kushan Dasgupta, University of Southern California Public Ideas and their Careers. Tim Hallett, Indiana University; Michael Sauder, University of Iowa; Orla Stapleton, Indiana University

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512A, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Michelle Marie Proctor, Madonna University Birding, Citizen Science, and the Environment. Elizabeth Cherry, Manhattanville College Catching ‘Em All: The Significance of the Pokémon GO Phenomenon to Animal Studies. Stephen Patrick Vrla, Michigan State University Debating the Inclusion of Animals in the Urban Farming Movement in Detroit. Michelle Marie Proctor, Madonna University Hydraulic Society and a “Stupid Little Fish”: Toward a Historical Ontology of the Nonhuman. Caleb Richard Scoville, UC Berkeley

Saturday

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516B, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Arielle Kuperberg, University of North Carolina at Greensboro Presider: Arielle Kuperberg, University of North Carolina at Greensboro More Greed or Less Need? The Impact of Legal Marriage on LGBQ Community Life. Abigail Ruth Ocobock, University of Notre Dame Cohabiting Daddies: How Children and Relationship Histories Matter for Marital Plans. Emily Anne Parker, Cornell University Even If We’re Living in a Cardboard Box: Religious Beliefs, Financial Readiness, and Marital Timelines. Patricia Tevington, University of Pennsylvania Relative Employment, Gender Attitudes, and Intimate Partner Victimization among Married, Cohabiting, and Non-Cohabiting Couples. Rena Cornell Zito, Elon University Discussant: Arielle Kuperberg, University of North Carolina at Greensboro

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Saturday

063. Section on Body and Embodiment. Bodies Crossing Borders and Boundaries

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512B, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Sabrina A. Strings, University of California, Irvine Presider: Anima Adjepong, University of Texas Global and Local Media and the Making of an Ethiopian National Icon: Melaku Belay. Hui Niu Wilcox, St. Catherine University Negotiating Humor within Horror: Boundary Work in Handling Body Parts and Dead Bodies. Elroi J. Windsor, Salem College So It’s the Shrooms! Collective Self-experimentation as Solution to Undone Medical Science. Joanna Kempner, Rutgers University; John Bailey, Rutgers University Discussant: Jessica Kizer, University of California, Irvine

064. Section on Collective Behavior and Social Movements. Leadership, Strategy, and Organization in Social Movements Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513B, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Hahrie Han, UCSB Dynamics of “Leaderless” Networked Protest Movements: The Interaction Between Digital Technology, Logistics and Tactical Shifts. Zeynep Tufekci, University of North Carolina Relational Imprinting: Founding Relationships and Movement Trajectories in Three Chinese Environmental Protests. Jean Yenchun Lin, Stanford University The New Right Movement: Leadership and Strategy. Alex DiBranco, Yale University The Organizational Trace of an Insurgent Moment. Adam D. Reich, Columbia University Bringing Leadership Back In. Marshall Ganz, Harvard University; Elizabeth McKenna, UC Berkeley

065. Section on Communication, Information Technologies, and Media Sociology. Race, Social Movements and Digital Media Technologies

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513C, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Jessie Daniels, Hunter College and The Graduate Center-CUNY The Effect of #BlackLivesMatter: The Significance of Communities and Collective Identity. Simon Weffer-Elizondo, Northern Illinois University; Stephanie Delise Jones, University of California, Irvine Hate Speech Online and the Fight for Legal Protection: The Case of Japan. Vivian Shaw, University of Texas at Austin The Master’s Tools Reimagined: Police Militarization and Strategies of Black Digital Resistance. Caliesha Lavonne Comley, Boston College Black Women and the Subversive Occupation of Digital Space. Leslie Jones, University of Pennsylvania

066. Section on Consumers and Consumption. Race, Ethnicity and Inequality in Consumer Culture

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512C, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Juliet B. Schor, Boston College Black American Dreams: An Examination of Black’s Aspirational Consumption. Cassi L. Pittman, Case Western Reserve University Constructing and Contesting the “Holy Land”: Christian Pilgrimage as a Multifaceted Social Phenomenon. Roger Baumann, Yale University Key Changes: Record Store Failure in Chicago, Milwaukee, and Detroit, 1970 – 2010. Thomas Anthony Calkins, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee

Who Owns the Co-op? Race, Class, and Symbolic Boundaries at a Food Co-operative. Sonita Moss, University of Pennsylvania Discussant: Sofya Aptekar, University of Massachusetts-Boston

067. Section on Evolution, Biology, and Society. Sociological Perspectives on Biological and Evolutionary Research and Business Meeting

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513D, 10:30-11:30 a.m. Session Organizer: Colter Mitchell, University of Michigan Presider: Colter Mitchell, University of Michigan Panelists: Bridget Goosby, University of Nebraska- Lincoln Catherine J. Taylor, Indiana University Jacob E. Cheadle, University of Nebraska-Lincoln

068. Section on International Migration Refereed Roundtable Session and Business Meeting

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517B, 10:30-11:30 a.m. Session Organizer: Angela S. Garcia, University of Chicago Table 01. Enforcement and Legal Status Table Presider: Cristian Luis Paredes, University of Texas at Austin The Production of Trans Illegality: Cisnormativity in the U.S. Immigration System. Megan Collier, University of Illinois at Chicago Challenging Immigration Detention in Interdisciplinary Perspective. Michael Flynn, Global Detention Project; Matthew B. Flynn, Georgia Southern University Race, Gender and Social Class Skewing in the Immigration Enforcment and Criminal Justice Systems. Judith Ann Warner, Texas A&M International University; Rohitha Goonatilake, Texas A&M International University “I was just tired of looking for a better life”: Motivations Influencing the Migration Decision. Cassie Hudson, University of North Texas Civic Stratification in the United States: Legal Status and First Generation Immigrant Economic Incorporation. Anna Nicole Kreisberg, Brown University Table 02. Ethnography Table Presider: Ariana Jeanette Valle, University of California-Los Angeles Outlining Global Ethnography in Migration Research. Hasan Mahmud, Northwestern University in Qatar Virtual Communities of Anglo and Spanish Migrants in Chile: A Multiple Case Study. Cristian Alberto Doña Reveco, Universidad Diego Portales, Chile; Yanko Pavicevic, Universidad Diego Portales, Chile An Ethnographic Study of Mexican Immigrants Women’s Biographies. Veronica Montes, Bryn Mawr College Germany’s Integration Politics in Practice: The Early Experience of Chinese-Speaking Highly Skilled Female Family Migrants. Chieh Hsu, University of Heidelberg Table 03. Gender and Migration Table Presider: Katharine Donato, Vanderbilt University Mothers and Moneymakers: Using Gender Norms for Policing Marriage Fraud in U.S. Immigration. Gina Marie Longo, University of Wisconsin-Madison The Impact of Male International Migration on Marital Quality in Rural Nepal. Ellen Compernolle, University of Michigan Staten Island’s Iron Ladies: Gender Role Changes and the Transnational Ripple Effect among Liberian Refugees. Bernadette Ludwig, Wagner College A Mother that Leaves is a Mother that Loves: Temporary Labor

Saturday, August 12, 2017

Reconsidering Migration Transition Theory. Karin A. Johnson, University of California-Riverside Transnational Migration Theory Advanced: A Case Study in Latin America Examining Long Distance Migration. Paul Kasun, Amerindia - Colombia The State Effect at the Border: Avoiding Totalizing Theories of Political Power in Migration Studies. Emine Fidan Elcioglu, University of Toronto Immigration Policy Theory: Thinking Outside the ‘Western Liberal-Democratic’ Box. Katharina Natter, University of Amsterdam Table 09. Policy Table Presider: Irene H.I. Bloemraad, University of California, Berkeley A Study of Immigrants in Guangzhou-the New Destination of International Migration. Aijia Li, Sun Yat-sen University Formal Immigration Policymaking and Immigrant Renewal Strategies in the Rust Belt. Emily A. Shrider, The Ohio State University Affecting Lives: How Winning the U.S. Diversity Visa Impacts DV Migrants Pre-and Post-Migration. Onoso Ikphemi Imoagene, University of Pennsylvania The Enduring Effects of Temporary Integrationist Policy. Luis Romero, The University of Texas at Austin The Policy and Practice of the U.S. Refugee Resettlement Program: Structural Constraints and Consequences. Molly Fee, University of California, Los Angeles Table 10. Race and Ethnicity 1 Table Presider: Jacqueline M. Hagan, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Moving South, but Not Really: Central Virginia, an Unexpected Gateway for African and Caribbean Immigrants. Milton D. Vickerman, University of Virginia Achieving the American Dream: Mexican Immigrant EthnoRacial Identity, Naturalization, and Homeownership. Esther Castillo, UC Irvine Racial and Ethnic Diversity and People’s Attitudes towards Immigrants in the United States. Annette Jacoby, City University of New York-Graduate Center Race and Place: Immigration Enforcement on the U.S.-Mexico Border. Eric Gamino, California State University, Northridge Table 11. Race and Ethnicity 2 Table Presider: Dina G. Okamoto, Indiana University Learning to Care: Class Ambivalence among West African Immigrant Care Workers. Fumilayo Showers, Central Connecticut State University Race and Ethnicity across Borders: Haitian Women in Diaspora. Nikita Carney, University of California - Santa Barbara I’m not Spanish, I’m from Spain: Spaniards’ Bifurcated Ethnicity and the Boundaries of Whiteness and Hispanicity. Jose G. Soto-Marquez, New York University The Racialization of Syrian Refugees in National Newspapers in Jordan and Turkey. Dalia Abdelhady, Lund University Table 12. Refugees and Asylees Table Presider: David Scott FitzGerald, University of California-San Diego Berlin’s Vietnamese Wall: Political Resocialization and Division among Immigrants and Refugees in Berlin. Phi Hong Su, University of California, Los Angeles Muslim-immigrant Integration in Europe: Muslim Immigrant Exclusion in the Context of the European Refugee Crisis.

Saturday

Migration and Migrant Motherhood. Valerie A. FranciscoMenchavez, San Francisco State University Parental Transmission of Gender Ideology in Adolescence: Evidence from Immigrants and Natives in Europe. Patricia A. McManus, Indiana University; Tamara van der Does, Indiana University; Muna Adem, Indiana University Table 04. High-skilled Migration and Entrepreneurship Table Presider: Jody Agius Vallejo, University of Southern California Israeli and Indian Infotech Migrants in Silicon Valley and Beyond. Steven J. Gold, Michigan State University Tentative Professionals: The Trailing Spouses of Elite Scholars. Ran Keren, Northeastern University Indian IT Workers in USA and Their Transnational Practices. Uma Sarmistha, University of Florida Russian Transnational Entrepreneurs in Toronto: How the Global Capitalist Economy Influenced Entrepreneurship. Alexander Shvarts, Humber Table 05. Immigrant Youth and Education Table Presider: Leah Caroline Schmalzbauer, Amherst College Without Parents and Papers: The Migration of Undocumented, Unaccompanied Youth to Los Angeles. Stephanie L. Canizales, University of Southern California Privileged, but Excluded: Intersecting inequalities among 1.5-generation Brazilians in Massachusetts. Kara Cebulko, Providence College How do Immigrant Visa Categories Shape the Children of Immigrants’ Education? Rennie Lee, University of Melbourne The Effect of Legal Status on Educational Outcomes of College Students. Holly E. Reed, Queens College, CUNY; Amy Hsin, Queens College, CUNY The Distinct Growth: Early Academic Trajectories of Children of U.S. Immigrants. Aspen Chen, University of Connecticut Table 06. Incorporation 1 Table Presider: Jennifer Lee, University of California, Irvine Constructing Germany, Germans, and Immigrants in National Integration Courses. Daniel Williams, St. Catherine University Problems of Measurement: Gay Community Attachment as an Additional Measure of Assimilation. Hubert Izienicki, Purdue University Northwest Different Pathways to Labour Market Integration by Motivation. Wouter Zwysen, University of Essex Protective Citizenship: Naturalizing Under Threat in the United States, 2000-2016. Lauren Duquette-Rury, UCLA; Carla Salazar Gonzalez, UCLA; Zhenxiang Chen, UCLA; Mirian Giovanna Martinez-Aranda, UCLA Social Status among Latino Immigrants in Durham, North Carolina. Angie Nathaly Ocampo, University of Pennsylvania Table 07. Incorporation 2 Table Presider: Rawan Arar Impact of Immigration Policies on Syrian Refugees’ Integration in Canada, Germany, Turkey, and the United States. Aysegul Balta Ozgen, State University of New York-Buffalo The Weight of Being Unauthorized: Legal Status and Obesity among Immigrant Latinas in Los Angeles. James Dean Bachmeier, Temple University; Claire E. Altman, University of Missouri Women’s Migration to Saudi Arabia from Turkey and Their Integration Process: The Case of Hatay. Sevsem Cicek-Okay, University of Cincinnati Table 08. Migration Theory Table Presider: Susan K. Brown, University of California-Irvine International Migration, Development, and Immigration Policy:

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Saturday

Session 068, continued Daniel Nicholas Ramirez Smith, Pennsylvania State University Refugees, Migrants, Asylum Seeker: Challenges to Refugee Policy in the Syrian Refugee Crisis. Laura J. Heideman, Northern Illinois University Social Integration and Identity Construction Problems of Urban Refugees in Istanbul. Erhan Kurtarir, Yildiz Technical University; Elif Bali Kurtarir, Yildiz Technical University Population Exchange and Ethno-Religious Fear: the EU-Turkey Agreement on Refugees in Historical Perspective. Gregory Goalwin, University of California, Santa Barbara Table 13. Social Inclusion and Exclusion Table Presider: Amada Armenta, University of Pennsylvania Social Integration of North Korean Migrants in South Korea. InJin Yoon, Korea University Social Exclusion and Migration: A Case Study of Caste in Nepal. Prem Bhandari, University of Michigan; Nathalie Williams, University of Washington; Loritta Chan, University of Washington A Bifurcated Welcome? Examining the Willingness to Include Seasonal Agricultural Workers in the Host Community. Paul Pritchard, University of Toronto Targeting Local Mothers and Ethnic Others: Immigrant Incorporation Policies and Social Exclusion in Helsinki and Paris. Linda Haapajärvi, École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales Displaced at “Home”: 1.5-generation Immigrants Navigating Membership after Returning to Mexico. Alexis Silver, Purchase College - SUNY Table 14. Stratification and Transnationalism Table Presider: Min Zhou, University of California, Los Angeles The Impact of Social Capital on Savings of Mexican Migrants in the U.S. during NAFTA. Diego Contreras-Medrano, University of Oregon Motivations for Remittances. Giselle Greenidge, University of North Texas The Limits of Extra-Territorial Transnationalism: The Case of Mexico. Carol L. Schmid, Guilford Technical Community College An Intergenerational Migration Experience: Social Mobility among Return Migrants and their Families in Mexico. Janelle Ashley Viera, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill Outwards Migration of Island-Born Puerto Ricans: Baby Boomers and Millenials. Mario Mercado-Diaz, Rutgers University Table 15. Well-being, Health and Emotion Table Presider: Angela S. Garcia, University of Chicago Applying Data Science technique, Sentiment Analysis and Qualitative to Assess Post-Settlement Emotions of Migrants. Srijita Sarkar, University of Saskatchewan; Sarah Knudson, St. Thomas More College, University of Saskatchewan; Abhik Ray, Washington State University Big, Fat Paycheck: An Australian Tale of Wages Differentials by Nativity Accounting for Body Size. Natalia Cornelia Malancu, Universitat Pompeu Fabra Navigating Liminality: Emotion Work among DACamented Young Adults from Mixed-status Families. Girsea Martinez, University of South Florida Costs of Unemployment on the Immigrant Male Labour Force’s Life Satisfaction in the United Kingdom, 2009-2015. Jing Shen, University of Mannheim; Irena Kogan, University of Mannheim

069. Section on Medical Sociology. Gender, Social Ties, and Health—a Double-Edged Sword? Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513F, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Patricia A. Thomas, Purdue University Presider: Patricia A. Thomas, Purdue University Psychological Distress Contagion in Same-Sex and Different-Sex Marriages. Rachel Leigh Behler, Cornell University; Rachel Donnelly, University of Texas at Austin; Debra Umberson, University of Texas at Austin The Caregiving Dyad: Does Caregivers’ Appraisal of Caregiving Matter for Care Recipient Health? Teja Pristavec, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Gender Differences in the Effects of Support Exchanges on Psychological Well-being. Christy LaShaun Erving, University of North Carolina at Charlotte; Amy Irby-Shasanmi, University of West Georgia Social Capital and Psychological Well-Being of Young Adults: A Study of College Students in China. Gina Lai, Hong Kong Baptist University; Odalia Ho Wong, Hong Kong Baptist University The Psychological and Productive Value of Social Relationships: The Social Networks of Newly Resettled Refugees. Richard Neil Greene, University of New Mexico

070. Section on Political Economy of the World-System Refereed Roundtable Session and Business Meeting

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520A, 10:30-11:30 a.m. Session Organizers: Marilyn Grell-Brisk, Universite de Neuchatel Samantha K. Fox, Binghamton University Table 01. Capitalism and Crisis A World of Vampires? Exploring the Geography of Financialization. Matthew Soener, The Ohio State University Dispossessions in Historical Capitalism: Expansion or Exhaustion of the System? Daniel Bin, University of Brasilia How to Get Away with Murder in Russia: Population-based Survey Experiment. Elena Sirotkina, Higher School of Economics; Margarita Zavadskaya Sacred Markets: Neoliberalism and Its Religious Foundations in the United States. Joshua Daniel Tuttle, George Mason University Scarcity Capitalism: A Boost for Authoritarian Regimes? Antonio Gelis-Filho, Fundação Getúlio Vargas - eaesp Table 02. Development Presider: Andrew N. Le, UCLA Embedded Aid: Do Donor and Recipient Connectedness to Global Networks Matter for Foreign Aid Allocation? Michaela Kathleen Curran, University of California at Riverside; Ronald Kwon Interrogating the China Model of Development. Alvin Y. So, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology; Yin-wah Chu, Hong Kong Baptist University Generalized and Particularized Trust: Association with Attitudes towards Welfare-state. Pui Yin Cheung, Indiana University Bloomington Table 03. Environment Presider: Alessandro Morosin, UC Riverside California’s Neoliberal Trajectory: Crisis, Environmental Injustice and Water Banking. David Champagne, University of British Columbia Explaining Labor Welfare in Southeast Asia: Following Paternalistic Labor Relation in Rubber Plantations. Rahardhika Arista Utama, Northwestern University

Saturday, August 12, 2017

071. Section on Race, Gender, and Class. Rethinking Intersectionality: Co-formations, Articulations, Assemblages

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513E, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Evelyn Nakano Glenn, University of California, Berkeley Presider: Evelyn Nakano Glenn, University of California, Berkeley Panelists: Paola Bacchetta, University of California Berkeley Sirma Bilge, Université de Montréal Roderick Ferguson, University of Illinois-Chicago Discussant: Evelyn Nakano Glenn, University of California, Berkeley

072. Section on Sociology of Development Refereed Roundtable Session and Business Meeting

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520B, 10:30-11:30 a.m. Session Organizer: Alexander Kentikelenis, Trinity College Table 01. Aspects of the Developmental State Defining the Rules of the Game: How Actors Contest and Shape Developmental Policies in Urban India. Jamie Lynn McPike, Brown University Embeddedness and Connectedness: How Does Political Connection affect NGOs’ Development-pursuing in China? Luo Jing, Tsinghua University Programmatic Configurations for the 21st Century Developmental State in Urban Brazil. Christopher Laurence Gibson, Simon Fraser University Putting Leadership under the Spotlight: Assessing Local Political Leaders’ Influence on Regional Development in China. Ling Zhu, Stanford University; Jianhua Ge, Renmin University of China States, Dependence, and Development: A Cross-National Study of Oil- and Mineral-dependent Developing Countries. Zophia Edwards, Providence College Table 02. Gender and Development - International Context Table Presider: Manisha Desai, University of Connecticut Hungry for Equality: A Longitudinal Analysis of Women’s Legal Rights and Food Security in Developing Countries. Aarushi Bhandari, State University of New York-Stony Brook; Rebekah Burroway, State University of New York-Stony Brook International Women’s Nongovernmental Organizing, Activism, and Democracy. Heidi E. Rademacher, State University of New York-Stony Brook Gender and Christian Development. Amy Michelle Reynolds, Wheaton College

Table 03. Gender and Development - National Context Table Presider: Rina Agarwala, Johns Hopkins University Activist, Entrepreneur, or Caretaker: Negotiating Varieties of Women’s Development. Mary-Collier Wilks, University of Virginia Fractured Modernization: Cultural and Structural Predictors of Attitudes on Gender Equality. Heather M. Gerling, Texas Woman’s University; William Ash-Houchen, Texas Woman’s University; Celia C. Lo, Texas Woman’s University Buying Change? Intersections of Social Capital, Gender, Empowerment, and Development in Fair Trade Coffee Cooperatives. Rebecca Anne Kruger, Columbia University The Gendered Dimensions of Resource Extractivism in Argentina’s Soy Boom. Amalia Leguizamon, Tulane University Domestic Violence and Social Change: Feminist Informal Justice Systems in India and Bangladesh. Fauzia Erfan Ahmed, Miami University, Ohio; Jyotsana Parajuli, Miami University, Ohio; Anna-Lucia Feldman, Miami University, Ohio Reflecting on the Role of Rakhaine Women through the Arts: A Case Study from Bangladesh. Hannah L. Poon Table 04. Welfare and Development Table Presider: Joseph A. Harris, Boston University Towards a Sociology of Migrants’ Remitting. Hasan Mahmud, Northwestern University in Qatar Where there is no Doctor, Community Health Workers and the Right to Health. Lillian Walkover, UCSF “Care Wage Gap” in China’s Transitional Economy. Shengwei Sun, University of Maryland, College Park Horizontal Inequality, Economic Growth, and Poverty Reduction in Developing and Transitional Economies. Kevin Doran, Saint Anselm College Table 05. Trade and Global Governance Table Presider: Matthew C. Mahutga, University of California at Riverside Caught between Winning and Learning: Governance and Knowledge Production through International Development Evaluation Systems. Emily Springer, University of Minnesota For Free Trade: A Comparison of the Demographic Factors Associated with Support for Import Restrictions. Benjamin Liam Peters How Increasing Globalization Leads to Higher Corruption in OECD Countries. Ali Madanipour, Cameron University; Michael Franklin Thompson, University of North Texas Table 06. Labor and Social Mobility - Local Perspectives Table Presider: Matthew R. McKeever, Haverford College Debating the Bargaining Power of Petty Producers in Agricultural Commodity Chains in China. Shumeng Li, Cornell University Educational Stratification by Race and Ethnicity in Brazil: A Focus on Indigenous Peoples. Aida Villanueva, University of Texas at Austin Globalization and Social Class in Turkey, 1980-2015. Yunus Kaya, Istanbul University Mobile (In)security? Exploring the Realities of Mobile Phone Use in Conflict Areas. Apryl A. Williams, Texas A&M University; Ben Tkach, Center on Conflict and Development Why Korea Becamea Dystopia: Downward Mobility and Collective Frustration in Precarious South Korea. Myung Ji Yang, University of Hawaii at Manoa Table 07. Labor and Social Mobility - Transnational Experience Does a Rising Tide Lift All Boats? Liberalization and Real Incomes

Saturday

Resisting Mining in Mexico’s Special Economic Zone: Renewed Ethnic Identity as a Motivation High-Risk Activism. Alessandro Morosin, UC Riverside Examining Intersectionality in the Movement in Defense of Life in Guatemala. Samantha K. Fox, Binghamton University Table 04. Organizations and Health Intergovernmental Organizations and the Diffusion and Consolidation of Democracy, 1972-2008. Lori Diane Smith, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de Mexico The Integration and Centralization of the Intergovernmental Organization Network, 1919–2017. Alexis Antonio Alvarez, University of California-Riverside Individual Public Attitudes towards Financing of Public Health Care Systems: Self-Interest, Deservingness, Altruism and Ideology. Ariel Azar, Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile; Luis Maldonado

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Saturday

Session 072, continued

075. Theory Section. How to Publish in Theory

in Advanced Industrial Societies. Roy Kwon, University of La Verne Governance and Climate-Related Vulnerabilities in the Acadian Coastal Communities of New Brunswick. Omer Chouinard, University of Moncton Policy Trajectories of Students’ Aid: A Comparative Analysis of Canada and the USA (1980-2016). Mounia Drissi Unearthing ‘Dead Capital’: Heirs’ Property Prediction in Two Southern Counties. Cassandra Johnson Gaither; Stanley Zarnoch, U.S. Forest Service Table 08. Land Rights and Urban Issues Table Presider: Matthew R. Sanderson, Kansas State University Can Community Mobilization Improve Government Service Delivery? Homestead Land Rights in Bihar, India. Andre Joshua Nickow, Northwestern University India’s Land Acquisition Problem: A Quantitative Analysis. Michael Levien, Johns Hopkins University; Smriti Upadhyay, Johns Hopkins University Seizing Participation: How Urban Movements Reshape Neoliberal Housing Provision in Chile and Brazil. Carter M. Koppelman, University of California-Berkeley

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512E, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Neil Gross, Colby College Panelists: Elisabeth S. Clemens, University of Chicago Mustafa Emirbayer, University of Wisconsin at Madison Omar A. Lizardo, University of Notre Dame Eric I. Schwartz, Columbia University

073. Section on Sociology of Education. Ethnoracial and Gender Identities

076. Plenary Session. The Progressive Neo-Liberal Challenge to the Politics of Distribution and Recognition

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513A, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Amy Gill Langenkamp, University of Notre Dame Presider: Pat Rubio Goldsmith, Texas A&M University The Construction and Consequences of Racially Segregated Peer Groups in Elementary School. Karen Phelan Kozlowski, University of Southern Mississippi The Origins of the Racial Gap in School Suspension and Expulsion. Jayanti Johanna Owens, Brown University; Sara S. McLanahan, Princeton University Assessing the Oppositional Culture Explanation among Mexicanorigin Students. Denise Ambriz, Indiana University-Bloomington Peers, Belonging, and Family: Identity Work among Black Students in the Transition to College. Amy C. Wilkins, University of Colorado-Boulder; Jennifer Ann Pace, University of ColoradoBoulder Examining the Factors that Predict Female Students’ Occupational Plans in STEM. Catherine Riegle-Crumb, University of TexasAustin; Tatiane Russo-Tait, University of Texas-Austin

074. Section on Sociology of Emotions. Emotions in Institutions

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512D, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Simone Ispa-Landa, Northwestern University Presider: Simone Ispa-Landa, Northwestern University A Labor of Love? How Healthcare Providers Manage Emotion Norms Within Conflicting Professional Expectations. Stef M. Shuster, Appalachian State University; Grayson Alexander Bodenheimer, Appalachian State University Worries, Fears and Hopes: Construing and Mobilizing Emotions in Financial Education. Daniel Maman, Ben Gurion University of the Negev; Zeev Rosenhek, The Open University of Israel Optimism and Political Participation. Kristen Schultz Lee, University at Buffalo, SUNY Goodness, Guilt, and Global Citizenship: Development Volunteers Feeling Inequality. Sophia Boutilier, Stony Brook University Discussant: Sara E. Thomas, Northwestern University

11:30 a.m.

Meetings

Section on Evolution, Biology, and Society Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513D, 11:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Section on International Migration Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517B, 11:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Section on Political Economy of the World-System Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520A, 11:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Section on Sociology of Development Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520B, 11:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m.

12:30 p.m.

Sessions

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517D, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Michèle Lamont, Harvard University Presider: Michèle Lamont, Harvard University From Progressive Neoliberalism to Reactionary Populism? Redistribution, Recognition and the Crisis of Hegemony. Nancy Fraser, The New School Why Rising Inequality Also Harms the Wealthy. Robert H. Frank, Cornell University How Inequality Weakens our Economy and Divides our Society. Joseph Stiglitz, Columbia University Discussant: Peter A. Hall, Harvard University This plenary session tackles questions related to distribution and recognition in the context of growing inequality. As a famous debate between political philosopher Nancy Fraser and Axel Honneth acknowledges, there have often been tensions between the ‘class politics’ associated with the distribution of resources and the ‘identity politics’ associated with recognition. Under some circumstances, access to resources (distribution) may be contingent on recognition (of groups as full members of the community); in other cases, the salience of group identity may diminish commitments to redistribution. Speakers will revisit this debate by reflecting on how progressive neo-liberalism connects with populism to reconfigure distribution and recognition. Two economists will also discuss the negative impact of growing inequality on the well-being of specific groups as well as collective well-being. This session is supported by the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research (CIFAR).

2:30 p.m.

Meetings

2018 Distinguished Career Award for the Practice of Sociology Palais des congrès de Montréal, 523B, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Committee on Committees Palais des congrès de Montréal, 523A, 2:30-6:10 p.m.

Saturday, August 12, 2017 Editors of ASA Publications Palais des congrès de Montréal, 524A, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Student Forum Advisory Panel Palais des congrès de Montréal, 524B, 2:30-4:10 p.m.

2:30 p.m.

Sessions

077. Presidential Panel. ASA Town Hall: Sociology’s Response to Trump

078. Thematic Session. Apocalypse Now: The Rise and Resonance of Dystopic Imaginaries

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511A, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Michael Rodríguez-Muñiz, Northwestern University Presider: Michael Rodríguez-Muñiz, Northwestern University Panelists: Andreu Domingo, University of Barcelona John R. Hall, University of California-Davis Ruha Benjamin, Princeton University Discussant: Ann Mische, University of Notre Dame Contemporary public discourse has become inundated with apocalyptic and doomsday narratives about the future. These narratives instigate and intensify anxieties and fears about environmental catastrophes, economic depressions, ethnoracial demographic invasions, global warfare, and biological disasters. Dystopic imaginaries are, to be sure, not unique to our present, but their pronounced rise and resonance over the past several decades demands sociological and social scientific interrogation. Building on growing scholarly interest in “imagined futures,” this panel brings together leading thinkers from sociology and neighboring fields to discuss and debate the emergence and effects of dystopias. From various angles—substantive, methodological, and theoretical— panelists will shed light on the construction, circulation, and consumption of dystopic imaginaries across different national and international contexts. What factors and dynamics have contributed to the global proliferation of apocalyptic narratives? How does the discursive content and narrative structure of dystopias differ or overlap? What sorts of political actions and affiliations are dystopias provoking, and how should we theorize the link between such imaginaries, power, and inequality?

079. Thematic Session. Cultural Categories, Political Power and Social Closure: Frontiers of Theory and Research Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511C, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Andreas Wimmer, Columbia University Presider: Andreas Wimmer, Columbia University Panelists: Deirdre Bloome, University of Michigan

Greta R. Krippner, University of Michigan Andreas Wimmer, Columbia University Ellis Monk, University of Chicago Discussant: Andreas Wimmer, Columbia University This panel explores how culture (templates of legitimacy, organizational blue prints, notions of dignity, etc.) influence how political actors gain and loose power and what the consequences are for structures of inequality in a society, including inequality in prestige, power, and economic resources. Conversely, political strategies and relationships can influence which cultural patterns are adopted and taken-for-granted, again with consequences for patterns of inequality. The panel introduces new theoretical approaches and empirical research strategies to disentangle this “dialectical” relationship between culture, politics, and social inequality.

080. Thematic Session. Culture Meets Criminology: Cultural Approaches to the Study of Crime and Punishment Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511B, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizers: Josh Guetzkow, Hebrew University Matthew Clair, Harvard University Panelists: Lois Presser, University of Tennessee Joachim J. Savelsberg, University of Minnesota Josh Guetzkow, Hebrew University Ron Levi, University of Toronto As criminology has established itself as a discipline in its own right, it has also erected disciplinary borders. Nowhere can this be seen more clearly than in the failure of developments in cultural sociology to penetrate criminological research. This panel will examine the current state of cultural theorizing in criminology and discuss how theoretical advances in cultural sociology over the past thirty years can help us to rethink and revitalize the study of crime and punishment. Invited panelists will discuss how their research shines a unique cultural focus on various aspects of crime and punishment: how culture interacts with neighborhood context to produce varying rates of crime and violence, the role of culture in courtroom dynamics and sentencing outcomes, how culture influences the process of re-entry, and what role culture has played in the development of tough-on-crime policies. We will also engage in an agenda-setting discussion of where and how to employ the tools of cultural sociology in future research.

081. Author Meets Critics Session. Legalizing LGBT Families: How the Law Shapes Parenthood (New York University Press, 2015) by Amanda K. Baumle and D’Lane R. Compton Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511F, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Abigail Ruth Ocobock, University of Notre Dame Presider: Emily Kazyak, University of Nebraska-Lincoln Critics: Brian Powell, Indiana University Mary Bernstein, University of Connecticut Corinne Reczek, The Ohio State University Authors: Amanda Kathleen Baumle, University of Houston D’Lane R. Compton, University of New Orleans

082. Regional Spotlight Session. Free Trade Agreements, Governance Schemes and Municipal Democracy

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514A, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Dorval Brunelle, Université du Québec à Montréal Presider: Dorval Brunelle, Université du Québec à Montréal Suburban Governance and Democracy of City-Regions. Pierre Hamel, Université de Montréal; Roger Keil, York University

Saturday

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517D, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Michèle Lamont, Harvard University Panelists: Nancy Kidd, American Sociological Association Eduardo Bonilla-Silva, Duke University Akos Rona-Tas, University of California, San Diego Ruth Milkman, CUNY Graduate Center Michèle Lamont, Harvard University This town hall meeting will inform our members of the various ways in which ASA and affiliated organizations have been responding to the various challenges to our discipline emerging from the Trump Administration. Panelists will also share their personal views on valuable and effective responses on the part of sociologists. Finally, they will engage with ASA members to discuss these challenges and current and future responses.

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Session 082, continued Comparing Cities/Towns along the NAFTA-feeding Trade Corridors. Peter V. Hall, Simon Fraser University; Margarita Camarena Luhrs, National Autonomous University of Mexico The Halifax Metro Region and Free Trade Agreements. Claudia de Fuentes, Saint Mary’s University Discussant: Francesco Duina, Bates College

Saturday

083. Departmental Management and Leadership Workshop: Liberal Learning and the Sociology Major: Connecting the Major to Employment Outcomes Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516D, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Jeffrey Chin, Le Moyne College Leader: Jeffrey Chin, Le Moyne College Co-Leaders: Mary Scheuer Senter, Central Michigan University Kathleen Lowney, Valdosta State University Sponsored by the Liberal Learning and the Sociology Major, 3rd Edition Task Force. This workshop will introduce the newly released 3rd edition and help departments consider its recommendations for creating stronger links between employment outcomes and the major. (third of three-part symposium)

084. Professional Development Workshop. Addressing Incivility in the Classroom: Effective Strategies for Faculty

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516B, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Chavella T. Pittman, Dominican University Leader: Chavella T. Pittman, Dominican University Classroom incivility refers to student behaviors that disrupt the learning environment. They can range from texting in class to outright intimidation or threats. Regardless of the severity of or motivation for the classroom incivility, research suggests they are on the rise. Unfortunately, faculty may not be prepared to deal with them. This is particularly troubling for marginalized faculty who are more frequently the targets of student incivility. In this workshop, participants will learn about faculty’s (especially those with marginalized statuses) experiences with student incivility. They will also learn about the potential consequences for faculty of unchecked classroom incivilities. Most importantly, participants will learn and practice strategies they can use to address problematic student behaviors.

085. Policy and Research Workshop. Applying for National Institutes of Health Funding Announcements Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512B, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Shobha Srinivasan, National Cancer Institute Leader: Shobha Srinivasan, National Cancer Institute Panelists: Michael L. Spittel, NICHD Chloe E. Bird, RAND Valerie L. Durrant, National Institutes of Health The purpose of the training session is to assist sociologists in approaches and methods in getting NIH support. The session will provide an overview/goals of NIH funding opportunities; present information on pitfalls in applications; and give an overview of the scientific review process. There are many opportunities that are ripe for the insights, perspectives, and expertise of social scientists--but many in the discipline think of NIH as narrowly focused on clinical or biomedical definitions of health. Did you know, for example, that there are several efforts and opportunities at the NIH that are looking for more sophisticated means of capturing residential histories,

neighborhood effects, and social context? There is even a Program Announcement that is searching for demonstrable effect of population level interventions that have group level impact. These are all issues that line up directly with the social sciences! The time for sociology at the NIH has never been greater--as the scientific issues that are important to the agency are clearly showing, through the literature, a need to integrate both the biological and the social to provide clear answers to complicated problems. The session will also highlight experiences of people who have gone through this process and have been successfully funded Additionally, the session will cover some areas of specific interest to the National Institutes of Health institutes and centers and also provide an overview of the review process. Learning objectives: 1. To provide guidance on the NIH funding announcements 2. To provide an overview of the requirements of the funding announcements 3. To enable potential applicants to compete successfully for awards under these announcements

086. Teaching Workshop. Connecting the Undergraduate Sociology Major Curriculum to Greater Career Readiness at Graduation

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512E, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Nancy A. Greenwood, Indiana University Kokomo In this workshop intended for faculty interested in curriculum development and change and/or ways to increase sociology majors will look at ways of making small or large changes to existing sociology program curriculum to assist students to be better prepared to do and find work in the local or statewide employment structure, especially in the non-profit and government sectors, but also in business. We will discuss options for curricular design, specific courses to help students see these opportunities, tweaking course content, service learning and internship opportunities, supporting students’ presentations at professional meetings, and the option of accrediting your program by the Commission for Accreditation for Applied & Clinical Programs in Sociology (CAPACS). We will offer some helpful handouts. Participants are encouraged to bring their questions or issues for discussion.

087. Graduate Programs in Sociology Poster Session

Palais des congrès de Montréal, Hall 220C, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Jaime Hecht, American Sociological Association See online program or program app for list of participating schools.

088. Regular Session. Advances in Quantitative Methods

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512F, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Geoffrey Thomas Wodtke, University of Toronto Presider: Andrew Miles, University of Toronto Heterogeneity’s Ruses: The Impact of Selection on Dynamics of Health Disparities and Life Expectancy. Hui Zheng, The Ohio State University; Siwei Cheng, New York University New Approaches to Age-Period-Cohort Models in the Social Sciences. Ethan Fosse, Princeton University; Christopher Winship, Harvard University The Divergence Index: A Decomposable Measure of Segregation and Inequality. Elizabeth Roberto, Princeton University When Should Researchers Use Inferential Statistics When Analyzing Data on Full Populations? John Robert Warren, University of Minnesota; Elizabeth Wrigley-Field, University of Minnesota; Liying Luo, The Pennsylvania State University; Jim Saliba, University of Minnesota Discussant: Jenna Nobles, University of Wisconsin, Madison

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089. Regular Session. Asian and Asian America

090. Regular Session. Children/Youth/Adolescents: Health, Bodies, and Well-being

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512G, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Sarah M. Ovink, Virginia Tech Presider: Megan Nanney, Virginia Tech Child Obesity and the Interaction of Family and Neighborhood Socioeconomic Context. Ashley Wendell Kranjac, Rice University; Rachel Tolbert Kimbro, Rice University; Justin Denney, Rice University Sex and Education: Does the Onset of Sex during Adolescence Lead to Bad Grades? Anthony Paik, University of MassachusettsAmherst; Tanya Rouleau Whitworth, University of MassachusettsAmherst The Transmission of Social Class and Health through Cultural Health Capital. Stefanie Mollborn, University of Colorado Boulder; Bethany Rigles, University of Colorado Boulder; Jennifer Ann Pace, University of Colorado Boulder Concerted Cultivation, Social Capital, and Cognitive Gains in Childhood: Causal Evidence from the United States. Thomas Laidley, New York University; Dalton Conley, Princeton University

091. Regular Session. Citizenship: Shifting Grounds of Entitlement

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512H, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Sophia Woodman, University of Edinburgh Presider: Sophia Woodman, University of Edinburgh Affective Citizenship: Rethinking Ethnic Belonging. Laavanya Kathiravelu, Nanyang Technological University Bringing Citizenship to Market: How to Sell a Quasi-Sacred Status. Kristin Surak, SOAS, University of London Managing Risk, Pursuing Opportunities: Immigration, Citizenship, and Security in Canada. Yukiko Tanaka, University of Toronto Discussant: Christian Joppke, University of Bern

092. Regular Session. Collective Memory II: The Aesthetics and Materiality of Memory Palais des congrès de Montréal, 515B, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Chana Teeger, London School of Economics Presider: Bin Xu, Emory University A Living Place: On Atmosphere and Memory in Home Museums. Vered Vinitzky-Seroussi, Hebrew University of Jerusalem; Irit Dekel, Humboldt University of Berlin

Spaces of Memory: Socialist East Germany Remembered through Food. Melanie Lorek, Graduate Center, City University New York Walking through Memory: An Architectural Phenomenology of Collective Memory at Memorials. Stephanie Peña-Alves, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Contested Memories: Painting the Landscape of Brotherhood and Division in Post-Conflict Ambon, Indonesia. Kadek Wara Urwasi, Northwestern University Discussant: Christina Simko, Williams College

093. Regular Session. Deviance and Social Control

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514C, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Michaela Soyer, Hunter College Outlaw State of Mind: Normalizing Criminal Justice Involvement through Socio-Criminal Background. Heili Pals, Texas A&M University; Richard D. Abel, Texas A&M University; Xavier Serna, Texas A&M University; Kimberly Harvey, Texas A&M University; Alma Trevino-Garza, Texas A&M University Digital Cultures of Control and the Field of Online Crime Reporting. Sarah Esther Lageson, Rutgers University Jail Talk: Family Experiences of Incarceration in Rural America. Allison Dwyer Emory, Cornell University The Vulnerability of Formerly Incarcerated Populations: How Returning Prisoners Manage their “Former Prisoner” Status. Andrea M. Leverentz, University of Massachusetts Boston

094. Regular Session. Fertility

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 515A, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Karen Guzzo, Bowling Green State University Presider: Kelly Balistreri, Bowling Green State University Attitudinal Change and Contraceptive Use: Development of Shared Cultural Models of Fertility. Emily A. Marshall, Franklin & Marshall College Mutual Influence? Gender, Partner Pregnancy Desires, Fertility Intentions, and Birth Outcomes in U.S. Heterosexual Couples. Colleen Ray, University of Nebraska-Lincoln; Sela Harcey, University of Nebraska-Lincoln; Julia McQuillan, University of Nebraska-Lincoln; Arthur L. Greil, Alfred University The Impact of Women’s Education on Third Births in the United States. Emma Zang, Duke University The Impacts of Maternity Protective Leaves on Fertility Hazards in South Korea. Hyun Sik Kim, Kyung Hee University Discussant: Karina M. Shreffler, Oklahoma State University

095. Regular Session. Gender, Inequality, and Work

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 515C, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizers: Catherine J. Taylor, Indiana University Christin L. Munsch, University of Connecticut Presider: Youngjoo Cha, Indiana University Education and Wage Gender Gaps by Birth Cohort in Twelve Countries. Louis Chauvel, University of Luxembourg; Anne Hartung, University of Luxembourg; Eyal Bar-Haim, IRSEI Educational Advantage and the Marriage Wage Premium. Amanda A. Mireles, Stanford University The Gendered Effect of Incarceration on Wages. Brianna Remster, Villanova University; Melissa Hodges, Villanova University When Do Firms Discriminate? Evidence for Discrimination in Job Assignment and Pay Determination at Japanese Firms. Hilary J. Holbrow, Cornell University

Saturday

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512A, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Dana Y. Nakano, California State University, Stanislaus Presider: Dana Y. Nakano, California State University, Stanislaus Diasporic Reconciliation: Living in South Korea as an “Overseas Korean”. Stephen Cho Suh, University of Colorado at Colorado Springs Post-Colonial Contexts, Community Characteristics and Pakistani Immigrant Transnational Organizations in London and New York. Ali R. Chaudhary, Rutgers University Segmented Participation of Overseas Chinese Migrant Networks/ Community Organizations in Australia. Yao-Tai Li, University of California-San Diego The Paradox of Ethnic Concentration: ambivalent Perceptions of the Korean Chinese Community in South Korea. Hwajin Shin, Korea University; In Seo Son, Korea University; In-Jin Yoon, Korea University

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Saturday

096. Regular Session. Globalization

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516E, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Wesley Longhofer, Emory University Presider: Taylor Whitten Brown Coopting Economic Institutions, Scripting Globalization: The Changing Role of Bilateral Investment Treaties (1958-2013). Nina Bandelj, University of California, Irvine; Aaron W. Tester, University of California-Irvine The Politics of World Polity: Script-writing in Intergovernmental Organizations. Alexander Kentikelenis, Trinity College; Leonard Seabrooke, Copenhagen Business School Threat and Global Identification. Brandon Gorman, University at Albany, SUNY; Charles F. Seguin, University of North CarolinaChapel Hill UN Workspaces and the Institutionalization of Human Trafficking as a Contemporary Phenomenon. Tania Eileen DoCarmo, University of California Irvine Discussant: Andrew Schrank, Brown University

097. Regular Session. Group Processes II. Modeling Group Processes

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 510B, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Shane D. Soboroff, Eastern Illinois University Presider: Christopher Patrick Kelley, United States Air Force Academy Casualties of Social Combat? Competitive Context Determines Whether Status Protects Against or Encourages Peer Victimization. James Chu, Stanford University Discordantly Meaningful: Examining Cognitive Mechanisms of Culture and Action. Chelsea Rae Kelly, University of Georgia Embedded Choice Processes for Unilateral Exchange Partners and the Problem of Nested Social Order. Yunsub Lee, Cornell University Toward a Theory of Interpersonal Contributive Justice. Barbara F. Meeker, University of Maryland College Park

098. Regular Session. Health and Well-being

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516A, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Elena M. Bastida, Florida International University Relationship Quality and Diabetes in Older Couples. James Duncan Iveniuk, University of Toronto; Linda J. Waite, University of Chicago; Vishal Ahuja, Cox School of Business, Southern Methodist University; C. Edward Chou, Harrison School of Pharmacy, Auburn University; Elbert S. Huang, Section of General Internal Medicine, University of Chicago Citizenship Status, Survey Language, and Self-assessed Health in the United States. Meredith Van Natta, University of California, San Francisco; Zachary Zimmer, Mount Saint Vincent University Stress Proliferation through Father’s Incarceration: Collateral Consequences for Young Children’s Physical Health. Sarah Violet Fry, Pennsylvania State University; Brandy R. Parker, Pennsylvania State University Religious Participation and Biological Functioning in Mexico. Terrence D. Hill, University of Arizona; Sunshine Marie Rote, University of Louisville; Christopher G. Ellison, University of TexasSan Antonio Social Class Inequalities in Health-related Quality of Life and its Reproduction through Habitus. Shaozhe Zhang, Wuhan University/UC San Diego; Ting Chen, Huazhong University of Science and Technology; Wei Xiang, Huazhong University of Science and Technology Understanding the Intersection of Illness, BMI, and Financial Strain

Using Growth Mixture Modeling. Eric Thomas Klopack, University of Georgia; Kandauda A. S. Wickrama, University of Georgia

099. Regular Session. Organizational Networks

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511D, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Edward T. Walker, UCLA Presider: Walter W. Powell, Stanford University Mapping the Knowledge Space: Grant Topics, the Productivity and Impact of University Research. Sang Teck Oh, University of Michigan; Jason Owen-Smith, University of Michigan Embeddedness as Source of Organizational Dysfunction: Cultural Holes and the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Ian Gray Hierarchies in Motion: The Co-evolution of Status and Authority in Small Organizations. Clark Bernier, Princeton University Discussant: Walter W. Powell, Stanford University

100. Regular Session. Political Sociology: Politics, Inequality, and Representation

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511E, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Anthony S. Chen, Northwestern University Gentrification as Political Persona: Strong-Mayor Form and the Influence of Local Government. Whitney Gecker, Boston University Framing Social Entrepreneurship: A Neoliberal Model of Social Change. Tamara Kay, University of Notre Dame; Marshall Ganz, Harvard University; Jason Spicer, MIT Beyond the “Usual Suspects?” Reimagining Democracy with Participatory Budgeting in Chicago. Madeleine Pape, University of Wisconsin-Madison; Chaeyoon Lim, University of WisconsinMadison Learning Where We Stand: How School Experiences Matter for Civic Marginalization and Political Inequality. Sarah K. Bruch, University of Iowa; Joe Soss, University of Minnesota Complex Religion and American Politics. Melissa J. Wilde, University of Pennsylvania; Patricia Tevington, University of Pennsylvania Discussant: Josh Pacewicz, Brown University

101. Regular Session. Sociology of Reproduction 3: The Politics of Reproduction: Organizations, Markets, and Health Policy

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 510D, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Susan Markens, City University of New YorkLehman College Presider: Hyeyoung Oh, City University of New York-Lehman College Hospital Ownership Status and Cesarean Sections: The Effect of For-Profit Hospitals. Theresa Morris, Texas A&M University; Kelly McNamara, Texas A&M; Christine H. Morton, Stanford University Department of Pediatrics Potential Mothers and Ideal Workers: How Professional Women Negotiate Reproduction and Work. Elissa Zeno, University of Virginia Reproducing Inequality: Subverting Reproduction and Reproducing Gender Inequality among Gamete Donors. Laura Halcomb, UCSB Maculate Conception: Markets and Morality in Russian and Ukrainian Reproductive Surrogacy. Alya Guseva, Boston University; Tatiana Larkina, National Research University -- Higher School of Economics Governing Reproduction in the Age of Zika. Miranda R. Waggoner, Florida State University; Hena Wadhwa, Florida State University

Saturday, August 12, 2017

102. Regular Session. The Conditions of Home, Housing, and Household

103. Regular Session. Urban Issues

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 510A, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Jan Doering, McGill University Brokering and Building Race: The Institutional Context of Segregation. Elizabeth Korver-Glenn, University of New Mexico The American Dream and the Social Meaning of Homeownership for African Americans. Nora E. Taplin-Kaguru, University of Chicago The Post-Apocalympic Favela: On the Failures of “Pacification” Where It Had Succeeded. Stefanie Israel de Souza, University of Notre Dame Discussant: Jan Doering, McGill University

104. Section on Animals and Society Roundtable Session and Business Meeting

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520A, 2:30-3:30 p.m. Session Organizer: Elizabeth Grauerholz, University of Central Florida Table 01. Table Presider: Stephen Patrick Vrla, Michigan State University Animals, Law and Gender: Power, Pain and the Review of the 1876 Cruelty to Animals Act, 1962-1965. Catherine Louise Duxbury, University of Essex Environmental Sociology, Capitalism, and the Plight of the Honey Bee. Laurent Cilia, University of Colorado Fillies and Feminism: Representations of Female Racehorses in Popular and Sports Media, 1974-2015. Laura M. Carpenter, Vanderbilt University; Elizabeth Kathryn Barna, Vanderbilt University We Go the Extra Mile for Each Other: The Construction of Human-Horse Relationships in Natural Horsemanship. Kelly O’Brien, Michigan State University Who Makes it on the ARK? A Sociozoologic Scale for Japan. Seven Mattes

105. Section on Body and Embodiment Refereed Roundtable Session and Business Meeting

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520B, 2:30-3:30 p.m. Session Organizers: David Paul Strohecker, University of MarylandCollege Park Marta Barbee, Ohio State University Kannaki Bharali, City University of New York Chelsea Mary Elise Johnson, University of Southern California Table 01. Bodies, Standards, and the Built World Presider: David Paul Strohecker, University of Maryland-College Park Gender, Bodies, and the U.S. Air Force Academy: Views on Physical Fitness Standards. Donald Adkins, Oklahoma State

University; Heather McLaughlin, Oklahoma State University Motordom, Automobility and Bully-Body-Schema. Lars D. Christiansen, Augsburg College Sized Out: The Impacts of Clothing Size Standards on Identity, Health, and Inequality. Katelynn Bishop, University of California, Santa Barbara; Maddie Jo Evans, University of Nevada, Las Vegas Table 02. Discourse and Bodies Presider: Harry Barbee, Florida State University Back Into the Fold: Normalizing Discourses in Eating Disorder Treatment. Alaina Iacobucci, University of Colorado-Boulder Failure to be Flexible: Impacts of Discourse and Sense of Control on Women’s Experiences of Childbirth. Erica Goodfriend The Pleasure of Work and the Work of Pleasure. Alyssa Goldstein, University of Massachusetts Amherst Table 03. Identity, Cognition, and Emotions in Embodiment Presider: Kannaki Bharali, City University of New York Emotions and the Gift in the Ethnographic Encounter: Fieldwork in the German Sex Industry. Annegret D. Staiger, Clarkson University Feminist Theory and Embodied Cognition: Bridging the Disciplinary Gap. Gordon Brett, University of Toronto New Materialist Re-conceptions of Embodiment within Social Psychology. Justine Egner, University of South Florida; Sara L. Crawley, University of South Florida Translating Transgender: Collective Production and Symbolic Boundaries in Thai “Kathoey” Identity. Alyssa A. Lynne, Northwestern University Table 04. Respectability, Morality, and Acceptance in Embodiment Presider: Chelsea Mary Elise Johnson, University of Southern California It’s Time For a Revolution: Resisting the Medicalization of Fatness Through Social Media Campaigns. Rayanne Streeter, Virginia Tech Dressed for Death: Execution Attire, Gender, and Respectability. Annulla Linders, University of Cincinnati; Erynn Masi de Casanova, University of Cincinnati How Long I’ve Been Fighting It: The Moral Career of the Bariatric Patient. Corey Elizabeth Stevens, University of Akron

106. Section on Collective Behavior and Social Movements Refereed Roundtable Session and Business Meeting

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517B, 2:30-3:30 p.m. Session Organizer: Yotala Oszkay Febres-Cordero, University of California, Los Angeles Table 01. Consumer Activism and the Corporation Table Presider: Cassandra Engeman, Uppsala University Engaging the Extractive Industry: Mobilization and Negotiation by Peruvian Communities under Mining Pressure. David D. Sussman, New York University The Empire Strikes Back: Activism, Industry Mobilization, and the Adoption of Pro-GMO Policies. Alexander Martin Ruch, Cornell University; Ion Bogdan Vasi, University of Iowa The Institutionalization of Anti-Corporate Protest. Andrew W. Martin, The Ohio State University; Marc Dixon, Dartmouth College Unseen Suffering: Slow Violence, Consumer Activism, and Environmental Injustice. Tad P. Skotnicki, University of North Carolina, Greensboro Table 02. Disruptive Social Movements Emerging from the Shadows: Cultivating Legitimacy for a Quasi-

Saturday

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 510C, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Claire W. Herbert, Drexel University Presider: Elizabeth Burland, University of Michigan Cumulative Effects of Doubling up in Childhood on Young Adult Outcomes. Hope Harvey, Harvard University Going Easy and Going After: How Building Inspections Backfire. Robin Bartram, Northwestern University Home Without Borders: Extending Home into the Public Sphere. Adam Yang; Nathanael T. Lauster, University of British Columbia Old Housing, New Needs: Are U.S. Homes Ready For an Aging Population? Jonathan Vespa, US Census Bureau Discussant: Rebbeca Tesfai, Temple University

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Saturday

Session 106, continued Legal Medical Cannabis Dispensary. Brandon Finlay, Indiana University, Bloomington From No Against Violence to Yeses Beyond Violence: Zapatista Autonomy and Commons. Stellan Vinthagen, University of Massachusetts; Sean Chabot, Eastern Washington University Poor People’s Collective Action: Vigilante Movements and the State in the Global South. Michael Roll, University of Wisconsin-Madison The Jonestown Incident as Collective Action: How Exceptionally Difficult Collective Decisions are Accomplished. Robert William Mowry, University of Notre Dame Beyond the Spectacle of “Violent Protest”: Rethinking Violence at Occupy Oakland. Emily Brissette, Bridgewater State University Table 03. Environmental Activism and Social Movements Table Presider: Fletcher Winston, Mercer University Allies in Action: Institutional Actors and Grassroots Environmental Activism in China. Yang Zhang, American University The Justice Advocate: A Qualitative Analysis of the Affluent, Liberal, Urban, White, Educated, Climate Activist. Jean Léon Boucher, Stony Brook University “On A Mission”: Commitment in Environmental Activism. Daniel Driscoll, UCSD Protest Participation and the Expanding Reach of the Climate Movement. Dana R. Fisher, University of Maryland; Anya Mikael Galli Robertson, University of Maryland; William Adam Yagatich, University of Maryland An Actor-Networked Understanding of Environmental Resistance Movements: Two “Resistance Socials” from Northeastern Turkey. Baran Karsak, Northeastern University Table 04. Energy Movements and Countermovements Changing Political Alliances and Success of Activists against Hydropower in Sweden. Katrin Uba, Uppsala University; Jenny Jansson, Uppsala University Citizen Activism, Discursive Opportunities, and Movement Frames Surrounding Natural Gas Fracking in the Marcellus Shale. Amanda E. Maull, The Pennsylvania State University Power to the People: Energy Populism in the U.S. Pacific Northwest. Meghan Elizabeth Kallman, Brown University; Scott Frickel, Brown University; Christine Horne, Washington State University The Battle Over Frac(k)ing: The Mobilization of the Local Residents. Mehmet Soyer, Utah State University The Framing of Divestment: Explaining the Recent Dynamic of a Social Movement. Stefanie Hiss, University of Jena; Sebastian Nagel, University of Jena; Agnes Fessler, University of Jena Table 05. Eventfulness and Process Critical Events as Opportunities: How Gun Control Groups Responded to the Sandy Hook Shooting. Eulalie Jean Laschever, UC-Irvine Social Crisis and Recurrent Mass Protest in Iceland. Jon Gunnar Bernburg, University of Iceland Social Movement Continuity and Change: Institutional, Online and Everyday Abeyance Structures. Alison Dahl Crossley, Stanford University Why It Started in Wisconsin: The Role of Movement Building in Producing Protest Waves. Ben Manski, University of California, Santa Barbara Political Assassination and Movement Outcomes: Examining the

1968 Memphis Sanitation Workers Strike. Claire Whitlinger, Furman University; Joseph Fretwell, University of Georgia Table 06. Ideological Movements of the Left and Right Table Presider: Ann Horwitz Dubin, University of Maryland College Park Somebody Has to Do This: Affective and Moral Dimensions of Socialist Struggle. Huseyin Arkin Rasit, Yale University Cultivating Conviction or Negotiating Nuance? Assessing the Impact of Associations on Ideological Polarization. Milos Brocic, University of Toronto Fitting In, Standing Out: Ambivalence and Multivocality in Far Right German Youth Style. Cynthia Miller-Idriss, American University; Annett Graefe, New York University Mobilizing Threat: Measuring Discursive Changes in Frame Articulation in a Group of Early Tea Party Supporters. Joseph Lee Crane, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill Three Words: “We the People”: Free Spaces and Collective Identity in the Tea Party. Stacy Keogh George, Whitworth University The Disastrous Electoral Consequences of Avoidance of Partisan Political Involvement by Progressive Advocacy and Protest Movements. John D. McCarthy, Pennsylvania State University Table 07. Institutional Intermediaries Table Presider: Amanda Pullum, California State UniversityMonterey Bay Advocacy in an Authoritarian State: How Grassroots ENGOs Influence the Government in China. Anthony J. Spires, The Chinese University of Hong Kong; Jingyun Dai, Harvard University Creating Legislative Allies in Congress: The Cases of the Labor, LGBT and Environmental Movements in Chile. Rodolfo Antonio Lopez, University of California-Irvine Organization and Mobilization in the Case of the Tea Party Movement. Benjamin Rohr, University of Chicago Table 08. Mechanisms for Solidarity All Hands are Needed: Emotion and Resilient Organizing by Diaspora Communities in Response to Ebola. Ryann Manning, Harvard University Better Solidarity Across Difference: Non-Tibetans and Collective Identity in The Tibetan Freedom Movement. Samuel Maron, Northeastern University Social Movements as Arenas of Struggle: The Case of Ireland’s 1916 Societies. John O’Connor, Central Connecticut State University; Brian Becker, Central Connecticut State University Water Infrastructures from Scratch: Building a Life in a Peruvian Informal Settlement. Kelly Moore, Loyola University Chicago; Kyle Woolley Table 09. Mobilization and Politicization My Autism Mommy Work: Community-based Carework and Embodied Health Social Movements. Cara A. Chiaraluce, Santa Clara University A New Generation of Ukrainians into Political Activism from 2000- 2014. Christine M. Emeran Anonymity and Ordinary Citizens in the Candlelight Protests of 2008. Eunkyung Song, Rutgers Neoliberal Development, Privatizing Nature, and Subaltern Resistance in Bangladesh. M. Omar Faruque, University of Toronto Political Solidarity Based on Indigenismo and Affective Commitment: An Analysis of the Coalition of Immokalee Workers. Melissa Gouge, George Mason University

Saturday, August 12, 2017

Life in the Deportation Nation. Samuel Gregory Prieto, University of San Diego Secularization and Sociopolitical Conflict in the Middle East. Abdy Javadzadeh, St. Thomas Social Movement Organizing: Robust Action in a MovementInhibiting Environment. Yanfei Hu Unrest in a Post-Cold War Era: Understanding the Role of WorldSystems Theory and Inequality. Shawn M. Ratcliff, University of Nebraska-Lincoln Urban Protest in the European Union. Matthew Schoene, Albion College Table 15. Social Movement Outcomes Table Presider: Lucas Diaz, Tulane University Electoral (Counter)Mobilization: The Tea Party’s Impact on the 2010 Senate Races. Burrel James Vann, University of California, Irvine Testing Pathways of Committed Activist Participation After College. Jonathan Horowitz, University of North CarolinaChapel Hill The Career Consequences of the Nashville Civil Rights Movement: A Qualitative Comparative Analysis. Jonathan Scott Coley, Monmouth College; Daniel B. Cornfield, Vanderbilt University; Larry W. Isaac, Vanderbilt University; Dennis Dickerson, Vanderbilt University Where Movements Matter: Examining Unintended Consequences of the Pain Management Movement Across Institutional Fields. Elizabeth Chiarello, Saint Louis University Table 16. Storytelling I Table Presider: Haley Jo Gentile, Florida State University Based on a True Story: How Converts Lend Credibility to Social Movements. Alexa Jane Trumpy, St. Norbert College The Power of the Personal: Changing Attitudes about the Movement to End Rape and Domestic Violence. Nella Van Dyke, University of California, Merced; Kathryn Patricia Daniels, University of California, Merced; Ashley Noel Metzger, University of California, Merced; Carolina Molina, University of California, Merced; Denise C. Castro, University of California, Merced “Onward to Single Payer”: Opportunity, Narrative, and Mobilization in the American Movement for Health Care Reform. Lindy Hern, University of Hawaii at Hilo Table 17. Storytelling II Table Presider: Michael Rosino, University of Connecticut Framing the Women’s Movement: Framing Amplification and Transformation through Songs and Poetry. William F. Danaher, Southern Illinois University; Trisha Lanae Crawshaw, Southern Illinois University Hard Work and No Pay: Cultural Narratives, Collective Action Frames, and Social Movement Meaning-Making. Jonathan Nathaniel Redman, UC Irvine Restaging as Resistance: Strategic Avowal, Conflict, and Transformation of the “Backstage” of Social Relationships. Selina R. Gallo-Cruz, College of the Holy Cross; Hannah Tulinski, College of the Holy Cross The Quality of the News Coverage of U.S. Radical Right-Wing Movement Organizations in the 1960s? Edwin Amenta, University of California, Irvine; Thomas Alan Elliott, University of California, Irvine; Nicole Clorinda Shortt, University of California, Irvine; Amber Celina Tierney, University of California, Irvine; Didem Turkoglu, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill

Saturday

Table 10. New Directions in Social Movement Methodologies Hope and the Construction of Organic Solidarity: An Experimental Study of Taking Action for Others. Luke ElliottNegri; Siqi Tu; Wenjuan Zheng, CUNY Graduate Center Macro-Structural Effects on Micro-Structural Tactical Diffusion: A Longitudinal Social Network Analysis. Misty Dawn RingRamirez, University of Arizona Performance Modeling: A Data Scientific Operationalization of Tilly’s Theory. Nicholas Brigham Adams, University of California, Berkeley Process Tracing in Social Movements Research: Paths of Opposition to Tuitions. Didem Turkoglu, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill Table 11. Policing and Social Control Table Presider: Samuel Gregory Prieto, University of San Diego Countermovement Mobilization and State Raids on Minority Religious Communities. Stuart A. Wright, Lamar University Deflected Privatization: The Punitive State, Community Policing and Prisoner Reentry. Edward Orozco Flores, University of California, Merced; Jennifer Elena Cossyleon, Loyola University Enforcing Social Justice: Horizontal Discipline and the Call-out in Prefigurative Politics. Mario Venegas, University of TexasAustin Strategic Control Performances: American Police Departments’ Responses to the Occupy Campaigns of 2011. Nicholas Brigham Adams, University of California, Berkeley Table 12. Social Media Activism and Technology Brokerage Roles within Twitter Networks of the Egyptian Revolution. Deena Abul-Fottouh Do Technologies Matter to Social Movements? A Materialist Possibility. Austin Choi-Fitzpatrick, University of San Diego Researching ICTs and Contentious Collective Action in the Digital Age: Toward a Synthetic, Comparative Framework. Jun Liu, University of Copenhagen Networked Publics and Digital Contention: Youth Activism in Authoritarian Contexts. Mohamed Zayani, Georgetown University Table 13. Social Movement Coalitions and Allies Table Presider: Chandra Russo, Colgate University Building Transnational Advocacy Networks through Social Justice Theater. Ruth Marleen Hernandez, University of Connecticut Effective Movement Coalitions for Legislative Changes: A Comparative Analysis of Feminist Legislative Campaigns in South Korea. Minyoung Moon, Vanderbilt University Elite Patronage and Deployment of Activist Identities within Professional Social Movement Organizations. Cam Nguyen Organizational Culture, Collective Identity, and the Challenges of Diversity in Progressive Religious Activist Coalitions. Jack Delehanty, University of Minnesota Transnational Political and Socio-Spiritual Action: The Responses of Indian Christians to Religious Persecution in India. Autumn Mathias, Northeastern University Grounding Anti-Globalization: Grassroots Globalists and the Politics of Place. Eric Larson Table 14. Social Movement Ecologies Legislation as Anti-HERO: The Political Effects of Traditional Family Structure and Organizations. Paige Ambord, University of Notre Dame Reticence and Resistance: The Everyday Politics of Immigrant

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Session 106, continued Table 18. Tactics and Repertoires Table Presider: Anna Paretskaya, University of Wisconsin-Madison How Do You Talk About Commercial Sexual Exploitation of Children Without Saying the Word “Sex?”. Taylor Houston, Mount Mercy University Suffragetto! Materializing Social, Corporeal, and Political Feminism through Game. Renee Marie Shelby, Georgia Institute of Technology Tactical Reproduction in the Pro-Choice Movement in Northern Ireland: Alliance for Choice’s Path Towards Successful Tactics. Marie-Lise Drapeau-Bisson, University of Toronto The “Right to Love:” Connecting “Gay” and “Marriage” through Identity Deployment Tactics. Anna Sorensen, SUNY Potsdam Feminist Activism at the 15-M/Indignados Movement and Beyond. Maria Martinez, University of California, Santa Barbara Eventful Spaces and Spatial Policing: The Case of Gezi Park Occupation. Dolunay Ugur, Yale University

107. Section on Communication, Information Technologies, and Media Sociology. Culture, Inequality and Social Inclusion in the Digital Era

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513B, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Jessie Daniels, Hunter College and The Graduate Center-CUNY Free Speech, Representation and Inclusion on Social Media Platforms. Zeynep Tufekci, University of North Carolina Skills Gaps, Surveillance, and Hope in Training at a High-Tech Charter School. Daniel Greene, Microsoft Research New England The Digital Hustle: Precarious Labor of High and Low Status Workers in the “Gig” Economy. Julia B. Ticona, University of Virginia Blood, Sweat, and Tears: Biotechnology and the Future of Wearable Tech. Elizabeth A. Wissinger, City University of New York/BMCC The Pipeline of Online Participation Inequalities: The Case of Wikipedia Editing. Aaron Shaw, Northwestern University; Eszter Hargittai, University of Zurich

108. Section on International Migration. Migration in the Global South

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513A, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Maryann Bylander, Lewis and Clark College A Migration Systems Approach to Understanding Migrant Social Capital. Nathalie E. Williams, University of Washington; Christina Hughes, University of Washington; Linda Young-DeMarco, University of Michigan Disaggregating Recruitment: Uncovering the Expectations, Obligations, and Hidden Pathways of Labor Migration. Daniel Karell, New York University Abu Dhabi (NYUAD) An Accidental Community? The Vietnamese Immigrants in Trinidad and Tobago. Andrew N. Le, UCLA Putting Trapped Populations into Place: Climate Change and Interdistrict Migration Flows in Zambia. Jack DeWaard, University of Minnesota-Twin Cities; Raphael J. Nawrotzki, University of Minnesota-Twin Cities

109. Section on Medical Sociology Reeder Award and Address and Business Meeting

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513E, 2:30-3:30 p.m. Session Organizer: Debra Umberson, The University of Texas at Austin

110. Section on Political Economy of the World-System. Women, Nature, and Colonies: Unpaid Work and World Accumulation, 1492-2017

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512C, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Jason W. Moore, Binghamton University Agricultural Revolutions in America’s Heartland: The Unpaid Work of Women, Children, and Soils. Ben Marley, Binghamton University Changing Modes of Labor Reproduction and Regimes of Accumulation during China’s Socialist Industrialization (19492010). Yige Dong, Johns Hopkins University Pathways of Appropriation, Food Regimes, and Unpaid Work in Late Colonial Philippines. Alvin Camba, Johns Hopkins University Proletarianization and the Postwar Baby Boom in the United States. Andrew J. Pragacz, Binghamton University The Colonial Domestic Imaginary: Peruvian Labor Law and the Household Worker. Katherine Maich, University of California, Berkeley

111. Section on Race, Gender, and Class. Intersectionality and Social Justice

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513F, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Sinikka Elliott, University of British Columbia Presider: Hyeyoung Kwon, Indiana University There is no Typical Victim: Intersectional Goals and Practices in the Chicago Domestic Violence Movement. Marie Laperrière, Northwestern University Stubborn Persistence: Women of Color Organizers on College Campuses. Jomaira Salas Pujols, Rutgers University Managing Allyship and Intersectionality: A Model of External and Internal Privilege Negotiation. Jaime Hartless, University of Virginia Many Are Called: Food, Faith, and Boundaries in an Urban Food Desert. Leslie R. Hinkson, Georgetown University; Michelle Beadle Holder, University of Maryland Promises and Challenges of Intersectional Food Justice Research and Praxis. Sinikka Elliott, University of British Columbia; Sarah Bowen, North Carolina State University; Joslyn Brenton, Ithaca College; Annie Hardison-Moody, North Carolina State University

112. Section on Sociology of Development. Politics, Development, and Gender

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514B, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Kathleen M. Fallon, State University of New York at Stony Brook Presider: Kathleen M. Fallon, State University of New York at Stony Brook Effects of Global Democratization as a Function of Gender and a Country’s Level of Development. Barbara Wejnert, University at Buffalo The Gender Question on China’s Second Continent. Robert Wyrod, University of Colorado Boulder The Nana Ohemaas (Queen Mothers) of Ghana and Good Governance in Africa. Cynthia M. Hewitt, Morehouse College Women’s Economic vs. Political Power: Extreme Cases, Development and a Joint Approach. Rae Lesser Blumberg, University of Virginia Discussant: Lorna Lueker Zukas, National University

113. Section on Sociology of Education. Overcoming Obstacles to Postsecondary Attainment

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513C, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Amy Gill Langenkamp, University of Notre Dame

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114. Section on Sociology of Emotions. Chair’s Hour and Business Meeting

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513D, 2:30-3:30 p.m. Session Organizer: Amy C. Wilkins, University of Colorado-Boulder Where is the Love? Affective Capital and Racial Inequality in Brazil. Elizabeth Hordge-Freeman, University of South Florida Intimate Possibilities: Research at the Intersections of Race and Sexuality. Jessica Fields, San Francisco State University Emotion Work, Moral Identity, and Pornography: Men’s Emotional Accounts of Consuming Inequality. Matthew B. Ezzell, James Madison University Emotion Displays and Stigma Resistance. Simone Ispa-Landa, Northwestern University

115. Theory Section. New Developments in Classical Theory

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512D, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Natalia Ruiz-Junco Presider: Peter M. Hall, Colorado State University Countering Trump: Using Weber to Construct a Typology of Charismatic Counter-roles. Paul Joosse, University of Hong Kong Attentive Flexibility: A Classical-Theoretical Grounding of a New Concept in the Study of Emotional Support. Jorie Hofstra, Rutgers Bourdieu and Marx on the Modern State. David L. Swartz, Boston University When Souls Came To Matter. Filipe Carreira da Silva, University of Lisbon Jane Addams and the Classical Canon in Sociological Theory: A Radical Proposal. Patricia Madoo Lengermann, The George Washington University; Jill Niebrugge-Brantley, The George Washington University

3:30 p.m.

Meetings

Section on Animals and Society Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520A, 3:30-4:10 p.m. Section on Body and Embodiment Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520B, 3:30-4:10 p.m.

Section on Collective Behavior and Social Movements Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517B, 3:30-4:10 p.m. Section on Medical Sociology Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513E, 3:30-4:10 p.m. Section on Sociology of Emotions Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513D, 3:30-4:10 p.m.

4:30 p.m.

Meetings

2018 Distinguished Contributions to Teaching Award Selection Committee Palais des congrès de Montréal, 523B, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Committee on the Status of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, and Queer (LGBTQ) People in Sociology Palais des congrès de Montréal, 525A, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Social Psychology Quarterly Editorial Board Palais des congrès de Montréal, 518A, 4:30-6:10 p.m. TRAILS Area Editors Palais des congrès de Montréal, 524A, 4:30-6:10 p.m.

4:30 p.m.

Sessions

116. Presidential Panel. Exclusion as an Unintended Consequence

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516B, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Michèle Lamont, Harvard University Presider: Marion Fourcade, University of California - Berkeley Wikipedia and Social Exclusion as Unintended Consequence of Purposive Action. Julia Potter Adams, Yale University Patterns of Cultural Exclusion: The Case of the Upwardly Mobile. Annette Lareau, University of Pennsylvania The College Economy: Creating New Forms of Inequality. Viviana A. Zelizer, Princeton University Do We Need Intentionality? Processual, Distributional, and System Agency and its Unintended Consequences. Karin D. Knorr Cetina, University of Chicago Discussant: Marion Fourcade, University of California - Berkeley Robert K. Merton’s 1936 essay on exclusion as an unintended consequence of purposive action has opened an important path for a systemic sociology of cultural and social inequality processes. This presidential session bring together sociologists who consider various sites for such processes, ranging from Wikipedia to college cultures, and other aspects of our daily lives. Authors are particularly concerned with the closing of opportunities as an unintended consequence of action.

117. Thematic Session. A Portrait of Contemporary Integration among the Children of Immigrants

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511A, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Roberto G. Gonzales, Harvard University Presider: Roberto G. Gonzales, Harvard University Panelists: Van C. Tran, Columbia University Cynthia Feliciano, University of California, Irvine Joanna Dreby, University at Albany, State University of New York Discussant: Philip Kasinitz, CUNY-Graduate Center A recent National Academy of Science report (The Integration of

Saturday

Presider: Allison L. Hurst, Oregon State University Transition to Postsecondary Education among Marginalized Youth in Toronto and Chicago. Karen Robson, McMaster University; Paul Anisef, York University; Jenny Nagaoka, University of Chicago Consortium on School Research; Robert Stewert Brown, Toronto District School Board Social Class and College Preparatory Activities: A Mechanism for Equal Access? Kevin J. McElrath, State University of New YorkStony Brook A Theory of (Socioeconomic) Relativity: The Role of Relative Advantage in Educational Attainment. Jessica McCrory Calarco, Indiana University; Natasha Quadlin, The Ohio State University Educational Attainment across the Great Recession in Brazil, Mexico, and the United States. Robert Wayne Ressler, University of Texas at Austin; Aida Villanueva, University of Texas at Austin; Leticia Marteleto, University of Texas at Austin; Robert Crosnoe, University of Texas at Austin Does Generational Status Matter in College? Educational Attainment among American Second Generation College Students. David K. Kirui, University of Pennsylvania; Grace Kao, University of Pennsylvania

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Session 117, continued Immigrants into American Society) finds that as immigrants become integrated into American society many facets of their lives improve including educational attainment, occupational distribution, income, and language ability. However, some other indicators decline in areas of health, crime, and family patterns especially for the second generation. And for many, immigration status is more determinative than are measures of integration for social and economic mobility. This panel will dig deeper into this general finding and focus on the children of immigrants and how they are faring in contemporary American society. The panel members will discuss their research around the social and cultural institutions as well as the processes that facilitate and constrain the integration of today’s 1.5 and second generations.

118. Thematic Session. Culture and Population Processes

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511B, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Margaret Frye, Princeton University Presider: Margaret Frye, Princeton University Panelists: Arland Thornton, University of Michigan Vida Maralani, Cornell University Aliya Saperstein, Stanford University Margaret Frye, Princeton University Beginning with the pioneering works of Malthus and Quetelet, culture has long been part of the theoretical foundation of demographic analysis. Yet in recent years, demographers have begun to more openly embrace the empirical tools and theoretical constructs developed within cultural sociology, from schemas and repertoires to cultural models. These four panelists will explore some of the implications of this recent “cultural turn” for our understanding of population dynamics. Specifically, panelists will explore how an understanding of cultural sociology can help us to understand four core topics in demography: racial classification, fertility and labor-force participation, development and family change, and the transition to adulthood.

119. Thematic Session. Elites’ Repertoires of Inequality: Comparing Preferences Towards Redistribution in Unequal Societies

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511D, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Elisa P. Reis, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ) Presider: Elisa P. Reis, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ) Panelists: Larry Bartels, Vanderbilt University Abram de Swaan, University of Amsterdam Serge Paugam, CNRS/EHESS/ENS Chana Teeger, London School of Economics Discussant: Leslie McCall, Northwestern University Social scientists have usually expected democracy and equality to correlate and yet we live in an era of unequal democracies. Recent studies in sociology and political science have focused on the attitudes of elites as a possible explanation for the growing inequality in American society. Although it is hard to assess the exact impact of elite preferences on policy outcomes, there is wide consensus that changes in preferences of elites towards redistribution are a necessary (even if not sufficient) condition for redistribution to take place. This session will add a comparative dimension to this question focusing on how economic and political elites across the globe make sense of inequality, what they perceive as the consequences of inequalities, and what they recognize as desirable and viable measures to reduce inequality. We will feature

sociologists and political scientists engaged in conceptual and empirical work on elites preferences towards redistribution as well as studies that focus on the cultural boundaries of the elites towards the poor and their potential implications for redistribution.

120. Thematic Session. Settler Colonialism and Indigenous Resurgence (cosponsored with Canadian Sociological Association)

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 510D, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Jeffrey Steven Denis, McMaster University Presider: Jeffrey Steven Denis, McMaster University Panelists: Rima Wilkes, University of British Columbia Vanessa Watts, McMaster University Hayden King, Ryerson University Bonita Lawrence, York University Indigenous-settler conflicts over land and treaties have escalated, socioeconomic disparities persist, and the number of missing and murdered Indigenous women has proliferated. Meanwhile, Idle No More and other Indigenous movements highlight resilience and resurgence, in face of ongoing injustices, as do the launching of commissions, reports, and recommendations into renewing relations. Front and centre are demands for, and in turn promises of, (re)building “nation-to-nation” relations with Indigenous peoples, potentially transforming the structural and ideological foundations of the settler state.

121. Presidential Session on Current Societal Challenges. Trump’s Challenges and Responses by Protest and Social Movements

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516E, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Kenneth (Andy) Andrews, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Presider: Kenneth (Andy) Andrews, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Panelists: Dana R. Fisher, University of Maryland Marshall Ganz, Harvard University Douglas McAdam, Stanford University Zeynep Tufekci, University of North Carolina Trump’s election has been met with a broad wave of protest and activism across numerous constituencies and claims. The Women’s March alone mobilized an estimated four million protesters in the day following the inauguration. In the subsequent weeks, we have seen hundreds of protests challenging proposed policies and rallying to support shared values and interests. Support for established advocacy and social movement organizations has surged while new groups have sprung up quickly. Panelists will consider central questions about the resistance informed by current research on this wave of protest: Who’s participating in the resistance and why? What forms of activism and coalitions are emerging? What lessons can we draw from prior movements and protest to understand the current moment? What difference has or can this activism make in the short or long run?

122. Presidential Session on Current Societal Challenges. Trump’s Challenges to American Society Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516A, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Ann Shola Orloff, Northwestern University Presider: Ann Shola Orloff, Northwestern University The Power of Law and Limits of Rights: Claims-making on Behalf of Immigrants. Irene H.I. Bloemraad, University of California, Berkeley

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123. Special Session. Alpha Kappa Delta (AKD) Distinguished Lecture

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511C, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Bethany Titus, Alpha Kappa Delta Where Will the Millennials Take Us? Transforming the Gender Structure. Barbara Jane Risman, University of Illinois-Chicago

124. Special Session. Broadcasting Sociology: What can be learned from taking to the airwaves, an international perspective

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516D, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Presider: Carmen Russell, American Sociological Association Panelist: Brian Southwell, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill Sociologists engage everyday life in their work, producing information invaluable to policymakers, a wide range of professionals, and, really, anyone who interacts with other people. However, even the most helpful knowledge is useless unless it reaches those who can make use of it. Dr. Brian Southwell, Director of the Science in the Public Sphere program at RTI International, faculty member at Duke University and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and host of the public radio show, The Measure of Everyday Life, will join Carmen Russell, Director of Communications for the ASA, for a frank discussion of how and why sociology does (and does not) make it into news coverage and public discourse. The Measure of Everyday Life, which features social scientists and their research, has been recognized by Player FM as a best sociology podcast; in addition to airing weekly on WNCU in the Raleigh-Durham media market, the show also has been downloaded as a podcast in more than 75 countries around the world and has featured projects from all over the globe. Southwell also is an active social scientist in addition to hosting the show; his new edited book on misinformation, Misinformation and Mass Audiences, appears in the Fall 2017 University of Texas Press catalogue. .

125. Author Meets Critics Session. Blowin’ Up: Rap Dreams in South Central (University of Chicago Press, 2016) by Jooyoung Lee Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511F, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Forrest Stuart, University of Chicago Critics: Jonathan R. Wynn, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Geoff Harkness, Rhode Island College

David Grazian, University of Pennsylvania Author: Jooyoung Kim Lee, University of Toronto

126. Author Meets Critics Session. Engines of Anxiety: Academic Rankings, Reputation, and Accountability. (Russell Sage Foundation, 2015) by Wendy Nelson Espeland and Michael Sauder Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511E, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Carol Heimer, Northwestern University Presider: Mitchell L. Stevens, Stanford University Critics: Elizabeth A. Armstrong, University of Michigan Kieran Healy, Duke University Mark C. Suchman, Brown University Authors: Wendy Nelson Espeland, Northwestern University Michael Sauder, University of Iowa

128. Policy and Research Workshop. How to Write a Successful Fund for the Advancement of the Discipline (FAD) Proposal

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512F, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Nicole V. Amaya, American Sociological Association Leader: Nicole V. Amaya, American Sociological Association Panelists: Michael W. Yarbrough, John Jay College (CUNY) Caitlin Patler, UC Davis Stephanie A. Bohon, University of Tennessee The Fund for the Advancement of the Discipline (FAD) program is jointly supported by the American Sociological Association and the National Science Foundation. The goal of the FAD program is to advance the discipline of sociology by funding small (up to $8,000), groundbreaking research initiatives that have the potential to stimulate new lines of research and innovative research conferences that will foster new networks of scientific collaboration. The ASA FAD program manager will give an overview of the program, including its history and what to expect from the funding application and evaluation process. Two recent award recipients will discuss how they wrote their proposals, what was emphasized, how they built the argument that their research or conference would advance the discipline, and how they incorporated evaluations received from the FAD committee. The third panelist has previously served on the FAD committee and will give insight on the selection criteria and how FAD proposals are reviewed. The purpose of this workshop is to encourage applications, especially from scholars in the early stages of their careers and those in departments without extensive research support. Workshop attendees are encouraged to bring questions regarding their own proposals and about the program more broadly.

129. Teaching Workshop. Protecting Public Scholars from Backlash (cosponsored with Sociologists for Women in Society)

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512C, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizers: Eric Anthony Grollman, University of Richmond Jessie Daniels, Hunter College and The Graduate Center-CUNY Leader: Eric Anthony Grollman, University of Richmond Co-Leader: Jessie Daniels, Hunter College and The Graduate CenterCUNY Panelists: R. L’Heureux Lewis-McCoy, The City College of New York CUNY Adia M. Harvey Wingfield, Washington University in St. Louis Marisa Camille Allison, George Mason University Jodi O’Brien, Seattle University

Saturday

Shifting Rural-Urban Boundaries: New Patterns of Spatial Interdependence and Inequality in America. Daniel T. Lichter, Cornell University Racial Boundaries in Trump’s America: Chocolate Cities and the Enduring Problem of the Color Line. Marcus Anthony Hunter, UCLA Gender, Policy, Politics: New Divides among Women and Men. Ann Shola Orloff, Northwestern University Politics in the contemporary United States features rising concerns about class, gender, racial/ethnic and rural/urban forms of inequality and polarization. The candidates in the 2016 presidential election proposed to address these issues in starkly different ways, and partisan political divides have only deepened since the Republican victory. Panelists will address the implication of President Trump’s politics and policies for distinctive forms of inequality, types of social boundary and distribution of power. The panel will also discuss the implications for claims-making and recognition of both citizens and denizens of the United States, and for political mobilization in the future.

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Session 129, continued Increasing attacks on scholars and scholar-activists have highlighted that academic freedom policies are not up to date with 21st century technology and means of public engagement. Worse, it appears that universities are unable, or perhaps unwilling, to jeopardize their reputations and donations in effectively defending the academic freedom and free speech of public scholars. All public scholars and intellectual activists face the risk of the public “talking back,” but these risks are heightened for women, people of color, and, especially, women of color. This interactive workshop will provide academics the tools necessary to support and protect public scholars and intellectual activists, with particular attention to what departments, universities, and professional organizations can do. The workshop centers on the consequences of engaging the public on issues that are particularly controversial -- namely inequality and exclusion.

130. Student Forum Roundtable Session

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516C, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizers: Joseph Reynolds Van Der Naald, The Graduate Center, CUNY Uriel Serrano, University of California, Santa Cruz Isabel Sousa-Rodriguez, The Graduate Center - CUNY Karen Okigbo, The Graduate Center Table 01. Contemporary Precarities and New Labor Struggles Table Presider: Jamie McCallum, Middlebury College Becoming a Bartender: ‘Default Careers’, Service Work, and Occupational Identity in the Age of Precarity. Jacqueline Frazer Different Assimilation, Different Exploitation: Comparing Older and Younger Mexican Undocumented Factory Workers in Chicago. Ashley Sanchez, University of Illinois Chicago; Elver Mondragon, University of Illinois at Chicago; Alondra Carmona, University of Illinois at Chicago Making Sense of the Living Wage Movement from 1995 to 2007. Andrew Carr, Duke University Table 02. Emotions, Material Objects, Social Movements, and Collective Behavior Presider: Maria Martinez, University of California, Santa Barbara Do You Know Who I am? Storytelling, Emotions, and Collective Identity in Undocumented Activist Theater. Nicole LAmbert, University of Colorado Boulder Another Tool on the Toolbelt: The Turn Towards Restorative Justice in Greater Boston Communities. Noah Wagner “Pixuleco” Meets the Citizen: The Face of Anti-Corruption Movement in Brazil. Renata Bozzetto, Florida International University Table 03. Gender (In)Equity and Social Exclusion: A Global Persperctive Table Presider: Angela D. Gee, California State University Los Angeles Self-Sexualized Selfies on Facebook and Perceptions of Sexual Harassment for Chicago Latina/o High. Daniel Ruiz, University of Illinois at Chicago; Jonathan Grimaldo, University of Illinois at Chicago; Dennis Kass, Northeastern Illinois University Effect of Social Structure on the Association between Chronic Illness and Distress. Hironori Imai, Doshisha University Gender Inequalities, Food Security Status, SNAP Participation and Unmarried Family Householders: Findings from National Data. Allison Ray, Texas Woman’s University

Table 04. In Service of Whom?’ Social Distance of Mothering Journeys “My Baby Motivates Me”: Latina Teenage Mothers’ Resilience in Graduating High School in Chicago. Janet Aleman, University of Illinios at Chicago; Giovani Hernandez, University of Illinois at Chicago; Magali Garcia, University of Illinois at Chicago The Immigrant Parent Disadvantage: Parent Linguistic Capital and Student School Performance. Jason Joseph Fontana Changes in New Mothers’ Social Support and Family Ties Across the Life Course. Lauren Griffin, Cornell University Intensive Motherhood and Domesticity: How Hand Crafting has Changed Intensive Motherhood. Christina Carney, University of Texas at Arlington Table 05. Migration and Migrant Workers Presider: Omkar Joshi, University of Maryland, College Park How Does Rural-Urban Migration Impact Subjective Well-being from the Perspective of Household? Yang Zhang Influential Factors on Migrant Workers’ Household Intentions: Individual and Contextual Determinants. Feinuo Sun Three Types of Social Networks: The Changing Intimacy of Chinese Female Migrant Workers on Construction Sites. LIN CHEN, National Taiwan University Table 06. Political Structures, Social Distance, Space, and Ideology Presider: Emily Schneider, University of California - Santa Barbara A Different Flavor: Globalization, Tourism, and the Romantic Components within the Caribbean Tourism Industry. Helen Christie Roberts, Western Connecticut State University Social Distance In Iraq and Lebanon. Jihan Abdullah Mohammed, Michigan State University Space, Ideology and the New Middle Class: Urban Resurgence of Religion in Post-Secular Turkey. Vasfiye Betul Toprak, Florida International University Table 07. Race, Racialization, Ethnic Categories, and Whiteness Table Presider: Derek Michael Da Silva, University of South Carolina Differentiated Labor Regimes: Workers’ Horizontal Interactions and Racialization on a Chinese Transnational Project in Ecuador. Ruijie Peng, University of Texas at Austin Normalizing Whiteness in Protestant Sunday School Curriculum: A Visual Analysis. Henry Zonio, University of Kentucky Rethinking Ethnic Categories and Boundary Formation from Cognitive Perspectives: Korean-Chinese in China and Korea. Shiwei Chen, Nanyang Technological University Table 08. Re-Theorizing Social Theory and Methodology In The Contemporary Era Presider: Scott Schaffer, University of Western Ontario Excavating the Temporal Dimension in Simmel’s “Conflict.” Samantha Leonard, Brandeis University Neoliberal Expectations versus Modern Realities: A Critical Review of Literature on Gambling during the Recession. Samantha Jo Ilacqua, Concordia University Trust and Inequality: A Call for Going Beyond Theory and Generalizable Surveys. Elyse L. Davis, University of MissouriKansas City Between Hunger and Heaven: Motives, Charity and Homelessness at a Christian Church in Taiwan. Scott Beck, New School for Social Research Table 09. Seconday and Post-Secondary Education: A Global Perspective Presider: Theodore C. Wagenaar, Miami University Community Engagement on the Path to College. Elizabeth

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Surani, Harvard University

131. Regular Session. Aging and Urbanism

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512D, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Corey M. Abramson, University of Arizona Presider: Corey M. Abramson, University of Arizona Age Segregation in American Metropolitan Areas, 1940-2014. John W. Sullivan, University of California-Los Angeles Exposure to High-Crime and High-Policing Areas in the Activity Spaces of Older Adults. Emily Anne Parker, Cornell University; Erin York Cornwell, Cornell University Helpfulness and Safety of Neighborhoods: Social Capital and SelfReported Health of Older Adults. Cindy L. Cain, University of California, Los Angeles; Steven P. Wallace, University of California Los Angeles; Ninez Ponce, University of California, Los Angeles Neighborhood Characteristics and Cognitive Functioning at Older Ages. Kieron James Barclay, Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research; Kathleen A. Cagney, University of Chicago; Irma T. Elo, University of Pennsylvania Discussant: Corey M. Abramson, University of Arizona

132. Regular Session. Challenges to the Military Institution

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512E, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Meredith A. Kleykamp, University of Maryland The American Military: Without Rival and Without Victory. Richard Lachmann, State University of New York-Albany Fault Lines of the American Military Profession. Thomas Crosbie, University of Maryland College Park; Meredith A. Kleykamp, University of Maryland Narratives of Non-Enlistment: Why People Who Want to Join the Military Choose Not To. David E. Rohall, Missouri State University; Morten G. Ender, United States Military Academy; Michael Matthews The Bureaucratic Dimension to Sexual, Gender, and Racial Harassment in the U.S. Military. Stephanie Bonnes, University of Colorado Boulder Experiential Confidants: A Study of Social Support among American and Israeli Veterans. Gabriel Morales Sod

133. Regular Session. Complex Systems

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512G, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Elizabeth Bruch, University of Michigan Dissecting Income Segregation. Mustafa Yavas, Yale University Small Teams Generate New Directions in Science and Technology: Their Decline May Slow Advance. James A. Evans, University of Chicago; Ling Fei Wu, University of Chicago; Dashun Wang, Northwestern University Something Out of Nothing: A Computational Model of Social Valuation Processes. Lynette Shaw, University of Michigan Discussant: Luis Bettencourt, Santa Fe Institute

134. Regular Session. Criminology

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513B, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Corina Graif, The Pennsylvania State University Banning the Box, Keeping the Stigma? Sustaining Attitudes Post Ban-the-Box. Lesley Erin Schneider, The Ohio State University; Michael Vuolo, The Ohio State University; Sarah Esther Lageson, Rutgers University Differential Behaviour or Selective Policing? Ethnic Differences in Self-reported Offending and Police Data. Arjen Leerkes; Pim Groeneveld, Erasmus University Rotterdam; Ramiro Martinez, Northeastern University Does Undocumented Immigration Increase Crime? Michael T. Light,

Saturday

Claassen Thrush Neighborhood Effects and School Accountability: The Case of New York City. Ankit Rastogi, University of WisconsinMadison Negotiated Boundaries: Why Middle-Class Families in Taiwan Hire Tutors? Tzuyi Kao Indifference and the Ivory Tower: A Comparison of Harvard and Columbia’s South African Divestment Movements. Farris Peale, Harvard University The Purpose of Education: A Sociohistorical Analysis of American Indian and African- American Socialization Between 1875-1918. Cody Carlos Rodriguez, University of Hawaii at Manoa Table 10. The Racialized Body and Image Presider: Chelsea Mary Elise Johnson, University of Southern California Blackening the Black Image: Media Portrayals of Blacks and Whites Killed by Police. Jared Aurelius Henderson, Colgate University “Jackie I love you. But you need to stop talking about race”: Beauty Vloggers and Race. Aisha Ariantique Upton, University of Minesota They Say I’m Too White, Don’t Look Mexican: Ethnic-Identity Conflict for Female High School Students. Monica Murillo, University of Illinois at Chicago; Briana Galvan, University of Illinois at Chicago White, But Not Quite: Korean Adoptees, Honorary Whiteness, and Racialization. Wendy Marie Laybourn, University of Maryland Table 11. Transition to Adulthood Presider: Michelle J. Budig, University of Massachusetts- Amherst Inequality in Higher Education: Student Debt, Social Background, and Labour Market Outcomes. Mitchell Dean McIvor, University of Toronto; Robert Andersen, University of Toronto Structural Disruption Theory: The Dynamic Interplay of Race, Identity, and Social Isolation. Jordan Christopher Burke, University of New Hampshire Sibship Size, Gender Inequity, and Children’s Intellectual Development in China. Jiaxin Shi Table 12. Youth, Mental Health, and Well-being Perceptions of Mental Health Issues and Available Resources in a Hispanic High School in Chicago. Cristal Angel, University of Illinois at Chicago; Egle Salgado, University of Illinois at Chicago; Guadalupe Rangel, University of Illinois at Chicago Perceptions of Dating Abuse among Mexican American High School Students in Chicago. Joshua Wyatt, University of Illinois at Chicago; Gerardo Flores, University of Illinois at Chicago Student Perspective of Mental Health and Well-being. Haley Medved Kendrick, University of Alabama at Birmingham; Nathaniel H. Boyd, University of Alabama at Birmingham; Angela M. Stowe, University of Alabama at Birmingham Body Image and Mental Health: The Moderating Effects of Race and Ethnicity. Candace Michele Evans Culture, Immigrant Experience, and Perceptions of Mental Health among College Students of South Asian Descent. Sara

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Saturday

Purdue University; Ty Miller, Purdue University Sex, Race, and Place: A Sex- and Race-Disaggregated Analysis of Neighborhood Structural Factors on Violent Crime. Lyndsay N. Boggess, University of South Florida; Ráchael Powers, University of South Florida; Alyssa Whitby ChAmberlain, Arizona State Univeristy From the Back-Alley to the Dark-net: New Technological Capacities for the Efficient Organization of Crime. Scott W. Duxbury; Dana L. Haynie, Ohio State University Discussant: Corina Graif, The Pennsylvania State University

135. Regular Session. Cross-National Sociology

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512H, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Christel Kesler, Colby College Presider: Christel Kesler, Colby College A Cross-National, Quantitative Study of the Relationship between Income Inequality and Incarceration Rates. Burle Steelman, University of Central Oklahoma; Thomas J. Burns, University of Oklahoma Rising Income Inequality during the Great Recession Had No Impact on Subjective Well-being in Europe, 2003-2012. C.G.E. Kelley, Yale University & International Survey Center; S.M.C. Kelley, University of California-Berkeley; Mariah Debra Evans, University of Nevada, Reno Gender and Highbrow Cultural Participation in Europe: A Macro-level Perspective. Susan Lagaert, Ghent University; Henk Roose, Ghent University Cross-National Differences in Foreign-born Female Labor Force Participation. Tristan Ivory, University of Missouri; Guilherme Chihaya Da Silva, Umeå University; Hirohisa Takenoshita, Sophia University Children of Immigrants in Western Europe: Development of Religious and National Identities in Adolescence. Tamara van der Does, Indiana University

136. Regular Session. Culture and Inequality: Language, Educational Experience, and Social Boundaries

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514A, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Ruben A. Gaztambide-Fernandez, Ontario Institute for Studies in Education Presider: Zach Richer, University of Maryland The Lingualization of Inequalities in Migration Societies. Barbara Rothmüller, University of Luxembourg Racial Variations in Understandings and Experiences of Organized Youth Activities. Douglas Hartmann, University of Minnesota; Teresa Toguchi Swartz, University of Minnesota; Alex Manning, University of Minnesota; Lisa Gulya, University of Minnesota Aiming at the Equal Community, Producing Inequality: The Community Logic Meets the Logic of Practice. Ana Velitchkova, University of Mississippi Educational Experiences and the Perceptions of Occupational Hierarchies. Ove Skarpenes, University of Agder and University of Bergen; Rune Sakslind, University of Bergen

137. Regular Session. Economic Sociology 3: Social Status in Economic Life

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514C, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Cristobal Young, Stanford University The Many Gifts of Status. Amanda J. Sharkey, University of Chicago; Balazs Kovacs, Yale University

Discrimination in Information Sharing: A Field Experiment. Alexandra Claire Feldberg, Harvard University; Tami Kim, Harvard Business School Social Companies: Hybrid Organizations, Legitimacy, and Unintended Consequences. Kendall Cox Park, Princeton University Rating Prestige: Symbolic Capital in Evaluations of Sovereign Creditworthiness. Gozde Guran, Princeton University Mapping Identity Space: Commensuration and Pricing in the Field of Higher Education. Freda B. Lynn, University of Iowa; Graham Miller, University of Iowa, College of Education; Olga A. Novoselova, University of Iowa

138. Regular Session. Homeownership - Who Buys, Who Doesn’t, Where, and Why

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 515B, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Claire W. Herbert, Drexel University Presider: Analidis Ochoa, University of Michigan Redlined Yesterday and Redlined Today: The Home Owners Loan Corporation’s Long Shadow. Jacob William Faber, New York University Other People’s Houses: The Social Influence of Mortgage Delinquency. Brian James McCabe, Georgetown University Muslim Home Ownership in the U.S., 2006-2010. Basak Ozgenc, State University of New York-Albany; Nancy A. Denton, State University of New York-Albany Cash, Gifts, and Seller-Financing Deals: How and Why People Become Homeowners in Distressed Neighborhoods. Christine J. Jang, Johns Hopkins University Discussant: Melody L. Boyd, SUNY-Brockport

139. Regular Session. New Approaches to Assimilation and Transnationalism

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 510B, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Tanya Maria Golash-Boza, University of California, Merced Placing Assimilation Theory: Mexican Immigrants in Urban and Rural America. Angela S. Garcia, University of Chicago; Leah Caroline Schmalzbauer, Amherst College The Effect of Generational Progression on “Ethnic Attrition” among Asian Ethnic Communities. Pyong Gap Min, City University of New York-Queens College; Sejung Sage Yim, The Graduate Center Intergenerational Relationships and Cultural Change in Immigrant Extended Families. Emerald Thai Han Nguyen, University of California Davis Negotiating Transnational ambivalence: How Aging Parents Grapple With Family Separation Across Time. Ken Chih-Yan Sun, Hong Kong Baptist University Transnationalism Amidst Global Politics: Iranians in Diaspora. Sahar Sadeghi, Muhlenberg College Discussant: Veronica Montes, Bryn Mawr College

140. Regular Session. Organizational and Spatial Approaches to Status Inequalities

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514B, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Donald Tomaskovic-Devey, University of Massachusetts Presider: Richard Benton, University of Illinois Black and Hispanic Representation in Policing: Organizational and Local Labor Market Context. Moriah Wren Willow, University of

Saturday, August 12, 2017 Maryland; Philip N. Cohen, University of Maryland Race, Sex and Credit Reports in Hiring. Rourke Liam OBrien, University of Wisconsin; Barbara Kiviat, Harvard University Race, Space, and Intergenerational Economic Mobility. Cassandra Robertson, Harvard University The Inequality Consequences of Immigration. Ken-Hou Lin, University of Texas-Austin; Inbar Weiss, University of Texas-Austin

141. Regular Session. Racial and Ethnic Inequality

142. Regular Session. The Business of Sports: Labor, Capital and Globalization

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 510C, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Ben Carrington, University of Texas-Austin Presider: Katrina Karkazis, Stanford University Cool Labor: When Symbolic Benefits Organize Consent. Tania R. Aparicio, New School for Social Research Athletic Labor and Social Reproduction. Nathan Kalman-Lamb, Duke University Not yet Transnational Enough: Scholarship on Sherpas in Himalayan Mountaineering. Vrinda Marwah, University of Texas at Austin Doing Business on the Golf Course: A Relational Game in Contemporary Mexico. Hugo Ceron-Anaya, Lehigh University Sporting Symbolism, Residential Development, and Postcolonial Complexities: The Building of Cricket-Focused Communities in India. Devra Waldman, University of British Columbia

143. Regular Session. The Role of Categories and Classifications in Cultural Markets and Social Life

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 510A, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Vanina Leschziner, University of Toronto Presider: Vanina Leschziner, University of Toronto Staying in the Zone: How Creative Professionals Evaluate and Pursue Good Work. Matthew Rowe, U.C. Berkeley Moral Rhetorics of Authenticity: A Repertoire-Theoretical Analysis of Authenticity within a Field of Restricted Production. Kyle Puetz, University of Arizona; Michael Gibson-Light, University of Arizona Never Really One of Us: Commitment-based Typecasting among Knit Designers. Hyejun Kim, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Pierre Azoulay, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Ezra W. Zuckerman, Massachusetts Institute of Technology The Politics of Normality. Eviatar Zerubavel, Rutgers University

144. Section on Collective Behavior and Social Movements. Bodies, Emotions, and Protest (cosponsored with Section on Body and Embodiment)

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513C, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: James M. Jasper, Graduate Center of the City University of New York Presider: Elizabeth Cherry, Manhattanville College A New World in Our Hearts: Evaluating Outcomes and Personal Transformation in Prefigurative Movements. Hillary Lazar, University of Pittsburgh Embodied Citizenship: The Body and Undocumented Mobilization in Brussels. Thomas Swerts, University of Antwerp Social Ties, Emotions, and Social Movement Participation on Twitter. Amanda Jean Stevenson, The University of Colorado Boulder It’s a Discipline: Political Asceticism in Resistance to the U.S. Security State. Chandra Russo, Colgate University Discussant: Deborah B. Gould, University of California, Santa Cruz

145. Section on Consumers and Consumption Refereed Roundtable Session and Business Meeting

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520A, 4:30-5:30 p.m. Session Organizer: David Orzechowicz, University of California, Davis Table 01. Culture and Consumption Art in the Home: Materiality and the Power of Symbolic Space. Sarah M. Corse, University of Virginia Cultural Capital and Family Attachments in the Material Culture of Living Rooms: Evidence from Chile. Joel P. Stillerman, Grand Valley State University Consuming Nostalgia: Are Vintage Clothing Consumers Caught in the Past? Nancy L. Fischer, Augsburg College Wine Nerds and Pleasure-seekers: Understanding Wine Taste Formation and Practice. Sarah Cappeliez, University of Toronto Table 02. Food and Consumption Food Desert Fixes: Do They Work. Kenneth H. Kolb, Furman University Food Security and Place-based Food Systems: A Case Study of Chinatown Food Markets in Honolulu, Hawaii. Hui Qian, Michigan State University Inequality Regimes in the Supermarket: Gender in the Aisles and at Home. Shelley L. Koch, Emory & Henry College The Supermom’s Little Helper: The Backstage of Family Food Narratives. Laurel Graham, University of South Florida; Jennifer Friedman, University of South Florida Table 03. Change and Stability in Consumption Funeral Directors’ Perceptions of Shifting Consumer Funeral Choices. Kathy Livingston, Quinnipiac University Changes in Household Consumption Expenditures in Response to Economic Shocks in Russia. Vadim Radaev, National Research University - Higher School of Economics Speed Up Society? Evidence from the United Kingdom 2000 and 2015 Time Use Diary Surveys. Oriel Sullivan-Alon, University of Oxford; Jonathan Gershuny Towards Social Generativity: Rethinking the Relationship between Generosity and Human Flourishing. Brandon Vaidyanathan, Catholic University of America; Hilary Davidson Green, University of Notre Dame and Rice University

Saturday

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 515C, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: John Major Eason, Texas A&M University Bend Don’t Break: Colorblind Racism as Institutional Logic. Charles A. Gallagher, La Salle University Keep Race on the Table: Racial Attitudes and Diversity Discourse in Leaders of Multiracial Organizations. Oneya Fennell Okuwobi, Ohio State University Race and the Geography of Opportunity in the Post-Prison Labor Market. Zawadi Rucks-Ahidiana, University of California, Berkeley; Heather M. Harris Towards a Critical Race Theory of Organizations. Victor E. Ray, The University of Tennessee-Knoxville Why do Employers Discriminate? The Role of Implicit and Explicit Racial Attitudes. Fabiana Silva, University of California Berkeley

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Session 145, continued

Saturday

146. Section on International Migration. Immigration Policies and Immigrant Inclusion/Exclusion Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513D, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Jennifer Elrick, McGill University Presider: Van Haren Ian, McGill University Assessing the 1965 Immigration Act: Through the Lens of Restriction. Guillermina Jasso, New York University Brown-Collar Influx Control and the Welfare State: Mexican and Central American Migrant Assistance, 1993-2013. Christopher S. Girard, Florida International University System Embeddedness: How Immigrants Perceive the Risk of Immigration Law and Enforcement. Asad L. Asad, Harvard University Rights and Responsibilities: Bureaucrats’ Competing Frames about U.S. Resettlement Objectives for Refugees. Fatima Sattar, Augustana College Discussant: Jennifer Elrick, McGill University

147. Section on Medical Sociology Refereed Roundtable Session

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517A, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizers: Corinne Reczek, The Ohio State University Zhe Zhang, The Ohio State University Table 01. Barriers and Effects of Healthy Eating Barriers to Health Eating: Examining the Influence of Income and Education on Healthy Food Purchasing Behaviors. Clare Tobin Lence, Office of the Legislative Fiscal Analyst, Utah Legislature; Lori Kowaleski-Jones, University of Utah Fertility of Young Women with Eating Disorders: A Comparison of Clinical and Non-clinical Measures. Jennifer Tabler, University of Texas Rio Grande Valley Which Activities Count? Using Experimental Data to Understand Conceptualizations of Physical Activity. Rachel Cusatis, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee; Dana Garbarski, Loyola University Chicago Table 02. Conceptualization and Measurement of Health and Illness Table Presider: Dena T. Smith, University of Maryland (UMBC) Health Lifestyles as a Multidimensional Social Phenomenon. William C. Cockerham, University of Alabama at Birmingham; Joseph Daniel Wolfe, University of Alabama at Birmingham; Shawn Bauldry, Purdue University Interviewers’ Ratings of Respondents’ Health: Correlates and Association with Subsequent Mortality. Dana Garbarski, Loyola University Chicago; Nora Cate Schaeffer, University of Wisconsin-Madison; Jennifer Dykema, University of Wisconsin - Madison The Social Construction of Misdiagnosis: The Case of Rare Illness. Kristina Fasteson Simacek, Indiana University Adult ADHD and Health: A Conceptual Model and Analysis. Scott D. Landes, University of North Florida; Andrew S. London, Syracuse University Multiple Selves: The Performance of an Idiosyncratic Self for those Diagnosed with Multiple Sclerosis. Kyle Anthony Carr, Boston College Table 03. Doctors (Health Professionals) in the Making Table Presider: Timothy James Hoff, Northeastern University Medical School Socialization and the Identity Construction Process in the Transformation from Student to Doctor. Alexis T. Franzese, Elon University

Parting Ways: An Examination of Gender Differences in Medical Career ambitions among Premedical Students. Matthew K. Grace, Hamilton College Subjective Social Status and Premedical Students’ Attitudes Towards Medical School. Matthew K. Grace, Hamilton College How new health occupations start: A political economy approach to the healthcare workforce. Thomas R. Konrad, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Table 04. Effects of Obesity/Body Weight Status Table Presider: Patricia Drentea, University of Alabama-Birmingham Body Weight Perception’s Effect on Inflammation for Young Women and Men in the United States. Heather Kristin Covington, University of Florida Chronic Obesity, Health Conditions, and Mortality. Noura E. Insolera, Panel Study of Income Dynamics Maternal Obesity and Child Peer Victimization: Intergenerational Impact of Weight Stigma in the United States. Rong Fu, Siena College; Miao Li, University of Notre Dame; Hong Xue, Ball State University; Youfa Wang, Ball State University Protective Factors Against Inflammatory Dysregulation in Young Adulthood: Variations by Adolescent Weight Status. Moira Pauline Johnson, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Table 05. Environment, Society, and Health Presider: Jennifer S. Carrera, Michigan State University Community Water Fluoridation: Emerging Debates among Experts and Community Contestation. Lauren Contorno, Northeastern University Diagnosing Climate Change Illnesses: Coccidioidomycosis in the United States. Sabrina McCormick, George Washington University; Alyssa Bruhn, George Washington University; Axumawit Teklu, George Washington University Natural Disaster and Sickness Shocks: Evidence of Informal Insurance from Bangladesh. Pallab Mozumder; Nafisa Halim, Boston University Are We Even Valued as Human Beings? Stress and Distrust After the Flint Water Crisis. Jennifer Lai, Michigan State University; Courtney A. Cuthbertson, Michigan State University Table 06. Gender and Health Presider: Karin A. Mack, CDC/NCIPC/DARPI Examining the Implications of the Relational Dynamics of Sex Role Orientation for Mental Health. Margaret McGladrey, University of Kentucky Gender Role Ideology, Self-rated Health and Happiness in China based on CGSS 2013. Yan Zhang, Michigan State University Political Gender Inequality and Infant Mortality in the United States, 1990-2012. Patricia Ann Homan, Duke University The Impact of Gender on Behavioral Health Literacy. Courtney A. Cuthbertson, Michigan State University; Paula K. Miller, Ohio University Transitions in Marital Relationship and Allostatic Load among Older Men and Women. Ha Ngoc Trinh, University of Texas Medical Branch; Leslie E. Cofie, University of Texas Medical Branch; Abbey B. Berenson, University of Texas Medical Branch Table 07. Health Care for Transgender People in the Current Era Nondiscrimination Policies and the U.S. Transgender Health Landscape: A Multilevel Analysis. Danya Raquel Lagos, University of Chicago The Commodification of Trans-bodies: The Political Economy of Trans-related Healthcare and the Global Market. Sofia Aboim, Institute of Social Sciences, University of Lisbon; Pedro Vasconcelos, ISCTE-IUL University Institute of Lisbon

Saturday, August 12, 2017

Columbia University Knowledge Attitude and Practice Regarding AIDS/HIV among Pakistani Women. Kamran Hanif, University of Lahore Social Inequalities and Unequal Access to Prevention Knowledge: Married Women’s Vulnerability to HIV/AIDS in Bangladesh. Syeda S. Jesmin, University of North Texas at Dallas; Md. Mosfequr Rahman, University of Rajshahi Tracing the Production of the Epistemology of HIV/AIDS. Alexandre White, Boston University Health Care Utilization Patterns among Latinos Diagnosed with HIV: Gender, Acculturation, and Inequalities. Heather Rodriguez, Central Connecticut State University Table 12. Race, “Weathering”, and Health Inequality Discrimination, Segregation, and Chronic Inflammation: Linking “Weathering” to the Poor Health of Black Americans. Ronald L. Simons, University of Georgia; Man Kit Lei, University of Georgia; Leslie Gordon Simons, University of Georgia Life Course Psychosocial Stress Exposure and Black-White Health Disparities in Old Age. Courtney Boen, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Should Insulin Therapy Matter? Determinants of Diabetes Care Outcomes. Jennifer Audrey Andersen, University of NebraskaLincoln Table 13. Race, Ethnicity, and Health Disparities Table Presider: Stephanie Hansard, Georgia State University Active and Avoidant Coping and Perceived Stress: Racial/Ethnic Differences in Texas City. Christine A. Mair, University of Maryland, Baltimore County; Malcolm Cutchin, Wayne State University; Richard Slatcher, Wayne State University; M. Peek, University of Texas Medical Branch Discrimination, Acculturation, and Self-Rated Health among U.S. Asian Immigrants: Testing Differences by National Origin. Max Reason, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill From the Enlightenment to Black Lives Matter: Racial and Gendered Transformation of Schizophrenia in Psychiatry. Ingrid Waldron, Dalhousie University Testing the Paradox: High Black Self-Esteem and Psychological Distress. Omar Tariq Bird The Consequences of Whiteness for the Health of Whites in the USA. Jennifer Malat, University of Cincinnati; Sarah MayorgaGallo, University of Massachusetts-Boston; David R. Williams, Harvard University Table 14. Religion and Health Presider: Richard J. Petts, Ball State University Definitions of Health According to Clergy: Implications for Health Research in Congregations. Anthony David Campbell, University of Alabama at Birmingham I am going where the women go: Black women’s health care work in faith communities. Staci A. Young, Medical College of Wisconsin Poverty, Mortality, and the Moderating Effect of Contextual Religiosity among U.S. Adults. Leah Drakeford Heroin is the Devil: Addiction, Morality, and Syringe Exchange in Rural America. Kelly Szott, Earlham College Table 15. Reproductive Decision Making and Mothering Experiences Table Presider: Christie Sennott, Purdue University Motherhood and the Dynamics of Reproductive Decision Making among Women with Disabilities. Tracey A. LaPierre, University of Kansas; Mary K. Zimmerman, University of Kansas School of Medicine; Jean P. Hall, University of Kansas-Medical Center

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Table 08. Health Care in the New Era Table Presider: Duane A. Matcha, Siena College (Non)-Performance of Sick Role and Health Perceptions in a New Brave World of Digital Health Information. Gul Seckin, University of North Texas; Jacquelyn Cheun, University of North Texas A Worthy Cause? Illness and Inequality in Medical Crowdfunding Success. Cambria Naslund, Princeton University Current State of the Art: Applications of the Internet in Health Interventions and Digital Health Surveillance. Eun Kyong Shin, University of Tennessee Health Science Center – Oak-Ridge National Lab; Arash Shaban-Nejad, University of Tennessee Health Science Center – Oak-Ridge National Lab Center for Biomedical Informatics, Department of Pediatrics Group Medical Visits: Participatory Care in Safety-net Clinics. Ariana Thompson-Lastad, University of California-San Francisco; Sara Rubin, University of California-San Francisco Pharmacogenomics and Personalized Medicine in Clinical Research and Practice. RAmya Madhavan Rajagopalan, University of Wisconsin - Madison Table 09. Health Policy How Policy Affects Disease: Fundamental Causes and the Case of Zika. Matthew Lawrence Kearney, University of WisconsinMadison Perceiving and Treating Autistic Bodies: The Construction of Dis-embodied Knowledge within the Alternative Biomedical Movement. Catherine Do Tan, Brandeis University Policing Disease: Reform of the International Health Regulations and Strategic Social Construction at the WHO. Alexandre White, Boston University The Biopower of the State Vaccinate: How Three Industrialized Nations Immunize their Citizens. Charles Allan McCoy, SUNY Plattsburgh The Disability Tax: A Hidden Toll Shortening the Llives of People with Disabilities. Sarah Shick, Case Western Reserve University Table 10. Healthcare Experiences and Interactions: Perspectives of Patients and Medical Practitioners On Death, Dying, and Emotional Labor: A Social Psychological Analysis of Nursing and Patient Death. Stephanie Clark, Northeastern University Psychosocial Experiences of Prophylactic Oophorectomy in Women with Inherited Cancer Risk. Rachel Meadows, The Ohio State University; Tasleem Juana Padamsee, The Ohio State University; Electra D Paskett, The Ohio State University Social Support, Cultural Health Capital, and Health Care Experiences. Elizabeth Gage-Bouchard, Roswell Park Cancer Institute Medical Care as Migration Process: Shifting Patient Expectations Organize Illness Experiences in the Porous Hospital. David Lawlor, Michigan State University; Adithya Bala, Michigan State University; Maya Giaquinta, Michigan State University; Megan Penzkofer, Michigan State University; Daniel A. Menchik, Michigan State University Talking about Dying: Tumor Progression Forcing Difficult Conversations between Patients and Oncologists. Dagoberto Cortez, University of Wisconsin-Madison Table 11. Knowledge, Perception, and Treatment of HIV/AIDS across Various Sociodemographic Contexts Table Presider: Catherine van de Ruit, Ursinus College Contextualizing Neighborhood Effects Abroad: HIV/AIDS and Community Activism in Rio de Janeiro. Anthony Urena,

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Session 147, continued Decentralization of Medical Knowledge and the Cost of Coordinating Care. Alexandra E. Brewer, University of Chicago The Shift towards a Medical Contraceptive Model in Europe: Where Are We Now? Rozemarijn Dereuddre, Ghent University This is Medicine and That is Not: Legal Boundary-work and the Maintenance of Professional Authority. Skye Miner, McGill University Table 16. Sexual/Gender Identity and Healthcare Experiences Table Presider: Brandon James Moore, The Ohio State University Experiences of Stigma During Sexual Healthcare Visits: A Qualitative Study of Non-monogamous Women. Rachael McCrosky, Georgia State University Navigating Compulsory Able-bodiedism and HIV Treatment Costs: HIV Status as an Intersection in Contingent Labor Markets. Katherine Weatherford Darling, University of California, Santa Cruz Negative attitudes toward PrEP: Moral Crusading and Sexual Citizenship. Mark Pawson, City University of New York Graduate Center; Christian Grov, CHEST & NDRI Sexual and Gender Identity Minority Experiences across Healthcare Organizations: Theorizing Minority Stress in Context. Emily Allen Paine, University of Texas at Austin Table 17. Socioeconomic Inequality and Health Disparity Do Income Inequalities in Higher Weight Status Depend on Social Integration? Anthony David Campbell, University of Alabama at Birmingham; Elizabeth Helene Baker, University of Alabama at Birmingham Does Income Inequality Buffer HIV Rate? A Panel Study of the United States, 2008-2014. Simone Rambotti, University of Arizona Income Inequality and Chronic Health Conditions: A Multilevel Analysis of the U.S. States. Kathryn Freeman Anderson, University of Houston; Eric Bjorklund, The University of Arizona; Simone Rambotti, University of Arizona Social Capital, Socioeconomic Inequality and Mortality. Diane S. Shinberg, Indiana University of Pennsylvania Does Cancer Prevention and Control Moderate Social Inequalities in Colorectal Cancer Mortality? Sean A. P. Clouston, Stony Brook University; Julia Acker, New York University; Bruce G. Link, University of California Riverside; Marcie Rubin, Columbia University Table 18. The Affordable Care Act: History and the Current State in Transition Table Presider: Stephanie P. Hall, Georgia State University Affordable Care Act: Institutional Intermixing and Trump’s Promise that Competition will be Beautiful. Ethan J. Evans, University of California, Davis The Affordable Care Act: An Analysis of the American Welfare State in Transition. Ethan J. Evans, University of California, Davis The “Borderization” of Health Care: Institutional Collaboration between Medical Care and Immigration Enforcement in Arizona. Erin Hoekstra, University of Minnesota Expanding ADHD Definitions and Medicine’s Control over Childhood. Manuel Vallee, University of Auckland Table 19. The Application of a Life Course Perspective in Health Research Age versus Cohort-related Differences in Late-life Cognition: A

Prospective Study of 100,454 Older Europeans. Sean A. P. Clouston, Stony Brook University Beyond Resources: Structural Conditions and Approaches to Chronic Illness Self-Management. Paul Bugyi, SUNY Old Westbury Birth Weight, Family Socioeconomic Status and Cognitive Skills among Chinese Adolescents. Jia Miao Childhood Chronic Illness and Long-Term Outcomes: The Role of Age of Onset and Disease Activity. Eitan Tye, Duke University Linking Perceived Discrimination during Adolescence to Health during Middle Adulthood via Self-esteem and Risk Behaviors. Tse-Chuan Yang, State University of New York-Albany; I-Chien Chen, Michigan State University; Seung-won Choi, Michigan State University; Aysenur Kurtulus, State University of New York-Albany Table 20. The Health Paradox of Immigrants and Ethnic Minorities A Fragile Protective Cloak? Examining Self-Rated Health and the Latin Americanization Thesis among Black Mexicans. Guadalupe Marquez-Velarde, Texas A&M University; Nicole E Jones, Texas A&M University; Verna M. Keith, Texas A&M University Maternal Education and the Hispanic Paradox: Evidence from Infant Mortality in the United States. Gracia Sierra The Healthy Immigrant Effect: When, From Where, What Language, or their Thoughts? Russell K. Schutt, University of Massachusetts-Boston; Mathew J. Creighton, University College Dublin; Manan Nayak, University of MassachusettsBoston Table 21. The Medicalization of Childbearing Countervailing Discourses in Obstetricians’ Clinical DecisionMaking Narratives. Lauren Ashley Diamond-Brown, Boston College The County or the Mother? A Multilevel Modeling Approach to Understanding Low-risk Caesarean Section Delivery. Andrea Tilstra, University of Colorado - Boulder The Effect of Family Policies and Public Health on Breastfeeding Initiation among 18 High-income Countries. Amanda M. Lubold, Indiana State University Table 22. Trends and Determinants of Mental Health Table Presider: Catherine L. Moran, University of New Hampshire Exploring Determinants of Suicidal Ideation 1998-2011. Jaein Lee, University of Maryland, College Park Mixed Methods Study of Family Separation and Refugee Mental Health: War Trauma and Administrative Violence. Jessica Rose Goodkind, University of New Mexico; Alexander Miller, University of New Mexico; Julia Hess, University of New Mexico; Deborah Bybee, Michigan State University Unidirectional or Bidirectional: Rethinking the Relationship between Education Achievement and Mental Health among Children. Wensong Shen, University of Pennsylvania; Ruolin Su, University of Pennsylvania Who Feels Powerful in China and Does it Matter to Psychological Well-being? Lei Jin, Chinese University of Hong Kong Non-Cognitive Traits, Self-Rated Health Status, and Mental Health. Isabelle Christine Beulaygue, Department of Interventional Radiology Table 23. Trends of Body Mass Index and the Medicalization of Obesity Table Presider: Alicia Riley, University of Chicago Decomposing Trends in Adult Body Mass Index, Obesity, and Morbid Obesity, 1971-2012. Ashley Wendell Kranjac, Rice

Saturday, August 12, 2017

148. Section on Political Economy of the World-System. World-System Disorder

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513A, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Albert J. Bergesen, University of Arizona Presider: Albert J. Bergesen, University of Arizona Growing Global Disorder and Nationalism in the 21st Century: Financialization, Social Unrest, and World Hegemonic Crisis. Sahan Savas Karatasli, Princeton University Macrosociology of Terrorism. Samuel Cohn, Texas A&M University Trends in World-Economic Volatility: Development in World-Historical Perspective, 1820 to 2008. Daniel Pasciuti, Georgia State University; Corey R. Payne, Johns Hopkins University World-System, Polity and Terrorism 1994-2012: A Longitudinal Study of Terrorism Using World Market and Trade Determinants. Abolfazl Sotoudeh-Sherbaf, Boston College

149. Section on Race, Gender, and Class. Intersectional Theorizing and Sociology: Legacies and Future Possibilities

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513E, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Freeden Oeur, Tufts University Presider: Saida Grundy, Boston University Confronting Confusion in Intersectionality’s Legacy: Are Race, Sexuality, Class, and Gender Mutually Constituted? Allison Suppan Helmuth, University of Illinois-Chicago; Ivy Ken, George Washington University Du Bois’ Global Sociology: The Intersections of Race, Class and Colonialism. Jose Itzigsohn; Karida Brown, UCLA Gendered Racialization: State Led Surveillance of Muslim American Men and Women in U.S. Airports. Saher Farooq Selod, Simmons College The Politics of Erased Migrations: Toward a Relational, Intersectional Sociology of Latinx Gender and Migration. Rocío R. García, University of California, Los Angeles Discussant: Tonya Frevert, UNC Charlotte

150. Section on Sociology of Development. Health and Inequality across the Globe

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513F, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Joseph A. Harris, Boston University Presider: Shiri Noy, University of Wyoming Therapeutic Citizens and Clients: Diverging Practices in Malawi’s Healthcare Facilities. Amy Yuan Zhou, University of California, Los Angeles Recruiting Body Tissue Labor: The Making of an AIDS Epidemic with Chinese Characteristics. Yan Long, Indiana University Gendered Health Inequalities in Mental Well-being? The Nordic Countries in a Comparative Perspective. Sigrun Olafsdottir, University of Iceland Relative Health Equality and Variation in Health Behavior in Hong Kong. Pui Yin Cheung, Indiana University Bloomington When Power Hurts: How Norms of Masculinity Influence Female Empowerment and Intimate Partner Violence. Taylor Whitten Brown Discussant: Sanyu A. Mojola, University of Michigan

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University; Robert L. Wagmiller, Temple University Race Effects of Perceived Weight Status and its Relationship with Unmet Health Care Need. Sarah Briana Rutland, University of Alabama at Birmingham Socioeconomic Disparities in Adolescent Obesity in Brazil: The Role of School Enrollment and Work. Molly Dondero, American University; Jennifer Van Hook, Pennsylvania State University The Incomplete Medicalization of Obesity: National Trends in Physician Visit, Diagnosis and Anti-Obesity Treatments 19962011. Gabriele Ciciurkaite, Utah State University The Social Life of the Body Mass Index as a Measure of Health. Iliya Gutin, The University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill Table 24. Well-being of Veterans Such a Rash Act: Wartime Experiences and Veteran Suicides after the Great War. Evan Roberts, University of Minnesota Turkish Gazis (Injured Veterans) Transition into Civilian Life. Mehmet Celebi, University of North Texas; Cynthia M. Cready, University of North Texas Table 25. Within the Medical Institution: Organizational Structure and Power Dynamics Ambiguous Hierarchy in Health Care: Resident and Medical Assistant Teaming. Joanna Veazey Brooks, University of Kansas School of Medicine; Bethany Sheridan, Harvard University and Harvard Business School; Alyna Chien, Boston Children’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School; Sara J. Singer, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health Disrupting Equilibrium: Sensemaking, Emotion, and Health Equity. Brooke Cunningham, University of Minnesota; Jill Marsteller, Johns Hopkins University; Windy Fredkove, University of Minnesota; Alden Lai, Johns Hopkins University; Dimpho Orionzi, Allina Health Heterogeneity in Nurses’ Perceptions of Physician Dominance. Clayton Thomas, Indiana University; Lydia Faith DiSabatino, Indiana University; Fabio Rojas, Indiana University Reinforcing Physician Authority: Clinical Ethics Consultation and the Resolution of Conflicts in Treatment Decisions. Katrina Hauschildt, University of Michigan; Raymond De Vries, University of Michigan Organizational Barriers to Improving Patient Safety in Hospitals. Teresa L. Scheid, University of North Carolina-Charlotte; Maureen Walsh Koricke, University of North Carolina-Charlotte Table 26. Work, Occupation, Stress Management, and Well-being Table Presider: Liana Christin Landivar, U.S. Department of Labor An Ethnography of Performance Anxiety Management among Classical Music Students in Montréal. Cassandre Ville, Université de Montréal In the Wake of Young Adulthood: Examining the Role of Occupational Prestige in Trouble Sleeping. Dana McClellen Auden, University of North Texas Precarious Work, Subjective Employment Insecurity, and Sleep Disturbance: Evidence From 31 European Countries. Quan Dang Hien Mai, Vanderbilt University; Anna W. Jacobs, Vanderbilt University; Terrence D. Hill, University of Arizona Table 27. Publishing Medical Sociology in ASR: A Conversation with an ASR Editor Presider: Sarah Mustillo, University of Notre Dame

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151. Section on Sociology of Education Refereed Roundtable Session and Business Meeting

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517B, 4:30-5:30 p.m. Session Organizer: Megan Theresa Thiele, San Jose State University Table 01. High Racial Impact: Quantitatively Demonstrating How Teachers Matter Table Presider: Hua-Yu Sebastian Cherng, New York University Teaching Bias? The Links between Teaching Quality and Classroom Demographic Composition. Hua-Yu Sebastian Cherng, New York University; Peter Halpin, New York University The Race of a Teacher and Differential Student Achievement: Evidence from Project STAR. Issa Abdulcadir Vertical Stratification within Education: Critically Examining Teacher Quality as a School Resource and Educational Mobility. Derek Anthony Houston, University of Oklahoma Black and Hispanic Boys’ Reading Achievement in Early Childhood: The Role of Schools and Teachers. Jessica Halliday Hardie, Hunter College, CUNY Do Teachers Show Reference Bias? Effects of Student and School Characteristics on Teacher-Reported Student Effort. Kendall LaParo, Temple University Table 02. Marginalized: Social Class and College Table Presider: Elizabeth M. Lee, Ohio University Organizing around the Margins: Class-activist Student Clubs on Selective College Campuses. Elizabeth M. Lee, Ohio University Stigma in Class: Mental Illness, Social Class and Tokenism in Elite College Culture. Katie Billings, University of Massachusetts Amherst The Participation of Collegiate Activities through the Lenses of Socioeconomic Status. Mitchell David Lingo, University of Iowa; Brian An, University of Iowa Work Hours in (Work) Context: College Student Worker Typologies and Academic Performance. Emma D. Cohen, Indiana University; Jennifer C. Lee, Indiana University Table 03. Smoothing the Break: How Transitions Matter Table Presider: William J. Carbonaro, University of Notre Dame School Transitions: Effects on Youth Friendship Networks and GPA from 6th to 12th Grade. Diane H. Felmlee, Pennsylvania State University; Cassie McMillan, Pennsylvania State University; Paulina dela Cruz Rodis; D. Wayne Osgood, Pennsylvania State University Are Schools Stratifiers or Equalizers? Comparing Calendar and School Year Achievement Gains in Indiana. William J. Carbonaro, University of Notre Dame Why You Should Move to Finland to Live the American Dream. Anne Christine Holtmann, Berlin Social Science Center (WZB) Table 04. Parental Involvement: Differentiating Contexts Table Presider: Mary J. Fischer, University of Connecticut Traveling to School: Trends in Parents’ Investment in Education. Idit Fast, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Emerging Entitlement: How Parents Respond to Participation Policies in New School Contexts. Anna Catherine Rhodes, Johns Hopkins University; Allison Young Advantaged/Disadvantaged School Community, Parental Networks, and Parental Involvement at Elementary School. Angran Li, University of Connecticut; Mary J. Fischer, University of Connecticut Parental Involvement among Immigrant Parents in Canada: Eastern European Voices. Max Antony-Newman, University of

Toronto Table 05. Trends in Intergenerational Mobility and Influence: How Parents Matter Table Presider: Alair MacLean, Washington State University Vancouver The Multiracial Advantage? Asian- American Academic Achievement across Asian/White Households. Can Cheng, Brigham Young University; Carol Jane Ward, Brigham Young University; Benjamin G. Gibbs, Brigham Young University; Lance D. Erickson, Brigham Young University; Jonathan A. Jarvis, Brigham Young University Acquiring Cultural Capital: Understanding Variation Between Parent and Student Stocks of Cultural Capital. Denise Deutschlander, Univeristy of Virginia Relationships between Parents’ and Children’s Higher Education in the Early 21st Century. Alair MacLean, Washington State University Vancouver Family, Education, and Tolerance: Do Parents’ Education Have an Effect on Opinions About Homosexuality? Michael Scott Branch, Syracuse University Table 06. Beyond Incubation: What Happens Post-Graduation? Table Presider: Alanna Gillis, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill Enthusiasts, Backup Planners, and Professionals: How College Students Approach Participation in Service Programs after Graduation. Alanna Gillis, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill The Lasting Impact of High School on Giving and Volunteering in America. David Sikkink, University of Notre Dame; Jonathan D. Schwarz, University of Notre Dame Expectations Versus Reality: Where Are Recent Doctoral Graduates Finding Work? David Michael Walters, University of Guelph; David Zarifa, Nipissing University; Brittany Etmanski, University of Guelph and University of Waterloo Lost in Transition: College Resources and Unequal Early-Career Trajectories of Arts Alumni. Nathan D. Martin, Arizona State University; Alexandre Frenette, Arizona State University Pedigree, Prestige and Corporate Elites in Postwar Japan. Daiji Kawaguchi, The University of Tokyo; Hiroshi Ono, Hitotsubashi University Table 07. Beyond the Basics: From Education to Politics Table Presider: Michael F. Polgar, Penn State University Education Reform and the Political Incorporation of Black and Latino Youth in School. Erin Michaels, City University of New York-Graduate Center How College Makes Citizens: Independent Effects of Higher Education on Political Engagement. Alanna Gillis, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill Integrating Holocaust Education. Michael F. Polgar, Penn State University Citizens(hip) Apart: Palestinian and Jewish Teachers Talk about Teaching Citizenship in Israeli Elementary Schools. Gal Levy, Open University; Mohammad Ibrahim Massalha, The Open University of Israel Table 08. Across Time and Space: Curriculum, Convergence and Citizenship Table Presider: Yoonjeon Kim, UC Berkeley Measuring High School Students’ Curricular Intensity Over Time. Megan J. Austin, University of Notre Dame Global Convergence toward Student-centered and Complex Classroom: The Influence of Global and Nation-specific Factors. Yoonjeon Kim, UC Berkeley

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of Illinois-Chicago College Major Choice, Career Perceptions and Plans: The Pathway to a Medical Career. Mette Evelyn Bjerre, University of Notre Dame; Elizabeth Stearns, University of North CarolinaCharlotte; Stephanie Moller, University of North CarolinaCharlotte; Melissa Dancy, University of Colorado-Boulder Gender Ideology and College Majors: Exploring how Different College Majors Pattern Gender Attitudes. Visha Patel, University of Oklahoma; Cyrus J. Schleifer, University of Oklahoma; Simon George Brauer, Duke University Military Service and STEM Degree Trajectories: An Intersectional Analysis. Christina R. Steidl, University of Alabama in Huntsville; Regina E. Werum, University of Nebraska-Lincoln; Jacob P. Absalon, United States Military Academy; Alice MillerMacPhee, University of Nebraska-Lincoln Table 13. Race and Education: The Struggle Continues Table Presider: Ashley Mikulyuk The Economic Benefits of K-12 School Diversity. Ashley Mikulyuk; Jomills Henry Braddock, University of Miami Race and Reading Performance: Schools as “Exacerbater” in the First Two Years of Elementary School. Jie Min Racial and Ethnic Differences in Student Participation in Private Supplementary Education Activities. Phoebe Ho, University of Pennsylvania; Hyunjoon Park, University of Pennsylvania; Grace Kao, University of Pennsylvania Table 14. High Stakes Education: Conditions and Consequences Table Presider: Maria T. Paino, Oakland University Accountability, District Employment Conditions, and Public School Teacher Morale. Kristen Erichsen, Florida State University; John Reynolds, Florida State University School Textbooks, Standardized Examinations and Social Cohesion. Mariam Orkodashvili, Vanderbilt University Separate and Unequal: School Rankings in America’ s Most Segregated Region. Michael Miner, University of WisconsinMilwaukee Tight Coupling for Some Teachers Means Loose Coupling for Others: Accountability and Gender in Schools. Maria T. Paino, Oakland University Preemption in the Face of Shifting Dilemmas and Institutionalization: Comparing Accountability Policies at Adams School. Debbie Heesun Kim, Northwestern University Imbedded in Rankings: Boundary Works in Interpretation of Numbers. Siyu Li, University Lille 1- Ecole Normale SupérieureCASS Table 15. Higher Education: Negotiating the Thin Line between Exclusion and Inclusion Critical Roadblocks: How Structural Circumstances Hinder First-Generation College Students from Developing Critical Thinking Skills. Alma Nidia Garza, University of California Irvine; Jean L. Van Delinder, Oklahoma State University Lean on Me: Friends as Academic Social Capital Resources among First Generation College Students. Irenee R. Beattie, University of California, Merced; Janice McCabe, Dartmouth College First-Generation College Students in Contemporary China: Cultural Capital and Heterogeneous College Effects. Wenli Liu Table 16. Outside Looking In: The Public and Education Table Presider: Emma D. Cohen, Indiana University Shifting Philosophies and Early Childhood Education in 19th Century America. Jeremy Redford, American Institutes for Research

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Higher Education, STEM, and Global Citizenship: A Nexus for Social Inclusion. Eric J. Simeon, Pennsylvania State University; Beverly Lindsay, University of California Table 09. College Choice: Navigating the Wide Terrain Table Presider: Wonsun Ryu, The University of Texas at Austin Top Student, Top School, Revisited: College Choice and Labor Market Outcomes for High School Valedictorians. Matthew Gaertner, SRI International; Alexandria Radford, MPR Associates, Inc. Exploring Factors Affecting College Enrollment of High School Students. Wonsun Ryu, The University of Texas at Austin Do the Right Thing: Race, Achievement and Inequality in Post-secondary Attainment. Jomaira Salas Pujols, Rutgers University Table 10. Education and the Workforce: The Role of Technical Education Table Presider: Will Tyson, University of South Florida Non-cognitive Skill Development in Career and Technical Education: Student, Teacher, and Employer Perspectives. Will Tyson, University of South Florida; Edward C. Fletcher, University of South Florida Optimal Duration of Participation in a Job Training Program That Promotes Positive Youth Development. Youngjo Im, University of Chicago; Ming-Long Lam, University of Chicago Persistent Disadvantage or New Opportunity? Developmental Perspectives on Low-achieving Youths’ Transitions into Vocational Education in Germany. Anne Christine Holtmann, Berlin Social Science Center (WZB); Heike Solga, Berlin Social Science Center (WZB); Laura Menze, Berlin Social Science Center (WZB) Wage Losses Due to Overqualification: Lower Formal Skill Demands or Occupational Skills Mismatch? Malte Reichelt, New York University Abu Dhabi; Nancy Kracke, Institute for Employment Research (IAB); Basha Vicari, Institute for Employment Research (IAB) Table 11. Educational Attainment Table Presider: Tori LaShan Thomas, Penn State University Exploring the Relationship between High School Racial Composition and Educational Attainment. Tori LaShan Thomas, Penn State University Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) and Bachelor Degree Attainment in the United States. Carolina Otero, Bringham Young University Hispanic High School Dropout Rate in the Context of Negative Attitudes towards Hispanics in Arizona. Volha Chykina, The Pennsylvania State University The Heterogeneous Treatment Effect of Teenage Childbearing on Educational Attainment. Kiwoong Park, SUNY Albany Do Chinese People Believe in Meritocracy? Influence of Educational Attainment. Zhonglu li, Shenzhen University Adjudicating Aspirations: Using Causal Effect Estimation to Test Competing Conceptualizations of Educational Aspirations. Kiara Douds, New York University; Delaram Takyar, New York University Table 12. Pathways and Trajectories: Majors, Medicine and the Military Table Presider: Mette Evelyn Bjerre, University of Notre Dame A Different Kind of Physician: Medical Residents’ Undergraduate Major and Cultural and Structural Competence. Deanna Christianson, University of Illinois-Chicago; Emily Hallgren, University of Illinois-Chicago; Laura Ellen Hirshfield, University

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Session 151, continued Believers, Moderates, Skeptics, and Cynics: Public Perceptions of the Value of a College Degree. Emma D. Cohen, Indiana University; Emily Meanwell, Indiana University; Brian Powell, Indiana University Who are the Compliers under Educational Expansion? Characterizing the Changing Schooling Population in Reforming China, 1981-2010. Maocan Guo, Harvard University Table 17. Parental Investment: Influencing Education Around the World Table Presider: Duy Do, University of Pennsylvania Academic Returns to Supplementary Investments: Evidence from Hong Kong. Wenli Liu Educational Investments and Attainment in Malawi: The Role of Neighborhood Peer Effects. Duy Do, University of Pennsylvania Effects of Social, Educational, and Healthcare Spending on the Relationship between Family Background and Academic Achievement. Stephanie M. Arnett, New Mexico State University Gendered Glass Self in 11 Countries: Children’s Attitude Perception Mediates Parent-Child Association in Math Attitude. Koit Hung, The University of Texas at Austin The Effects of Family Backgrounds on Children’s Educational Performance and Achievement in China’s Market Transition. Yuling Wu, Nanyang Technological University; Hong Xiao, Nanyang Technological University Table 18. The University: Institutions and their Affiliates Table Presider: Christine Min Wotipka, Stanford University Examining the Institutional Features Influencing Sexual Harassment and Assault at Colleges and Universities. Kolby Cameron, Whitworth University; Jason Wollschleger More than a Leaky Pipeline? A Cross-National Analysis of Women Faculty, 1970-2012. Christine Min Wotipka, Stanford University; Mana Nakagawa, Stanford University; Joseph Svec, University of Minnesota Putting it into Practice: Creating a Culture that Encourages Teaching and Learning Research. Molly J. Dingel, University of Minnesota Rochester; Kelsey J. Metzger, University of Minnesota Rochester; Robert Dunbar, University of Minnesota Rochester; Aaron Kostko, University of Minnesota Rochester; Marcia Nichols, University of Minnesota Rochester The Numbers of Merit: Gauging the Consequences of Quantitative Evaluation of Academics. Hector Vera, UNam Theorising the Diffusion of Innovation in Teaching in Higher Education. Anastasia Kulpa, University of Alberta Competing Institutional Logics And Teaching Effectiveness In Traditional and Online University Classrooms. Billy Ray Brocato, Texas A&M University; Oi-man Kwok, Texas A&M University Table 19. Mentorship and Social Class: Inequalities in Advising Table Presider: Mary Larue Scherer, University of MassachusettsAmherst Seeking Out Support: Looking Beyond Socioeconomic Status to Explain Academic Engagement Strategies at an Elite College. Anthony Abraham Jack, Harvard University; Veronique Irwin, Berkeley Different Students Will Gravitate for Different Reasons: Preliminary Findings on Connections between Advisers and Students. Irina Chukhray, Rice University; Amanda Bancroft,

Rice University The ambigious Role of the High School Counselor: Implications for Students and Schools. Mary Kate Blake, University of Notre Dame Institutions Adrift: Social Class and Faculty Mentorship at a Flagship and Regional Public University. Mary Larue Scherer, University of Massachusetts- Amherst Table 20. After Graduation: Impacts of the University Experience Table Presider: Kennan Cepa, University of Pennsylvania Demographic Differentials in Health Returns to College Selectivity. Sarah Garcia, University of Minnesota; John Robert Warren, University of Minnesota; Evangeleen Pattison, The University of Texas at Austin; Eric Grodsky, University of Wisconsin An Examination of the Gender Wage Gap among Recent Postsecondary Graduates. Anthony Jehn, University of Guelph; David Michael Walters, University of Guelph; Stephanie Howells, University of Guelph College as a “Contested Terrain” Heterogeneous Effects of Majors on College Pathways and Post-College Outcomes. Jung In, University of Oxford The Impact of Non-traditional College-going on Entry into Marriage and ivorce. David B. Monaghan, University of Wisconsin-Madison Time is Money? Timing of Student Loans and College Completion. Kennan Cepa, University of Pennsylvania Table 21. Race and Exclusion on University Campuses Table Presider: Anthony Pena, University of Illinois - Chicago Black Yard, White Yard: Exploring the Black Greek Experience at Historically Black and Predominantly White Institutions. Shaonta Allen, University of Cincinnati Racing to the Degree: Bridging Sociological Perspectives on Education, Racialized Experiences, and Mental Health. Stacey Houston, Vanderbilt University The Foundation Supports the Structure: History, Logics, Culture, and the Minority Student College Experience. Anthony Pena, University of Illinois - Chicago Table 22. Bridging the Gaps: How Geography Matters for Education Table Presider: Xiao Yu, Johns Hopkins University On the Move: Assessing the Immediate Impacts of School and Residential Mobility on Student Achievement. Marshall Ryan Jean, Northwestern University Proximity and Post-secondary Education Participation: Examining North-South and Urban-Rural Differences in Canada. David Zarifa, Nipissing University; Darcy Hango, Statistics Canada; Roger Pizarro Milian, McMaster University Rural-Urban Migration, School Context, and Gender Inequality in Cognitive Skill. Xiao Yu, Johns Hopkins University Study-Abroad: The New Education Gospel in China. Yingyi Ma, Syracuse University Table 23. Education, Violence and Discipline Table Presider: Horace Joseph Duffy, Rice University Choosing Safety: School and Neighborhood Safety in New York City High School Choice. Chantal Annise Hailey, New York University School Racial Composition and Discipline. Horace Joseph Duffy, Rice University The Effects of Violence Exposure on California Student Education Outcomes. Ravaris LaDale Moore, UCLA Poverty, Stress, and Academic Performance: ACE Scores and Achievement in an Urban District. Corey Bunje Bower, State

Saturday, August 12, 2017

Table 28. School Choice: How Families Navigate the Terrain Table Presider: Paul Thomas Knudson, University of Massachusetts Amherst Are Urban Public Schools Suitable? How Student Learning Styles and Disposition affect School Choice. Paul Thomas Knudson, University of Massachusetts Amherst Choosing Late: Considering Late Registration in School Choice. Kelley Fong, Harvard University; Sarah Faude, Northeastern University How Parents Find Schools: School Choice, Access to Information, and the Reproduction of Inequality. Max Cuddy, University of Illinois at Chicago The Cumulative Effects of Social Networks: School Choice among Disadvantaged Parents. Bailey A. Brown, Columbia University School-Based Decision Making among Families that Face Social and Economic Disadvantages. Daniela Barriga, Brigham Young University; Kristie J. Rowley, Brigham Young University; Curtis D. Child, Brigham Young University Table 29. Neoliberalism: At What Cost? Table Presider: Blane DaSilva, University of South Carolina Sumter Market Strategies in Higher Education: A Test of Neoliberal Theories of Competition. Beth Mintz, University of Vermont; Daniel Krymkowski, University of Vermont School Choice, Neoliberal Mothering, and the Rise of “Situational” Homeschooling. Kate Henley Averett, University at Albany, SUNY Resisting the Market University: Political Challenges to the Locus of Authority in Public University Tuition Policy. Jennifer Marie Nations, UC-San Diego Commodification and Consumerism in Higher Education: Is College Like a Car? Blane DaSilva, University of South Carolina Sumter Table 30. The Nexus of Gender and Education: It’s Complicated Table Presider: Ran Liu, University of Pennsylvania Does Privilege bring Gender Equality? How Family Background Impacts Aspiration, Stereotype, and Motivation in Mathematics. Ran Liu, University of Pennsylvania Oppositional Masculinity: Gender and Inequalities in School Attitudes, Performance, and Conduct. Daniel Rudel, Indiana University School Allocation Policy and the Reverse Gender Gap in Academic Achievement. Duoduo Xu, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology The Endorsement of Math-Gender Stereotype: A Comparative Perspective from China. Xiao Yu, Johns Hopkins University Gender Gaps in Student Academic Achievement and Inequality: Taiwan in Comparative Perspective. Shu-Ling Tsai, Academia Sinica; Michael Lee Smith, Economics Institute, Czech Academy of Sciences; Robert M. Hauser, University of Wisconsin-Madison Context Matters: A Cross-national Analysis of Gendered Differences in the Impact of Self-efficacy and Self-concept. Brian Huff, The Pennsylvania State University Table 31. The Continuing Significance of Stratification in Schools Table Presider: Marshall Ryan Jean, Northwestern University Can You Work Your Way Up? Ability Grouping and the Development of Student Engagement. Marshall Ryan Jean, Northwestern University Categorically Different: Diversity in Reward Structure of Noncognitive Skills between Schools and Curriculum Tracks. Siqi Han, Ohio State University

Saturday

University of New York at Buffalo; Susan Baldwin, Buffalo Public Schools Table 24. The School to Prison Pipeline: Inequalities in Action Table Presider: Sarah McGill Davis, University of North CarolinaChapel Hill Examining Factors that Influence White Pardoning in North Carolina Public High Schools. Sarah McGill Davis, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill School Disciplinarity and Carceral Outcomes: A Longitudinal Study of the ‘School-to-Prison-Pipeline’. Meg Caven, Brown University Concentrated Disadvantage and Aggressive Peers: School Climate and Boys’ Educational Attainment. Cheryl A. Roberts, Duke University The Impact of Discipline on School Participation and Civic Engagement. Zimife Umeh, Duke University; John Paul Bumpus, Duke University; Angel Luis Harris, Duke University Table 25. The Roles of Teachers: Beyond Teaching to the Test Table Presider: Achala Gupta, National University of Singapore Encounters on the Field: Teacher’s Authority: Unpacking ‘Ethnography’ in a Secondary School in India. Deepa Idnani, UCL “Teacher corruption” examined: Exploring occupational culture of “teacher-cum-tutors” in education landscape in contemporary India. Achala Gupta, National University of Singapore Talent Development in Education: An Inclusive or Exclusive Education Policy? Annette Rasmussen, Aalborg University; Christian Ydesen, Aalborg University Table 26. The Continuing Significance of Teacher and School Effects Table Presider: Benjamin G. Gibbs, Brigham Young University Between-Sector Differences in the Effects of Teacher Characteristics upon Student Outcomes. Brian R. Fitzpatrick, University of Notre Dame Meeting Expectations: Which School Investments Matter Most? A Case Study of Illinois Public Schools, 2002-2012. Wesley Jeffrey, Brigham Young University The Convergence of Tight and Loose Coupling in Chinese Art Test Prep Schools. Jun Fang, Northwestern University Negotiating State Policy in the Improvised Classroom: An Ethnographic Inquiry into Sexual Health Classrooms. Katelin Albert, University of Toronto Table 27. School Choice and Race: An Enduring Legacy of Exclusion? Table Presider: Mahala Dyer Stewart, University of Massachusetts Amherst Everybody Just Wants What’s Best for Their Kid: Racialized Logics in White Parents’ Schooling Choices. Mahala Dyer Stewart, University of Massachusetts Amherst Blind Choice: Color-Blind Racism in the Washington D.C. School Choice System. Angie O’Brien, University of Maryland The Other Narrative: Issue Frames and Their Consequences for Support of Charter School Expansion. Daphne Michelle Penn, Harvard University School Choice and Latinx Students: Breaking the Diversity Dichotomy. Michael R. Scott, University of Texas-Austin Reproduction of Racial Segregation in Charter Schools: Relationship between Neighborhood Demographics and Charter School Demographics. Qingyu Bu, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; Ruby Mendenhall, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

87

88

Saturday, August 12, 2017

Saturday

Session 151, continued Understanding Opportunity Gaps in an Urban, Community-based Education Reform Initiative. Lori Delale-O’Connor, University of Pittsburgh; Ira Emil Murray, University of Pittsburgh Table 32. Social Control, Discipline and Education Table Presider: Heidi Gansen, University of Michigan Norms in Action: The Individual Student in the School Climate. Colm Flaherty, Lund University; Patrik Andersson, Lund University Positive Discipline? Lay and Impulsive Disciplinary Practices in Early Childcare Settings. Heidi Gansen, University of Michigan; Karin A. Martin, University of Michigan Sexual Orientation and School Discipline: New Evidence from a Population-Based Sample. Joel Mittleman, Princeton University Race and Disciplinary Nets of Social Control: A Comparative Analysis of High School Handbooks. Brooke Dinsmore, University of Virginia Table 33. Race and Teachers: Examining the Relationship from Qualiative Approaches Table Presider: Jessica Cobb Closing Social Distance: Identity, Experience, and Congruence between Teachers and Students. Meg Caven, Brown University Organizing Blame: How Teachers Inhabit Narratives of Inequality. Jessica Cobb Teachers’ Deficit Constructions of Urban Students: Accounting for Student Needs Not Rooted in Deficit Discourse. Heidi Katherine Pitzer, SUNY - Onondaga Community College Exploring the Potential of Teacher Education Programs for Mitigating Racial Inequalities within Schools. Melissa A. Archer, University of Delaware Table 34. Race, Ethnicity and Student Body Composition Table Presider: Sheila Marie Contreras, Michigan State University Dispersing the Critical Cloud. Jessica Rose Kalbfeld, New York University From Deficit to Capital: Re-envisioning Latino Students’ Presence in Higher Education Spaces. Maria Isabel Ayala, Michigan State University; Sheila Marie Contreras, Michigan State University Students of Languages at Community Colleges: Demographics and Motivations. Eric Ketcham, City University of New YorkGraduate Center; Tomonori Nagano, LaGuardia Community College; Alexander Funk, Center for Integrated Language Communities The Struggle for Affirmative Actions in Brazil: The Case of UFRJ. Irene Rossetto, University of Sao Paulo; Marcelo JP Paixão, The University of Texas at Austin

152. Theory Section. Coser Salon

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 515A, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: John R. Hall, University of California-Davis Presider: John R. Hall, University of California-Davis Between Situations: Theorizing The Cadence of Interaction. Iddo Tavory, NYU

5:30 p.m.

Meetings

Section on Consumers and Consumption Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520A, 5:30-6:10 p.m. Section on Sociology of Education Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517B, 5:30-6:10 p.m.

6:30 p.m.

Meetings

Harvard Sociology Alumni Reception Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520E, 6:30-8:10 p.m. Human Rights and Global Justice (TG03) Palais des congrès de Montréal, 524A, 6:30-8:10 p.m. Memorial Event for James A. Davis Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514A, 6:30-8:10 p.m. Pennsylvania State University, Sociology Department Reception Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520F, 6:30-8:10 p.m. Sociologists’ AIDS Network (SAN) Palais des congrès de Montréal, 523B, 6:30-8:10 p.m. Stanford Center on Poverty and Inequality Palais des congrès de Montréal, 525B, 6:30-8:10 p.m. Wiley: Best Practices for the Publishing Process for Sociology Journals Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514B, 6:30-8:10 p.m.

Saturday, August 12, 2017

6:30 p.m.

Receptions

7:00 p.m.

89

Receptions

Joint Reception: Section on Consumers and Consumption and Section on Economic Sociology Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520A, 6:30-8:10 p.m.

Reception for Scholars with International Research and Teaching Interests Palais des congrès de Montréal, 710B, 7:00-8:00 p.m.

Joint Reception: Section on Medical Sociology and Section on Sociology of Mental Health Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517A, 6:30-8:10 p.m.

8:00 p.m.

Joint Reception: Section on Race, Gender, and Class; Section on Asia and Asian America; and Section on Sociology of Sex and Gender Offsite, TBD, 6:30-8:10 p.m.

Joint Reception: Section on Teaching and Learning in Sociology and Alpha Kappa Delta Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511C, 6:30-8:10 p.m. Section on Animals and Society Reception Offsite, Intercontinental Montréal, 360, rue Saint-Antoine Ouest, 6:30-8:10 p.m. Section on Communication, Information Technologies, and Media Sociology Reception Offsite, Pub St. Paul, 124 St Paul E, 6:30-8:10 p.m. Section on Evolution, Biology, and Society Reception Offsite, TBD, 6:30-8:10 p.m. Section on International Migration Reception Offsite, TBD, 6:30-8:10 p.m. Section on Labor and Labor Movements Reception Offsite, TBD, 6:30-8:10 p.m. Section on Marxist Sociology Reception Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520D, 6:30-8:10 p.m. Section on Methodology Reception Hyatt Regency Montreal, Creation Room, 6:30-8:10 p.m. Section on Political Economy of the World-System Reception Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520B, 6:30-8:10 p.m. Section on Sociology of Children and Youth Reception Offsite, Hambar Restaurant, 355, rue McGill, 6:30-8:10 p.m. Section on Sociology of Education Reception Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517B, 6:30-8:10 p.m. Student Reception Palais des congrès de Montréal, 710A, 6:30-7:30 p.m. Theory Section Reception Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520C, 6:30-8:10 p.m.

153. The evening plenary featuring Ta-Nehisi Coates has been cancelled due to unavoidable circumstances.

9:30 p.m.

Receptions

Department Alumni Night (DAN) Palais des congrès de Montréal, 710B, 9:30-11:00 p.m.

Saturday

Joint Reception: Section on Sociology of Emotions; Section on Altrusim, Morality, and Social Solidarity; and Section on Social Psychology Offsite, La Vieux Dublin Pub, 636 Cathcart, 6:30-8:10 p.m.

Sessions

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ASA PROGRAM AD

2018

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Program Schedule • Sunday, August 13, 2017 7:00 a.m.

Meetings

Fund for the Advancement of the Discipline (FAD) Advisory Panel Palais des congrès de Montréal, 524B, 7:00-10:10 a.m. Journal Archives Advisory Group Palais des congrès de Montréal, 523B, 7:00-8:15 a.m. Section on Crime, Law, and Deviance Council Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520E, 7:00-8:15 a.m. Section on Global and Transnational Sociololgy Council Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517C, 7:00-8:15 a.m. Section on Sociology of Children and Youth Council Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520D, 7:00-8:15 a.m. Section on Sociology of Culture Council Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520C, 7:00-8:15 a.m. Section on Teaching and Learning in Sociology Council Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520A, 7:00-8:15 a.m.

Meetings

2018 Distinguished Scholarly Book Award Selection Committee Palais des congrès de Montréal, 523A, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Committee on Publications Palais des congrès de Montréal, 524A, 8:30 a.m.-4:10 p.m. Minority Fellowship Program (MFP) Advisory Panel Palais des congrès de Montréal, 523B, 8:30-10:10 a.m.

8:30 a.m.

Sessions

154. Thematic Session. (New) Stigmatization and Discrimination

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511F, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Michèle Lamont, Harvard University Presider: Michèle Lamont, Harvard University Visible Stigmatization and Contested Responses: Black Brazilians reactions to Stigma and Discrimination in Rio de Janeiro. Graziella Moraes D. Silva, Graduate Institute in Geneva-IHEID The Persistence of the Color Line: African Americans’ Experiences with Racism and Discrimination. Jessica S. Welburn, University of Iowa National Belonging in a Jewish Democracy: The Case of Arab Palestinian Citizens of Israel. Josh Guetzkow, Hebrew University Discussant: Bernice A. Pescosolido, Indiana University Panelists will discuss the greater salience of stigmatization as compared to discrimination across variously marked groups. They will also highlight how national contexts and cultural repertoires influence types of responses individual offer when confronting racism. They will also compare the salience of collective and individual responses in the context of neoliberalism. The panel will show how history, social and symbolic boundaries and groupness enable and constrain the experience of everyday racism.

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511A, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Brian Gran, Case Western Reserve University Presider: Brian Gran, Case Western Reserve University Right without Duties? The Sociological Origins of an Absence. Christopher Nigel Roberts, University of Minnesota Navigating U.S. Law along the United States-Mexico Borderlands. Mary Romero, Arizona State University Against the Law: Mob Violence and the Politics of Vigilante Justice in India. Poulami Roychowdhury, McGill University Law’s Struggle with Religion: Equality and Inclusion. Bryan Turner, City University of New York-Graduate Center Now more than ever, people across the world are encountering law in manifold areas of social life. As human rights are implemented, institutions and cultures of rights are created and sometimes suppressed. Newcomers encounter different ideas, languages, beliefs, and practices, often through legal systems, whether local, national, or international. Actors running these legal systems, which are often corrupt, may take a dim view of strangers’ legal concerns. Individuals who are vulnerable may turn to “law” for protection, even while many people are discovering that law increasingly serves as a panopticon across multiple hierarchies and in many parts of their societies. Sociologists participating in this panel will present cuttingedge ideas and research on multiple encounters people experience with law in all areas of contemporary social life. While this panel will remind us that law is everywhere, panelists will offer insights into new questions for sociological scholarship on law.

156. Thematic Session. How Technology is Changing Social Relationships

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511C, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Kevin Lewis, University of California, San Diego Presider: Kevin Lewis, University of California, San Diego Birds of a Feather Flock Together Online: Differences in Social Media Adoption. Eszter Hargittai, University of Zurich Cellphones in Public: Social Interaction in a Smartphone Era. Lee Humphreys, Cornell University Digitally Enabled Social Movement Participation. Jennifer Earl, University of Arizona; Katrina E. Kimport, University of California, San Francisco The Shifting Boundaries of Urban Community. Jeffrey Lane, Rutgers University The impact of contemporary technologies on interpersonal relationships has riveted public attention. Anxieties abound concerning smartphone-obsessed parents who neglect their children, teenagers socializing in virtual spaces, and the evergrowing importance of social media in all spheres of life, from online romance to online activism. What do we know empirically about new technology and social interactions so far, and what else lies ahead?

157. Special Session. Gen(der) X: New Cultural Revolutions in the Global South And The Restructuring of Women’s Work Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511B, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Swethaa S. Ballakrishnen, New York UniversityAbu Dhabi Presider: Swethaa S. Ballakrishnen, New York University-Abu Dhabi The Construction of Modern Motherhood and Work in the Middle East. May Al-Dabbagh, New York University-Abu Dhabi

Sunday

8:30 a.m.

155. Thematic Session. Encountering the Law

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Sunday, August 13, 2017

Sunday

Session 157, continued Gendered Politics among Informal Workers In India. Rina Agarwala, Johns Hopkins University Thinking Global Restructuring With Gender: What Are The Stakes? Leslie Salzinger, University of California at Berkeley Discussant: Cynthia Fuchs Epstein, Graduate Center, CUNY This panel seeks to unpack the processes of economic and cultural restructuring by highlighting research on gender and work in the global south. Showcasing evidence from India, Mexico and the Middle East, panelists use emerging economies as unique petri dishes to witness the impact of global production networks on micro inequalities. Together, we will ask: When we view the market through this lens of gendered personhood, how do we make sense of these cultural orders and shifts? And in what ways do these exogenous scripts mold internal social movements in these societies? The last half-century has witnessed a range of international responses to the dissemination of neoliberal markets, norms and values. One such significant reaction has been the worldwide systemic inclusion of women in new kinds of workforces. And more recent research reveals these renegotiations are palpable even in higher ends of the labor spectrum. For example, in Arab “global” work environments, although women and men both suffer penalties for being “local”, men suffer a higher relative penalty in global contexts than their female peers. Similarly, research from India’s elite professional firms show that women uniquely poised to restructure cultural scripts because domestic firms over conform to idealized neoliberal values of merit and equality. By invoking these perspectives, this panel urges its’ audience to look not just as how markets become cultural; but also how in these sites of emergence, markets produce new cultures of an ideal worker capable of renegotiating existing hierarchies of gender and class.

158. Author Meets Critics Session. Citizen-Protectors: The Everyday Politics of Guns in an Age of Decline (Oxford University Press, 2015) by Jennifer Carlson Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511D, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Randol Contreras, University of Toronto Critics: Elizabeth Chiarello, Saint Louis University C.J. Pascoe, University of Oregon David Yamane, Wake Forest University Author: Jennifer Carlson, University of Arizona

159. Policy and Research Workshop. The Panel Study of Income Dynamics

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512D, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Paula W. Fomby, University of Michigan Leader: Paula W. Fomby, University of Michigan This interactive workshop is geared toward current and prospective users of the Panel Study of Income Dynamics (PSID, psid.org), the world’s longest running longitudinal household panel survey. It provides an overview of the general structure and content of PSID and its supplemental surveys (including the Child Development Supplement, the Transition into Adulthood Supplement, and the Disability and Time Use Supplement) as well as an update on recent and current data collection efforts (the Rosters & Transfers Files, the Childhood Retrospective Circumstances Study, the Web/Mail Supplement, and the 2014 Child Development Supplement). The second half of the workshop includes a detailed walk-through of the PSID website, documentation, and data center as well as a question and answer session related to participant specific inquiries. The PSID has collected data on a wide range

of sociologically relevant topics from a nationally representative sample of US families and their descendants since 1968. Content domains include employment, occupations, income, wealth, education, expenditures, health, aging, marriage, childbearing, child development, youth transitions, philanthropy, intergenerational relations, and numerous other topics.

160. Teaching Workshop. The Politics of Collaboration: Issues of Power and Pedagogy in Faculty-Student Research Partnerships

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512B, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Gary Alan Fine, Northwestern University Leader: Gary Alan Fine, Northwestern University Co-Leader: Peter S. Bearman, Columbia University Panelists: Ann Mische, University of Notre Dame Dawn T. Robinson, University of Georgia Iddo Tavory, New York University How to maintain a productive research collaboration between faculty and graduate students is a salient challenge, but is one with great benefits. As scholars who have engaged in important collaborations as students and as faculty, we recognize issues of power and the importance of clarity in setting the terms of any joint scholarly engagement both prior to the project and throughout data collection, writing, and the publication process. When operating with trust and transparency, collaboration can be important for pedagogy and mentorship, but at times dissatisfactions and even feelings of betrayal or deception are possible. With many sociological publications developing from a “research team,” explicit attention to collaboration across status lines is essential.

161. Regular Session Ethnomethodology and Conversation Analysis: Achieving Recognizable Objects and Information - Medical Settings

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512A, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Anne Warfield Rawls, Bentley University Explaining Test Results: Practices for Demonstrating the Interpretation of Measurement Data. Satomi Kuroshima, JSPS/ Chiba University Facing the Reality of Health Management: Physician Responses to Patient Disclosures of Medical Misdeeds. Clara Ann Blomgren Bergen, University of California Los Angeles Interpreting Patients’ Behaviour in an Intellectual Disability Care Setting. Joseph Webb, Bristol University; Alison Pilnick, University of Nottingham; Jennifer Clegg, Nottingham University Working with Objects in Dementia Care. Daniela Boehringer, University of Osnabrueck; Lucia Wilma Artner, University of Hildesheim; Jasmin Pritha Richter, University of Hildesheim

162. Regular Session. Considering the Material in Social Theory

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512C, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Eleanor Townsley, Mount Holyoke College American Pragmatic Philosophy, Sociological Phenomenology and French Sociological Pragmatism: Convergences, Differences, and Cross-fertilization. Frère Bruno Frère, University of Liège; Daniel Jaster, University of Texas Sociology Toward Death: Heidegger, Finitude, and Human Possibility. Kelly J. Nielsen, University of California-San Diego; Tad P. Skotnicki, University of North Carolina, Greensboro The Materiality of Social Fields. Dustin S. Stoltz, University of Notre Dame; Marshall Allen Taylor, University of Notre Dame

Sunday, August 13, 2017 The Order of Nature: Structural Transformation in 19th Century America. Eric Malczewski, Harvard University

Sade Lindsay, The Ohio State University Discussant: Maryann Erigha, University of Memphis

163. Regular Session. Contexts and Trajectories of Incorporation

166. Regular Session. Gender, Family, and Work

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513A, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Thomas Georg Soehl, McGill University Presider: Thomas Georg Soehl, McGill University Capitals or Contexts? Foreign Workers’ Economic Assimilation in Japan’s Highly Selective Immigration Regime. Hilary J. Holbrow, Cornell University Immigrant Students on PISA: Explaining American (un)Exceptional Achievement in an International Context. Florencia Silveira, Brigham Young University; Kristie J. Rowley, Brigham Young University South Asian Migration, Settlement, and Socio-political Incorporation on the North American West Coast. Prema Ann Kurien, Syracuse University The Diverging Labor Market Performance of Mainland Chinese Immigrants in Hong Kong. Wenyang Su, The Chinese University of Hong Kong; Yuying Tong, The Chinese University of Hong Kong Discussant: Peter Catron, UCLA Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514C, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Yvonne Alexandra Braun, University of Oregon Presider: Yvonne Alexandra Braun, University of Oregon As Many As I Can Afford: Economic Constraint and Reproductive Justice in Uganda. Erin Heinz, University of Arizona; Louise Marie Roth, University of Arizona Building Empowerment, Resisting Patriarchy: Understanding Empowering Intervention against Domestic Violence among Grassroots Women in Gujarat. Soma Chaudhuri, Michigan State University; Merry Morash Complicating Narratives of Women’s Food and Nutrition Insecurity: Domestic Violence in Rural Bangladesh. Erin C. Lentz, University of Texas, Austin Empowerment, Declined: Paradoxes of Microfinance and Gendered Subjectivity in Urban India. Smitha Radhakrishnan, Wellesley College Women Labor Migrants’ Remittances as a Path Towards Empowerment and Development. Babs Grossman-Thompson, California State University Long Beach

165. Regular Session. Gender, Ethnicity, and Racialization in the Media

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512E, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Anabel Quan-Haase, University of Western Ontario Lesbianing Together: Images of Incarcerated Women in Orange is the New Black. Anna Curtis, SUNY Cortland; Meghan Kocijanksi, SUNY Cortland Using Culture to Change Culture: Exploring Online Violence Against Women Prevention Work as Bystander Intervention. Jordan Fairbairn, Western University The Maternal Gaze: The Pleasures of Connectivity IRL and URL. Kara M. Van Cleaf Racialization of the Muslim Body and Space in Hollywood. Maheen Haider, Boston College Mass Shootings, Medicine, and the Media: The Role of Whiteness in Violent Crime Coverage. Laura Frizzell, The Ohio State University;

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512F, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Christin L. Munsch, University of Connecticut Choosing Schools, Reproducing Family Inequality? Race/Gender Privilege and the Negotiation of a New Domestic Task. William Joslyn Scarborough, University of Illinois at Chicago Not Only The Money Counts? Experimental Insights on Genderspecific Preferences for Non-monetary Job Attributes. Katrin Auspurg, University of Munich; Thomas Hinz, University of Konstanz Women’s Education and Decision-Making in Nuclear and MultiGenerational Households in China. Cheng Cheng, Princeton University Discussant: Lindsey Trimble O’Connor, California State University Channel Islands

167. Regular Session. Multi-Racial and Multi-Ethnic Classification and Identities

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 515A, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Carolyn A. Liebler, University of Minnesota Presider: Carolyn A. Liebler, University of Minnesota African American Middle-Class Mothers’ Racial Socialization of Black/White Biracial Children: Doing versus Being Black. Dawn M. Dow, University of Maryland, College Park Racializing Multiracials: How Monocentric Racial Categorization Influences the Parental Racial Socialization Process. Cristina Marie Ortiz, University of Chicago Racial Classification of Afro-Latin Americans in Metropolitan Areas of the United States. Jessica Elaine Peña, University of MarylandCollege Park Managing Ethnic Boundaries: Hispanics and Ethnic Identity in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Casandra Danielle Salgado, University of California, Los Angeles Borders of the Racial Frontier: Exploring the Boundaries, Limits, and Exclusions of Multiracial Collective Identity. Alyssa Marie Newman, University of California Santa Barbara Discussant: Kristen Lavelle, University of Wisconsin-Whitewater

168. Regular Session. National Identities and Nationalisms

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512G, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Jackie Lee Hogan, Bradley University Presider: Jackie Lee Hogan, Bradley University Being Chinese? National Identity and Student Movements in Hong Kong. Fen Lin, City University of Hong Kong; Sixian Lin, City University of Hong Kong Where We are Born and the Soil from Where We Eat: The Idea of Terric Nationhood. Syeda Quratulain Masood, Brown University Illiberal Integration: Leitkultur and Orientalism in German Integration Courses and Citizenship Test. Joseph Loe-Sterphone, University of California, Santa Barbara Waking Up from the ‘ American Dream’ and Un-Pledging Allegiance: Coloniality and Resistance in the Current Moment. Melanie E. L. Bush, Adelphi University Impossible Laws and the Production of Minority Nationhood: Debating Québec’s 2013 Charter of Values. Emily J. Laxer, University of Michigan

Sunday

164. Regular Session. Development and Gender

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169. Regular Session. Neoliberal Governance and Biomedical Battlefields

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 515B, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Jorge Fontdevila, California State University Fullerton Presider: Jorge Fontdevila, California State University Fullerton How Marxism helps us understand how people think and act about HIV and other epidemics. Samuel R. Friedman, National Development and Research Institute AIDS and Austerity: Gay Men’s Health Crisis and the Causes of Nonprofit Proliferation. Michelle Esther O’Brien, New York University Institutional Ethnography as a Critical Research Strategy: Access, Engagement, and Implications for HIV/AIDS Research. Daniel Grace, University of Toronto Truvada Whore: The Social Limitations and Promise of PrEP/PEP HIV Prevention. Jason Lee Crockett, Kutztown University N’avalez pas leur pilule! PrEP and the Biopolitical Paradigm of HIV Prevention in Montréal. Gabriel Girard, Université de Montréal

Sunday

170. Regular Session. New Directions in Urban Sociology

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516A, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Robert Vargas, University of Notre Dame An Ethnographic Portrait of Concentrated Homicide in a Social Network. David M. Hureau, University at Albany SUNY Capitalizing on Community: Tax Credit Housing and the Commercialization of Grassroots Advocacy. John N. Robinson, Washington University in St. Louis Patronage and Marketization Dynamics in the Provision of Local Social Welfare. Nicole P. Marwell, University of Chicago; Erez Aharon Marantz, New York University; Delia Baldassarri, New York University The Political Order of the City: Neighborhoods and Voting in Toronto, 1997-2014. Jan Doering, McGill University; Daniel Silver, University of Toronto; Zachary Taylor, University of Western Ontario Discussant: Josh Seim, University of California - Berkeley

171. Regular Session. New Directions in the Study of the World-System: Nature, Materials, Justice

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 515C, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Jason G. Cons, University of Texas at Austin Presider: Jason G. Cons, University of Texas at Austin Anthropocene or Capitalocene? Nature in the Making and Unmaking of Historical Capitalism. Jason W. Moore, Binghamton University Raw Materials and Resistance in Capitalist Commodity Chains. Elizabeth A. Sowers, California State University, Channel Islands; Paul S. Ciccantell, Western Michigan University; David A. Smith, University of California-Irvine Responsive Resistance: Conceptualizing Agency in the World System: The Case of Climate Debt. David M. Ciplet, University of Colorado Boulder The Bhopal Movement: Struggles for Justice in the World-System. Nikhilendu Deb, University of Tennessee Knoxville The Geopolitics of Grains: Biotechnology and Grains for Feed and Food in the World Economy. Bill Winders, Georgia Institute of Technology Discussant: Jason G. Cons, University of Texas at Austin

172. Regular Session. Race and Ethnicity: Boundaries and Classification

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516E, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Neda Maghbouleh, University of Toronto Presider: Tristan Ivory, University of Missouri Does Genetic Ancestry Testing Promote an Essentialized View of Race? Findings from a Randomized Controlled Trial. Wendy D. Roth, University of British Columbia; Kaitlyn Jaffe, University of British Columbia Your Race Is My Race Too: Racial Fluidity in Survey Interviewer Self-Identification. Robert Pickett, UC Berkeley; Aliya Saperstein, Stanford University; Andrew Penner, University of California, Irvine “If you don’t know me by now…”: Observed and Reported Race in Fragile Families Survey. Ellen Whitehead, Rice University; Allan Farrell, Rice University; Jenifer L. Bratter, Rice University Racial Attitudes in an Age of Immigration. Ariela Schachter, Washington University in St. Louis

173. Regular Session. Sociology and the Arab World

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 510A, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Erik Love, Emory University Do Inegalitarian Views about Gender Explain Muslim Women’s Low Employment Levels? Eman Abdelhadi, New York University; Paula England, New York University How do States in the Global South Maintain Sovereignty? Jordan and the Syrian Refugee Crisis. Rawan Arar The Rising of the Saudi Entrepreneur Generation. Anita Cristina Butera, University of Houston Law Center Bargaining with the Devil: A History of Women’s Rights in Modern Day Algeria. Maro Youssef, University of Texas at Austin Discussant: Amina Zarrugh, Texas Christian University

174. Regular Session. Sociology of Reproduction 1: Experiencing the Reproductive Body

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 510B, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Susan Markens, City University of New YorkLehman College Why Not Try the New Pill? User Risk/Benefit Assessment of Controversial Oral Contraceptives. Alina Geampana, McGill University “Liquid Gold” and “Labor of Love”: Women’s Talk about Pumping Breastmilk at Work. Katherine M. Johnson, Tulane University Biological Stories: How Men Define Their Role in Reproduction. Rene Almeling, Yale University “No, but I froze my eggs”: Egg Freezing as “Non-Reproductive” Technology. Kit Myers, University of Southern California Navigating Surrogacy: How Surrogates in the United States Negotiate Market Considerations of Intimate Exchange. Elizabeth Ziff, New School for Social Research

175. Regular Session. Sociology of Work and the Workplace Palais des congrès de Montréal, 510D, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Ted Mouw, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill Don’t Ask or Tell: Pay Secrecy Policies in U.S. Workplaces. Jake Rosenfeld, Washington University in St. Louis Ending Invisibility: Routinized Violence, Everyday Forms of Resistance, and Mobilization among Brazil’s Domestic Workers. Jean Francois Mayer, Concordia University Merit and Favoritism in High Transparency: Networks, Gender and

Sunday, August 13, 2017 Promotions in a Virtual Organization. Yuval Spiegler, Tel Aviv University; Alexandra Kalev, Tel Aviv University From Facetime to Flextime: The Enactment of Ideal Worker Norms After an Office Redesign. Leroy Gonsalves, Harvard University

176. Regular Session. Sociology of the Body

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 510C, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Piper Coutinho-Sledge, Bryn Mawr College Body Part Analogies and Emotions in an Embodied Health Movement. Laura M. Carpenter, Vanderbilt University The Body Positive Movement: Feminist Progress? Helana Darwin, Stony Brook University Embodied Dissent: How Rule Breaking Residents Challenge Decision Making Processes in Urban Spaces. Christina R. Jackson, Stockton University More than Wearing Black: Women and Fatness in the Paid Labor Market. Erica L. Toothman, University of South Florida The Production of Breasted Excess: Large Breasts and Interpretations of Feminine Embodiment as Disability. Katelynn Bishop, University of California, Santa Barbara

177. Regular Session. Voting and Electoral Processes

178. Section on Aging and the Life Course Refereed Roundtable Session

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516C, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Hui Liu, Michigan State University Table 01. Aging in a Global Context Table Presider: Hui Zheng, The Ohio State University Balancing Work-Family and Care: The Case of Caregivers in the Peripherical Region of Bas-Saint Laurent. Marco Alberio, Canada Research Chair in Social Innovation and Territorial Development Discerning Ageing in Relation to the Law? Debates on the Legal Framework in France. Benoît Hippolyte Eyraud, Université de Lyon Rural-Urban Migration and Health Trajectories of Older Adults: Evidence from Longitudinal Data in China. Zhiyong Lin, University of Maryland, College Park Socioeconomically Disadvantaged Older Adults’ Challenges of Aging Well in Bangladesh. Iftekhar Amin, University of North Texas at Dallas

Table 02. Caregiving and End of Life Table Presider: J. Jill Suitor, Purdue University Optimism and Religiosity Can Diminish Future Care Planning in Late Life. Eva Kahana, Case Western Reserve University; Boaz Kahana; Tirth Raj Bhatta, Case Western Reserve University; Kaitlyn Barnes Langendoerfer, Case Western Reserve University; Nirmala Lekhak, Case Western Reserve University The Influence of Proxy Reporter Characteristics on Perceptions of Older Adults’ End-of-Life Care Quality. Elizabeth Anne Luth, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey The Role of Religious Beliefs in Ethics Committee Consultations for Conflict Over Life-Sustaining Treatment. Julia Bandini, Brandeis University; Wendy Cadge, Brandeis University; Andrew Courtwright, Massachusetts General Hospital; Angelika Zollfrank, Yale New Haven Hospital; Ellen Robinson, Massachusetts General Hospital The Influence of Adult Caregiving and Unequal Division of Domestic Labor on Depression among Female Caregivers. Jennifer Tabler, University of Texas Rio Grande Valley; Claudia Geist, University of Utah Forms of Family Mobilization among Latino Dementia Caregivers. Sunshine Marie Rote, University of Louisville; Jacqueline L. Angel, University of Texas at Austin Table 03. Children, Youth, and the Future of Aging Table Presider: Barbara L. Schneider, Michigan State University Changes in Sexual Lives and Their Consequences for Career Plans among Sexual Minorities. Koji Ueno, Florida State University; Amanda Nix, Florida State University; Lacey Ritter, Florida State University; Teresa Roach, Florida State University; Abraham E. Pena-Talamantes, Florida State University College Selectivity, Subjective Social Status, and Mental Health in Young Adulthood. Jeremy E. Uecker, Baylor University; Lindsay R. Wilkinson, Baylor University Timing of Transgender Identity Milestones and Attempted Suicide. Lindsey Wilkinson, Portland State University; Jennifer Pearson, Wichita State University; Hui Liu, Michigan State University Variation in Young Adults’ Transitions to Financial Independence and Implications for Financial Security. Megan Doherty Bea, Cornell University; Youngmin Yi, Cornell University Young Adults’ Goals Appraisals over the Great Recession: Examining Individual Characteristics and Local Opportunity Structures. Claudia Recksiedler, University of Switzerland; Richard A. Settersten, Oregon State University Table 04. Cognitive Health and Aging Table Presider: Zhenmei Zhang, Michigan State University Gendered Strains on Social Ties: Spousal Dyads affected by Alzheimer’s. Renee Lynn Beard, College of the Holy Cross Men’s Health Disadvantage in Widowhood: Is this True for Cognitive Functioning? Jonathan Wörn, University of Cologne; Marja Aartsen, NOVA Norwegian Social Research Trajectories of Cognitive Decline: The Role of Lifespan Adversity. Jordan Weiss Early Life Disadvantage and Cognitive Resilience across the Life Span: Does Conscientiousness Matter? Kristen M. Schorpp, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Table 05. Disability, Functional Limitations, and Aging Table Presider: Jessica A. Kelley-Moore, Case Western Reserve University Functional Limitations and Depression of Chinese Older Adults:

Sunday

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516B, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Dana R. Fisher, University of Maryland Presider: Dana R. Fisher, University of Maryland Explaining Populist Right Vote in Hungary and Poland: A Comparative Individual Level Analysis. Teodora Gaidyte, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam Loss Aversion and Mobilization: Evidence from Voter Turnout. Jason O. Jensen, McGill University The Field of Political Production: Campaign Staff and Consultants in American National Elections. Daniel Laurison, Swarthmore College The Production of Civic Inequality: How High School Shapes Voting Behaviors in Midlife. Jamie M. Carroll, University of Texas-Austin; Chandra Muller, University of Texas; Robert Reynolds, University of Texas-Austin The Race for a Republican Presidential Nominee: A Lone Voice of Threat and Decline. Meaghan Mingo, Cornell University

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Sunday

Session 178, continued An Intersectionality Perspective. Jiao Yu, Case Western Reserve University Reliability of Assistance to Older Adults. Judith Treas, University of California, IrvineBrian Joseph Gillespie, Sonoma State University The Impact of Chronic Conditions on the Disablement Process of Aging Veterans. Stephanie Ureña, Florida State University The Relationship between Social Activity and Incident Functional Disability among Older Adults in China. Zhihong Sa, Beijing Normal University Table 06. Economics of Aging Table Presider: Pamela Herd, University of Wisconsin-Madison Baby Boomers, Social Security, and Medicare: A Print Media Analysis. Duane A. Matcha, Siena College Framing Debates Concerning Social Security and Health Insurance Policy. John B. Williamson, Boston College; Renee Lynn Beard, College of the Holy Cross People Like Me: Multiple Belongings among Senior Mobile Home Residents in Florida. Maggie Kusenbach, University of South Florida Social and Genomic Structure of Socioeconomic Achievement Over the Life Course. Hexuan Liu, University of Cincinnati Table 07. Families and Aging Table Presider: James M. Raymo, University of Wisconsin-Madison Chronic Disease, Sexual Frequency, and Sexual Satisfaction: A Dyadic Analysis of Older Couples. Shannon Shen, Michigan State University Religious Attendance HeterogAmy and Partnership Quality in Later Life. Markus H. Schafer, University of Toronto;Soyoung Kwon Spousal Concordance for Depressive Symptoms according to Spousal Relationships. Jiwon Baek, Yonsei University The Gray Divorce Revolution: Older Adult Attitudes toward Divorce, 1994-2012. Susan L. Brown, Bowling Green State University; Matthew Wright Table 08. Health and Well-being Over the Life Course Table Presider: Andrea E. Willson, Univeristy of Western Ontario Childhood Adversity, College Degree, and Long Term Health: An Evident from NLSY97. Yulin Yang, State University of New York-Buffalo Linking Happiness and Health: A Biopsychosocial Life Course Approach. Anthony Richard Bardo, Duke University; Amy Danielle Thierry, Duke University The Biological Embedding of Child Maltreatment. Patricia M. Morton, Rice University Long Term Benefit or Scar: How Experience with Recessions in Young Adulthood Impacts Subjective Well-being. Bryce J. Bartlett, Duke University Table 09. Race, Class, Gender, and Life Course Table Presider: Kimberly R. Huyser, University of New Mexico Gendered Expectations Distort Male-Female Differences in Instrumental Activities of Daily Living in Later Adulthood. Connor Sheehan, University of Texas at Austin Not so Black and White: Examining the Black-white Self-esteem paradox. Jasmine Lanisha Davis, Indiana University Social Change and the Evolution of Gender Differences in Depression: An Age-Cohort Consideration. Andreea Mogosanu, University of Toronto; Laura Upenieks, University of Toronto Social Network Members’ Education Attainment: The

Implications of Education, Race and Age. Noah Webster, University of Michigan; Kristine J. Ajrouch, Eastern Michigan University; Toni C. Antonucci, University of Michigan Table 10. Successful Aging Table Presider: Shelia R. Cotten, Michigan State University An Ecological Framework for Active Aging in China. Pei-Chun Ko, National University of SingaporeWei-Jun Jean Yeung, National University of Singapore Beyond Dysfunction and Decline: How Women’s Sexualities Change across the Life Course. Lisa Renee Miller, Eckerd College Inclusion in Post-Modern World of Information to Achieve Successful Aging: A Study of Technogenerians. Gul Seckin, University of North Texas; Susan Hughes, University of North Texas Successful Aging 2.0: A Conceptual Expansion? Toni Calasanti, Virginia Tech Table 11. Work and Retirement Table Presider: Sarah Burgard, University of Michigan Retirement Decision and Work Behavior after Retirement in Society with Immature Pension System. YeonJin Lee, University of Pennsylvania; Wei-Jun Jean Yeung, National University of Singapore The Effect of Bridge Employment on Mental Health Outcomes: A Systematic Review. XiaoYu Annie Gong, McGill University; James Falconer, University of Alberta To Work or Not to Work at Old Age: Does Depression Symptoms Matter for Baby Boomers? Fang-Yi Huang, University of Florida

179. Section on Crime, Law, and Deviance. Inequality and Decision-Making in Crime and the Criminal Justice System

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513E, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Sarah Brayne, University of Texas at Austin Presider: Chris M. Smith, University of California, Davis Complaining while Black: Racial Disparities in the Adjudication of Complaints against the Police. Jacob William Faber, New York University; Jessica Rose Kalbfeld, New York University Resources, Navigation, and Punishment in the Criminal Courts. Matthew Clair, Harvard University Opportunities Diverted: The Influence of Race and Family Status on Intake Diversion among Juveniles. Tony Love, University of Kentucky; Edward W. Morris, University of Kentucky Reflecting through Broken Windows: Adaptive Import and Distortion of U.S.-style Crime Control in Latin America. Carlos Felipe Bustamante, University of California, Berkeley Ruptured Alliances: Prosecutors, Victims, and the Legislative Fight for Discretion. Anya Degenshein, Northwestern University

180. Section on Economic Sociology Refereed Roundtable Session and Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517B, 8:30-9:30 a.m. Session Organizers: Emily A. Barman, Boston University Alison Gerber, Uppsala University Table 01. Categories and Classification Table Presider: Connor John Fitzmaurice, Boston University Patent Oppositions in Networks: An Analysis of the Cosmetics Industry. Malte Doehne, University of Zürich (UZH); Markus Lang, University of Heidelberg Producer Exploration can Generate Categories without Audiences. Anthony Vashevko, Stanford University

Sunday, August 13, 2017

Table 07. Finance and Banking I Table Presider: Soohan Kim, Korea University From Classrooms to Trading Rooms: The Embedding in Global Financial Markets of China’s Education Industry. Le Lin, University of Chicago Information, Fast and Slow: Price Data, Crop Statistics and Derivative Market Outcomes. David L. Pinzur, University of California-San Diego Legitimize Banking: The Institutional Logic of Sustainability in the German Banking Industry. Stefanie Hiss, University of Jena; Sebastian Nagel, University of Jena; Gesa Griese, University of Jena Table 08. Finance and Banking II Table Presider: Saheli Nath, Northwestern University Private Risk-Pooling and Insecure Homeownership. Lora A. Phillips, Ohio State University; Michael David Nau, Ohio State University Risk Shift: An Institutional Logics Perspective. Saheli Nath, Northwestern University Risk-Taking in a Post-Pension Society: A Potential Mechanism for Generating Wealth Inequality in 401(k) Retirement Plans. Adam Hayes, University of Wisconsin-Madison Table 09. Finance and Banking III Table Presider: Daniel Hirschman, Brown University Institutional Work, Power and Temporally Layered Change: Dividend Distributions at the Dutch East India Company. Wim van Lent, Montpellier Business School When Market Fundamentalism and Industrial Policy Collide: The Tea Party and the U.S. Export-Import Bank. Kristen Hopewell, University of Edinburgh Who is Buying Stocks? Educational Pairing and Urban Residency in Deciding China’s Household Finance. Ningzi Li, Cornell University Table 10. Firms and Employees Between Contract and Charity: The Reclassification of Public Employee Pensions in the City of Detroit. Mikell Alexandra Hyman, University of Michigan Dynamics of Stakeholder Capitalism: Employee Participation in Corporate Ownership and Control. Sangjoon Lee, Stanford University Shared Capitalism, Social Capital and Intra-Organizational Dynamics. Sangjoon Lee, Stanford University “I don’t have a J-O-B!” Culture, Risk, and amateur Real Estate Investing. Philip M.E. Garboden, Johns Hopkins University Table 11. Inequality and the Market I Table Presider: Ashley E. Mears, Boston University A Changing Landscape? An Intersectional Analysis of Race and Gender in Access to Social Capitals. Song Yang, University of Arkansas; Brandon A. Jackson, University of ArkansasAnna Zajicek, University of Arkansas Gender and Borrowed Social Capital: An Empirical Test. Sumeet Duggal, McGill University; Brian Rubineau, McGill University; Erin Arcario, Boehringer Ingelheim; Yauhann Billimoria, Boehringer Ingelheim Table 12. Inequality and the Market II Table Presider: Dana Kornberg, University of Michigan Authority Structures and Founding of Financial Institution: Credit Unions Across Indigenous Communities in Taiwan, 1965-2014. Wan-Zi Lu, University of Chicago; Zong-Rong Lee, Academia Sinica Exchanging Cultural Debt for Economic Capital, or Why Bengali

Sunday

Sorting Metal, Sorting Men: Identity Economics and Moral Logics in a Market for Scrap Metal. Elise Martel Cohen Table 02. Debt and Credit Table Presider: Basak Kus, Wesleyan University Educational Debt and Individual Autonomy: Why Lawyers Do Not Like Participating in Loan Forgiveness Programs. Abby Jean Stivers, SUNY Albany Investing in Your (Imagined) Future: The Moral Logic of Spending Debt in College. Hannah E. Clarke, University of Arizona The Great Recession and Racial Disparities in Access to Mortgage Credit. Jose Loya, University of Pennsylvania; Chenoa Flippen, University of Pennsylvania Table 03. Elites and CEOs I Crisis, Not Complexity: Changing Predictors of Outside CEO Hires at Large, Publicly-Traded U.S. Firms. Matthew Stimpson, UC Berkeley Do Foreign Firms Change Culture? Evidence from Female Executives and Firms in the GCC. Alessandra L. Gonzalez, University of Chicago Logics in Executive Power: Corporate Strategy, Performance, and CEO Dismissal in the Shareholder Value Era, 1984-2007. Shoonchul Shin, University of California Berkeley Table 04. Elites and CEOs II Table Presider: Alicia Eads, Cornell University Single-Domain Role Transitions in Multiplex Relationships: The Enabling Function of Authority Roles. Jian Bai Li The Dark Side of Embeddedness: When Family Relationships Give Rise to Malfeasance. Jian Bai Li The ‘Matthew effect’ in Strategic Decision-making: How CEO Status Affects Investment Decisions. Russell Fralich, HEC Montréal; Alex Bitektine, HEC Montréal Table 05. Employment I Table Presider: Thomas Biegert, WZB Berlin Social Science Center Accumulation or Absorption? The Development of Household Non-/Low-employment during the Great Recession in Europe. Thomas Biegert, WZB Berlin Social Science Center; Bernhard Ebbinghaus Are Older and Young Workers Substitutes? A Time-series Analysis based on the British LFS. Jacques Wels, University of Cambridge; Brian Beach, International Longevity Centre (ILC-UK) Negative Attitudes towards Unemployment in European Countries, in Relation to the Activation Shift and Macroeconomic Changes. Veerle Buffel, Ghent University; Sarah Van de Velde, University of Antwerp The More You Travel, the Less You Are Connected: Commute Time and Social Capital in Organizations. Soohan Kim, Korea University; Lira Ahn, Korea University Table 06. Employment II Table Presider: Christine Fountain, Fordham University Returns to Education and Skills in the New Economy: Evidence from the PIAAC. Xavier St-Denis, McGill University The Role of Generations in Explaining Self-employment Trends: An Assessment of Period and Cohort Effects. Seok Woo Kwon, University of Calgary; Martin Ruef, Duke University The Sociologists Were Right All Along: Measuring the Effects of Social Structure on Earnings. Charles Plante, McGill University Who Gets an Internship? Differential Status Advantage in Accessing Internships and Full-Time Positions. Santiago Campero, HEC Montréal

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Sunday

Session 180, continued Muslims BecameGarbage Collectors. Dana Kornberg, University of Michigan Property Rights and Wrongs: Oil and Gas Lease Contracts as Artifacts of Social Inequalities. Daniel N. Kluttz, UC Berkeley Walking the Walk, Talking the Talk: An Exploration of Indigenous Entrepreneurs and their Cultural Capital. Rochelle R. Cote, Memorial University of Newfoundland Table 13. Innovation and Entrepreneurship I A Review of the Antecedents and Consequences of Innovation. Meagan Rainock, Brigham Young University; Dallin Everett, Brigham Young University; Andrew Pack, Brigham Young University; Eric C. Dahlin, Brigham Young University; Christopher A. Mattson, Brigham Young University Institutional Effects in the Worldwide Expansion of Innovation. Gonzalo Valdes, Stanford University Relationship Asymmetry and Potential of Newness: The Spatial and Organizational Dynamics of Entrepreneurship. Tunde Cserpes, University of Illinois at Chicago Table 14. Innovation and Entrepreneurship II Table Presider: Emily Bryant, Boston University The Theater of Innovation: Developing Transferable Skills for Performing a Hybrid Organizational Identity. James Whitcomb Riley, MIT Sloan School of Management Time’s Arrow: Understanding Actor Involvement in Innovation– Retrospectively. Gorgi Krlev, University of Heidelberg, University of Oxford; Helmut K. Anheier, University of Heidelberg; Georg Mildenberger, University of Heidelberg Varieties of Gendered-Capitalism: Institutional Environment and Gender Inequality in Entrepreneurship. Daniel Auguste, University of North Carolina at Charlotte Table 15. Labor Markets Table Presider: Roman V. Galperin, Johns Hopkins University Sheltered Labor Markets? Native Workers’ Unemployment Risks, Occupational Closure, and the Non-Native Labor Supply. Stefan Stuth, WZB Berlin Social Science Center Tax-for-fee Reform as Exogenous Shocks: Peasants’ Financial Burden and Rural Migration Behavior in China, 1998-2002. Bingdao Zheng, Fudan University Immigrants Getting a Job: Cultural Norms, Emotional Energy, and Foreign-Educated Immigrant Disadvantage in Mainstream Hiring. Koji Rafael Chavez, Washington University in St. Louis Table 16. Markets and Morality Table Presider: Michaela DeSoucey, North Carolina State University The Moral Dilemmas of Economic Contention in California Hospitals, 1946-1974. Pablo U. Gaston, University of California, Berkeley Truth in Advertising: Alignment of Morality and Business in the Early Twentieth Century Advertising Industry. Yaniv Ron-El, University of Chicago Welfarist and Neoliberal Comparisons of the Generosity of Canadians to Americans. Mary-Beth Raddon, Brock University Table 17. Niches Table Presider: Paul-Brian McInerney, University of Illinois at Chicago Crafting Beer: Locational and Institutional Constraints on Microbreweries. Carolyn Smith Keller, Keene State College; Saran Ghatak, Keene State College Hybrid Moral Codes: Claiming Moral Worth and the Case of

Design Solutionism. Shelly Ronen, New York University Oddballs and Outlaws: Managing “Liabilities of Deviance” under Conditions of Eccentricity and Immorality. Pushkala Prasad; Maureen A. Scully, University of Massachusetts Boston; Anshuman Prasad, University of New Haven Table 18. Public Sector and Public Policy I Table Presider: Marcelo JP Paixão, The University of Texas at Austin Austere Publics: Party Strategy, Agenda Setting, and Fiscal Policy Since the Great Recession. Edward Crowley, New York University Institutional Spanning, Relational Strategies, and Brokerage Formation: Evidence from a Corruption Network in China. Yingyao Wang, Brown University The Great Double Bind: Shifting Frames and Conflicting Rationalities in the Chinese Administrative State. Tina ChingTien Lee, Princeton University The Nature of Bureaucracy and Institutional Change. Chris M. Rea, UCLA Table 19. Public Sector and Public Policy II When Times Get Tough: Subjective Well-being and Support for the U.S. Welfare State. Joshua R. Bruce, Duke University Ecological Question and Development of Productive Forces: Finding a Way Out of Global Climate Change. Tarique Niazi, University of Wisconsin Table 20. Special Markets Table Presider: Sarah Quinn, University of Washington Sensitively Flipping the Home: Expectations and Emotional Labor in the Philadelphia Housing Market. Doron Raoul Shiffer-Sebba, University of Pennsylvania Subtractive Production of a Moral Commodity Along the Value Chain for Used Clothing. Emma Pendzich Greeson, University of California- San Diego The Evolution of Illegal Alcohol Markets in Russia since the Late Socialist Period. Vadim Radaev, National Research University - Higher School of Economics Table 21. Special Monies Table Presider: Charlie Eaton, Stanford Graduate School of Education Exogenous Shocks, Emotions, and the Bitcoin Market Emergence. Andreea Daniela Gorbatai, University of California at Berkeley Switching Roles, Gaining Support: Backer inexperience, founder intent, and success in crowdfunding. Keyvan Kashkooli, Santa Clara University; Peter Younkin, McGill University The Sociology of Bitcoin. Cavita Devi Meetun, Western University Canada

181. Section on Global and Transnational Sociology Refereed Roundtable Session and Business Meeting

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517C, 8:30-9:30 a.m. Session Organizers: Victoria Reyes, University of California, Riverside Jonathan Wyrtzen, Yale University Table 01. Gender/Sexuality Table Presider: Vrushali Patil, Florida International University Transgender and “Third Gender” Construct Responses to Homonationalism: Decolonial, Defiant Acts of Resistance. Salvador Vidal-Ortiz, American University; Joanna Dressel, City University of New York-Graduate Center Transnational LGBTQ Advocacy Network Study in Korea. Chelle Jones, University of Michigan Toward an Archipelagic Approach to Global Transgender Studies.

Sunday, August 13, 2017

Table 08. Global Environmental and Climate Crisis and Justice Table Presider: John Foran, University of California Table 09. Global Human Rights Table Presider: Jeong-Woo Koo, Sungkyunkwan University Individual Perceptions of Human Rights in a Globalizing World: A Multilevel Analysis of 47 Countries. An Na Hwang, Sungkyunkwan University; Jeong-Woo Koo, Sungkyunkwan University; Subin Lee, Sungkyunkwan University

182. Section on International Migration. The Return of Temporary Migration Regimes

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513C, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: David A. Cook-Martín, Grinnell College Imagined Futures: The Effects of Uncertainty on DACAmented Youth in the United States. Roberto G. Gonzales, Harvard University; Cristina Lacomba, Harvard University; Carolina Valdivia, Harvard Graduate School of Education Selecting Migrants in their Way Out: Measuring Labour Immigration Policies and Temporariness. Amparo González-Ferrer, CSIC; Erica Consterdine, University of Sussex; James Hampshire, University of Sussex; Yoan Molinero, CSIC Recruitment of Mexican Workers under the H-2 Visa Program: Transborder Infrastructure, Migration Industry and Deception. Ruben Hernandez-Leon, University of California-Los Angeles; Efren Sandoval, CIESAS; Lidia Esther Munoz, CIESAS Legal and Liminal: How Temporary Legal Status Heightens the Costs of Skilled Migration. Elizabeth Jacobs, University of Pennsylvania The Contradictions of Liminal Legality: Economic Attainment and Civic Engagement of Immigrants in Temporary Protected Status. Byeongdon Oh, University of Kansas; Cecilia Menjivar, University of Kansas; Daniel R. Alvord, University of Kansas; Victor Agadjanian, University of Kansas

183. Section on Labor and Labor Movements. Open Topic

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514B, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Chris Rhomberg, Fordham University Presider: Erin E. Hatton, State University of New York at Buffalo Development and Its Discontents. Adaner Usmani, New York University The White Working Class, Authoritarianism,and Union Membership. J. Gregg Robinson, Grossmont College Collective Inaction and the Plight of the Public Sector Professional Union. Lauren Benditt, YouGov Organizing Dixie: How Well Does the Justice for Janitors Model Travel? Erica Dobbs, Swarthmore College

184. Section on Medical Sociology. Health Care through a Sociological Lens

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513D, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Deborah Carr, Boston University Presider: Deborah Carr, Boston University Racialized Legal Status as a Social Determinant of Health. Asad L. Asad, Harvard University; Matthew Clair, Harvard University Healthcare Inequality among Asians: The Role of Ethnic Subgroup and Acculturation on Disparities. Terceira A. Berdahl, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality; Julia T. Caldwell, University of Chicago The Contingencies of Ethnoraciality: Disparities in Reliance on Doctors among Sexual Minorities. Abigail A. Sewell, Emory University; Emily S. Pingel, Emory University Anti-Discrimination Laws and Insurance Coverage for Sexual

Sunday

Emmanuel David, University of Colorado Boulder Immigrant Women in the Ethnic Beauty Salon Business. Soulit Chacko, Loyola University, Chicago Beauty Diplomacy: Culture, Markets, and Politics in the Nigerian Beauty Pageant Industry. Oluwakemi M. Balogun, University of Oregon Table 02. Arts/Culture/Religion Table Presider: Shai M. Dromi Table 03. Migration Coordinating Humanitarianism: Croatia and the European Refugee Crisis. Laura J. Heideman, Northern Illinois University Poverty or Nationalism? Motherhood, Migration, and Transnational Social Fields between Italy and Ukraine. Cinzia Solari, University of Massachusetts Boston Suppressing Transnationalism: Bringing Constraints Back into the Study of Immigrant Transnational Political Action. Ali R. Chaudhary, Rutgers University; Dana M. Moss, University of Pittsburgh Buying Up the Semi-Periphery: Mediterranean Citizenship for Sale in the Era of Sovereign Debt. Max Holleran, New York University Europe as a Network of Transnational Attachment: Structure, Predictors, Cleavages. Emanuel DeutschmannJan Delhey, Otto-von-Guericke University MagdeburgMonika Verbalyte, Otto-von-Guericke University Magdeburg Table 04. Social Movements Table Presider: Colin J. Beck, Pomona College World Society in Action: Mobilizing the International in South Korean LGBT Activism. Minwoo Jung, University of Southern California Conditioning Nationalism: Exogenous Influences on the Hindu Nationalist Movement in Nepal. Luke Wagner, Yale University Marginalization, Mobilization, and Power: Women against State Violence in Argentina, Serbia, and Liberia. Selina R. GalloCruz, College of the Holy Cross Spatialities of Contention in Counter-Revolutionary Egypt. Atef S. Said, University of Illinois at Chicago Table 05. Globalization/International Organizations Table Presider: Alexander Hoppe, University of Pennsylvania Chasing World-class Urbanism: Urban Fads and Transnational NGOs in Buenos Aires. Jacob H. Lederman, University of Michigan-Flint The Effects of Food Imports, Economic Development, and Inequality on Life Expectancy: A Global Cross-National Study, 1960-2015. Mikhail Balaev, Flinders University Caught between Winning and Learning: Performance Metrics and Knowledge Production in Transnational Evaluation Systems. Emily Springer, University of Minnesota Table 06. Labor Table Presider: Natascia Boeri, Bloomfield College Table 07. Global Populism Table Presider: Roland Robertson, University of Pittsburgh Global Populism: Locating a Phenomenon. John H. Simpson, University of Toronto-Mississauga Mapping Anti-Globalist Populism. Manfred B. Steger, University of Hawai’i-Manoa Global Populism: Empirical, Conceptual, and Theoretical Points of Departure. George M. Thomas, Arizona State University Global Populism and its Variants. Roland Robertson, University of Pittsburgh

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Session 184, continued Minorities. Alexa Solazzo, Rice University Clinicians’ Perspectives on Bias in Health Care Delivery. Staci A. Young, Medical College of Wisconsin; Marie Wolff, Medical College of Wisconsin Discussant: Tasleem Juana Padamsee, Ohio State University

Sunday

185. Section on Methodology. Method Teaching in Undergraduate Programs

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516D, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Guang Guo, University of North Carolina Presider: Peter V. Marsden, Harvard University Mixing Media and Methods to Enhance Research Mastery. Russell K. Schutt, University of Massachusetts-Boston The Problems and Prospects of Teaching Mixed Methods Research. Sharlene J. Hesse-Biber, Boston College Real Data, Real Interest: Harnessing Online Survey Data Repositories to Teach Entry Level Statistics. Charles Plante, McGill University Translating Sociological Methods to Marketable Skills: Practical Advice for Professionalization in Undergraduate Methods Instruction. Pierce Greenberg, Washington State University Social and Cultural Trends Using GSS and Census Data. Michael Hout, New York University

186. Section on Social Psychology Refereed Roundtable Session (cosponsored with Section on Sociology of Emotions)

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520B, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizers: Lynn Gencianeo Chin, Washington and Lee University Kaitlin M. Boyle, Virginia Tech Table 01. Constraint and Opportunity in Social Networks Table Presider: Gretchen Peterson, University of Memphis Gossip and Reputation from a Social Network Perspective. Lea Ellwardt Hidden in Plain Sight: Gender Differences in the Experiences of Eating Disorders and Recovery. Connor Strobel, UC-Irvine Social Media and (Non) Public Health Threats: Risk Society Online, Zika Virus, and Individual-Level Outcomes. Andrea Laurent-Simpson, Southern Methodist University The Theory of Gatekeeping: How Laboratory Findings Compare with Field Examples. Mamadi Corra, East Carolina University Table 02. Theory and Measurement of Aspects of the Self (Re-)Defining Self-Perception of Weight Appropriateness: A Confirmatory Factor Analysis of Weight Change Attitudes and Actions. Iliya Gutin, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill An Alternative Approach to Measuring Contemporary Racial Attitudes: Validating the Explicit Racial Resentment Scale. Alicia D. Simmons, Colgate University Beyond the Dichotomy: Exposure to Incarceration and Depressive Symptoms. Lauren Porter, University of MarylandLaura DeMarco, Ohio State University Cognitive Sociology and the Division of Labor: Evaluating Social Identity and the Burden of Proof. Michael W. Raphael, CUNY Graduate Center Gendered Cyborgs and Cyborg Genders. Richard Randell, Webster University Table 03. Macro Structural Impact on Individual Cognition Table Presider: Anthony Richard Bardo, Duke University Buffering-Resource or Status-Disconfirmation? How

Socioeconomic Status Shapes the Relationship between Perceived Under-Reward and Distress. Atsushi Narisada, University of Toronto Gender, Flexicurity and Job Security: Determinants of Job Security in 19 Countries. Szu Ying Ho, City University of New York-Graduate Center Inequality, Cultural amplification, and Social Exclusion in Europe? Jonathan Kelley, University of Nevada, Reno; S.M.C. Kelley, University of California-Berkeley Schema Generalization: The Welfare State Enhances Tolerance of Homosexuality. C.G.E. Kelley, Yale University and International Survey Center Table 04. Life Events and the Dynamic/Temporal Self Table Presider: Carrie Clarady, University of Maryland at College Park Inmate Identities and Social Networks. Cynthia Baiqing Zhang, Central Washington University Victims and Survivors: The Construction of Personal Identities among Battered Spouses. Helge Johannes Marahrens, Indiana University, Bloomington Table 05. Dyadic Interactions Table Presider: Sirry Alang, Lehigh University Capturing Couple Desire: Couple Agreement, Type of Desire, and Her Accuracy. Sela Harcey, University of Nebraska-Lincoln; Colleen Ray, University of Nebraska-Lincoln; Julia McQuillan, University of Nebraska-Lincoln; Arthur L. Greil, Alfred University; Deadric Williams, University of Nebraska-Lincoln The Costs of Co-Leadership in Fashion Houses, Mountaineering Teams, Qualitative Reports, and the Lab. Eric Anicich, USC Marshall School of Business; Frederic Clement Godart, INSEAD; Roderick Swaab, INSEAD; Adam Galinsky, Columbia Business School To Give and to Receive: Using Actor-Partner Interdependence Model to Examine Social Support and Depression. Stephanie Hansard, Georgia State University

187. Section on Sociology of Children and Youth. Children and Youth Agency and Culture

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514A, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Timothy Stablein, ​Union College Presider: Ana Lilia Campos Manzo, Connecticut College A 21st Century Breakfast Club: Continuity and Change in High School Social Groups. Rowena C. Crabbe, University of Illinois-Chicago; Lilla Pivnick, University of Texas at Austin; Julia Bates, University of Illinois-Chicago; Rachel A. Gordon, University of IllinoisChicago; Robert Crosnoe, University of Texas at Austin Passing as Friends: LGBTQ Youth and the Dyadic Presentation of Romantic Relationships. Kelli R. Chapman, University of Cincinnati The Child Activist. Kelly Bergstrand, University of Texas, Arlington; Monica M. Whitham, Oklahoma State University Wayward Elites: Identity Restoration and the Reproduction of Privilege in a Therapeutic Boarding School. Jessica Ann Pfaffendorf, University of Arizona

188. Section on Sociology of Culture. History in Cultural Explanation Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513F, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Lyn Spillman, University of Notre Dame Neoliberal Discourse and Racial Imaginaries: Two Temporalities. Chandra Mukerji, University of California, San Diego

Sunday, August 13, 2017

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How Authors’ Practices Shaped Their Ideas: Literature and Philosophy in Germany versus Britain, 1740-1820. Richard Biernacki, University of California-San Diego The Rise of the Idea of Model in Policy-making: The Case of British Parliament, 1803-2005. Pertti Alasuutari, University of Tampere; Marjaana Rautalin, University of Tampere; Jukka Tyrkkö, Linnaeus University Taking the Long View: Cultural Continuity and Change in American Vegetarianism. Laura J. Miller, Brandeis University; Emilie Hardman, Harvard University The Wicked People of Gangster’s Village: Historical Continuity and the Incorporation of Latino Immigrants. Pepper Glass, Weber State University

9:30 a.m.

189. Section on Sociology of Education. Students and Families Interacting with Teachers and Schools

Committee on the Status of Women in Sociology Palais des congrès de Montréal, 523B, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m.

190. Section on Teaching and Learning in Sociology. Classrooms as Safe Spaces for Engaging Controversial and Difficult Topics

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511E, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Leslie T.C. Wang, Saint Mary’s College Presider: Leslie T.C. Wang, Saint Mary’s College Outside Comfort Zone, Still Impactful? Student and Instructor Responses to Changes in “Diversity Requirement” Course. Eileen O’Brien, Saint Leo University; Janis Prince, Saint Leo University Safe Space Praxis: How Our Theory of Safe Space Shapes our Teaching Practice. Dylan Paré, University of Calgary The Visible Whiteness of Being: Challenging the Invisibility of Whiteness. Kathleen J. Fitzgerald, Tulane University Untold Stories. Betsy Leondar-Wright, Lasell College; Adj Marshall, Jerusalem Peacebuilders Discussant: Leslie T.C. Wang, Saint Mary’s College

191. Theory Section. How to Make a Career in Theory

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512H, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Neil Gross, Colby College Panelists: Claire Laurier Decoteau, University of Illinois, Chicago Isaac Ariail Reed, University of Virginia Robin E. Wagner-Pacifici, The New School for Social Research

Section on Economic Sociology Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517B, 9:30-10:10 a.m. Section on Global and Transnational Sociology Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517C, 9:30-10:10 a.m.

10:30 a.m.

Meetings

2018 Excellence in Reporting on Social Issues Award Selection Committee Palais des congrès de Montréal, 523A, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m.

Community College Coffee Hour Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520A, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m.

10:30 a.m.

Sessions

192. Presidential Panel. Higher Education, Knowledge Production and Inequality

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513B, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Michèle Lamont, Harvard University Presider: Neil Gross, Colby College Panelist: Katherine Shelley Newman, University of MassachusettsAmherst Making it Matter: Educational Inequality, Research, and the Quest for Solutions. Prudence L. Carter, University of California-Berkeley Sociology of W.E.B. Du Bois: To Efforts of Canonization. Aldon D. Morris, Northwestern University Policies for Excellence, Good Science and Legitimate Inequalities. Christine Musselin, Sciences Po Discussant: Alondra Nelson, Columbia University and Social Science Research Council Beyond standard arguments concerning cultural capital, credentialism and expertise, the sociological literature on how culture contributes to inequality in higher education and knowledge production has been exploding over the last thirty years. Participants in this session will tackle this question by considering the boundary between academic knowledge and the policy making world as it shapes educational inequality, canonization of disciplinary knowledge, comparative higher education, and the fate of public universities.

193. Thematic Session. Evaluation, Quantification, and Inequalities in Education

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511B, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizers: Lila Belkacem, Université Paris-Est Créteil, LIRTES, OUIEP Benjamin Denecheau, Université Paris-Est Créteil, LIRTES, OUIEP Chauvel Séverine, Université Paris-Est Créteil, LIRTES, OUIEP Presider: Benjamin Denecheau, Université Paris-Est Créteil, LIRTES, OUIEP The Impact of Admissions Practices on Race Relations on Elite University Campuses in the United States and Britain. Natasha Warikoo, Harvard University How Do the Teachers Construct Meanings during Grading Process? Study of Teachers’ Judgement in Practice. Lucie Mottier Lopez,

Sunday

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513B, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Amy Gill Langenkamp, University of Notre Dame Presider: Brian R. Fitzpatrick, University of Notre Dame Synchronized Socialization: How Peers and Teachers Influence Children’s Behaviors at an Affluent and a Poor Preschool. Casey Lorene Stockstill, University of Wisconsin-Madison Changing Faces: Race, Class, and Parent-Teacher Organizations. Brittany C. Murray, UNC - Chapel Hill; Thurston A. Domina; Rebecca L. Boylan, University Of Georgia; Linda Renzulli, Purdue University Diverging Strategies: (Mis)communication Between Schools and African- American Families. Aaron Crawford, UCLA Playing Fair: How Student Perceptions of Teacher Bias Impacts Later Academic Outcomes. Emily Persons, Duke University; Kamilah Legette, Duke University; Angel Luis Harris, Duke University Inequality, Segregation, and School Choice Enrollment in Urban Districts, 1999-2011. Kendra Bischoff, Cornell University; Laura M. Tach, Cornell University; Bridget Brew, Cornell University

Meetings

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Session 193, continued University of Geneva The Choice of School in French-speaking Belgium: The Growing Role of Labels and Networks in Judging the Reputation of a School. Jérôme Deceuninck, Université Catholique de Louvain; Hugues Draelants, Université Catholique de Louvain Devices of Intercultural Mediation and their Role in the Evaluation of the Pupils and their Families. Lila Belkacem, Université Paris-Est Créteil, LIRTES, OUIEP In most massified educational systems, the rankings and quantified indicators have become progressively more frequent and contribute to the hierarchization of pupils and schools. Quantitative evaluations are used to measure “educational performances,” not only for international comparisons, but also to assess the efficiency and the impact of programs, and management and treatment of educational problems. The way they are read and used by the actors may contribute to the stagnancy of the social, racial and gender inequalities, but with the impression of a transparency and an equal school system. This thematic session investigates evaluation practices in different countries and their presumed objectivity, as well as the alternative views of such practices by educational actors, parents, and pupils. From a critical perspective, this session will highlight the effects of educational evaluation practices on social, gender, and racial inequalities in schools. The differences in the educational systems’ structure, their organization and their contribution to these inequalities will be discussed in the light of the different levels, from primary to higher education, in order to emphasize the variations in the amplitude of these reproduction. This session includes papers from the USA, Belgium, Switzerland, and France and will contribute to the international comparison on these questions.

194. Thematic Session. Global Work, Culture and Inequality Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511E, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Allison Pugh, University of Virginia Presider: Jennifer M. Silva, Bucknell University Cultural Conceptions of Work: Women’s Narratives in Spain, Japan, and the United States. Mary C. Brinton, Harvard University One Divides into Two: Team Moves in Finance. Olivier Godechot, Sciences Po Cultural Workscapes: The Lives of Business Professionals in France, Norway, and the United States. Jeremy Markham Schulz, University of California, Berkeley The Moral Measure of Overwork. Allison Pugh, University of Virginia; Sarah Elizabeth Mosseri, University of Virginia Multiple scholars have documented the power of work as a moral measure in the United States. Despite increased work precariousness, and some reported ambivalence about work by cohort or generation, there is evidence that many invest increasing symbolic importance in work – in having a full-time job, being busy, working long hours, and the like – as proof of one’s adulthood, honor, or character. How does this compare globally or, in the US, across populations? Panelists will consider the culture of work in various contexts and comparatively, including in finance/tech sectors, in the US, Europe and elsewhere, and by gender and class.

195. Thematic Session. International Perspectives on the Measurement of Race and Ethnicity Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511F, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Martin Bulmer, University of Surrey, UK Presider: Martin Bulmer, University of Surrey, UK

Ethnic and Linguistic Categories in Québec: Counting to Survive. Victor Piché, McGill University, Université de Montréal The Failure of the Importation of Ethno-racial Statistics in Europe: Debates and Controversies. Patrick Simon, Institut National des Études Demographiques Demographic Change in Interracial Unions and How We Conceptualise and Measure Race and Mixture. Miri Song, University of Kent Multiple Race Measures across Latin America and Implications for Estimating Ethnoracial Composition and Measuring Inequality. Edward E. Telles, University of California-Santa Barbara Methodological Pitfalls of Measuring Race, or Some of its Dimensions. Wendy D. Roth, University of British Columbia Discussant: Danielle Juteau, Université de Montréal Issues of capturing statistically ethnic diversity in the contemporary world remain a challenge across cultures, embodying different conceptions of the meaning of ethnic difference and variation. This session will focus on issues such as the use of the term “race” and color, reliance on questions on national origin, the significance of language, use of religion as a marker, and the problems posed by capturing ethnic mixture. There will be a particular emphasis on French Canada, Europe and Latin America.

196. Special Session. Culture and Embodied Cognition: Readjusting Boundaries between Mind, Brain, and Body

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511A, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Karen A. Cerulo, Rutgers University Presider: Karen A. Cerulo, Rutgers University What is the Right Level of Psychological Realism for Cultural Sociology? Stephen Vaisey, Duke University When Objects Meet Bodies: What Materiality Teaches Us about Embodied Cognition. Terence Emmett McDonnell, University of Notre Dame Organized Embodiment. Janet Vertesi, Princeton University Racializing Smell: Olfaction and Embodied Cognition. Karen A. Cerulo, Rutgers University Steps to a Sociology of Flesh and Blood: Principles and Applications. Loic Wacquant, University of California-Berkeley How do we think … make meaning … process and comprehend the people and things we encounter in our daily existence? Traditionally, scholars studying these matters offer different answers to these complex questions. Some—including neurologists, cognitive psychologists, evolutionary biologists and computer scientists— attend almost exclusively to neural operations. They address what we might call the “inside” aspects of thought, as they tie the structure and function of the brain to processes such as attention, perception, classification and memory. Others—including cognitive sociologists, cultural anthropologists and social psychologists— attend to what we might call the “outside” dimensions of thought. Here the study of mind takes priority over the brain as scholars explore the sociocultural conventions and norms that inform what we attend to or ignore, how we classify people, places, objects or events, and what we remember or forget during our social encounters and experiences. In recent years, a third group of scholars have suggested a more expansive approach to cognition. Theories of “embodied cognition” help us bridge brain and mind and connect the inside and outside elements of thought. The body is central in building that bridge. Embodied cognition theories suggest that how we think, make meaning, process and comprehend the world involves the sentient—what our bodies feel, what they see,

Sunday, August 13, 2017 hear, smell, taste and touch. Thus the brain alone cannot explain how we think, and thought is not simply the product of cultural patterns and rules. For these theorists, our bodily experiences and the contexts in which those experiences are situated prove equally important to a thorough understanding of cognition. In this session, participants will present sociological research that is informed by the embodied cognition movement. Through both theoretically and empirically based presentations, panelists will offer support for the perspective as a lens on culture and cognition. Moreover, they will address what the embodied cognition movement holds for the future of culture and cognition and the steps the field must take to fully realize such benefits

197. Special Session. Religion’s Role in Peace, Justice, and Missions Movements (cosponsored with Association for the Sociology of Religion)

198. Special Session. The “Culture” of Immigration: Understanding Migration Through (Non-Essentialist) Cultural Analysis

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511D, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: John O’Brien, NYU Abu Dhabi Presider: John O’Brien, NYU Abu Dhabi How the Meanings of Ethnicity Change by Context, Life Course Phase and Legal Status. Robert Courtney Smith, City University of New York-Baruch College, Graduate Center Racial Remittances: How Ideologies of Race Travel with Migrants. Sylvia Zamora, Loyola Marymount University Gendered Institutions and Immigrant Categorizing. Sara R. Curran, University of Washington Dreams Fulfilled or Dreams Dashed: West African Diversity Visa Lottery Winners in the United States. Onoso Ikphemi Imoagene, University of Pennsylvania Despite the “cultural” nature of many of the issues central to migration scholarship, the application of tools and concepts from the sociology of culture to investigate questions of immigration has been, overall, halting and uneven (Levitt 2005, Menjivar 2010). This session will explore the possibilities of a more cultural approach to the study of migration by bringing together sociologists who are employing tools of cultural analysis to study migration processes and subjectivities. The session will both highlight effective strategies for using culture to investigate pressing and timely questions about migration, and identify common threads that might form the basis of a shared cultural sociology of immigration. The questions that such a sociology would seek to answer, both in this session and beyond, might include: How do migrants classify and assign

meaning to members of receiving country populations, and vice versa? How is cultural life and practice reorganized at the level of everyday life in the process of settlement? How are newly emergent forms of identity and self-classification among migrant populations contested and negotiated in the intra-group setting? How do migrants receive, adapt, or reject cultural practices, schemas, and discourses made newly available in the receiving country context? How do migrants understand and experience notions of citizenship, nationality, legality, and belonging in everyday life? How can longstanding terms of analysis such as “assimilation” and “acculturation” be reconceptualized to provide increased analytical leverage and empirical rigor? Presentations in this session will highlight innovate approaches to the study of migration through cultural sociology.

199. Author Meets Critics Session. Inequality, Democracy, and the Environment ( New York University Press, 2015) by Liam Downey

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511C, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Elaine Alma Draper, California State University, Los Angeles Critics: Kenneth Alan Gould, City University of New York - Brooklyn College Rachael Leah Shwom, Rutgers University Phil Brown, Northeastern University Author: Liam Downey, University of Colorado

200. Regional Spotlight Session. Religion and Complex Futures: Diversity, Pluralism and Equalities

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516B, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizers: Valérie Amiraux, Université de Montréal Lori Beaman, University of Ottawa Religion, Migration, Diversity and Equality: A Report from the U.S. Heartlands. Mary Jo Neitz, University of Missouri Sites of Pluralism: Religious Equality, the Individual and the Group. Benjamin Berger, York University Equality of What? On the Challenges of Sociologically Identifying Religion and Non-religion. Peter F. Beyer, University of Ottawa Update on European Court of Human Rights Cases Involving Minority Religions. James T. Richardson, University of Nevada, Reno

201. Departmental Management and Leadership Workshop. Liberal Learning and the Sociology Major: Effective Online Courses

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512B, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizers: Andrea Nicole Hunt, University of North Alabama Melinda Jo Messineo, Ball State University Leader: Melinda Jo Messineo, Ball State University Co-Leader: Andrea Nicole Hunt, University of North Alabama Sponsored by the Liberal Learning and the Sociology Major, 3rd Edition Task Force. This workshop will introduce the newly released 3rd edition and help departments consider its recommendations for high quality online coures in the disicpline. (second of three-part symposium)

202. Policy and Research Workshop. Advocating for Science and Science-Informed Policy: What Every Sociologist Should Know

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516A, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Wendy Naus, Consortium of the Social Science Associations

Sunday

InterContinental Montreal, A. Fraser, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Michael O. Emerson, North Park University Presider: William A. Mirola, Marian University Faith-Based Social Movements and Racial Justice Under the Trump Regime. Richard L. Wood, University of New Mexico Fostering Diversity in Multiracial Congregations in the United States. Rebecca Y. Kim, Pepperdine University Creation Care: The Emergence of the Religious Environmental Movement. Stephen Ellingson, Hamilton College Discussant: Laurel Kearns, Drew University Papers in this session address religion’s roles in peace, justice, and mission movements, both within the United States and from a global comparison perspective. Participants in this session will present research related to religion’s roles in different areas such as politics, environmental protection, and racial relations.

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Session 202, continued Leader: Wendy Naus, Consortium of the Social Science Associations Do you have a passion for advocacy, or perhaps just looking to learn what you can do to promote sociological scholarship to inform policy? During this workshop, you will learn about how politics and the actions of elected officials can shape policies impacting scientific research, discuss ways research can meaningfully inform policy on a range of topics, how sociologists can engage in the policy process from home and in Washington, crafting messages about your research that resonate with lay-audiences, and effective ways of engaging the general public in support of social science research. ASA is a founding member of the Consortium of Social Science Associations (COSSA), a Washington, DC-based advocacy organization whose primary purpose is to promote sustainable federal funding for social and behavioral science research and federal policies that positively impact the conduct of research. COSSA Executive Director Wendy Naus will lead a discussion these and other topics, and share best practices for engaging in advocacy and outreach on behalf of your science. Be sure to bring your questions and ideas.

Sunday

203. Informal Discussion Roundtable Session

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517C, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizers: Nathan D. Martin, Arizona State University Aggie Jooyoung Noah, Arizona State University A Career in Grantwriting: What’s in Your Toolbox? Linda L. Marston, Springfield College Campus Racial Climates: Integrating Qualitative, Quantitative, and Historical Approaches. Katherine McClelland, Franklin and Marshall College Collective Memory and Trauma. Raj Andrew Ghoshal, Elon University Detention and Human Rights issues for Immigrants and Refugees in Japan, Mexico, and the United States. Michelle VanNatta, Dominican University; Masae Yuasa, Hiroshima International University; Patricia Zamudio Grave, Centro de Investigaciones y Estudios Superiores en Antropologia Social, Xalapa; Clinton Nichols, Dominican University Genetic Testing and Fertility Decisions. Sharlene J. Hesse-Biber, Boston College; Hilary Flowers Prospects for a Critical Sociology in the 21st Century. Mervyn Horgan, University of Guelph; Fuyuki Kurasawa, York University; Saara Liinamaa, Acadia University Public Social Science in Troubled Times. Josh R. Klein, Iona College; Chris Agee, CUNY-Graduate Center; Robert Caputi, Borough of Manhattan Community College Researching Macro-level Stressors in the Etiology of Mental Health/Substance Abuse Outcomes. Judith A. Richman, University of Illinois at Chicago Seeing Generations Sociologically: New Ideas and Prospects. John Christopher Holley, Suffolk University Sport: The Great Equalizer? Suzanne S. Hudd, Quinnipiac University The Future of Food Studies in Sociology. Caroline Erb-Medina, City University of New York - Graduate Center The Myth of Post-Racialism and the Detriment of Colorblindness. Trevor Brendon Milton, Queensborough-CUNY The New Op-Ed: Teaching Public Sociology with Digital Storytelling. Sara Brooke Moore, Salem State University The Rise of Informal Participation: An Alternative Approach to Political Activism? Laurence Bherer, Université de Montréal; Pascale Dufour, Université de Montréal

204. Student Forum Workshop. A Ph.D. Timeline That Works For You

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512C, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Kati Barahona-López, University of CaliforniaSanta Cuz Presider: Karen Okigbo, The Graduate Center Panelists: Mai Thai, Indiana University-Bloomington Shannon Marie Gleeson, Cornell University Kimberly Kay Hoang, University of Chicago Jerry Flores, University of Toronto

205. Regular Session. Advances in the Sociology of Emotions

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512D, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Seth Abrutyn, University of British Columbia Affect, Sentiments, and the Persistence of Self in Elderly Adults with Alzheimer’s Disease. Linda E. Francis, Cleveland State University; Kathryn J. Lively, Dartmouth College; Alexandra Konig, University of Waterloo; Jesse Hoey, University of Waterloo Judging Genocide: Emotional Labor in Transitional Justice. Evelyn Ann Gertz, The Ohio State University; Hollie Nyseth Brehm, The Ohio State University The Holy Spirit Speaks through our Affects: Emotion Culture at a Catholic Spiritual Center. Erin F. Johnston, Stanford University

206. Regular Session. Blacks and African Americans

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512E, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Pamela Braboy Jackson, Indiana University Measuring Mexico’s Black Population. Christina Alicia Sue, University of Colorado-Boulder; Fernando Riosmena Does Racial Identity Protect? Perceived Racism and Health among Black Middle-Class Americans. Carlos D Tavares, Duke University “Little Lagos,” African Ethnicity, and the Afropolitan. Anima Adjepong, University of Texas

207. Regular Session. Competing Debates on Latinas/os and Racialization

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512F, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Gilda Laura Ochoa, Pomona College Toward Unifying Racial and Ethnic Paradigms. Vilma Ortiz, University of California-Los Angeles A Racist or Multiracial Mainstream? Latino Families’ Views. Jessica Vasquez-Tokos, University of Oregon A Lighter Shade of Brown? Racial Formation and Urban Change in Latino Los Angeles. Alfredo Huante, University of Southern California Assessing the Health Status of Puerto Ricans. Fernando I. Rivera, University of Central Florida; Giovani Burgos, Adelphi University; Marc Anthony Garcia, University of Texas Medical BranchGalveston Brown Brilliance: Latinx Knowledge, Sociology, and Society. Michael De Anda Muñiz, University of Illinois at Chicago Discussant: Gilda Laura Ochoa, Pomona College

208. Regular Session. Ethics, Localism, and Food Consumption

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512G, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Simon Langlois, Universite Laval Presider: Zeynep Arsel, Concordia University, Canada Bridging the Gap between Ethical Consumers and Corporate Social Responsibility. Ellis Jones, Holy Cross

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If Foucault Studied Food: An Analysis of Biopolitical and Neoliberal Appetites. Rachel Bogan, The Graduate Center, CUNY Notes on the “Social Construction” Paradigm in the Local Food Literature. Sang-hyoun Pahk, University of Hawaii at Manoa On (not) Knowing Where Your Food Comes From: Children, Meat, and Ethical Eating. Kate Cairns, Rutgers University; Josee Johnston, University of Toronto Discussant: Laura J. Miller, Brandeis University

Racial Inequality in Employment and Earnings after Incarceration. Bruce Western, Harvard University; Catherine Sirois, Stanford University A House before I was 40: Gentrification, Housing Scarcity, and Poverty in the Amenity-Rich Rural West. Jennifer Sherman, Washington State University Discussant: David Brady, University of California, Riverside

209. Regular Session. Health Policy

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 510B, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Amy Adams Quark, College of William & Mary Presider: Amy Adams Quark, College of William & Mary Capability Building for Latecomers: Connecting Public Research Institutions and Firms for an Innovation Economy. Michelle Fei-yu Hsieh, Academia Sinica Cross-Class Coalitions and Collective Goods: The Farmacias del Pueblo in the Dominican Republic. Andrew Schrank, Brown University Development in the City: Growth and Inclusion in the Megacities of Brazil, India and South Africa. Patrick G. Heller, Brown University Framing Care, Framing Entitlement: Women, State, and Care. Preethi Krishnan, Purdue University Not on the Same Page: Status Barriers to State-Private Ties in Economic Development. Aruna Ranganathan, Stanford University; Laura Doering, McGill University Discussant: Jennifer L. Bair, University of Virginia

210. Regular Session. Moving In and Out of Homes and Neighborhoods

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 510D, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Claire W. Herbert, Drexel University Presider: Lydia Wileden, University of Michigan Metropolitan Segregation and Residential Mobility between Poor, Non-Poor, and Affluent Neighborhoods. Ryan Gabriel, Brigham Young University; Christine Liebbrand, University of Washington; Christian Lawrence Hess, University of Washington; Kyle Crowder, University of Washington Contingent Tenure: How Landlords Use the Threat of Eviction. Philip M.E. Garboden, Johns Hopkins University; Eva Rosen, Georgetown University Gentrification, Housing Displacement and Right to the City Movements in Northeast Los Angeles. Jan C. Lin, Occidental College Who Gets “Housing First”? Determining Eligibility in an Era of Housing First Homelessness. Melissa Osborne, University of Chicago Discussant: Jennifer Rene Darrah-Okike, University of Hawaii

211. Regular Session. Poverty

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 510C, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: David Brady, University of California, Riverside Presider: Jennifer Buher Kane, University of California, Irvine How Structural Adjustment Programmes Affect Inequality: A Disaggregated Analysis of IMF Conditionality, 1980–2014. Alexander Kentikelenis, Trinity College Places in Need: The Changing Geography of Poverty. Scott W. Allard, University of Washington Poor State, Rich State: Understanding the Variability of Poverty Across U.S. States. Jennifer Laird, Columbia University; Jane Waldfogel, Columbia University; Christopher Wimer, Columbia University

213. Regular Session. Race and Ethnicity: Categories and Their Meanings

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516E, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Neda Maghbouleh, University of Toronto Presider: Oshin Khachikian, University of California, Irvine Contingent Racial Formation: Challenges to the Racial Ideology of The Dillingham Commission (1907-1911). Sunmin Kim, University of California at Berkeley Beyond Aryans: Germanification, Racial Classification and Stratified Citizenship in Nazi-Occupied Eastern Europe. Anna Katharina Skarpelis, New York University Excluding Europe’s Muslims: Symbolic Boundaries and AntiImmigrant Attitudes Along a Racial-Ethnic Hierarchy. Aaron Ponce, Michigan State University Racializing the Muslim Rights Movement: How Shifting Identities Reshape Mobilization Strategies for Inclusion. Hajar Yazdiha, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill Puerto Ricans, Dominicans, and the Emotional Currency of U.S. AntiBlackness. Shantee Rosado, University of Pennsylvania

214. Regular Session. Transnational Politics: New Perspectives

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 510A, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Alvaro Santana-Acuña, Whitman College Presider: Sorana Toma, ENSAE Resolution, Intervention, and the Multiple Paths to Recurrence. Eric Schoon, The Ohio State University The Influence of International Relations on Democratization, 1972 – 2005. Mathias De Roeck; Ronan Van Rossem, Ghent University Where are the Neoliberals? Examining Liberalization, Perceived Freedom, and Free Market Values in 54 Countries. Jeffrey C. Dixon, College of the Holy Cross Brexit and Prejudice Against Immigrants: The United Kingdon is not Unique. Mariah Debra Evans, University of Nevada, Reno

Sunday

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516D, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Sigrun Olafsdottir, University of Iceland Presider: Mirza Balaj, Norwegian University of Science and Technology Social Policy as Health Policy: Social Expenditures and Life Expectancy Gains. Megan M. Reynolds, University of Utah; Mauricio Avendano, King’s College London The Bureaucratic (Non)Production of ‘Human Kinds’: ‘Handicap Psychique’ and the Mentally Disordered in France. Alexander Vosick Barnard, University of California, Berkeley World Bank Projects and Targeted Health Programs and Policies in Peru, Argentina, and Costa Rica, 1980-2005. Shiri Noy, University of Wyoming Choose the Plan That’s Right for You: Individuation and Stratification in Employer-Sponsored Health Insurance. Adam Goldstein, Princeton University Discussant: Simone Maria Schneider, Trinity College Dublin

212. Regular Session. Public Institutions and Development

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215. Section on Aging and the Life Course. Life Course Processes in a Global Context

Sunday

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514B, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Merril Silverstein, Syracuse University Presider: Merril Silverstein, Syracuse University Aging in Place: Living Arrangement Transitions in the United States, England, and Europe. Jane Banaszak-Holl, University of Michigan; Sheela Kennedy, University of Michigan; Emily Joy Nicklett, University of Michigan; Jacques Wels, University of Cambridge; Elizabeth West, University of Greenwich; Sandra Zwakhalen, Maastricht University Doing Gendered Age: Childcare Negotiations in Chinese Immigrant Families. Xuemei Cao, SUNY Albany Heterogeneity in U.S. Immigration Policy Regimes and Mexican American Functional Limitation Trajectories. Collin William Mueller, Duke University; Bryce J. Bartlett, Duke University State-level Policies as a Family Resource to Reduce Family-to-Work Conflict among European Families with Aging Parents. Elizangela Storelli, Boston College; Shannon N. Davis, George Mason University Discussant: Jacqueline L. Angel, University of Texas at Austin

216. Section on Asia and Asian America Refereed Roundtable Session and Business Meeting

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516C, 10:30-11:30 a.m. Session Organizer: Prema Ann Kurien, Syracuse University Table 01. Racialization and Racial Identity Table Presider: Karen D. Pyke, University of California, Riverside “I was like ivory soap”: Midwest Asian Americans, Internalized Racial Oppression, and Identity Shifts. Monica M. Trieu, Purdue University; Hana Lee, Purdue University Perceived Discrimination as Legacy: Korean Immigrants’ Work Lives at Korean Multinational Enterprises in the United States. Eunbi Kim, University of Pennsylvania There are No Asians in China: Chinese International Students and their Multiple Understandings of Race. Keitaro Okura Table 02. Educational Institutions, Pathways, and Attainment Table Presider: Jun Xu, Ball State University A Comparative Case Study of Public High School Dropouts and Completers among Bhutanese Refugees. Bola Sohn, The University of Texas at Austin Between-Year and Within-Year School Mobility: Different Effects by Race/Ethnicity. Jie Min Cyber Divide: International Students, Spatial Mobility and Transnational Elite. Kenneth Han Chen, University at AlbanyState University of New York Sub-Cultural Aspects of Educational Attainment among Asian Americans. Arthur Sakamoto, Texas A&M University; Sharron Wang, Texas A&M University The Incoroporation of Minority Faculty in Higher Education: The Experiences of Asian Scholars in Australian Universities. Nana Oishi, University of Melbourne Table 03. Marriage, Family, and Fertility Table Presider: Leslie Kim Wang, University of Massachusetts Boston Determinants of Intermarriages among Foreign-Born Asians in the United States. Maggie Bohm-Jordan, University of Wisconsin- SP; Philip Q. Yang, Texas Woman’s University Fertility Behavior among Endogamous and Exogamous Asian Americans. Sharron Wang, Texas A&M University Marriage and Parenthood Preferences among Young Chinese

Women and Men. Sampson Lee Blair, SUNY-BuffaloTimothy Madigan, Mansfield University Why do Chinese Americans Have More Children than Chinese Canadians? Jing Zhao, University of British Columbia Table 04. Political Mobilization in Asia Table Presider: Paul Yunsik Chang, Harvard University Influences of Social Capital on Political Participation in Rural Areas in China. Fanmu Zeng, Tsinghua University; Jifan Liu, Tsinghua University; Jar-Der Luo, Tsinghua University Land Expropriation in Peri-rural Sichuan: Negotiation or Resistance? Yin-wah Chu, Hong Kong Baptist University The End of East Asian Linguistic Cosmopolitanism: Japan, Korea, and Vietnam, ca. 1850–1950. Jeffrey Weng, University of California, Berkeley The Sewŏl Ferry Disaster as the Second Kwangju Massacre in South Korea: On Post-State Sovereignty. Hyun Ok Park, York University Anti-Japanese Sentiment among Chinese University Students: The Influence of Nationalist Propaganda. Min Zhou, University of Victoria; Hanning Wang, University of Victoria Table 05. Constructions of Ethnic Identity Table Presider: Jennifer L. Lê, Bellevue College Construction of Ethnic Identity among South Asian Muslims in the United States. Fatema Zohara Cultural Citizenship: Asian American and Pacific Islanders in Primetime Television. Nancy Wang Yuen, Biola University; Christina B. Chin, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign; Meera Deo, UCLA School of Law; Faustina M. DuCros, San Jose State University; Jenny Lee, University of California, Los Angeles; Noriko Milman, University of San Francisco; Karissa Yaw, Biola University Heritage-Education Organizations in the Korean Community in the New York-New Jersey Area. Pyong Gap Min, City University of New York-Queens College; Daeshin Hayden Ju, The Graduate Center The Asian American Movement Art in San Francisco Bay Area. Laura Fantone, University California-Berkeley The Context of Intergroup Contact, Attitudes, and Urbanitemigrant Worker Friendship Ties in Urban China. Jenny Xin Li, The Chinese University of Hong KongYuying Tong, The Chinese University of Hong Kong Table 06. Gender in Asia Gendering Labor: A Case of Sales Promotion Workers in Cosmetics in South Korea. Eunji Lee, Yonsei University; Jaeyoun Won, Yonsei University Influence of Social Networks on Older People’s Subjective Well-being in Japan: Gender and Age Differences. Saori Yasumoto, Osaka University; Takeshi Nakagawa, University of Zurich; Yasuyuki Gondo, Osaka University; Yukie Masui, Tokyo Metropolitan Geriatric Hospital and Institute of Gerontology; Kei Kamide, Osaka University; Kazunori Ikebe, Osaka University; Yoshiko Ishioka, Keio University; Tatsuro Ishizaki, Tokyo Metropolitan Geriatric Hospital and Institute of Gerontology; Ryutaro Takahashi, Tokyo Metropolitan Geriatric Hospital and Institute of Gerontology; Yasuhiko Arai, Keio University Privileged, Constrained, or Disadvantaged? Gendered Rationales for intra-Asia Marriage Migration: The Case of Vietnamese. Hsin-Chieh Chang, National Taiwan University

Sunday, August 13, 2017

217. Section on Collective Behavior and Social Movements. Consequences of Social Movements Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513A, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Kenneth (Andy) Andrews, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Presider: Kenneth (Andy) Andrews, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Panelists: Kenneth (Andy) Andrews, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill James M. Jasper, Graduate Center of the City University of New York Brayden G. King, Northwestern University Katrin Uba, Uppsala University Nella Van Dyke, University of California, Merced

218. Section on Crime, Law, and Deviance. Advances in Urban Ethnography

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513F, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Christopher J. Lyons, University of New Mexico The Stickup Kids: Race, Drugs, Violence, and the American Dream. Randol Contreras, University of Toronto No Way Out: Precarious Living in the Shadow of Poverty and Drug Dealing. Waverly Duck, University of Pittsburgh Wounded City: Violent Turf Wars in a Chicago Barrio. Robert Vargas, University of Notre Dame Behind the White Picket Fence: Power and Privilege in a Multiethnic Neighborhood. Sarah Mayorga-Gallo, University of Massachusetts-Boston Discussant: Victor M. Rios, University of California, Santa Barbara

219. Section on Economic Sociology. Culture and Economy

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514C, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Michael D. Lounsbury, University of Alberta Presider: Patricia H. Thornton, Texas A&M University Capital and Carbon: The Shifting Common Good Justifications for Energy Regimes. Thomas D. D. Beamish, University of CaliforniaDavis; Nicole Woolsey Biggart, University of California-Davis When Oppositional Logics Falter: The Uncertain Worth of “Homemade Food” in a Failed Food Swap. Connor John Fitzmaurice, Boston University Evaluation and Valuation in Social Enterprise: How Organizations Confront the Paradox of Moral Markets. Paul-Brian McInerney, University of Illinois at Chicago Categorical Legitimation: Media Coverage for Market Networks and Organizational Founding and Failure. Shoonchul Shin, University of California Berkeley The Inauthenticity in the Legitimacy: Trade-Offs in Firm Identities in New Market Entry. Jae-Kyung Ha, Boston University; Ezra W. Zuckerman, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Stine Grodal, Boston University

220. Section on Global and Transnational Sociology. Diffusion in a Highly Stratified World-System

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 515A, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Kristen Shorette, Stony Brook University Foreign Aid and Norm Diffusion: The Case of Gender Equality. Liam Swiss, Memorial University; Kathleen M. Fallon, State University of New York at Stony Brook Gender Ideology in Cross-National Context: Socioeconomic Development and World-Society Integration. Roshan Kumar Pandian, Indiana University

Sunday

Table 07. Well Being and Mental Health Empirical Evidence of Mismatch of Subjective Well-being: Are Satisfied People Happy? Jun Kobayashi, Seikei University; Carola Hommerich, German Institute for Japanese Studies (DIJ) Ethnic Differences in Mental Health among Asian Americans. Fang Gong, Ball State University; Jun Xu, Ball State University Family Structure Change and Behavioral Problems in South Korea. Jonathan A. Jarvis, Brigham Young University; Ashley Larsen Gibby, Penn State; Shana Lee Pribesh, Old Dominion University Inequality in Risk of Suicide: Differentials of Impacts of Community Level Factors in South Korea. Jaein Lee, University of Maryland, College Park Social Status and Damage by Disaster: Life and Social Consciousness after the Great East Japan Earthquake. Yoichi Murase, Rikkyo University; W. Lawrence Neuman, University of Wisconsin-Whitewater Table 08. Immigration/Immigrants Table Presider: Se Hwa Lee, Dickinson College Elastic Intimacies and ‘Middling’ Migration: Negotiating Partners, Parents and Visas. Shanthi Robertson, Western Sydney University Immigrant Youth Organizing as Civic Preparation. Rand Quinn, University of Pennsylvania; Chi Nguyen, Pennsylvania State University Korean American Communities on the U.S.-Mexico Border. Minjeong Kim, San Diego State University Table 09. Migration in Asia Table Presider: Sookhee Oh, University of Missouri-Kansas City Living in Skipped Generation Households and Psychological Well-being among Middle-aged and Older Grandparents in China. Ming Wen, University of Utah; Qiang Ren, Peking University; Kim M. Korinek, University of Utah; Ha Ngoc Trinh, University of Texas Medical Branch Risk-Taking Tendencies and Public Immigration Attitudes: Evidences from Four East Asian Countries. Kyusun ShimYunSuk Lee, University of Seoul Social Construction of Migrants in South Korea. Soon Seok Park, Purdue University The Lasting Impact of Parental Migration on Children’s Behavioral Outcomes: Evidence from China. Bo Zhou, State University of New York-Albany; Zai Liang, State University of New York-Albany; Zhijun Liu, Zhejiang University Table 10. Social Inequality Table Presider: Wei Zhao, University of North Carolina-Charlotte Housing and Child Development Outcomes in Contemporary China: Unravelling Rural-Urban Disparities. Qian He, University of Wisconsin-Madison Local Labor Market Contexts and Unemployment among Immigrants in Japan. Hirohisa Takenoshita, Sophia University The “Spike and Slab” Income Inequality in Imperial China: Observations from 202 BC to AD 1906. Qiang Wu, University of International Business and Economics, ChinaGuangyu Tong, Duke University Why Class Matters: Understanding How Social Reproduction Operates among Asian American College Students. Blair Harrington, University of Massachusetts at Amherst

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Session 220, continued Global Diffusion and Stratification of Reproductive Technology: The Case of Birth by Caesarean Section. Emily A. Marshall, Franklin & Marshall College; Sarah Schubach, Franklin & Marshall College When Scripts Do Not Resonate: Global Minority Rights and Local Boundary Dynamics in Southern Turkey. Zeynep Ozgen, New York University-Abu Dhabi; Matthias Koenig, University of Goettingen World Society in Interaction: Practicing International Advocacy Work in South Korean LGBT Activism. Minwoo Jung, University of Southern California

Sunday

221. Section on Labor and Labor Movements. Global Labor Protest

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512H, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Chris Rhomberg, Fordham University Presider: Joel P. Stillerman, Grand Valley State University Declining Rural Safety Net, Perceptions of Political Risk and Selective Radicalization of Labor Contention in China. Zheng Fu, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology Development, Proletarianization and the Association of Workers in Garment Industry in China. Shuwan Zhang, CASS; Lulu Fan, Guangzhou Academy of Social Sciences The Antinomies of Successful Mobilization: Inclusion and Exclusion among Bogota’s Newly Organized Recyclers. Manuel Zimbalist Rosaldo, University of California at Berkeley Varieties of Dockworker Unionism in Latin America: National Context, Local Strategy and International Connections. Caitlin R. Fox-Hodess, University of California, Berkeley

222. Section on Marxist Sociology. Marxist Sociology in the 21st Century: 150 Years of Marx’s Capital Palais des congrès de Montréal, 515C, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Paul Prew, Minnesota State University - Mankato Presider: Paul Prew, Minnesota State University - Mankato Karl Marx on Human Life and its Commodification. Delal Aydin, Binghamton University The Material Conditions of Detroit’s Great Rebellion. Mark Jay; Virginia Leavell, UC Santa Barbara How does the Economic Structure Influence Labor Struggles in China? Changling Cai, Binghamton University

223. Section on Medical Sociology. Health Disparities over the Life Course

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513C, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Hui Liu, Michigan State University Presider: Jennifer Karas Montez, Syracuse University Rethinking the Role of Childhood SES in Adult Health: Integrating Theories of the Disablement Process. Patricia Ann Homan, Duke University; Scott M. Lynch, Duke University Development of Educational Disparities in Health across the Transition to Adulthood. Elizabeth Lawrence, University of North Carolina; Robert A. Hummer, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Wage Gains, but Few Health Returns to Some College: A Role for Employment Histories? Sarah Burgard, University of Michigan; Anna Zajacova, University of Western Ontario; Shauna Dyer, University of Michigan Life Course Perspectives on Health Inequality: The Intersection of Race, Nativity, and Aging. Tyson H. Brown, Duke University Discussant: Mark D. Hayward, University of Texas at Austin

224. Section on Methodology. Otis Dudley Duncan Lecture: Epigenetic Processes Mediating between Social Environment and the Genome Palais des congrès de Montréal, 515B, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Guang Guo, University of North Carolina Panelist: Moshe Szyf, McGill University

225. Section on Race, Gender, and Class. Feminist Disability Studies: Advancing Intersectional Analyses (cosponsored with Section on Disability and Society) Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513D, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Laura Mauldin, University of Connecticut Panelists: Kim Hall, Appalachian State University Alison Kafer, Southwestern University Nirmala Erevelles, University of Alabama Barbara Katz Rothman, City University of New York Linda M. Blum, Northeastern University

226. Section on Social Psychology. Social Psychological Approaches to Examining Health Disparities

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512A, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Stefanie Mollborn, University of Colorado Boulder A Roadmap for Reclaiming Patient Compliance Research in an Era of Increasingly Medicalized Medical Sociology. Karen Lutfey Spencer, University of Colorado Denver Seeing Inequality: Is Witnessing Discrimination Bad for Your Health? Angela Dixon, Princeton University When Keeping It Real Goes Right: Identity Meaning Structure and Psychological Distress. Mark Henry Walker, Louisiana State University Appraisal of Stressors, Stress Responses, and the Mental Health of African Americans. Sirry Alang, Lehigh University

227. Section on Sociology of Children and Youth. United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child: United States and Canada Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513E, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Maria Schmeeckle, Illinois State University Panelists: Brian Gran, Case Western Reserve University Yvonne M. Vissing, Salem State University Jonathan Todres, Georgia State University Meg Gardinier, Childfund Alliance Kay Tisdall, University of Edinburgh Margo Greenwood, University of Northern British Columbia

228. Section on Sociology of Culture Refereed Roundtable Session

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517B, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizers: Brian McKernan, The Sage Colleges Hannah Linda Wohl, Northwestern University Table 01. Comparative and Transnational Culture Table Presider: Aneesh Aneesh, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Cultural Manifestations of Settler Colonialism. Clifford L. Broman, Michigan State University; Shikha Bista Deliberative Ideals Across Diverse Cultures. Jensen Sass, University of Canberra Macro - Macro Emergence: Global Expansion of Participation and Policy. Matthew Pearce, UC Irvine Supporting Equality or Emphasizing Difference? State Policy on Interethnic Relations and Conflict in Central Europe. Sara Jean Tomczuk, University of Washington

Sunday, August 13, 2017

Reconceptualized. Allister Pilar Plater, University of Virginia Towards a Micro-Cultural-Sociology of Categorical Revision: The Case of Chronically Ill People. Hwa-Yen Huang, Rutgers University Table 07. Culture and Inequality Table Presider: Amanda Koontz, University of Central Florida Diversity Work. Amy Elizabeth Jones, University of Wisconsin Madison Unexpressed Desires of Equality for Black Americans. Nathan Reed, University of Southern California Is Healthy Eating Too Expensive? How Low-Income Parents Evaluate the Cost and Value of Food. Caitlin Daniel, Harvard University Organizational Responsiveness to Entitlement in Everyday Requests and Complaints. Simone Zhang, Princeton University Re-evaluating Cultural Homology. Michael Schultz, Northwestern University Table 08. Culture and Media Deaf Identity Salience: Tracing Daphne’s Deaf Identity Salience through Switched at Birth Season One. Penny Harvey, Georgia State University Representation and Portrayal of Gender in English-Language Muslim Children’s Books. Kemal Budak, Emory University Teaching the Heart: Character Education as a Solution to Changing Social Problems, 1985-2016. Emily Handsman, Northwestern University The New Blackface: Construction of the Modern AfricanAmerican Male Actor. Edgar Jesus Campos, University of Minnesota-Twin Cities Table 09. Culture and Memory Table Presider: Ailsa Craig, Memorial University 100 Voices after 100 Years: Remembering the Armenian Genocide in Diaspora. Duygu Gul Kaya, York University FaceTiming the Nation: Art of Mobilizing Citizens in the Age of Fiber-optics through Collective Memory. Yagmur Karakaya, University of Minnesota Memory Activism, Memory Regions, and the Comparative Study of Contested Pasts. Yifat Gutman, Ben-Gurion University The Haunting of the Captain Phillips Rangers Memorial and the Memory Work of Ghost Stories. Christine Bucior, Pennsylvania State University The Memory Revolution and the 21st Century Genealogy Boom. Jackie Lee Hogan, Bradley University Table 10. Diffusion, Consecration, and Legitimization Table Presider: Derek Roberts, Copperbelt University Depreciated to be Appreciated: Gender Devaluation in the Cultural Consecration of Korean Writers, 1960-2000. Jina Lee, University of Arizona Legitimizing Foreign Cultural Products: The Case of Asian Films in the United States. Mihyang Ahn, Leadership Center, Yonsei University Red and Gold Washing: The Chinese Art Hype in California vs. Asian American Art’s Invisibility. Laura Fantone, University California-Berkeley Table 11. Material Culture Network Table Presider: Michael L. Siciliano, University of California Los Angeles Imaginary Constituencies: Landscape Architecture and the Construction of an Urban Public. Michael Owen Benediktsson, Hunter College

Sunday

“Asphalt” Nivkhs: Transformation of Traditional Culture of Arctic and Sub-Arctic Indigenous People. Svetlana Tulaeva Table 02. Creativity and Collaboration Table Presider: Richard D. Lloyd, Vanderbilt University Concerted Efforts: Toward a Theory of Reciprocal Influence in Collaborative Circles. Ugo Corte, Uppsala University Labored Meanings: Contemporary Artists and the Process and Problems of Producing Artistic Meaning. Ann L. Mullen, University of Toronto Socializing Professional Rejection in Artistic Labor Markets. Rachel Elizabeth Skaggs, Vanderbilt University Structure, Creativity or Identity? What Makes Artistic Innovators Famous Beyond their Peer Network? Mitali Banerjee, HEC Paris; Paul L. Ingram, Columbia University The Muse at Work: Processes of Creative Experimentation. Hannah Linda Wohl, Northwestern University Table 03. Cultural Capital Table Presider: Roscoe C. Scarborough, Franklin and Marshall College Aesthetics and Morality: The Evaluation of Female and Male Bodily Beauty in Five European Countries. Giselinde Kuipers, University of Amsterdam; Sylvia Holla, University of Amsterdam Cultural Equality in the United States: Does Public Funding Promote Access to the Arts? Tal Feder, University of Haifa Tastes and Cultural Models of Friendship: Three Hypotheses. Kyle Puetz, University of Arizona Table 04. Cultural Production Table Presider: Catherine L. Moran, University of New Hampshire Cosmopolitanism and Hegemony: The Manchurian Motion Picture Corporation and the Production of My Nightingale (1943). Seio Nakajima, Waseda University Hip Hop and Diasporic Cultural Production: The Caribbean Diaspora in Toronto. Athena Elafros, Keuka College Income Differences among Contemporary Composers: How Does Gender Matter? Ju Hyun Park, Emory University Municipal Government as an Arts Facilitator. Nicholas P. Dempsey, Eckerd College Table 05. Cultural Sociology and Politics Table Presider: Andrea M. Voyer, University of Connecticut A Monster of a Crisis: Creature Features and Capitalism’s Monstrous Ecological Effects. Jeffrey A. Ewing, University of Oregon From High Ground to Low Responsibility: Shifts in Rhetoric as Complaints Turn to Racial Conflict. Neal King, Virginia Tech; Anna Calasanti, University of New Mexico The Cultural Politics of Marijuana: Marijuana, the News Media, and Recreational Legalization. Andrew Horvitz, SUNY New Paltz Too Dangerous to Disclose? A Case Study on the Legal Struggle over Detainee Abuse Images. Anna Veronica Banchik, University of Texas- Austin Table 06. Culture and Contemporary Theory Table Presider: Filipe Carreira da Silva, University of Lisbon Rethinking the Iranian Civil Sphere: The Case of HIV/AIDS and the subjective/ objective civility. Elham Pourtaher, University at Albany Seneca Falls and the Discourse of Equality. Brian T. Connor, University of Maryland, College Park Terrorism’s Aesthetics. Marshall Battani, Grand Valley State University; Michaelyn Mankel, Grand Valley State University They’re Assholes, but They’re My Assholes: Female Authority

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Sunday

Session 228, continued Museums, Pluralism, and Cultural Change: The Creation Museum as a Challenger Museum. Kathleen C. Oberlin, Grinnell College Second Chances: Institutional Symbols and Laser Tattoo Removal. Joseph Klett, University of California, Santa Cruz The Material Culture of Social Camouflage. Christena NippertEng, IU-Bloomington Table 12. Methods in Cultural Sociology Table Presider: Laura Fantone, University California-Berkeley On the Non-observability of Exercise by Strangers: Seeing-thelift, Being the Team. Edward John Reynolds, The University of New Hampshire Sociology at a Slant: James Agee’s Ethnographic Superrealism. Lindsey A. Freeman, Simon Fraser University To Boldly Make What No Man Has Made Before: Self, Society, and Stuff. Abigail Jorgensen, University of Notre Dame Where’s the Effort? Emotions and the Problem of MeaningCentrism in Cultural Theories of Action. Stephen F. Ostertag, Tulane University Table 13. Morality and Socialization Table Presider: Shelly Steward, University of California, Berkeley Intergenerational Transmission of Fertility Intentions among Women in a Developing Country. Adenife Modile, University of Colorado Boulder Morality in Action: Theorizing the Heterogeneous Role of Morality in Adolescent Deviant Decision-Making. Taylor Paige Winfield, Princeton University; Ryan James Parsons, Princeton University Revisiting Adolescent Society: School Organization, Peer Culture, and Teacher Control Strategy. Ruo-Fan Liu, University of Wisconsin-Madison The Moral Lives of Righands. Cary Beckwith, Princeton University The Transition to Late Modernity and the Educational Trajectories of Russian Youth. Dmitry Kurakin, National Research University Higher School of Economics; David B. Bills, University of Iowa Table 14. Sociology of Music Table Presider: Lisa McCormick, University of Edinburgh Canons and Compilations: The Role of Cultural Anchors in the Evolving Definition of Electronic/dance Music. Alex van Venrooij, University of Amsterdam Cultural Logics and Modes of Consumption Unravelling the Multiplicity of Symbolic Distinctions in the Musical Field. Mart Willekens, Erasmus University Music and Self-Transformation in the Production of “Greatness”. Aaron J. Klassen, Carleton University The Development of Electronic/dance Music in the United States, United Kingdom and the Netherlands, 1985-2005. Rens Wilderom, University of AmsterdamAlex van Venrooij, University of Amsterdam Tiers, Scenes, and What it all Means: Implications of Live Music Venue Hierarchies. Nikki-Marie Brown Table 15. Sociology of Taste Table Presider: Mark W. D. Paterson, University of Pittsburgh Gender, Household Position, and Taste Acquisition Timing in the Cultural to Economic Capital Conversion Process. Brandon Sepulvado, University of Notre Dame Photo Elicitation in the Study of Culture and Taste. Anders Vassenden, University of Stavanger

Strategic Liking? Artistic Tastes, Boundary Drawing and Cultural Goodwill among Russian University Students. Mikhail Sokolov, European University at Saint Petersburg; Volokhonsky Vladimir, Saint Petersburg State University Tasting the City: Bringing Sociology of Evaluation to Studies of Urban Aesthetics. Anastasiya Halauniova, University of Amsterdam The Emergence of Heterarchical Cultural Evaluation? A Latent Class Analysis of Cultural Evaluation Repertoires. Marc Verboord, Erasmus University Rotterdam

229. Section on Teaching and Learning in Sociology Roundtable Session

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520B, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizers: Jay R. Howard, Butler University Lisa Handler, Community College of Philadelphia Table 01. Exploring the Teaching Experience at Different Types of Institutions Exploring the Teaching Experience at Elizabethtown College. Michele Lee Kozimor-King, Elizabethtown College Jan Thomas, Kenyon College. Jan E. Thomas, Kenyon College Teaching and So Much More: Experiences and Opportunities at a Liberal Arts University. Mari Plikuhn, University of Evansville Table 02. Exploring the Teaching Experience at Different Types of Institutions Speed Dating: The Public Urban Comprehensive College. Mikaila Mariel Lemonik Arthur, Rhode Island College Teaching Where You Land. Diane L. Pike, Augsburg College Reflections and Advice on a Career as a Teacher-scholar at a Small Women’s Liberal Arts College. Brent Mack Shea, Sweet Briar College Table 03. Exploring the Teaching Experience at Different Types of Institutions Being a Sociologist Who Teaches at a Community College: Professional Identity on an Unexpected Career Path. Rifat A. Salam, CUNY-Borough of Manhattan Community College Teaching and Learning at a Modest-ranking PhD Granting University. Dustin Kidd, Temple University Teaching at a Comprehensive Regional College. DeAnna Loraine Gore, University of South Carolina Aiken Table 04. Exploring the Teaching Experience at Different Types of Institutions Changing Academic Landscape. Kim Davies, Augusta University Small Liberal Arts Universities. Bryan K. Robinson, University of Mount Union Working at a Community College. Elizabeth Burkhalter Table 05. Teaching and Learning in Sociology Papers Evaluating “Flipped Classroom” Tools: Wikipedia, Edmodo, Netflix and More. Giovanna Follo, Wright State UniversityLake Campus; Diane M. Huelskamp, Wright State UniversityLake Campus Incorporating Online and In-Person Book Clubs into Sociological Courses. Amanda Wyant, North Carolina State University; Sarah Bowen, North Carolina State University Not Stuck in the Middle, Unhappy, or in Crisis: Teaching Experiences of College Professors at Mid-Career. Rebecca Bordt, DePauw University The Discounting of Evolutionary Explanations in Sociology. Károly Takács, Hungarian Academy of Sciences

Sunday, August 13, 2017

230. Theory Section. New Developments in Contemporary Theory

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514A, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Aliza Luft, UCLA Presider: Aliza Luft, UCLA Culture and Computation: Steps to a Probably Approximately Correct Theory of Culture. Jacob Gates Foster, University of California-Los Angeles Dilemmas: Where No Schema Has Gone Before. Lawrence Hamilton Williams, University of Toronto Evil Euphemisms: Folk Devils and the Social Construction of Denial. Ana Villarreal, Boston University Thinking about Age-Appropriateness: Understanding the Role of Culture in Moral Evaluation. Michael Lee Wood, University of Notre Dame

11:30 a.m.

Meetings

Section on Asia and Asian America Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516C, 11:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m.

12:30 p.m.

Meetings

American Journal of Sociology Palais des congrès de Montréal, 524B, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Committee on the Status of Persons with Disabilities in Sociology Palais des congrès de Montréal, 523B, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Committee on the Status of Racial and Ethnic Minorities in Sociology Palais des congrès de Montréal, 525A, 12:30-2:10 p.m.

12:30 p.m.

Sessions

231. Presidential Panel. Cultural Processes Compared

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516B, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Michèle Lamont, Harvard University Presider: Lyn Spillman, University of Notre Dame Classifying, Counting, and Calculating as Cultural Processes. Wendy Nelson Espeland, Northwestern University Knowing and Placing the Human: Standardization, Categorization, and the Politics of Race, Gender, and Sexuality. Steven Epstein, Northwestern University An Equal Say in Struggling against Inequalities? Comparative Insights into Popular Frustration When Taking Part, and Possible Populist Reactions. Laurent Thevenot, L’Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales Canonization Processes in the Making and Remaking of Culture. David A. Snow, University of California, Irvine Discussant: Nicolas Dodier, Ecole des hautes etudes en sciences sociales Social scientists have become preoccupied with a systematic examination of the ways in which cultural processes such as evaluation, commensuration, canonization and standardization are feeding into inequality. This session brings together some of the most generative recent research on this topic, with the hope of stimulating increased attention to how classification, meaningmaking and institutionalization participate in pathways that feed inequality.

232. Thematic Session. Field-Based Approaches to the Study of Political Discourse

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511C, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Bart Bonikowski, Harvard University Presider: Bart Bonikowski, Harvard University Panelists: G. Cristina Mora, University of California, Berkeley Stephanie L. Mudge, University of California-Davis Rodney Benson, New York University Bart Bonikowski, Harvard University Sociologists have recently returned to the study of institutional politics, reclaiming territory previously ceded to political science. From the analysis of social cleavages and political parties to policy feedback effects, the discipline is once again engaging with the role of political power in producing and reinforcing social inequality. As part of this development, growing emphasis is being placed on the centrality of political discourse in both enabling and constraining social change. The stigmatization of immigrants and ethnic minorities, the populist vilification of political and intellectual elites, and the elision of substantive issues in favor of incendiary rhetoric have become common features of political culture in the U.S. and Europe alike. Sociologists are in an ideal position to shed light on the range of discursive repertoires in legislative and electoral politics, the mechanisms that lead political actors to select particular discursive options, and the impact of particular forms of claims-making on policy and the contours of subsequent debates. Such work must take on a doubly relational perspective: it must consider meaning as constituted by systems of symbolic relations and it must view discursive choices as stemming from the relations among political actors and between political actors and their target audiences. Field analysis offers a particularly useful framework for understanding these processes. This session seeks to showcase cutting-edge research that employs a field-based perspective to research on political discourse in institutional politics, with a particular focus on unique sources of data and innovative methods that are able to capture the relational properties of claims-making.

233. Thematic Session. Happiness and Inequality

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511D, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Anna Sun, Kenyon College Presider: David Bartram, University of Leicester Social Capital and Migratory Pathways are Associated with Immigrants’ Happiness around the World. Rocío Calvo, Boston College Happiness and the U.K. Citizenship Process: Do Tests and Ceremonies Enhance Immigrants’ Lives? David Bartram, University of Leicester Happiness and Inequality in Urban China. Becky Yang Hsu, Georgetown University; Anna Sun, Kenyon College; Deborah S. Davis, Yale University; James Farrer, Sophia University; Richard Madsen; Chih-Jou Chen, Academia Sinica Why Income Inequality is Dissatisfying? The Role of Subjective Social Status. Simone Maria Schneider, Trinity College Dublin On the Political Determinants of Inequality in Subjective Well-being across Nations. Benjamin Radcliff, University of Norte Dame The papers on this panel examine the complex relationship between happiness and inequality using diverse methodologies and from global perspectives. Calvo et al’s paper draws data from the Gallup World Poll to examine determinants of immigrants’ happiness across different immigration pathways (Global South-Global North, South-South, North-North, North-South). Bartram’s paper examines the relationship between immigration and happiness, investigating

Sunday

2018 Jessie Bernard Award Selection Committee Palais des congrès de Montréal, 523A, 12:30-2:10 p.m.

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Session 233, continued whether migration to a wealthier country brings greater happiness to the immigrants. Based on data from a three-year project that consists of both ethnographies and a national representative survey, Hsu et al analyze the multiple cultural sources of happiness in urban China under the conditions of great political change and economic inequality. Simone Schneider uses data of the European Social Survey 2012/13 to examine whether subjective social status – a person’s perception of his/her social standing in the social hierarchy – is an important psychological mechanism explaining the inequality-satisfaction link across European societies. Benjamin Radcliff and Alexander Pacek analyze the political determinants of inequality in subjective well-being across nations.

Sunday

234. Thematic Session. Mobilizing Culture in Divided Cities: Inclusion, Exclusion and the Politics of Urban Belonging

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511A, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Ryan Centner, London School of Economics Presider: Ryan Centner, London School of Economics Urban Cleansing: Exclusion, Evictions, and Ethno-Racial Targeting in Urban India. Liza Weinstein, Northeastern University The Visual Culture of Katrina: Understanding the Antinomies of Belonging in the Post-Disaster City. Daina Cheyenne Harvey, College of the Holy Cross Queer Youth Placemaking in Iconic Gay Neighborhoods. Theo Greene, Bowdoin College Discussant: Ryan Centner, London School of Economics How is culture mobilized toward inclusion – but also exclusion – across the unequal urban realm? It is a classic insight of urban sociology that most cities are somehow “divided,” concentrating difference and fostering multiple communities. Much rarer are investigations into the production and use of cultural forms where city space is brought into focus. The city is a locus for making and distinguishing cultural categories, artifacts, and senses; it is an environment where culture is wielded in inventive, substantive ways that shape the physical order of social inequality, as well as how it is felt. This session addresses how culture in a variety of forms is mobilized in place-based struggles over belonging in cities around the world. Inspired by scholarship on cultural boundary-marking, spatial struggles over authenticity and righteousness, and the nexus of culture, power, and inclusion, our participants focus on how divided cities pivot on – and can be improved or worsened through – strategies of cultural mobilization that aim toward inclusion of some kind, but may have a counterface of exclusion as politics play out in and on space. We look at how space can be a platform, a tactic, or a project in struggles over culture that yield greater inclusion or exclusion. We dwell on cases where political valences are not always so plain, requiring deeper analysis and comparison. By engaging directly with varied, intersecting social inequalities, we highlight tricky contexts that can broaden our knowledge about bolstering inclusion in troubled cities, yet with circumspection.

235. Special Session. Culture(s) of Privacy and Surveillance in World of Technological and Legal Change Palais des congrès de Montréal, 515B, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Denise L. Anthony, Dartmouth College Presider: Denise L. Anthony, Dartmouth College It’s Dangerous: The Online World of Drug Dealers, Rappers, and the Street Code. Marta-Marika Urbanik, University of Alberta; Kevin

D. Haggerty, University of Alberta A Socio-history of Privacy and the Self. Celeste Campos-Castillo, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Surveillance Culture and Surveillance Capitalism. David Lyon Privacy and Protest. Jennifer Earl, University of Arizona Across the world, technological advances enable communication and information flows previously unimaginable yet also create challenges for social actors - from individuals and communities to companies and nation-states - regarding privacy, that is, its protection, limits and management. In previous work, sociologists and others distinguished between behavior and speech that was “in public” versus “in private.” Regardless of whether the line between public and private was ever as bright as we now assume, today behavior and speech leave data trails that can reveal beliefs, traits, actions and interests that not only may be considered private, but also have real effects on individual and collective outcomes. At the same time, advances in (and lack of or variation in legal limits on) monitoring, storing, and analyzing all of this “big data” (i.e., surveillance) enable commercial and government entities to have significant power that crosses political boundaries and legal jurisdictions. Global actors, including governments and corporations, social movements and citizens, seek both to utilize these technologies for individual and collective benefits but also to limit their reach and impact. This session seeks to explore privacy and surveillance as related to fundamental sociological concepts and questions from multiple perspectives, including but not limited to, sociology of culture, media & technology, law, social psychology and group processes, and political sociology. The session is open to empirical research as well as theoretical exploration of issues related to privacy and surveillance in society from various international or comparative perspectives. This session seeks to explore these issues from multiple perspectives, including but not limited to, sociology of culture, media & technology, law, psychology and group process. The session is open to empirical research on a related topic, as well as theoretical exploration of the key issues related to privacy and surveillance in society.

236. Author Meets Critics Session. Credit to Capabilities: A Sociological Study of Microcredit Groups in India (Cambridge University Press, 2014) by Paromita Sanyal Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511B, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Graziella Moraes D. Silva, Graduate Institute in Geneva-IHEID Critics: Patrick G. Heller, Brown University Bruce G. Carruthers, Northwestern University Karen S. Cook, Stanford University Author: Paromita Sanyal, Florida State University

237. Author Meets Critics Session. Geisha of a Different Kind: Race and Sexuality in Gaysian America (New York University Press, 2015) by C. Winter Han

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511E, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Kimberly Kay Hoang, University of Chicago Critics: Rhacel Salazar Parrenas, University of Southern California Catherine Connell, Boston University Jason Orne, Drexel University Author: Chong-Suk Han, Middlebury College

Sunday, August 13, 2017

238. Departmental Management and Leadership Workshop. Liberal Learning and the Sociology Major: Identifying Essential Learning Outcomes Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512C, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Susan J. Ferguson, Grinnell College Sponsored by the Liberal Learning and the Sociology Major, 3rd Edition Task Force. This workshop will introduce the newly released 3rd edition and help departments consider its recommendations for defining essential learning outcomes for the major. (First of threepart symposium)

239. Professional Development Workshop. Maintaining a Connection with Your Institution: Possibilities and Barriers

240. Policy and Research Workshop. Contingent Faculty in Academic Sociology (sponsored by the ASA Task Force on Contingent Faculty)

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512D, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizers: Dan Clawson, University of Massachusetts Louis Esparza, California State University, Los Angeles Leader: Louis Esparza, California State University, Los Angeles Panelists: Michael Burawoy, University of California-Berkeley Catherine L. Moran, University of New Hampshire Victor W. Perez, University of Delaware ASA has established a Task Force on Contingent Faculty to examine employment trends, conditions of employment, the position of contingent faculty in the university, the effects on careers, and the consequences for higher education. Conditions for full-time non-tenure-system faculty are generally dramatically better than conditions for part-time per-course instructors, with the former more common at research universities and the latter more common at community colleges and state universities. The Task Force aims to have a (highly) preliminary report by the 2017 Annual Meeting, and will seek feedback from workshop participants on our understanding of the larger framework of these changes and their consequences. We seek feedback on the existing situation on various kinds of campuses and on recommendations for future action by ASA, sociology departments, universities, and individuals. All panelists are Task Force members.

241. Student Forum Paper Session. Interrogating the Limits of Social Inclusion: An Intersectional Perspective

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512E, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizers: Kati Barahona-López, University of CaliforniaSanta Cuz Uriel Serrano, University of California-Santa Cruz Isabel Sousa-Rodriguez, The Graduate Center - CUNY Colonizing Sexuality: How Ideas of Queerness are Built on Western Religious Power Structures. J. Dylan Sandifer, University of Memphis Conditional Community: Racialized Intersectional Obstacles to Involvement in LGBT Organizing. Cal Garrett, Uniersity of Illinois at Chicago; Lydia Dana, University of Illinois at Chicago The Women to Drive Movement in Saudi Arabia. Huda Alsahi, SNS Coming Out of the Shell: Conquering Fear, Vulnerability, and Despair through Family-Focused Community Organizing. Jennifer Elena Cossyleon, Loyola University Discussant: Wendy Marie Laybourn, University of Maryland

242. Regular Session. Attitudes towards Immigration and Migration Policy

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512F, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Thomas Georg Soehl, McGill University Presider: Jennifer Elrick, McGill University From “God Sent” to “God Damned”: Nativist Shocks and Race Relations in New Immigrant Destinations. Laura Lopez-Sanders, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill How did South America Legalize Migrants and Give Them Rights? The Case of Mercosur. Deisy Del Real, UCLA How does nationalism affect attitudes toward immigrants? Decoupling “state” and “nation” through the case of Israel. Yuval Feinstein, University of Haifa Imagined Threats: How Immigration Motive Misperception Shapes Perceived Group Threat. Friedolin Merhout, Duke University Discussant: Andreas Wimmer, Columbia University

243. Regular Session. Community and a Sense of Belonging Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512G, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Eva Rosen, Georgetown University The Construction and Pursuit of Place Distinction in the Woods of Northern Maine. Meaghan Stiman, Boston University The People and Place of Rochor Centre: Familiarity and Weak Interactions as a Mechanism of Community. Pamela Mary Devan, Boston University The Public Library as Resistive Space in the Neoliberal City. Sofya Aptekar, University of Massachusetts-Boston

244. Regular Session. Double Binds and Double Standards

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 515C, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizers: Catherine J. Taylor, Indiana University Christin L. Munsch, University of Connecticut Presider: Kjerstin Gruys, University of Nevada, Reno Constructing Spiritual Motherhood and Resisting Gender Inequality in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Casey R. Clevenger, Brandeis University Contested Bodies and the Double Bind: The Reproduction of Sexualized Femininity in Professional Women’s Surfing. Vanessa Madden Kauffman, University of California, Irvine Does Marital Name Choice Cause Women and Men to be Evaluated Differently? Kristin Kaye Kelley, Indiana University-Bloomington “Leftover Women” and “Kings of the Candy Shop”: Gendering Chinese American Return Migrants in China. Leslie Kim Wang,

Sunday

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512A, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizers: Thomas L. Van Valey, Western Michigan University William V. D’Antonio, Catholic University Presider: Thomas L. Van Valey, Western Michigan University Panelists: Sandra L. Hanson, Catholic University of America J. I. Hans Bakker, University of Guelph Diane L. Pike, Augsburg College Mary Ann Lamanna, University of Nebraska-Omaha One of the issues sociologists must consider as part of their retirement planning is whether they want to maintain a connection with their institution or organization (or if they want to establish a connection with another institution or organization). This session will focus on some of the possibilities in maintaining a connection as well as some of the barriers that have been encountered. The presenters are from a range of different types of institutions, and different parts of North America, and they have had varying experiences. They will make short presentations of their experiences, then the discussion will be opened to questions from the audience.

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Session 244, continued University of Massachusetts Boston Discussant: Sharla N. Alegria, University of California Merced

245. Regular Session. Internal Migration 1: Social Ties and Social Mobility among Internal Migrants

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516A, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Rachel E. Goldberg, University of California, Irvine Presider: Rachel E. Goldberg, University of California, Irvine Migration, Gender and Household Livelihood Strategy in Rural China. Yuying Tong, The Chinese University of Hong Kong; Binbin Shu, The Chinese University of Hong Kong; Martin P. Piotrowski, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Social Influence and Health Investments: Urban Ties and Household Sanitation in Rural India. Anna Lunn, Stanford University Does household headship status determine migrants’ family ties? Evidence from South Africa. Rebecca Wang, Brown University What does “rural” and “urban” mean? Differing definitions of place identity among Chinese migrants. Amy Tsang, Harvard University Discussant: Holly E. Reed, Queens College, CUNY

Sunday

246. Regular Session. Mortality and Morbidity

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516D, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Jennifer A. Ailshire, University of Southern California Presider: Rachel Donnelly, University of Texas at Austin Disadvantaged Areas or Racial Disadvantage? Geographic Variation in Black-White Life Expectancy Gaps. Arun Hendi, Duke University Explaining the Pathway from Self-Rated Health to Mortality: Diagnosis as a Determinant of Predictive Power. James Falconer, University of Alberta; Amelie Quesnel-Vallee, McGill University Revisiting Rising Mortality in Midlife among Non-Hispanic Whites: An Age-Period-Cohort Perspective. Emma Zang, Duke University; Yang Claire Yang, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Kenneth C. Land Rising Educational Gradients in Mortality: What are the Roles of Marriage Formation and Educational Assortative Mating? Wen Fan, Boston College; Yue Qian, University of British Columbia The Black-White Mortality Crossover: Integrating Mortality Selection and Life Course Explanations. Elizabeth Wrigley-Field, University of Minnesota; Felix Elwert, University of Wisconsin-Madison Discussant: Jessica Y. Ho, Duke University

247. Regular Session. Negotiating Gender Norms

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516E, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Ellen Lamont, Appalachian State University Presider: Rachel M. Schmitz, University of Texas Rio Grande Valley Breaking Chains, Tying Knots: How Non-Binary People Resist and Reproduce Gender in Everyday Life. Harry Barbee, Florida State University Lady Gazing at the Gay Bar: How Women Use Gay Bars as Sites of Sexual Presentation. Morgan Robert Purrier, University of Michigan Gender Ideology Formation: Uncovering Financial Strategies in Ukrainian Households. Nadina Lauren Anderson, University of Arizona Culture, Identities, and Gendered Power: Mexican American and Mexican Immigrant Baby Naming Practices. Christina Alicia Sue, University of Colorado-Boulder; Amy C. Wilkins, University of Colorado-Boulder; Adriana Nunez, University of Colorado Discussant: Joanna Pepin, University of Maryland

248. Regular Session. Parenthood 1: Parental Well-being

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 510D, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Kei Nomaguchi, Bowling Green State University Presider: Marshal Neal Fettro, Bowling Green State University Are the Parents Alright? Time in Self-Care in Same-Sex and Different-Sex Two-Parent Families with Children. Jennifer March Augustine, University of South Carolina; Jose Martin Aveldanes, University of South Carolina; Carla A. Pfeffer, University of South Carolina Distribution and Disavowal: Managing the Parental Stigma of Children’s Weight and Weight Loss. Jenny L. Davis, The Australian National University; Bianca Manago, Indiana University; Carla Goar, Kent State University; Bobbi Reidinger, Kent State University Mothers’ and Fathers’ Well-being in Parenting across the Arch of Child Development. Ann Meier, University of Minnesota; Kelly Musick, Cornell University; Jocelyn Fischer, Cornell University Parenthood Happiness and Social Policy in East and South Asia. Shih-Yi Chao; Jennifer L. Glass, University of Texas Discussant: Kei Nomaguchi, Bowling Green State University

249. Regular Session. Racial and Ethnic Boundaries, States, and Empire Palais des congrès de Montréal, 510C, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Cybelle Fox, UC Berkeley Presider: Cybelle Fox, UC Berkeley The Political Uses of ambiguity: Statecraft and U.S. Empire in the Philippines, 1898-1946. Katrina Quisumbing King, University of Wisconsin, Madison The Global “ American Negro” Education Model: U.S. Empire and Educational Philanthropy in Africa, 1919-1922. Julia Bates, Boston College Meteorological Frontiers: Climate Knowledge, the West, and U.S. Statecraft, 1800-1850. Zeke Baker, UC Davis Region, Race and History: Racial Palimpsests in the United States and Beyond. Angel Adams Parham, Loyola University New Orleans Revolution for Whom? Miskitos and Sandinistas in Revolutionary Nicaragua, 1979-1987. Zachary M. Wilmot, Brown University Discussant: James R. Jones, Rutgers University

250. Regular Session. Sociology of Middle East and Muslim Societies

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 510A, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Mustafa Gurbuz, American University Presider: Mustafa Gurbuz, American University Formalizing Informality: State-building and the Birth of Revolutionary Militias in Post-revolution Iran. Maryam Alemzadeh, University of Chicago Partners in Patriarchy: Faith-Based Organizations and Neoliberalism in Turkey. Zeynep Atalay, St. Mary’s College of California Playing Identity, Playing Politics: The Tunisian Ennahdha in Tunisia during the Constituent Assembly. Ratiba Hadj-Moussa, York University; Samar Ben Romdhane, Moncton University The Rise of the Islamic State and its Transnational Raison d’État. Vali Mansouri, George Mason University; Abdallah Hendawy, George Mason University Discussant: Said Arjomand, SUNY- Stony Brook

Sunday, August 13, 2017

251. Regular Session. Wealth and Affluence

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 510B, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Daniel J. Schneider, University of CaliforniaBerkeley Presider: Fabian T. Pfeffer, University of Michigan The Concentration of Wealth Within Family Lineages. Fabian T. Pfeffer, University of Michigan; Alexandra A. Killewald, Harvard University; Andreja Siliunas, Harvard University The Social History of a Capitalist Class: Wealth Holders in Stockholm, 1914–2006. Martin Gustavsson, Stockholm University; Andreas Melldahl, Uppsala University The Varying Effects of Incarceration, Conviction, and Arrest on Wealth Outcomes among Young Adults. Michelle Lee Maroto, University of Alberta; Bryan L. Sykes, University of California, Irvine Wealth and Policy Preferences. Liza G. Steele, State University of New York, Purchase Discussant: Geoffrey Thomas Wodtke, University of Toronto

252. Section on Aging and the Life Course. Intergenerational Relations in the Era of Inequality

253. Section on Altruism, Morality, and Social Solidarity. Altruism, Morality, and Social Solidarity Open Topic

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514B, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Monica M. Whitham, Oklahoma State University Presider: Gretchen Peterson, University of Memphis Durable Civic Disparities across Local Areas in the United States: Civic Deserts, Hotspots, and Their Destinies. Dingeman Wiertz, University of Oxford; Chaeyoon Lim, University of WisconsinMadison Education, Perceived Control, and Volunteering. Joonmo Son, National University of Singapore; John Wilson, Duke University The Moral Boundaries that Impact Support for the Troops. Alexis Pang, New York University Theists as “Other”? Symbolic Boundaries Based on Freethought Values. Amanda Marie Schutz, University of Arizona

254. Section on Asia and Asian America. Politics of Citizenship in Asia and Asian America

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514A, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Hae Yeon Choo, University of Toronto NGOs, Populist Democracy, and New Forms of Citizenship in China.

Carolyn L. Hsu, Colgate University Government-Citizen Relations in Hong Kong and Taiwan. Syaru Shirley Lin, Chinese University of Hong Kong Tolerable subjects and desexualized citizens: Politics of Transgender Rights in Postcolonial India. Chaitanya Lakkimsetti, Texas A&M University Relational Security: Selective Disclosure in Friendships of Korean and Mexican Undocumented Young Adults. Esther Yoona Cho, University of California, Berkeley

255. Section on Collective Behavior and Social Movements. Social Movements, Political Parties and Elections Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511F, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Lee Ann Banaszak, Penn State University Elections, Bureaucracies, Public Opinion, Social Movements, Policy Feedback, and Policymaking: Early U.S. Old-Age Policy. Edwin Amenta, University of California, Irvine; Thomas Alan Elliott, University of California, Irvine Minority Protest and Political Elections in the Early Stages of Governmental Responsiveness. Daniel Gillion, University of Pennsyslvania Outside the Convention: Protestor Motivations at the 2016 RNC and DNC and Partisan Activism. Kevin Reuning, Penn State University; Lee Ann Banaszak, Penn State University Political Conversations on Social Media: Bridging Between Parties and Movements in the United Kingdom. Thomas Davidson, Cornell University; Mabel Berezin, Cornell University When Politicians Pander: The Influence of Social Movements on Politicians’ Voting. Burrel James Vann, University of California, Irvine

256. Section on Crime, Law, and Deviance Refereed Roundtable Session and Business Meeting

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517B, 12:30-1:30 p.m. Session Organizer: Shelley Keith, University of Memphis Table 01. Assessing Multiple Theoretical Perspectives A Social Disorganization Theory and Routine Activities Theory Examination of Non-Violent Sex Crime. Anthony Vega, Washington State University Collective Efficacy, Formal Social Control, Relative Deprivation, and Perceived Safety in Urban China. Yunran Zhang, The Chinese University of Hong Kong; Hua Zhong, The Chinese University of Hong Kong; Junxiu Wang, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences Linking Adolescent Racial Discrimination and Young Adulthood Partner Violence among African American Men and Women. Tara Elizabeth Sutton, University of Georgia; Leslie Gordon Simons, University of Georgia; Brittany Martin, University of Georgia; Eric Thomas Klopack, University of Georgia Structural Disruption Theory: The Dynamic Interplay of Racial Injustice, Social Isolation, and Self-Concept. Jordan Christopher Burke, University of New Hampshire Table 02. Causes of Crime and Incarceration Presider: Nikita Carney, University of California - Santa Barbara State-Level Policy Change During Mass Incarceration, 1975-2002. Offer Egozy, New York University The Contemporary Transformation of American Youth: An Analysis of Changes in Crime Prevalence, 1991-2015. Kelsey Cundiff, Pennsylvania State University; Eric P. Baumer, Pennsylvania State University

Sunday

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513D, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizer: J. Jill Suitor, Purdue University Presider: J. Jill Suitor, Purdue University Changing Perceptions of Intergenerational Responsibility for Later Life Support in Singapore. Debra Street, State University of New York-Buffalo; Yulin Yang, State University of New York-Buffalo Received Support and Later-Life Functional Limitations among the Elderly in the United States and China. Zhangjun Zhou, Pennsylvania State University The Time-squeeze on Elder Caregivers: Influences on Daily Time Use, Physical Health, and Well-being. Liana C. Sayer, University of Maryland; Joan R. Kahn, University of Maryland; Rose Malinowski Weingartner Precarity, Inequality and the Myth of Agency in the Study of the Life Course. Dale Dannefer, Case Western Reserve University; Wenxuan Huang, Case Western Reserve University The Ripple Effects of War. Daniel Nicholas Ramirez Smith, Pennsylvania State University

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Sunday

Session 256, continued Table 03. Consequences of Criminal Records on Future Offending Table Presider: Gabriela Kirk, Northwestern University Getting By: Low Wages and Income Supplementation. Holly Nguyen Housing, Family and Community and Their Role in the Reentry Process. Gabriela Kirk, Northwestern University Not Without a Price: The Influence of Conviction on Illegal Earnings. Brandy R. Parker, Pennsylvania State University; Sarah Violet Fry, Pennsylvania State University Table 04. Consequences of Criminal Records on Life Circumstances Table Presider: David McElhattan, Northwestern University Criminal Justice System Involvement and Health: The Role of Economic Disadvantage, Antisocial Lifestyle, and Stress. William Michael Clemens, Bowling Green State University; Monica A. Longmore, Bowling Green State University; Peggy C. Giordano, Bowling Green State University; Wendy Diane Manning, Bowling Green State University Criminal Records and College Admissions: A National Experimental Audit. Robert Austin Stewart, University of Minnesota From the Cot to the Couch? Young Adult Incarceration and Returns to the Parental Household. Cody Warner, Montana State University Racialized Risk: The Proliferation of Criminal Background Checks in the Era of Mass Incarceration. David McElhattan, Northwestern University Table 05. Correlates of Violence Table Presider: Amy J. Fitzgerald, University of Windsor Cultural Predictors of the Direction of Lethal Violence: Analysis of 162 European Regions. Steven Stack, Wayne State University; Frederique Laubepin, University of Michigan Weird Winter Weather Wilding: Climate Change, Anomalously Warm Winter Temperatures, and Violent Crime in Philadelphia, 2010-2016. Christopher P. Thomas, Graduate Center, City University of New York (CUNY)/John Jay Table 06. Crime Intervention Programs Table Presider: Joshua Wakeham, University of Alabama Notes from a Failed Gang-Intervention Program: Problems of Bureaucracy and Epistemology in a People-Changing Organization. Joshua Wakeham, University of Alabama Organizational Type as a Determinant of Case Management Strategies for Reentry Planning: An Impact Analysis. Ronald J. D’Amico; Christian Geckeler, Social Policy Research Associates The Runaround: Punishment, Welfare, and Poverty Survival After Prison. John Michael Halushka, New York University Table 07. Identity Maintenance and Transformations Table Presider: Zachary Miner, SUNY Albany Identity Transformations: Getting out of a Cult. Marybeth F. Ayella, Saint Joseph’s University Defensive (M)othering in Women’s Reentry Identity Narratives. Stacy De Coster, North Carolina State University; Karen Heimer, University of Iowa Rhetoric vs. Reality: Experiences of Stigma among Upstate New York Gun Enthusiasts. Zachary Miner, SUNY Albany Table 08. Moral Views of Crime Table Presider: Sanna King, University of Hawaii at Manoa Addiction Frameworks and Drug Policy Attitudes. Jennifer M. Murphy, Penn State Berks The ambiguity of “At-Promise” Youth Narratives: Going Beyond

“Making Good Choices”. Sanna King, University of Hawaii at Manoa Before Execution: Religion, Race, and Intimacy in the Final Statements of Death-row Inmates in Texas. Kevin John McCaffree, Indiana University-Purdue University, Fort Wayne Table 09. Online Victimization Table Presider: Matthew M. Le Claire, University of Nevada, Las Vegas Assessing Direct Bullying and Cyber-Bullying Victimization with the NCVS School Crime Supplement. Matthew M. Le Claire, University of Nevada, Las Vegas; Andrew S. Spivak, University of Nevada, Las Vegas Assessing the Relationship between Online Activity and Juvenile Cyber Violence. Daniel Semenza, Emory University Rape on Reddit: Online Sexual Assault and Rape Narratives. Natalie Castaneda, University of South Carolina Table 10. Organizational Crime Table Presider: Marianna A. Klochko, The Ohio State University Systemic Wrongdoing as Organization-Level Failure: When Trust Repair Does Not Work. Janet P. Near, CBA; Marcia Miceli, Georgetown University; AJ Brown, Griffith University Table 11. Organizational Structures of Prisons Table Presider: Jennifer Peirce, John Jay College / CUNY Graduate Center Documenting Change in Belize Central Prison. Kevin W. Whiteacre, University of Indianapolis; Amanda Jayne Miller, University of Indianapolis International Human Rights Standards in Prisons: Prisoner Perceptions of Punitiveness in the Dominican Republic. Jennifer Peirce, John Jay College / CUNY Graduate Center The Rise and Fall of Criminal Alien Requirement (CAR) Private Prisons: A Trump Question. Judith Ann Warner, Texas A&M International University; Rohitha Goonatilake, Texas A&M International University Table 12. Place, Choice, and Situational Theories Table Presider: Thomas A. Loughran, University of Maryland An Examination of the Impact of Interventions and Key Events on Far-Right Violence and Homicides. Steven Michael Chermak, Michigan State University; Joshua Freilich, John Jay College Criminal Justice; Vladimir Bejan, Seattle University; William Parkin, Seattle University; Jeffrey Gruenewald, Indiana University-Purdue University Bridging Criminological Theories and Rational Choice: The Criminal Reservation Payment. Thomas A. Loughran, University of Maryland; Holly Nguyen; Ray Paternoster, University of Maryland Communities of Accomplices: Explaining Youth Co-Offending beyond the Urban-Rural Divide. Danielle C. Kuhl, Bowling Green State University; Tara D. Warner, University of Nebraska-Lincoln The Social Ecology of Gang Activity: A Case Study in a Southwestern City. Meghan Elizabeth Hollis, Texas State University Table 13. Police Profiling Table Presider: Jerreed Dean Ivanich, University of Nebraska-Lincoln Being Unseen? Three Competing Hypotheses about Race Disparities in Police Contact among Homeless Youth. Jerreed Dean Ivanich, University of Nebraska-Lincoln; Tara D. Warner, University of Nebraska-Lincoln Boundary Work and Signification in the Policing of Place and Race. Daanika Gordon, University of Wisconsin Madison Neighborhood Surveillance and the Prison Assembly Line. Trevor Brendon Milton, Queensborough-CUNY

Sunday, August 13, 2017

Public Encounters are Initiated. Emma Frankham Return to the Beat: A Call for a New Ethnography of Police in the 21st Century. Michael Sierra-Arevalo, Yale University Shaping Opinions: Factors that Influence Minority Youth Views on Police Legitimacy. Raymond Jenkins, Northern Illinois University I Can’t Breathe: The Police Use of Deadly Force in Large U.S. Cities. Jonathan Dirlam, Ohio State University Table 20. Police, Communities, and Race Table Presider: Andrew V. Papachristos, Yale University Bargaining for Justice: Police Union Contracts as a Source of Inequality and Accountability? Theresa Rocha Beardall, Cornell University The Meaning of Racialized Police Violence. Peter A. Hanink, University of California-Irvine Table 21. Recidivism, Violence, and Victims Table Presider: Derek Kreager, Pennsylvania State University The Socio-Emotional Impact of Violent Crime in Victims’ Social Networks. Jason B. Phillips, Rutgers University Government Assistance and Recidivism. Alyssa Yetter, Pennsylvania State University

257. Section on Economic Sociology. Economic Sociology and Inequality

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513E, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Rachel E. Dwyer, The Ohio State University Presider: Neha Gondal, Boston University A Nation of Installment Plan Buyers: How Homeownership Becamea Mass Wealth Building Vehicle. Maude Pugliese, McGill University Disentangling the Effects of Race and Place in Economic Transactions: Findings from an Online Field Experiment. Max Besbris, Rice University; Patrick Sharkey, New York University The Organizational Production of Earnings Inequalities in Germany, 1994-2010. Donald Tomaskovic-Devey, University of Massachusetts; Silvia Maja Melzer, University of Bielefeld Wage Stagnation and the Rise of Merchant Capitalism: How BuyerSupplier Relations Affect U.S. Workers’ Wages, 1978-2014. Nathan Wilmers, Harvard University Who Gets to Share in the “Sharing Economy”? Racial Discrimination on Airbnb. Mehmet Cansoy, Boston College; Juliet B. Schor, Boston College

258. Section on Global and Transnational Sociology. The Global, the Transnational, and the Historical

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513F, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Julian Go, Boston University Presider: Victoria Reyes, University of California, Riverside Displacement and Colonial State Power: The Case of Forced Labour Migrations in the British Empire. Ricarda Hammer, Brown University Global Inequality in the Face of Historical and Contemporary Periods of Globalization, 1500-Present. Sahan Savas Karatasli, Princeton University; Sefika Kumral, Johns Hopkins University Historicizing “South-South Partnerships”: India, Kenya, and the Technocratic Imagination in HIV/AIDS Programs. Gowri Vijayakumar, Brandeis University Theorizing Transnational Sex, Gender and Sexuality: Lessons on Thinking Sideways from the Early Modern Period. Vrushali Patil, Florida International University Discussant: Victoria Reyes, University of California, Riverside

Sunday

Table 14. Policies and Stigmatized Groups Presider: Lloyd Klein, Hostos Community College, CUNY Police as Rights’ Protector for Sex Workers? On Adaptability after Law Changes in Switzerland. Mira Anne Fey, Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies Violence and the Stigma Concept. Steve Durant, University of Toronto “I Didn’t Need Any Help”: How Sex Workers Experience Victimbased Approaches to Prostitution Policy. Lillian Taylor Jungleib, University of California, Santa Barbara Table 15. School Based Programs and Discipline Making ‘Model Citizens’: Junior Police and Social Control in School. Mai Thai, Indiana University-Bloomington Secondary Discipline: How Parents are Incorporated into the Disciplinary Mission of Punitive Alternative Schools. Jessica L. Dunning-Lozano, Ithaca College Table 16. Sentencing Outcomes Table Presider: Veronica L. Horowitz, University of Minnesota Mapping the Texas Shadow Carceral State: County Level Variation in the Collection of LFOs. Ilya Slavinski, UT Austin Misdemeanor Justice and the Length of Pretrial Detention in Cook County Jail. Kyla Bourne, University of Chicago Rural and Urban Differences in Gendered-Sentencing Patterns of Pennsylvania. Yunmei Lu, Pennsylvania State University The Functions of Pre-trial Detention in France and Canada. Sacha Raoult, AIx-Marseille Universite; Marie Manikis, McGill University; Arnaud Derbey, Aix-Marseille Universite Why is Commutation an Aberration? Veronica L. Horowitz, University of Minnesota; Christopher Uggen, University of Minnesota-Twin Cities Table 17. Sexual Victimization Table Presider: Meredith Gwynne Fair Worthen, University of Oklahoma Gendered Prisons, Gendered Policy: Gendered Subtexts and the Prison Rape Elimination Act. Nicole M. Oehmen, University of Iowa; Allison Gorga, University of Iowa Improving Urban Mobility and Gender Inequality: UNWomen Proposal to Eradicate Sexual Violence in Public Spaces. Arturo Alvarado, El Colegio de México Intersectionality and Addressing College Sexual Assault: Examining Gender, Sexual Identity, Race/Ethnicity, Social Class and Group Affiliations. Meredith Gwynne Fair Worthen, University of Oklahoma; Samantha Ashley Wallace, University of Oklahoma Table 18. Theoretical Causes of Deviance Table Presider: Shelley Keith, University of Memphis A Theoretical Examination of Immigrant-Status and Substance Use among a Sample of Latino College Students. Matthew Grindal, University of California, Riverside; Amanda Admire, University of California, Riverside; Tanya A. Nieri, University of California, Riverside Examining the Relationship between Family Structure and Delinquency. Greggory J. Cullen, University of Guelph Modeling Sutherland’s Core Propositions: Differential Association, Delinquent Behavior and Offending Repertoire. Kyle Thomas, University of Missouri-St. Louis; Jean McGloin Whatever it Takes: Moral Boundary Work in Iterative Writing With Feedback. Edward E. Brent, University of Missouri Table 19. Use of Police Force Table Presider: Kathryn M. Nowotny, University of Miami Ethnoracial and Mental Health Disparities in How Fatal Police-

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Sunday

259. Section on Labor and Labor Movements Refereed Roundtable Session and Business Meeting

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516C, 12:30-1:30 p.m. Session Organizer: Chris Rhomberg, Fordham University Table 01. Agricultural Industry and Work Table Presider: Todd E. Vachon, University of Connecticut Seeds, Serfs and Society: Farmers on Trial. Nathan Russell Collins, University of Kansas We’re Losing Time: Laboring and Waiting among Borderlands Agricultural Workers. Kathleen Ann Griesbach, Columbia University Table 02. Restructuring Work: Professionals and Labor Intermediaries Table Presider: Louise Birdsell Bauer, University of Toronto A Rolling Stone Gathers No Moss? Restructuring in Corporate Law Associateships. Christine A Riordan, Institute for Work and Employment Research Organizational Emergence and the Rise of Vendor Management Organizations. Laureen K. O’Brien, University of Arizona Table 03. Manufacturing Workers in Comparative Perspective Table Presider: Corey Pech Workers’ Views on Plant Closures: The Global Context of Production. Norene Pupo, York University; Hart Walker Rebuild Labor Associational Power in the Reactionary Structures. Changling Cai, Binghamton University; Ellen Friedman, National Education Association Table 04. Wage and Income Policies Table Presider: Erin Kelly, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Is Universal Basic Income a Disincentive to Work? An Empirical Review. Sarah Reibstein, Princeton University Minimum Wage Increases and Job Satisfaction among LowWage Employees. Adam Storer; Adam D. Reich, Columbia University Table 05. U.S. Unions and Tactical Diversity Table Presider: Tom Juravich, University of Massachusetts A Varied Repertoire: Tactical Diversity in Former Labor Strongholds. Amanda Pullum, California State UniversityMonterey Bay The Labor Union Gap: The Fear Factor and Digital Spaces. Jen Schradie, Institute for Advanced Study in Toulouse Table 06. Labor and Social Protection: The Case of Bangladesh Table Presider: Chris Tilly, University of California Los Angeles The Regulatory Experiment in Bangladesh: Legitimacy and Worker Safety in the Garment Industry. Youbin Kang, University of Wisconsin-Madison Organized Labor or Organized Donors: Who Shapes Social Welfare Programs in the Least Developed Nations? Md. Mahmudur Rahman Bhuiyan, Immigration Research West Table 07. Resistance and Mobilization Across Race and Class Table Presider: Eric S. Brown, University of Missouri The Specter of the ‘Black Scab’: Strikebreaking and Racialized Class Politics in the Progressive Era. Amelia Fortunato, The Graduate Center, CUNY The (Culinary) Arts of Resistance: Race and Labor Politics in a Food Service Training Program. Anna Wilcoxson, Loyola University Chicago; Kelly Moore, Loyola University Chicago Table 08. Informal Labor Around the World Table Presider: Lefeng Lin, University of Wisconsin-Madison Organizing at Temp Agencies: The Case of Montréal’s Immigrant Workers Centre. Loïc Malhaire, Université de Montréal; Yanick

Noiseux, Université de Montréal Informed but Insecure: Working Conditions and Social Security among Paid Domestic Workers in Ecuador. Erynn Masi de Casanova, University of Cincinnati Table 09. Labor Mobilization in the Developing World Table Presider: Kim Scipes, Purdue University Northwest Opportunity without Organization: Labour Mobilization in Egypt after the 25th January Revolution. Christopher Barrie; Neil Ketchley, King’s College London Bringing Labor into Development Studies. Kim Scipes, Purdue University Northwest Table 10. Temporary and Contingent Workers: Blue and White Collar Table Presider: Virginia Parks, Occidental College Intersecting Inequalities and Temporary Employment: Explaining Earnings Inequality among Inland Southern California’s Blue Collar Warehouse Workers. Ellen R. Reese, University of California-Riverside; Jason Y. Struna, University of Puget Sound; Joel S. Herrera, University of California-Los Angeles; Juliann Allison, UC-Riverside Wall to Wall: Industrial Unionism at the City University of New York, 1972-2017. Luke Elliott-Negri Table 11. Historical Cases: New York City and Puerto Rico Table Presider: Michael Franklin Thompson, University of North Texas Case Study of the Labor and Social History of the Land Administration Independent Employee Union Research. Nelson Arnaldo Vera Hernandez, University of Puerto RicoAguadilla Campus

260. Section on Marxist Sociology. What does 21st Century Revolution Look Like, 100 Years after 1917?

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514C, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Leontina M. Hormel, University of Idaho Presider: Leontina M. Hormel, University of Idaho Exile and Incorporation During Revolution: Mexico and Russia from 1910-1924. Andrew Robert Smolski, North Carolina State University; Alexander Reid Ross, Portland State University; Javier Sethness Castro, Independent Scholar Hegemony and Globalization: A Critical Appraisal. Benjamin Levy Neo Liiberalism and the Dialectic of Dignity and Ressentiment. Lauren Langman, Loyola University of Chicago; Tova Benski, College of Management Race, Class, Revolution in the 21st century: Lessons from the League of Revolutionary Black Workers. Walda Katz-Fishman, Howard University; Jerome Scott, League of Revolutionaries for a New America; Ralph Christopher Gomes, Howard University Discussant: Samuel R. Friedman, National Development and Research Institute

261. Section on Medical Sociology. Inequalities in Reproductive, Prenatal and Postnatal Health around the World

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513B, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Leticia Marteleto, University of Texas at Austin Presider: Ernesto F. L.Amaral Cumulative Inequality and Race/Ethnic Disparities in Low Birthweight: Differences by Childhood SES. Laura Freeman, Rice University Examining the Nativity Gap in Low Birth Weight between U.S.Born and Foreign-Born Black Women. Karyn Alayna Stewart, Washington University in St. Louis

Sunday, August 13, 2017 Why Take the Risk? Social Class and Prenatal Alcohol Use. Elaine Marie Hernandez, Indiana University Women’s Land Ownership and Participation in Decision-making about Reproductive Health in Malawi. Julia Andrea Behrman, New York University Discussant: Florencia Torche, Stanford University

262. Section on Methodology. Four short papers on New and Innovative Measures and Business Meeting

263. Section on Race, Gender, and Class. Methodologies of Intersectionality

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513A, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Nancy A. Naples, University of Connecticut Presider: Nancy A. Naples, University of Connecticut An Intersectionality of the People: Centering Researchers of Marginalized Identities. Cristina Khan, University of Connecticut Bus Depots in New York City: An Intersectional Approach to Environmental Justice. Rachel G. McKane, Vanderbilt University; Stacey Houston, Vanderbilt University; Lacee Satcher, Vanderbilt University Historical Comparative Methods of Intersectional Analysis: Theory Doesn’t Grow on Trees. Myra Marx Ferree, University of Wisconsin Transnational Structural Intersectionality and Domestic Work: The Production of Ugandan Domestic Worker Regimes. Michelle Marie Christian, University of Tennessee; Assumpta Namaganda, Uganda Hotels, Food, Tourism, Allied Workers Union Discussant: Nancy A. Naples, University of Connecticut

264. Section on Social Psychology. Social Psychological Approaches to Examining Racial and Ethnic Inequality

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512B, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Ellis Prentis Monk, Princeton University Group Self-Interest as a Motivator for Whites’ Social Policy Support and Opposition. Maritza Mestre Steele, Indiana University; Denise; Ambriz, Indiana University-Bloomington Presumed Mexican Until Proven Otherwise: How Middle-class Dominican and Mexican Immigrants Negotiate the Latino Prototype. Irene Browne, Emory University; Katharine Tatum, Emory University; Belisa E. Gonzalez, Ithaca College Perceptions of Relative Deprivation among Coloureds’ in PostApartheid South Africa. Whitney Nicole Laster Pirtle, University of California - Merced “Welcome” But Not Welcomed: Perceived Discrimination, Social

Exclusion, and Sense of Belonging among Swedish Immigrants. Muna Adem, Indiana University

265. Section on Sociology of Children and Youth Refereed Roundtable Session and Business Meeting

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520B, 12:30-1:30 p.m. Session Organizer: Markella Rutherford, Wellesley College Table 01. Child Well-being: Family Structure and Social Networks Table Presider: Jennifer Vanderminden, University of North Carolina, Wilmington Neighborhood Social Cohesion and Residents’ Likelihood of Intervening in Suspected Child Maltreatment or Delinquency. Brittany R. Rabb, Case Western Reserve University; Jessica A. Kelley-Moore, Case Western Reserve University; Jill Korbin, Case Western Reserve University; James Spilsbury, Case Western Reserve University The Relationship between Family Structure Stability and Transitions on Parental Self Efficacy and Child Behavior. Yuanyuan Yue, Old Dominion University; Shana Lee Pribesh, Old Dominion University; Jonathan A. Jarvis, Brigham Young University The Impact of Youth Social Capital on the Educational Attainment of Homeless Young Adults. Stephanie Renee Anckle, El Camino College 5-HTTLPR Moderates the Association between Family Structure on Children’s Delinquent Behaviors. Brianne Pragg, Pennsylvania State University; H. Harrington Cleveland, Pennsylvania State University; Jonathan Daw, Pennsylvania State University; David Vandenbergh, Pennsylvania State University; Mark Feinberg, Pennsylvania State University Table 02. Education Table Presider: Stuart Rhoden, Arizona State University Advantages and Limitations in Early Head Start’s Wrap Around Services Initiative. Kristen Schmidt, Lehigh University; Heather Beth Johnson, Lehigh University Discontinuous Educational Experience of Migrant Children in China. Liang Su, Shanghai University The Soft Power of PISA on the Common Core Standards Reform Effort in the United States. Selene M. Cammer-Bechtold, Syracuse University Time for a Change? Do School Transfers During the Elementary Years Help or Hurt? Jennifer Lynn Triplett, Anderson University; Shannon Marie McDonough, Clemson University Table 03. Peer Relationships Table Presider: Gregory Clark Elliott, Brown University How Much Do You Care about Friendship in Your Life? Dong Hoon Shin, University of IowaJi Hye Kim, University of Iowa Status Multiplicity and Adolescent Peer Groups: Implications for Affective Belonging in School. James Murphy, University of Chicago Stigmatized Telling: Victim and Bystander Responses to Negative Peer Interactions in Elementary School. Brent Harger, Gettysburg College Student Support and School-Aged Bullying: A Multilevel Approach. Xiaoshuang Luo, University of Oklahoma Table 04. Social Integration and Well-being Table Presider: Radha Modi, University of Illinois, Chicago Risks, Resources, and Depressive Symptomatology among Marshallese Adolescents. Kevin M. Fitzpatrick, University of Arkansas; Don Edward Willis, University of Missouri Immigrant Families’ Involvement in Religion and Second

Sunday

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512H, 12:30-1:30 p.m. Session Organizer: Erin Leahey, University of Arizona To Hold a Position: Linking the Cognitive and Macro-Social Perspectives on Public Opinion. Andrei G. Boutyline, University of California, Berkeley Quantifying Social Biases in News Discourse about Obesity from 1980-2016. Alina Arseniev-Koehler, University of California Los Angeles The Content and Correlates of Subjective Local Contexts. Frederik Hjorth, University of Copenhagen; Peter Thisted Dinesen, University of Copenhagen; Kim Mannemar Soenderskov, Aarhus University Negligible Connections? The Role of Familiar Others in the Diffusion of Smoking among Adolescents. Chan S. Suh, Boise State University; Yongren Shi; Matthew E. Brashears, University of South Carolina-Columbia

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Sunday

Session 265, continued Generation’s Adaptation: An Adaptive Bridge or Barrier? Yuying Shen, Norfolk State University Suicidality and Spheres of Social Integration among U.S. Hispanic Adolescents: The Mediating Role of Drug Use. Marissa Aida Laurel-Wilson, Harmony Science Academy; Marcus Antonius Hidalgo Ynalvez, Texas A&M International University Latino Children’s Health: The Role of Parents’ Immigration Status and Residence in the United States. Lucrecia Mena Melendez Table 05. Work and Emerging Adulthood Table Presider: John Christopher Holley, Suffolk University Girls and Boys Who Work: Gendered Adolescent Work and Orientations to Adulthood. Emma Williams-Baron It All Depends on What You Want to Believe: How Emerging Adults Navigate Religion and Science. Kyle Clayton Longest, Furman University; Jeremy E. Uecker, Baylor University Table 06. Youth Agency and Decision Making Table Presider: Ingrid E. Castro, Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts Managed Autonomy: Youth Participation in Organizations. Sarah Gaby, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Young Women’s Reported Dilemmas with Nude Photographs. Sara E. Thomas, Northwestern University

266. Section on Sociology of Culture. Graduate Student Professional Workshop. From Dissertation to Book: On the Publishing Process and Business Meeting

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513C, 12:30-1:30 p.m. Session Organizers: Gemma Mangione, Columbia University Teachers College Hannah Linda Wohl, Northwestern University Panelists: Michaela DeSoucey, North Carolina State University Jennifer C. Lena, Columbia University, Teachers College Terence Emmett McDonnell, University of Notre Dame Eric I. Schwartz, Columbia University

267. Section on Teaching and Learning in Sociology. Scholarship of Teaching and Learning

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 515A, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Rachel E. Stein, West Virginia University Presider: Rachel E. Stein, West Virginia University Active Learning in Introduction to Sociology: Increasing Learning Gains and Engagement. Stacy D. Evans, Berkshire Community College But Do They Learn Better? A Comparative Study of Active Learning Strategies Across Different Classroom Types. Marybeth C. Stalp, University of Northern Iowa; Martha J. Reineke, University of Northern Iowa High-Impact Forums and Activities: A new model for High-Impact Practices. Hannah Beth Love, Colorado State University; Jennifer Eileen Cross, Colorado State University; Tara O’Connor Shelley, Colorado State University; Pamela Coke, Colorado State University Teaching the Gini Coefficient: Leveraging Student Misconceptions to Improve Quantitative Literacy. Dennis J. Downey, California State University, Channel Islands; J. Brooke Ernest, San Diego State University What Catalyzes Community-Based Learning? Direct Measures of Critical Thinking Gains. Charles Westerberg, Beloit College; Carol Wickersham, Beloit College; Margaret Cress, Beloit College; Karen Jones, Beloit College

1:00 p.m.

Sessions

268. Research Funding Opportunities and Data Resources Poster Session

Palais des congrès de Montréal, Hall 220C, 1:00-4:00 p.m. Session Organizer: Nicole V. Amaya, American Sociological Association American Time Use Survey: Data Opportunities. Rose Ann Woods, Bureau of Labor Statistics Children of the NLSY79. Canada Keck, The Ohio State Unviersity; Carole Lunney, Center for Human Resource Research Data Management, Dissemination and Linkage in Add Health (National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health). Sarah Catherine Dean, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill; Kelsey Meekins, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill; Carolyn Halpern, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill Data, Employment, Training, and Research Funding Opportunities at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Karin A. Mack, CDC/NCIPC/DARPI; Deborah Holtzman, Centers of Disease Control and Prevention East Asian Social Survey (EASS). Jibum Kim, Sungkyunkwan University; Yang-Chih Fu, Academia Sinica; Noriko Iwai, Osaka University of Commerce; Seokho Kim, Seoul National University; Weidong Wang, Renmin University MMP and LAMP: Methodology and Databases. Karen A. Pren, Princeton University Medical Expenditure Panel Survey: A Resource for Sociological Research. Terceira A. Berdahl, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality; James B. Kirby, Agency for Healthcare Research & Quality National Academy of Education/Spencer Fellowship Programs. Abigail Bell, National Academy of Education; Gregory White, University of Maryland National Institutes of Health Research Funding Opportunities. Juanita J. Chinn, National Institute for Child Health and Human Development (NICHD) National Longitudinal Surveys of Youth. Rosella Gardecki, The Ohio State University Research Support for Sociologists. Nicole V. Amaya, American Sociological Association Social Explorer: A Platform for Interactive Display and Exploration of Demographic and Social Data. Andrew A. Beveridge, Queens College and Graduate Center CUNY Sociology Program. Marie Cornwall, National Science Foundation; Katherine Meyer, The Ohio State University The Association of Religion Data Archives. Roger Finke, Pennsylvania State University; Dane R. Mataic, Pennsylvania State University The Future of Census Bureau Data Dissemination. Ally BurlesonGibson, U.S. Census Bureau The General Social Survey/International Social Survey Program. Tom W. Smith, National Opinion Research Center The New Immigrant Survey (NIS). Monica Espinoza Higgins, Princeton University Understand and Explore the IPUMS-Demographic and Health Surveys Data Dissemination System. Elizabeth Heger Boyle, University of Minnesota; Tanja Andic, University of Minnesota Twin Cities

Sunday, August 13, 2017

1:30 p.m.

Meetings

Section on Crime, Law, and Deviance Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517B, 1:30-2:10 p.m. Section on Labor and Labor Movements Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516C, 1:30-2:10 p.m. Section on Methodology Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512H, 1:30-2:10 p.m. Section on Sociology of Children and Youth Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520B, 1:30-2:10 p.m. Section on Sociology of Culture Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513C, 1:30-2:10 p.m.

2:30 p.m.

Meetings

2018 W.E.B. Dubois Award for Distinguished Scholarship Selection Committee Palais des congrès de Montréal, 523A, 2:30-3:30 p.m.

2:30 p.m.

Sessions

269. Presidential Panel. Global Inequalities

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513B, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Michèle Lamont, Harvard University Presider: Wendy Griswold, Northwestern University Changing Dimensions of Stratification in World Society: Inequalities and Inequities. John W. Meyer, Stanford University Can We Measure Linguistic Inequalities? Gisèle Sapiro, L’Ecole des hautes études en sciences sociales Racial Inequality and the Globalization of Resistance. Tianna S. Paschel, University of California - Berkeley Violence Against Women and Global Inequalities. Margaret Abraham, Hofstra University Discussant: Giselinde Kuipers, University of Amsterdam This session will feature some of the most important recent work on the many manifestations of globalization as they impact inequality. This includes the circulation of expressive culture, the influence of transnational social movements, and the transformation of practices of citizenship. In addition, participants will consider the relative importance of economic inequality as compared to social and political status.

270. Thematic Session. Framing the Rise in Economic Segregation: Trends and Policies

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511D, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Hilary Silver, Brown University Presider: Hilary Silver, Brown University The Economic Integration Agenda. Paul Jargowsky, Rutgers University-Camden Income Segregation and Opportunity for All. Ann Owens, University of Southern California Affordable Housing, Residential Mobility, and Segregation in U.S. Metropolitan Areas. Len Albright, Northeastern University; Douglas S. Massey, Princeton University Unrecognized Features of Urban Segregation in Paris: Effects of the

Crisis and Policy Impacts. Edmond Preteceille, Sciences Po Comparing the Political Economy of Inequalities in the United States and European Large Metropolis. Paul Pierson, University of California-Berkeley; Patrick Le Galès, Sciences Po CNRS Rising segregation by income and the global proliferation of gated communities threaten social cohesion and imply the secession of the rich from social and civic responsibilities. Social classes seem to inhabit separate worlds, feeding populism in many countries. Policies to reduce economic segregation -- inclusionary zoning, court-ordered housing integration, mobility programs like Moving to Opportunity, and mixed-income housing programs -- are often resisted with NIMBY tactics, and even when implemented, may stigmatize or isolate low-income households. This panel asks: What do the most recent trends in economic segregation look like in the US and abroad? Can the US learn from the integration policy experiences of other societies with similar class polarization? How can we frame policy discourse and design economic desegregation programs to encourage social inclusion and reduce the growing separation of social worlds?

271. Thematic Session. Is Finanancialization Driving Inequality?

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511B, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Frank Dobbin, Harvard University Presider: Frank Dobbin, Harvard University Financialization, Varieties of Capitalism, and the Organization of Inequality. Gerald F. Davis, University of Michigan Consumer Credit and Society: A Comparative Perspective. Alya Guseva, Boston University Inequality and the Platform Economy: Finance, Technology and Labor. Juliet B. Schor, Boston College Seeing Finance through a Relational Inequality Lens. Donald Tomaskovic-Devey, University of Massachusetts

272. Thematic Session. Morality, Power, and Inequality

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511A, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizers: Steven Lukes, New York University Gabriel Abend, New York University Measurement and Moral Order. Kieran Healy, Duke University The Emotions behind Morality. James M. Jasper, Graduate Center of the City University of New York Beyond Altruism and Interest: Redistribution, Recognition and the Power of Categories. Lyn Spillman, University of Notre Dame On Demarcating the Moral. Steven Lukes, New York University Morality has been of increasing interest as a field of empirical inquiry to anthropology (ordinary ethics), economics (behavioral economics), psychology (moral psychology), moral philosophy (experimental ethics), and neuroscience. Sociologists have been developing a new sociology of morality, too. Our proposed thematic session will ask what sociologists’ contributions to these ongoing debates have been and should be. In light of the meeting’s theme, we wish to explore two more specific questions. What have sociologists learned about the moral dimensions of power and inequality? How have they or can they benefit from looking at these issues in comparative perspective? In many societies, morality is widely invoked in public discourse and in organizational life and at both the macro and the micro levels. For example, on the one hand, morality sometimes legitimizes power and inequality, and sometimes manifests and widens unequal distributions of material and cultural resources. On the other hand, morality fuels protest and resistance; historically, moral views and institutions have often been at the heart

Sunday

Task Force on Engaging Sociology Palais des congrès de Montréal, 523B, 2:30-4:10 p.m.

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Session 272, continued of social and political change. How do sociologists understand these social processes? What are the significance and effects of moral norms and practices? To what extent are they used strategically? To what extent are they dependent on underlying moral background elements? How do they shape power and inequality outcomes? Last but not least, what practical implications (if any) follow from sociological accounts of the interactions between morality, power, and inequality? We have identified four panelists from a larger list (the first four in the list below). One of them, Webb Keane, is an anthropologist who has just published a major book on these topics, Ethical Life: Its Natural and Social Histories. Thus, a further goal of this panel is to bring an anthropologist to the table, on the assumption that our two disciplines can benefit from a joint discussion of these questions.

Sunday

273. Thematic Session. The Globalization of Contemporary Art: Markets, (De-)Coloniality and (De-) Commodification

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512C, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Adrian Favell, University of Leeds Presider: Adrian Favell, University of Leeds Panelists: Olav Velthuis, University of Amsterdam Larissa Buchholz, Northwestern University Patricia A. Banks, Mount Holyoke Virag Molnar, The New School for Social Research Discussant: Michael Hutter, WZB Berlin Social Science Center Building on the powerful presence of Howard Becker (Artworlds) and Pierre Bourdieu in the discipline, the narrowly focused but richly significant sociology of contemporary art and artworlds offers a lens on key processes of global cultural diffusion, inequalities, and urban change. Contemporary art, for example, has become central to the cultural consumption and self-image of elites around the world, as well as the conflicted transformation of global cities through cultural policy and gentrification. The session assembles several of leading pioneers articulating an agenda that crosses economic, cultural, and global sociology. Two speakers, Velthuis and Buchholz, in their work tackle the creation and collection of value in contemporary globalizing commercial art fields, while Banks and Molnar’s work look into counter-hegemonic possibilities and paradoxes, in emergent contemporary African art and urban street art, respectively. Commentary will be led by Hutter one of the most distinguished senior names in the field. The panel will be organized with short interventions/statements and open back and forth discussion, with pro-active chairing – in a lively roundtable format.

274. Special Session. Religious Dividing Lines: Race, Class, and Immigration (cosponsored with Association for the Sociology of Religion)

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513A, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Jason E. Shelton, University of Texas-Arlington Presider: Jason E. Shelton, University of Texas-Arlington Blackness as Primary: The Varied Effects of Race, Religion and Education on American’s Political Views. Melissa J. Wilde, University of Pennsylvania Latino/a Religious Organizations: Lifelines for Social and Political Engagement on Immigration. Milagros Pena, University of California-Riverside Are Blacks Divided By Faith? Examining the Role of Religious Denominations in the Formation of Racial Attitudes among Black Americans. Ryon J. Cobb, University of Southern California; Jason

E. Shelton, University of Texas-Arlington Latino and Asian American Evangelicals at the Crossroads of American Politics. Janelle Wong, University of Maryland Discussant: Penny Edgell, University of Minnesota This session invites scholars to discuss how religion intersects with race and class, particularly within the immigration process. Papers in this session address the religious lives of different racial and ethnic groups, including African Americans, Latinos, and Asian Americans.

275. Author Meets Critics Session. Denial of Violence: Ottoman Past, Turkish Present, and Collective Violence against the Armenians, 1789-2009 (Oxford University Press, 2016) by Fatma Muge Gocek Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511C, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Ho-Fung Hung, Johns Hopkins University Critics: Sefika Kumral, Johns Hopkins University Julian Go, Boston University Bin Xu, Emory University Author: Fatma Muge Gocek, University of Michigan

276. Regional Spotlight Session. Latino/a North Americans: The Making of Communities, Identities and Boundaries in the United States, English Canada and Québec Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516B, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Victor Armony, Université du Québec à Montréal Presider: Victor Armony, Université du Québec à Montréal How Does Multicultural Canada’s Ethnicizing Imperative Shape Latin American Political Incorporation? Patricia Landolt, University of Toronto Undocu-Latinxs: Redefining U.S. Latinidades in the New Century. Mark Overmyer-Velazquez, University of Connecticut Ethnic Boundaries and Their Temporalities: Mexican and Guatemala Seasonal Workers in Québec. Jorge Pantaleon, Université de Montréal Discussant: Victor Armony, Université du Québec à Montréal

277. Professional Development Workshop. Beyond the Ivory Tower: Combining Social Theory with Politics and Service

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511E, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Jaime Hartless, University of Virginia Leader: Jaime Hartless, University of Virginia Presider: Shantel Gabrieal Buggs, The University of Texas at Austin Panelists: C.J. Pascoe, University of Oregon Angela Jones, Farmingdale State College, State University of New York Eric Anthony Grollman, University of Richmond Angie Pamela Mejia, Syracuse University In this workshop, publicly engaged scholars and activists will discuss how they bridge the oft-lamented chasm between the academy and ‘real world’ social justice work (e.g., LGBTQ activism, feminism, antiracist activism, and economic justice). Some topics that panelists might address include: the advantages and challenges of doing public sociology; writing/speaking for academic versus popular audiences; building activist connections outside academia; justifying/amplifying one’s public sociology in CVs, on the job market, and during tenure consideration; and thinking critically about causes one cares about. No affiliation with the Caucus will be required to attend this workshop in the spirit of building bridges with other sections and increasing Caucus visibility within ASA.

Sunday, August 13, 2017

278. Professional Development Workshop. Preparing for Applied Work Outside of Sociology: Lessons in Translation

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512E, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Kathleen C. Oberlin, Grinnell College Leader: Kathleen C. Oberlin, Grinnell College What should one consider when transitioning from graduate school to an alternative academic position/applied position? What are some of the best practices for how to approach ‘translating’ one’s skill set? Or, simply how should one talk about skills and experience for a broader, applied audience? What is useful, what’s valuable, and what needs to be developed further for certain types of positions? The preceding questions are simply a few of the issues we will consider in this workshop on applied positions tied to the social sciences. This workshop will be of particular interest to graduate students and faculty considering a transition/expansion of their academic work.

279. Policy and Research Workshop. Women’s Rights and Policy: International Human Rights Treaties and Constitutional Reforms

280. Minority Fellowship Program Research Session. Issues in Race, Ethnicity, Gender, and Family

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514A, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizers: Jean H. Shin, American Sociological Association Brandon McCain, American Sociological Association Presider: Gilda Laura Ochoa, Pomona College

(K)in Context: Relational Networks and Well-being among Children and Adolescents Raised by Grandparents. Julia M. Arroyo, University of Florida Home Bound: Undocumented, Unaccompanied Immigrant Youths’ Familial Context of Reception in the United States. Stephanie L. Canizales, University of Southern California Home Care, Race, and Inequality Regimes. Celeste Curington, University of Massachusetts- Amherst Passing Color, Passing Wealth? Marriage Selection and Color Advantage in the 19th Century. Robert L. Reece, Duke University

281. Regular Session. Advertising and Consumption

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512F, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Simon Langlois, Universite Laval Advertising in Black and White: Constructing the Middle-class in Ebony and Life Magazines (1960s). Chelsi Chanel Florence, University of California Davis Beyond the Local: Places, People, and Brands in New England Beer Marketing. Jeffrey S. Debies-Carl, University of New Haven Consuming the Family Meal: News Media Constructions of Home Cooking and Health. Merin Oleschuk, University of Toronto The Life of “The Consumer”: The Production and Consumption of Consumer Research in Advertising. Andrew C. Cohen, Yale University Discussant: Amanda Koontz, University of Central Florida

282. Regular Session. Arab Americans

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512D, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Erik Love, Emory University Social Relations and Health: Comparing ‘Invisible’ Arab Americans to Blacks and Whites. Kristine J. Ajrouch, Eastern Michigan University; Toni C. Antonucci, University of Michigan The Immigrant Health Paradox: Are Arab Immigrants in the United States an Exception? Stephanie J. Nawyn, Michigan State University; KyungSook Lee, Michigan State University; Goleen Samari, University of Texas; Rosina Hassoun, Saginaw Valley State University Sister Nations: Exploring themes of Arab-Canadian and ArabAmerican Literature. Iman Jamal Abdulmoneim, Cairo University Utilizing the American Community Survey Data and the Prospects of the New MENA Census Category. Mehdi Bozorgmehr, City University of New York-City College, Graduate Center; Eric Ketcham, City University of New York-Graduate Center Racializing Arabs, Middle Easterners, and Muslims through Racial, Ethnic, and Religious Cues. Bradley J. Zopf, University of Illinois at Chicago Discussant: Louise Cainkar, Marquette University

283. Regular Session. Corporate Power and Economic Policy, Practice, and Development

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512G, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Cybelle Fox, UC Berkeley Presider: Cybelle Fox, UC Berkeley After Unity, Autonomy: Monsanto and the Remaking of Corporate Power, 1972-1985. Jensen Sass, University of Canberra Discipline, Development and Sources of State Capacity. Erez Maggor, NYU Domesticating the Islamic Economy: How an Alternate Path for Socioeconomic Development Takes Hold in New Contexts. Aisalkyn Botoeva, Brown University The Business-led Globalization of CSR: Channels of Diffusion from

Sunday

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512B, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizers: Mark Frezzo, University of Mississippi Susan C. Pearce, East Carolina University Leader: Mark Frezzo, University of Mississippi Co-Leader: Susan C. Pearce, East Carolina University Building on the work of Sociologists for Constitutional Reform (SCR)—a group devoted marshaling sociological research, teaching, and service to inspire innovative thinking on the potential for an amended or revised Constitution—this workshop explores the issue of women’s rights in the US. Notwithstanding its status as a pathbreaking document and its strengths in the area of first-generation civil and political rights, the US Constitution has fallen out of step not only with cutting-edge human rights thinking (emanating from the UN, the NGO sector, and the world of social movements), but also with the revised constitutions of many countries. Accordingly, SCR members have published on the benefits of amending or revising the Constitution to capture the emancipatory potential of contemporary human rights norms. Citing the proposed Equal Rights Amendment, which earned 35 of the necessary 38 state ratifications in the 1970s before expiring in 1982, and the 1979 UN Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW), which the United States signed but failed to ratify, the workshop organizers will lead a discussion of the following questions: How are the ERA and CEDAW relevant to the current period? Why should we consider amending or revising the Constitution to include women’s rights? How might such an amendment or revision affect policymaking and institution building in the US? How might it affect norms, consciousness, and practices in the U.S.? As members of SCR, the workshop organizers will moderate a conversation on ways to incorporate a concern for constitutional reform in general and for women’s human rights in particular into research, teaching, and service in sociology.

131

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Sunday, August 13, 2017

Session 283, continued the United States into Venezuela and Britain, 1962–1981. Rami Kaplan Discussant: Junmin Wang, University of Memphis

284. Regular Session. Culture, Identity and Belonging

Sunday

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 515C, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Thomas Georg Soehl, McGill University Presider: Louise Caron Cracks in the Melting Pot? Religiosity, Assimilation and Social Heterogeneity among Muslim Immigrants in France. Lucas Germain Drouhot, Cornell University Dimensions of Belonging: Relationships between Police Identity Checks and National Identity in France. Mélanie Terrasse, Princeton University Gender Identity and Second-generation Integration: A Case of Second-generation Somali Immigrants in Canada. Ahmad (Aryan) Karimi, Mr.; Sandra M. Bucerius, University of Alberta; Sara Thompson, Ryerson University Inter-Role Transitions: Inter-Role Differences, Self-Identification Battles and Performance of Immigrant Entrepreneurs. Serghei Musaji, IE Business School; Julio De Castro, IE Business School

285. Regular Session. Environmental Sociology: Selected Topics

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516E, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Kathleen J. Tierney, University of ColoradoBoulder Presider: Shannon Elizabeth Bell, University of Kentucky Climate Change Movements and the Courts: Policy-making and the Role of Science. Sabrina McCormick, George Washington University Divergent Pathways On the Road to Sustainability. Patrick Trent Greiner, University of Oregon; Julius Alexander McGee, Portland State University From Community to Courtroom: Litigation and Environmental Justice in the Case of PFAS Contamination. Tibrine Dafonseca, Northeastern University; Lauren Richter, Northeastern University; Alissa Cordner, Whitman College; Phil Brown, Northeastern University; Marina Atlas, Northeastern University Student Models and Morals: Value Claims and Expert Judgments in American Organizations’ Framings of Climate Change. Rachel Wetts, University of California, Berkeley Stratification in the Storm: Neighborhood Residential Segregation and Inequality in Outcomes of ‘Natural’ Disasters. Brian L. Levy, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Akram Al-Turk, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

286. Regular Session. Gender, Health, and Inequality

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516A, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizers: Catherine J. Taylor, Indiana University Christin L. Munsch, University of Connecticut Presider: Tetyana Pudrovska, University of Texas-Austin Discrimination, Intersectionality, and Gendered Health Inequities: Does Discrimination Explain the Gender Gap in Self-reported Health? Catherine E. Harnois, Wake Forest University; Joao Luiz Bastos, Federal University of Santa Catarina Gender and Health Focusing on Human Capital and Family Behaviors in United States, Korea and Finland. Hyeyoung Woo, Portland State University; Lindsey Wilkinson, Portland State University

The Context of Birth Country Gender Inequality on Mental Health Outcomes of Intimate Partner Violence. Sarah Shah, University of Toronto Zika Virus: Understanding the Mechanisms of Gender Inequality in Brazil. Leticia Marteleto, University of Texas at Austin; Abigail Weitzman, University of Texas at Austin; Raquel Zanatta Coutinho, Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais Discussant: Kristen W. Springer, Rutgers University

287. Regular Session. Health Care and Care Delivery

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516D, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Brea Louise Perry, Indiana University Presider: Tom VanHeuvelen, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign Physician Referral Network Formation in Cross-Institutional Context. Spencer Anthony Garrison, University of Michigan; John Hollingsworth, University of Michigan Medical School; Jason Owen-Smith, University of Michigan Residential Segregation, Neighborhood Health Care Organizations, and Children’s Health Care Utilization: The Case of Phoenix. Kathryn Freeman Anderson, University of Houston Doing Empathy in the Clinical Encounter. Alexandra Vinson, Northwestern University; Kelly Underman, University of Illinois at Chicago The Political Economy of Hope: Synthesizing Barriers to Hospice Utilization for End-Stage Cancer Patients. Emily Allia Hammad Mrig, University of Colorado Denver; Karen Lutfey Spencer, University of Colorado Denver

288. Regular Session. Immigrant Families

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 510D, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Tanya Maria Golash-Boza, University of California, Merced Across Borders and (Il)legality: Intragroup Differences amongst Latino Mixed-Status Families. Andrea Gomez Cervantes, University of Kansas Inequality in Immigrant Families: Double Bind and Children’s Language Brokering Work. Hyeyoung Kwon, Indiana University Money, Culture, and Power: Negotiating Egalitarianism in Taiwanese Immigrant Families. Chien-Juh Gu, Western Michigan University The Mexican Sending State’s Involvement in Family Reunification in an Era of Deportation. Alyssa Peavey, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill Too Much Pressure on Me: Latina/o Citizen Youth Negotiating Illegality in Mixed-Status Families. Cassaundra Rodriguez, University of Nevada, Las Vegas Discussant: Jane Lilly Lopez, University of California- San Diego

289. Regular Session. Lives in Sociology: Decision Making over the Lifecourse Palais des congrès de Montréal, 518B, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Rosalyn Benjamin Darling, Indiana University of Pennsylvania Presider: Jennie Jacobs Kronenfeld, Arizona State University Three Lives in Two Americas. Robert Perrucci, Purdue University The Last of Life for which the First was Made. Debra Kaufman Decision Making in a Non-traditional Sociological Career. Elinore E. Lurie Turning Points in a Latina Academic Career. Maxine Baca Zinn, MIchigan State University Discussant: Rosalyn Benjamin Darling, Indiana University of Pennsylvania

Sunday, August 13, 2017

290. Regular Session. Parenthood 2: Inequalities in Parental Investment

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 510C, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Kei Nomaguchi, Bowling Green State University Presider: Vanessa Wanner Lang, Bowling Green State University Gender Disparities in Parenting Time across Activities, Child Ages and Educational Groups. Daniela Veronica Negraia, University of South Carolina; Jennifer March Augustine, University of South Carolina; Kate C. Prickett, The University of Chicago Income Inequality and Class Divides in Parental Investments. Joe LaBriola, University of California-Berkeley; Orestes Pat Hastings, University of California, Berkeley; Daniel J. Schneider, University of California-Berkeley Role Models and Men’s Possible Selves: Exploring Father Involvement in Fragile Families. Jessica L. Collett, University of Notre Dame; Kayla Danielle Russell Pierce, University of Notre Dame; Kelcie Vercel, University of Notre Dame What Makes a Good Father? Young Fathers’ Perspectives from Jail About Parenting. Britni Leia Adams, University of California-Irvine Discussant: Melissa A. Milkie, University of Toronto

291. Regular Session. Participation and Social Movements

292. Regular Session. Sociology of Reproduction 2: Constructing and Contesting Reproductive Knowledge and Science Palais des congrès de Montréal, 510A, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Susan Markens, City University of New YorkLehman College Motivating Men: Social Science and the Regulation of Reproductive Masculinity in Cold War India. Savina Jewel Balasubramanian, Northwestern University Is Knowledge Power? Women’s Resistance to a Quantified Pregnancy. Eleni Skaperdas, University of California Los Angeles Reproductive Choices: A Qualitative Inquiry into Egg Freezing Parties. Rebecca Kaufman Peer Breast Milk Sharing as Moral Motherwork. Shannon K. Carter, University of Central Florida; Beatriz M. Reyes-Foster, University of Central Florida Risky Environments, Risky Desires: Maternal Responsibility in the U.S. Environmental Health Movement. Norah MacKendrick; Kate Cairns, Rutgers University

293. Section on Aging and the Life Course. Matilda White Riley Session and Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514B, 2:30-3:30 p.m. Session Organizer: Jessica A. Kelley-Moore, Case Western Reserve University Panelist: Madonna Harrington Meyer, Syracuse University

294. Section on Altruism, Morality and Social Solidarity Refereed Roundtable Session and Business Meeting

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520A, 2:30-3:30 p.m. Session Organizer: Kelly Bergstrand, University of Texas, Arlington Table 01. Individuals’ Behaviors and Attitudes Table Presider: Maria Cristina Ramos Flor, Duke University Assessing the Relative Effects of Volunteerism over Charity on Concerns of Poverty and Racial Equality. Katherine Comeau, University of Notre Dame How and Who to Help: Responses to Unethical-Prosocial Actions and the Restoration of Stigmatized Identity. Maria Cristina Ramos Flor, Duke University Pitirim A. Sorokin’s Theory of Solidarity and Antagonism. Vincent Jeffries, California State University-Northridge Public Benefit Reception and Support for Redistribution. Bolette Danckert, University of CopenhagenPeter Thisted Dinesen, University of CopenhagenKim Mannemar Soenderskov, Aarhus University Table 02. Morality in Professions Table Presider: Katrina Running, Idaho State University Corrosion of Professional Ethics: Rural Teachers in Neoliberal China. Dan WangYisu Zhou, University of Macau Emotion Management and the Professional Culture of Administrative Social Workers in Russia. Olga Alexandrovna Simonova, The Higher School of Economics Teach for (which) America? The Politics of the Moral Discourse of Teach for America. Benjamin Ray Foley, Rutgers Why Do People Volunteer? The Conceptualisation and Measurement of Socially-driven and Market-driven Dispositions towards Volunteerism. Burak Sonmez, University of Essex Table 03. Religion and Civic Values Table Presider: Elisabeth Becker The Effects of Provincial and Individual Religiosity on Deviance in China: A Moral Community Thesis. Xiuhua Wang, Baylor University; Sung Joon Jang, Baylor University The Ethical Substance of Salvation: Materialism and Religious Rejection of the World in Contemporary Islam. Elisabeth Becker

295. Section on Asia and Asian America. Inequality and Resilience in Asia and Asian America

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513C, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Hua-Yu Sebastian Cherng, New York University Cohort Size and Life Chances: The Chinese Baby Boomers and their Well-being. Xiaoling Shu, University of California Davis Ethnic Solidarity, Financialization, and Redevelopment in Koreatown and the LA Garment Industry. Angie Y. Chung, University at Albany; Sookhee Oh, University of Missouri-Kansas City Getting a Job: Asian Americans in the Corporate World. Margaret M. Chin, Hunter College and Graduate Center Mobilizing Ethnicity: Employer Relation with Co-Ethnics Employees in Immigrant Filipina-Owned Care Businesses. Jennifer Nazareno, Brown University Discussant: Yingyi Ma, Syracuse University

Sunday

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 510B, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Andrew W. Martin, The Ohio State University Presider: Marc Dixon, Dartmouth College Frame Resonance and the Barrier of Problem Recognition in Digital Social Movements. Jared Matthew Wright, Purdue University Patterns of Social Movement Participation: Protest Frequency, Protest Diversity and Protest Repertoire. Hanning Wang, University of Victoria What Do Unions Really Do to Politics? Sinisa Hadziabdic, University of Geneva; Lucio Baccaro, University of Geneva What Matters Most? Human, Psychological and Social Capital Drivers of African- American and White Political Participation. Belinda Robnett, University of California-Irvine; Daniel Schneider, University of California, Irvine

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Sunday, August 13, 2017

296. Section on Crime, Law, and Deviance. Challenges and Consequences of Imprisonment across the Globe Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514C, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Lila Kazemian, John Jay College of Criminal Justice Panelists: Christopher Uggen, University of Minnesota-Twin Cities Paul Nieuwbeerta, Leiden and Utrecht University Reuben Miller, University of Michigan Lila Kazemian, John Jay College of Criminal Justice Discussant: Jeremy Travis, City University of New York-Graduate Center

Sunday

297. Section on Economic Sociology. Economic Sociology and Public Policy

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513F, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Donald W. Light, Rowan University Presider: Donald W. Light, Rowan University Reducing Racial and Gender Inequality: The Role of Public-Sector Unions. Jasmine Kerrissey, Thomson; Nathan Meyers, University of Massachusetts Amherst Capitalism Out of the Shadow: Double ambiguity, Privatization and Marketization in China. Le Lin, University of Chicago Neoliberal Fraud and the State-Corporate Criminology of Food: Examining the Partnership for a “Healthier” America. Kenneth Sebastian Leon, American University; Ivy Ken, George Washington University Under the Radar: The Dynamic Development of Middle-Tier Markets through Free Trade Agreements. Eunsung Yoon, Korea University Discussant: Alejandro Portes, Princeton University, Sociology, Emeritus

298. Section on Global and Transnational Sociology. Thinking Beyond the Nation-State

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 515A, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Peggy Levitt, Wellesley College Presider: Peggy Levitt, Wellesley College What I Learn about Globalizations by Looking at a Shoe? Claudio Ezequiel Benzecry, Northwestern University Diaspora is Good to Think With: The Sociology of Race as a Challenge to Methodological Nationalism. Zine Magubane, Boston College Workers of the World: Reimagining Labor as a Global Force. Jamie McCallum, Middlebury College Gender and Capitalism in Global Perspective: Value Chains, Discourses, and Dilemmas of Context. Smitha Radhakrishnan, Wellesley College Transnational Social Movements vs Thinking Transnationally about Social Movements. Jocelyn S. Viterna, Harvard University

299. Section on Labor and Labor Movements. Challenges Facing Canadian Labour

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512H, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Chris Rhomberg, Fordham University Presider: Barry Eidlin, McGill University Precarious Professionals: Gender Relations in the Academic Profession and the Feminization of Employment Norms. Louise Birdsell Bauer, University of Toronto The Rise of Precarious Work in Northern Ontario’s Mines: A Challenge to Canadian Labour. Reuben N. Roth, Laurentian University; Mercedes Steedman, Laurentian University; Shelley Condratto, Laurentian University

Work and Workers’ Movements in Canada After the Great Recession. Mark Preston Thomas, York University; Stephanie Ross, McMaster University Local Labour Councils in Québec: A Comparative Approach. Thomas Collombat, Université du Québec en Outaouais; Sophie Potvin, Université du Québec en Outaouais

300. Section on Marxist Sociology Refereed Roundtable Session and Business Meeting

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520B, 2:30-3:30 p.m. Session Organizer: Ann M. Strahm, California State University, Stanislaus Table 01. Class Consciousness / Social Solidarity Class and Consciousness: Social Mobility Perceptions and Inequality Within Structured Economic Systems. Lloyd Klein, Hostos Community College, CUNY Global Political Economy in the Making of the Modern Social Imaginary. Dean R. Ray, York University Institutionalists against Institutionalism? Wolfgang Streeck on Diversity and Change in Contemporary Capitalism. Jonah Michael Birch, New York University The Political Process as a Mechanism of Control and the 2016 Presidential Election. Vince Montes, San Jose State University Table 02. Intersections of Class, Race, Gender, and Place Productive Femininity and Working Class Culture: The ‘Iron Girl’ Image under the Maoist Era Revisited. Lihua Wang, Holy Cross College Worker Cooperatives and Neoliberal Urbanism Economic Empowerment or Co-optation? Donal Malone, Saint Peter’s University Working Class Poverty Class Black Male Habitus in U.S. Courtrooms: Qualitative Investigation of Non-Verbal Communication. Roxanne Gerbrandt, Austin Peay State University; Joseph Flewwellin, Austin Peay State University Table 03. Marxian and Critical Theories A Critique of Dualistic Notions in Social Theory from Descartes to Giddens. Jeffrey A. Halley, University of Texas-San Antonio; Timothy Haverda, University of Texas-San Antonio Herbert Marcuse, Radical Subjectivity, and Environmental Politics in the 21st Century. Michael J. Sukhov The Linguistics of Socialism: A Semiotic Analysis of Institutional Discourse on Art in Communist Albania. Jorge Candelario Gonzalez, University of Ottawa Table 04. Marxian Theory and Environment The Nature and Limits of Endless Accumulation: World Oil, Planetary Warming and Global Capitalist Crisis. Roberto Jose Ortiz Ortiz, Binghamton University Inequality and the Manifold Crisis: Triangulating Nature to Cancel Out the Sociological Bias. Michael Kleinod, Rheinische Friedrichs-Wilhelm-Universität Bonn The Industrial Capitalist Order and ‘Production Science’: Why ‘Conservatives’ Tend to Trust GMO Food. Chunyan Liu, Shanghai University; Tarique Niazi, University of Wisconsin The Treadmill of Production and Coastal Environmental Concerns: Structural Selectivity and Policy Formation in North Carolina. Jason Sean Allen, North Carolina State University; Stefano B. Longo, North Carolina State University

Sunday, August 13, 2017

301. Section on Methodology. Advances in Methods for Analyzing Longitudinal Data

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 515B, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Scott M. Lynch, Duke University Presider: Scott M. Lynch, Duke University Nonlinear Autoregressive Latent Trajectory Models. Shawn Bauldry, Purdue University; Kenneth A. Bollen, University of North Carolina Regression-based Adjustment for Time-varying Confounders. Geoffrey Thomas Wodtke, University of Toronto Socioeconomic Inequalities in the Onset of Cognitive Pathology. Sean A. P. Clouston, Stony Brook University; Marcus Richards, University College London Discussant: Bryce J. Bartlett, Duke University

302. Section on Social Psychology. Cooley-Mead Award Ceremony, Address, and Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512A, 2:30-3:30 p.m. Session Organizer: Amy Kroska, University of Oklahoma

303. Section on Sociology of Children and Youth. Children and Youth in a Globalizing World

304. Section on Sociology of Culture. Culture and the 2016 Presidential Election

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513E, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Ronald N. Jacobs, University at Albany Presider: Ronald N. Jacobs, University at Albany Why Evangelicals Voted for Trump: A Critical Cultural Sociology. Philip S. Gorski, Yale University On the Construction Sites of History: Where Did Donald Trump Come From? Mabel Berezin, Cornell University Politics as a Vacation. Robin E. Wagner-Pacifici, The New School for Social Research; Iddo Tavory, NYU Deep Stories, Nostalgia Narratives, and Fake News: Storytelling in the Trump Era. Francesca Polletta, University of California, Irvine; Jessica Callahan, University of California, Irvine Discussant: Ronald N. Jacobs, University at Albany

305. Section on Teaching and Learning in Sociology. Hans O. Mauksch Award, Address and Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511F, 2:30-3:30 p.m. Session Organizer: Michelle A. Smith, Lakeland Community College Using Brain Science to Improve Student Learning in Sociology Classes. Melinda Jo Messineo, Ball State University

Meetings

Award Presenters and Recipients Photo Session Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517D, 3:30-4:10 p.m. Section on Aging and the Life Course Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514B, 3:30-4:10 p.m. Section on Altruism, Morality, and Social Solidarity Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520A, 3:30-4:10 p.m. Section on Marxist Sociology Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520B, 3:30-4:10 p.m. Section on Social Psychology Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512A, 3:30-4:10 p.m. Section on Teaching and Learning in Sociology Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511F, 3:30-4:10 p.m.

4:30 p.m.

Sessions

306. ASA Awards Ceremony and Presidential Address Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517D, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Presiders: Adia M. Harvey Wingfield, Washington University in St. Louis; Kathleen Gerson, New York University Presidential Address: Addressing the Recognition Gap: Destigmatization Processes and the Production of Inequality. Michèle Lamont, Harvard University All attendees are invited to attend the ASA Awards Ceremony and Presidential Address to honor the award winners and share in President Michèle Lamont’s address

6:30 p.m.

Receptions

Honorary Reception Palais des congrès de Montréal, 710A, 6:30-7:30 p.m.

7:00 p.m.

Receptions

Joint Reception: Section on Collective Behavior and Social Movements Reception and Section on Racial and Ethnic Minorities Offsite, Bier Market-Montreal, 7:00-9:00 p.m. Section on Aging and the Life Course Reception Offsite, Intercontinental Montréal, 360, rue Saint-Antoine Ouest, 7:009:00 p.m. Joint Reception: Section on Crime, Law, and Deviance; Section on Human Rights; and Section on Sociology of Law Offsite, Hotel William Gray, 421 rue Saint Vincent, 7:00-9:00 p.m.

7:30 p.m.

Meetings

Japan Sociologists Network Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512A, 7:30-9:30 p.m. Sociologists’ Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender and Queer (LGBTQ) Caucus Palais des congrès de Montréal, 518C, 7:30-8:30 p.m.

Sunday

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513D, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Elizabeth Vaquera, The George Washington University Presider: Elizabeth Vaquera, The George Washington University Imagining the Future in the Neoliberal Era: British Young People and the Turn to the Self. Michela Franceschelli, University College London; Avril Keating, Institute of Education Not a Zero-sum Game: China’s Internal Migration and the Well-being of Rural-origin Children. Duoduo Xu, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology The Priceless Child on the Global Periphery: Reconfiguring the Boundary between Dignity and Work. Isabel Jijon, Yale University Discussant: Yasemin Besen-Cassino, Montclair State University

3:30 p.m.

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Sunday, August 13, 2017

136

7:30 p.m.

Receptions

Joint Reception: Section on Sociology of Development; Section on Sociology of Culture; and Section on Global and Transnational Sociology Palais des congrès de Montréal, Terrace, 7:30-9:30 p.m. Section on Ethnomethodology and Conversation Analysis Reception Offsite, Mechant Boeuf, 124 rue Saint-Paul Ouest, 7:30-9:30 p.m.

8:00 p.m.

Meetings

Network for the Social Scientific Study of Science and Religion Palais des congrès de Montréal, 518A, 8:00-9:10 p.m. New York University, Department of Sociology Reception Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516C, 8:00-10:00 p.m. The Ohio State University Reception Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520F, 8:00-10:00 p.m.

Sunday

University of Pennsylvania Reception Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520A, 8:00-10:00 p.m.

8:00 p.m.

Receptions

Just Desserts! A Carla B. Howery Teaching Enhancement Grant Program Benefit Reception (ticket required for admission) Hyatt Regency Montreal, Creation Room, 8:00-9:30 p.m.

8:30 p.m.

Meetings

Sociologists for Trans Justice Palais des congrès de Montréal, 518C, 8:30-9:30 p.m.

9:00 p.m.

Meetings

Soon-to-be-Author-Meets-Non-Critics Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514A, 9:00-11:00 p.m.

9:30 p.m.

Receptions

Minority Fellowship Program (MFP) Benefit Reception (ticket required for admission) Palais des congrès de Montréal, 710B, 9:30-11:00 p.m.

University of Wisconsin, Madison Sociology Department Reception Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520B, 8:00-10:00 p.m.

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PUBLISHING WITH PURPOSE Curated Stories The Uses and Misuses of Storytelling

SUJATHA FERNANDES

No Shortcuts Organizing for Power in the New Gilded Age

Cheap Sex The Transformation of Men, Marriage, and Monogamy

American Routes Racial Palimpsests and the Transformation of Race

Design and Analysis of Time Series Experiments

Living in the Crosshairs The Untold Stories of AntiAbortion Terrorism

Wounded City Violent Turf Wars in a Chicago Barrio

Why Children Follow Rules Legal Socialization and the Development of Legitimacy

Beyond the Cubicle Job Insecurity, Intimacy, and the Flexible Self

NEW IN HIGHER EDUCATION

Despite the Best Intentions How Racial Inequality Thrives in Good Schools

Mixed Messages Norms and Social Control around Teen Sex Pregnancy

Homeward Bound Modern Families, Elder Care and Loss

Postcolonial Thought and Social Theory

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What’s Normal? Reconciling Biology and Culture ALLAN V. HORWITZ

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Program Schedule • Monday, August 14, 2017 7:00 a.m.

Meetings

ASA Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517B, 7:00-8:15 a.m. Society and Mental Health Editorial Board Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520B, 7:00-8:15 a.m.

8:30 a.m.

Meetings

2018 Public Understanding of Sociology Award Selection Committee Palais des congrès de Montréal, 523A, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Department Resources Group (DRG) Training Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516C, 8:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Managing Editors Palais des congrès de Montréal, 523B, 8:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Orientation for New Section Officers Palais des congrès de Montréal, 518B, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Section on History of Sociology Council Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512G, 8:30-9:30 a.m. Section on Sociology of Population Council Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512H, 8:30-9:30 a.m. Sociological Methodology Editorial Board Palais des congrès de Montréal, 524A, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Sociology of Education Editorial Board Palais des congrès de Montréal, 710A, 8:30-10:10 a.m.

Sessions

307. Thematic Session. Higher Education/Shifting Processes

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511B, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Yasemin Soysal, University of Essex Panelists: Kim Voss, University of California Michael Sauder, University of Iowa Francisco O. Ramirez, Stanford University Yasemin Soysal, University of Essex Higher Education systems across the globe are being transformed. Recent decades have seen the expansion of the core missions of higher education systems (beyond teaching and research to driving regional and national economic development) along with their increasing embeddedness within a wider framework of competition (facilitated by national and international excellence rankings) and assessments (via national quality assurance schemes). This panel addresses the nature of university changes, the global forces that lead to changes, and the cultural/institutional frames utilized to make sense of these changes.

308. Thematic Session. Population Health and Culture: The Contributions of Sociological Theory and Methods Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511D, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Christine A. Bachrach, University of Maryland Presider: Christine A. Bachrach, University of Maryland Transforming the Food System: A Cultural and Infrastructural

309. Thematic Session. Preserving Cultural Heritage: Hegemony, Sustainability, and Global Commodification Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511E, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Alvaro Santana-Acuña, Whitman College Presider: Alexandra Marie Kowalski Trading Places: Pathways of Negotiating Space on World Heritage Sites. Robert Parthesius, Leiden University and New York University-Abu Dhabi World Society and World Heritage. Michael A. Elliott, Towson University; Vaughn Schmutz, University of North Carolina at Charlotte Cultural Models of World Heritage: Leaders, Discerners, the Persistent, and the Disengaged. Victoria Reyes, University of California, Riverside Commodifying the Past: When Becoming World Heritage Site Does More Harm than Good. Alvaro Santana-Acuña, Whitman College From Kyoto to Paris to Abu Dhabi, national and local governments strive to preserve their cultural heritage for present and future generations, whether tangible (e.g., cities, buildings, and objects) or intangible (e.g., languages, songs, and rituals). Such efforts are often driven by the desire to acquire the prestigious “World Heritage” label from UNESCO. Instituted in 1972, this UNESCO program only adds to its list heritage of “outstanding universal value.” This list now includes 1031 properties, the majority of which (801) are cultural sites. Most of these are found in Europe, while Africa has the lowest amount of them. This inequality suggests that preservation efforts entail strategies to fix the boundaries of these cultural products. The result is an “imagined heritage,”

Monday

8:30 a.m.

Approach to Public Health. Andrew Deener, University of Connecticut Individual Choice and Public Health: Considerations of Risk, Parenting, and Prevention in Childhood Vaccine Decisions. Jennifer A. Reich, University of Colorado Denver Heterogeneity in Network Structure and Health Seeking Behavior Associated with Health Ideation in a Senegalese Population. Jack Sandberg, George Washington University Discussants: Andrew J. Perrin, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Peter S. Bearman, Columbia University The panel examines multiple ways that the sociological study of culture contributes to improving population health science. Population health seeks to understand how population health outcomes are jointly shaped by the interplay of macro-level factors (e.g. stratification systems and cultural institutions) and individuallevel phenomena (e.g. biology, cognition, behavior). This session focuses on one facet that is beginning to receive more attention within population health – culture. Panel members will address the following questions: (a) how do cultural frames, beliefs, and values impact health behaviors, health care, and health promotion; (b) how do individual agency, social interaction, and cultural institutions combine to produce change in health; and (c) what contributions can students of culture address to improve health in the U.S. and across the globe? The panel features three speakers who will present research that examines the cultural underpinnings of health at the population level. The two discussants will reflect on key questions and challenges in conducting research that can augment the contributions of research on culture to understand and improve the health of populations.

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Monday, August 14, 2017

Session 309, continued by which visitors are expected to experience in situ tangible objects or intangible activities that authentically portray peoples’ lives in a given past. This session will analyze the fabrication and preservation of cultural heritage. Who fabricates it and how? How is preservation understood and implemented in different cultural contexts? What role does the UNESCO World Heritage program play in the production of global cultural hegemony? Since World Heritage candidates must meet uniform criteria, can the acquisition of World Heritage status endanger the preservation of a site due to cultural standardization? The session will also address the issue of sustainability by analyzing the clash between rising mass heritage tourism (e.g., Prague’s historical center or India’s Taj Mahal) and preservationists’ call for more inclusive cultural heritage protection.

310. Presidential Session on Current Societal Challenges. Trump’s Challenge to American Democracy?

Monday

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 510C, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Michèle Lamont, Harvard University Presider: Peter Gourevitch, University of California-San Diego Panelists: Eduardo Bonilla-Silva, Duke University Jacob Hacker, Yale University Sidney Tarrow, Cornell University Joan C. Williams, University of California - Hastings College Panelists will address the various ways in which the Trump presidency has created new and distinct challenges for the American Polity, for the political system, as well as for various groups of citizens and non-citizens. Offering different and complementary perspective, they will also draw conclusion and make recommendations for the road ahead.

311. Special Session. Remaking Academic Life Across the Globe: Institutional Ethnographies of the Corporate University

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511F, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizers: Marjorie L. DeVault, Syracuse University Eric Mykhalovskiy, York University Presider: Marjorie L. DeVault, Syracuse University Doing the “Ideal Academic”: Gender, Class and Excellence in a “World Class” University. Rebecca Lund, Aalto University Teaching Excellence’: Institutional Ethnography, Performance Management and Higher Education Reform in Taiwan. Yu-Hsuan Lin, Nanhua University Student Advocacy, Surveillance and the Client Service University. Elizabeth Brule, York University What Institutional Ethnography Offers Struggles to Subvert the Corporate University. Janice Newson, York University The Institutional Ethnography approach promises to illuminate organizational changes that are often occurring “behind our backs” but have profound effects on people’s work and everyday lives. In this session, scholars using Institutional Ethnography will present analyses of transformations in university life in different parts of the world. Their presentations will explore the varying local expressions of an international move toward the corporate university, including consequences for faculty and students and the contributions of Institutional Ethnography for contemporary struggles in higher education.

312. Author Meets Critics Session. Parenting to a Degree: How Family Matters for College Women’s Success (University of Chicago Press, 2016) by Laura T. Hamilton Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511C, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Claudia Buchmann, Ohio State University Presider: Claudia Buchmann, Ohio State University Critics: Mitchell L. Stevens, Stanford University Claudia Buchmann, Ohio State University Fabian T. Pfeffer, University of Michigan Author: Laura Theresa Hamilton, University of California, Merced

313. Policy and Research Workshop. Engage! How to Win Over the Media, Promote Your Research and Become a Front Page Personality Palais des congrès de Montréal, 510D, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Carmen Russell, American Sociological Association Leader: Carmen Russell, American Sociological Association Panelists: Elizabeth Ghedi-Ehrlich, Scholars Strategy Network Emily Costello, The Conversation U.S. Everyday, journalists are looking for expert sources on topics their audiences care about, topics sociologists are natural experts in. They want to talk to you... but are you ready to talk to them? The ASA is looking to bridge that gap and hosting a workshop/ panel designed to help members improve their public engagement practices. For that purpose, we are working with The Conversation and Scholars Strategy Network and have invited them to come to Montreal to discuss how they can help sociologists promote their research to the widest possible audience. The Conversation (theconversation.com) is an independent source for informed commentary and analysis, all written by the academic and research community and edited by journalists for the general public as a way of promoting a better understanding of current affairs and complex issues among the public at large. The Scholars Strategy Network (scholarsstrategynetwork.org) seeks to improve public policy and strengthen democracy by organizing scholars working in America’s colleges and universities, connecting their research to policymakers, citizens associations, and the media. The workshop panel will provide details on how to: • Pitch and write commentary, op-eds, essays and analysis for general interest media • Promote oneself as an expert source on particular topics of interest to media and public • Engage in an interview whether for print, TV, radio, and live broadcast • Build a portfolio of “news hits” in the course of creating a public persona as a subject matter expert

314. Policy and Research Workshop. How to Engage in International Research Collaborations Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512A, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Kathrin Zippel, Northeastern University Leader: Kathrin Zippel, Northeastern University

315. Minority Fellowship Program Professional Workshop. Who Climbs the Academic Ladder? Race and Gender in a World of Whiteness

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513A, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizers: Jean H. Shin, American Sociological Association Brandon McCain, American Sociological Association Co-Leaders: Roberta M. Spalter-Roth, American Sociological Association Jason A. Smith, George Mason University Jean H. Shin, American Sociological Association Panelists: Cheryl B. Leggon, Georgia Institute of Technology Willie Pearson, Georgia Institute of Technology Rebecca Romo, Santa Monica College

Monday, August 14, 2017

316. Regular Session. Boundary Stretching the Study of Religion

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512B, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Gerardo Marti, Davidson College Presider: Gerardo Marti, Davidson College Global Spirituality among Scientists. Elaine Howard Ecklund, Rice University; Di Di, Rice University; Robert A. Thomson, Baylor University; Simranjit Khalsa, Rice University Opiate of the Masses? Social Status, Comfort from Religion, and the Suppression of Political Consciousness. Landon Schnabel, Indiana University-Bloomington Cross-National Variation in the Social Origins and Religious Consequences of Religious Non-Affiliation. Philip Schwadel, University of Nebraska-Lincoln Discussant: Jenny Trinitapoli, University of Chicago

317. Regular Session. Class Formation Processes

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512C, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Donald Tomaskovic-Devey, University of Massachusetts Presider: Jeffrey A. Smith, University of Nebraska-Lincoln Beyond Meritocracy: Wealth Accumulation in German Upper Classes. Nora Waitkus, University of Bremen; Olaf Groh-SAmberg, University Bremen Inequality and Elite Embeddedness: New Evidence from California’s Proposition 30 Tax Increase. Charles Varner, Stanford University; Cristobal Young, Stanford University Regional Disparities, Extended Families, and the Emergence of a National Middle Class in Ghana. Carola Lentz, University of Mainz; Andrea Noll, University of Hamburg Wealth Polarization and Natural Hazards: A Longitudinal Analysis of the Cumulative Effects on Inequality. Junia Howell, University of Pittsburgh; James R. Elliott, Rice University Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512D, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Nancy Weiss Hanrahan, George Mason Universitry Presider: Nancy Weiss Hanrahan, George Mason Universitry Critiquing the Foucauldian Genealogy of (Neo)Liberalism and the Retrieval of Homo Civilis. Marc W. Steinberg, Smith College Dignity, Democracy or Liberation? Critical Theory and the Ethical Turn. Sarah S. Amsler, University of Lincoln; Nancy Weiss Hanrahan, George Mason Universitry The Social Psychology of Gramsci-A Frankfurt School Approach. Lauren Langman, Loyola University of Chicago Theorizing Violence against Women: The Applicability of Marxist Feminist Theories in Discussions of Gender-based Violence. Elena Chernyak, Hartwick College Discussant: Claire Laurier Decoteau, University of Illinois, Chicago

319. Regular Session. Disaster

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512E, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Jennifer Bea Rogers-Brown, Long Island University, Post Presider: Jennifer Bea Rogers-Brown, Long Island University, Post Move Out or Dig In? Risk Awareness and Mobility Plans in a DisasterAffected Community. Timothy James Haney, Mount Royal University The Political and Social Nullification of the Federal Response to the 2010 BP Oil Spill. Brian Mayer, University of Arizona The Value of Agility in Disaster Relief: A Social Construction

Approach. Mary Nelan, University of North Texas; Tricia Wachtendorf, University of Delaware; Samantha Penta, University of Delaware Touristic Disaster: Spectacle and Recovery in Post-Katrina New Orleans. Kevin Fox Gotham, Tulane University The Effects of Maternal Social Support and Education Attitudes on Child Education Outcomes after Hurricane Katrina. Ethan Raker, Harvard University

320. Regular Session. Environmental Sociology: Corporations, Emissions, and Environmental Justice

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511A, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Kathleen J. Tierney, University of ColoradoBoulder Presider: Kathleen J. Tierney, University of Colorado-Boulder Corporate-State Relations, Corporate Structures, and Carbon Emissions in the U.S. Energy Sector. Harland Prechel, Texas A&M University Industrialization, Residentialization and Environmental Justice: A Historical Analysis of Toxic Hazards Around Greater Buffalo. Eric J. Krieg, Buffalo State College Super Polluters, Super Employers? Disproportionality in the Production of Pollution and the Jobs versus Environment Debate. Mary B. Collins, SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry; Simone Pulver, University of California, Santa Barbara; Dustin Hill, State University of New York-College of Environmental Science and Forestry The Effects of Political-Economic Integration on Power Plants’ Carbon Emissions in the Post-Soviet Nations. Andrew K. Jorgenson, Boston College; Wesley Longhofer, Emory University; Don Grant, University of Colorado-Boulder Discussant: Richard York, University of Oregon

321. Regular Session. Group Processes I. Diversity and Collective Action

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516E, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Shane D. Soboroff, Eastern Illinois University Presider: Shane D. Soboroff, Eastern Illinois University A Positive Relationship between Individuated Ingroup-construal and Diverse Team Cohesion. Na Yoon Kim, Cornell University Negative Consequences of Status Differentiation and Competitive Group Tasks. Chantrey J. Murphy, California State University, Long Beach Norm Talk and Human Cooperation: Can We Talk Ourselves into Cooperation? Daniel B. Shank, Missouri University of Science & Technology; Yoshihisa Kashima, University of Melbourne; Kim Peters, University of Queensland; Garry Robins; Michael Kirley, University of Melbourne Race, Gender, and Team Formation. Jasmón Bailey Racial Identity and Perceptions of Environmental Injustice among Black Americans. Christie L. Parris, Oberlin College; Karen A. Hegtvedt, Emory University; Cathryn Johnson, Emory University; Lindsey Coyle, American Cancer Society

322. Regular Session. Identity, Diversity, and Inequality: The Work and Politics of Popular Culture Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516B, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Laura Grindstaff, University of California, Davis Presider: Laura Grindstaff, University of California, Davis Creativities of the Culture Industries. Michael L. Siciliano, University of California Los Angeles

Monday

318. Regular Session. Critical Theory

147

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Monday, August 14, 2017

Session 322, continued Politicizing Online Tabloids in Times of Trouble: American “Gawker” and Polish “Pudelek.” Helena Chmielewska-Szlajfer, Kozminski University Comic Books and Collective Memory: Social Movements, Politics, and Diversity in Comic Books 1935-Present. Jesse Klein, Florida State University Hybridizing Feminism in and through Popular Culture. Sarah R. Johnson, University of Virginia Three Kongs: Race, Gender, and Fear in Hollywood Ape Films. James J. Dowd, University of Georgia

323. Regular Session. Journalism as a Changing Practice

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 510A, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Anabel Quan-Haase, University of Western Ontario Armchair Detectives and the Social Construction of Falsehoods: An Actor Network Approach. Penn Pantumsinchai, University of Hawaii at Manoa Subjectivity on the Page and Screen: Bias, Emotions, and SelfInterest as tools in Arts Reporting. Phillipa K. Chong, McMaster University Trumping Spectacle? The Sociological Study of Spectacle and the 2016 American Presidential Election. Brian M. Lowe, SUNY, College at Oneonta The Politics of Representation: Wire Agencies and Local News Organizations in the Coverage of Darfur. Nicholas James Siguru Wahutu, University of Minnesota Discussant: Nicholas James Siguru Wahutu, University of Minnesota

Monday

324. Regular Session. Labor Markets: Emerging Issues and New Approaches

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 510B, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Pamela Stone, Hunter College Presider: Pamela Stone, Hunter College Black Holes and Purple Squirrels: A Tale of Two Online Labor Markets. Steve McDonald, North Carolina State University; Amanda K. Damarin, Georgia State University, Perimeter College; Jenelle Lawhorne; Annika M. Wilcox, North Carolina State University A Second Look at the Process of Occupational Feminization and Pay Reduction in Occupations. Hadas Mandel, Tel Aviv University Is Healthcare the New Manufacturing? Industry, Gender, and “Good Jobs” for Low-and Middle-skill Workers. Janette S. Dill, University of Akron Transforming Retail and Other Bad Jobs: FromTtheoretical Framework to Policy and Strategy Agenda. Françoise Carré, University of Massachusetts Boston; Chris Tilly, University of California Los Angeles Discussant: Katherine Weisshaar, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

325. Regular Session. Peace and Conflict: Peace-Building and Post-Conflict Settings Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516D, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: J. Craig Jenkins, Ohio State University Searching for a Just Peace in Darfur: Reconciliation, Punitive Attitudes, and Exposure to Violence. Courtney DeRoche, The Ohio State University; Hollie Nyseth Brehm, The Ohio State University Assessing Mental Health in Humanitarian Emergencies: A

Representative Survey in Kalobeyei Refugee Settlement. Shannon Golden, Center for Victims of Torture Lonely at War: Social Isolation and Treachery in Civil War. Andrew Davis, University of Arizona Policing Inequality: An Ethnography of Private Security in Guatemala. Robert Brenneman, Saint Michael’s College Resisting Exclusion through Tourism: Strategies, Consequences, and Challenges of Alternative Jewish Tours in Israel/Palestine. Emily Schneider, University of California - Santa Barbara Discussant: Kurt Schock, Rutgers University

326. Section on Aging and the Life Course. International Perspectives on Social Inclusion and Exclusion of Older Adults

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513B, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Dale Dannefer, Case Western Reserve University Pathways from Exclusion to Inclusion in Later Life: Developing New Forms of Solidarity in Urban Environments. Chris Phillipson, University of Manchester The Role of Health in Late Life Social Inclusion and Exclusion. Markus H. Schafer, University of Toronto Queering Aging: LGBTQ Families and Health in an Aging Context. Corinne Reczek, The Ohio State University; Mieke Beth Thomeer, University of Alabama at Birmingham Living Apart Together, Living Together Apart: Interpersonal Ties and the Clustering of Diabetes among Sibling Pairs and Couples. Jielu Lin, National Institutes of Health

327. Section on Community and Urban Sociology. Revisiting the Power, Space, and Exclusion of Global Cities in the 21st Century Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514A, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Jean Beaman, Purdue University Presider: Jean Beaman, Purdue University Community Gardens As Expressions of Symbolic Ownership: Resistance Against Neoliberalism, Gentrification, and Crime. Jill Eshelman, Northeastern University From Caste to Purity in Europe’s Urban Centers: How Capital City Mosques Contest Exclusion. Elisabeth Becker Globalization and Gentrification: North-South Migration and Neighbourhood Upgrading in Cuenca, Ecuador’s El Centro. Matthew F. Hayes, St. Thomas University Insurgent Citizenship in Rio de Janeiro’s War Zones. Anjuli Fahlberg, Northeastern University Transmobilities: Mobility, Harassment, and Violence Experienced by Transgender and Gender Nonconforming Public Transit Riders. JaDee Yvonne Carathers, Portland State University; Amy Lubitow, Portland State University; Maura Kelly, Portland State University Discussant: Anthony M. Orum

328. Section on Economic Sociology. Markets, Finance, Credit, and Money

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513D, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Simone Polillo, University of Virginia Presider: Aaron Z. Pitluck, Illinois State University Central Banks and the Politics of Expectations: How Monetary Policymaking Yields Pro-Finance Decisions. Ayca Zayim, University of Wisconsin-Madison Institutionalized Meaning and Policymaking: Revisiting the Causes of American Financial Deregulation. Kim Pernell, University of Toronto

Monday, August 14, 2017 The Financialization of the Public Sphere. Alex Preda, King’s College London Varieties of indebtedness: Financialization and mortgage market institutions in Europe. Tod Stewart Van Gunten, Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies; Edo Navot, Columbia University Discussant: Aaron Z. Pitluck, Illinois State University

329. Section on Ethnomethodology and Conversational Analysis. The Relevance of Garfinkel’s Studies for Ethnomethodology and Conversation Analysis Research Today

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 515C, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Kenneth B. Liberman, University of Oregon Revisiting The Analyzability of Action-in-context as a Practical Achievement. Geoffrey Raymond, University of California-Santa Barbara Emerging Order in the Forklift Warehouse. Johannes Wagner, Southern Denmark University The Conversation Analytic Foundations of Ethnomethodology. Eric Livingston, University of New England-Australia; Michael Lynch, Cornell University

331. Section on Latino/a Sociology. Latinas/os, Gender, and Sexuality

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513E, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Victor M. Rios, University of California, Santa Barbara Presider: Jade Aguilar, Willamette University Exploring the Identities and Assimilation of South Americans from a Gendered and Intersectional Analysis. Dana Chalupa, Misericordia University Progressive Gendered Ideologies: The Influence of Family Dynamics in the Lives of Latina Physicians. Glenda M. Flores, University of California, Irvine The Relationship between Latina/o Students’ Perceived Negative Campus Climate and Cognitive Outcomes at Selective Universities. Marla Franco, University of Arizona; Young K. Kim, Azusa Pacific University Wishers, Goal Setters, Angry Victims: Young Honduran Women’s Aspirations. Amber Zappia Larkin, University of Florida; Marilyn E. Swisher, University of Florida; Rebecca J. Williams, University of Florida; Kelly Moore, University of Florida Fragmented Illegalities: Differentiated Legal Status among Undocumented Immigrants. Heidy Sarabia, California State University-Sacramento

332. Section on Organizations, Occupations, and Work. Good Jobs, Not So Good Jobs: The Dynamics of Workplace Inequality

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512F, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Elisabeth S. Clemens, University of Chicago Presider: Steven Vallas, Northeastern University Distinction at Work: Status Practices in a Community Production Environment. Will Attwood-Charles, Boston College Am I the Frog in the Pot? Globalized Professional Work and the Causes of Overload. Erin Kelly, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Phyllis Moen, University of Minnesota The Worth of Women’s Work: Logics of Symbolic and Material Valuation in the Gendered Labor Market. Lauren Valentino, Duke University Discussant: Steven Vallas, Northeastern University

333. Section on Political Sociology. Chair’s Session: Nations, Nationalism, and National Belonging

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 515A, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Rhys H. Williams, Loyola University Chicago Presider: Rhys H. Williams, Loyola University Chicago Imagining the Nation: Religion and Visions of National Belonging Across the Political Divide. Ruth Braunstein, University of Connecticut Nations Dissolving: Populism, Nationalism and Emotional Disintegration in Erdogan’s New Turkey. Sinem Adar, Lichtenberg-Kolleg, University of Goettingen; Gulay TurkmenDervisoglu, University of Goettingen Secularized Evangelical Discourse and the Boundaries of National Belonging. Jack Delehanty, University of Minnesota; Evan Stewart, University of Minnesota

334. Section on Science, Knowledge and Technology. Race and Ethnicity in Global and Postcolonial Science

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 515B, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Anthony Ryan Hatch, Wesleyan University Presider: Grant Shoffstall, Williams College Categorical Heterogeneity in Latin American Human Biology: Amerindians, Europeans, Makiritare, Mestizos, Puerto Rican, and Quechua. Santiago José Molina, University of California Berkeley The Post-colonial Condition: French Social Sciences Evolution through the Case of Arkoun and Sayad. Amin Perez, Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales; Mohamed Amine Brahimi, School for Advanced Studies in the Social Sciences

335. Section on Social Psychology. Social Psychological Approaches to Understanding Gender Inequality

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513F, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Sarah Thebaud, Unviersity of California Santa Barbara Presider: Catherine J. Taylor, Indiana University The Inversive Sexism Scale: Endorsements of the Belief that Women are Privileged and Other Sexist Attitudes. Emily Kiyoko Carian, Stanford University Is there an Active Parenting Penalty? Evidence from Field and Laboratory Experiments in Germany. Lena Hipp, WZB Berlin Social Research Center Not Your Average Joe: Pluralistic Ignorance and the Stalled Gender Revolution. Tagart Cain Sobotka, Stanford University The Hazard of Dominance: An Analysis of Who’s Still Standing. Scott V. Savage, University of Houston; David M. Melamed, The Ohio

Monday

330. Section on Human Rights. The State of Human Rights across Different Contexts and Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520A, 8:30-9:30 a.m. Session Organizer: Lynette J. Chua, National University of Singapore Para-Sociology: Policymaking as a Parallel Site for Sociological Analysis. Angela Elena Fillingim, University of California, Irvine Know the Reports, Know the Organization: UNHCR and the Syrian Crisis. Nir Rotem, University of Minnesota Cross-national Variations in Protections for Internationally Displaced Persons. Ralph Ittonen Hosoki, University of California, Irvine

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Session 335, continued State University Discussant: Stephen Benard, Indiana University

336. Section on Sociology of Culture. Gender, Culture, Media

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513C, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Andrea Press, University of Virginia Presider: Andrea Press, University of Virginia Incorporating the Erotic: Redrawing the Boundaries of Sexuality and New Media in Romance Genre Fiction. Anna Michelson, Northwestern University Non-notable? Deletion as Devaluation on Wikipedia. Francesca Tripodi, University of Virginia Reading as a Man, Reading as a Woman: Gendered Uses of Sciencefiction and Fantasy. Elodie Hommel, ENS de Lyon / Centre Max Weber Both Underrepresented and Misrepresented: Feminist Media Activism in the National Organization for Women. Christine Slaughter, Yale University “Mother Courage”: Sociology of a Semantic Slippage. Lorenzo Sabetta, Sapienza - University of Rome

Monday

337. Section on Sociology of Law. Law and Inequality: Criminal, Civil, and the Intersection of the Two

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514B, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Erin York Cornwell, Cornell University Presider: Daanika Gordon, University of Wisconsin Madison Predicting Danger in Immigration Bond Hearings. Emily Ryo, USC Gould School of Law The Welfarization of Criminal Justice? Poverty, Punishment, and Rehabilitation in Criminal Courts. Katherine Hood, UC Berkeley Broke People, Broken Rules: The Production of the Welfare Rule Violator through Fraud Enforcement. Spencer Headworth, Purdue University Juries Judging Injuries: The Special Role of Special Damages in Personal Injury Civil Cases. Mary R. Rose, University of Texas; Shari Seidman Diamond, Northwestern University School of Law Discussant: Justine Eatenson Tinkler, University of Georgia

338. Section on Sociology of Mental Health. Pearlin Award Lecture, Section Awards, and Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514C, 8:30-9:30 a.m. Session Organizer: Kristi L. Williams, The Ohio State University

339. Section on Sociology of Sex and Gender. Gender, Politics, and Power

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516A, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: James W. Messerschmidt Presider: James W. Messerschmidt Double-Duty Politics: How Electing Ethnic Minority Women Can Keep Ethnic Majority Men in Power. Melanie M. Hughes, University of Pittsburgh Forced Disappearance as a Gendered Form of State Violence. Amina Zarrugh, Texas Christian University How Feminicidio Becamethe Language of State Responsibility in Mexico. Paulina Garcia del Moral, University of Toronto Revisiting the Feminist Theory of the State. Cinthya Johanna Guzman, University of Toronto Discussant: Catherine I. Bolzendahl, University of California, Irvine

9:30 a.m.

Meetings

Section on History of Sociology Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512G, 9:30-10:10 a.m. Section on Human Rights Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520A, 9:30-10:10 a.m. Section on Sociology of Mental Health Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514C, 9:30-10:10 a.m. Section on Sociology of Population Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512H, 9:30-10:10 a.m.

10:30 a.m.

Meetings

2017-18 ASA Council New Member Orientation Palais des congrès de Montréal, 518A, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Award Selection Committee Chairs with the Committee on Awards Palais des congrès de Montréal, 523A, 10:30-11:10 a.m. Honors Program Careers Briefing Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514B, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m.

10:30 a.m.

Sessions

340. Presidential Panel. Immigration, Security, Islam in Europe

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516A, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Michèle Lamont, Harvard University Chair: Mabel Berezin, Cornell University Muslims, Islam, and Rethinking Boundaries in Europe. Tariq Modood, University of Bristol How and Why Does European Neoliberalism Cauterize Muslims from Its Body Politic? Fatma Muge Gocek, University of Michigan Mobility of Individuals and the Question of Security within and without Borders: Muslims in Europe and Migrants’ Crises. Riva Kastoryano Discussant: Louise Cainkar, Marquette University This session concerns the place of Muslims and Islam in Western Europe. It considers the tensions between their desire to view themselves as socially integrated and valuable contributors to societies, and their stigmatization as . ‘the enemy within’. It also considers their relationship with other Muslims and their experience of racialization. Their position leads us to rethink social and symbolic boundaries in the post-Brexit European context, against the background of the refugee crisis.

341. Thematic Session. Boundaries and Fields

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511A, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Neil Fligstein, University of Californnia Presider: Neil Fligstein, University of Californnia Panelists: Elisabeth S. Clemens, University of Chicago Neil Fligstein, University of Californnia Omar A. Lizardo, University of Notre Dame Douglas McAdam, Stanford University George Steinmetz, University of Michigan The concept of “field” has proved useful across a number of sociological research areas. These substantive research programs include the areas of culture, organizations, political sociology, social movements, and race and ethnicity. While the idea of fields

Monday, August 14, 2017 has been associated with the work of Pierre Bourdieu, scholars have developed the concept in the context of their engagement with empirical work, often in ways that do not reflect Bourdieu’s conceptualization. This panel takes stock of these developments by considering how the different theoretical approaches are used across research areas and what advantages and disadvantages that each has. In particular, we attempt to discuss how to think about problems of boundary formation within and across fields.

342. Thematic Session. Moneyed Families: Wealth Holding and Transmission among the Super Wealthy

343. Thematic Session. Multicultural, Intercultural, Transcultural: Which Models and Which Practices for the Inclusion of Differences in the Americas?

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511B, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Jean-Francois Cote, Université du Québec à Montréal Presider: André Tremblay, University of Ottawa The Elusive Search for the Inclusion of Difference: Critical Reflections on Power, Contemporary Citizenship, and Indigenous PeoplesSettler Relations in Canada. Daniel Salée, Concordia University Multicultural, Intercultural, Transcultural: Which Models and Which Practices for the Inclusion of Differences in the Americas? James V. Fenelon, California State University, San Bernardino

Contextualizing Quebec’s Interculturalism in Canada’s Multiculturalism: A Transcultural Standpoint. Afef Benessaieh, TÉLUQ Discussant: Ben Carrington, University of Texas-Austin Throughout the 20th century, various models of social inclusion have been proposed in order to reconsider the monolithic vision of national cultures among the various societies in the Americas, ranging from multicultural, or intercultural, to transcultural – either in the United States, Canada, Québec, Mexico, Brazil, Peru, or elsewhere. Based either on the recognition of the presence of a plurality of the cultural communities in a society (multicultural), or of the relations among those cultural communities (intercultural), or again of the transformations occurring in the meeting of those cultural communities (transcultural), those models have fueled different kinds of sociological analysis, as well as public politicies in various contexts, and have being embodied in a wide variety of social and cultural expressions. Is one of these models, or which one of these models, can pretend to a mode adequate vision of the inclusion of the cultural differences (and particularly, for example, of the inclusion of First nations) within the various societies throughout the Americas ? If so, what are the practices associated with these models, in terms of their social, aesthetic and ethical dimensions ? How do the practices intersect with the (mutli/inter/trans)cultural representations in those contexts ? How are the specific cultural practices defined in such occasions ? How are they performed ? Do they ask for specific forms of dramatization, and to what extent do they reframe the grand narrative of national cultures ? How far do they still challenge the monolithic vision promoted by the Western/European legacy of the modern colonization of the Americas, relayed by the formation of the nation-states throughout the Americas ? And is there any possibility of transnational or hemispheric identification produced accordingly.

344. Thematic Session. What You See is What You Get? New Thinking on Race and the Visual

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511E, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Ann J. Morning, New York University Presider: Ann J. Morning, New York University The Biotechnical Gaze: Me and 23andMe. Simone Browne, University of Texas at Austin Racializing ‘Invisible’ Minorities in Japan: A Step Beyond the TransAtlantic Paradigm. Yasuko Takezawa, Kyoto University What You See Is What You Get? Influences of Ancestry and Phenotype on Racial Perception and Categorization. Destiny Peery, Northwestern University Race has long been believed in the West to be a straightforward matter of perceiving obvious differences in superficial physical traits. As Western societies have become more demographically heterogeneous, however, the idea that one can simply “see” race has increasingly come under fire. Myriad groups including but not limited to multiracial people, Latinos, South Asians and Middle Easterners pose challenges to racial classification as usual in official checkboxes. And while some contend that DNA-based definitions offer a solution for assigning individuals to races, there is no definitive genetic taxonomy on the horizon. If anything, both biologists and social scientists have demolished the myth that races are genetically discrete, naturally-rooted and objectively-delineated groupings of human beings. Yet the widespread belief that we passively “see” racial difference endures, making it a key element of the cultural toolkit of racially stratified societies.

Monday

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511C, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Jeremy Markham Schulz, University of California, Berkeley How Permeable is the One Percent? Lisa A. Keister, Duke University Professions and Plutocrats: Wealth Management and the One Percent. Brooke Harrington, Copenhagen Business School Socializing the Younger Generation in Multigenerational Business Families - Strategies and Trajectories. Jeremy Markham Schulz, University of California, Berkeley Being “Good People”: The Moral Imperatives of Legitimate Privilege. Rachel Sherman, New School for Social Research Discussant: Shamus Rahman Khan, Columbia University Although it is widely acknowledged that economically elite families play an important role in the stratification system, they have not yet garnered sufficient attention from social scientists. In this session, prominent scholars will bring fresh insights to a range of topics connected to wealth-holding and wealth transmission among the global ultra-wealthy, a cutting-edge research area within sociology. The papers will touch on stratification, economic sociology, the sociology of culture, and sociology of the family. They will have a broad appeal to both scholars and students. Brooke Harrington, Copenhagen Business School, highlights the secretive world of global wealth management experts and the ways in which they work closely with ultra-wealthy families to preserve wealth and shield it from government authorities. Jeremy Schulz, UC Berkeley, highlights the complex role of liquid and illiquid wealth within multigenerational business families in provoking conflict and building solidarity. He explores the symbolic meanings of both forms of wealth and how they mediate relations between older and younger generations. Lisa Keister will discuss how individuals and families accumulate wealth and join the top ranks of wealth holders. Rachel Sherman, New School for Social Research, looks at how wealthy and privileged New York parents cast themselves as morally worthy of their social advantages and thus as legitimately entitled. Legitimate entitlement depends on hard work, reasonable consumption, giving back, and raising children with similarly “good values.”

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Monday

345. Thematic Session. Youth Jobs and the Future: Problems and Prospects

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511D, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Lynn Sharon Chancer, Hunter College Presider: Lynn Sharon Chancer, Hunter College Panelists: Maria Kefalas, St. Joseph’s University Lynn Sharon Chancer, Hunter College Arne L. Kalleberg, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill Martín Sánchez-Jankowski, University of California-Berkeley Discussant: Christine Trost, University of California-Berkeley A recently published report The Plummeting Labor Market Fortunes of Teens and Young Adults (2014) found employment prospects for teens and young adults had grown precipitously worse between 2000 and 2011. During the ‘Great Recession’ of 2007, youth unemployment in America soared to a post-War record of 19%. While this social problem is well-known and focused upon across Europe, it is very severe – if relatively overlooked – in the United States where, currently, 10 million youth are without work and millions more are under-employed. Moreover, surprisingly little has been written about youth unemployment specifically, and the sense of anxiety it creates within what Arne Kalleberg calls a now ‘precarious economy.’ In the US, labor market policies generally have been discussed, but mostly in terms of simple loss of earnings whereas early life unemployment creates a harmful multiplier effect, engendering a wide range of negative adult life outcomes and attendant social problems. Most worrisome, perhaps, is the significant increase in American youth who feel insecure and ‘disconnected’ from work and education, and who feel that their life chances and opportunities are depressingly uncertain or declining. Youth joblessness is a major public issue affecting American society and culture. Ironically, social scientific responses to youth joblessness have been analogously ‘disconnected’. Within sociology, not enough discussion has taken place between scholars interested in political economy, culture, work, labor and family about this issue: also the problem of youth joblessness has not been tackled with the focused aim of influencing policy-makers, politicians, and legislators. This panel tries to fill in this gap with papers that take a wide range of perspectives on youth, jobs and precarity. Each of the papers also make policy recommendations – some involving economic and political changes, and others changes in cultural attitudes – so as to both further investigate this issue and recognize its significance going forward

346. Presidential Session on Current Societal Challenges. The Trump/Brexit Moment: Causes and Consequences Palais des congrès de Montréal, 518B, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Mike Savage, LSE Presider: Mike Savage, LSE The Lost Unifying Energy of the State: Responding to Three Constituents: EU states, Financial Markets and the People. Patrick Le Galès, Sciences Po CNRS The Revolt of the Rust Belt: Place, Politics, and Sociology in the Twenty-First Century. Michael McQuarrie, London School of Economics The Cultural Resonance of Symbolic Boundaries Discourse and Trump’s Triumph: The Case of the White Working Class. Bo Yun Park, Harvard University; Elena Ayala-Hurtado, Harvard University; Michèle Lamont, Harvard University American Hybrid: Donald Trump’s Strange Marriage of Populism and Plutocracy. Paul Pierson, University of California-Berkeley This session reflects on challenges posed by the U.S. election

and related political developments in Europe, such as the ‘Brexit’ referendum in the UK. Papers discuss how we can understand the election of Donald Trump as President of the United States, and what sense social scientists in particular can make of the political events that are now shaping political and social life in the US, the UK, and elsewhere. They examine the dimensions of sociology to which the election result calls attention – for example, populism, nationalism, inequality, anti-elite politics, migration, finance, and expertise – as well as considering the broader global patterns in which Donald Trump’s election appears to fit. This session brings together some of the authors contributing to a special issue of The British Journal of Sociology to be published in Fall 2017, to be edited by Nigel Dodd, Michele Lamont, and Mike Savage.

347. Special Session. Generations of Suicide: Understanding Cohort Differences in Suicide Risk Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512A, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Steven Stack, Wayne State University Presider: Frank Trovato, The University of Alberta Durkheim and His Discontents: A Social Psychological, Emotional, and Cultural Re-Appraisal of Suicide. Anna S. Mueller, The University of Chicago; Seth Abrutyn, University of British Columbia How Being “The Other” Matters: Examining the Influence of Social Context on the Individual Risk of Suicide Using a U.S. Big Data Solution. Bernice A. Pescosolido, Indiana University Generations of Suicide: Understanding the Increased Risk for Suicide among U.S. Postwar Birth Cohorts. Julie A. Phillips, Rutgers University The Strain Theory of Suicide. Jie Zhang, SUNY College at Buffalo Discussant: Matt Wray, Temple University The session deals with current developments in the sociological analysis of suicide, on the occasion of the 120th anniversary of the publication of Durkheim’s classic work, Suicide. Each participant will deal with how their perspective is both similar and different from that of a classic Durkheimian model of suicide and discuss the latest developments in their ongoing stream of research on suicide.

348. Special Session. Intra- and Inter-Religious Divisions (cosponsored with Association for the Sociology of Religion)

InterContinental Montreal, A. Fraser, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Michael O. Emerson, North Park University Presider: Michael O. Emerson, North Park University Religion, Gender and the Sociology of Islam: Sunni and Shi’a Perspectives on Gender Traditionalism. Gabriel A Acevedo, University of Texas at San Antonio Civil Religion and the Crisis in American National Identity. Rhys H. Williams, Loyola University Chicago The Freedom to Choose: Religious Homes, Religious Divorces, and Who’s Homeless. Nancy Ammerman, Boston University Discussant: Korie L. Edwards, Ohio State University Papers in this session situate religion under a framework of intersectionality. Invited session participants will discuss how religion intersects with gender, national identity, and family. Through the framework of intersectionality, this session will contribute to our understandings about intra- and inter-religious divisions.

Monday, August 14, 2017

349. Author Meets Critics Session. Love, Money and HIV: Becoming a Modern African Woman in the Age of AIDS (University of California Press, 2014) by Sanyu A. Mojola Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511F, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Kimberly Kay Hoang, University of Chicago Critics: Shari L. Dworkin, University of California-San Francisco Robert Wyrod, University of Colorado Boulder Margaret Frye, Princeton University Author: Sanyu A. Mojola, University of Michigan

350. Regional Spotlight Session. Social Categories, Inequality and the State: A View from Canada to the United States and Beyond

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516B, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Luisa Farah Schwartzman, University of Toronto Presider: Luisa Farah Schwartzman, University of Toronto Fear in the Shelter: Gender, Illegality, and the Securitization of Women’s Shelters in Canada. Salina Abji, Carleton University Beyond Employment Inequality: Wealth Disparities by Disability Status in Canada and the United States. Michelle Lee Maroto, University of Alberta; David Nicholas Pettinicchio, University of Toronto Policing Race, Moral Panic and the Growth of Black Prisoners in Canada. Akwasi Owusu-Bempah, Indiana University; Wendell Adjetey, Yale University Discussant: Christel Kesler, Colby College

351. Policy and Research Workshop. Grant-Seeking from Private Foundations: What Investigators Should Know

352. Teaching Workshop. The Benefits of Integrating Community Service as a Vehicle for Enhancing Courses to Promote Social Justice and Humanistic Values

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512C, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Michelle Marie Proctor, Madonna University The focus of this interactive workshop will be to engage participants through discussion and activities exploring the latent and manifest benefits and logistical challenges of collaborative community service-learning projects. The goals of this workshop will be to assist participants in gaining insight into the value of community service-learning. In addition it will provide insight into pedagogical skills that can be used to promote and implement opportunities for students to become aware of power inequalities exiting within society generally, and more specifically how they can develop and promote a sense of social justice of non-human animals.

353. Visual Media Poster Session

Palais des congrès de Montréal, Hall 220C, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Gregory Shawn Scott, De Paul University The Show and Tell Machine Revisited. Terri Toles-Patkin, Eastern Connecticut State University; Chris A. Raymond, User Experience Designer Advancing Social Science at EPA: Establishing the SocialEnvironmental Science Exchange. Emily Eisenhauer, American Association for the Advancement of Science; Bryan Hubbell, U.S. Evironmental Protection Agency; Elizabeth Corona, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Dental Surgery and its Impact on Drug Users’ Identities: A PhotoDocumentary Study. Patricia Drentea, University of AlabamaBirmingham; Heith Copes; Jessica Lynn Valles Distress from Violent Victimization: Impacts on Concerns about Crime and Perceptions of Law Enforcement. Eileen E. Avery, University of Missouri; Joan M. Hermsen, University of Missouri; Katelynn Patricia Towne, University of Missouri Environmental Concern in Developed and Developing Countries: An Assessment of Inglehart’s Post-Materialism Theory. Tameka Gaye Samuels-Jones, University of Florida Friends and Followers: Measuring Multiple Ideologies through Social Networks. Merilys Huhn, Stanford University Gender Differences: Violence Exposure, Drug Use and HIV Risk Behaviors in Young Adult African Americans. Frough Saadatmand, Howard University; Roderick Harrison, 2M Research Services; Jennifer Bronson, Howard University Heterogeneity in Social Networks: Does Racial Heterogeneity Impact Political Attitudes? Calley Fisk, University of South Carolina Improving the Race/Ethnicity Question for Our Diverse Nation: The Census Bureau’s 2015 National Content Test. Nicholas A. Jones, U.S. Census Bureau; Michael Bentley, U.S. Census Bureau; Sarah Konya, U.S. Census Bureau Is this Really Gentrification? An Analysis of St. Louis City Neighborhoods. Melissa J. Garcia, University of Missouri-St. Louis Parental Involvement: Not Just Good for the Kids. Adam Williams, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Psychosocial Factors and BRCA1/2 Genetic Mutation Testing in Women. Sharlene J. Hesse-Biber, Boston College; Hilary Flowers; Jing Jiang, Boston College; Shiya Yi, Boston College; Chen An, Boston College Rethinking the Iranian Civil Sphere. Elham Pourtaher, University at Albany Similar Starts, Divergent Discourses: Attitudes Surrounding “Affirmative Action” and “Diversity” in the 21st Century. Neeraj

Monday

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512B, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: James A. Wilson, Russell Sage Foundation Leader: James A. Wilson, Russell Sage Foundation Panelists: Leana Chatrath, Russell Sage Foundation Rhoda Freelon, Spencer Foundation Vivian S. Louie, William T. Grant Foundation Seeking external funding for social science research is an increasingly competitive process and preparing a successful letter of inquiry and grant application can be a challenging and timeconsuming exercise. In addition to the many government sources of research funding, private foundations can also be an important source of financial support. It is important however, to recognize that foundations differ from government sources in their funding priorities – foundations generally tend to have more constrained resources and target their funding for more specific purposes. In this panel session, program staff from three of the nation’s most prominent funders of social, educational, economic and policy research will provide an overview of foundation programs and priorities, new initiatives, and the basics of grant-seeking from private foundations. With extensive experience in evaluating proposals as part of the grant-making process, panelists will also discuss, from the perspective of a funding organization, what investigators should consider when writing a grant application. This panel is designed to be especially useful for early career scholars but is also informative for more experienced investigators.

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Session 353, continued Rajasekar, University of Minnesota Social Exclusion and Migration. Prem Bhandari, University of Michigan; Nathalie Williams, University of Washington; Loritta Chan, University of Washington; Cathy Sun, University of Michigan The Effects of Mother-Child Relationship Quality and Depressive Symptoms on Hooking Up Behaviors. Chanell Nicole Washington, The Pennsylvania State University The U.S. Government Funding and Antiretroviral Treatment Coverage Rates: Select Countries, 2005-2014. Bashiruddin Ahmed; Antonio Bruce, U.S. Census Bureau Undocumented College Students, Social Exclusion and Psychosocial Well-being. Rosalie A. Torres Stone, Clark University; Nathanael Aragon Cooper, Clark University; Kathryn Sabella, University of Massachusetts Boston “Fake News” and Information Literacy. Hailey Mooney, University of Michigan Library; Heather Mooney, Wayne State University; Shevon Desai, University of Michigan Library

Monday

354. Open Refereed Roundtable Session

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517A, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizers: Walda Katz-Fishman, Howard University Britany Gatewood, Howard University Table 01. Environmental Racism and Crisis: Resistance and Struggle Table Presider: Shannell Thomas, Howard University Race and Colonialism in the U.S. Environmental Movement. Travis L. Williams, Virginia Commonwealth University Local Newspaper as the Arena of the Power Struggle Over Fracking. Mehmet Soyer, Utah State University Oil, Capital, and Nature: Do Marx’s General Laws of Production Apply? Kirk S. Lawrence, St. Joseph’s College, New York; Jason W. Moore, Binghamton University Table 02. Environment, Health, Race and Place Table Presider: Jean Léon Boucher, Stony Brook University Is Global Warming affecting Weather? The Social and Experiential bases of Perceiving the Link. Matthew John Cutler, Yale University In Their Own Words: Disaster and the Embodiment of Emotion, Suffering, and Mental Health. Ashleigh Elain McKinzie, University of Georgia Socio-Economic and Racial Disparities in Estimated Cancer Risks from Air Toxics in Las Vegas. Camila Huerta Alvarez, University of Oregon A Comparison of Urban and Rural Water Levels in Wells: The Case of Lubbock County. Robert Lee Cavazos, Tarleton State University Table 03. Rethinking Day Laborers, Immigrant Workers, and Manual Labor Table Presider: Jordan Scott, Binghamton University Day Laborers and Worker Centers: Organizing Latino Immigrants. Daniel Melero Malpica, Sonoma State University Invisible Laborers as Bodies in Performance: Manual Labor as a Professional Practice. Babz Jewell Policies and Practices on the Treatment of Migrants in South Korea: The Perspectives of Activists. Keumjae Park, William Paterson University Table 04. Women, Work and Class across Time and Place Table Presider: Nicole Rousseau, Kent State University, Howard University

Give the Single Girls a Chance! Depression-era Narratives of Life Course and Household Equity. Evan Roberts, University of Minnesota Assessing the Exclusion of Women in Conservation Networks: An Exploration of the Connections Between Conservation Photographers. Cameron Thomas Whitley, Michigan State University; Linda Elizabeth Kalof, Michigan State University Comparing Household Employment, Gender Contracts and the Crisis in Europe. Jacqueline O’Reilly, University of Brighton Business School; Nuria Sanchez-Mira, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona Negotiating Class, Gender and Status: Greeks in Australia, Greece and the United States. Vasilikie (Vicky) Demos, University of Minnesota-Morris Table 05. Gender and Sexualities in Diverse Contexts Table Presider: Shanae Jefferies, University of North Texas LGBT Human Right as a Global Health Issue. Joseph M. Marchia, Stony Brook University LGBTQ Prison Policy, Queer Visibility, and Prison Violence. Braxton Jones, University of New Hampshire Pleasure Beyond the Binary: A Quantitative Analysis of College Student’s Enacted Sexuality. Jax J. Gonzalez, University of Colorado, Boulder; Aubrey Limburg, University of Colorado, Boulder More Than a Number’s Game: Hooking Up and Satisfaction with Sexual History for College Men. Shannon Sheehan, University of Michigan Table 06. Racialization, Whiteness, Power and Culture Table Presider: Ainsley LAmbert, University of Cincinnati Accomplishing Whiteness through Culture: Future Directions for the Study of Whiteness and Racial Oppression. Erik Tyler Withers, University of South Florida White Entrapment: Racial Contestation and Accountability. Brennan J. Miller, Kent State University Constructing Ethnic Identity: How Race Affects Ethnic Identity among Later Generation Immigrants in the United States. Erin Freeman, Boston University Biblical Origins of Racist Norms: Tuition Rebates Advocated as a Motivational Tool. David (Jed) D. Schwartz Table 07. Migration and Immigration: Experiences and Processes Table Presider: Shaonta Allen, University of Cincinnati Migrants ‘In-transit’: A Theoretical Look at the Migration Journey. Lilian Chavez, Mesa Community College Putting Experiences of ‘Movement’ Back into the Migration Debate: Central Eastern European Workers in Britain. Zinovijus Ciupijus, University of Leeds Latinos’ Remittance Behavior as a Transnational Practice: Variations by Nativity, Generation, and Social Capital. Sung David Chun, Mercy College of Ohio Parental Involvement among First and Second-Generation Immigrants to the United States. Adam Williams, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Table 08. Education and Social Struggle: Critical Voices and Praxis Table Presider: Kenneth H. Bolton, Southeastern Louisiana University We’re Not An Extension of School: Exploring Education and Race in a Community Youth Program. Brionca Taylor, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Enchanted Capitalism: Myths, Markets, and Monsters. Alex M. Zukas, National University Scholar Activism: Building Unity between the Academy and the Street in this Movement Moment. Walda Katz-Fishman,

Monday, August 14, 2017

How far up the river? Assessing the health consequences of criminal justice contact. April Fernandes, North Carolina State University P.E.A.C.E. Be With You: Family Law Mediation and Controlling Narratives. Elaina Kay Behounek, Mercer University Unlocking the Black Box of Mental Health Court Case Processing. Lindsey R. Beach, University of Washington Table 14. Rethinking Law, Power, and Crime Table Presider: Edwin Grimsley, The Graduate Center, CUNY Definitions of Deviance: Law, Power, and Hegemony. Pat L. Lauderdale, ASU Takin’ Care of [Prison] Business: The State-Level Determinants of Private Prison Populations, 2000-2015. Rachel M. Durso, Washington College When Rescue is not Rescue: Hoarding among Animal Welfare Workers. Marion C. Willetts, Illinois State University Table 15. Political Action in Southern Africa, Rwanda, and Zimbabwe Table Presider: Rasmieyh R Abdelnabi, George Mason University From Civic Orientation to Public Participation: Connecting Volunteering to Civil Society In Southern Africa. Sara Compion, Kean University Honoring the Dead or the Party? Celebrating Victory at Zimbabwe’s National Heroes Acre. Lorna Lueker Zukas, National University Mandating Unity in the Wake of Destruction: Rwanda’s Constitution and the Enforcement of National Memory. Jeremy Kuperberg, Northwestern University Table 16. Asian Experiences and Cultures Transnationally Table Presider: Syeda S. Jesmin, University of North Texas at Dallas Can We Be Friends? Focusing on Immigrants in Japan. Shigemi Ohtsuki, Tokyo Metropolitan University Collective Blindness toward Racism? An Analysis of Chinese Immigrants’ Reactions when Others Encountered Discrimination. Ping Ping, Spokane Falls Community College “Why do I buy number 8?” A Study on Auspicious Consumption in China and United States. Danqing Yu, Iowa State University The Relationship Between Confucianism and Economic Development: An Analysis of Consumption Patterns in China. Weiwei Zhang, St. Lawrence University Table 17. Health, Culture, and Community Table Presider: Carlos Chapman, Howard University Health, Obesity, and the Importance of Cultural Context: Evidence from Mauritania. Adenife Modile, University of Colorado Boulder Risky Eating in Romantic Relationships: Exploring the Role of Relationship Status and Quality. Lauren Elizabeth GebhardtKram, The Ohio State University Hepatitis C and the Social Hierarchy: How Stigma is Built in Rural Communities. Charley Henderson, Tarleton State University; Atsuko Kawakami, Tarleton State University The Importance of Environment: Neighborhood Characteristics and Parent Perceptions of Child Health. Cory Cronin, Ohio University Table 18. Aging Across National and Institutional Contexts Table Presider: Judith Ann Singletary How Frontline Workers Experience For-Profit Medical Chains: The Case of Home Health Aides. Tina Wu, University of Pennsylvania Nursing Homes and ‘Affordable Care’ from the Perspective of a SNF-ist. Leslie L. King, Smith College Women’s Lived Experiences of Aging: Fragments of Daily Life

Monday

Howard University; Britany Gatewood, Howard University; Anthony Jerald Jackson, Howard Univerity; Jerome Scott, League of Revolutionaries for a New America Beyond Survival: The Rise and Expansion of “Education in Emergencies” as a Global Field. Julia Lerch, Stanford University Table 09. Education, Race, Gender, and Inequality Table Presider: Candice C. Robinson, University of Pittsburgh An Exploration of Racial Segregation and Attitudes Supportive of Diversity in Five Southern School Districts. Roslyn A. Mickelson, University of North Carolina at Charlotte; Toby L. Parcel, North Carolina State University; Stephen Samuel Smith, Winthrop University Educators As “Equity Warriors”. Emily K. Penner, University of California, Irvine; Jane E. Rochmes, Stanford University; Susanna Loeb When it Comes to Social and Behavioral Skills, Schools are not Such a Great Equalizer. Douglas B. Downey, Ohio State University; Joseph Workman, University of Oxford; Paul von Hippel, University of Texas Table 10. Higher Education, Race, Ethnicity, and Nationality Table Presider: Steven A. Tuch, The George Washington University Being Mexican in New York City: Racialization Through Institutions. Jorge Ballinas, Temple University The Role of Race/Ethnicity in Shaping Cognitive Learning Gains among First-Generation College Students. Michael F. Iorio, Loma Linda University College Engagement and Cognitive Development among Latino Transfer and Native Students at Selective Institutions. Elizabeth A. Rennick, University of Arizona; Young K. Kim, Azusa Pacific University Waiting for DACA? Educational Trajectories of Undocumented South Korean College Students. Jennifer Catherine Sloan, The Graduate Center, City University of New York Table 11. Journalism and Media across Contexts Table Presider: Jason A. Smith, George Mason University Booty, Body, and the Standard of Feminine Beauty: Discourses of Booty Work in Women’s Magazines. Niamba Baskerville, Northwestern University Fear of Crime and Media Exposure: A Pre- and Post-Hurricane Katrina Analysis. John G. Boulahanis, Southeastern Louisiana University Integrating Daily Print News into the Introductory Sociology Classroom. Zachary Schrank, Indiana University South Bend Structure and Practical Action in Literary Journalism. William Keats-Osborn, University of British Columbia Table 12. Family and Public Policy across Nations and Places Table Presider: Anjerrika Raishawn Bean, Howard Universitty Social Support and Parenting Appraisals of Dual-Earner Mothers and Fathers. Daphne Pedersen, University of North Dakota The Effect of Workfare Policy on Single Parent Families in Japan. Yuya Saitoh, Tokyo Metropolitan University The Weaknesses and the Strength of the Social Service Models for Children in Turkey. Fatime Gunes, Anadolu University The Connection between Giving to Family and Giving to Others. Teresa M. Cooney, University of Colorado Denver; Adam D. Shapiro, California State University-San Marcos; Amanda Barnett, University of Wisconsin - Stout Table 13. Criminal Justice: Race, Body, Health and Family Table Presider: Emerald Jones Citizen to Convict: The Consumption of the Body in the Age of Prisoner Reentry. CalvinJohn Smiley, Hunter College-City University of New York

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Monday

Session 354, continued from a Seniors Center in Turkey. Pinar Ustel, University of Michigan Good Care in the Elderly Care Sector of South Korea: Gendered Immigration and Ethnic Boundaries. Yangsook Kim, University of Toronto Table 19. Revisiting Social Theory: Weber, Mead, Sorokin, and Durkheim Table Presider: Arelia R. Johnson, Texas Southern University Max Weber and George Herbert Mead: Some Dissimilarities and their Implications. Michael M. Rosenberg, Concordia University Rationalized Love: A Weberian Analysis of the Romantic Sphere. Jessica Caryn Goldstein-Kral, University of Texas at Austin Philosophical Sources of Integralism. Robert Colbert Rhodes, University of Texas of the Permian Basin The Role of the State in Education: Classical Interpretations and Contemporary Implications. Amanda J. Brockman, Vanderbilt University Table 20. Diverse Themes: Race, Class, Gender, Culture, Religion, Health, and Organization Table Presider: Tasmiah Amreen, University of Arkansas Race, Ethnic, and Gender Heterogeneity in the Effect of College Bound Friends on College Enrollment. Steven Elias Alvarado, Cornell University She Keeps Me Warm: Religious and Sexual Identities in Emerging Adulthood. Patricia Snell Herzog, University of Arkansas; Tiffany E. Hood, University of Arkansas On Cybernetic Monsters: Cyborg Astronauts, Terrestrial Cryonauts, and the Cybernetic 1960s. Grant Shoffstall, Williams College Does Sector Matter? An Empirical Study in Organizational Sociology. Curtis D. Child, Brigham Young University America’s Obsession with Race, Money and Medicalization: Excessive Low-risk Cesarean Sections among African American Women. Lacey Caporale, Case Western Reserve University

355. Student Forum Workshop. Teaching In Our Contemporary Moment

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514A, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Kati Barahona-López, University of CaliforniaSanta Cuz Presider: Joseph Reynolds Van Der Naald, The Graduate Center, CUNY Panelists: Melissa Brown Jessie Daniels, Hunter College and The Graduate Center-CUNY Tanya Maria Golash-Boza, University of California, Merced Leisy Janet Abrego, University of California, Los Angeles

356. Regular Session. Disability and Social Life

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512D, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Tom W. Buchanan, Mount Royal University Presider: Tom W. Buchanan, Mount Royal University Human Rights, Technology, and Disabilities. Anne Bryden, Case Western Reserve University In Their Own Words: A Content Analysis of Diagnostic Experiences among Women on the Autism Spectrum. Sarah Hupp Williamson, North Carolina State University Just a Little Respect: Differences in Job Satisfaction among Individuals with and Without Disabilities. Jennifer Dennison Brooks, Syracuse University

The Transition to Adulthood for Persons With and Without Disabilities: An Examination of Five Adulthood Markers. Alexandra Krause, Florida State University; Koji Ueno, Florida State University Going the Extra Mile: Disclosure, Accommodation, and Stigma Management among Working Women with Disabilities. Mairead Eastin Moloney, University of Kentucky; Robyn Lewis Brown, University of Kentucky; Gabriele Ciciurkaite, Utah State University 357. Regular Session. Immigrants’ Access to Social Services, Health, and Health Care Palais des congrès de Montréal, 510D, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Tanya Maria Golash-Boza, University of California, Merced They Don’t Relate to Us: Perceptions of Care, Service, and Discrimination in Health Care Institutions. Amada Armenta, University of Pennsylvania; Heidy Sarabia, California State University-Sacramento Facilitating Conditions: Information and Access to Social Services among Undocumented Women. Dani Carrillo, UC Berkeley Permanent Injury Beyond Medical Intervention: Disguising Death in U.S. Immigrant Detention. Beatriz Aldana Marquez, Texas A&M University; Tiffany Amorette Young, Texas A&M University; Kay Sarai Varela, Texas A&M University; John Major Eason, Texas A&M University The Effect of Immigration Policy on Infant Health: The Arizona SB1070 as a Natural Experiment. Florencia Torche, Stanford University Immigration Legislation and Social/Civic Engagement: The Impact of the “Show Me Your Papers” Laws. Christopher Maggio, City University of New York-Graduate Center Discussant: Whitney Nicole Laster Pirtle, University of California Merced

358. Regular Session. Inequality and Interaction with the Health Care System

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 510C, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Emily Walton, Dartmouth College Presider: Katrina Hauschildt, University of Michigan Changing the Navigators’ Course: Brokerage and Healthcare for Unauthorized Immigrants under the ACA. Laura Lopez-Sanders, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill Complex Care and Contradictions of Choice in the Safety Net. Meredith Van Natta, University of California, San Francisco; Nancy J. Burke, University of California-Merced; Sara Rubin, University of California-San Francisco; Mark Fleming, University of California-Merced; Ariana Thompson-Lastad, University of California-San Francisco; Irene H. Yen, University of CaliforniaSan Francisco; Janet K. Shim, University of California-San Francisco Deconstructing Physicians Trust: An Evaluation of Trust in the United States and Iceland. Sigrun Olafsdottir, University of Iceland Vaccine Resistance and Medical Management: Surveillance and Parental Control in Pharmaceutical Decision-Making. Jennifer A. Reich, University of Colorado Denver Discussant: Celeste Campos-Castillo, University of WisconsinMilwaukee

359. Regular Session. Interracial Marriage/Assortive Mating Palais des congrès de Montréal, 510B, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Yang Hu, Lancaster University Presider: Yue Qian, University of British Columbia

Monday, August 14, 2017 Blurring Boundaries: Applying the Status Exchange Hypothesis to White-Latino Intermarriage. Emilce Santana, Princeton University Only Child Couple and Economic Inequality in China. Fangqi Wen, New York University The End of a Taboo? The Reputational Costs of Interracial Dating for U.S. Women. René Flores, University of Washington; Kali Vitek, University of Michigan Self-Rated Health Associations with Interracial and Inter-ethnic Marriage and Cohabitation in the United States. Lucia Christine Lykke, U.S. Census Bureau; Michael S. Rendall, University of Maryland Is Love Blind? Gender Differences in Mate Preferences among Online Daters in Shanghai. Yue Qian, University of British Columbia; Yang Shen, Shanghai Jiaotong University

360. Section on Community and Urban Sociology Refereed Roundtable Session and Business Meeting

Trading Affluence for Diversity? A Discrete Choice Analysis of the Neighborhood Destination Choices of Mixed-Race Couples. Amy L. Spring, Georgia State University Table 04. Environment and Health in the City Presider: William Michelson, University of Toronto Accessible Rations: A Study of Food Environment and Race in Forsyth County, North Carolina. Tangela G. Towns, WinstonSalem State University; Richard Greg Moye, Winston Salem State University Hazard Experience, Vulnerability, and Flood Risk Perceptions in a Post-Disaster City. Kevin Fox Gotham, Tulane University; Bradford Powers, Tulane University; Katie R. Lauve-Moon, Tulane University Providing HIV Treatment in Rural Areas: A Qualitative Analysis of Provider Perspectives. Heather Rodriguez, Central Connecticut State University Shared Environmental Vulnerabilities of Global Urbanism: Waste Management and the Treadmill of Production. Albert S. Fu, Kutztown University State Governments and/or Advantaged Neighbors: Changes in Neighborhood-Level Toxic Concentration at Multiple Geographic Scales, 2001-2010. Juyoung Lee, Brown University Table 05. Fringes and Suburbs Presider: Brian James McCabe, Georgetown University Choice Under Duress: Life in the Suburban Fringe of a Financialized San Francisco Bay Area. Mary Shi, UC Berkeley On the Challenges to (Studying) Suburbanization in the Global South: Zambia’s Urban Peripheries. Derek Roberts, The Copperbelt University The Legacy Effect: How Neighborhood Trajectories Matter to Organizational Deprivation in the Suburbs. Jennifer Bouek, Brown University; Benjamin Howard Bellman, Brown University Variations in Attitudes Toward Government Spending Across Urban and Rural Communities. Emily Sandusky, Cornell University Table 06. Gentrification Presider: Jason Patch, Roger Williams University Gentrification, Segregation or Deprivation? A Spatial Analysis of Residential Evictions in Brooklyn New York. Max Arthur Herman, New Jersey City University; Franklyn Arroyo, New Jersey City University; William Montgomery, New Jersey City University If You Build It, They Will Come: Retailers and Racial Gentrification. Mahesh Somashekhar, University of Washington The Role of Morality in Contemporary Urban Development. Vinay Kumar, State University of New York at Buffalo; Christopher Mele We’ve Been Doing Fine: Reframing Narratives of Disinvestment in Gentrifying Neighborhoods. Taylor Cain, Boston University Table 07. Global Urban Politics Presider: William G. Holt, Birmingham-Southern College Economy, Culture and the Role of Meaning in Public-Private Social Housing in Canadian Cities. Zachary Hyde, University of British Columbia Mobilizing Discourses in Urban Social Movements in Macau. Esther Hio-Tong Castillo, Moravian College The Party and the Peddlers: Enacting Social Exclusion through Policy Dialogue in Brazil. Jacinto Cuvi, University of Texas at

Monday

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517B, 10:30-11:30 a.m. Session Organizers: Jacob H. Lederman, University of Michigan-Flint Victoria Reyes, University of California, Riverside Table 01. Art and The Creative City How do Cultural Organizations in Semi-Peripheral Positions Pursue Legitimacy? Alexander Hoppe, University of Pennsylvania Making Jerusalem ‘Cooler’: Creative Script, Youth Flight, Diversity. Noga Keidar, University of Toronto Neighborhood Diversity and the Rise of Artist Hotspots: From Creative Class to Neighborhood Change. Corina Graif, The Pennsylvania State University Where is the Creative City? Metro- and Neighborhood-level Characteristics Associated with Arts Growth, 2001-2011. Matt Patterson, University of Calgary; Daniel Silver, University of Toronto Has Neo-Bohemia Changed: Neo-Bohemia and Neo-Bohemians in Philadelphia. Geoffrey Moss, Temple University; Rachel Wildfeuer, Temple University Table 02. Culture and Identities in the City Presider: Melis S. Kural, State University of New York-Buffalo Beyond the Labor Market: Meaning Making, Lifestyle Choice and Middle Class Economic Security. Alexis Mann, Brandeis University The Interplay between Inconspicuous Consumption and the Built Environment: Lessons from a New Delhi Neighborhood. Meenoo Kohli, University of California, Santa Cruz The Price of China Dream: Language Endangerment, Upward Mobility, and Social Exclusion in Shanghai. Fang Xu, University of California, Berkeley Urban Marginalization ‘from below’ in Youngstown, Ohio. James Rhodes, University of Manchester Table 03. Diversity and Urbanism Presider: Lauren Hughes Hannscott, Pennsylvania State University Diversity without Integration: A Case Study of Pro-Diversity Neighbors in a Racially Diverse Neighborhood. Gina Spitz, Loyola University Chicago Does Diversity in a Neighborhood Lead to a Diverse Social Life? Alan V. Grigsby, University of Cincinnati Precursors to Neighborhood Revitalization? Immigrant Growth and Neighborhood Change in New and Traditional Immigrant Settlement Areas. Rebbeca Tesfai, Temple University; Matt Ruther, University of Colorado; Janice Madden, University of Pennsylvania

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Monday

Session 360, continued Austin The Power Behind the Powerful: Public Good, Eminent Domain and Land Control in American Urban Centers. William G. Holt, Birmingham-Southern College Table 08. History, Belonging, and Collective Memory of Places Presider: Richard D. Lloyd, Vanderbilt University Feeling at Home in the City: Materials of Local Belonging in Helsinki and Madrid. Kaisa M. Kuurne, University of Eastern Finland; Victoria Gomez Ghosts, Doppelgängers, and Bêtes Noires: The Presence of Absent Neighborhoods in Urban Research. Jeffrey Nathaniel Parker, The University of Chicago Intersectional Consequences of Heritage Commodification in Cultural Enclave Neighborhoods. Jason Orne, Drexel University Neighborhood Legacies: Exploring the Importance of the History of Place and Its Influence on Today. Matthew James Martinez, Brown University; Johnelle Sparks, University of Texas at San Antonio Table 09. Housing 1 Presider: Nathanael T. Lauster, University of British Columbia Analyzing Accessory Dwelling Units on Long Island. Katrin B. Anacker, George Mason University; Christopher Niedt, Hofstra University Housing Wealth, Inter Vivos Transfers, and College Enrollment in the United States. Thomas Laidley, New York University Housing, Health and BMI in Australia. Bruce Keith Tranter, University of Tasmania; Jed Donoghue, University of Tasmania Social Support and Residential Stability in Privately Owned Assisted Housing. Kevin R. Beck, University of California- San Diego Speculators and Specters: Second Homeownership in Boston, Massachusetts. Meaghan Stiman, Boston University Table 10. Housing 2 Presider: Jennifer Rene Darrah-Okike, University of Hawaii How Race and Poverty Have Driven Changes in Housing Voucher Distributions Since the Great Recession. Rahim Kurwa, UCLA The Organization of Neglect: Limited Liability and Housing Disinvestment. Adam Silver Travis, Harvard University Variations in Responses among Faith-Based Affordable Housing to a Competitive Funding Environment. Patricia E. Tweet, St. John Fisher College; Christopher Mele Table 11. Images and the City Presider: Gordon Gauchat, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Capitalizing on Culture: The Case of Detroit. Mikell Alexandra Hyman, University of Michigan Inform and connect: Place Ambassadors and Social Capitalbased Economic Development. Joshua M. Hurwitz, Columbia University; Tara Vinodrai, University of Waterloo Race and Representation in France and the United States. Gregory Smithsimon, Brooklyn College CUNY; Yohann Le Moigne, Université d’Angers; Alex Schafran, University of Leeds The Reinvention of Urban Space through Culture: The Case of Rio de Janeiro. Bruno Couto Table 12. Informal Labor and Urbanism Presider: Dana Kornberg, University of Michigan Governing the Informal: Informal Settlements and Exclusion in

China, India, and Brazil. Xuefei Ren, Michigan State University Making it Work: Learning to Succeed in a Public Marketplace. Laura A. Orrico, Penn State University, Abington Redefining Urban amenities: Why and How to Include Non-tomoderate-Profit Cultural Spaces. Sampo Ruoppila, University of Turku Researching the ‘Backstage’ of the Creative Iindustries: The Socioeconomic Polarization within the Performance Arts of Brussels. Eva Swyngedouw, University of Brussels (VUB/ULB) Transitional Realities of Gentrification: Invoking Food Trucks in the Construction of the “Wynwood Vibe.” Renata Bozzetto, Florida International University; Jack Vertovec, Florida International University; Vasfiye Betul Toprak, Florida International University Table 13. Land and Property Presider: Bernadette Ludwig, Wagner College Social Housing in Mexico and in China: Political Economy of Urbanization and Local Context. Yu Chen, The University of Texas at Austin Temporality, Strategy, and Competing Ideologies in the Implementation of Community Land Trusts. Allison Reed, University of Chicago To Protect the Core Property: Public Housing Policy, Race, and Urban Redevelopment in Baltimore. Peter Rosenblatt, Loyola University Chicago What Explains the Housing Vacancy in Today’s China? Extra Property, Land Finance, and Work Unit. Zequn Tang, State University of New York-Albany Table 14. Politics and the City Creative City Development as a Displacement Process: A Skills-based Analysis using Agent-Based Modeling. Megan Robinson, Vanderbilt University Planning for Just Sustainability: Justice-Speak and Black Political Power. Alesia Montgomery, Stanford University Political Fields and the Production of Political Places. Christian Rosen, Goethe University Urban Politics and the Contradictions of Globalization: A Seattle Case Study. Jerome Hodos, Franklin & Marshall College Why Can’t I Stand in Front of My House? Street-Identified Blacks’ Negative Encounters with Police. Brooklynn K. Hitchens, Rutgers University, New Brunswick; Yasser A. Payne, University of Delaware; Darryl ChAmbers, University of Delaware Table 15. Race and Urban Development Presider: Watoii Rabii, State University of New York-Buffalo Immigration, Race, and Neighborhood Change on Buffalo’s West Side. Robert M. Adelman, State University of New YorkBuffalo; Aysegul Balta Ozgen, State University of New YorkBuffalo; Watoii Rabii, State University of New York-Buffalo Model Cities? Racial Segregation in Progressive Cities. Stephen Appold, University of North Carolina Saving Black Portland: Organizational Roles in Preserving a Disintegrating Community. Angela Addae, University of Arizona Straight Gods, White Devils: Exploring Paths to Non-Religion in the Lives of Black LGBTQ People. Simone Alexandra Kolysh, The CUNY Graduate Center The Social Production of Racialized Space. Steven Tuttle, Loyola University Chicago Table 16. Race/Ethnicity and Segregation Presider: Felipe Antonio Dias, University of California at Berkeley

Monday, August 14, 2017

Global and Regional Hierarchy in City and World-Systems. Hiroko Inoue, University of California, Riverside Networked Vouchers. Monica C. Bell, Harvard University Table 21: The Role of Neighborhoods Presider: Tamara G.J. Leech, IU Fairbanks School of Public Health Higher-Order Spatial Structures and the Reproduction of Neighborhood Inequality: Exploring the Metropolitan Area’s Role. Jared Nathan Schachner, Harvard University Measuring Neighborhood Collective Efficacy with “Big Data” from 311 Systems. Tina Law, Yale University Neighborhood Differences in Temporal Patterns. Linsey Nicole Edwards, Princeton University Neighborhood Mechanisms and the Intergenerational Transmission of Status. Jared Nathan Schachner, Harvard University Table 22. Urban Planning Presider: Ferzana Havewala, University of Baltimore Anticipating the Global City: Elite Planning in the 1960s Redevelopment of Lower Manhattan. Michelle Esther O’Brien, New York University Business Impact on Communities’ Economic Development and Austerity Policies: An Extension of the Growth-Machine Framework. Lazarus Adua, University of Northern Iowa; Linda Lobao, Ohio State University Invisible Industries: The Politics and Struggles of Port Development Coalitions in Southern California. Emily Helen Yen, UCLA Seeing for a City: How Civic Organizations Interpret Social Problems for City Administrations. Bryant Crubaugh, Pepperdine University Urban (Under)development and Class Politics at Semiperipheries: The Case of Łódź, Poland. Magdalena RekWozniak, University of Lodz

361. Section on Comparative-Historical Sociology. Politics and Power in Latin America

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 510A, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Cedric de Leon, Providence College Brokers, Clients and Elite Political Networks in Mexico. Tod Stewart Van Gunten, Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies Explaining the Paradox of Postwar Latin American Political Development. Simeon J. Newman, University of Michigan Political Party Articulation in Post-neoliberal Democracies. Gabriel Chouhy, University of Pittsburgh Two Primitive Accumulations Behind Political Articulation: A Case Study of Postrevolutionary Bolivia. Edwin F. Ackerman, Syracuse University Discussant: Diana Graizbord, University of Georgia

362. Section on Crime, Law, and Deviance. Innovation and New Directions in the Study of Communities, Crime, and Justice

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513A, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Lyndsay N. Boggess, University of South Florida Presider: William Alex Pridemore, University at Albany - SUNY Exploring the Impact of Urban Revitalization and Immigration on Homicides in San Antonio Communities, 1950-1969. Janice Anne Iwama, University of Massachusetts Boston; Ramiro Martinez, Northeastern University Dynamics of Neighborhood Disadvantage and Imprisonment. Jessica T. Simes, Boston University

Monday

Changing Racial Segregation in the New South Africa. Michael J. White, Brown University; Richard Ballard, Gauteng CityRegion Observatory; Christian Hamann, Gauteng City-Region Observatory; Anna Nicole Kreisberg, Brown University The Ties that Bind Us: A Process-Based Approach to Understanding Attachment to Place. Lindsey D. Cameron, University of Michigan U.S. Immigration, Residential Queuing, and Neighborhood Mobility among Native-Born Families, 1968-2011. Jeremy Pais, University of Connecticut Table 17. Segregation Presider: Melody L. Boyd, SUNY-Brockport A Blurry Telescope? Moving Out as a Method to Assess Ethnic Preferences. Lincoln G. Quillian, Northwestern University; Antonio Nanni, Northwestern University Preferences for Integration vs Behavior: Can Preferences Really Explain Segregation? Richard Greg Moye, Winston Salem State University Standard versus Observed Residential Segregation, 1980 and 2010. Wenquan (Charles) Zhang; John R. Logan, Brown University The Role of Barriers in Shaping Segregation Profiles: The Importance of Visualizing Local Effects. Rory Kramer, Villanova University Urban Transformations and the Changing Structure of Segregation in the 21st Century. Jackelyn Hwang, Princeton University; Elizabeth Roberto, Princeton University; Jacob S. Rugh, Brigham Young University Table 18. Social Capital and Urbanism Presider: Mark Hutter, Rowan University Fitting in: Churches, Community Context, and Social Capital. Christopher Michael Graziul, Brown University Participation and Community: A Study of Four Chicago Neighborhoods Revisited. Pat Donahue, George Mason University The Role of Trust in Examining Relationships in Neighborhoods in Transition. Christina R. Jackson, Stockton University Trust in the City: The Social Determinants of Trust in Chicago Neighborhoods. Michael Evangelist, University of Michigan Table 19. Sustainability and the City The City and the Conflict over Bike Lanes: Logos, Ethos and Pathos. Saeed Hydaralli, Roger Williams University The Successive Nature of City Parks: Making and Remaking Unequal Access over Time. James R. Elliott, Rice University; Elizabeth Korver-Glenn, University of New Mexico; Daniel Bolger, Rice University Urban Agriculture in New Orleans. Yuki Kato, Georgetown University Are There Any Left? Production of Istanbul’s Green Spaces. Basak Durgun, George Mason University “Lifers” and “Bike People:” How Competing Neighborhood Narrative Frames Reproduce Neighborhood Inequality. Sarah S. Hosman, Boston University Table 20. The Networked City City, Class, and the Location of Ties: A Spatial Analysis of Social Networks in Tehran. Jaleh Jalili, Brandeis University Contextualizing Collective Efficacy: Examining Sources of Neighborhood Attachment. Joy Kadowaki, Purdue University Global Cities and World Urban Networks and Hierarchies: Three Decades of Research. David A. Smith, University of CaliforniaIrvine; Michael Timberlake, University of Utah

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Session 362, continued An Integrated Multilevel Theory of Crime at Place: Routine Activities, Social Disorganization, and Crime Concentration. Roderick Jones, University of North Carolina - Wilmington; William Alex Pridemore, University at Albany - SUNY Fear of Crime and Neighborhood Exposures among Urban Youth. Christopher R. Browning, The Ohio State University; Bethany Boettner, The Ohio State University; Catherine Calder, The Ohio State University; Anna Mohr, The Ohio State University Building Bridges: Linking Old Heads to Collective Efficacy in Disadvantaged Communities. Karen F. Parker, University of Delaware; TaLisa J. Carter, University of Delaware; Heather Zaykowski, University of Massachusetts, Boston

363. Section on Ethnomethodology and Conversational Analysis. New Directions in Ethnomethodology and Conversation Analysis Research and Business Meeting

Monday

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 515C, 10:30-11:30 a.m. Session Organizer: Aug Nishizaka, Chiba University Invoking Death: The Management of Patient Resistance in Cancer Treatment. Alexandra Tate, UCLA New Directions in EMCA: Approaching Autism Spectrum Disorder from the Standpoint of Commonsense Knowledge. Douglas W. Maynard, University of Wisconsin; Jason Turowetz, University of Siegen Power in Go: Material Practice, a Perspicuous Setting, and Its Praxeological Implications. Philippe Sormani, Istituto Svizzero di Roma

364. Section on History of Sociology. The Historical Sociology of Social Science: Quebecois Perspectives (cosponsored with Section on Comparative-Historical Sociology) Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512G, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Peter Kivisto, Augustana College Presider: Peter Kivisto, Augustana College Adam Smith: Neglected, to Our Cost. John A. Hall, McGill University The Last Days of Durkheim’s Life. Marcel Fournier, Université de Montréal Quebec Sociology and How it Differentiates Itself From Mainstream Anglophone American Sociology. Jean-Philippe Warren, Concordia University Who Were the First Sociologists in France? A Long-term Perspective on Conflicting Narratives about the Birth of French Sociology. Sebastien Mosbah-Natanson, Paris Sorbonne University-Abu Dhabi Discussant: Chad Alan Goldberg, University of Wisconsin-Madison

365. Section on Human Rights. Human Rights and Law From Above and Below: Comparative Perspectives

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512F, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Frank Munger, New York Law School Presider: Kiyoteru Tsutsui, University of Michigan Inclusive Placemaking: Localizing Human Rights in Response to Global Urban Crises and Right-Wing Populism. Jackie Smith, University of Pittsburgh Too Much Pressure: The Intended and Unintended Consequences of Sousveillance. Ori Swed, University of Texas at Austin A Problem of Humanity: The Human Rights Framework and the Struggle for Racial Justice. Michael Rosino, University of Connecticut Secular Global Elites? Religious Identities, Context-Based

Knowledge, and Meaning-Making Processes within UN Spaces. Shanna Corner, University of Notre Dame Discussant: Kiyoteru Tsutsui, University of Michigan

366. Section on Inequality, Poverty and Mobility. Surviving and Escaping Poverty

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516E, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: David J. Harding, University of California at Berkeley Presider: Katherine Hood, UC Berkeley Faith, Poverty, and Place: Religious Congregations and Social Service Provision Across the United States. Jessica White Gillooly, University of Michigan; Scott W. Allard, University of Washington Daily Life under the “Specter of Dislocation” in the Mobile Home Park. Esther Sullivan, University of Colorado Denver Making Ends Meet while Sanctioned on TANF. Jessica Hausauer, Syracuse University Public Transfers and the Educational Attainment of Poor Mothers. Shauna Dyer, University of Michigan Wealth, Race, and Place: Neighborhood Effects on Wealth Inequality and the Racial Wealth Gap. Brian L. Levy, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

367. Section on Latino/a Sociology Refereed Roundtable Session and Business Meeting

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520A, 10:30-11:30 a.m. Session Organizers: Aurelia Lorena Murga, University of Texas at El Paso San Juanita García, University of California, Riverside Table 01. Framing Immigrant Discourses: Contesting Latina/o/x Belonging and Exclusion Table Presider: Alfonso R. Latoni, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIH) A Virtuous Country and its Deserving Immigrants. Walter Julio Nicholls; Justus Uitermark, University of Amsterdam Ethnic and Class Biases against Migrant Students in the Public Education System in Florida, U.S. Janese Free, Emmanuel College; Katrin Kriz, Emmanuel College Getting Schooled? The Questionable Role of Education in Influencing Latinos’ Immigration Attitudes. Raul S. Casarez, Rice University Racism and the Struggle for Dignity and Respect: A Comparison of Anti-Immigrant and Pro-Immigrant Activists. Carina A. Bandhauer, Western Connecticut State University Table 02. Latina/o/x Identities: Challenging Whiteness Table Presider: Isabel Sousa-Rodriguez, The Graduate Center CUNY Competing Identity Management: Latino/a and Non-Latino/a Attorneys in Criminal Immigration Proceedings. Jessie K. Finch, Stockton University The Racial Middle and the Earnings Gap: What Drives Lower Earnings for Latinos and Asians? Charlene Cruz-Cerdas, NYU Steinhardt Table 03. Exclusionary Policies and their Aftermath on the Lives of Latina/o/xs Table Presider: Gloria S. Vaquera, John Carroll University The Impact of Gun Trafficking Along the U.S.-Mexico Border. Omar Camarillo, Eastern New Mexico University The Role of Citizenship Status in the Formation of Latino Immigration Policy Preferences. Cassie Hudson, University of North Texas; Giselle Greenidge, University of North Texas; Shanae Jefferies, University of North Texas

Monday, August 14, 2017 White Ribbon Society: Local Immigration Commissions and Decision-Making. Felicia Arriaga, Duke University To Pimp the DREamer: Foundations, Nonprofit Organizations, and the Reification of Social Movements and Movement Actors. Michael P. Young, University of Texas-Austin; Phillip Vargas, University of Texas-Austin Table 04. Super Chingona/x Latina/o/x Table Presider: Nancy Lopez, University of New Mexico Because I’m a Fighter: Examining Salvadoran Women’s Leadership Toolkit. Karen Ivette Tejada, University of Hartford Capital Socio-Femenino: Latina Adolescent Street Vendors Protecting the Men in their Lives. Emir Estrada, Arizona State University What does it mean to return home? Narratives of Uncertainty and Hope. Betsabeth Monica Lugo, University of Texas at Austin Transformative Sociological Pedagogies in Chicana/Latina Studies. Elisa Facio, Eastern Washington University

368. Section on Mathematical Sociology. Open Topic

369. Section on Organizations, Occupations, and Work. Making Organizational Compliance Real

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516D, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Eunmi Mun, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign How Did That Happen? The Effects of Perceived Legitimacy on the Formality of Evaluative Cultures. Stacy E. Lom, University of Central Arkansas A Man Is Known by His Cup: Signaling Commitment via Costly Conformity. Minjae Kim, MIT Sloan School of Management Putting an Anti-Bullying Law in Place: Implementation Styles in Schools. Hana Shepherd, Rutgers University; Idit Fast, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Rapid Relationality: Staff Influence Over Line Members for Soldier Mental Healthcare. Julia DiBenigno, Yale University The Uneven Distribution of Professional Discretion: Parental Monitoring, Fiscal Reform, and Special Education Placement. Rebecca Ann Johnson, Princeton University

370. Section on Political Sociology. International Migration and Citizenship Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513E, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Prema Ann Kurien, Syracuse University

Presider: Prema Ann Kurien, Syracuse University Examining the Classical Diaspora: Immigrant Soldiers in the Israel Defense Forces. Karina Shklyan, University of California, San Diego Immigrants’ Political Integration: An Identity Politics Approach. Michael David Nicholson, University of California, San Diego Long-Term Care and Migrant Labour: Comparing Migrant Care Worker Policies in Korea and Taiwan. Yi-Chun Chien, University of Toronto Making Political Citizens? Migrants’ Narratives of Naturalisation in the United Kingdom. Leah Bassel, University of Leicester; Pierre Monforte, University of Leicester; Kamran Khan, Kings College London

371. Section on Racial and Ethnic Minorities. Race and Policing

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512E, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Robert Vargas, University of Notre Dame Local Legacies of Slavery and Contemporary Policing in the U.S. North and South. Matthew Ward, University of Southern Mississippi Racial Disparities in Arrest Rates. Kat Albrecht, Northwestern University; Beth Redbird, Northwestern University Spectacular Politics: Racial Visuality in the Deaths of Sam Hose, Emmett Till, and Michael Brown. Jennifer Carlson, University of Arizona; Michelle S. Phelps, University of Minnesota-Twin Cities Violent Policing in Context: A Critical Look at what Influences Officer Use of Force. Kayla A. Preito-Hodge, University of Massachusetts- Amherst Discussant: David Cunningham, Washington University in St. Louis

372. Section on Science, Knowledge, and Technology. Encoding Inclusion, Decoding Inequality

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 515A, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Alondra Nelson, Columbia University and Social Science Research Council Presider: Aneesh Aneesh, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee The Ferguson Effect: Public Sociology and the Making of an American Statistic. Joan M. Donovan, University of California Los Angeles Standardizing Biases: Selection Devices and the Quantification of Race. Daniel Hirschman, Brown University; Emily Bosk, Rutgers University Beating the Box: How Truckers Resist Surveillance. Karen Levy, Cornell University Fast Fashion Police: Data, Technology, and Retail Worker Monitoring. Madison Van Oort, University of Minnesota When Genetics Challenges a Racist’s Identity: Genetic Ancestry Testing among White Nationalists. Aaron Panofsky, University of California-Los Angeles; Joan M. Donovan, University of California Los Angeles

373. Section on Sociology of Culture. Public Cultural Sociology

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513C, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: David A. Smilde, Tulane University Presider: David A. Smilde, Tulane University Panelists: Orlando Patterson, Harvard University Abigail C. Saguy, UCLA David A. Smilde, Tulane University Mary Blair-Loy, University of California-San Diego Craig Calhoun, Berggruen Institute

Monday

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512H, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Alison J. Bianchi, University of Iowa Presider: Alex Hanna, University of Toronto A Model for Innovation Diffusion with Intergroup Suppression. Joseph M. Whitmeyer, UNC Charlotte; Shariq Husain, Jawaharlal Nehru University Costly Communication? Situation Awareness and Tie Preservation in Disrupted Environments. Sean M. Fitzhugh, U.S. Army Research Laboratory; Arwen DeCostanza, U.S. Army Research Laboratory; Norbou Buchler, U.S. Army Research Laboratory; Diane Ungvarsky, U.S. Army Research Laboratory Linking Inputs, Outcomes, and their Distributions. Guillermina Jasso, New York University Mathematically Modeling How Bureaucrat-Civilian Interactions Affect International Travel and Migration Flows. Jacob Richard Thomas, University of California-Los Angeles On the Reliability of Friendship. Francis Lee, University of CaliforniaIrvine; Carter T. Butts, University of California-Irvine

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374. Section on Sociology of Law. Law and Culture

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513D, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Kathryne M. Young, University of Massachusetts at Amherst Presider: Nathan Shelton, University of Wisconsin-Madison Integrating Organizational Legal Cultures: Sex Discrimination in Health Care Settings. Anna Kirkland, University of Michigan Landlord Constructions of Fair Housing Compliance in the Information Age. Anna Reosti, University of Washington Legality and Exclusion: Discrimination, Legal Cynicism and System Avoidance across the European Roma Experience. Ioana Sendroiu, University of Toronto; Ron Levi, University of Toronto Vulnerability and the College Kid: Legal Consciousness, Categories of Risk, and the Contestation of Title IX. Kathryn Hendricks, University of Chicago “Once Again, a Meth Lab Exploded and Somebody Died”: Constructing a Rural War on Drugs. Kevin Revier, State University of New York at Binghamton

Monday

375. Section on Sociology of Mental Health. Biosociology, Neurosociology and Mental Health

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513F, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Anne Frances Eisenberg, SUNY- Geneseo Presider: Anne Frances Eisenberg, SUNY- Geneseo Bi-Chloride of Gold and the Ebullience of Addiction. Austin Abernethy Stimpson Jenkins, Northwestern University Depression and Mortality: Investigating the Role of Cognitive Impairment and Cause of Depression. Sarah Garcia, University of Minnesota Mindfulness and Mental Health: Survivors of Homicide and their Providers. Stephanie W. Hartwell, University of Mass-Boston Why Do We Need the Frontal Lobes? The Neurological Foundations of Complex Human Social Life. Rengin Bahar Firat, Georgia State University Discussant: Anne Frances Eisenberg, SUNY- Geneseo

376. Section on Sociology of Population. Health and Inequality across the Life Course

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514C, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Margot Jackson, Brown University Coming of Age in an Unequal State: The Life Course Effects of Economic Inequality on Health. Beth Truesdale, Harvard University Early Parental Investment and Child Development Trajectories. Lingxin Hao, Johns Hopkins University The Health Costs of Upward Mobility. Lauren M. Gaydosh, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Kathleen Mullan Harris, University of North Carolina; Kristen M. Schorpp, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Towards Understanding Young Adults’ Socioeconomic Circumstances in Health Inequality Research: Smoking as a Case Example. Thierry Gagné, Université de Montréal; Katherine L. Frohlich, Université de Montréal Discussant: Patricia Ann Homan, Duke University

377. Section on Sociology of Sex and Gender. Feminist Perspectives on Science and Technologies

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 515B, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Emily S. Mann, University of South Carolina Presider: Miranda R. Waggoner, Florida State University A Tilted Playing Field: Expertise and the Institutional Reproduction

of Sex Difference. Madeleine Pape, University of WisconsinMadison Am I Pregnant? Technology, Self-management, and Power. Joan H. Robinson, Columbia University Care in the Lab: A Feminist Analysis of Environmental Epigenetics. Martine Lappe, Columbia University Digitally Divided Citizenship: Black Women’s Negotiation of Felony Disenfranchisement in the Digital Era. Susila Gurusami, University of California, Los Angeles Doing Gender Differently: Race and Resistance in Hormonal Contraceptive Use. Krystale Littlejohn, Occidental College Discussant: Miranda R. Waggoner, Florida State University

378. Section on Teaching and Learning in Sociology. Social Problems and the Gen Ed Core: What Should We Cover? Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513B, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Kathleen Lowney, Valdosta State University Presider: Kathleen Lowney, Valdosta State University Curricular Diversity: Do We Include Persons with Disabilities in Introductory Sociology Course Content. Sabrina Marks; Marisa Lucca, University of Central Florida; Elizabeth Grauerholz, University of Central Florida Future Citizens and Social Problems. Carl B. Backman, Auburn University

11:10 a.m.

Meetings

Committee on Awards Palais des congrès de Montréal, 523A, 11:10 a.m.-12:10 p.m.

11:30 a.m.

Meetings

Section on Community and Urban Sociology Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517B, 11:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Section on Ethnomethodology and Conversational Analysis Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 515C, 11:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Section on Latino/a Sociology Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520A, 11:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m.

12:30 p.m.

Sessions

379. Plenary Session. The Pursuit of Inclusion through Law, Policies, Narratives and Other Means Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517D, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Michèle Lamont, Harvard University Presider: Michèle Lamont, Harvard University Multiculturalism as an Ethic of Membership. Will Kymlicka, Queen’s University Lines in the Sand, Stone Walls, and Narrative Redrawings: Religion and Boundary-making in Postsecular Quebec. Genevieve Zubrzycki, University of Michigan Toward a Practice of Economic Advancement. Christopher Stone, Open Society Foundation Perceived Interdependence and Multiracial Coalition Building. William Julius Wilson, Harvard University Discussant: Prerna Singh, Brown University Across the globe, societies are pulled apart by conflicts driven

Monday, August 14, 2017 by linguistic, religious and ethno-racial differences, poverty and inequality, nativity, and more. Yet, hope persists against all odds, fed by normative commitments for belonging, solidarity, and social justice. This plenary features social scientists who are asked to reflect on actual and potential political and societal tools for achieving a better future and more successful societies. They will discuss some of the main challenges we face, and ways to make symbolic and social boundaries more permeable for greater social inclusion.

2:30 p.m.

Meetings

Opportunities in Retirement Network (ORN) Advisory Board Palais des congrès de Montréal, 523B, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Section Officers with the Committee on Sections Palais des congrès de Montréal, 518B, 2:30-4:10 p.m.

2:30 p.m.

Sessions

380. Presidential Panel. ASA Town Hall: Promoting Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion in Sociology

381. Thematic Session. Moving On Up: Symbolic Boundary Creation and Upward Mobility amongst Middle and Professional Classes in the Global South

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511B, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizers: Swethaa S. Ballakrishnen, New York UniversityAbu Dhabi Jules Naudet, CNRS-EHESS Presider: Jules Naudet, CNRS-EHESS Multi-class Families, Regional Disparities and the Emergence of Middle Classes in Africa. Carola Lentz, University of Mainz San Felipe: Middle-Class Groups Meet. Omar Pereyra, Pontificia Universidad Catolica del Peru Beyond Boon, Doom and Balance: Upwardly Mobile Women in India’s Professional Firms. Swethaa S. Ballakrishnen, New York University-Abu Dhabi Discussant: Jules Naudet, CNRS-EHESS Over the last three decades, global inequality has become increasingly characterized by within-country rather than betweencountry income inequality (Firebaugh 2003). And while there is contestation over the role globalization plays in this process (Giddens 1999), the diffusion of neoliberalism has undoubtedly shaped the way in which mobility is experienced and symbolic

boundaries are traced across the world. This panel seeks to critically examine the contemporary reconfiguration of this stratification amongst upper-middle, middle and professional classes in global south sites where these processes are particularly rampant. We invite papers that decode the ways in which established social structures and traditional hierarchies in these countries are being renegotiated through social, cultural and economic processes. Unlike established postindustrial societies, we expect sites in the global south to allow us a window into understanding meaning-making processes as a response to global cultural references and exchanges. We not only seek to gain a better understanding of the composition of these new kinds of elite mobility but also of the ways in which the boundaries that demarcate “elite”, “professionals” and “middle class” are defined anew in a globalizing world. What are the new markers of class in these sites? How do these frame pre-existing norms and cultural repertoires? What can that tell us about the complex relationship between globalization and stratification? We expect these comparisons to help inform new ways of understanding both similarities and difference between national cases; as well as to introduce new ways of thinking through concepts and methodologies inherited from the West.

382. Thematic Session. Panel Discussion: Culture, Social Science Research, and Policymaking

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511D, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizers: Jal D. Mehta, Harvard University David J. Harding, University of California at Berkeley Presider: David J. Harding, University of California at Berkeley Panelists: Jal D. Mehta, Harvard University John L. Campbell, Dartmouth College Adam Gamoran, William T. Grant Foundation Thomas M. Medvetz, University of California, San Diego Alonzo Plough, Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Much social science research is motivated by a desire to solve social problems through informed policymaking and practice. This session explores the role of culture in structuring the reception and use of social science research in the policymaking process and implementation of policies and programs. What can we learn about the role of social science research in policymaking from applying the conceptual tools of cultural sociology? How do the cultural logics of policymakers and policymaking institutions influence how they use, misuse, or ignore evidence from social scientists? When and how do ideas and knowledge travel from academia to public discourse and policy debates? Panelists from both inside and outside academia will address these questions across policy domains and in comparative perspective.

383. Thematic Session. Post-Bourdieusian Theoretical Agendas

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511E, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Pierre-Michel Menger, College de France Presider: John Levi Martin Social Aesthetics as a General Cultural Sociology. John Levi Martin; Benjamin Merriman, University of Kansas Consecration as a Social Process of Valuation. Fabien Accominotti, London School of Economics Boundary Work and Labor Exploitation. Ashley E. Mears, Boston University Talent and Creativity at Work: The New Social Physics of Inequality. Pierre-Michel Menger, College de France Discussant: Mustafa Emirbayer, University of Wisconsin at Madison

Monday

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517D, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Michèle Lamont, Harvard University Panelists: Jean H. Shin, American Sociological Association Tanya Maria Golash-Boza, University of California, Merced Adia M. Harvey Wingfield, Washington University in St. Louis Monica McDermott, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Michèle Lamont, Harvard University ASA staff will present data on the representation of various groups in the ASA leadership. The President will discuss what the ASA has done to address concerns about inclusion in our professional association and, together with three council members, will engage in an exchange with the audience concerning what we can do better. We will address not only diversity in our organization, but larger issues about participation, cultural citizenship, and marginalization in departmental life and higher education more generally. Please join us for constructive conversation about concrete steps ahead.

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Session 383, continued This session explores the contemporary fruitfulness of Pierre Bourdieu’s work for setting new theoretical agendas. It features contemporary research breaking new theoretical ground by going back directly to the work of Bourdieu and developing original readings of it, or building on some of its previously overlooked aspects. The session pays special attention to issues of culture and social boundaries, two themes that stand prominently on the Annual Meeting’s agenda. The work of panelists will illustrate how Bourdieuinspired insights into these themes can be creatively recombined to think anew about stratification, reproduction, and inequality in contemporary societies. Most significantly, these new theoretical developments share an interest in understanding these phenomena at a finer-grained level than was typically done in prior waves of Bourdieusian research. Presentations will reflect in particular on how Bourdieu’s sociology of culture may serve as a foundation for a social aesthetics and a general cultural sociology (Martin and Merriman); on the mutual constitution of cultural and social structures and its relevance for thinking about status and valuation (Accominotti); on the influence of the Bourdieusian legacy for theorizing processes of exploitation (Mears); and on the new social physics of inequality (Menger).

Monday

384. Thematic Session. Secularism and Religion in the Public Sphere: Unintended Cultural Consequences

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511A, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Michele Dillon, University of New Hampshire Presider: Gene Burns, Michigan State University From the Axial Age to our Age: Religious Explanations of the World and their Rejections. John C. Torpey, Graduate Center, City University of New York The Liberal Politicization of Pope Francis’s Critique of Climate Change. Michele Dillon, University of New Hampshire Strangers in a Strange Election. Michael Hout, New York University; Arlie Russell Hochschild, University of California-Berkeley Discussant: Gene Burns, Michigan State University This panel will offer diverse perspectives on the cross-cutting ways in which religious ethics and secular pressures are re-orienting American society. The first paper, by John Torpey, will critique recent theorizing on the so-called axial age by demonstrating how its onesided, religious-ideas framework for the emergence of modernity does not satisfactorily account for the persistence of cultural conflicts and societal problems. In the second presentation, Michele Dillon will discuss the secular reception of Pope Francis’s critique of climate change, drawing attention to its politicization in the U.S. by those on the left (as well as the right), and how this politicization contributes to distorting public communication. This will be followed by a conversation between Michael Hout and Arlie Hochschild on the growing religious and cultural divide in the U.S. Hout will draw on national survey data, and Hochschild on her qualitative research in Louisiana, to explore current tensions at the intersection of religion, secularism, and political culture. The panel discussant, Gene Burns, will draw on his expertise in religion and political sociology to offer integrating remarks and reflections on the issues at stake.

385. Special Session. Religion’s Role in International Conflicts and Violence (cosponsored with Association for the Sociology of Religion) Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513A, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Michael O. Emerson, North Park University Presider: Michael O. Emerson, North Park University

Understanding the Forms and Tactics of Religious Conflicts. Roger Finke, Pennsylvania State University Is There Anything New about Contemporary Religious Violence and Terror? James K. Wellman, University of Washington Religion as a Weapon of War: An Anthropological and Ethnographic Account. Jordan Kiper, University of Connecticut Discussant: Sarah L. MacMillen, Duquesne University This session invites scholars to discuss religion’s role in violent international conflicts. Papers to be presented in this session contribute to our empirical understandings about religious conflicts, advance the development of scholarly understandings of religious violence and terror, and draw our attention to methodological concerns about religion’s role in global peace and violence.

386. Special Session. The Rise of Sociogenomics: Cultural Context and Consequences

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512A, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Catherine Bliss, UCSF Presider: Sara N. Shostak, Brandeis University The Advances in Genomics and Its Potential Benefits to Sociology. Guang Guo, University of North Carolina Genetics and Social Science: Rising Interest, Rising Resistance. Jeremy Freese, Stanford University Susceptible to Genetic Influence? Gene-Environment Interaction in Disciplinary Perspective. Sara N. Shostak, Brandeis University Genetic data and methods have a growing presence in sociology as well as other social scientific disciplines. In recent years, the new research fields of genoeconomics, genopolitics, and genosociology have emerged. What aspects of contemporary American scientific, political, or popular culture have favored the rise of such fields? And what are their likely consequences? This panel will combine presentations from leading sociologists who are currently working to integrate genetic research into social science and those from sociologists who are studying the ramifications of their efforts.

387. Author Meets Critics Session. National Colors: Racial Classification and the State in Latin America (Oxford University Press, 2014) Mara Loveman Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511F, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Yasemin Soysal, University of Essex Presider: Mabel Berezin, Cornell University Critics: Edward E. Telles, University of California-Santa Barbara Tiffany D. Joseph, Stony Brook University Marc J. Ventresca, University of Oxford Author: Mara Loveman, University of California, Berkeley

388. Regional Spotlight Session. Everett C. Hughes, Montreal and French Canada

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 515B, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Marcel Fournier, Université de Montréal Presider: Marcel Fournier, Université de Montréal French Canada after the Transition: Furthering the Sociological Dialogue in/on North America. Jean-Francois Cote, Université du Québec à Montréal Insight through Craftsmanship: The Sociological Legacy of Everett Hughes. Richard Helmes-Hayes, University of Waterloo Everett C. Hughes, Jean-Charles Falardeau and the Programme De Recherches Sociales. Simon Langlois, Universite Laval The making of French Canada in Transition and of its French Translation. Philippe Vienne, Université Libre de Bruxelles Discussant: Andrew Abbott, University of Chicago

Monday, August 14, 2017

389. Professional Development Workshop. From Dissertation to Book

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512B, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Dawn R. Norris, University of Wisconsin-La Crosse Co-Leaders: Valerie L. Chepp, Hamline University Kristen Barber, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale Tristan Bridges, The College at Brockport - SUNY A completed but unpublished dissertation differs greatly from a book based on dissertation research. Dissertations use a clear methodology to research and explain a topic to a scholarly community so that advisers will understand and validate the work. By contrast, a published book must tell the story of research differently, with fresh insight, clarity, and a new audience in mind. This workshop focuses on how to make the writing transition from dissertation to book. It outlines: (1) differences between the dissertation and the book manuscript; (2) the intermediate stages in transforming dissertation research into a book manuscript; (3) common barriers to this transformation and strategies to overcome them; and (4) elements of a book prospectus. The workshop will provide informational materials and will include a brief audience Q&A and a hands-on workshop in which participants will work on one of three stages in the book development process: (1) deciding whether to write a book/writing the proposal; (2) shopping the proposal/negotiating the contract; or (3) writing the full manuscript/ preparing for marketing.

390. Policy and Research Workshop. New Tools for Measuring Culture

391. Teaching Workshop. GIFTS: Good Ideas for Teaching Sociology and for Publishing in TRAILS

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512C, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Julie Pelton, University of Nebraska - Omaha Leader: Julie Pelton, University of Nebraska - Omaha Panelist: Jaime Hecht, American Sociological Association Join TRAILS staff for a workshop experience designed to help deepen participants’ appreciation of the value of publishing in TRAILS for both professional development and improved teaching practice. Walk away with new concrete ideas. Learn how to construct a strong TRAILS submission. Talk with TRAILS authors and area editors. Leave with ideas for turning your teaching innovation into a publication!

392. Regular Session. Contemporary Methods and Findings in Public Opinion Research

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512D, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Alicia D. Simmons, Colgate University Presider: Alicia D. Simmons, Colgate University Text Regression for Open-Ended Survey Responses. Ethan Fosse, Princeton University Case Studies of Desegregation/Resegregation: How Opinion Polling Can Help Establish External Validity. Toby L. Parcel, North Carolina State University; Stephen Samuel Smith, Winthrop University; Virginia Riel, North Carolina State University; Madison Boden, Wells Fargo Lagging Socio-Economic Indicators of the Great Recession. Tom W. Smith, National Opinion Research Center Framing Inequality: How Exposure to Poverty and Wealth Shapes Attitudes toward Inequality. Delaram Takyar, New York University Can Politicians Shape Public Attitudes Towards Immigrants? Evidence from the 2016 U.S. Presidential Election. René Flores, University of Washington

393. Regular Session. Educational Change and Its Impact: A Long Term Perspective Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511C, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Soo-yong Byun, The Pennsylvania State University Presider: Brielle Eileen Bryan, Harvard University Unequal School Contexts Over Two Decades: Moving Beyond Race and Free Lunch Composition. Kendra Bischoff, Cornell University; Ann Owens, University of Southern California The Value of Associate Degree, Vocational Diploma and Certificate, and College Dropout on 20-Year Longterm Earnings. ChangHwan Kim, University of Kansas; Christopher R. Tamborini, U.S. Social Security Administration Global Trends in Socioeconomic Segregation between Schools, 1964-2015. Anna Katyn Chmielewski, University of Toronto Global/Structural Changes in Education Systems: High Stakes Examinations and Tracking, 1960-2010. Jared Furuta, Stanford University Discussant: Josipa Roksa, University of Virginia

394. Regular Session. Ethnic Conflict in a Global Context

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512E, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Peter Simi, Chapman University Presider: Peter Simi, Chapman University Colonization, Institutionalized Inequality and the Production of Ethno-religious Conflict in Northern Ireland. Lachlan McNamee, Stanford University

Monday

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 515C, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: John W. Mohr, University of California-Santa Barbara Leader: John W. Mohr, University of California-Santa Barbara Co-Leader: Robin E. Wagner-Pacifici, The New School for Social Research Panelists: Ronald L. Breiger, University of Arizona Monica Lee, Facebook, Inc. Laura K. Nelson, University of California Berkeley Andrew J. Perrin, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Henk Roose, Ghent University The sociological study of culture has long been advanced through qualitative methods that focus on problems of interpretation, hermeneutics, subjectivity, “thick description,” and the study of implicit knowledge. Over the last 25 years quantitative sociologists have also increasingly been turning their attention to the study of culture. Initially this work embraced a production of culture approach which de-emphasized cultural content in favor of studies of cultural organizations and markets, but more recently we have also seen many new projects that seek to use formal methods to pursue more interpretative analyses of culture. This tendency has accelerated with the rise of social network modeling and more recently with an explosion of techniques for Big Data analysis, as many more opportunities are opening up to study culture in its relational aspects (both social and semiotic), to mine cultural content that is stored in digital formats, and to move from content analysis to the large-scale study of (what many analysts consider to be) unmediated text data. In this workshop we will review some of the main styles of formal studies of culture with the goal of providing a general overview of these methodologies, showing what they can and cannot do, and pointing workshop attendees to other important citations, training resources, and new research tools. Topics include forms of cultural analysis that employ network analysis methods, correspondence analysis, computational linguistics, social media data as well as other forms of Big Data.

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Session 394, continued Contested Hierarchy: The Intensification of Ethnic Stereotype among Chinese Migrants in Australian Cash-In-Hand Job Market. Yao-Tai Li, University of California-San Diego Social Closure and ‘Boundary Nesting’: A Sunni-Turkish Majority vs. Kurdish and Alevi Minorities. Zeki Sarigil, Bilkent University Territorial Conflict and Japanese Attitudes towards East Asian Countries: A Natural Experiment. Akira Igarashi, Tohoku University

395. Regular Session. Explaining Social Action through the Perspectives of Culture and Cognition Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516E, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Vanina Leschziner, University of Toronto Presider: Vanina Leschziner, University of Toronto Action, Motivation, and Identity: A Consideration of Identity as Means and Ends. Scott Beck, New School for Social Research Bounded Reflexivity: How Expectations Shape Careers. Lawrence Hamilton Williams, University of Toronto; Scott K. Montgomery, Cornerstone OnDemand Talking Your Self Into It: On the Motivational Significance of Accounts. Daniel A. Winchester, Purdue University; Kyle Green, Utica College He Heard, She Heard: Toward a Cultural Sociology of the Senses. Alessandra Lembo, University of Chicago Neuroculture and the Self: Constructing Identity after Brain Injury. Jorie Hofstra, Rutgers; Jan Verstraete, Montclair State University

Monday

396. Regular Session. Fatherhood, Parental Leave and Gender Inequality

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516A, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: David J. Maume, University of Cincinnati Presider: Sarah Thebaud, Unviersity of California Santa Barbara Attitudes, Patterns, and Predictors of Paternity Leave-Taking among U.S. Fathers. Richard J. Petts, Ball State University; Chris Knoester, Ohio State University; Qi Li, Ohio State University Parental Leave Use by Fathers, Relationship Promotion, and Paternal Engagement in Fragile Families. Brianne Pragg, Pennsylvania State University Damned If You Do and Damned If You Don’t? Care-based Leaves and Gender Equality. Leann M. Tigges, University of WisconsinMadison; Miriam Barcus, University of Wisconsin-Madison; Jungmyung Kim, University of Wisconsin-Madison Contested Hegemony: Fatherhood Wage Effects across Two U.S. Birth Cohorts. Lynn Prince Cooke, University of Bath; Irene Boeckmann, University of Toronto Discussant: David Pedulla, Stanford University

397. Regular Session. Immigration to the United States

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 510D, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Shobha Hamal Gurung, Southern Utah University Presider: Cristina Lacomba, Harvard University Assimilation or Alienation? The Case of American Muslim Religiosity and Immigration. Laila Noureldin Assimilation’s Flavor: Mexican Food and American Cuisine. Anna Boch, Stanford University; Tomas R. Jimenez, Stanford University; Katharina Roesler, Stanford University Immigrant integration in new destinations: Co- and inter-ethnic social and work networks in Oregon. Emily J. Wornell, Ball State University The Blackulturation of West African Immigrant Youth in New York

City. Dialika Sall, Columbia University Undocumented Mexican Migration and Children’s Educational Attainment: An Instrumental Variable Analysis. Pat Rubio Goldsmith, Texas A&M University

398. Regular Session. Internet and Society: Identity, Connectivity, and Integration

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 510C, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Wenhong Chen, University of Texas at Austin Identity Work and Emotion Management: Invisible Forms of Digital Inequality. Laura Robinson, Santa Clara University Connected Seniors: How Connected Seniors: How Older Adults Exchange Social Support On and Offline. Barry Wellman, University of Toronto; Anabel Quan-Haase, University of Western Ontario; Guang Ying Mo, University of Toronto; Helen Hua Wang, University of Buffalo; Alice (Renwen) Zhang, Northwestern University Connecting and Disconnecting: Social Media Adoption and School Social Integration. Hana Shepherd, Rutgers University; Jeffrey Lane, Rutgers University The Physical-Digital Divide: Exploring the Social Gap between Digital Natives and Physical Natives. Christopher Ball, Michigan State University; Jessica Francis, Michigan State University; Kuo-Ting Huang, Michigan State University; Travis Kadylak, Michigan State University; Shelia R. Cotten, Michigan State University; RV Rikard, Michigan State University

399. Regular Session. Kinship, Support, and Social Inequality

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 510A, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Natalia Sarkisian, Boston College Presider: Deniz Yucel, William Paterson University Material Hardship and Access to Routine Assistance from Family and Friends. Colin Campbell, East Carolina University Inequality and Intergenerational Solidarity: Cash Flows from Parents to Children. Marc Szydlik, University of Zurich; Bettina Isengard, University of Zurich; Ronny König, University of Zurich Racial Differences in Household Responses to Economic Adversity. Yuqi Lu, Cornell University Social Capital in Context: How Low-Income Families Access Public Benefits. Denia Garcia, Princeton University Discussant: Christine A. Mair, University of Maryland, Baltimore County

400. Regular Session. Labor, Gender and Care Work

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 510B, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Heidi Gottfried Becoming Homecare Workers: Chinese Immigrant Women in California’s Oakland Chinatown. Jennifer Jihye Chun, University of Toronto; Cynthia J. Cranford, University of Toronto Rethinking ‘Labor’ through Surrogacy Practices. Anabel Stoeckle, Wayne State University Duplicitous Freedom: Dichotomous Markets of Care in Global Human Trafficking Rescue. Elena Shih, Brown University Urban Theory, Demographic Aging and Paid Reproductive Labour in the Global City. Feng Xu, University of Victoria; Kendra Strauss, Simon Fraser University Discussant: Mary Romero, Arizona State University

Monday, August 14, 2017

401. Regular Session. Migrants and Global Labor Markets

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516B, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Thomas Georg Soehl, McGill University Presider: Yuval Feinstein, University of Haifa Influence of Fatalism on Migration. Arland Thornton, University of Michigan; Jeffrey Swindle, University of Michigan; Nathalie E. Williams, University of Washington; Linda Young-DeMarco, University of Michigan; Cathy Sun, University of Michigan; Christina Hughes, University of Washington Mapping Feminized Migration Globally: 1960-2000. Joya Misra, University of Massachusetts-Amherst; Ragini Saira Malhotra, University of Massachusetts-Amherst; Diego Leal, University of Massachusetts-Amherst The “Migrant in the Market”: Migration and Care Work Across Six Liberal Welfare Regimes. Naomi Lightman, University of Calgary “Expanding” or “Crowded-out”? Migratory Incentives of Chinese Immigrants in Ghana. Jinpu Wang, Syracuse University Discussant: Deisy Del Real, UCLA

402. Regular Session. Welfare State 1: Drivers, Dimensions, and Consequences of Subnational Policy Variation in the United States

403. Section on Community and Urban Sociology. Creative Class Cities: Promises Made, Promises Broken

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513B, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizers: Rachael A. Woldoff, West Virginia University Greggor Mattson, Oberlin College Cities in Love with Themselves: Distinctiveness, Innovations and Inequalities in Urban Cascadia. Ryan Centner, London School of Economics Goodbye to All That: Leaving the Creative Class City. Rachael A. Woldoff, West Virginia University; Robert C. Litchfield, Washington and Jefferson College Mobile and Plugged In: Navigating Co-Living Networks in PostIndustrial Urban Los Angeles. Jeffrey L. Sternberg, Northeastern University The Consequences of the Creative Class during the Great Recession: Was the Creative Class Recession-Proof? Qiong (Miranda) Wu; Michael E. Wallace, University of Connecticut The Effect of Gentrification on Community Connection. Joseph R. Gibbons, San Diego State University; Michael Barton, Louisiana State University; Timothy Reling, Louisiana State University Discussant: Prentiss A. Dantzler, Colorado College

404. Section on Comparative-Historical Sociology. The Politics of Experts and Expertise

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 515A, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Barry Eidlin, McGill University Companies and the Rise of Economic Thought. Emily Anne Erikson, Yale University; Mark Hamilton, Yale University Institutional Logics and the Veterans Administration Post-War Reforms: Implementation in its Mental Health System. Greg Greenberg, Veterans Health Administration Mediating Party and Public: Intellectuals and the Resurgence of Right-to-Work in the Industrial Midwest. Johnnie Anne Lotesta, Brown University Organizing Psychiatry: How Public Workers Shape Social Services. Isabel M. Perera, University of Pennsylvania

405. Section on Environment and Technology. Sustainabilities: Ideologies and Practices

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513E, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Tammy L. Lewis, CUNY-Brooklyn College Presider: Stella M. Capek, Hendrix College The Town That Food Saved? Investigating the Promise of a Local Food Economy in Vermont. Kathryn Ann Olson, Boston College When Win-Win Loses: Inequality and the Failure of Urban Sustainability Policy in Bloomberg’s New York. Daniel Aldana Cohen, University of Pennsylvania Integrating the Just Sustainabilities Framework and Theories of Justice to Understand Variations in Community Engagement. Laura Senier, Northeastern University; Lauren Contorno, Northeastern University; Boris Templeton, Northeastern University Sustainability without Environmental Justice: The Clean Air Act as a Cautionary Tale for Solar Energy Development. Shannon Elizabeth Bell, University of Kentucky Planetary Improvement: Cleantech and the New Green Spirit of Capitalism. Jesse Goldstein, Virginia Commonwealth University

406. Section on Inequality, Poverty and Mobility. The Diverse and the Poor: Policy Effects on the Poor

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514A, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Alexandra Kalev, Tel Aviv University Presider: Vincent J. Roscigno, Ohio State University Crisis Capital and Ecological Benevolence: How Relief Organizations Reproduce Poverty and Privilege in Urban Disasters. Sancha Doxilly Medwinter, University of Massachusetts- Amherst Enumerating the Homeless: Methodological Improvements using Student Researchers. Curtis Smith, Utah State University; Ernesto Castaneda, American University Local Paid Sick Leave Policy and Low Wage Workers: Evidence from an Intersectional Approach. Cynthia Deitch, George Washington University Race, Welfare, and the Risk of Child Poverty among the 48 Contiguous United States. Zachary Parolin, Herman Deleeck Centre for Social Policy, University of Antwerp

407. Section on Latino/a Sociology. Latinas/os and Gentrification

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512G, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Victor M. Rios, University of California, Santa Barbara A Battle of Worths: Symbolic boundaries, community conflict and notions of progress. Melissa Mercedes Valle

Monday

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516D, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Ann Shola Orloff, Northwestern University Expanding Family Policy: Women, Labor, and the Politics of Family Leave across U.S. States, 1983-2016. Cassandra Engeman, Uppsala University Laboratories of Democracy (Thousands of Them): Public Employment and Social Welfare across the Federal System. Gregory Hooks, McMaster University; Linda Lobao, Ohio State University; Mark Partridge, Ohio State University; Victor Iturra, Universidad Catolica del Norte Regulatory Frameworks: Child Welfare Agencies and the Politics of Perinatal Care. Matty Lichtenstein Separate and Unequal: The Dimensions and Consequences of Safety Net Decentralization in the United States, 1994-2014. Sarah K. Bruch, University of Iowa; Marcia Meyers; Janet Gornick, The Graduate Center / City University of New York Discussant: Drew Halfmann, University of California-Davis

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Session 407, continued Negotiating Ethnic Identity and Co-Ethnic Solidarity: A Case Study of Second-Generation Enclave Entreprenuers. Janet Muniz, UC Irvine Racial Aesthetics of Real Estate Listings in Brooklyn. Zaire Z. DinzeyFlores Spatial Spirituality and Ethnic Membership. Jonathan Calvillo, Boston University The De-Racialization of Latino Space: Gentrification and Race in San Francisco, 1990-2014. Zawadi Rucks-Ahidiana, University of California, Berkeley

408. Section on Organizations, Occupations, and Work. Matching Persons and Jobs

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512F, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Elisabeth S. Clemens, University of Chicago Language and Gender in the Online Job-Matching Process. Emilio J. Castilla, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Hye Jin Rho, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Taking a Pass: How Proportional Prejudice and Decisions Not to Hire Reproduce Sex Segregation. Ming De Leung, UC Berkeley; Sharon Koppman, University of California, Irvine No Vacancy: Professional-Client Relationships as Barriers to Jurisdictional Shifts. Kurt Sandholtz, Brigham Young University; Isaac Waisberg, Tel Aviv University A Career Advancement Perspective on Inter-organizational Job Mobility. Tiantian Yang, Duke University; Matthew Bidwell, The Wharton School Discussant: Roberto M. Fernandez, MIT Sloan School of Management

Monday

409. Section on Political Sociology. Politics, Culture, and Inequality in Latin America and the Caribbean

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512H, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: David A. Smilde, Tulane University Presider: David A. Smilde, Tulane University Co-Producing Democracy: Protest, Participation, and the Law in the Brazilian Amazon. Peter Taylor Klein, Bard College Social Movements as Gramscian Political Parties: Counterhegemonic Politics, Education, and the Transformation of Public Institutions. Rebecca Tarlau, Stanford University State-led Food Sovereignty in the Lives of Andean Women: Connections and Contradictions in MAS era Bolivia. Jenny Cockburn, Carleton University Transforming the Nation? The Bolivarian Educational Reform in Venezuela. Matthias vom Hau, Institut Barcelona d’Estudis Internacionals (IBEI); Jared Abbott, Harvard University; Hillel Soifer, Temple University Seeing Like the U.S. Empire: Counter-Balancing the Bolivarian Revolution in Socialist Venezuela. Timothy M. Gill, Tulane University

410. Section on Racial and Ethnic Minorities. Decoding Settler Colonialism: Race, Place and Citizenship

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514C, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Evelyn Nakano Glenn, University of California, Berkeley Presider: Rick A. Baldoz, Oberlin College Settler Colonialism, Place and Racialized Citizenship. Louise Seamster, University of Tennessee-Knoxville Palestine/Israel and South Africa: Racial Capitalism and Settler Colonialism. Andy Clarno, University of Illinois at Chicago

Coloniality, Affective Structures, and Counter/Auto-Ethnography: Living with Qallunaat, Listening to Minnie Aodla Freeman. Ginna Husting, Boise State University Settler Colonialism in Detroit and the Politics of Erasure: Theorizing Pre-Gentrification in Declining Cities. Claire W. Herbert, Drexel University; Michael Brown

411. Section on Science, Knowledge and Technology Refereed Roundtable Session and Business Meeting

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516C, 2:30-3:30 p.m. Session Organizers: Alka Menon, Northwestern University Michael Allan Halpin, University of Wisconsin - Madison Table 01. Theories of Representation Table Presider: Alexander I. Stingl, Leuphana University Lüneburg Subjectivity, Experience, and Twenty-first Century Media in Mark Hansen’s Feed-Forward. Joseph W. Schneider, Drake University Social Brain Hypothesis and its Implications to Sociology. Hugo Neri, University of São Paulo; Veridiana Domingos Cordeiro, University of São Paulo The Deployment of Medical Images as Propaganda? Exercise of Epistemic Authority by Persuasive Technology. Alexander I. Stingl, Leuphana University Lüneburg Table 02. Stratification and STEM Table Presider: Cassidy Puckett, Emory University Increasing the Number of Women Majoring in Physics, Math and Computer Science. Angela Johnson, St. Mary’s College of Maryland Sexist Workplace Climate and Career Experiences for Japanese Women in Science and Engineering. Tetsushi Fujimoto, Doshisha University; Shiming Xia, Doshisha University The Socialization of Undergraduate Students through Disaster Stories: Offering Vicarious Learning in Engineering Laboratory Communities. Caitlin Donahue Wylie, University of Virginia Vocational Vestiges: Detracking, Choice, and STEM Education in the New Comprehensive High School. Cassidy Puckett, Emory University; Brian Gravel, Tufts University Table 03. Knowledge in Global and Multicultural Contexts Table Presider: Logan Dawn April Williams, Michigan State University Core and Periphery in the Global Academic System: How University Reputation Shapes International Student Mobility. Juergen Gerhards, Freie University Berlin; Silke Hans, Georg-August-Universität Göttingen; Daniel Drewski, Freie Universität Berlin Multicultural Brokerage in New Product Development teams. Hae-Jung Hong, NEOMA Business School The Rise and Stall of the Canadianization Movement: Inequalities among Canadian Professoriate, Evidences from 1977-2017. Francois Joseph Lachapelle, University of British Columbia; Patrick John Burnett, University of British Columbia When Global Economic Ideas Become Political: Economic Knowledge Regimes, Politics and the Public in China. Yibing Shen, Brown University Table 04. Intersection of Disease and Social Problems Table Presider: Molly J. Dingel, University of Minnesota Rochester Addiction Recovery, Genetic Frameworks, and Biological Citizenship. Molly J. Dingel, University of Minnesota Rochester; Jenny Ostergren, University of Michigan School of Public Health; Kathleen Heaney, Hennepin County Medical

Monday, August 14, 2017

Vanderbilt University Table 09. Standards and Standardization Table Presider: Christoph Hanssmann, UCSF Epidemiological Rage: Population Biography, Biomedical Expertise, and the Quantified Politics of Recognition. Christoph Hanssmann, UCSF Tracing Race in the Social Sciences: An Examination of Journal Articles, 1945-2015. Tina M. Park, Brown University Movement, Measurement, Modernity: Physiology and the Observation of Labor and Industrial Fatigue, 1870-1945. Mark W. D. Paterson, University of Pittsburgh Table 10. Science and Institutions Table Presider: Emily Bosk, Rutgers University Cultural Science: How Religious Switching Affects Individual Understandings of Science. Marcus Mann, Duke University; Cyrus J. Schleifer, University of Oklahoma Information Inequality: The Class, Gender, and Race of Knowledge. Molly M. King, Stanford University Knowing What We Don’t: Uncertainty in Food Risk Science. Akos Rona-Tas, University of California, San Diego “I wouldn’t go downtown and hold a sign or anything”: Citizen Science and Environmental Movements. Jaime McCauley, Coastal Carolina University Iron Cage or Tissue Paper? Emily Bosk, Rutgers University

412. Section on Sociology of Culture. The Mediation of Cultural Conflict

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514B, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Matthias Revers, University of Frankfurt From the “Sioux Massacres” to the “Dakota Genocide”: Transitional (In)Justice and Collective Memory in Minnesota (1862-2012). Alejandro Baer, University of Minnesota; Joseph Eggers, University of Minnesota; Nicholas James Siguru Wahutu, University of Minnesota; Brieanna Marie Watters, University of Minnesota Comprehending the Contentious Public Sphere in the Authoritarian Context. Haoyue Li, SUNY, Albany What is Right and Wrong about Russia and the United States: Mapping a Moral Field. John Sonnett, University of Mississippi How Media Ownership Matters: Political Instrumentalism by Ownership Type in Sweden, France, and the United States. Timothy Neff, New York University; Mattias Hesserus, Uppsala University Discussant: Lisa McCormick, University of Edinburgh

413. Section on Sociology of Law Refereed Roundtable Session and Business Meeting

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520A, 2:30-3:30 p.m. Session Organizer: Michael W. Yarbrough, John Jay College (CUNY) Table 01. Accountability and Surveillance Table Presider: Thomas Crosbie, University of Maryland College Park Wiretapping and the Law: Canada’s Entrance into the Five Eyes Intelligence Community. Dennis Molinaro “Me van a procesar”: Reducing corruption, increasing uncertainty in prosecutors’ decision making in Bolivia. Jorge Derpic, The University of Texas at Austin Table 02. Education and Disciplinary Processes in Law and Legal Institutions Table Presider: Anita Cristina Butera, University of Houston Law Center

Monday

Center; Jennifer McCormick, Pennsylvania State University Building an Infrastructure for Interdisciplinary Inquiry: The Rise of the Obesity Research Enterprise. Melanie Jeske, University of California, San Francisco Digital Divide and Body Size Disparities among Chinese Adults. Chih-Chien Huang, Saint Anselm College; Scott Thomas Yabiku, The Pennsylvania State University Early-life exposure to the China Famine and the subsequent risk of type 2 diabetes. Wencheng Zhang, Syracuse University Table 05. Subjects and Objects in Healthcare Table Presider: Moran Levy, Columbia University CRISPR/Cas Technology: Articulated Innovation and the Progression of Scientific Research Programs. Santiago José Molina, University of California Berkeley How the Challenge of Finding the ‘Optimal’ Patients for Experimentation with New Chemotherapies Redrew Cancer Diagnoses. Moran Levy, Columbia University The Rise of Quantification in United States Health Care Delivery Policy, 1965-2015. Taylor M. Cruz, UC San Francisco Table 06. Producing Knowledge Table Presider: Kate Williams, University of Cambridge Academic Scientists’ “Ambidextrous Behavior” and Doctoral Science Mentoring Practices. Maria Del Rosario Benavides, Texas A&M International University; Marcus Antonius Hidalgo Ynalvez, Texas A&M International University Neoliberal Grandfathers: A Genealogical Analysis of Economists’ Careers and Networks. Lasse Folke Henriksen, Copenhagen Business School; Leonard Seabrooke, Copenhagen Business School; Kevin Young, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Predicting Scholarly Publications among Undergraduate Researchers: The Challenge of Social Class in the STEM Pipeline. Heather A. Daniels, University of Texas at El Paso; Timothy William Collins, University of Texas at El Paso; Danielle Xiaodan Morales, University of Texas at El Paso; Angela Frederick, University of Texas at El Paso Theorising Knowledge Production across Diverse Research Contexts. Kate Williams, University of Cambridge Table 07. Knowledge Circulation Table Presider: Miriam Padolsky, Government of Canada Research Obstacles in the Context of Knowledge-Intensive Work. David Jeremy McBee, University of Arizona The Evolving Structure of a Scientific Citation Network and its Political Effects. Jonathan David Shaffer, Boston University The Matilda Effect in Sociology: Citations from leading generalist journals. Diogo Lemieszek Pinheiro, University of North Georgia Undone Science and Canadian Health Research. Katelin Albert, University of Toronto; Steve G. Hoffman, University of Toronto; Sherri Klassen, University of Toronto Table 08. Gender in Technology and Science Table Presider: Tongyu Wu, University of Oregon Gender Gap in Patenting in China. Yu Tao, Stevens Institute of Technology; Wei Hong, Tsinghua University; Ying Ma, Chinese Academy of Science and Technology for Development; Paige Brown, Stevens Institute of Technology Just Waiting for the “Old Dirty Geologists” to Retire. Kristine Kilanski, Stanford University Surveillance is a Joke: Ethnicized Masculinities in the High Tech Workplace. Tongyu Wu, University of Oregon The Processes of Stigmatization and Destigmatization in Online News Coverage of Sugar Dating. Cathryn Beeson-Lynch,

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Monday

Session 413, continued A Failing Grade For the Post-BAPCPA Credit Counseling and Bankruptcy Education Industry. Anita Cristina Butera, University of Houston Law Center Punitive Liminality: Identity Transformation among College Students in Prison. Ruth Elizabeth Delaney, CUNY Graduate Center Teen Courts as Alternative Justice: Intervening in the Lives of Modern “Wayward” Youth? Sarah Gaby, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill; Amy M. Magnus, University of California, Irvine Table 03. Law and Intimate Relations Domestic Vulnerability: Navigating Labor Rights at Home in New York. Katherine Maich, University of California, Berkeley Flat Broke without Children: Policing Nonresident Parents in Child Support Court. Elizabeth Cozzolino, University of Texas at Austin Table 04. Law and the Production of Knowledge Table Presider: Timothy L. O’Brien, University of WisconsinMilwaukee Gender, Deference to Authority, and Judicial Gatekeeping in Civil Rights Litigation. Timothy L. O’Brien, University of WisconsinMilwaukee The Culture of Legal Education: Indeterminacy and Methods of Constructing Legal Competence. Michael W. Raphael, CUNY Graduate Center The Path of the Law Review: How Inter-field Ties Enable Institutional Emergence and Reinforce Persistence. Daniel N. Kluttz, UC Berkeley Vam on Trial: Rationality and Expertise in Teacher Evaluation Lawsuits. Zachary Webster Griffen, University of CaliforniaLos Angeles; Aaron Panofsky, University of California-Los Angeles Table 05. Mobilization, Meaning, and the Law Table Presider: Sam Jackson Principled Law Breaking in America: Nullification and Civil Disobedience. Sam Jackson Regulating Abortion: The Role of Legislation Type in Predicting Legislative Success. Lauren M. Brenzel, Vanderbilt University Under the Punitive Aegis: Discipline as Empowerment in the Family Justice Center Model. Victoria I. Piehowski, University of Minnesota-Twin Cities Table 06. Stratification in Legal Processes and the Legal Profession Table Presider: Ronit Dinovitzer, University of Toronto The Ties That Bind: The Relationship Between Law Firm Growth And Law Firm Survival. Alan James Kluegel, University of California-Berkeley The New Place of Corporate Law Firms in the Structuring of Elite Legal Careers. Ronit Dinovitzer, University of Toronto; Bryant Garth, American Bar Foundation

414. Section on Sociology of Population. Romantic Relationships, Childbearing, and Family Systems

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513C, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Sarah R. Hayford, Ohio State University Presider: Alexandra Kissling Global Family Change: Convergence? Luca Pesando, University of Pennsylvania; Andres Felipe Castro, University of Pennsylvania; Liliana Andriano, University of Oxford; Julia Andrea Behrman,

New York University; Francesco Billari, University of Oxford; Frank F. Furstenberg, University of Pennsylvania; Hans-Peter Kohler, University of Pennsylvania; Christiaan Monden, Nijmegen University Do Young Women’s Preferences against Nonmarital Childbearing Predict Steps to Prevent Nonmarital Pregnancy? Rachel Shattuck, University of Maryland, College Park Disjoining the Romantic from the Reproductive Project: An Examination of Egg Freezing. Eliza Brown; Mary Patrick, NYU Gender Role Attitudes and Fertility Ideals in South Korea. Soo-Yeon Yoon, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Discussant: Christie Sennott, Purdue University

415. Section on Sociology of Sex and Gender. Doing Gender: 30 Years Later

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513D, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Laurel Westbrook, Grand Valley State University Presider: Jamie Louise Budnick, University of Michigan Alpha, Omega, and the Letters in Between: Gender Politics in the LGBT Conservative Christian Movement. Dawne Moon, Marquette University; Theresa Tobin, Marquette University, Department of Philosophy Men’s Central and Women’s Peripheral Unemployment: How Couples Reproduce Gender Inegalitarian Norms during Unemployment. Aliya Hamid Rao, Stanford University Masculine Undercompensation and the Achievement of Masculine Balance. Kathryne M. Young, University of Massachusetts at Amherst Sheep in Wolf’s Clothes: Gendered Organizational Culture and Undoing Structural Equity Initiatives in the Finance Sector. Hazel Hollingdale, University of British Columbia Discussant: Catherine Connell, Boston University

416. Section on the Sociology of the Family. Race, Ethnicity, Social Class, and Families Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513F, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Jenifer L. Bratter, Rice University Presider: Mary Elizabeth Campbell, Texas A&M University Born Without a Silver Spoon: Wealth and Unintended Childbearing. Jessica Houston Su, University at Buffalo, SUNY; Fenaba Addo, University of Wisconsin-Madison Ecologies of Social Control: Race, Criminal Justice, and Child Protection. Frank Edwards, University of Washington It Takes a Village: Parental Involvement in Extracurricular Activities among Armenian immigrant and Native Born Families. Oshin Khachikian, University of California, Irvine Parenting During Ferguson: Making Sense of White Silence. Megan R. Underhill, University of North Carolina Asheville Fatherhood and the Progression of Romantic Relationships. Sharon L. Sassler, Cornell University Discussant: Ellen Whitehead, Rice University

3:30 p.m.

Meetings

Section on Science, Knoweldge, and Technology Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516C, 3:30-4:10 p.m. Section on Sociology of Law Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520A, 3:30-4:10 p.m.

Monday, August 14, 2017

4:30 p.m.

Meetings

2018 Program Committee Palais des congrès de Montréal, 523A, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Committee on Sections Palais des congrès de Montréal, 523B, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Department Resources Group (DRG) Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516C, 4:30-5:30 p.m. Honors Program Graduate School Briefing Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514B, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Section on Mathematical Sociology Council Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520A, 4:30-5:30 p.m.

4:30 p.m.

Sessions

417. Presidential Panel. Poverty Eradication and Social Inclusion

418. Thematic Session. Changing the Cultural Narrative

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511A, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Marc W. Steinberg, Smith College Presider: Marc W. Steinberg, Smith College Panelists: Wendy Leo Moore, Texas A&M University Zulema Valdez, University of California, Merced Joyce M. Bell, University of Minnesota Discussant: Matthew W. Hughey, University of Connecticut Recent surveys suggest a waning belief in the Horatio Alger story and the metanarrative of the American Dream, particularly among younger generations. If this is the case there are important questions about how alternative narratives—particularly those which emphasize the collective rather than the individual and equity rather than hierarchy—might supersede this metanarrative. This

session focuses on the possibilities for the rise and dissemination of alternative narratives in arenas such as politics and popular culture. How do such narratives gain legitimacy and achieve diffusion? In what ways does narrative struggle channel and limit the rise of alternatives?

419. Thematic Session. New Perspectives on Culture In, Around, and Through Social Networks

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511C, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Mark C. Pachucki, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Presider: Mark C. Pachucki, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Panelists: Peter S. Bearman, Columbia University Neha Gondal, Boston University James A. Evans, University of Chicago Kevin Lewis, University of California, San Diego In recent years, a growing amount of scholarship has benefitted from interrogation of synthetic approaches to studying culture and social networks in order to understand micro-, meso-, and macro-level social processes. This session will explore theoretical and methodological challenges as well as rewards of doing so. Leading scholars in this area will present their recent work on this topic, which will be followed by a panel discussion of how their perspectives overlap as well as differ.

420. Thematic Session. Race, Culture, and Exclusion for People on the Move

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511E, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Tiffany D. Joseph, Stony Brook University Presider: Tiffany D. Joseph, Stony Brook University Panelists: Pawan H. Dhingra, Tufts University Tanya Maria Golash-Boza, University of California, Merced Jessica Tollette, Harvard Sylvia Zamora, Loyola Marymount University Discussant: Tiffany D. Joseph, Stony Brook University Global migration has played a significant role in transforming the locales to which individuals immigrate and the communities from which these migrants come. In recent years, Global North countries have struggled to incorporate larger influxes of (Global South) migrants amid a global recession and fiscal budget constraints as well as increasing socio-political conflict and concerns about climate change that have put people on the move. In receiving countries, a big concern is how these migrants, who hail from Africa, Asia, the Middle East, and Latin America and have different cultures, religions, and languages, will “fit” into their new societies. These migrants also bring significant ethno-racial heterogeneity and challenge cultural and national understandings of belonging and citizenship. Likewise, immigrant-sending countries struggle with how to fill the social, economic, and political absence left by these migrants. Yet, through transnational ties maintained while residing in host countries, migrants transmit global cultural and racial conceptions to family, friends, and institutions at home. This transnational movement has yielded challenges in what it means to belong to and be included in one or multiple nation-states, as well as a (re) construction of social and symbolic group boundaries. Therefore, this panel of race, culture, and migration scholars will discuss how race and ethnicity factor into cultural interpretations of inclusion/exclusion at the micro or macro level for migrants of diverse ethno-racial backgrounds in Brazil, Mexico, Spain, and the United States.

Monday

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516B, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Michèle Lamont, Harvard University Presider: Dian Yang, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences Conditions in High-Poverty Neighborhoods: The Rise in Inequality Between Cities. Mario Luis Small, Harvard University Recasting Culture to Undo Gender: A Sociological Analysis of Women’s Self-help Groups in India. Paromita Sanyal, Florida State University Poverty and the Individualization of Responsibility in Europe and the United States. Nicolas Duvoux, University Paris 8 How Elites Perceive Poverty and Inequality, and Why It Matters? With Special Attention to Brazil and South Africa. Elisa P. Reis, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ) The Rise of the Unaffordable World. Matthew Desmond, Harvard University Discussant: Christopher Jencks, Harvard University This session considers the forms that poverty takes, the extent to which the poor are stigmatized across societies, and the circumstances that make the non-poor more likely to support social inclusion. Participants consider various cultural, institutional and social processes as well as policies that are put in place to improve social inclusion. This ranges from interventions in rural India that aim to transform social networks outside traditional caste and kinship networks, to studies that investigate how cities respond to housing crisis across continents and how non-profit aims to mobilize the poor for greater community involvement.

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421. Special Session. Learning Race and Ethnicity: Socialization in the Family

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516D, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Chinyere Osuji, Rutgers University at Camden Presider: Chinyere Osuji, Rutgers University at Camden Panelists: Jenifer L. Bratter, Rice University Angela D. James Velma McBride Murry, Vanderbilt University The family is one of the most important institutions of socialization, including for membership into racial and ethnic groups and categories. With Asians, Blacks, Latinos, and multiracial individuals comprising the majority of children in the U.S., it becomes more imperative to understand the role of race and ethnicity in families. It will highlight emerging research on: multiracial identification; parental ethno-racial identification of children; the role of race in defining family; and the social psychological factors of ethno-racial socialization. The work and perspectives shared in this session will stimulate thinking on how to best conceptualize the roles and patterns of race and ethnicity in one of the most key institutions of socialization, the family. Keywords: family, race, ethnicity, multiracial, African American, youth, children

Monday

422. Special Session. Making the Case for Social Sciences in Canada and the United States: Challenges and Opportunities

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 518B, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Michèle Lamont, Harvard University Presider: Steven G. Brint, University of California, Riverside Panelists: Ted Hewitt, Social Science and Humanities Research Council of Canada Alondra Nelson, Columbia University and Social Science Research Council Wendy Naus, Consortium of the Social Science Associations Discussant: Steven G. Brint, University of California, Riverside This panel assembles leaders in the world of the social sciences who will discuss their experiences with promoting and defending our disciplines in North America. Steven Brint, a prominent expert of American higher education will serve as a discussant and provide concluding remarks.

423. Author Meets Critics Session. Pulled Over: How Police Stops Define Race and Citizenship (Chicago Series in Law and Society) (University of Chicago Press, 2014) by Charles R. Epp, Steven Maynard-Moody, and Donald P. Haider-Markel

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511F, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Karen Glover, California State University San Marcos Presider: Judy Lubin, Howard University Critics: Robert J. Duran, University of Tennessee Ana Muniz, UCLA Jason M. Williams, Montclair State University Authors: Charles Epp, University of Kansas Steve Maynard-Moody, University of Kansas Donald Haider-Markel, University of Kansas

424. Author Meets Critics Session. Selling Our Souls: The Commodification of Hospital Care in the United States (Princeton University Press, 2014) by Adam Dalton Reich Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511D, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Fred Block, University of California-Davis

Presider: Carol A. Caronna, Towson University Critics: Marion Fourcade, University of California - Berkeley Donald W. Light, Rowan University Lori Freedman, University of California, San Francisco Author: Adam D. Reich, Columbia University

425. Author Meets Critics Session. The Tumbleweed Society: Working and Caring in an Age of Insecurity (Oxforcid University Press, 2015) by Allison J. Pugh Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511B, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Kathleen Gerson, New York University Presider: Kathleen Gerson, New York University Critics: Philip N. Cohen, University of Maryland Michael A. Messner, University of Southern California Erin Kelly, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Author: Allison Pugh, University of Virginia

426. Professional Development Workshop. Creating and Using Accountability Groups

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512A, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Craig Upright, Winona State University Professional academics work in a unique institutional environment juggling teaching, researching, writing, and administration all with a typically flexible schedule. However, some of the most important career impacting projects -- such as dissertation writing, article publishing, and manuscript proposals — have no deadlines and often take a back seat to more pressing and time-contingent matters. This workshop will introduce the concept of “accountability groups,” informal collections of scholars who keep each other “accountable” daily on the progress of certain projects. Craig Upright will explain how the accountability group he created helped him stay focused by employing a relatively simple program. At the end of the workshop participants will have an opportunity to form their own accountability groups with each other.

427. Student Forum Paper Session. Resilience, Academic Success, and Indigenous Education

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512B, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizers: Uriel Serrano, University of California, Santa Cruz Kati Barahona-López, University of California-Santa Cuz Isabel Sousa-Rodriguez, The Graduate Center - CUNY Resilience in Disabled Minority High School Students in Chicago: Student’s Experience and Teacher’s Perceptions. Johuan Hernandez, University of Illinois at Chicago; Edgardo Rodeo, University of Illinois at Chicago Academic Resilience in Gang Members in Chicago Public High Schools. Kamaria Crowley, University of Illinois at Chicago; Nayeli Castro, University of Illinois at Chicago; August Abitang, University of Illinois at Chicago Case Study Exploring Second-Generation Somali Adolescents’ Academic Success. Isaac Doppenberg Canada’s Capitalist Economy: Implications for Off-reserve Indigenous Education in Ontario. Nicholas Daniel George MacKenzie, Laurentian University Discussant: Christina Irene Acosta

428. Regular Session. Big Data Applications in the Study of Inequality Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512D, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Donald Tomaskovic-Devey, University of Massachusetts

Monday, August 14, 2017

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Presider: Ted Mouw, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill Intracohort and Intercohort Changes in Black-white Earnings Inequality in 40 Years of Administrative Data. Siwei Cheng, New York University; Christopher R. Tamborini, U.S. Social Security Administration; ChangHwan Kim, University of Kansas; Arthur Sakamoto, Texas A&M University Is the Scandinavian Model Under Pressure? Recent Trends in Educational Attainments, Earnings and Wealth in Norway. Oyvind Nicolay Wiborg, University of Oslo; Marianne N. Hansen, University of Oslo The Dogged Persistence of the Old Boy: Social Closure and the British Elite, 1897-2016. Aaron Reeves, LSE; Sam Friedman, LSE Variation in Net Fatherhood Wage Premiums across and within Establishments. Sylvia A. Fuller, The University of British Columbia; Lynn Prince Cooke, University of Bath

University Who Helps with the Homework? Inequity in Parenting Responsibilities and Relationship Quality among Employed Parents. Leah Ruppanner, University of Melbourne; Scott Schieman, University of Toronto; Melissa A. Milkie, University of Toronto Relative Earnings in Families and Depression. Karen Z. Kramer, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; Sunjin Pak, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Are Working Mothers Happier? Some New Evidence from Germany. Claudia Schmiedeberg, University of Munich; Jette Schröder, GESIS Mannheim; Josef Bruderl, University of Munich Gender Equality and Work-Family Spillover from a Cross-National Perspective. Gayle Kaufman, Davidson College; Hiromi Taniguchi, University of Louisville

429. Regular Session. Environmental Policy

432. Regular Session. Indigenous Peoples

430. Regular Session. Ethnographic, Historical and Global Perspectives on Higher Education

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 515C, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Jal D. Mehta, Harvard University Differentiating Global Citizens: Organizational Habitus and Cosmopolitan Capital in British Higher Education. Jonathan Z. Friedman, New York University Engineering Credentialism: Negotiating the Expansion of Graduate Education at Stanford University, 1945-1970. Alexander Kindel, Princeton University; Mitchell L. Stevens, Stanford University Hanging In, Stopping Out, Dropping Out: Community College Students in an Era of Precarity. Beth Ann Hart, University of California, Davis Identity Threat Revisited: Multilevel Cultural Analysis of Academic Incorporation among Black and Latino Engineering Students. Anthony Matthias Johnson, Northwestern University The Making of A Teenage Service Class: Race, Class, Gender, and “College For All.” Ranita Ray, University of Nevada-Las Vegas Discussant: Scott Davies, University of Toronto

431. Regular Session. Family, Work and Well-being

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512E, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: David J. Maume, University of Cincinnati Motivation for Shift Work and the Well-being of Parents with Evening and Night Shifts. Matthew N. Weinshenker, Fordham

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516A, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: C. Matthew Snipp, Stanford University Presider: Alessandro Morosin, UC Riverside #NoDAPL Fever: Decoding Public Fascination with the Sacred Stone Camp. Nicholas G. Cragoe, University of Illinois UrbanaChampaign Constructing Canadians: Indigenous and Settler Political Identities in Speeches from the Throne, 1867-2015. Adam Colin Howe, University of British Columbia Exploring the determinants of unmet health care needs among Indigenous Canadians. Helen Cerigo; Amelie Quesnel-Vallee, McGill University Understanding the Construction of American Indian and Alaska Native Diabetes Using Critical Race Theory. Kimberly R. Huyser, University of New Mexico; Alena Kuhlemeier, University of New Mexico Discussant: Carmela Marie Roybal, University of New Mexico

433. Regular Session. Institutions and Institutional Change

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 510D, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Edward T. Walker, UCLA Presider: Brayden G. King, Northwestern University Returning to the Contested Terrain: Labor Conflict and the Legalization of the American Workplace Revisited. Tim Bartley, Ohio State University; Erica Phillips, Ohio State University; Evelyn Ann Gertz, The Ohio State University Gone with the Wind: Industry Development and the Evolution of Social Movement Influence. Chad Carlos, Brigham Young University; Wesley Sine, Cornell University; Brandon H. Lee, Melbourne Business School Governance, Financialization and Institutional Fragility: Public Sector Pensions in the United States. Jason Windawi, Princeton University Cities in Action: A Comparative Study of U.S. Cities’ Sustainability Practices. Christof Brandtner, Stanford University; David F. Suarez, University of Washington Discussant: Brayden G. King, Northwestern University

434. Regular Session. Internet and Society: The Rogue Ones Palais des congrès de Montréal, 510C, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Wenhong Chen, University of Texas at Austin Presider: Wenhong Chen, University of Texas at Austin Revolution in the making? Social Media Effects across the Globe. Shelley J. Boulianne, MacEwan University Digital Minutemen: Paul Revere Had a Horse and Conservatives

Monday

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512C, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Fernando I. Rivera, University of Central Florida Presider: Fernando I. Rivera, University of Central Florida Climate Change and Legitimate Governance: Land Use and Transportation Policy in California. Ryken Grattet; Thomas D. D. Beamish, University of California-Davis; Debbie Niemeier, University of California-Davis Living with an Energy Lease: Landowners and the Shale Gas Industry. Dylan Edward Bugden, Cornell University; Richard Stedman, Cornell University Nuclear Denial in Japan: The Network Power of an Energy Industrial Complex. Michael Dreiling, University of Oregon; Tomoyasu Nakamura, Senshu University (Japan); Yvonne Alexandra Braun, University of Oregon Policy Learning in an Evolving Environmental Risk Policy Network. Adam Douglas Henry, University of Arizona; Thomas M. Dietz, Michigan State University Discussant: Alfonso R. Latoni, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIH)

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Session 434, continued Have the Internet. Jen Schradie, Institute for Advanced Study in Toulouse Self-Control and Exposure to Online Fraud Targeting: The Role of Information Disclosure. Gustavo S. Mesch, University of Haifa Personal Profile Settings as Cultural Frames: Facebook vs. Vkontakte. Shanyang Zhao, Temple University; Aleksandr Shchekoturov, Lobachevsky State University of Nizhni Novgorod; Svetlana Shchekoturova, Nizhny Novgorod State Technical University Discussant: Laura Robinson, Santa Clara University

435. Regular Session. Peace and Conflict: Conflict Escalation and Political Violence

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 510B, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: J. Craig Jenkins, Ohio State University Dynamics of Escalation: A Cross-national Analysis of Levels of Civil Conflict. Mehri Ghazanjani, McGill University Non-State Actors and the Micro-Dynamics of Non-Violence during the Bosnian War. Marie E. Berry, University of Denver After Confrontation, Then What? Nonviolence in the 21st Century. Johnny J. Mack, Communities without Boundaries International Conditional Effects of Educational Attainment on Domestic Terrorism. John Lee, Northwestern University The Four-Headed Hydra: A Latent Class Typology of Terrorist Organizations. Michael Genkin, Singapore Management University How Does War Affect the Social Structures of Local Communities? Empirical Evidence from Colombia. Laura Acosta Gonzalez, Northwestern University

Monday

436. Regular Session. Qualitative Methodology I: Epistemology and Ethnography

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 510A, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Ralph LaRossa, Georgia State University Presider: Katie Linette Acosta, Georgia State University The Misinterpretation of Marginalized Groups in Developing Countries and its Consequences. Rashedur Chowdhury, University College Dublin Feminist Epistemology and Gendered Careers in Sociology. Kimberly Kay Hoang, University of Chicago; Elizabeth Long, Rice University; Nehemiah Ankoor, Rice University; Sophie Alysse Fajardo, University of Chicago What Can You Do with a Single Case? Josh Pacewicz, Brown University Conducting Family Observations: A Methodological Guide. Annette Lareau, University of Pennsylvania; Aliya Hamid Rao, Stanford University

437. Regular Session. Social Movements and Identity

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516E, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Andrew W. Martin, The Ohio State University Presider: Steven A. Boutcher, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Linkages, Strategies, and Identities in Filipino Diaspora Mobilization for Regime Change. Sharon Quinsaat, Grinnell College Threads that Bind: Explaining Coordinated Action in Social Movements. Max Chewinski, University of British Columbia Waves of Protest, the Eros Effect and the Social Relations of Diffusion. Lesley J. Wood, York University Why Framing National Identity Fails: The Anti-Moral and National Education Movement in Hong Kong. Sixian Lin, City University of Hong Kong; Fen Lin, City University of Hong Kong

438. Section on Community and Urban Sociology. Questioning the City: New Directions in Urban Theory

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513A, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Miriam Greenberg, University of California Santa Cruz Presider: Hillary Angelo, University of California - Santa Cruz Claiming the “Right to the City” Beyond the City: The Role of Agrarian Social Movements. Angela Serrano Zapata, University of Wisconsin-Madison Consuming Abu Dhabi. Harvey L. Molotch, New York University Eco-Professionals, Gentrification, and the Contradictions of the Climate Friendly City. Jennifer Rice, University of Georgia; Daniel Aldana Cohen, University of Pennsylvania; Joshua Long, Southwestern University; Jason Jurevich, Portland State University
 Manhattan’s Koreatown as a Transclave: The Emergence of the New Ethnic Enclave in a Global City. Jinwon Kim, Oberlin College Discussant: Leonard Nevarez, Vassar College

439. Section on Comparative-Historical Sociology. Race and Ethnoreligious Politics

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 515B, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Cedric de Leon, Providence College A Bourdieusian Approach to Explaining the Rise of Religious Nationalism in France, 1940-1942. Aliza Luft, UCLA Black Revolutions, Black Republics. Ricarda Hammer, Brown University; Alexandre White, Boston University Ethnicizing the Frontier: Elite Structure of Ethnic Minority and Ethnic Mobilization in Southwest China (1660s-1930s). Yue Dai, University of Virginia Roots of Radicalism: The Language of Revolution, Extremism, and Localism in Afghanistan, 1979-2001. Daniel Karell, New York University Abu Dhabi (NYUAD); Michael Freedman, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Discussant: Tasleem Juana Padamsee, Ohio State University

440. Section on Global and Transnational Sociology. Cultural (Re)Imaginings of the World (cosponsored with Section on Sociology of Culture)

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514A, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizers: Peggy Levitt, Wellesley College Ronald N. Jacobs, University at Albany Presiders: Peggy Levitt, Wellesley College Ronald N. Jacobs, University at Albany World Landscapes as Visions of Radical Social Inclusion. Wendy Griswold, Northwestern University Democracy in Motion: Blueprints, Best Practices and the Political Imagination. Gianpaolo Baiocchi, NYU Digital Citizenship and the Clash of Epistemic Cultures in Global Civil Society. Fuyuki Kurasawa, York University Imaginings of European Cosmopolitanism: “Empty” Nation, “Empowered” Individual. Yasemin Soysal, University of Essex Discussant: John A. Hall, McGill University

441. Section on Inequality, Poverty, and Mobility. Social Exclusion

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514C, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Christopher Wildeman, Cornell University Presider: Kristin Turney, University of California, Irvine Maternal Imprisonment, Economic Marginality, and Unmet Health Needs in Early Adulthood: Pathways to Social Exclusion. Holly

Monday, August 14, 2017 Foster, Texas A&M University; John Hagan, Northwestern University Parental Incarceration, Own Incarceration, and Neighborhood Attainments in Adolescence and Adulthood. Raymond R. Swisher, Bowling Green State University; Kyla Marie Campbell, Bowling Green State University Post-Conviction Housing Instability. Brielle Eileen Bryan, Harvard University Discussant: Anna R. Haskins, Cornell University

442. Section on Latino/a Sociology. Latina/o Youth and Social Change

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513B, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Victor M. Rios, University of California, Santa Barbara Presider: Veronica Montes, Bryn Mawr College An Exploration of Intragroup Relations Between Mexican American and Mexican Immigrant Youth. Liliana V. Rodriguez, University of California, Santa Barbara Defying the System: Latina/o Undocuactivists Becoming Agents of Social Change. Joanna B. Perez, California State UniversityDominguez Hills Family and The American Dream Ideology: Emotional Burdens or Resources for Latina/o College Students? Stacy Lynn Salerno, Florida State University Starving for Justice: Hunger Strikes, Spectacular Speech, and the Struggle for Dignity. Ralph Armbruster-Sandoval, University of California, Santa Barbara The Indignation of ‘Cariño’: A Comparative Analysis of Movement Making by theMAYO and theNIYA. Phillip Vargas, University of Texas-Austin

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512F, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Elisabeth S. Clemens, University of Chicago The Intimate Dance of Networking: Comparing the Emotional labors of Young American and Danish Job Seekers. Sabina Pultz, University of Copenhagen; Ofer Sharone, University of Massachusetts Amherst Immigrant Legal Status, Legal Knowledge, and Claims-Making in Low Wage and Unregulated Labor Markets. Caitlin Patler, UC Davis; Shannon Marie Gleeson, Cornell University; Matthias Schonlau, University of Waterloo Coming Back to Who I am: Social Support and Identity Repair after Job Loss. Lindsey M. Ibanez, Ohio State University; Steven H. Lopez, Ohio State University The Perversity of Unemployment Narrative: Low-Wage Workers Navigating the Workforce Development System. Brian William Halpin, University of California Davis Discussant: Kristine Kilanski, Stanford University

444. Section on Political Sociology Refereed Roundtable Session and Business Meeting

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517B, 4:30-5:30 p.m. Session Organizer: Thomas Edward Janoski, University of Kentucky Table 01. The Present and Future of the U.S. Republican Party Demographic Change and the Structure of Republican Party Politics. John D. Kincaid, California State Stanislaus Donald Trump’s Working Class Habitus. David Showalter, University of California, Berkeley

How the Republican Party Becamethe Party that Attracted White Supremacists. Jack M. Bloom, Indiana University Northwest Reliably Republican? Shifts in U.S. Veterans’ Political Party Affiliation from 1974 to 2014. Salvatore J. Restifo, The University of Texas Rio Grande Valley; Steven Larrimore Foy, The University of Texas Rio Grande Valley Table 02. Politics in China and Hong Kong Presider: Wan-Zi Lu, University of Chicago Extra-Budget Funds in China: Source of Corruption or Good Governance? Yeon Ju Lee, University of Chicago Legal Origins of Spectacular Violence: China’s 1983-1986 StrikeHard Campaign. William James Welsh, UC Berkeley Pension Reform in Urban China (1993-2003): Legacies, Challenges, and Achievements. Ting Jiang, Metropolitan State University of Denver The Princelings in China: How Do They Benefit from their Red Parents? Tony Huiquan Zhang, University of Toronto The Making of Hong Kong’s Separatism. Rebecca S.K. Li, The College of New Jersey Table 03. Social Movements in Political Sociology Presider: Zeynep Atalay, St. Mary’s College of California A Multi-Dimensional Approach to Nationalism: The Emergence of Contemporary Hindu Nationalism in Nepal. Luke Wagner, Yale University Interpretation Schemata and Cultural Implications: Hong Kong Post-80s’ Social Movement in Framing Analysis. Yan Wang, London School of Economics and Political Science Making the Collectivist Organization: Creativity, Conformity, and Social Closure. Will Attwood-Charles, Boston College Theorizing the Radical Right: Directions for Social Movements Research on the Right-Wing Social Movements. John D. Kincaid, California State Stanislaus Table 04. Terrorism and Legitimacy in Political Sociology Presider: Hemin Khzir Aziz, University of Cincinnati Does the Past few Years of Conflict in the Middle East Indicate Secularization? Abdy Javadzadeh, St. Thomas Objects of Legitimation: Constructing Robust Discourse in the International Response to the Syrian Civil War. Eric Schoon, The Ohio State University Social Media Reactions to Terrorism: Using Topic Sentiment Analysis to Explore Post-Terrorist Attack Discourse. Emirhan Demirhan Terrorism and Civil Society: Organizational Opportunity and Repression in Cross-National Perspective, 1970-2006. Andrew Davis, University of Arizona; Yongjun Zhang Table 05. Revolutions, Resistance and Coups Coups Democracies and Social Movements in Turkey 1908-2015. Baris Eren Localized Resistance in Urban South Africa. Marcel Paret, University of Utah Pathways to Popular Uprisings: An fsQCA of Revolution Emergence in the “Arab Spring.” Tyson Patros, University of California, Irvine Restraining the Political through Stay-Away Orders: The Case of Occupy Oakland. Emily Brissette, Bridgewater State University Table 06. Economic Policy, Markets and Politics Buying a Qualification to a Certified Market? An Analysis of Fairtrade as a Development Agent. Anneloes Mook, University of Florida Profit in the name of Allah: Bazaar politics and power in urban

Monday

443. Section on Organizations, Occupations, and Work. On the Margins of the Labor Market

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Monday

Session 444, continued Pakistan. Umair Javed, London School of Economics and Political Science The End of Bretton Woods: Learning Power in Institutional Change. Christoffer Zoeller, UC-Irvine Same Opinion, but Different Reasons: Why do Japanese People Support Market Principles? Naoki Sudo, Gakushuin University Table 07. Investment, Wages and Austerity Creeping and Cumulating Scarcity and the Inevitability of Austerity. Jon D. Shefner, University of Tennessee Politics, Institutions, and Pathways to State Minimum Wage Increases. Michael Franklin Thompson, University of North Texas; Ali Madanipour, Cameron University Rhetoric of Retrenchment: The Discursive Construction of American Fiscal Crisis. Edward Crowley, New York University The Agro-Industrial State: Agrarian Movement Influence on Early U.S. State Building. Brad Bauerly Table 08. Water and Welfare Presider: Victor W. Perez, University of Delaware A Cultural Political Economy of Water Security: Examining Economic Contexts and Agricultural Power Structures. Jeanine Cunningham, University of Oregon Explaining Municipal Welfare States: Santo André and São Bernardo do Campo, 1989-2001. Janaina Saad Peabody, University of Wisconsin-Madison Precarity and Disposable Populations: Analyzing the Flint Water Crisis. Rachel Elizabeth Moran, University of Southern California Varying Trajectories of Welfare Regimes and the Bangladeshi Case: State, Society and Global Political Economy. Esha Sraboni, Brown University Table 09. Racial Discrimination and Politics Exploring the Relationship between Religion and Welfare Preferences: Protestant Ethic, Substitution Effect, and Minority Status. Amie Bostic, University of Texas-Rio Grande Valley The Legacy of the Jim Crow Economy on the U.S. Welfare State. Carmen Brick, UC Berkeley The Lawless Europeans: Law and Order on Penang Island, 17861807. Hanisah Binte Abdullah Sani, University of Chicago Table 10. Elections and Voting Presider: Jen Heerwig, Stony Brook University Sibling Similarities and the Intergenerational Transmission of Socioeconomic Inequalities in Voter Turnout. Hannu Lahtinen, University of Helsinki; Jani Erola, University of Turku; Hanna Wass, University of Helsinki The 2016 Presidential Race in Florida: Surveys from the Field. Ann Horwitz Dubin, University of Maryland College Park The Art of the Impossible: Utopia and Instrumentalism in Electoral Politics. Gabriel Hetland, University at Albany Table 11. The Politics of Immigrants, Refugees and Muslims Presider: Jamie Lynn Palmer, University of Georgia Forced Migration Management and the Diffusion of Mobility Regimes for Refugees and IDPs in Ukraine. Raphi Rechitsky, National University Postcolonial Sites of Memory: Managing and Unsettling the Nation. Meghan Elizabeth Tinsley, Boston University Symbolic Boundaries, Cultural Threat and Anti-Muslim Sentiment in America. Joseph H. Gerteis, University of Minnesota; Douglas Hartmann, University of Minnesota

Table 12. Political Parties in Power and Under Attack Presider: Haley Jo Gentile, Florida State University Power to the People: Topic Modeling and Democratic Party Platforms 1840-2016. Scott Appelrouth, California State University, Northridge Ruling Oneself In: Party-State Struggles, European integration and the Rise of the Turkish AKP, 1995-2008. Phyllis Handan Jeffrey, University of California Davis Parties and Direct Democracy: Does Parties’ Performance Influence Public Support on Referendum? Dong-woo Park Swinging Leftwards: Public Opinion on Economic and Political Integration in Latin America, 1997-2010. Emanuel Deutschmann; Lara Minkus, Universität Bremen Table 13. State Building in Many Countries Explaining National and Ethnic Identification in Africa. Matthew Lange, McGill University; Amm Quamruzz Aman, McGill University Statistics as Statecraft: National Statistical Systems (NSS) and State Building, 1800 to 2011. Jing-Mao Ho The Materiality of Governance: Expanding State Infrastructural Power in Honduras. Leslie Elva MacColman, University of Notre Dame The Role of Strategic Necessity: Constitutional Reform as a Social Movement Response to Structural Adjustment. Ben Manski, University of California, Santa Barbara Table 14. Political Institutions and Territories International Expert Culture. Michael Christensen, York University The De-Territorialization of the Nation-State: Global Organizations in Global Circulation. Tim Rosenkranz, New School for Social Research The Trouble with Types: What Does an Association’s Content Type Reveal about its Civic Character? Matthew G. Baggetta, Indiana University; Kimberly Madsen, Indiana University What Voting Leaves Out: Criminal Justice Contact and Political Voice. Erin Eife, University of Illinois at Chicago Table 15. Attitudes and Public Opinion in Political Sociology Attitudes About Divorce Laws: A Long Term Look. James Clark Davidson, Baylor University Polarization of Abortion Attitudes: Political Identity, Religious Conservatism, and Gender Attitudes. Emily Joo Dorshorst, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee The Impact of Public Opinion on Policy in Cross-National Perspective. Josh P. Curtis, Bishop’s University; Matthew Parbst, University of Toronto The Newspaper and The Growth Machine: The Case of the Boston Olympics Bid. Alex Natasha Press, Northeastern University Table 16. Theories in Political Sociology Paine as Social Thinker. Josh R. Klein, Iona College Power in (inter)action: Coordinating Participation with Performative Power. Eeva Luhtakallio, University of Tampere Power, State-Making, and Social Revolution in the Works of W.E.B. Du Bois. Andrew Lowell Owen, Northwestern University The Democratic Consequences of the Politics of Belonging. Kristina Bakkær Simonsen Table 17. Citizenship, Cosmopolitanism and Civic Associations Presider: David L. Swartz, Boston University Race and the Empire-State: Puerto Ricans’ (Un)equal U.S. Citizenship. Ariana Jeanette Valle, University of California-Los Angeles Becoming a Cosmopolitan: National Identity, Patriotism, and

Monday, August 14, 2017

445. Section on Racial and Ethnic Minorities. Concepts Without Borders? Race, Racism, and Ethnicity in Global Perspective

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513F, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Ashley Wood Doane, University of Hartford Boundaries of Difference and Transnational Blackness. Jean Beaman, Purdue University Caught between Past and Future: Multi-racial Families and the Development of Institutional Racism in Poland. Sarah D. Grunberg, Ithaca College Explaining Trump and Brexit: Comparative White Racial Frames in the United States and the United Kingdom. Celia Olivia Lacayo, UCLA; Steve Garner Global Hierarchies of Love: Exploring the Boundaries of Mixed Marriage. Erica Chito Childs, Hunter College/ CUNY Graduate Center Modernity, Malinchismo, and the Global Color-line: Unveiling Assimilation in México. Kerri Rachelle Howard, Northwestern University Discussant: Ashley Wood Doane, University of Hartford

446. Section on Science, Knowledge, and Technology. Scientific Careers: Key Dimensions of Social Inequality

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513C, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizers: Mary Frank Fox, Georgia Institute of Technology Kjersten Bunker Whittington, Reed College Presiders: Mary Frank Fox, Georgia Institute of Technology Kjersten Bunker Whittington, Reed College High Resources, High Demands in Elite Science: Consequences for Careers of Men and Women Postdocs. Anne Kathrin Kronberg, Goethe University, Frankfurt; Matthias Revers, University of Frankfurt; Heather Hofmeister, Goethe University, Frankfurt The Impact of Foreign-born Status on Academic Scientific Careers in the United States. Monica Gaughan, Arizona State University Tech Work and Family Friendly Policies: Citizens and Immigrant Workers. Sharla N. Alegria, University of California Merced; Pallavi Banerjee, University of Calgary Labor Unions and Equal Pay for Faculty: A Study of Pay Gaps on a Unionized Campus. Rodrigo Dominguez-Villegas, University of Massachusetts- Amherst; Laurel Smith-Doerr, University of Massachusetts- Amherst

447. Section on Sociology of Law. Human Rights and Law from Above and Below: Comparative Perspectives

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512G, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Joachim J. Savelsberg, University of Minnesota Beyond the State: Implementing Human Rights in Everyday Life. David John Frank, University of California, Irvine The Promise of Shifting Human Rights from a Legal to a Sociological Framework. Elizabeth Heger Boyle, University of Minnesota Repertoires of Practice in Human Rights NGOs: The Role of the Law. Monika Christine Krause, London School of Economics Stories of Resisting Invention: Human Rights and Islamic Tradition in History. Hassan Abdel Salam, Dartmouth College Discussant: Christopher Nigel Roberts, University of Minnesota

448. Section on Sociology of Mental Health. Discrimination, Social Exclusion, and Mental Health Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512H, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Alex E. Bierman, University of Calgary Presider: Alex E. Bierman, University of Calgary Racial Disparities in Mental Health: The Importance of Skin Tone, Racial Classification, and Other Identification. Ryon J. Cobb, University of Southern California; Verna M. Keith, Texas A&M University; Dawne M. Mouzon, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey; Whitney Nicole Laster Pirtle, University of California - Merced Fear and the Social Consequences of Medical Labels and Devalued Behavior. Bianca Manago, Indiana University; Trenton D. Mize, Indiana University Does Mental Health Treatment Matter For Stigma Reduction? The Impact of Personal and Network Experiences. Megan Elizabeth Bolton, Indiana University Everyday Discrimination is Associated with All-cause Mortality: Evidence from the Health and Retirement Study. Heather R. Collins-Farmer, Pennsylvania State Unviersity; Linda A. Wray, Pennsylvania State University; Jason R. Thomas, Pennsylvania State University Discussant: Tony N. Brown, Rice University

Monday

Values among Peace Corps Volunteers. Meghan Elizabeth Kallman, Brown University Overcome America, Reentering Asia: Civic Cosmopolitan Publics in the Japanese Sixties. Kei Takata, University of DuisburgEssen The Ideal Compatriot. Markus Hadler, University of Graz; Anaid Flesken, University of Bristol Table 18. Politics in Local, City and State Environments Presider: Barbara Wejnert, University at Buffalo Examining the Role of Small Business in Tax and Fiscal Policy in Kansas. Daniel R. Alvord, University of Kansas Field Dynamics at the Intersection of Law and Local Politics. Jennifer Girouard, Marlboro College Table 19. Authoritarianism, Hegemony and Military Dominance Hegemony and the Limits of Military Dominance. Richard Lachmann, State University of New York-Albany Reflections on Hegemony: Military Authoritarianism and Political Parties in Pakistan During the Zia Era. Ghazah Abbasi, UMass Amherst Repressing Political Modernity: Democratic Transitioning and State Repression in Latin America. Martin Jacinto, University of California, Irvine The Impulse to Orthodoxy: Why Illiberal Democracies Treat Religious Pluralism as a Threat. David Levy, Boston University Table 20. Political Polarization in the United States, Korea, and Eastern Europe Presider: John C. Torpey, Graduate Center, City University of New York Measuring Political Polarization among the General American Public: A Social Networks Approach. Nick Rogers, Stony Brook University; Jason Jeffrey Jones, Stony Brook University Moral Polarization of Korean Politics: Analysis on Moral Foundations of Korean Political Parties. Changdong Oh, Yonsei University Not My Neighbor: Political Orientations and Homonegativity in Contemporary Eastern Europe. Ksenia Gracheva, University of California, Irvine; Catherine I. Bolzendahl, University of California, Irvine The Emergence of Rightwing Populism in the United States: From Movement to Party to President. Ritchie Savage, Pratt Institute

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449. Section on Sociology of Population. The Demography of Social Inequality

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513D, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Gregory Sharp, University at Buffalo, SUNY Presider: Gregory Sharp, University at Buffalo, SUNY Childhood Residential Experiences, Socioeconomic Attainment, and Residential Segregation in Early Adulthood. Robert L. Wagmiller, Temple University; Jared Strohl, University at Buffalo, SUNY; Robert M. Adelman, University at Buffalo, SUNY Evictions in the Changing City: Spatial, Racial, and Gender Disparities in Evictions. Timothy Thomas, University of Washington The Many Hardships of Undocumented Immigrants in the United States: Evidence from SIPP 1996-2008. Claire E. Altman, University of Missouri; Colleen M. Heflin, University of Missouri; Chaegyung Jun, University of Missouri; James Dean Bachmeier, Temple University The Spatial Concentration of Neighborhood Affluence and Its Protective Effect against the Risk of Prenatal Smoking. Jennifer Buher Kane, University of California, Irvine; Ehsan Farshchi, University of California-Irvine Discussant: Adam Matthew Lippert, University of Colorado Denver

Monday

450. Section on Sociology of Sex and Gender Refereed Roundtable Session and Business Meeting

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517C, 4:30-5:30 p.m. Session Organizers: Kirsten A. Dellinger, University of Mississippi Patti A. Giuffre, Texas State University Table 01. Changing Attitudes about Gender Table Presider: D’Lane R. Compton, University of New Orleans Comparison of Gender Roles Attitudes of Young Men and Women in urban China. Odalia Ho Wong, Hong Kong Baptist University; Gina Lai, Hong Kong Baptist University Converging or Diverging: Changing Gender Attitudes in Five Asian Societies. Wenjie Liao, North Carolina State University; Liying Luo, The Pennsylvania State University Table 02. Development Table Presider: Valeria Bonatti, University of Illinois Urbana Champaign Gender and Social Reproduction in Sub-Contracting Garment Production. Natascia Boeri, Bloomfield College Generational Narratives and Women’s Changing Agency in Indigenous Lenca Communities of Western Honduras. Rebecca J. Williams, University of Florida The Making of the “Third World” Gendered Technological Subject in Development. Firuzeh Shokooh-Valle, Northeastern University Table 03. Embodiment and Surveillance Table Presider: Abigail T. Brooks, Providence College Acculturation, Body Dissatisfaction and Eating Disorder Symptoms among Latinas. Edith Ramirez, University of Nevada, Reno; Marta Elliott, University of Nevada, Reno Gentle Cages: Benevolent Sexism and the Gendered Structures of Punishment. Allison Gorga, University of Iowa The Hidden and the Absent: A Document Analysis of a Health Department’s Sex Education “Toolkit”. Orlaith Heymann, University of Cincinnati Table 04. Feminism Table Presider: Marcia Texler Segal, Indiana University Southeast Between “Fact and Fiction”: Gender Theorizing in Virginia Woolf. Sarah L. MacMillen, Duquesne University; Bridget Fitzpatrick, Boston University

Ways Feminist Theories Can Add Insights to Issues of (Transnational) Power in Political Sociology. Jamie Lynn Palmer, University of Georgia Women’s Contributions to the Sociology of Social Class in Early American Sociology. Joyce E. Williams, Texas Woman’s University; Vicky MacLean, Middle Tennessee State University Fighting Back on a Slippery Slope: A ‘Feminist Empowerment’ Approach to Self-defense Teaching. Bell Alicia Murphy, University of Otago Table 05. Fertility and Infertility Table Presider: Rene Almeling, Yale University Gender Ideology and Fertility Intentions: The Case of Japan. Yuko Hara, University of Maryland Masculinity, Infertility and Cancer: How Gender Impacts Men’s Mental Health and Desire for Social Support. Skye Miner, McGill University; Davis Daumler, University of Michigan; Phyllis Zelkowitz, McGill University, Institute for Community and Family Psychiatry Jewish General Hospital, Lady Davis Institute Table 06. Gender and Violence Table Presider: Jessica Penwell Barnett, Wright State University Gender-Based Violence and Socially Excluded Populations in Kenya. Elizabeth Swart, University of Southern California Sexual Violence, Legal Reforms, and Forensic Reports: The Emerging Medico-Legal Discourse and Practice in Turkey. Tugce Ellialti-Kose, University of Pennsylvania Social Factors in Help-seeking: Stigma, Bystander Action, and Disclosure among Survivors of Gender-based Violence. Jessica Penwell Barnett, Wright State University; Eleanor Maticka-Tyndale, University of Windsor The Disparity in Socio-economic Status between Spouses and its Effect on Domestic Violence in Korea. Ki Tae Park, University of Hawaii; Yean-Ju Lee, University of Hawaii Table 07. Gendered Work Table Presider: Sharon R. Bird, Oklahoma State University The Financialized Ideal Worker: A Wager on Employment in the New Economy. Megan Tobias Neely, University of Texas at Austin Female Managers and Work–Family Conflict among their Subordinates. Makiko Fuwa, Tokyo Metropolitan University Gender Inequality in High-Tech: An Organizational Logic in Transition. Ethel Mickey, Northeastern University Table 08. Higher Education Table Presider: Kirsten A. Dellinger, University of Mississippi Faculty Assessment of the Clarity of Tenure Expectations: Does Gender Matter? Rodica Lisnic, University of Arkansas; Anna Zajicek, University of Arkansas; Brinck Kerr, University of Arkansas Fitting in Diversity and Gender Politics: Empirical Findings from Transformation Plans of German Universities. Kathrin Zippel, Northeastern University; Anke Lipinsky, GESIS-Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences, Monitoring Society and Social Change, Center of Excellence Women and Science CEWS The Diffusion of Title IX Sexual Harassment Complaints across U.S. College and Universities, 1994-2014. Celene Raymer Reynolds, Yale University Table 09. Intersections: Sexualities and Genders Table Presider: Kate Henley Averett, University at Albany, SUNY Americans’ Gender Attitudes at the Intersection of Sexual Orientation and Gender. Eric Anthony Grollman, University of Richmond

Monday, August 14, 2017

Feminism in Comedy: Is “Raunch” Combating Sexism? Jack Nix I Just Want to be Bad: Differing Viewer Perceptions of Female and Male Transgressive Characters. Evan Cooper, Farmingdale State College Millennials on Raunch Culture: An Unqualified Critique. Bernadette Barton, Morehead State University Table 16. Queering Gender Table Presider: Debarun Majumdar, Texas State University - San Marcos Queering Abortion Rights: Notes from Argentina. Barbara Sutton, University at Albany - SUNY; Elizabeth Borland, The College of New Jersey Sleeping with the Enemy: Television, the Male Gaze and the Acceptance of Same-Sex Marriage. William Cory Albertson, Georgia State University Life Has Actually Become More Clear: An Exploration of Resiliency among LGBTQ Young Adults. Rachel M. Schmitz, University of Texas Rio Grande Valley; Kimberly A. Tyler, University of Nebraska-Lincoln Table 17. Religion Table Presider: Cristina Khan, University of Connecticut Patriarchal Attitudes in Turkey: The Influence of Religion and Political Conservatism. Ceylan Engin, Texas A&M University; Heili Pals, Texas A&M University Social Structures, Religion, and Values in Veiling Preference in the Middle East and North Africa. Mansoor Moaddel, University of Maryland; Julie de Jong, University of Michigan Table 18. Sexual Violence Table Presider: Mindy Stombler, Georgia State University Accounting for Rape: Forty Years of Scientific Knowledge Production in the United States and Canada. Ethan Czuy Levine, Temple University Conceptualizing Consent: How American Prosecutors Assess Desire, Victimization, and Harm in Sexual Assault Cases Involving Teenagers. Jamie L. Small, University of Dayton Federal Intervention in Campus Sexual Assault: Title IX Investigations and the “It’s On Us” Campaign. Molly Sapia, Temple University Sexual Assault History, Attribution of Blame, and Psychology Well-Being. Ann E. Jones, University of Nevada, Reno; Marta Elliott, University of Nevada, Reno Table 19. The Lifecourse Table Presider: Heather E. Dillaway, Wayne State University Adolescent Religiosity and Sexual Self-Efficacy. Brianna McCaslin, University of Notre Dame Do Rich People Have Better Sex: The Role SES in the Sex Life of Older Adults. XiaoYu Annie Gong, McGill University; José Ignacio Nazif-Muñoz, McGill University Does Being an Early-Bloomer Harm School Performance? Pubertal Timing and Academic Achievement among Boys. Eitan Tye, Duke University Gender Conventions, Sexual Self-Efficacy, and Sexual Frequency. Daniel L. Carlson, University of Utah; Brian Soller, University of New Mexico Table 20. Transgender Studies Table Presider: Laurel Westbrook, Grand Valley State University On Identity Politics and its Discontents: Between Gender Recognition and Disembodied Communities. Sofia Aboim, Institute of Social Sciences, University of Lisbon Passing With Care: When and How Transmen Disclose their Gender Identity. Tristen Kade, Portland State University There’s No Fieldtrip to Transgenderland”: Anti-Bullying,

Monday

Laboring to Fit? LGBTQ Gender Labor in the Increasingly “Inclusionary” U.S. Military. Courtney Caviness, University of California Davis Medical Comfort at the Intersection of Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity. Zelma Lizeth Tuthill, Rice University; Bridget K. Gorman, Rice University Table 10. Men and Masculinities Framing a Movement with Memes: The Men’s Rights Subreddit. Chelsea Starr, Eastern New Mexico University Swallowing the Red Pill: Collective Masculinities in an Online Space. Pierce Alexander Dignam, Florida State University The Age of Misandry: Frames Utilized by Men’s Rights Organizations and the Reproduction of Inequality. Zachary D. Palmer, Purdue University Table 11. Motherhood Table Presider: Harmony Danyelle Newman, University of Northern Colorado Mothers without Choice: Woman’s Subject Position in the Ukrainian Policy Discourses. Oleksandra Tarkhanova, Bielefeld University Opt Out or Push out? Mothering and Identity in Taiwan and America. Wen-hui Anna Tang, National Sun Yat-sen University Reflexive Motherhood: Ideology, Identity, and the MeaningMaking Work of New Mothers. Sara Brooke Moore, Salem State University The Hard Work of Feeding the Baby: Breastfeeding and Intensive Motherhood in Contemporary Urban China. Amy Hanser, University of British Columbia; Jialin Camille Li, University of Illinois at Chicago Table 12. Non-traditional Contexts Table Presider: Kumiko Nemoto, Kyoto University of Foreign Studies The Missing and Needed Male Nurse: Discursive Hybridization in Professional Nursing Texts. Marci D. Cottingham, University of Amsterdam The Work of Women Real Estate Agents: Gender as Subversion and Skill. Eliza Benites-Gambirazio, University of Arizona There are No Female Marines: Comparing Recruiting Images from WWII and Present Day. Erica C. Bender, UC San Diego Table 13. Occupational Segregation Table Presider: Patti A. Giuffre, Texas State University Bringing Work Home: How Occupational Sex Composition Influences Traditional Gender Roles. Christopher Quiroz, University of Notre Dame; Elizabeth Aura McClintock, University of Notre Dame Structural Accommodations of Classic Patriarchy: Women and Workplace Gender Segregation in Qatar. Rania Salem, University of Toronto Scarborough; Hanan Abdul Rahim, Social and Economic Survey Research Institute, Qatar University; Kathryn M. Yount, Emory University Gender Gap in STEM by College Programs. Yun Cha, University of Pennsylvania Table 14. Politics Table Presider: Caner Hazar, University of Connecticut Female Political Leadership and the 2016 Presidential Election. Susan Hagood Lee, Boston University She Can’t Work Alone: Female Leadership and Women’s Wellbeing in 133 Countries, 1990-2013. Szu-Min Yu; ThungHong Lin, Academia Sinica; Ya-Hsuan Chou, Academia Sinica Table 15. Popular Culture Table Presider: Neal King, Virginia Tech

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Session 450, continued Transphobia, and the Limits of Tolerance. Sarah A. Miller, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Table 21. Urban Settings Table Presider: Jenny Lendrum, Wayne State Univesrity Gender and Land Grabs in Comparative Perspective. Michael Levien, Johns Hopkins University Why Do Cities Tend to Disrupt Gender Ideologies and Inequalities? . Alice Evans, University of Cambridge; Liam Swiss, Memorial University Table 22. Work and Family Table Presider: Caitlyn Collins, Washington University in St. Louis Against the Odds? Keeping a Non-traditional Division of Domestic Work after First Parenthood. Marta Dominguez Folgueras, Sciences Po; Teresa Jurado-Guerrero, Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia; Carmen Botía-Morillas, Universidad Pablo de Olavide, Seville Husbands’ Economic Dependency and Allostatic Load at Midlife. Joeun Kim, Pennsylvania State University; Jonathan Daw, Pennsylvania State University; Nancy Luke, Pennsylvania State University Rationalizing Essentialism: Adapting to a Stalled Revolution. Sarah Ashwin, London School of Economics; Olga Isupova, Higher School of Economics, Institute of Demography

Monday

451. Section on Sociology of Sexualities. Transnational Sexualities

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 515A, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Chaitanya Lakkimsetti, Texas A&M University Offloaded: Women’s Sex Work Migration across Asia and the Gendered Antitrafficking Emigration Policy of the Philippines. Maria C. Hwang, Brown University The Transnational Sexual Migration of Mexican Gay Men and the Globalization of Sexualities. Hector Carrillo, Northwestern University Transnational Moral Conservatism: How the United States and Taiwanese Christian Pro-family Movements Conspire to Produce Sexual Inequalities. Ying-Chao Kao, Rutgers University Understanding Transnational Sexuality in India: Globalization and Institutional Schemas. Apoorva Ghosh, University of CaliforniaIrvine

452. Section on the Sociology of the Family. New Data and Research Approaches for Studying Families

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513E, 4:30-6:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Sheela Kennedy, University of Michigan The Promise of Automated Text Methods for Analyzing Qualitative Data in Demography. Parijat Chakrabarti, Princeton University; Margaret Frye, Princeton University Researching Queenila, Care Work On the Move: Multi-Sited Ethnography and Transnational Families. Valerie A. FranciscoMenchavez, San Francisco State University Revisiting Measurements of Gender Inequality: Is Family Decision Making Power? Joanna Pepin, University of Maryland Racial Differences in Gay Women’s Dating Preferences for Women with Children. Matt Rafalow, Google; Jessica Kizer, University of California, Irvine Same-Sex Couples’ Shared Time in the United States. Katie Genadek; Joan Garcia Roman; Sarah M. Flood, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities

5:30 p.m.

Meetings

Department Resources Group (DRG) Advisory Board Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516C, 5:30-6:10 p.m. Section on Mathematical Sociology Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520A, 5:30-6:10 p.m. Section on Political Sociology Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517B, 5:30-6:10 p.m. Section on Sociology of Sex and Gender Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517C, 5:30-6:10 p.m.

6:30 p.m.

Meetings

ASA Opportunities in Retirement Network (ORN). Business Meeting, A Life in Sociology Series Lecture and Reception in Honor of William D’Antonio Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514A, 6:30-8:10 p.m. American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) Reception Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520F, 6:30-8:10 p.m. CAPACS Palais des congrès de Montréal, 523B, 6:30-10:30 p.m. Centenary Commemoration for Harold Garfinkel Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514C, 6:30-8:10 p.m. Global Health and Development Interest Group Palais des congrès de Montréal, 523A, 6:30-8:10 p.m. Sociological Focus Editorial Board Palais des congrès de Montréal, 525A, 6:30-8:10 p.m. Sociologists for Justice Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520C, 6:30-8:10 p.m. The Sociology of Anti-Semitism Palais des congrès de Montréal, 524A, 6:30-8:10 p.m. University of British Columbia and University of Toronto Reception Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520D, 6:30-8:10 p.m. University of Chicago, Department of Sociology Reception Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520E, 6:30-8:10 p.m. Work/Culture Network Palais des congrès de Montréal, 524B, 6:30-8:10 p.m.

Monday, August 14, 2017

6:30 p.m.

Receptions

Joint Reception: Section on Body and Embodiment and Section on Sociology of Sexualities Offsite, L’Assommoir N-D, 211, rue Notre-Dame Ouest, 6:30-8:10 p.m. Joint Reception: Section on History of Sociology; Section on Political Sociology; and Section on Comparative-Historical Sociology Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517B, 6:30-8:10 p.m. Joint Reception: Section on Organizations, Occupations, and Work and Section on Inequality, Poverty, and Mobility Offsite, TBD, 6:30-8:10 p.m. Joint Reception: Section on Sociology of Population and Section on the Sociology of the Family Offsite, TBD, 6:30-8:10 p.m. Section on Alcohol, Drugs, and Tobacco Reception Offsite, TBD, 6:30-8:10 p.m.

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Section on Disability and Society Reception (contact Sara Green, University of South Florida, for more information) Offsite, TBD, 6:30-8:10 p.m. Section on Environment and Technology Reception Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517A, 6:30-8:10 p.m. Section on Latino/a Sociology Reception Offsite, Tapas 24, 420 Notre-Dame Ouest, Local 4, 6:30-8:10 p.m. Section on Mathematical Sociology Reception Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520A, 6:30-8:10 p.m. Section on Peace, War, and Social Conflict Reception Offsite, TBD, 6:30-8:10 p.m. Section on Sociology of Religion Reception Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520B, 6:30-8:10 p.m. Sociological Practice and Public Sociology Reception Offsite, TBD, 6:30-8:10 p.m.

Section on Community and Urban Sociology Reception Offsite, Hambar Restaurant, 355, rue McGill, 6:30-8:10 p.m.

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Program Schedule • Tuesday, August 15, 2017 7:00 a.m.

Meetings

Section on Environment and Technology Council Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517B, 7:00-8:15 a.m. Section on Sociology of Religion Council Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520B, 7:00-8:15 a.m. Section on Sociology of Sexualities Planning Committee Palais des congrès de Montréal, 523B, 7:00-8:15 a.m. Section on the Sociology of the Family Council Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520C, 7:00-8:15 a.m. Task Force on Contingent Faculty Palais des congrès de Montréal, 523A, 7:00-8:15 a.m.

8:30 a.m.

Meetings

2016-17 ASA Council Members-at-Large Palais des congrès de Montréal, 518A, 8:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. American Sociological Review Editorial Board Palais des congrès de Montréal, 710A, 8:30-10:10 a.m. COPE Revision Committee Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 523A, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Contemporary Sociology Editorial Board Palais des congrès de Montréal, 710B, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Honors Program Wrap-up Palais des congrès de Montréal, 518B, 8:30-10:10 a.m.

8:30 a.m.

Sessions

453. Thematic Session. Structure, Culture, and Health Inequality in International Perspective

454. Thematic Session. The Social Construction of Intellectual Property

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511D, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Bruce G. Carruthers, Northwestern University Presider: Bruce G. Carruthers, Northwestern University Panelists: Bruce G. Carruthers, Northwestern University Jeannette Anastasia Colyvas, Northwestern University Heather A. Haveman, UC Berkeley The leading firms in the world economy are increasingly formed around the control of intellectual property rights (e.g., patents, copyrights, trademarks). If the economy of the future is all about ferreting out and exploiting the rent-generating opportunities around intellectual property rights, it is important to understand how these rights are constructed, the implications of alternative forms of construction for the economy and employment, and the main ways in which the construction of such rights might change or evolve.

455. Special Session. New Directions for Climate Action (cosponsored with Canadian Sociological Association)

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511E, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Howard Ramos, Dalhousie University Presider: Howard Ramos, Dalhousie University Perceived Influence in Climate Change Policy Networks: The Effect of Social Network Position in the Canadian Case. David B. Tindall, University of British Columbia; Mark C.J. Stoddart, Memorial University of Newfoundland Environmental Crises, Policy, and Scientific Change: Insights from a Computational Analysis. John VP McLevey, University of Waterloo Local Struggles against Climate Change. Suzanne Staggenborg, University of Pittsburgh Climate Change and the Future of Cities. Eric Klinenberg, New York University; Liz Koslov, New York University This session is supported by the Federation for the Humanities and Social Sciences. This session will examine climate change and climate action in the Post-COP21 era. It will examine how regime shifts have affected policies, practices, attitudes and protest around climate change as well as public participation and perception of environment and environmentalism. Papers will explore whether or not new directions of policy and action have affected broader cultural norms and attitudes towards the environment and conversely how those have influenced political actors ranging from protesters to policy makers and states. The social, cultural and political dynamics of climate change are riddled with tensions and contradictions. While international climate policy-making summits often fail to make significant progress, many cities and sub national states as well as mobilized citizens are taking action towards mitigation and adaptation. Despite increasingly stern warnings of irreversible ecological change, polar sea ice melts, circumpolar nations look at these transformed environments as potential new resource frontiers for oil and minerals. The 2014 People’s Climate March was the largest public mobilization around climate change to date, but climate skeptics continue to receive media attention that is disproportionate to their standing within the scientific community. This session will

Tuesday

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511A, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Jane D. McLeod, Indiana University Presider: Jane D. McLeod, Indiana University Gender and Global Health Inequality: The Case of Qatar. Jen’nan G. Read, Duke University The Institutional Foundations of Health Inequality: How CrossNational Comparison Identifies Material and Symbolic Causation. Jason Beckfield, Harvard University The Global Landscape of Stigma. Bernice A. Pescosolido, Indiana University Confronting Racial Inequities in Health: Challenges and Opportunities. David R. Williams, Harvard University This session focuses on the interplay of structural and cultural processes that produce health inequality. The overarching question this session addresses is: How are structural and cultural forms of exclusion, domination, boundary maintenance, and the like implicated in health beliefs and behaviors, health disparities, disease-related stigma, and experiences in the health care system? Following a brief introduction, four panelists—each of whose work extends beyond the United States—will describe how their research on health inequality answers this broad question. Following the panelists’ presentations, the presider will lead a general discussion on these questions: • Can material and symbolic processes of health inequality be distinguished

empirically? Is there value to doing so? To what extent are material and symbolic processes mutually reinforcing? To what extent do they counteract each other? • What lessons does research on the interplay between material and symbolic processes offer to theory, health interventions, and health policy?

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Tuesday, August 15, 2017

Session 455, continued explore a diverse range of topics related to the sociology of climate change, including: climate change adaptation and mitigation, media representations and climate discourse, public opinion and behaviour, and protest around social inequality and climate justice.

456. Author Meets Critics Session. Despite the Best Intentions: How Racial Inequality Thrives in Good Schools (Transgressing Boundaries: Studies in Black Politics and Black Communities) (Oxford University Press, 2015) by Amanda E. Lewis and John B. Diamond Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511F, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Karolyn Tyson, University North Carolina-Chapel Hill Presider: Karolyn Tyson, University North Carolina-Chapel Hill Critics: Carla Dawn O’Connor, University of Michigan R. L’Heureux Lewis-McCoy, The City College of New York - CUNY Charles A. Gallagher, La Salle University Authors: Amanda Evelyn Lewis, University of Illinois at Chicago John B. Diamond, University of Wisconsin - Madison

457. Professional Development Workshop. Preparing Young Scholars for the Future of Disability Studies

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512B, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Tom Gerschick, Illinois State University Leader: Tom Gerschick, Illinois State University Despite being a status much like sex, gender, race, ethnicity, social class and sexual orientation, scholarship on disability has significantly lagged these contemporary research and social action areas. Existing disability scholars understand the necessity of training the next generation of scholars to broaden sociologists’ understanding of the importance of studying disability in its own right and for its implications for intersectional theory and scholarship. Our expressed goal is to demonstrate the many research gaps in the sociology of disability and to demonstrate ways of addressing them. We envision this session as a catalyst where young scholars can get ideas for new projects, network with potential collaborators, and learn of publication opportunities and outlets.

Tuesday

458. Policy and Research Workshop. Rethinking Data Collection with Public Records Requests: Perspectives from the U.S. and Canada

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512A, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Pierce Greenberg, Washington State University Leader: Pierce Greenberg, Washington State University Co-Leaders: Kevin Walby, University of Winnipeg Tia Dafnos, University of New Brunswick Governments across the globe afford the public access to a variety of documents and data through open records laws. However, sociologists rarely use this valuable resource. This workshop will introduce sociologists to the process of filing public records requests to collect both qualitative and quantitative data. Presenters from the U.S. and Canada will (1) discuss potential applications of public records requests in sociological research and (2) overview guidelines for procuring data through open records laws. The workshop will also include a small-group brainstorming session to ensure that participants come away with ideas for implementing public records requests into their research. The intended audience is all sociologists who conduct research. Drs. Kevin Walby and Tia Dafnos have written extensively about using public records requests in critical criminology in Canada. Dr. Walby edited “Brokering Access: Power, Politics, and Freedom of Information Process in Canada,” a definitive

volume on the use of public records in sociological research. Session organizer Pierce Greenberg recently published a review article on the use of public records requests in sociological research in Social Currents and has used public records requests to collect data about coal waste facilities in the U.S.

459. Teaching Workshop. Group Work that Works

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516E, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Bryan K. Robinson, University of Mount Union Leader: Bryan K. Robinson, University of Mount Union This workshop introduces Team-Based Learning (TBL) as a classroom management strategy. TBL’s unique approach to groups provides all the benefits of collaboration while still holding individual students accountable for their fair share of the work. Along with basic implementation of TBL, this workshop will cover examples of productive group assignments as well as strategies for effective team evaluation.

460. Regular Session. Boys, Men, and Masculine Spaces

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512C, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizers: Christin L. Munsch, University of Connecticut Catherine J. Taylor, Indiana University Presider: Sarah Diefendorf, University of Washington Becoming Geniuses: The Infantilization of Boys’ Misbehaviors in Middle School. Michela Musto, University of Southern California Buying a Voice: Gendered Contribution Careers among Affluent Political Donors to Federal Elections, 1980-2008. Jen Heerwig, Stony Brook University; Katie Gordon, Stony Brook University Role Modeling Responsibility: Promoting the Essential Father Discourse in Responsible Fatherhood Programming and Policy. Jennifer Randles, California State University-Fresno Women in the One Percent: Gender Dynamics in Top Income and Wealth Positions. Jill Evelyn Yavorsky, Ohio State University; Lisa A. Keister, Duke University; Mike Nau, The Ohio State University Women’s Double Hurdle: Gaining the Skills, and Adapting to the Social Expectations, of Masculine Spaces. Sarah A. Outland, University of Chicago

461. Regular Session. Ethnomethodology and Conversation Analysis: Achieving Recognizable Objects and Information - Technical Settings

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512D, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Anne Warfield Rawls, Bentley University Supervising Autonomous Vehicles. Erik Vinkhuyzen, Nissan Research Center - Silicon Valley Scientists Arguing: Emotion in Interdisciplinary Lab Conversation. Donald A. Everhart, UCSD Do You Wanna See the Baby? Referencing Ultrasounds in Prenatal Care. Lisa Kietzer, UCLA The Moment of Attack: Ethnomethodology, Airborne Military Operations and the Use of Force against Designated Targets. Michael Mair, University of Liverpool; Christopher Elsey; Martina Kolanoski, Goethe University Frankfurt

462. Regular Session. Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender Studies 1

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512E, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Abigail Ruth Ocobock, University of Notre Dame After Assimilation: Conservative LGBT Politics in the Beacon of LGBT Rights. Jeffrey W. Lockhart, University of Michigan Building Relationships from the Ground Up: How Queer Actors Remake Courtship. Ellen Lamont, Appalachian State University

Tuesday, August 15, 2017 No Girls Allowed? Fluctuating Boundaries between Gay Men and Straight Women in Gay Public Space. Tyler G. Baldor, University of Pennsylvania Paving the Way to Forgotten: Progress, Invisibility, and the Ageing of the Lesbian Herstory Archives. Rebekah Orr, Christopher Newport University The Assembled Transgender Child. Ann Travers Discussant: Megan Carroll, University of Southern California

463. Regular Session. Historical Sociology

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512F, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Erik Schneiderhan, University of Toronto Presider: Christian Daye, Alpen-Adria-Universität Klagenfurt Man-on-the-Spotism, Territoriality, and the Materiality of the 19th-Century Thai State: The Case of Thai Forestry. Keerati Chenpitayaton, Chulalongkorn University Violent Colonial Geographies: The Ruins of Residential Schools. Katherine Ainsley Morton, Memorial University of Newfoundland Diffusion Conditions to Institutionalization: The Case of Heritage Policies in the “Long 19th Century”. Alexandra Marie Kowalski Teacher Institutes in the American South: The Importance of a Transitional Institutional Form. Daniel R. Huebner, University of North Carolina at Greensboro Severed Bonds: Religious Organizations and Moral Contention in the Case of American Slavery. Kristin George, UC Berkeley Discussant: Xiaohong Xu, National University of Singapore

464. Regular Session. Human Rights

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514C, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: David L. Brunsma, Virginia Tech Presider: Tatiana Samay Andia, Universidad de los Andes At the Foot of the Grave: Challenging the Narrative of Violence in Post-Franco Spain. Nicole Iturriaga, University of California Los Angeles Living through the Bureaucracy of Forced Migration: The Everyday Life of Refugee Encampment. Kamryn Danielle Warren, University of Connecticut The Limits of Rights: Claims-making on Behalf of Immigrants. Kim Voss, University of California; Fabiana Silva, University of California Berkeley; Irene H.I. Bloemraad, University of California, Berkeley

465. Regular Session. Jobs, Occupations, and Professions

466. Regular Session. Mental Health in Special Populations

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 515A, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Richard Edward Adams, Kent State University Presider: Kristen Marcussen, Kent State University Chinese Americans’ Mental Health: Lost in translation? Kelly Kato, Rutgers University Depression Risks and Correlates among Different Generations of Chinese Americans. Lin Zhu, Temple University Gender Differences in Work-Family Conflict and its Mental Health Consequences in the Canadian Context. Marisa Christine Young, McMaster University; Ruth Repchuck, McMaster University Revisiting the Black-White Paradox in Mental Disorder in Three Cohorts of Black and White Americans. Patricia Louie, University of Toronto; Blair Wheaton, University of Toronto

467. Regular Session. Play and Profit: From Youth Games to College Sports Palais des congrès de Montréal, 515B, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Ben Carrington, University of Texas-Austin Presider: Ben Carrington, University of Texas-Austin The Uneven Playing Field: How School Context Shapes the High School Sports Experience for Young Men. Jeffrey Owen Sacha, University of California, Davis The Pay to Play Girls’ Youth Sports to College Pipeline. Rick Eckstein, Villanova University Tenuous Cosmopolitan Canopies: Youth Soccer and Race in the United States. Alex Manning, University of Minnesota Positional Segregation and Trends among Polynesian Football Players in NCAA Division I Football. Emily Lybbert, Brigham Young University; Mikaela Dufur, Brigham Young University; Seth Feinberg, Western Washington University; Kory J. Jensen, Brigham Young University Recruiting, Matching, and Consolidating: The Expansion of Football Recruiting and its effects on Industry Structure. Stephen Lippmann, Miami University

468. Regular Session. Political Culture and the 2016 Election

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 515C, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Caroline W. Lee, Lafayette College Presider: Lucas Diaz, Tulane University Political Participation and Tolerance to Political Incivility. Justin Knoll, University of Arizona Troubled Legitimacies: Between Facts and Codes in the 2016 U.S. Presidential Election. Jason L. Mast, University of Warwick Voting, Protesting, and Beyond: Young Voters’ Understanding(s) of Political Participation. Bo Yun Park, Harvard University Staying Engaged: Tea Party Political Culture Paves the Way for the Trump Campaign. Elizabeth Anne Yates, University of Pittsburgh Discussant: Ruth Braunstein, University of Connecticut

469. Regular Session. Qualitative Methodology II: Narrative and Analysis Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516B, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Ralph LaRossa, Georgia State University Presider: Dawn Michelle Baunach, Kennesaw State University The Thematic Lens: A Formal and Cultural Framework for Comparative Qualitative Analysis. Thomas DeGloma, Hunter College and the Graduate Center, CUNY; Max Papadantonakis, Graduate Center, CUNY Sociological Fiction: Using Composite Characters in Narrative

Tuesday

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 510D, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: William Finlay, University of Georgia Presider: William Finlay, University of Georgia Bad Jobs for Whom? Structural Position and Job Reward Preferences among Contingent Faculty. Elizabeth Ann KlainotHess, The Ohio State University Early Career Trajectories: Precarity and Timing within Labor Market Entry. Dirk Witteveen, City University of New York, The Graduate Center Labor Outsourcing and Value Production: Producing Social and Symbolic Value on the Contracting Labor Market. Guillaume Dumont, OBS Business School The Paradoxes of Self-Branding: An Analysis of Consultants’ Professional Web Pages. Michal Pagis, Bar Ilan University; Galit Ailon, Bar-Ilan University Unemployed: White-Collar Job Searching After the Great Recession. Steven H. Lopez, Ohio State University; Lora A. Phillips, Ohio State University

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Session 469, continued Ethnography. Noah Amir Arjomand, Columbia University Process and Reliability for Cultural Model Analysis Using SemiStructured Interviews. Heather E. Price, Marian University; Christian Smith, University of Notre Dame Qualitative Coding: A 21st Century Approach. Nicole Deterding, University of Wisconsin-Madison; Mary C. Waters, Harvard University

470. Regular Session. Social and Digital Media

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516A, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Anabel Quan-Haase, University of Western Ontario Becoming Data: Web Analytics, Journalism, and the Emotional Dimensions of Rationalizing Technologies. Caitlin Petre, Yale University Does Compassion Go Viral? Social Media, Caring, and the Fort McMurray Wildfire. Shelley J. Boulianne, MacEwan University; Joanne Minaker, MacEwan University Does Longer Social Network Site Use Cause more Psychological Distress? Yangtao Huang, The University of Queensland; Mark Western, The University of Queensland The Mortality of Citizen Journalism Sites: An Event History Analysis. Ryan P. Larson, University of Minnesota; Andrew M. Lindner, Skidmore College Resonance and Relevance: A Revival of Media Sociology. Wenhong Chen, University of Texas at Austin

Tuesday

471. Regular Session. Sociology of Knowledge: Classification as a Social Process

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511B, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Laura Stark, Vanderbilt University Examining Age: Reluctant Street-Level Bureaucrats in the German Refugee Crisis. Ulrike Bialas, Princeton University Instrumentalities: How Experts Use Instruments to Organize Sound in Space. Joseph Klett, University of California, Santa Cruz Randomised Controlled Trials as a Deferral Device: Asking “What Works” and the Transformations of Citizenship. Monika Christine Krause, London School of Economics Rethinking Knowledge-Power in Development: Politics, Infrapolitics, and Extra-politics of Evaluation. Elisa Martinez, University of Massachusetts The Epistemic Logic of Asylum Screening: (Dis)embodiment and Knowledge Production in Brazil. Katherine Christine Jensen, University of Texas at Austin

472. Regular Session. Status in Organizational Fields

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511C, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Edward T. Walker, UCLA Presider: Roman V. Galperin, Johns Hopkins University Status Rebellion: When Lower Status Firms Differentiate Pro Bono Reward Strategy. Wooseok Jung, HEC Paris A Fair Game? Racial Bias and Repeated Interaction between NBA Coaches and Players. Letian Zhang, Harvard University Status Seeking and Boundary Breaking: Why Middle-Status Universities Commercialize Less in China? Xirong Subrina Shen, Cornell University The Role of Multiple Audiences in the Evaluation of Boundary Crossers in Creative Markets. Samira Dias dos Reis, UC3M; Olga M. Khessina, UIUC; Adriano Proença, UFRJ Discussant: Roman V. Galperin, Johns Hopkins University

473. Regular Session. Violent Perpetration and Victimization – Direct and Indirect Effects

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516D, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Angela P. Taylor, Fayetteville State University Presider: Kathryn M. Nowotny, University of Miami Childhood Exposure to Violence and Risky Adolescent Health Behaviors. Sarah James, Princeton Unversity; Louis Donnelly, Princeton University; Jeanne Brooks-Gunn, Teachers College; Sara S. McLanahan, Princeton University Victimization in Context: Explaining Violence Exposure via Individual Risk Factors and Perceived School Safety. Daniel Mifflin Kimmel, Yeshiva University Perpetration and Victimization of Dating Violence among College Students: Variance between United States and China. Xiaoshuang Luo, University of Oklahoma Intervention or Involvement: A Video-Based Analysis of Bouncers in Violent Interaction. Marie Bruvik Heinskou, University of Copenhagen; Lasse Suonperä Liebst, University of Copenhagen; Peter Ejbye-Ernst, Netherlands Institute for the Study of Crime and Law Enforcement; Jakob Demant, University of Copenhagen The Intersection of Vicarious Trauma and Personal Trauma Histories for Sexual Assault Crisis Workers. Amanda Moras, Sacred Heart University; Maura Ryan, Georgia State University Discussant: Jennifer Vanderminden, University of North Carolina, Wilmington

474. Section on Alcohol, Drugs, and Tobacco Refereed Roundtable Session and Business Meeting

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520A, 8:30-9:30 a.m. Session Organizer: Ellen Benoit, National Development Research Inst Table 01. Drugs and Policies Women are NORML, too! Gender and the Marijuana Policy Reform Movement. Danielle Giffort, St. Louis College of Pharmacy County-Level Variation in Support for Medical and Recreational Cannabis on the Ballot. Lindsey Marie Beltz, Washington State University Illegal Drug Markets and Victimizing Crime in New York and the United States. David F. Greenberg, New York University Table 02. Substance Use and Medical Issues Table Presider: Carrie B. Oser, University of Kentucky Breaking the law for the greater good? Core-stigmatized Organizations and Medical Cannabis Dispensaries in Canada. Jenna Valleriani, University of Toronto Doctor Shopping for Prescription Opioids: Insights from a Social Network Analysis of Prescriber-patient Ties. Brea Louise Perry, Indiana University; Carrie B. Oser, University of Kentucky They Make You Feel Like a Criminal: Managing Chronic Pain Amid the Prescription Opioid Epidemic. Loren Wilbers, University of Wisconsin-Whitewater Table 03. Substance Use and Social Control Examining the Link between Undocumented Immigration, Illicit Drugs, and DUI, 1990-2014. Michael T. Light, Purdue University; Ty Miller, Purdue University; Brian Christopher Kelly, Purdue University Self-Medication, Abuse, or Nonmedical Prescription Drug Use? Trust and Incarcerated Women’s Conceptualization of Prescription Drug Use. Michelle Hannah Smirnova, University of Missouri - Kansas City; Jennifer Gatewood Owens “You do know that’s my child in there!” A Socio-ecological

Tuesday, August 15, 2017 Exploration of Smoking in Pregnancy. Aimee Grant, Cardiff University; Melanie Morgan, Cardiff University; Dunla Gallagher, Cardiff University; Dawn Mannay, Cardiff University Table 04. Substance Use, Identities and Statuses Motivations for MDMA (Ecstasy/Molly) use among AfricanAmericans: Implications for HIV Prevention and Harm Reduction Programs. Khary K. Rigg, University of South Florida A Qualitative Study of How Chinese Young People Understand Smoking Behaviour in Gender. Tong Pei, University of Essex Context Matters: Understanding Substance Use among Homeless Youth Living on the Streets. Elizabeth A. JoniakGrant, National Coalition of Independent Scholars Gender, Alcohol, and The Media: The Portrayal of Ideal Men and Women in Alcohol Commercials. Gregory Michael Hall, SUNY at Buffalo; Robert Kappel, SUNY at Buffalo, Tulane University

475. Section on Comparative-Historical Sociology. Empires, Colonies, Indigenous Peoples

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512G, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: George Steinmetz, University of Michigan Legacies of Suspicion: From British Colonial Emergency Regulations to the ‘War on Terror’ in Israel and India. Yael H. Berda, Hebrew University Imperial Returns: American Empire and Militarization at Home. Julian Go, Boston University Standing Rock, Epicenter of Resistance to American Empire. James V. Fenelon, California State University, San Bernardino; Thomas D. Hall, DePauw University Indigenous and European laws of nations in North America to 1763. Saliha Belmessous, University of New South Wales Discussant: Krishan Kumar, University of Virginia

476. Section on Environment and Technology Refereed Roundtable Session and Business Meeting

Elites, Embeddedness, and Environmental Inequality. Ian Robert Carrillo, University of Wisconsin Production or Preferences: Structural and Personal Determinants of Small Farm Forest Cover in Brazil. Jon Mikael Nelson, Brown University Table 04. Global Issues in Environmental Sociology Table Presider: Albert S. Fu, Kutztown University A Network Analysis of International Trade in Plastic Waste. Yikang Bai Clinical Trial Outsourcing to Undeveloped Nations: How Pharmaceuticals Exploit the Human Body as Natural Capital. Micah Anthony Pyles Deforestation in the Global South: Assessing Uneven Environmental Improvements 1991-2012. Aaron W. Tester, University of California-Irvine How Global Environmental and Development Pressures Affect National Park Expansion in Non-Western Countries. Natasha Miric, University of California, Irvine Benefit Sharing Arrangements Between Oil Companies and Indigenous People in the Russian Arctic. Maria Sergeevna Tysiachniouk, Centre for Independent Social Research; Svetlana Tulaeva Table 05. Debates and Rhetoric around Fossil Fuels and Climate Change Table Presider: Anthony E. Ladd, Loyola University New Orleans Climate Change Rhetoric in the Trump Era: Lessons from Climate Change Constructions in Oklahoma. Rachel Gurney, Oklahoma State University; Beth Schaefer Caniglia, Regis University; Riley E. Dunlap, Oklahoma State University Dancing Madly Backwards: Fractured Communities and Unconventional Energy Development in the Reign of Trump. Anthony E. Ladd, Loyola University New Orleans Defining the Debate over Coal-Fired Power in the United States: Industry Accounts and Environmental Frames. Anya Mikael Galli Robertson, University of Maryland Fracking, Environmental Rhetoric, and Greenwashing: Shifting the Scale of Risk in the Oil and Gas Industry. Stephen J. Scanlan, Ohio University Table 06. Environmental Justice Table Presider: Tracy Perkins, Howard University Environmental Injustice and Sexual Minorities: A National Study of Air Pollution Risks among Same-Sex Partners. Timothy William Collins, University of Texas at El Paso; Sara Elizabeth Grineski, University of Texas at El Paso; Danielle Xiaodan Morales, University of Texas at El Paso The Multiple Meanings of Environmental Justice. Tracy Perkins, Howard University The Model Minority Myth Exposed: Carcinogenic Air Toxics among Asian Americans in Four Immigrant Gateways. Sara Elizabeth Grineski, University of Texas at El Paso; Danielle Xiaodan Morales, University of Texas at El Paso; Timothy William Collins, University of Texas at El Paso; Estefania Hernandez, University of Texas at El Paso; Ana Fuentes, University of Texas at El Paso Why Sustainability “Ain’t Gonna” Work: Privilege, Crisis Mitigation, Consumption and Non-Renewable Energy Dependency. Soraya Cardenas-Conte, Cascadia College Table 07. Environmentalisms Table Presider: Diane C. Bates Defensive Environmentalism in a College Town: Do Students Have the Same Priorities as Locals? Diane C. Bates; Michael Nordquist, The College of New Jersey Evaluating Sharing Movements through the Lens of Ecological

Tuesday

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517B, 8:30-9:30 a.m. Session Organizer: Tammy L. Lewis, CUNY-Brooklyn College Table 01. Latin American Resource Use, Extraction, and Conflicts Table Presider: Kenneth Alan Gould, City University of New York Brooklyn College Ecotourism Under Siege: The Political-Economic Dynamics of Oil Extraction Threats to Sustainable Development in Belize. Kenneth Alan Gould, City University of New York - Brooklyn College Mining Controversies: An Analysis of Project Conga, CajamarcaPeru. Giselle Velasquez Solidarity amidst Ecological Crisis: A Comparative Study of Garifuna and Miskito Communities along Nicaragua’s Caribbean Coast. Apollonya Maria Porcelli, Brown University Table 02. Focus on China A Master Plan of Sustainability: The Temporal Mismatch in China’s Mass Peasant Relocation Programs. Yue Du, University of Wisconsin Madison Local Politics and Informal Institutions in the Top-down Implementation of Environmental Authoritarianism in China. KuoRay Mao, Colorado State University-Fort Collins; Qian Zhang, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences Table 03. Focus on Brazil Table Presider: Ian Robert Carrillo, University of Wisconsin Chocolate Futures and Connected Pasts: A Global Historical Environmental Sociology of Brazil’s Cocoa Coast. Amy Teller, Brown University

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Tuesday

Session 476, continued Intentional Communities. Chie Lorene Togami, University of Pittsburgh La Vía Campesina and Standing Rock: Possibilities for Food, Water, and Climate Justice Amidst Global Expulsions? Caitlin Hays Schroering, University of Pittsburgh Table 08. Counter Environmentalisms Table Presider: Kerry Ard, Ohio State University Another Avenue of Action: Climate Change Counter Movement Industries Use of PAC Donations and Environmental Voting. Kerry Ard, Ohio State University; Nick Garcia, Ohio State University; Paige Kelly, Ohio State University Environmental Movement under the law “On Foreign Agents”: Network Transformation. Maria Sergeevna Tysiachniouk, Centre for Independent Social Research; Svetlana Tulaeva; Laura Henry, Bowdoin College The Role of Public Relations in the Transformation of the American Environmental Movement. Melissa Miriam Aronczyk, Rutgers University; Robert Brulle, Drexel University Table 09. Climate Change Concern Table Presider: Daniel Driscoll, UCSD A Critical Analysis of Local Attitudes on Climate Change and Environmental Risk in Southeastern Louisiana. Jacob Lipsman, University of Kansas How does Experiencing Climate Change Influence Ideological Transformation? Diana Stuart, Northern Arizona University Multiplex Network Ties and Climate Change: A Sense of Urgency, Support for Policies and Individual-level Practices. Thomas Macias, University of Vermont Table 10. Responding to Climate Change Crop diversification in the U.S. Corn Belt: A mixed methods analysis. Gabrielle E. Roesch-McNally, USDA Climate Hubs; J. Gordon Arbuckle, Iowa State University; John Charles Tyndall, Iowa State University Predicting Public Perceptions of an Abnormally Cold Winter: The Impacts of Temperature versus Political Orientation. Riley E. Dunlap, Oklahoma State University; Chenyang Xiao, American University; Aaron M. McCright, Michigan State University Table 11. Food Justice Table Presider: Justin Sean Myers, Marist College Beyond the Access Trap: From Distributive to Procedural Justice in Food Systems Planning. Justin Sean Myers, Marist College Composting Inequality: Social Movement Spillover, Food Justice, and Expanding Contemporary Food Politics. Joshua Sbicca, Colorado State University Urban Agriculture: Can it Benefit Local Ecologies and Local Communities? Jared Strohl, University at Buffalo, SUNY Where are First Foods in Food Justice? A Field Analysis of Infant Foods and Feeding. Erica Morrell, Middlebury College Table 12. Transitions Toward Sustainability Table Presider: Karen O’Neill, Rutgers University Brewing Green: Sustainability in the Craft Beer Movement. Ellis Jones, Holy Cross Engaging the Public in Coastal Climate Adaptation through Design and Planning. Karen O’Neill, Rutgers University; Heather M. Fenyk, Rutgers University Getting to Zero: A Field-level Perspective on Organizational Transitions Towards Carbon Neutrality. Georgia Piggot, University of British Columbia Workplace Energy Conservation at Michigan State University. Summer Allen, Michigan State University; Sandra T. MarquartPyatt, Michigan State University

Table 13. Theories in Environmental Sociology Table Presider: Gregory Hooks, McMaster University Ecological Modernization: Tales of Creation, Utopian Tales, and Sociological Theory. J. P. Sapinski, University of Victoria Modeling Topics in Environmental Sociology, 1990-2014: An Exploratory Structural Topic Model. Jeremiah Bohr, University of Wisconsin Oshkosh Recasting the Treadmills of Production and Destruction: New Theoretical Directions. Gregory Hooks, McMaster University; Chad L. Smith, Texas State University; Michael Lengefeld Resource Dependence Theory, the Treadmill of Production, and Ecological Modernization. Cynthia Evelyn Carr, UC Riverside Table 14. New Directions in Theories in Environmental Sociology Table Presider: Ryan Gunderson, Miami University A Holon Ecology Approach to Scale. Laura Alex Frye-Levine, University of Wisconsin-Madison; Michael M. Bell, University of Wisconsin-Madison Temporality in Environmental Sociology: Foundations and Opportunities for the Field. Laura Hanson Schlachter, University of Wisconsin-Madison Values, Technology, and Environmental Knowledge: Reconstructing Max Scheler’s Phenomenological Environmental Sociology. Ryan Gunderson, Miami University Unboundary Work: A Theory of Interdisciplinary Dynamics at the Intersection of Economics and Ecology. Laura Alex FryeLevine, University of Wisconsin-Madison Table 15. Environmental Policies and Practices in the United States The Lines are Drawn: Pinchotist Forestry, Private Property and the Dissolution of Progressive Conservation. Cade A. Jameson, University of Oregon The Hydrosocial Cycle and Life Environmentalism: Different Approaches to River and Watershed Governance. Kayleigh Ward, Michigan State University The Most Serious Environmental Offenses identified and Prosecuted by the Federal Government, 1982-2010. Alana R. Inlow, Washington State University; Erik W. Johnson, Washington State University; Jennifer Schwartz, Washington State University Table 16. Spatial Approaches to Environmental Issues Table Presider: Clare Cannon, UC Davis Analyzing the Spatial Location and Distribution of Landfills Across the United States. Clare Cannon, UC Davis Manufacturing History and Industrial Pollution in the United States. Kevin T. Smiley, State University of New York at Buffalo Unequal Resilience: Neighborhood Disadvantage, Bureaucratic Decision Rules, and the Duration of Electricity Outages. Raoul Salvador Lievanos, University of Oregon; Christine Horne, Washington State University Table 17. Rethinking Sustainability and Resilience Table Presider: Naomi Terese Krogman, University of Alberta Desolation Row: Sustainability for the Oft-Forgotten. Naomi Terese Krogman, University of Alberta The Complexities of Inequalities and Power: Intersectionality and Socio-Ecological Resilience. Braden Leap, Mississippi State University The Sustainability Decision: A Phenomenological Analysis. Jerry L. Williams, Stephen F. Austin State University Finding Common Ground in Local Food Systems of Kansas and Missouri. Ruth M. Stamper, University of Kansas Table 18. Climate Change and Disasters Table Presider: Rachael Leah Shwom, Rutgers University Exploring Tipping Points in the Human-Climate System. Rachael

Tuesday, August 15, 2017

477. Section on Inequality, Poverty, and Mobility. The Structure of Income Inequality and Exploitation

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513E, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Arthur Sakamoto, Texas A&M University Presider: Hyeyoung Woo, Portland State University Growing Apart: The Changing Firm-Size Wage Premium and Its Inequality Consequences. Ken-Hou Lin, University of TexasAustin; Joel Adam Cobb, The Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania Is Housing the Poor Lucrative? Exploitation and Inequality in Urban Rental Markets. Matthew Desmond, Harvard University; Nathan Wilmers, Harvard University What We See Depends on Where We Stand: Distorted Perception of Social Income Inequality. Jingwen Zhong

The Sense of Injustice, Perceived Inequality and Preferences for Redistribution. Yeon Ju Lee, University of Chicago Discussant: Kevin T. Leicht, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign

478. Section on Organizations, Occupations, and Work. Differences at Work

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513F, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Elisabeth S. Clemens, University of Chicago Cultural Tokenism: The Effects of Gender, Race, and Ethnicity for Immigrant Women at Work. Debaleena Ghosh, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale; Kristen Barber, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale Developmental Practices and Organizational Race and Gender Diversity. Elizabeth H. Gorman, University of Virginia; Fiona M. Kay, Queen’s University Undoing Gender in a Postfeminist Era: Gender Essentialization and Feminine Devaluation among Designers. Shelly Ronen, New York University Gender and Network Mobilization in the Search for Managerial Work. Elena Obukhova, McGill University; Adam M. Kleinbaum, Dartmouth College Discussant: Sarah Thebaud, Unviersity of California Santa Barbara

479. Section on Peace, War, and Social Conflict Refereed Roundtable Session and Business Meeting

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516C, 8:30-9:30 a.m. Session Organizer: Ashley Veronica Reichelmann, Virginia Tech Table 01. Spaces and Resources of War Land Conflicts and Changes in Socioeconomic Relations: The Manyani Emerge in Tanzania. Mariam M. Kurtz, Georgetown University The Material Roots of Rebel Fragmentation in Civil Wars: A Case Study of the Syrian Conflict. Caitlin Ella Wind Table 02. The Theories and Structures of Conflict and Violence Table Presider: Michelle I. Gawerc, Loyola University Maryland Migration, Intergroup Isolation and Mistrust in Urban China. Bingdao Zheng, Fudan University Racial Differences in Approval of Police Use of Force, 1975-2014. Jenifer Hamil, Duke University Structuring Nonviolence. Johnny J. Mack, Communities without Boundaries International; Lester R. Kurtz, George Mason University Table 03. Using Soldiers: Perspectives, Props and the Other Table Presider: Stephanie Bonnes, University of Colorado Boulder Like Attracts Like: Military Values and Branch Affiliation of Cadets after the Reform. Morten Braender, Aarhus University; Vilhelm Stefan Holsting, Royal Danish Military Academy, Copenhagen Business School On Humvee, Helmet and Social Sciences: Materiality of Appropriation. Nima Zahedi Nameghi Spectacle in the Science of War Trauma: From Shell Shock to PTSD to TBI. Jerry L. Lembcke

480. Section on Political Sociology. The Cultural Contexts of Political Action

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513C, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Paul R. Lichterman, University of Southern California Presider: Claudio Ezequiel Benzecry, Northwestern University Resisting “Gender Theory” in France: A Fulcrum for Religious Action in a Secular Society. Michael Stambolis-Ruhstorfer, Université

Tuesday

Leah Shwom, Rutgers University A Social Trap for the Climate? Collective Action, Trust and Risk Perception in 35 Countries. E. Keith Smith, Colorado State University; Adam Mayer, Colorado State University Structurally Disadvantaged: Procedural Justice in Climate Policymaking. Danielle Falzon, Brown University Disaster Vulnerability, Displacement, and Infectious Disease: Nicaragua and Hurricane Mitch. Peter Joseph Loebach, Weber State University; Kim M. Korinek, University of Utah Table 19. Technology and Social Institutions Table Presider: Jesse Goldstein, Virginia Commonwealth University Network-Construction and Network-Exploitation by Innovation Agencies. Steven Samford, University of Toronto; Dan Breznitz, Georgia Institute of Technology The Problem of Scaling Up: Considering the Economic Landscape of Niche Technologies. Christina A. Ergas, University of Tennessee Energizing Legality: Energy Infrastructures, Law and Temporality in the Making of an Authoritarian Turkey. Sinan Erensu, Northwestern University Ocean Beliefs and Support for an Offshore Wind Energy Project. David Bidwell, University of Rhode Island Table 20. Social Construction of Nature and Animals Table Presider: Jordan Fox Besek, University of Oregon Claims-Making and the Careers of Infrastructure Projects: Understanding Sediment Diversion Planning in Southern Louisiana. Michael Haedicke, Drake University Opportunities for Power: Hinterland Mobilization in the Creation of New York City’s Watershed. Sarah Blake, Washington State University The Liberal Concept of Individual Rights is a Barrier to Sustaining Biodiversity and Wolf Recovery Efforts. Alexander Thomas Simon, Utah Valley University “You Get It Taken Away, You Strike Back”: Responding to the Presence of Invasive Species. Jeanine Cunningham, University of Oregon; Jordan Fox Besek, University of Oregon Table 21. Responses to Limits Table Presider: Miriam Padolsky, Government of Canada Adapting to New Agricultural Water Restrictions in Idaho. Katrina Running, Idaho State University; Kathleen Shipley, Idaho State University; Morey Burnham, Idaho State University Behavioral Plasticity and Psychological Distance in Water Conservation. Summer Allen, Michigan State University Fuel Poverty: The Role of Social-Psychological Factors Affecting Low-income Households’ Acceptance to Demand Response. Chien-fei Chen, University of Tennessee; Xiaojing Xu, University of Tennessee; Laura Arpan, Florida State University; Alyssa Loveday, University of Tennessee

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Session 480, continued Bordeaux Montaigne; Josselin Tricou, Université Paris 8 Conservativism in a Time of Fake News and Irrelevant Truths. Ian Mullins, University of California, San Diego The Political Value of Cultural Capital: Nationalism, Ethnic Exclusion and Elites in 19th Century Congress Poland. Malgorzata Kurjanska, Harvard University Teleologies in Contention: Re-imagining Futures in Public Deliberation. Ann Mische, University of Notre Dame Discussant: Paul R. Lichterman, University of Southern California

481. Section on Racial and Ethnic Minorities. Comparative Perspectives on Racialization and Migration

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512H, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Patricia Landolt, University of Toronto Presider: Patricia Landolt, University of Toronto Color-blind Classism: Class Distinction and Discursive Resilience against Stigmatization among Upper-middle Class Immigrants in France. Lucas Germain Drouhot, Cornell University; Radu Andrei Pârvulescu, Cornell University Covering the Syrian Refugee Crisis: Immigration Discourses and the Politics of National Belonging. Man Xu Gender Equality and LGBTQ Rights in Refugee Politics: Racialization and the Production of National Membership. Anna C. Korteweg, University of Toronto; Gökçe Yurdakul, Humboldt University, Berlin Racial ambiguity and the Dynamism of the Racial Middle. Radha Modi, University of Illinois, Chicago Discussant: Patricia Landolt, University of Toronto

Tuesday

482. Section on Science, Knowledge, and Technology. Technology, Politics, and Socio-Environmental Solutions

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513D, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Scott Frickel, Brown University Presider: Tammy L. Lewis, CUNY-Brooklyn College Contested Identities and Truths in Governance of Extraction and Environmental Risks in Minnesota Copper Mining. Erik Kojola, University of Minnesota Maintaining Reliability in an Increasingly Complex Field: The Electricity Industry’s Transition to Smart Grid. Lauren Scott, Washington State University Stakeholder Perceptions of Hydraulic Fracturing: Engaging in Strategic Science Translation. Michelle Lynn Edwards, Texas Christian University The End of the Petrochemical Age? Corporate Technological Fixes to Existential Ecological Threats. Alice Mah, University of Warwick Water Use Decision-making in Southwest Michigan. Jennifer Lai, Michigan State University

483. Section on Sociological Practice and Public Sociology Refereed Roundtable Session and Business Meeting

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517C, 8:30-9:30 a.m. Session Organizer: Melissa S. Fry, Indiana University Southeast Table 01. Bringing Community Based Participatory Research to Scale Co-Production of Research Questions and Research Evidence in Public Health: Bringing CBPR to Scale. Mark Wolfson, Wake Forest School of Medicine Table 02. Recovering Institutions of Higher Education After War Improving Homeless Point-in-time Counts with Student Researchers. Curtis Smith, Utah State University; Ernesto Castaneda, American University

Table 03. The Destigmatizing Power of Disease in Practice Problem Gamblers’ Engagement with Medicalization Discourses and the Destigmatizing Power of Disease. Andrea Jane Dassopoulos, University of Nevada, Las Vegas; Sarah A. St. John, University of Nevada, Las Vegas Table 04. At Risk-ing and Asterisking Native Peoples in Social Science At Risk-ing and Asterisk-ing Native Peoples in Social Science: Settler-Colonialism Made Visible through Keyword Analysis. J. M. Bacon, University of Oregon Table 05. Social Psychology and Ethics The Sociological Side of Gordon W. Allport: Social Psychology and Engaged Social Ethics. Lawrence T. Nichols, West Virginia University Table 06. Communicating Outside the Academy: Stories and Guidance Table Presiders: Kristin Kenneavy, Ramapo College of New Jersey Shannon Cavanagh, University of Texas at Austin Robert W. Faris, UC-Davis Table 07. Communicating Outside the Academy: Stories and Guidance II Table Presiders: Emily McKendry-Smith, University of West Georgia Mairead Eastin Moloney, University of Kentucky Table 08. Mentoring for Applied Sociologists Inside and Outside the Academy Table Presiders: Kathleen Odell Korgen, William Paterson University Sarah K.S. Shannon, University of Georgia; Chloe E. Bird, RAND; Catherine Mobley, Clemson University Table 09. Social Activism: Putting Sociological Practice (Applied, Clinical, and Engaged Public Sociology) to Work Table Presiders: Lindy Hern, University of Hawaii at Hilo Melodye Gaye Lehnerer, College of Southern Nevada Miriam W. Boeri, Bentley University Table 10. Sociological Practice and Professional Development: Approaches to Training and Education Table Presiders: Gary C. David, Bentley University James Daniel Lee, San Jose State University Johanna Bishop

484. Section on Sociology of Religion. Religion in CrossNational Perspective: Leveraging Comparisons

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514A, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Mark Chaves, Duke University Presider: Mark Chaves, Duke University Religious Identity and Religious Behavior in South Africa. Philip S. Brenner, University of Massachusetts Boston Religious Elites and Empathy: The Role of Church-State Incongruence. Robert Braun, Northwestern University The Influence of Religion on Intergenerational Solidarity in Eastern and Western Germany. Anja Steinbach, University of DuisburgEssen; Merril Silverstein, Syracuse University Perceptions of Discrimination in Global Science. Elaine Howard Ecklund, Rice University; Robert A. Thomson, Baylor University; Daniel Bolger, Rice University; Sharan Kaur Mehta, Rice University

485. Section on Sociology of Sex and Gender. Conceptualizing, Operationalizing and Measuring Gendered and Sexual Violence

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513B, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizers: Mary Blair-Loy, University of California-San Diego Jennifer A. Reich, University of Colorado Denver Presider: Lisa D. Brush, University of Pittsburgh

Tuesday, August 15, 2017 The Gender of Police Violence: An Intersectional Analysis. Nikki Jones, University of California-Berkeley Precarious Migrants: Domestic Workers in Dubai. Rhacel Salazar Parrenas, University of Southern California The Paradox of “Ethical” Protectionism: Research on Child Sexual Violence. Heather R. Hlavka, Marquette University Immeasurable: Feminist Reflections on Sexual Violence within Mexican Families. Gloria Gonzalez-Lopez, University of Texas at Austin The Challenges of Using Online Sampling Platforms in Studies of Violence Against Women. Claire M. Renzetti, University of Kentucky

10:30 a.m.

197

Meetings

COPE Committee Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 523A, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Honors Program Advisory Panel Palais des congrès de Montréal, 525A, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m.

10:30 a.m.

Sessions

488. Presidential Panel. Social Movements, Rights, and Boundaries

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514B, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Vrushali Patil, Florida International University Aberrations of “Home”: Gay Neighborhoods and the Experiences of Community among GBQ Men of Color. Theo Greene, Bowdoin College Polyamory and American Sexual Exceptionalism in the Film Savages. Mimi Schippers, Tulane University Queer Exceptionalism and Exclusion: Cosmopolitanism and Inequality in ‘Gay Friendly’ Beirut. Ghassan Moussawi, University of Illinois-Urbana Champaign Sexual Citizenship and the Affective Politics of Latina Youth. Emily S. Mann, University of South Carolina Discussant: Jyoti Puri, Simmons College

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516B, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Michèle Lamont, Harvard University Presider: Cynthia Fuchs Epstein, Graduate Center, CUNY How Do Courts Enforce Hate Speech Laws? Values and Boundaries in the European Context. Erik Bleich, Middlebury College Emergence in Social Movements: The Case of Male Chauvinist. Jane Mansbridge, Harvard University International Law and the Politics of Religious Difference: A Historical Sociological Perspective. Matthias Koenig, University of Goettingen Discussant: Jan Willem Duyvendak, University of Amsterdam This session concerns the various ways in which social and symbolic boundaries are shaped by social movements and state action. It is particularly concerned with the role of the law in enabling and constraining various types of solidarity toward minority groups and women.

487. Section on the Sociology of the Family. Family Relationships across the Life Course

489. Thematic Session. The Cognitive Sociology of Inclusion and Exclusion

486. Section on Sociology of Sexualities. Intersectionalities and Sexualities

9:30 a.m.

Meetings

Section on Environment and Technology Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517B, 9:30-10:10 a.m. Section on Peace, War, and Social Conflict Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516C, 9:30-10:10 a.m. Section on Sociological Practice and Public Sociology Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517C, 9:30-10:10 a.m. Section on Sociology of Alcohol, Drugs, and Tobacco Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520A, 9:30-10:10 a.m.

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511B, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Eviatar Zerubavel, Rutgers University Presider: Gary Alan Fine, Northwestern University War Widows and Drive-By Widows: The Politics of Boundaries Shaping Deservingness in U.S. Welfare Policy. Brittany Battle, Rutgers University - New Brunswick Sexual Identities, Cultural Attention, and the Sociocognitive Politics of Marginalization and Privilege. Wayne H. Brekhus, University of Missouri Social Speciation: An Approach to Ethno-national Enmity. Kai Erikson, Yale University Ethnoracial Classification as a Politics of Erasure. Mara Loveman, University of California, Berkeley The session will revolve around the theme of delineation (and around the main mechanism making it possible, namely boundaries), which is the sociomental act underlying the way individuals as well as groups include and exclude other individuals and groups. It will encompass different substantive domains (gender, nationality, race and ethnicity, sexuality) as well as tackle with those domains at both the macro-, meso-, and micro- levels of social analysis. To accomplish that, I have secured the participation of four colleagues, who will present papers on “social speciation” and the politics of ethnicity (Erikson), the politics of ethnoracial classification (Loveman), the politics of sexual marginalization (Brekhus), and the politics of “social deservingness” in welfare policy (Battle).

490. Thematic Session. The New Philanthropy as Social Investment: Theorizing the Philanthrocapitalist Turn Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511E, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizers: Erica Kohl-Arenas, University of California, Berkeley

Tuesday

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513A, 8:30-10:10 a.m. Session Organizer: Jenjira Yahirun, University of Hawai’i at Mānoa Presider: Sung S. Park, University of California, Los Angeles Why are Parents so Unhappy? The Impact of Conflicts on Parents’ Relationship Satisfaction. Björn Huß; Matthias Pollmann-Schult, Bielefeld University Stepfamily Formation and Changes in Mothers’ Relationships with Children. Valarie King, Penn State University Backup Parents, Playmates, Friends: Grandparenting Roles by Family Structure and Child Age. Christopher Near, Cornell University; Rachel Dunifon Parents’ Valuation of Approving a Child’s Spouse in a Context of Marital Change. Keera Allendorf, Indiana University Discussant: Jenjira Yahirun, University of Hawai’i at Mānoa

198

Tuesday, August 15, 2017

Session 490, continued Linsey McGoey, University of Essex Presider: Darren Thiel, University of Essex Panelists: Emily A. Barman, Boston University John D. Arena, College of Staten Island Discussant: Linsey McGoey, University of Essex First coined in 2006, the term ‘philanthrocapitalism’ turns ten years old this year – and yet conceptual and practical understandings of the concept remain in their infancy. Where has the term come from; who are its main proponents; and what risks and opportunities does it herald? In this session, a range of scholars analyse the hope, hype and tensions of the philanthrocapitalist turn, exploring a number of novel developments in global philanthropy, including the rise of ‘impact investing’ and the new trend of establishing limited liability companies (LLCs) rather than traditional foundations in order to disburse large fortunes. Panellists will address questions such as: is there a direct relationship between growing philanthropy and growing wealth inequality, and if so, how can we improve the measurement of that relationship? How to study new philanthropic entities such as philanthropic LLCs where grant-making is less open to public scrutiny than at traditional foundations? How to document the ways in which corporate donors enlist new charitable ‘subjects’ and populations as entrepreneurs are positioned in both theory and practice to produce a return on investment? The conceptual themes and empirical developments addressed by panelists are increasingly urgent at a time when a growing number of major philanthropic institutions announce initiatives to address entrenched patterns of poverty and inequality by mobilizing capital created through patterns of wealth production that can contribute to the very problems they aim to solve.

Tuesday

491. Thematic Session. The World According to U.S. Social Science

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511F, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizers: Cynthia Miller-Idriss, American University Mitchell L. Stevens, Stanford University Presider: George Steinmetz, University of Michigan Panelists: Raewyn Connell, University of Sydney Charles Kurzman, University of North Carolina John Lie, University of California, Berkeley Florencia Torche, Stanford University Discussant: George Steinmetz, University of Michigan American scholars working in the academic disciplines of economics, political science, and sociology have long made the United States their default object of study, largely delegating inquiries beyond U.S. borders either to “area specialists” or to anthropologists, historians, and humanists. Whether this national parochialism is good or ill for disciplinary social science is a perennial question, even as recent events on the global stage give it new urgency. Are U.S. social scientists currently giving the world its due? What would our discipline look like if ‘the world’ becamea larger part of our research and teaching? How ought the production of knowledge about the ‘rest’ of the world be organized in U.S. universities today?

492. Author Meets Critics Session. The Social Life of DNA: Race, Reparations, and Reconciliation After the Genome (Beacon Press, 2016) by Alondra Nelson Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511D, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Joan H. Fujimura, University of Wisconsin Critics: Ann J. Morning, New York University Dorothy E. Roberts, University of Pennsylvania

Author: Alondra Nelson, Columbia University and Social Science Research Council

493. Regional Spotlight Session. Policies and Health Inequalities Around the Globe

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511A, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Amelie Quesnel-Vallee, McGill University Constrained Choice: Evidence for a New Approach to Global Health Inequalities. Patricia P. Rieker, Boston University; Chloe E. Bird, RAND Using Mixed Methods Experimental Policy Analysis to Identify and Address the Unintended Consequences of Policies to Reduce Social Inequalities in Health. Lindsey Richardson, University of British Columbia Measuring and Monitoring Health Inequalities in Canada: The PanCanadian Health Inequalities Reporting Initiative. Beth Jackson, Public Health Agency of Canada Discussant: Richard M. Carpiano, University of British Columbia

494. Departmental Management and Leadership Workshop. Student Parents on Campus: How Sociology Departments and Faculty can Support Their Students Who are Balancing College with Raising Children

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512A, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Sheila M. Katz, University of Houston Leader: Sheila M. Katz, University of Houston Co-Leaders: Autumn R. Green, Endicott College Perry A. Threlfall, George Mason University Student parents represent a rapidly growing and significant portion of the undergraduate population, yet most colleges and universities have not yet researched or identified these students or developed any specialized support services that they need to be successful. According to data from the Institute for Women’s Policy Research, students with children make up 4.8 million students or 26% of the undergraduate student population nationally. Yet the six-year baccalaureate graduation rate for student parents is alarmingly low. Emerging research and initiatives are beginning to address student parents both as a high-risk population, and a diverse population in need of a range of student support services from their colleges and universities to increase their retention and degree completion. Sociology faculty are often most aware of student parents through their direct interactions and relationships with students but may feel frustrated or helpless about how to support their student parents and how to approach college administrations about institutionalizing support systems. The National Center for Student Parent Programs has partnered with the Program Evaluation & Research Group to develop and pilot The Family Friendly Campus Toolkit, a set of instruments and guided process through which institutions can conduct a self-assessment and program development initiative to improve their college/ university’s approaches to supporting parenting students on their campuses. This workshop will address these issues exploring both effective strategies for advocating for institutional change, as well as interpersonal and classroom strategies that can be implemented by individual faculty members or departments. The workshop will cover the following topics: 1. Who are student parents? 2. What do they need? 3. Examples of strategies and best practices from college and university student parent programs across the U.S. 4. Classroom strategies & faculty interactions 5. How to build an institutional initiative on your campus utilizing the Family Friendly Campus Toolkit as recently developed at Endicott College’s National

Tuesday, August 15, 2017 Center for Student Parent Programs and piloted at eight colleges & universities including two-year, four-year public and private institutions. The workshop will cover the following topics: 1. Who are student parents? 2. Why are they returning to school after starting a family? 3. What do they need? 4.Examples of strategies and best practices from college and university student parent programs across the U.S. 5. Classroom strategies & faculty interactions 6. How to build an institutional initiative on your campus utilizing the Family Friendly Campus Toolkit as recently developed at Endicott College’s National Center for Student Parent Programs and piloted at eight colleges & universities including two-year, four-year public and private institutions.

495. Regular Session. Ethnomethodology and Conversation Analysis: Authority, Politics and Inclusion - Imperatives of Preference Orders Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512C, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Anne Warfield Rawls, Bentley University A Scalar View of Progressivity in Interaction. Chase Wesley Raymond, University of Colorado, Boulder Is Conversation Built for Two? Tanya Stivers, UCLA What is ‘Chandelle’ in English? Word Searches in the EFL Classroom. Julie Bouchard

496. Regular Session. Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender Studies #2

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512D, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Abigail Ruth Ocobock, University of Notre Dame Black and LGBT: Identity Salience and Perception of Same-Sex Marriage. Jess Lee, University of California, Irvine Justifying Explicit Racism with Cultural Logics of Sexual Orientation: Racial Exclusion on Gay Hookup App. Jody Ahlm, University of Illinois at Chicago Unequal Risk: The Roles of Race, Gender, and Class in the Murders of Transgender People. Laurel Westbrook, Grand Valley State University Identity Override: Why Sexual Orientation Reduces the Rigidity of Racial Boundaries. Adam L. Horowitz, Tel Aviv University; Charles Jonathan Gomez, University of California, Berkeley Discussant: Chong-suk Han, Middlebury College

497. Regular Session. Gendered Sexuality

498. Regular Session. History of Sociology/Social Thought Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512F, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Chad Alan Goldberg, University of WisconsinMadison

Presider: Chad Alan Goldberg, University of Wisconsin-Madison An Agenda for Democratic Society: Alred Schütz’s Der Sinnhafte Aufbau der sozialen Welt. Christopher Herbert Schlembach, University of Vienna Historical Epistemology in the Historiography of the Social Sciences: Three Approaches. Christian Daye, Alpen-Adria-Universität Klagenfurt What Kind of Writing is Sociology? Literary Form and Theoretical Integration in the Human Sciences. Martin Lukk, University of Toronto Who Reads Tocqueville Today? A Pragmatic Genealogy of Democracy in America. Filipe Carreira da Silva, University of Lisbon Discussant: Anne Kane, University of Houston - Downtown

499. Regular Session. Law and Society Perspective on Crime Control, Citizenship and Persistence of Inequality

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514C, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Nicole Gonzalez Van Cleve, Temple University Presider: Anya Degenshein, Northwestern University A Multidimensional Sociology of “Trafficking.” Pantea Javidan, London School of Economics and Political Science Crime Control as Customer Service in an Advantaged Community. Devon Magliozzi, Stanford University Does Decriminalization Mean Destigmatization? Law Reform, Sex Work, and Stigma. Dana Hayward, Yale University Racial Threat, Criminal History, and Employment: Examining the Determinants of Ban the Box Passage. Eric LaPlant, Ohio State University Tangled Exclusion: Felons, Illegals, and the Stratification of Citizenship through U.S.-Mexico border Policing. Patrisia MaciasRojas, University of Illinois, Chicago

500. Regular Session. Migrants and their Homelands

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 515A, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Thomas Georg Soehl, McGill University Presider: Amal Al-Ashtal, McGill University A Dynamic Model of Self-Employment and Socioeconomic Mobility among Return Migrants: The Case of Urban Mexico. Joshua Thomas Wassink, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Jacqueline M. Hagan, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Sending Country Practices and Civic Participation among Immigrants. Eric Fong, Chinese University of Hong Kong; Wataru Ozawa, Ritsumeikan University; Feng Hou, Statistics Canada International Mobility as a Response to Social Inequality? Evidence from France. Louise Caron Migration and Parental Absence in Latin America: A Comparative Assessment. Jack DeWaard, University of Minnesota-Twin Cities; Jenna Nobles, University of Wisconsin, Madison; Katharine Donato, Vanderbilt University Discussant: David Scott FitzGerald, University of California-San Diego

501. Regular Session. Political Cultures in Unlikely Places

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 515B, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Caroline W. Lee, Lafayette College Presider: Marcos Emilio Perez, Colby College Placing Community Gatherings in the “Public Sphere”: Case Studies from a Disadvantaged Black Neighborhood. Francisco Pablo Landeros Vieyra, Washington University in St. Louis “It’s not about Policy; It’s about Personality”: Legitimating Rural Political Regimes. Philip George Lewin, Florida Atlantic University

Tuesday

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512E, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Ellen Lamont, Appalachian State University Presider: Apoorva Ghosh, University of California-Irvine Hacking Patriarchy, Agency and the Sexual Projects of Pakistani Women. Fauzia Husain, University of Virginia Moaning and Eye Contact: College Men’s Negotiations of Sexual Consent in Theory and in Practice. Nicole Bedera, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Heterosexuality and Heteroflexibility: Homophobia, Hegemonic Masculinity and Femininity, and Straightness. Tony Silva, University of Oregon Reproducing (and Disrupting) Heteronormativity: Gendered Sexual Socialization in Preschool Classrooms. Heidi Gansen, University of Michigan Discussant: Stef M. Shuster, Appalachian State University

199

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Tuesday, August 15, 2017

Session 501, continued Participation and Control: Soviet Letters to the Editor during Late State Socialism. Andrew D. Buck, University of Southern Indiana Protest Movements and the Culture of Democratic Liberty: The Example of Street Mobilization in Russia, 2011–2012. Anna Paretskaya, University of Wisconsin-Madison Discussant: Michael McQuarrie, London School of Economics

502. Regular Session. Sociology of Science

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516A, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Aaron Panofsky, University of California-Los Angeles Presider: Seyyed Ayatollah Mirzaie, Institute for Humanities and Cultural Studies Why Scientists Chase Big Problems. Jacob Gates Foster, University of California-Los Angeles; Carl T. Bergstrom, University of Washington; Yangbo Song, Chinese University of Hong Kong (Shenzhen) British Science: National Cultures of Animals, Care and Experimentation. Carrie E. Friese, London School of Economics; Nathalie Nuyts, LSE; Juan Pablo Pardo-Guerra, University of California, San Diego HPV Vaccine Development and Organizational Cultures of Translation at the National Cancer Institute, 1991-2008. Natalie Brooke Aviles, Colby College The Color of Progress: Race, Status, and Technology in the Cotton Sector of Burkina Faso. Jessie K Luna, University of Colorado at Boulder Democratic Values and the Cultural Authority of Science. Gordon Gauchat, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee

Tuesday

503. Regular Session. Space and Place

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516E, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizers: Rachel Parker, CIFAR Richard P. Appelbaum, University of California-Santa Barbara Presider: Gary P. Green A Permeable Boundary: Networks of Student Mobility in Baltimore City and its Inner Suburbs. Julia Burdick-Will, Johns Hopkins University; Jeffrey Grigg, Johns Hopkins University; Faith Connolly, Baltimore Education Research Consortium; Kiara Millay Nerenberg, Johns Hopkins University Deindustrialization of Rural America: Economic Restructuring and the Rural Ghetto. Gary P. Green Fear and Loathing (of Others) in Washington, D.C. Brandi Thompson Summers, Virginia Commonwealth University; Kathryn Howell, Virginia Commowealth University Green, Blue, Yellow, and Red: The Relational Racialization of Space. Raoul Salvador Lievanos, University of Oregon “Perfectly Positioned”: The Blurring of Urban, Suburban, and Rural Boundaries in a Southern Community. Betsie Garner, University of Pennsylvania

504. Regular Session. Teaching Sociology

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516D, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Teresa Ciabattari, Pacific Lutheran University Presider: Anne Frances Eisenberg, SUNY- Geneseo A Comparison of Class Size Effects in Larger and Smaller Sections of the Introductory Sociology Course. Sandra Rezac, SUNY Plattsburgh; Charles Allan McCoy, SUNY Plattsburgh; Stanley Sabin, SUNY Plattsburgh; Stephen C. Light, SUNY Plattsburgh Do they have to like it to learn from it? Students’ CLG Experiences and Learning. Renee A. Monson, Hobart and William Smith

Colleges Effect of Removing a Cheating Inhibitor on Online Exam Scores: Lengthening Time for Exam Access. Steven Stack, Wayne State University Grappling with Self-Serving Attribution Bias in the Classroom: Opportunity for a Teachable Moment. Sarah Jean Hatteberg, The College of Charleston Seeing Sociology: An Analysis of What Concepts Introductory Sociology Students Can Apply Using Photography. Stephanie Medley-Rath, Indiana University Kokomo

505. Regular Session. Undoing Gender: Sport, Power and the Body

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 510D, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Ben Carrington, University of Texas-Austin Presider: David Karen, Bryn Mawr College The Powers of Testosterone: Obscuring Racial and Regional bias in Regulating Female Athletes’ Eligibility. Katrina Karkazis, Stanford University; Rebecca Jordan-Young, Barnard College The Social Organization of CrossFit and the Reconstruction of the Self and Body. Michael Eddie Ramirez, Texas A&M University Corpus Christi To become badass the only way I knew how: Strength and Femininity in Powerlifting Women. Kelly O’Brien, Michigan State University Charging the Net: A Generational Model of Social Activism in Women’s Professional Tennis. Kristi Tredway, St. Mary’s College of Maryland Challenging Athletic Professionalism: The Case of Elite Female Cycling. Diana Tracy Cohen, Central Connecticut State University

506. Section on Alcohol, Drugs, and Tobacco. Disparate Impacts of the Opioid Epidemic

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513A, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Ellen Benoit, National Development Research Inst Clinicians’ Perspectives on the Extended-Release Naltrexone Continuum of Care. Carrie B. Oser, University of Kentucky; Erin Winston, University of Kentucky; Hannah K. Knudsen, University of Kentucky; Michele Staton-Tindall, University of Kentucky; Kate Eddens, University of Kentucky Disparities in Opioid Analgesic Prescription among Older U.S. Adults. Hanna Grol-Prokopczyk, University at Buffalo, SUNY Like a Fish Out of Water: Managing Chronic Pain in the Urban Safety Net. Sara Rubin, University of California-San Francisco; Nancy J. Burke, University of California-Merced; Irene H. Yen, University of California-San Francisco; Janet K. Shim, University of CaliforniaSan Francisco The Opioid Epidemic and Big Pharma Corporate Responsibility: Smoke and Mirrors? Mark Wolfson, Wake Forest School of Medicine; Kathleen L. Egan, Wake Forest School of Medicine; Sunday Azagba, Wake Forest School of Medicine Then and Now: The Legacy of Needle/Syringe Exchange Programs for Current Activism against Opioid EpidemicE. Zoe V. DavisChanin, Binghamton University; Benita Roth, Binghamton University

507. Section on Comparative and Historical Sociology Refereed Roundtable Session and Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520A, 10:30-11:30 a.m. Session Organizer: Carly Knight, Harvard University Table 01. Elite Dynamics and Collective Behavior Table Presider: Samuel David Stabler, Yale University

Tuesday, August 15, 2017 The Birth of “Neo-Socialism”: The Dynamics of Schism and Doctrinal Heresy in the French Socialist Party. Mathieu H. Desan, University of Colorado Boulder Creating Consent in State-socialist Eastern Europe: The Cosmopolitan Nationalism of the Weak. Ana Velitchkova, University of Mississippi The Stance of Armed Forces in Mass Uprisings: The Mutiny Against Ben Ali in Tunisia. Jean-Baptiste Gallopin, Yale University Between Religious and Political Fields: Reformulating Parish Space in Puritan New England, 1637-1741. Samuel David Stabler, Yale University A Comparative Analysis of Conservative Right-wing Protest Rhetoric in the Segregationist Resistance Era. Devon Alanzo Wright, Florida International University Table 02. States, Revolutions, and Empire Table Presider: Matvey Lomonosov, McGill University Contexts of State Violence: The History of Expulsions of Jews. Kerice Doten-Snitker, University of Washington Long Distance Nationalism: Old or Recent? Mythmaking and Construction of Nationhood by Early Albanian Diasporics. Matvey Lomonosov, McGill University Repolarization of Power: Decline of the Golden Horde and Russia’s Empire-Building in the Middle Ages. Pavel I. Osinsky, Appalachian State University Table 03. Policies, Politics, and Institutions Table Presider: Carly Knight, Harvard University Efforts against Human Trafficking. Robin Shura, Hiram College; Brian Kelly Polk, Case Western Reserve University Inventing Missing Persons: The Origins of the NYPD’s Missing Persons Bureau, 1867-1918. Matthew Wolfe Table 04. Markets, Development and Industrialization Table Presider: Jennifer Elise Triplett, University of Michigan Evolution of Liberal Influences in Modernization Theory: Four Liberal Presuppositions in Bryce, Rostow, and Huntington. Jennifer Elise Triplett, University of Michigan Principles of Conflict: A Case Study of Family and Industrialization in Republican Shanghai, 1910s-1940s. Wei Luo, Yale University Collective Bargaining in French and North- American Unions: Origin of “Expertise”. Maïlys GANTOIS, CESSP/CRPS Université Paris I - Panthéon Sorbonne Bring Incorporated Comparison into Chinese Stagnation Studies. Sung Hee Ru, Binghamton University

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513E, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Scott D. Landes, University of North Florida Facing Disability among Elderly Holocaust Survivors: Challenges for Trust and Care-Getting. Eva Kahana, Case Western Reserve University; Tirth Raj Bhatta, Case Western Reserve University; Boaz Kahana; Minzhi Ye, Case Western Reserve University; Nirmala Lekhak, Case Western Reserve University Post 9/11 Discrimination and Mental Health in the Context of the Great Recession. Robyn Lewis Brown, University of Kentucky; Judith A. Richman, University of Illinois at Chicago; Kathleen M. Rospenda, University of Illinois-Chicago; Myles Moody, University of Kentucky Authentic “Wounded Warriors”? How Post-9/11 Wounded Veterans Use Group Boundaries to Challenge Stigma. Sidra J. Montgomery, University of Maryland

Unequal Suffering of War: Combat Participation, Regime Type, and Leaders’ Health. Ruolin Su, University of Pennsylvania; Wensong Shen, University of Pennsylvania Discussant: Amy Kate Bailey, University of Illinois - Chicago

509. Section on Environment and Technology. Water and Inequality

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513D, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Tammy L. Lewis, CUNY-Brooklyn College Presider: William Michelson, University of Toronto Community Based Participatory Research and Citizen Science for Community Organizing around Water Quality and Water Shutoffs. Jennifer S. Carrera, Michigan State University; Jade Mitchell, Michigan State University; Lucero Radonic, Michigan State University Saving for a Dry Day: Investigating Well Ownership and Water Usage during Droughts in Kansas. Brock Ternes, University of Kansas Oil and Water in the American West: Water Market Impacts of Unconventional Oil Production in Colorado. Stephanie Ann Malin, Colorado State University; Kelsea MacIlroy, Colorado State University Rising Tides, Rising Demands: Community-Organized Coastal Retreat in Post-Sandy New York City. Liz Koslov, New York University Social Support for Water Quality: The Influence of Values and Racial Attitudes. Thomas M. Dietz, Michigan State University; Ran Duan, Michigan State University; Jakob Nalley, Michigan State University; Tony Van Witsen, Michigan State University

510. Section on Inequality, Poverty and Mobility. Social Mobility in Comparative Perspective

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513F, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: David J. Harding, University of California at Berkeley Presider: Monica Boyd, University of Toronto Classes, Capitals, and Closure: How Parents’ Occupation (or MicroClass) affects Children’s (Big) Class Destination. Daniel Laurison, Swarthmore College Did Caste Matter? Social Mobility in 1967 India in Comparative Perspective. Jonathan Kelley, University of Nevada, Reno Intergenerational Social Slass Mobility in Europe: A new Comparative Account of National Variation. Marii Paskov, University of Oxford; Erzsebet Bukodi, Institute of Education, University of London; Brian Nolan, University of Oxford Social Mobility in Post-war Japan: Long-term Trends and Crossnational Comparisons. Hiroshi Ishida, University of Tokyo; Satoshi Miwa, Tohoku University The Intergenerational Effects of the Works Progress Administration. Charles Varner, Stanford University; Sepideh Modrek, San Francisco State University; David Rehkopf, Stanford University

511. Section on Organizations, Occupations, and Work Refereed Roundtable Session

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517B, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizers: Alexandra Vinson, Northwestern University Jiwook Jung, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Table 01. (Loss of) Job Satisfaction in a New World of Work Table Presider: Liana Christin Landivar, U.S. Department of Labor Economic Development, Marketization, and Regional Variation of Work Values in Urban China. Yang Cao, UNC Charlotte Employee Reactions to Unmet Normative Claims for a Just Recognition of Work Performance. Frank Kleemann, University of Duisburg-Essen; Jule Elena Westerheide, Institut für Soziologie

Tuesday

508. Section on Disability and Society. Disability, War/ Social Conflict, and Inequality (cosponsored with Section on Peace, War, and Social Conflict)

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Tuesday, August 15, 2017

Tuesday

Session 511, continued Job Satisfaction and Turnover Intensions of Non-Tenure Track Faculty in Higher Education. Chad Gregory Evans, University of Pennsylvania The Unbearable Lightness of Being Retired: A Qualitative Study of Retired Chief Executive Officers. Michelle Pannor Silver, University of Toronto Table 02. Competing Logics in Finance Bond Ratings as Evidence for Competing Institutional Logics in Corporate Finance. Jacob Apkarian, CUNY, York College Doing Well by Doing Good? The Hidden Burdens of Inclusive Business. Laura Doering, McGill University The Diffusion of International Development Strategies: U.S. Foundations and the Case of Microfinance. Emily Bryant, Boston University The Power of Going it with Friends or a Crowd: Disassociating from a Prosocial Market Category. Silvia Dorado, University of Rhode Island; Virginia Simon Moya, Universidad de Valencia Table 03. Employee Control and Surveillance Table Presider: Arturo Alvarado, El Colegio de México Employees or Suspects? Surveillance and Scrutinization of Lowwage Service Workers in U.S. Dollar Stores. Tracy Vargas, Syracuse University Floral Ethics: Understanding the Meaning of “Work Well Done”. Isabelle Valérie Zinn, University of Lausanne / EHESS, Paris Infantilisation and ‘Tough Love’ in the Chinese workplace: Towards a New Form of Paternalism. Jingqi Zhu, Newcastle University; Rick Delbridge, Cardiff University When Work is Punishment: Penal Subjectivities in Punitive Labor Regimes. Erin E. Hatton, State University of New York at Buffalo “Rumores de pasillo:” Democratizing Information in the Transparent Organization. Katherine Sobering, University of Texas at Austin Table 04. Entrepreneurship Table Presider: Eunmi Mun, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign Measuring Entrepreneurship: Measurement Choices Can Influence Empirics. Joseph Nathan Cohen, City University of New York, Queens College; Ryan C. Sperry, City University of New York, Queens College Microsocial Assembly of Innovative Action: Brokerage, Knowledge Articulation and Creative Projects. David Obstfeld; Marc J. Ventresca, University of Oxford; Greg Fisher, Indiana University Present Time Perspective and Sustainable Development: An Ethnography of Tea Producer Organizations in East Africa. Anna Kim, HEC Montréal; Pratima Bansal, Ivey Business School, Western University; Helen Haugh, University of Cambridge Social Status and Legitimation Agents: The Entry of Communist Elites into Private Entrepreneurship. Hongwei Xu, University of Windsor; Litao Zhao, National University of Singapore Table 05. Factors Shaping Employment Outcomes Table Presider: Eun Kyong Shin, University of Tennessee Health Science Center – Oak-Ridge National Lab Between State and Market: Hukou, Non-Standard Employment, and Bad Jobs in Urban China. Kevin Stainback, Purdue University; Zhenyu Tang Career Achievement and Gender Differences in Divorce. Colleen Stuart, Johns Hopkins University; Sue H. Moon, Long Island University; Tiziana Casciaro, University of Toronto

Is there a gender promotion gap? A meta-analysis on 30 years of research. Constantin Schoen Tied Migration and Employment: Public Perceptions of Military Spouses Seeking Work. Brittany Dernberger, University of Maryland, College Park; Meredith A. Kleykamp, University of Maryland Is it my sexual orientation? LGBTQ Employment Experiences. Nicole Genevieve Denier, Colby College; Sean Waite, McGill University Table 06. Gender Wage Gap and Motherhood Penalty Table Presider: Tasmiah Amreen, University of Arkansas Gender Wage Inequalities Between Historical Heritage and Structural Adjustments: A German-German Comparison Over Time. Anne Busch-Heizmann, University DuisburgEssen; Lara Minkus, Universität Bremen Rural-Urban Differences in Motherhood Wage Penalty. Xiao Li, Washington State University Social Status effects on the Motherhood Penalty in Occupational Status. Janna Besamusca, University of Amsterdam The Misapplication of Mr. Gary Becker: How to Weed Out Wage Discrimination and Why Legitimacy Matters. Hyungmin Cha Table 07. Gendered Evaluations of Women’s Work Performance Table Presider: Lyn Craig, University of New South Wales Doing Ideal Work: Ideal Work as Gendered Performance. Christin L. Munsch, University of Connecticut; Lindsey Trimble O’Connor, California State University Channel Islands Female Clergy, Authority, and Making Sense of Parish Financial Contributions. Catherine A. Crowder, University of California San Diego Pathways to Business Ownership. Stephanie A. Pullés, University of California, Irvine Same-Sex Referent and Pre-Career Perceptions of Gendered Work Performance. Tom W. Buchanan, Mount Royal University; Travis Milnes, Colorado State University The Revolution Will Not Be Rationalized:Organizational Structures, Demography and Gender Inequality in Non-Profit Organizations. Gal Deutsch, Tel Aviv University Table 08. Interpreting Employment Policy in Organizations Changes in Organizational Interpretations of the Lactation at Work law: Health Concerns and Managerial Goals. Elizabeth A. Hoffmann, Purdue University Family Responsibilities Discrimination, HR Work-Family Discourse, and Organizational Mediation of U.S. Civil Rights Law. Robin Stryker, University of Arizona; Heidi ReynoldsStenson, University of Arizona; Krista Frederico, University of Arizona Pregnant Workers and Lactating Employee Rooms: Gender Neutrality in HR’s Family Friendly Workplace Discourse. Krista Frederico, University of Arizona When do Categories Matter? Workplace Incivilities, Immigrant Status, Gender, and Nonstandard Employment. Anthony Rainey, University of Massachusetts at Amherst Table 09. Making Sense of Organizational Change Table Presider: Tina Uys, University of Johannesburg Framing Inequality: Perceptions of Workplace Harassment and Normative Change in Oregon’s Construction Trades. Sasha Bassett, Portland State University Organizational Culture and Conflict in Mergers of Higher Education: The Case of University of North Georgia. Sarah Min, Kennesaw State University; Darina Elena Lepadatu, Kennesaw State University Reengineering Elite Higher Education: MIT’s MOOC Strategy. Ben

Tuesday, August 15, 2017

Berkeley Why Some Employees Might Thrive on Job Insecurity. Ola Cornelius Sjoberg, Swedish Institute for Social Research Table 15. Professional Identity Formation Table Presider: Kannaki Bharali, City University of New York A Field Theory of Mentoring. Peter Lista, Indiana University Becoming Lawyers: Mapping Professional Identity Formation in the United States and China. John Bliss, Harvard Law School Physician Autonomy and the Paradox of Rationalization: Clinical Pathways in China’s Public Hospitals. Lei Jin, Chinese University of Hong Kong Resistance and Adaptation: Technological Change and Threats to Expertise in Radiology. Joshua M. Hurwitz, Columbia University The Differentiation of a Semi-profession: The Emergence of the Contingent Faculty. Keith R. Johnson, None Table 16. Professionalization and the Emergence of New Fields Table Presider: Jiwook Jung, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign From Welfare Professions to Field of Welfare Work. Jan Thorhauge Frederiksen, University of Copenhagen Mental Health Counselors Emergence as a Strategic Action Field. Jeff Scott Shelton, University of Georgia The Sensemaking and Improvisation Associated with Work Transfer and Upskilling in Health Care Organizations. Timothy James Hoff, Northeastern University The Teaching Profession: How Knowledge-Worker Characteristics Improve the Worldwide Esteem of Teaching. Heather E. Price, Marian University; Kristen Weatherby, ICL Institute of Education Table 17. Social Networks and Power Table Presider: Richard Benton, University of Illinois Brokerage and Closure in Corporate Control: Structural Sources of Power for a Fractured Corporate Elite. Richard Benton, University of Illinois Organizational Networks as Communication Mechanisms: How Reinforcing and Competing Information Impacts Firm Behavior. Tarun Banerjee, University of Pittsburgh Who’s the Boss? Power and Structure in the Prohibition-Era Chicago Outfit. James Abbott, Yale University; Andrew V. Papachristos, Yale University Table 18. Social Networks and Work Table Presider: Jeffrey A. Smith, University of Nebraska-Lincoln Aesthetic Subsidy: Design Cuts and the Changing Labor of Graphic Designers in the Network Society. Thomas J Billard, University of Southern California Competition, Camaraderie or Social Comparison? Exploring the Origin of Positive and Negative Ties. Charles Kirschbaum, Insper Institute of Education and Research Coworking through the 100-year Life: New Organizations for Flourishing Lives and Careers. Tuukka H. Toivonen, University of London, Soas; Onya Idoko, UCL Institute for Global Prosperity The Geography and Multiplexity of Job Lead Ties. Emily J. Smith, University of California, Irvine; Carter T. Butts, University of California-Irvine; John R. Hipp, University of California, Irvine; Nicholas N. Nagle, University of Tennessee, Knoxville Table 19. Stress, Burnout and Care Work Half the Job is Pleasing Her: Manager-Induced Stress, Care Worker Adaptations, and Care Recipient Outcomes. Elizabeth Kathryn Barna, Vanderbilt University Burnout, Coping and Suicidal Ideation: An Application and

Tuesday

Hidru Gebre-Medhin, UC Berkeley When is a CSA no Longer a CSA? Member Tenure and Sensemaking During Organizational Change. Melissa Fletcher Pirkey, Cornell University Table 10. Organizational Culture and Exclusion Table Presider: Laureen K. O’Brien, University of Arizona Profit-Making Pressure and Workers’ and Managers’ Masculinities in a Global Auto-Parts Company in the United States. Kumiko Nemoto, Kyoto University of Foreign Studies Unpacking the Endogenous Relationship between Culture and Performance in Startup Founding Teams. Matthew Corritore, Stanford University Who can play? Patterns of Exclusivity in a Mid-size Tech Firm. Chelsea Wahl, University of Pennsylvania Women in Technology: Why do they leave? Christianne Corbett, Stanford University Table 11. Organizational Logics and Organizational Identity Table Presider: Bridget Rose Nolan, Bryn Mawr College Diversification as Coordination: Theorizing Racial Diversity in an American Denomination. Sorcha Alexandrina Brophy, University of Pittsburgh Stakeholder Pressure to Marketize Social Enterprise. Sarah Woodside, Canisius College Unconventional Legitimacy: Promotional Practices in Ontario’s Non-Elite Private School Sector. Roger Pizarro Milian, McMaster University; Linda Quirke, Wilfrid Laurier University From ‘One Stop Shop’ to ‘No Wrong Door’: Expansion and Centralization in the Veterans Services Sector. Erica C. Bender, UC San Diego Table 12. Organizations and Civil Society Table Presider: Xiaohong Xu, National University of Singapore A Hidden Curriculum on Civil Society? Structures and Practices of the Knights of Pythias, 1868-1930. Pamela A. Popielarz, University of Illinois at Chicago Organizing Before Knowing: Social Problem Construction and the Development of Nonprofit Organizations in Postsocialist China. Ling Han, Stanford University Ties That (More Than) Bind: Civic Styles and Political Cooptation in Revolutionary China. Xiaohong Xu, National University of Singapore Why Firms Incorporate Social Services? A Multi-case Study of Reverse Embeddedness. Yi Han, Shanghai University of Finance and Economics Table 13. Power and Inequality in Collaboration Networks Collaboration Networks, Survival, and Success in Creative Industries. Yonghoon Lee; Martin Gargiulo Reaching for the Stars. Carla Carolina Rua Gomez, Università della Svizzera italiana; Martin C. Goossen, University of Tilburg; Gianluca Carnabuci, University of Lugano The Fractal Approach to Gender Segregation: Preliminary Results on a Scientific Network. Antonio Nanni, Northwestern University Table 14. Precarious Work and Job Insecurity Table Presider: Felipe Antonio Dias, University of California at Berkeley Classification Struggles in Semi-Formal and Precarious Work. Michael Gibson-Light, University of Arizona Connecting Social Structures of Accumulation to Worker Perceptions: Perceived Employment Insecurity in the United States, 1977-2012. Travis S. Lowe, University of Tulsa Precarious Morality: Narratives of Workplace Commitment in the Oil and Gas Industry. Shelly Steward, University of California,

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Session 511, continued Extension of the Job Demand-Control-Support Model. Jean E. Wallace, The University of Calgary Workplace Stresses, Stakes in Conformity, and Deviance as Corrective Action. Stacy De Coster, North Carolina State University; Martha Crowley, North Carolina State University Bounded Authenticity or Boundless Intimacy? Labor Regimes in Germany’s Indoor Prostitution. Annegret D. Staiger, Clarkson University Why Hard Work is Not Enough: Workplace Policies and the Mobility of African American Women Workers. Katrinell M. Davis, University of Vermont Table 20. Tensions in Institutional Logics Table Presider: Andrew King, UMass Boston Doing More with Less: Intensive Care and the Logic of Flexible Teamwork. Jason Rodriquez, University of Massachusetts Boston School Choice as Ideological Differentiation: Charter School Identities and Outcomes in the Accountability Era. Jaren Randell Haber, University of California, Berkeley Teaching Teachers: How Teacher Preparation Programs Cope with Institutional Complexity. Emily Persons, Duke University To Err is Human: Computerization and Job Quality in the 21st Century. Marcel Knudsen, Northwestern University Table 21. Worker Mobility Within and Across Organizations Table Presider: Alexandra Vinson, Northwestern University Differential Migration Patterns and Career Paths of the Chinese Internal Migrants. Thomas Peng, University of California, Berkeley Mobility Across the Academic Life Course. Adam Roth, Washington State University Occupational Concentration, Job Mobility, and Transition to SelfEmployment. Gorkem Aksaray, Emory University

Tuesday

512. Section on Peace, War, and Social Conflict. Peace, Conflict, and Political Change

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 515C, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Megan E. Brooker, University of California-Irvine Presider: Lisa A. Leitz, Chapman University Iraq Veterans Against the War in the Obama Era: How Political Allies Stimulate Organizational Decline. Megan E. Brooker, University of California-Irvine Iraq and the Material Basis of Post-Conflict Police Reconstruction. Jesse S.G. Wozniak, West Virginia University The Globalization of Political Contention. Edward M. Crenshaw, Department of Sociology; Kristopher K. Robison, Northern Illinois University; J. Craig Jenkins, Ohio State University Political Origins of Social Conflict: Democratization and Anti-Kurdish Communal Violence. Sefika Kumral, Johns Hopkins University Sticks, Stones and Molotov Cocktails: Unarmed Collective Violence and Democratization. Ali Kadivar; Neil Ketchley, King’s College London

513. Section on Political Sociology. The Comparative Politics of Austerity and Anti-Austerity

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513B, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Jon D. Shefner, University of Tennessee Austerity, Nationalist Politics and the Fallacy of Postneoliberalism. Cory Blad, Manhattan College Institutional Inequality: Student Loan Indebtedness by University. Maria Bordt

Kill It to Save It: Austerity and Apocalypse in America. Corey Dolgon, Stonehill College Marxism and the Political Economy of Austerity. John O’Connor, Central Connecticut State University The Invisibility of Women and Gender in Parliamentary Discourse during the Portuguese Economic Crisis (2008-2014). Ana Prata, California State University Northridge

514. Section on Racial and Ethnic Minorities. Theorizing 21st Century Racial-Ethnic Activism (cosponsored with Section on Collective Behavior and Social Movements)

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514A, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Belinda Robnett, University of California-Irvine Presider: Veronica Terriquez, UC Santa Cruz Be the Movement: Civic Engagement Strategies among Black Young Professionals in the Era of Black Lives Matter. Candice C. Robinson, University of Pittsburgh Threats and Opportunities: How Local Contexts Shape the Immigrant Rights and Undocumented Youth Movements. Lisa M. Martinez, University of Denver The Movement for Reproductive Justice by Women of Color: Blending Intersectionality and Human Rights. Patricia Zavella, University of California-Santa Cruz The Movement for Reproductive Justice and the Latinx Feminist Imagination. Rocío R. García, University of California, Los Angeles Discussant: Veronica Terriquez, UC Santa Cruz

515. Section on Rationality and Society. Morality, Rationality and Collective Action Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512G, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Jody Clay-Warner, University of Georgia Presider: Vincent W. Buskens A Two-year Longitudinal Comparison of Three Measures of Social Value Orientation. Dieko M Bakker, University of Groningen; Jacob Dijkstra, University of Groningen Altruism and Social Optimality in Finite Strategic Games. Lin Tao, Peking University Deep Edges: Online Communities as Social Movement and Social Organization. Ryan James Parsons, Princeton University Mimicry, Empathy and its Relation to Pro-social Behavior. Axel Franzen, University of Bern; Sebastian Mader, University of Bern

516. Section on Sociological Practice and Public Sociology. Civic Engagement and Action: Culture and Inclusion on Campus and Off Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514B, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Yvette Young, University of Utah Presider: Yvette Young, University of Utah Panelists: Jose Zapata Calderon, Pitzer College Jennifer Eileen Cross, Colorado State University Marilyn Krogh, Loyola University Chicago Jacob Alden Sargent, Occidental College

517. Section on Sociology of Religion Refereed Roundtable Session and Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516C, 10:30-11:30 a.m. Session Organizer: Mark Killian, Whitworth University Table 01. Congregations Table Presider: Katie E. Corcoran, West Virginia University Emotion, Religion, and Civic Engagement: A Multilevel Analysis of U.S. Congregations. Katie E. Corcoran, West Virginia

Tuesday, August 15, 2017

University Table 07. Religion, Families, and Youth Table Presider: Kyle Clayton Longest, Furman University Are Religious Affiliation and Religiosity Associated with Body Mass Index and Obesity in Adolescence? Joseph Charles Jochman, University of Nebraska-Lincoln Parenting Practices and Attitudes and the Role of Belief in Supernatural Evil. Brandon C. Martinez, Providence College; Joshua Tom, Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture; Todd W. Ferguson, University of Mary Hardin-Baylor; Brita Andercheck, Southern Methodist University; Samuel Stroope, Louisiana State University The Effects of Media Use on Dietary Integration among Muslim Youth in Europe. Hiroshi Kojima, Waseda University Table 08. Religious Competition and Identity Table Presider: John Patrick Hartley, Yale University Is American Islam a “Conservative” Religion? John O’Brien, NYU Abu Dhabi; Eman Abdelhadi, New York University The Field of American Evangelicalism: Struggles with Islam and the Competition for Religious Authority. John Patrick Hartley, Yale University; Roger Baumann, Yale University The Mosque-Cathedral of Cordoba and the Politics of Cultural Patrimony. Avi Y. Astor, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona; Marian Burchardt, University of Leipzig; Mar Griera, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona Worshipping the Free Market: Charismatic Christianity, Dominionism and the Prosperity Gospel. Dominic Vincent Wetzel, City University of New York Table 09. Intersections of Religion and Theory Table Presider: Jason Wollschleger Progressive Evangelicals, Critical Pragmatism, and Four Modes of Social Reflexivity. Wes Markofski, Carleton College Re-thinking Religion in an Actually Existing Public Sphere: Laudato Si, Habermas and Religious Authority. Robert S. Mackin, Texas A&M University; Andrew Craig McNeely, Texas A&M University Rethinking Religious Sectarianism: A Case Study of Sectarian Imaginations in Lebanon. Toni Rouhana Table 10. Religion and Gender Table Presider: Susan Crawford Sullivan, College of the Holy Cross Embodying the Pastoral Role: Gender, Clothing and Legitimacy. Kathleen Anne Steeves, McMaster University From Nuns to ‘Nones’: The Prosperity Gospel, Gender, and the Rise of the Religiously Unaffiliated. Dominic Vincent Wetzel, City University of New York Identity Change and Reversion from Islam: An Egocentric Social Network Perspective. Sakin Erin, University of CaliforniaRiverside; Ugur Arcagok, Mus Aplarslan University; Ali Esref Keles, Igdir University

518. Section on Sociology of Sex and Gender. Gender and Social Justice in a Global Context

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513C, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Rachel A. Rinaldo, University of Colorado, Boulder Presider: Gul Aldikacti Marshall, University of Louisville Disruptive Bodies: Queer Resistance, Muslim Piety and the Embodied Politics of Women’s Soccer in Senegal. Beth D. Packer, EHESS Opportunity, Vulnerability, and Duty: Women’s Experiences as Elected Lay Judges on Rwanda’s Gacaca Courts. Allison Nobles, University of Minnesota; Christopher Uggen, University of Minnesota-Twin Cities; Hollie Nyseth Brehm, The Ohio State

Tuesday

University Exploring Generational Shifts in Lay Ministry. Brian Starks, Kennesaw State University Normative Pressures and Congregations’ Competitive Strategies. Matthew May, Oakland University Table 02. Religious Organizations Table Presider: Mark Killian, Whitworth University A Multi-level Exploration of the Paradoxical Tensions in a Buddhist Temple. Hee-Chan Song; Pratima Bansal, Ivey Business School, Western University Mobilizing the Faithful: The Impact of Resource Slack, Dependency, and Clergy Agency on Congregational Activism. Dane R. Mataic, Pennsylvania State University Understanding Organizational Structure and its Consequences in an International Church. Sarah Busse Spencer, Higher School of Economics, National Research University Table 03. Religion and Health Table Presider: Stacy Keogh-George, Whitworth University Beliefs in and about God and Attitudes towards Voluntary Euthanasia. Shane Sharp, Northern Illinois University The Evolving Impact of Religiosity on Informal Caregiving. Sarah Wilkins-Laflamme, University of Waterloo Magic, Mysticism, and Mental Health: Developing a Theoretical Understanding of Spirituality and Health. Haley Medved Kendrick, University of Alabama at Birmingham Religion, Geography, and Euthanasia: The Effects of Religion and Geography on American Approval of Euthanasia. Miles Marsala, Duke University Table 04. Secularities Table Presider: Kevin John McCaffree, Indiana University-Purdue University, Fort Wayne Creating Sacredness and Defending Secularity: Religion in the Workplace of Taiwanese Scientists. Di Di, Rice University Modernization, Government Regulation and Religious Involvement in Contemporary China: An Analysis based on CGSS2010. Ye Zi, Shanghai University The Demographic and Attitudinal Differences of Religious NonAffiliates. Kevin John McCaffree, Indiana University-Purdue University, Fort Wayne Table 05. Religion in Cross-National Perspectives Table Presider: Roberta Ricucci, University of Turin Are Arab-Muslim Canadians Irremediably Others? When Collective Memories Shape the Anti-accommodation Discourse. Samar Ben Romdhane, Moncton University Being Muslim on-line, European Off-line: Second Generations and their Religious belonging in a Catholic Country. Roberta Ricucci, University of Turin Powers of the Sacred: The Politics of (Sufi) Shrines in Contemporary Punjab. Amen Jaffer Religion in Public Institutions: Comparative Perspectives from the United States, United Kingdom, and Europe. Mar Griera, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona; Ines Michalowski, Social Science Research Center Berlin (WZB); Kristen Remington Lucken, Brandeis University Table 06. Religion and Intersectionality Table Presider: Jennifer L. Lê, Bellevue College How a Love of the Lord Remains: Gender, Faith, Relational Resilience and Surviving Sexual Assault. Townsand PriceSpratlen, Ohio State University Social Inequalities as God’s Will: The Divine Fatalism of American Conservative Protestants. Stephanie Chan, Biola

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Session 518, continued University Rethinking Gender, Land and Corruption in Africa and Asia. Kristy Kelly, Columbia University/Drexel University Untangling the Impact of Institutions and Resources on Attitudes Towards Domestic Violence. Lacey Caporale, Case Western Reserve University Discussant: Rachel A. Rinaldo, University of Colorado, Boulder

519. Section on Sociology of Sexualities. Criminalization of Sexuality

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512H, 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Angela Jones, Farmingdale State College, State University of New York Presider: Angela Jones, Farmingdale State College, State University of New York Law, Science, and the Co-production of the “Sexually Violent Predator.” Stefan Vogler, Northwestern University Victim Impact: Analyzing Dispartiies by Race, Gender, and Sexuality under State HIV Exposure and Disclosure Laws. Trevor Alexander Hoppe, University at Albany, SUNY HIV Interventions, LGBT Visibility, and Anti-Gay Backlash in Malawi and Senegal. Nicole Angotti, American University; Tara A. McKay, Vanderbilt University; Rachel Sullivan Robinson, American University Queer Control Complex: The Criminalization of LGBTQ Youth and the Production of Homelessness. Brandon Andrew Robinson, University of Texas - Austin The Regulation of Sexual and Familial Intimacy through PolygAmy’s Prohibition in France and Canada. Melanie Heath, McMaster University

Tuesday

520. Section on the Sociology of the Family Refereed Roundtable Session and Business Meeting

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517C, 10:30-11:30 a.m. Session Organizer: Jessica McCrory Calarco, Indiana University Table 01. Gender and Marriage Table Presider: Rhiannon Miller, Johns Hopkins University Changing Gender Norms and Marriage Dynamics in the United States. Léa Pessin, Penn State University Differences in German Youth Gender Ideologies: The Relationship Between Family Structure and Doing Gender. Alyssa J Alexander, Brigham Young University; Mikaela Dufur, Brigham Young University; Carolina Otero, Bringham Young University; Yuanyuan Yue, Old Dominion University; Tiana Bettinson, Brigham Young University Four Frameworks for Family Life Held by Adolescents. Laura Krull, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill; Bo Hyeong (Jane) Lee, University of North Carollina-Chapel Hill; Karam Hwang, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill; R. Batool Zaidi, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill; Lisa D. Pearce, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill Happily, Ever After: Children’s Socialization and Interpretation About Love and Marriage. Adriana Ponce, University of Michigan Table 02. Transition to Adulthood Table Presider: Sarah M. Kendig, Arkansas State University Family Support and Positive Affect among Adolescents: An Extended Intersectional Analytical Approach. Zinobia Chara Bennefield, University of North Carolina at Charlotte Agency, Linked Lives, and Gender Inequality in the Transition to Adulthood. Jaclyn S. Wong, University of Chicago

An Exploration of Adolescent Romantic Relationships and their Association with Young Adult Romantic Relationship Quality. Amy Lucas, University of Houston-Clear Lake Money Flows: Parent-Child Monetary Exchanges in African American and Immigrant Families During the Transition to Adulthood. Yader R. Lanuza, University of California-Irvine Sequencing Education with Family Formation During the Transition to Adulthood: Implications for Adult Depression. James Richard S. McCall, Washington State University Table 03. Race, Ethnicity, and Nationality Table Presider: Mark Hutter, Rowan University Fade to White? White Privilege and Identity in Russian Adoptive Families. Lisa Gulya, University of Minnesota Marriage, Household Composition, Class Status by Nativity for Women of Color: 1980-2014. Jessica Elaine Peña, University of Maryland-College Park; Kris Marsh, University of Maryland Modern Day Anti-Miscegenation? How Affirmative Action Bans Have Shaped Interracial Marriage. David Antonio MickeyPabello, University of Michigan Family Matters: But Not In the Way Most International Migration Scholars Think. Jacob Richard Thomas, University of California-Los Angeles; Peng Huang, Peking University Table 04. Same-Sex Marriage and Parenthood Table Presider: Kristin Kaye Kelley, Indiana University-Bloomington Creating Lesbian Families: Factors Influencing Choice of Method when Choosing to have Children. Marianne Cutler, East Stroudsburg University Family Feuds: How Legal Changes Affect Media Discourses Concerning the Family. Adriana Brodyn, University of British Columbia One Sex, Two Sexes, One Parent, Two Parents: Public Attitudes Toward Single and Same-Sex Parenthood. Simon Cheng, University of Connecticut; Kristin Kaye Kelley, Indiana University-Bloomington Queer Families Online: Internet Resources For French and American Same-Sex Couples Hoping to Have Children. Michael Stambolis-Ruhstorfer, Université Bordeaux Montaigne Table 05. Fathers and Fatherhood Distinctiveness, Deference and Dominance in Black Caribbean Fathers’ Engagement with London and New York City Schools. Derron O. Wallace, Brandeis University Fatherhood 2.0: Introducing an Ethnographic Study of Dadbloggers. Casey Scheibling, McMaster University Gay Fathers on the Margins: Race, Class, Marital Status, and Pathway to Parenthood. Megan Carroll, University of Southern California Parenthood and Masculinity in Single Fathers with Joint Custody. Hilary Flowers The Means to and Meaning of “Being There” in Responsible Fatherhood Programming. Jennifer Randles, California State University-Fresno Table 06. Parenting 1 Table Presider: Kate C. Prickett, The University of Chicago Intensive Mothering in the Public Sphere: The Case of the School Volunteer. Beth Anne Shelton, University of Texas-Arlington; Rebecca Deen, University of Texas-Arlington The End of Intensive Motherhood? Education, Work, and Time Focused on Children from 2003-2015. Kate C. Prickett, The University of Chicago Times of Inequality: Gendered Differences in Parents’ Time Use by Socioeconomic Status. Jess M. Meyer, Northwestern University

Tuesday, August 15, 2017

The Wage Penalty for Intensive Caregiving. Rebecca Glauber, University of New Hampshire Who Cares about Public Investment in Childcare? Ezra Joseph Temko, University of New Hampshire Table 11. Extended Family Table Presider: Christina Cross, University of Michigan Blessing or Burden? Grandparental Co-residence and Disparities in Child-related Investments. Mariana Amorim Extended Family Households among U.S. Children: Differences by Race and SES. Christina Cross, University of Michigan Intergenerational Solidarity from Resource Exchange and Doing Family Perspectives: The Case of Korean Newlyweds. Soomin Kim, Stanford University The Effect of Changes in Household Composition on Children’s Educational Attainment. Kristin Perkins, Harvard University The Importance of Kin in Protecting the Child Health in Nairobi. Shelley Clark, McGill University; Sangeetha Madhavan, University of Maryland; Caroline Kabiru, African Population and Health Research Center The Quiet Revolution in Grandparenting: Hidden Supports, Durable Ties, and the Scaffolding of Family Inequality. Jennifer Utrata, University of Puget Sound Table 12. Non-Traditional Families Table Presider: Jaclyn Ann Tabor, Indiana University Bad Mothers of Girly Sons: Mother-Blame as Social Resistance to Childhood Gender-Nonconformity in Boys. Krysti N. Ryan, University of California, Davis Mom, Dad, or Somewhere in Between: How Children Negotiate a Parent’s Gender Transitions. Jaclyn Ann Tabor, Indiana University What it Means to be Absent: Exploring the Nature of Father Absence through its Variation. Matthew Alemu, University of Michigan Table 13. Relationships 1 Table Presider: Kara Joyner, Bowling Green State University Does Marital Quality Predict Togetherness? Couples’ Shared Time During Encore Adulthood. Sarah M. Flood, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities; Katie Genadek; Phyllis Moen, University of Minnesota Gender Differences in Spousal Network Overlap and Individual Well-being: A Cross-cultural Comparison. Hsin-Chieh Chang, National Taiwan University Who Matters Most? Social Support, Perceived Likability, and Emotional Well-being Across the Life Course. Kayla Danielle Russell Pierce, University of Notre Dame; Christopher Quiroz, University of Notre Dame Durkheim and Domestic Violence: A Contemporary Application of Classical Theory. Anna Sheree Rogers, University of South Carolina - Columbia Table 14. Relationships 2 Table Presider: Lisa A. Strohschein, University of Alberta Exposure to Local Violence and Women’s Pathways to First Union Formation in Mexico. Monica Lisette Caudillo, University of Maryland A Comparison of ADHD, Depression, and Self-Rated Health and their Gendered Effects on Intimate Relationship Quality. Nicole Lehpamer, Michigan State University Sex, Intimacy, and Situationships: How Women Navigate Singleness at Mid-Adulthood. Angela Perone, University of Michigan; Elizabeth A. Armstrong, University of Michigan; Spencer Anthony Garrison, University of Michigan; Charity M. Hoffman, University of Michigan; Kelly N Giles, University of Massachusetts, Amherst

Tuesday

What is the Optimal Maternal Age at Birth for Offspring’s Educational Attainment? Evidence from Add Health. Samuel Fishman, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill When I Was Your Age: The Intergenerational Transmission of Mothers’ High School Academic Programs. Matthew Lawrence, Middlebury College Table 07. Parenting 2 Table Presider: Megan Reid, University of Wisconsin - Madison From Victimized to Stigmatized:Lived Experiences of Women Who Mother in the Context of Domestic Violence. Caroline Beth McDonald-Harker, Mount Royal University Parenting Practices in Diverse Family Structures. Daniel J. Potter, American Institutes for Research Yan mu ci zu: The Intergenerational Cooperation and Conflicts in Parenting in Urban China. Suowei Xiao, Beijing Normal University Educate Yourself and Choose Healthy Options: Discussing Consumption, Risk, and Choice on Green Mommy Blogs. Carmen Rowe, Boston University Under my Eye Watch: Mothers Raising Low-income Black Teenagers in Urban Environments. Megan Reid, University of Wisconsin - Madison; Sinikka Elliott, University of British Columbia Table 08. Families and Health Table Presider: Kristin Turney, University of California, Irvine A Mixed Methods Investigation of Disparities in Pediatric Cochlear Implantation Outcomes. Laura Mauldin, University of Connecticut Fighting Harder and Showing Gratitude: Immigrant Parents Caring for a Child with Autism. Nazli Kibria, Boston University How is Motherhood Associated Waistline at Midlife? Women’s Fertility History and Body Weight at 40s. Zhe Zhang, The Ohio State University Neoliberalism and Parenting Children with Disabilities. Ahoo Tabatabai, Columbia College Young Adult Drinking and Depression: Consequences of Poverty, Maternal Depression, and Childhood Behavioral Problems. Rachel G. McKane, Vanderbilt University Table 09. Work and Family 1 Table Presider: Christine M. Percheski, Northwestern University A Typology of Work-Family Balance and its Effect on Marital and Job Satisfaction. Deniz Yucel, William Paterson University An Examination of Work-Family Conflict Differences Between Same-Sex and Different-Sex Couples. Barbara F. Prince, Bowling Green State University; Michele Lee Kozimor-King, Elizabethtown College The Constant Caregiver: Work-Family Spillover among Men and Women in Nursing. Jamie J. Chapman, Westminster College; Marci D. Cottingham, University of Amsterdam The Grey Area: The Work/Family Desires and Expectations of PhD Seeking Women and Men. Marbella Eboni Allen, Rice University Table 10. Work and Family 2 Table Presider: Judith A. Levine, Temple University More Traditional Each Year? Earnings and Married Mothers’ Employment Hours over the Childrearing Years. Katrina Leupp, Washington State University Sex of Child and the Fatherhood Bonus: The Payoff for Girls. Elizabeth Aura McClintock, University of Notre Dame; Emily Fitzgibbons Shafer, Portland State University The Declining Significance of Motherhood? Differential Effects of Children on Boomer and Millennial Women’s Wages. Brian Serafini, University of Washington

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208

Tuesday, August 15, 2017

Tuesday

Session 520, continued She is the Dumper, He is the Dumper. Ya Su Does Widowhood Affect Memory Functioning among Older Adults in China? Zhenmei Zhang, Michigan State University; Lydia Li, University of Michigan; Hongwei Xu, University of Michigan; Jinyu Liu, Columbia University Table 15. Union Instability and Change Table Presider: Lauren Griffin, Cornell University Divorce, Fertility, and an Emerging Two-tier Family System in China. Jingjing Chen, University of California, Davis In Sickness and in Health: The Effect of Easier Access to Divorce on Self- Reported Health. Alex Shpenev, University of Pennsylvania Multiple-partner Fertility and the Growth in Sibling Complexity. Laura M. Tach, Cornell University; Mariana Amorim Negotiating Certainty After Union Instability: Theorizing Why Individuals Enter Alternative Conjugal Arrangements Following a Dissolution. Davis Daumler, University of Michigan; Celine Le Bourdais, McGill University Till Misfortune Do us Part? The Great Recession and Divorce Risk in 30 countries. Pilar Gonalons-Pons, Goethe University Frankfurt am Main; Markus Gangl, Goethe University Frankfurt am Main Table 16. Gender Ideology and Family Table Presider: Claudia Geist, University of Utah Independent Women? Social Class and Self-reliance after the Gender Revolution in the West. Berglind Ragnarsdottir, Graduate Center, City University of New York Measurement Invariance of Reproductive Knowledge and Fertility Motivation across Gender. Karen Guzzo, Bowling Green State University; Vanessa Wanner Lang, Bowling Green State University; Sarah R. Hayford, Ohio State University The Gender Revolution in Action: Cohort Change in the Association of Housework Performance and Couples’ Wellbeing. Daniel L. Carlson, University of Utah; Amanda Jayne Miller, University of Indianapolis; Sharon L. Sassler, Cornell University Table 17. Union Formation Table Presider: Aaron Michael Hoy, Syracuse University Educational Assortative Mating and the Reversal of the Gender Gap in Education. Dana Hamplova, Institute of Sociology Higher Education Expansion and Changing Marriage Formation in China: Evidences from the 2010 Census. Hao Liu, Renmin University of China; Yingchun Ji, Shanghai University Same-Sex Sexuality and the Duration of First Marriages. Aaron Michael Hoy, Syracuse University; Andrew S. London, Syracuse University The Role of Education Level, College Selectivity and Social Background in Marriage Formation. Karly Sarita Ford, Penn State; Megan Andrew, University of Notre Dame The Timing and Likelihood of Union Formation by Sexual Orientation Identity and Social Context. Barbara F. Prince, Bowling Green State University; Kara Joyner, Bowling Green State University; Wendy Diane Manning, Bowling Green State University Table 18. Family, Work and Inequality Table Presider: Omkar Joshi, University of Maryland, College Park Defining Female Achievement and Linked Lives of Korean Women. Eunsil Oh, Harvard University Intersectionality at Work: Racial Variation in Women’s Employment after First Birth. Sandra M. Florian, University of Pennsylvania

Raising the Race: Black Career Women and Inter-generational Economic Inequality. Riché J Barnes, Endicott College Longitudinal Patterns of Maternal Spanking: Variations by Race and Ethnicity. Wendi Leigh Johnson, Oakland University Table 19. Families, Health and Policy A Mixed Methods Investigation of Adverse Birth Outcomes. Karina M. Shreffler, Oklahoma State University; Stacy Tiemeyer, University of Nebraska Lincoln; Tiffany Spierling, Oklahoma State University Child ‘Protective’ Services: Protecting Children or Punishing Mothers? Christie Sillo Parental Diet Disease Knowledge and Child Diet and Obesity Outcomes. Noura E. Insolera, Panel Study of Income Dynamics Poverty and Fertility: Assessing the Mediating Role of Mental Health. Rachel G. McKane, Vanderbilt University The Presence of Children, Well-being, and Family Policy in 15 Countries. Natalie D. Hengstebeck, University of North Carolina at Greensboro; Heather M. Helms, University of North Carolina at Greensboro Table 20. Transfers and Transitions Heterogeneous Effects of Employment Instability on Transitions to First-time Homeownership: Evidence from NLSY79 Cohort. Qian He, University of Wisconsin-Madison Household Structure and Private Intergenerational Transfers in Russia. Anna Mironova, National Research University Higher School of Economics Impacts of Three Family Events on Residential Mobility. Aaron J. Howell, SUNY - Farmingdale Structural Determinants of China’s Divorce Rate: A CrossRegional Analysis. Li Mo, The University of Sydney Table 21. Families and Children’s Outcomes Table Presider: Maggie Bohm-Jordan, University of Wisconsin- SP Different Gravities towards Familism: A Case Study of KoreanAmerican Youth in Los Angeles. Jeonghye Ohk, Yonsei University Identical Twins and their Extraordinary Relationship. Joleen Loucks Greenwood, Kutztown University of Pennsylvania Re-thinking First-Generation College Status among Undocumented Immigrant Students. Thomas Pineros Shields, University of Massachusetts Lowell The Balancing Act of Family and College: Reciprocity and its Consequences for Black Students. Yolanda Maria Wiggins, University of Massachusetts- Amherst Table 23. Table Presider: Jean Elson, University of New Hampshire Close Family-Work Interrelationship in the Case of Rural Migrant Workers in China. Yu Guo, University of Maryland Labor Force Exit of Married Women in South Korea. Daeshin Hayden Ju, The Graduate Center The Effect of Marriage and Cohabitation on Earnings in CrossNational Perspective. Misun Lim, University of Massachusetts Amherst The ‘Gender Revolution’ in Paid and Unpaid Work: Continuation or Stall in Cross-National Gender Inequalities? Oriel SullivanAlon, University of Oxford; Jonathan Gershuny; John P. Robinson, University of Maryland Table 23. Professional Socialization: Getting Your Work Published! Table Presiders: Kelly Raley, University of Texas, Austin J. Jill Suitor, Purdue University Table 24. Professional Socialization: Navigating the Job Market Table Presiders: Susan L. Brown, Bowling Green State University Margot Jackson, Brown University

Tuesday, August 15, 2017

11:30 a.m.

Meetings

209

Section on Comparative and Historical Sociology Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520A, 11:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m.

inequality to the nonprofit sector leads to a new breed of programs and interventions that neither reflects the evidence on what works or the public’s sensibilities about how best to take on poverty and inequality.

Section on Sociology of Religion Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516C, 11:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m.

523. Thematic Session. The Unevenness of Feminist Social Change

Section on Sociology of the Family Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517C, 11:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m.

12:30 p.m.

Meetings

Journal of Health and Social Behavior Editorial Board Palais des congrès de Montréal, 710A, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Section on Inequality, Poverty, and Mobility Council Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513F, 12:30-1:30 p.m.

12:30 p.m.

Sessions

521. Thematic Session. How Media Shape Group Boundaries

522. Thematic Session. The New Anti-Inequality Philanthropy. Is it Working?

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511E, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizers: David B. Grusky, Stanford University Robert Reich, Stanford University Presider: David B. Grusky, Stanford University Panelists: Sheldon Danziger, Russell Sage Foundation Ryan Rippel, Gates Foundation This session is supported by the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research (CIFAR). This session is supported by It is suddenly fashionable to engage in anti-inequality and anti-poverty philanthropy. This development leads us to ask (a) whether the new philanthropy is indeed working (when assessed against some counterfactual world without such anti-inequality philanthropy), and (b) whether the decision to off-load worries about rising

524. Special Session. Technology, Culture and the Future of Work

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511C, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Jerry A. Jacobs, University of Pennsylvania Presider: Jerry A. Jacobs, University of Pennsylvania Panelists: Jerry A. Jacobs, University of Pennsylvania Stephen R. Barley, University of California Santa Barbara Ariane Ollier-Malaterre, Université du Québec à Montréal Stories about how technology is changing the production of goods and services appear almost daily. Some of these innovations are already familiar: self-checkout scanners at the grocery store; touch-screens for ordering at airport restaurants, surgery-assisting robots in the operating room. Others, we are told, will be introduced in short order: self-driving cars, automated investment advising, automated document translation, and drone aircraft for agriculture, rescue and even for express delivery. These along with a host of other technological innovations have led to a series of questions: Will work disappear? For work that remains, how will the culture of the workplace change, specifically with respect to its character, location, skill requirements, scheduling and monitoring of jobs? This session plans to bring together researchers and scholars who are tracking these developments. In addition to including sociologists, the session will also cast a wider net to include researchers from management, technology, labor history and related fields.

525. Author Meets Critics Session. The Moral Background: An Inquiry into the History of Business Ethics (Princeton University Press; 2016) by Gabriel Abend Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511F, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Steven Lukes, New York University Presider: Viviana A. Zelizer, Princeton University Critics: Margaret R. Somers, University of Michigan Ann Swidler, University of California-Berkeley

Tuesday

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511D, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Abigail C. Saguy, UCLA Presider: Andrea Press, University of Virginia Segmentation, Exclusion, and Opportunity in the Digital Media Landscape: ‘Quality News for Quality Audiences’, or Something More? Rodney Benson, New York University Creating Monsters: How Media Discourse Shapes Understandings of Sexual Predators and their Victims. Rebecca Ann DiBennardo, UCLA Policing the Boundaries of Representation: (Re)creating Visual Narratives About Activists in Broadcast News, 1970 – 2012. Deana Rohlinger, Florida State University How the New Media Divide Feminists, Gay Rights Activists, and Transgender Rights Activists. Abigail C. Saguy, UCLA; Juliet Williams, UCLA Discussant: David Grazian, University of Pennsylvania This panel session speaks to how public discourse shapes material and cultural inequalities by specifically examininghow the news media shape group boundaries. News media representations of social groups shape people’s understandings of themselves and of others. By drawing on a range of specific case studies, this panel will contribute to our understanding of how the news media draw symbolic boundaries around groups in ways that produce, maintain, and sometimes challenge social inequality.

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511A, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Christine L. Williams, University of Texas at Austin Presider: Megan Tobias Neely, University of Texas at Austin Panelists: Susanna Walters, Northeastern University Adia M. Harvey Wingfield, Washington University in St. Louis Michael A. Messner, University of Southern California Arlene Stein, State University of New Jersey-Rutgers This panel will investigate the unevenness of social change around gender and sexuality. A number of milestone victories, such as the recognition of LGBT relationships, the removal of barriers to women in the military, and the first woman presidential candidate for a major party have occurred at the same time as we are witnessing renewed attacks on abortion rights and the virulent harassment and assault of women on college campuses. Previous metaphors used to describe the unevenness of feminist social change include “waves,” “backlash,” and “stalled revolution.” In this session, panelists will be invited to expand on or replace those metaphors. The goal will be to understand the patterns of feminist social change historically, and for different social groups. For example, panelists will be asked to address whether the expansion of gender and sexual rights has favored particular social groups, such as those privileged by race and class.

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Tuesday, August 15, 2017

Session 525, continued Roi Livne, University of Michigan-Ann Arbor Author: Gabriel Abend, New York University

526. Policy and Research Workshop. National Science Foundation: Proposal Development, Merit Review and Funding Opportunities

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512A, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Marie Cornwall, National Science Foundation Leader: Marie Cornwall, National Science Foundation This workshop targets graduate students, faculty, and researchers who are new at proposal writing and submission or are interested in learning about funding opportunities for sociological research at the National Science Foundation. Representatives from NSF will discuss the proposal development process, elements of a competitive proposal, proposal submission and review, and funding opportunities for sociological research. The format will be interactive, allowing for audience questions and participation. Time is allotted for providing advice on how to prepare competitive doctoral dissertation proposals.

527. Regular Session. Ethnography/Ethnographic Studies

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512C, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Kimberly Kay Hoang, University of Chicago Presider: Kimberly Kay Hoang, University of Chicago An Ethnographic Exploration of the Emergence of Group Threat in a New Immigrant Destination. Monica McDermott, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Determining When to Evict: A Comparative Ethnography of Land Occupations in Post-Apartheid South Africa. Zachary Levenson, University of California-Berkeley Jobless and Godless: The Ideological Projects of a Faith-based Job Readiness Program. Gretchen Purser, Syracuse University; Brian Hennigan, Syracuse University Urban Farmers in Northwest Detroit: Seeing the Bucolic in Blight. Sharon Cornelissen, Princeton University Discussant: Jessica Cobb

Tuesday

528. Regular Session. Ethnomethodology and Conversation Analysis: Authority, Politics and Inclusion - Social Structures of Conversation Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512D, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Anne Warfield Rawls, Bentley University Interpreters’ Involvement in Dual Language Press Conferences: The Case of China. Ruey-Ying Liu, UCLA May it Tease the Court: Humor in Supreme Court Oral Arguments. David R. Gibson, University of Notre Dame; Robert William Mowry, University of Notre Dame Negotiating Repair: The Infrastructural Contexts of Practice and Power. Christopher R. Henke, Colgate University Practices of Introspection: Doing Spirituality in Postural Yoga. Clemens Willi Eisenmann, University of Konstanz, University of Siegen

529. Regular Session. Gender and States in Flux

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512E, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Ellen Lamont, Appalachian State University Presider: Cadhla McDonnell, Pennsylvania State University Resettled and Unsettled: The Reorganizing of Gender Relations by Syrian Refugee Families in the United States. Heba Gowayed Cultural Schemas of Son Preference in Azerbaijan. Candas Pinar, Yale

University Keepers of the Hearth and Battlefront: Women Volunteers in the Donbas Conflict. Christina Olha Jarymowycz, Boston University

530. Regular Session. Latinas/os, Criminalization, and Exclusion

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512F, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Gilda Laura Ochoa, Pomona College The Indelible Effects of Legal Liminality among Colombian Migrant Professionals in the United States. Lina Rincón Highlighting Unaccompanied Minors’ Structural Vulnerability. Kati Barahona-López, University of California-Santa Cuz Gender on the Run: Wanted Latinas in a southern California Barrio. Jerry Flores, University of Toronto; Xuan Santos, University of California-Santa Barbara; Ariana Ochoa Camacho, University of Washington Tacoma Master Status or Intersectional Identity? Undocumented Students’ Sense of Belonging on a College Campus. Zulema Valdez, University of California, Merced; Tanya Maria Golash-Boza, University of California, Merced Racial Identity, Racialization Experiences, and Feelings of Belonging and Exclusion among Mexican American Women. San Juanita García, University of California, Riverside Discussant: Laura E. Enriquez, UC Irvine

531. Regular Session. Legal Knowledge, Practices, and Expertise: Studying Legal Cultures of Criminal Justice

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514C, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Ron Levi, University of Toronto Abolition and the Alternative: Law, Morality, and Life Without Parole in the Anti-Death-Penalty Movement. Christopher Seeds, New York University Legal Culture and Consciousness in Prisons: The Role of the Jailhouse Lawyer. Kristyn Kenn, Northwestern University Plea Bargaining and Its Roots in the Culture of English Common Law Amidst Democratic Transformation, 1680-1850. Mary E. Vogel, NYU (Visiting) and University of Manchester (Home) Police Use of Big Data: Implications for Law and Inequality. Sarah Brayne, University of Texas at Austin The Seropolitics of HIV Criminalization in Canada. Martin French, Concordia University; Amy Swiffen, Concordia University

532. Regular Session. Mental Health Research Outside the United States

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 515A, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Richard Edward Adams, Kent State University Presider: Richard Edward Adams, Kent State University Do Supportive Family Policies Reduce Marital Disparities in Happiness? Results from 22 OECD Countries. Robin W. Simon, Wake Forest University; Matthew Andersson, Baylor University; Jennifer L. Glass, University of Texas Functional Limitations and Depression in the Context of Welfare Regimes. Alex E. Bierman, University of Calgary; Sibyl Kleiner, The University of Calgary Social Status Inequality and Mental Health in Europe. Marii Paskov, University of Oxford; Lindsay Richards, Nuffield College The Black Sheep Penalty: Delinquent Peers, Neighborhood Context, and Adolescent Suicidality. Harris Hyun-soo Kim, Ewha Womans University; Paul Yunsik Chang, Harvard University

Tuesday, August 15, 2017

533. Regular Session. Political Sociology. Regular Session: Business and Politics in the United States

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 515B, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Anthony S. Chen, Northwestern University Presider: Anthony S. Chen, Northwestern University Is Business Unity Antithetical to Democracy? Ivana Katic, Yale School of Management; Mark S. Mizruchi, University of Michigan Small Business and the Legitimation of Pro-Business Politics in the 1970s. Linroy Joseph Marshall, University of Michigan Class Dominance or Fracturing? Sources of Broad Interest in Lobbying by Fortune 500 Corporations. Joshua Murray, Vanderbilt University; Tarun Banerjee, University of Pittsburgh Economics, Antitrust Policy, and the Linked Evolution of the Academic and Policy Fields. Elizabeth Popp Berman, University at Albany, SUNY Discussant: Anthony S. Chen, Northwestern University

534. Regular Session. Race, Class and Gender

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516B, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Nancy A. Naples, University of Connecticut Presider: Nancy A. Naples, University of Connecticut Intersectionality and the Problems of Essentialism, Reductionism, and Experience. Samantha Snow Plummer, University of Pittsburgh Autism Inequalities: An Intersectionality Approach. Jennifer S. Singh, Georgia Institute of Technology Intersectional Change and Social Justice in the Family. Shauna A. Morimoto, University of Arkansas Trapped in the Matrix: An Analysis of Intersectional Social Media Activism. Melissa Brown

535. Regular Session. Social Networks: New Methods and Measures

536. Regular Session. Social Theory: Innovations in Social Theory

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511B, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Daniel R. Huebner, University of North Carolina at Greensboro Presider: Daniel R. Huebner, University of North Carolina at Greensboro Casework: Medical Knowledge/Power in Practice. Daniel Ray Morrison, Vanderbilt University; Black Hawk Hancock, DePaul University

Complex Secrets and their Audiences: Structure and Perception of the Insull Conspiracy in 1930s Chicago. Georg Rilinger, University of Chicago Fields, Symbolic Capital, and Homologous Hinges. Emily A. Barman, Boston University Finding Theory in the Great American Paradox: Why Those Needing Government Help Don’t Want It. Harry Perlstadt, Michigan State University Discussant: Daniel R. Huebner, University of North Carolina at Greensboro

537. Regular Session. Technology

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516D, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Erin A. Cech, University of Michigan Techno-Physical Feminism: Surveillance, Wearable Technology, and Shifting Risk Paradigms. Renee Marie Shelby, Georgia Institute of Technology “You’re Fired,” Says the Robot: The Rise of Workplace Automation, Technophobes, and Fears of Unemployment. Paul Knowlton McClure Echo ChAmbers in Science? Lanu Kim, University of Washington; Jevin West, University of Washington; Katherine Stovel, University of Washington Superintelligence and Natural Resources: Morality and Technology in a Brave New World. Robert Todd Perdue, University of Forida Technologies of Intimacy: How Families Negotiate Spirituality and Technology In a Sacred Place. Kathleen E. Jenkins, College of William and Mary; Ken Chih-Yan Sun, Hong Kong Baptist University

538. Regular Session. U.S. and Global Social Movements

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 510D, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Joyce M. Bell, University of Minnesota Presider: Aisha Ariantique Upton, University of Minesota Sustaining Cross-Conflict Collective Identities during the 2014 Gaza War: Joint Israeli-Palestinian Peace Movement Organizations. Michelle I. Gawerc, Loyola University Maryland Local Receptivity Climates and the Dynamics of Media Attention to Protest. Patrick Rafail, Tulane University; John D. McCarthy, Pennsylvania State University; Samuel Michael Sullivan, Pennsylvania State University Academic Opportunity Structures and the Creation of Campus Activism. Jo Reger, Oakland University Countering Change: Explaining the Private Repression of Protest. Heidi Reynolds-Stenson, University of Arizona Global Movements? Comparing Writings and Slogans in Contemporary Protests. Cécile Van de Velde, Université de Montréal Discussant: Aisha Ariantique Upton, University of Minesota

539. Regular Session. Welfare State 3. Social Provision Beyond Taxes and Transfers

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516E, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Ann Shola Orloff, Northwestern University State Replacements: Deinstitutionalization, Austerity and the Emergence of Immigrant Business Ownership in Long Term Care. Jennifer Nazareno, Brown University Use-Based Welfare: Land, Welfare, and Property Experiments in Chicago, 1895-1935. Nate Ela, University of Wisconsin - Madison Who Pays for the Next Wave? The U.S. Welfare State and Responsibility for Climate Change. Rebecca Elliott, London School of Economics

Tuesday

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516A, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizer: James Moody, Duke University A New Method to Reduce Overestimation of Thresholds with Observational Network Data. George Berry, Cornell University; Christopher John Cameron, Stanford University Diagnosing Multicollinearity in Exponential Random Graph Models. Scott W. Duxbury The Shapes of Solidarity: Theorizing Emergent Structures in Social Networks with Abstract Geometry. Matthew J. Chandler, University of Notre Dame Tools for Assessing the Model Adequacy of Exponential Graph Models (ERGMs) Using Labeled Networks. Nolan Phillips, University of California at Irvine; Carter T. Butts, University of California-Irvine Twin Trouble: Fragility of Heritability Estimates for Adolescent Friendship Networks. Byungkyu Lee, Columbia University; Dalton Conley, Princeton University

211

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Session 539, continued “Professional Movements” and the Expansion of Access to Healthcare in the Industrializing World. Joseph A. Harris, Boston University Discussant: Isaac William Martin, University of California San Diego

540. Section on Comparative-Historical Sociology. Pierre Bourdieu and Historical Sociology

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514B, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizer: George Steinmetz, University of Michigan Presider: Mathieu H. Desan, University of Colorado Boulder Event, Structure and History. Jean-Louis Fabiani, Ecole des Hautes études en Sciences Micro-histories and Huge Comparisons: Bourdieu and the Practice of Social History. Lutz Raphael, University of Trier How Bourdieu’s Approach Helps Us Write the History of the Formation of the Scientific Field From the 17th to the 20th Century. Yves Gingras, Université du Québec à Montréal Field Transformations as History: Between the Evenemental and the Longue Durée. Craig Calhoun, Berggruen Institute Discussant: Gisèle Sapiro, L’Ecole des hautes études en sciences sociales

Tuesday

541. Section on Disability and Society Refereed Roundtable Session and Business Meeting

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516C, 12:30-1:30 p.m. Session Organizer: David Nicholas Pettinicchio, University of Toronto Table 01. Family and the Life Course Table Presider: Sara E. Green, University of South Florida More than a Parent, You’re a Caregiver: Intersectional Narratives of Fathers of Disabled Children. Heidi Steinour, University of Florida; Sara E. Green, University of South Florida Depression and Hearing Loss: Demographic Diversity among U.S. Adults. Jessica West, Duke University Development in Context: The Simplifications and Distortions of the Disease Narrative of Autism. Benjamin DiCicco-Bloom, Hamilton College Table 02. The Intersection of Race/Ethnicity, Gender and Disability Disability, Gender and Education in China. Min Li From Enabling to Coercion: Contraception Practices at the Intersection of Gender and Serious Mental Illness. Brea Louise Perry, Indiana University; Emma Frieh, Indiana University Bloomington; Eric R. Wright, Georgia State University Double Jeopardy: Jewish Children With Disabilities As Victims of Nazi “Euthanasia” Crimes. Lutz Kaelber, University of Vermont Table 03. Stigma and Identity Table Presider: Heather D. Evans, University of Washington Invisible Disabilities, Visible Service Dogs: The Discrimination of Service Dog Handlers. Meghan L. Mills, Birmingham Southern College The Portrayal of Mental Illness in Four Movies: Depictions that Reinforce or Challenge Stigma. Amy Ann Armstrong Trial by Fire: Forms of Impairment Disclosure and Implications for Disability Identity. Heather D. Evans, University of Washington “How can I find the energy?” Neurodiversity and Neoliberal Discourses of Mental Health Online. Brenna Harvey, University of Connecticut; John Bailey, Rutgers University Table 04. Policy, Institutions and Organizations

Table Presider: Loren Wilbers, University of Wisconsin-Whitewater Health Selection to Unemployment and Disability in Differing Social Policy Settings. Veerle Buffel, Ghent University; Kristian Heggebo, Oslo and Akershus University College Normalizing Neglect: An Organizational Analysis of NYC Planning Failures for People with Disabilities. Jonathan Lin, Columbia University Profession-based Differences on the Permeability of Weight Stigma. J. Andrew Higginbotham, Texas Tech University

542. Section on Environment and Technology. Energy and Inequality

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513C, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Tammy L. Lewis, CUNY-Brooklyn College Presider: Steven R. Brechin, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Ecologically Unequal Exchange, Climate Change, and Economic Recessions: The U.S. Experience 2000-2010. Xiaorui Huang, Boston College Pipelines and Environmental Justice: A Sociology of Natural Gas Infrastructure Buildout. Diane M. Sicotte, Drexel University; Kelly A. Joyce, Drexel University The Effect of Proximity on Policy Preferences about Unconventional Oil and Gas Development? A Texas-Based Study. Bryce Hannibal, Texas A&M Univeristy Narratives of Risk, Redemption and Resistance: Oil Disasters and Offshore Drilling in Aotearoa New Zealand. Patricia Widener, Florida Atlantic University There’s Always Winners and Losers: Masculinities, Resource Dependence, and Post-Disaster Environmental Complacency. Travis Milnes, Colorado State University; Timothy James Haney, Mount Royal University

543. Section on Organizations, Occupations, and Work. Award Ceremony and Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513A, 12:30-1:30 p.m. Session Organizer: Mark C. Suchman, Brown University

544. Section on Peace, War, and Social Conflict. Privatization of Security

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 515C, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizers: Ori Swed, University of Texas at Austin Thomas Crosbie, University of Maryland College Park Seeing Like a Supply Chain: The RAND Corporation, Logistics, and the 2003 Invasion of Iraq. Sam Haraway, University of California, Davis Some Reflections on the Idea of Privatization of Security in Mexico. Arturo Díaz Cruz, Colegio de México “Humane” Immigration Enforcement and Latina Immigrants in the Detention Complex. Andrea Gomez Cervantes, University of Kansas; William G. Staples, University of Kansas

545. Section on Racial and Ethnic Minorities Refereed Roundtable Session and Business Meeting

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517B, 12:30-1:30 p.m. Session Organizer: Nilda Flores-Gonzalez, University of IllinoisChicago Table 01. Educational Policy Table Presider: Jason Lamont Cummings, University of South Carolina A Contemporary Overview of Inequality in Public Education by Race and Ethnicity. Kimberly Ann Goyette, Temple University

Tuesday, August 15, 2017

American Racial Formation. Mike King, Bridgewater State University White People’s Time: Lived Experiences of Time as Racial Wage in a Hyper-Racial World. H. Alexander Welcome, LaGuardia Community College Whiteness, Power, and Privilege in an Oregon Spanish Immersion School. Ashley Woody, University of Oregon Witnessing Whiteness? Critiquing Cultural Capital and Logics of Ethno-Racial Deficiency in British Sociology. Derron O. Wallace, Brandeis University Table 07. Race Theory Table Presider: Ashley Rondini, Franklin and Marshall College A Remedy for Racism: Terminating White Supremacy. Timothy McGettigan, Colorado State University - Pueblo Against Teleology in the Study of Race and Ethnicity. Victor E. Ray, The University of Tennessee-Knoxville; Louise Seamster, University of Tennessee-Knoxville Similar Starts and Divergent Discourses: Attitudes Surrounding “Affirmative Action” and “Diversity” in the 21st Century. Neeraj Rajasekar, University of Minnesota Table 08. Race and Politics Table Presider: Vivian Shaw, University of Texas at Austin A Seat At The Table For Whom: Intersectionality and South Asian American Political Organizing. Sheena Sood, Temple University Ordinary Representations of Representation: Ethnic Minority Representatives in French Politics. Camille Hamidi, Université de Lyon The Complexity of Policy Preferences: Examining Self-Interest, Group-Interest, and Race Consciousness Across Race and Political Ideology. William Joslyn Scarborough, University of Illinois at Chicago; Allyson L. Holbrook, University of Illinois at Chicago Explaining the Gaps in Secular and Religious Volunteering Between Non-Western Immigrants and Natives in Denmark. Hans-Peter Yogachandiran Qvist Table 09. Racial Classification Table Presider: Steven Tuttle, Loyola University Chicago How Canadians Understand the Categories of Visible Minority and Person of Colour. Jessica Braimoh, McMaster University Measuring Our Nation’s Racial/Ethnic Diversity: The 2015 Census National Content Test to Improve Race/Ethnicity Data. Nicholas A. Jones, U.S. Census Bureau; Michael Bentley, U.S. Census Bureau; Sarah Konya, U.S. Census Bureau U.S. Census Bureau’s 2015 National Content Test for Race/ Ethnicity: Instructions and Terminologies. Beverly M. Pratt, U.S. Census Bureau; Kelly Mathews, U.S. Census Bureau; Julia Coombs, U.S. Census Bureau Table 10. Race and the Labor Market Table Presider: Alfredo Huante, University of Southern California Does Living in a Neighbourhood with Many Minorities Lower Labour Market Integration across Europe. Wouter Zwysen, University of Essex; Neli Demireva, Nuffield College Experimental Evidence of Ethnic Discrimination in the Danish Labor Market. Malte Rokkjaer Dahl, University of Copenhagen From Yellow Peril to Model Minority: Perceived Threat of Asian Americans in the Workforce. Jenny Nguyen, University of Central Florida; J. Scott Carter, University of Central Florida; Shannon K. Carter, University of Central Florida Table 11. Racial Attitudes Table Presider: Joseph Loe-Sterphone, University of California,

Tuesday

Are Black Students Equal Beneficiaries in St. Louis? An Analysis of the Largest Voluntary Desegregation Plan. Jerome Ellis Morris, University of Missouri-St. Louis; Melissa J. Garcia, University of Missouri-St. Louis Social Resources at Non-Selective Colleges. Judith Sedaitis, NYC College of Technology Teacher Bias and Eduational Outcomes. Leah Gillion, Princeton University Table 02. Race and Higher Education Table Presider: Aaron Arredondo, University of Missouri Biracial Students at HBCUs: How Contact with Blacks Can Improve Biracial Students’ Racial Regard. Kristen Annette Clayton, University of Georgia Exploring the Internalization and Resistance of Coloniality Frames among Latina(o) College Students. Maria Isabel Ayala, Michigan State University; Christian Ramirez, Michigan State University Introducing the Invisible Man: Black Male Professionals in Higher Education. Claudine D. McLaren Turner, University of Central Florida; Elizabeth Grauerholz, University of Central Florida Black and Latino Men and Campus Racial Climate. Uriel Serrano, University of California, Santa Cruz Table 03. Racial Others in Educational Settings Table Presider: Chalane E. Lechuga, Metropolitan State University of Denver International Students’ Cross-Border Transmission on Race Mediated by Simultaneity as Ruling Elites There/Racialized Others Here. Sung-Choon Park, The New School Paternalistic Exoticism: White Students and Law School Diversity. Yung-Yi Diana Pan, Brooklyn College - CUNY Black British Students Accounts of ‘Otherness’ at elite UK Universities: Methods Utilised to ‘Fit In’. Constantino Sansao Dumangane, Cardiff University Table 04. Whiteness and Trump Supporters Table Presider: Celia Olivia Lacayo, UCLA Cultural-defense and Strategies of Racial Exclusion among Heathens: Mainstreaming Racism in the Era of Trump. Jennifer Snook, Grinnell College; Ross Haenfler, Grinnell College Re-Centering the Right: Deploying Whiteness Post-1960. Lauren Richter, Northeastern University The Complexity of “Deep Stories:” Race, Emotions, and Trump Supporters. Haley Jo Gentile, Florida State University; Pierce Alexander Dignam, Florida State University; Benjamin DowdArrow, Florida State University; Kristen Erichsen, Florida State University; Doug Schrock, Florida State University The Gentrification of the White Working Class: Racial Fragility, Toxic Masculinity, and Donald Trump. Adam Safer, Stony Brook University Table 05. Whiteness and Victimization Table Presider: Cristian Luis Paredes, University of Texas at Austin Claiming Black Lives: Reverse Passing and Racial Identity Work among Whites. Matthew Oware, DePauw University The Construction of Racialized Marginalized and White Hegemonic Masculinities among Sperm Donors’ Essays. Carol Walther, Northern Illinois University White Myths on “White Discrimination”: “We Are the New Victims of Racism.” Gabe Miller, Texas A&M University Table 06. Whiteness and Privilege Table Presider: Erin Freeman, Boston University Aggrieved Whiteness: White Identity Politics and Modern

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Tuesday

Session 545, continued Santa Barbara Latent Prejudice: American Attitudes toward Blacks. Daniel Adam Nicholson, Indiana University Racial Microaggressions at Predominately White Institutions: Connecting Micro Mechanisms to Macro Inequalities. Ainsley LAmbert, University of Cincinnati The Deep Schemas of Anti-Blackness in Colonial Korea, 1919-1937. Jae Kyun Kim, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign Encounters and Echoes: Contextualizing Discrimination and the Internalization of Stereotypes through Socioeconomic and Demographic Processes. Boroka Bo, University of California, Berkeley Changing Encounters with Everyday Otherness: Gendered Responses to Boundaries among Second-generation Immigrants. Carolin Fischer, University of Neuchâtel; Janine Dahinden, University of Neuchâtel Table 12. Racial Inequality Table Presider: Sonita Moss, University of Pennsylvania Albuquerque Exceptionalism? The Politics of Multiculturalism among Hispanics and whites in New Mexico. Casandra Danielle Salgado, University of California, Los Angeles Race, Gender, and Liquid Assets: Investigating the Black-white Disparity in Homeownership Exit 2007-2013. Chunhui Ren, Delta State University Unknown Causes: An Examination of the (In)stability of Americans’ Explanations for Racial Inequality. Kiara Douds, New York University “Reconstruction Has Stopped the Nonsense” Visual Ethnography and Community Capacity Building in Post-Prison Reentry. Townsand Price-Spratlen, Ohio State University; William Goldsby, Reconstruction, Inc. (Philadelphia, PA) Table 13. Race in a Global Perspective Table Presider: Marcelo A. Bohrt, Brown University Cosmetic Surgery and Racial Projects in Global Perspective. Alka Menon, Northwestern University Gender, Ethnicity, Body, Nation, and Power: Patricia Troncoso’s Hunger Strike. Trinidad Valle, Fordham Global Power Relations and their effect on the Unequal Racialization of Migrants. Caroline Schoepf, Hong Kong Baptist University; Matthew Ming-Tak Chew Table 14. Media Representations of Race Table Presider: Kevin Zevallos, University of Connecticut Constructing the Ghetto: An Analysis of Urban and Community Sociology Syllabi. Deirdre D. Caputo-Levine, Idaho State University; Vanessa Lynn Construction of the “Threat:” Media Portrayals of Puerto Rican Immigration, 2010-2015. Bianca Gonzalez-Sobrino, University of Connecticut Eye of the Tiger Mom: Representations of Asian Americans in Contemporary American Television. Thomas Chung, The Graduate Center The Dissemination and Reproduction of Dominant Ideologies on Social Media. Paul Anskat, University of New Hampshire Using Free Speech to Justify It: Anti-Muslim Sentiments in Online Comments. Karyn Light-Gibson, University of Arizona Table 15. Racial Disparities and Mental Health Table Presider: Stephanie P. Hall, Georgia State University An Alternative Examination of the Strength of Black Women and Mental Health. Stephanie P. Hall, Georgia State University

Associations among Autosomal Ancestry DNA Testing, Ethnic Identity, and Psychological Well-being of African Americans. LaKisha David, University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign Great Recession’s impact on substance abuse outpatient treatment completion rates for minorities. Kathleen Anangwe, University of Nairobi; Luis Enrique Espinoza, Texas Woman’s University; Lucas Enrique Espinoza, University of Texas Rio Grande Valley Recounting the Silences of War: Cambodian Americans and the Construction of Transgenerational Trauma Narratives. Yvonne Y. Kwan, Dartmouth College Table 16. Racial Disparities and Health Data Spanning Three Decades Illustrate Racial Disparities in Likelihood of Obesity. Celia C. Lo, Texas Woman’s University; William Ash-Houchen, Texas Woman’s University; Heather M. Gerling, Texas Woman’s University Ensnared by Color Blindness: Discourse on Health Care Disparities. Brooke Cunningham, University of Minnesota; Andre Scarlato, University of Minnesota Microaggressions, Diabetes Distress, and Self-Care Behaviors in a Sample of American Indian Adults. Kelley J. Sittner, Oklahoma State University Table 17. Race and Youth Table Presider: Jasmine Lanisha Davis, Indiana University A Race Against (White) Time: The Temporal Constraints of Whiteness for Youth. Rahsaan Mahadeo, University of Minnesota The Manifestations of Prejudice in Everyday Life: A Preliminary Examination of the Observations of White Youth. James T. Baker, McMaster University The Rules of (Dis)Engagement: How Black Youth Navigate Police Contact in New York City. Brittany Nicole Fox-Williams, Columbia University Transgressive Temporalities: CP Time and the Importance of being Off Time to Youth of Color. Rahsaan Mahadeo, University of Minnesota Table 18. Ethnicity Retention Table Presider: Herrica Telus, University of Illinois at Chicago Cultural Barriers to the Successful Integration of Minorities in Britain. Neli Demireva, Nuffield College Determinants of Linguistic Retention: The Case of Ontario’s Francophone Official-Language Minorities. Jean-Francois Nault, University of Toronto Ethnic Attrition in the Nigerian American Second Generation. Amon S. Emeka, Skidmore College Second- Generation Indians Navigating the Ethnic and Religious identities. Soulit Chacko, Loyola University, Chicago Table 19. Interracial Couples Table Presider: Julia M. Arroyo, University of Florida Color, Culture, or Cousin? Framing Boundaries in Interracial Relationships. Shantel Gabrieal Buggs, The University of Texas at Austin Race, Law, and Family Formation in the United States. Emma Shakeshaft, University of Wisconsin-Madison Critical Constructivis’ and Ethnoracial Boundaries: Deessentializing Blackness in Dyads of Interracially Married Couples. Chinyere Osuji, Rutgers University at Camden Table 20. Interracial Contact and Attitudes Table Presider: Erik Tyler Withers, University of South Florida Intergroup Contact and the Racial Attitudes of Black and White Youths, 1976-2015: Does Contact Matter? Steven A. Tuch,

Tuesday, August 15, 2017 The George Washington University; Jason A. MacDonald, West Virginia University; Franchesca Nestor, West Virginia University Lessons about Race: Black Parents’ Racial Socialization in a Predominantly White Suburban Context. Linn Posey-Maddox, University of Wisconsin, Madison The Role of Symbolic Boundaries in Ethno-racial Differences in Social Trust. Monica Mi Hee Hwang, St. Thomas More College, University of Saskatchewan

546. Section on Rationality and Society. Empirical Tests of Rational Choice Models Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512H, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Arnout van de Rijt, Utrecht University Presider: Afife Idil Akin, State University of New York-Stony Brook Discounting the Future: Does it Increase Households’ Energy Consumption? Andreas Diekmann, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology ETH Zurich; Heidi Bruderer Enzler, ETH Zurich; Ulf Liebe Endogenous Peer Punishment Institutions in Prisoner’s Dilemmas: The Role of Noise. Nynke Van Miltenburg, Utrecht University; Vincent W. Buskens; Werner Raub, Utrecht University Networks, Institutions, and Uncertainty: Information Exchange in Early-Modern Markets. Emily Anne Erikson, Yale University; Sampsa Samila, IESE The Network Dynamics of Social Influence in the Wisdom of Crowds. Joshua Becker, Annenberg School for Communication; Devon Brackbill; Damon M. Centola, Annenberg School of Communication

547. Section on Sociological Practice and Public Sociology. Applying Sociology to Real World Problems

548. Section on Sociology of Religion. Is Religion Really Just Culture? Is Culture Really Just Religion? (cosponsored with Section on Sociology of Culture) Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513E, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Jeffrey Guhin, University of California, Los Angeles Presider: Jeffrey Guhin, University of California, Los Angeles Panelists: Tia Noelle Pratt, St. Joseph’s University Penny Edgell, University of Minnesota Jen’nan G. Read, Duke University Stephen Vaisey, Duke University

549. Section on Sociology of Sex and Gender. Struggles over Difference and Inclusivity in Higher Education

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513D, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Tressie Cottom, Virginia Commonwealth University Presider: Tressie Cottom, Virginia Commonwealth University Another Kabyle House: Bourdieuian Approach towards Gendered Higher Education in the United States and South Korea. Yun Kyung Cho, University of Wisconsin-Madison Critical Race Theory and Intersectionality for Contextualizing RaceGender-Class “Achievement Gaps” in Higher Education. Nancy Lopez, University of New Mexico; Christopher Erwin, University of New Mexico; Melisa Binder, University of New Mexico; Mario Javier Chavez, University of New Mexico Neutralizing the Harm of Sexist and Racist Jokes among Undergraduate Students. Maria R. Lowe, Southwestern University; Reginald Anthony Byron, Southwestern University; Holly O’Hara, Southwestern University; Dakota Cortez, Southwestern University Why Do Students Go into STEM? Race, Gender and SES Stratification in STEM Learning Opportunities. Martha Cecilia Bottia, University of North Carolina at Charlotte; Roslyn A. Mickelson, University of North Carolina at Charlotte; Cayce Jamil

550. Section on Sociology of Sexualities. 20 Years of Sexualities

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514A, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Sharon Preves, Hamline University Presider: Sharon Preves, Hamline University Bringing Sexy Back: Pornographics as Queer Method. Angela Jones, Farmingdale State College, State University of New York Sociological Knowledge and Proliferation: A Trajectory for Sexuality Studies. Lee Thorpe, West Virginia University The Demography of Sexuality: Queering Demographic Research, Theory, and Methods. Amanda Kathleen Baumle, University of Houston; Ben Dreon, University of Houston Where Do We Study? Reflections on the Geographical Turn in Sociological Sexualities Research. Amy L. Stone, Trinity University Discussant: Jyoti Puri, Simmons College

551. Section on the Sociology of the Family. Gender, Work, and Family

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513B, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Liana C. Sayer, University of Maryland Presider: Rose Malinowski Weingartner Babies, Work, or Both? The Interdependence of Women’s Employment and Fertility in East Asia. Eunsil Oh, Harvard University; Mary C. Brinton, Harvard University Is Intensive Mothering a Cross-National Ideology? A Qualitative Study of Maternal Guilt among Working Mothers. Caitlyn Collins, Washington University in St. Louis Marriage Formation and Economic Opportunity in the United States, 1970-2000. Catherine A. Fitch, University of Minnesota; Sheela Kennedy, University of Michigan; Michael Oakes, University of Minnesota; Steven Ruggles, University of Minnesota The Impact of Affordable Day Care on Women’s Work in a Slum Settlement of Nairobi. Shelley Clark, McGill University; Caroline Kabiru, African Population and Health Research Center; Sonia Laszlo, McGill University; Stella Muthuri, African Population and Health Research Center Discussant: Michelle J. Budig, University of Massachusetts- Amherst

Tuesday

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512G, 12:30-2:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Mark Frezzo, University of Mississippi Presider: Jan Marie Fritz, University of Cincinnati Getting to 80%: Mobilizing Feedback, Lifestyles, and Social Practices Research to Shape Residential Energy Consumption. Bridget Austin Clark, University of California, Davis Policing in Chicago: A Workshop in Social Justice Ethnography. Michael De Anda Muñiz, University of Illinois at Chicago; Andy Clarno, University of Illinois at Chicago Public Higher Education’s Role in Shaping a Workforce in Rhode Island. Mikaila Mariel Lemonik Arthur, Rhode Island College; Francis J. Leazes, Rhode Island College The Clinical Sociologist and Whistleblowing: Creating Social Justice in the Workplace. Tina Uys, University of Johannesburg Discussant: Mark Frezzo, University of Mississippi

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1:30 p.m.

Meetings

Section on Disability and Society Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516C, 1:30-2:10 p.m. Section on Inequality, Poverty, and Mobility Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513F, 1:30-2:10 p.m. Section on Organizations, Occupations, and Work Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513A, 1:30-2:10 p.m. Section on Racial and Ethnic Minorities Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517B, 1:30-2:10 p.m.

2:30 p.m.

Meetings

2016-17 ASA Council Palais des congrès de Montréal, 518A, 2:30-6:10 p.m.

2:30 p.m.

Sessions

Tuesday

552. Thematic Session. The Cultural Terrain of Migrant Inclusion and Exclusion: Perspectives from Africa and Asia

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511C, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Susanne Yukping Choi, Chinese University of Hong Kong Presider: Cecilia Menjivar, University of Kansas The Popular Politics of Resisting Xenophobic Violence: Reflections on the South African Experience. Michael Neocosmos, Rhodes University Nibbling at Resilient Colonialism in South Africa. Francis Nyamnjoh, University of Cape Town Sinicization and De-Sinicization as Strategies of Social Inclusion/ Exclusion: Understanding the Southeast Asian Chinese Experiences. Liu Hong, Nanyan Technological University Gender and Anti-Migration: Boundaries of Familial Morality, Body and Sexuality. Susanne Yukping Choi, Chinese University of Hong Kong Conventional sociological research on migration has focused on the economic, social and political domains, with cultural dynamics of migrant inclusion and exclusion remain in the shadow of scholarly inquiry. This proposed thematic session brings to the forefront the various cultural processes and institutional dynamics that construct the symbolic boundaries between natives/locals and different migrant groups, and the repertoires mobilized by social actors to sustain, challenge, and cross these boundaries. It asks: 1) what are the symbolic messages legislation, migration policies, traditional and social media send about a particular migrant group and how they intersect to demarcate the ‘we’ and the ‘they’ division, and to legitimize the marginalization of the ‘they’; 2) how migrants mobilize and select certain cultural discourses to challenge and cross the boundaries, and 3) the consequences of successful or failed boundary crossing on the identity of migrants. Recognizing that most existing migration research is based on the experiences of countries in Europe and North America, which may not reflect adequately the distinctive experiences of Asian and African societies, this proposed thematic session focuses on perspectives from Africa and Asia. We believe that in an era of globalization and digitalization, an interrogation of the cultural logic of migrant inclusion and exclusion is one of the most urgent and timely issues awaiting sociologists’ attention.

553. Thematic Session. We’re All Telling Our Stories But Is Anyone Listening? Capturing Narrative Impact

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511F, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizers: Kelly J. Nielsen, University of California-San Diego Francesca Polletta, University of California, Irvine Presider: Kelly J. Nielsen, University of California-San Diego Panelists: Christopher A. Bail, Duke University Wendy Griswold, Northwestern University David J. Harding, University of California at Berkeley Jennifer M. Silva, Bucknell University Discussant: Kelly J. Nielsen, University of California-San Diego As cultural resources, stories are often central to both analyses of inequality and struggles for equity, inclusion, and resilience. This session focuses on ways of conceptualizing and measuring narrative impact. By asking when stories work, when they do not work, and what it means for stories to work, this session will consider how to disentangle the effects of culture on inequality. At the level of both individuals and political groups, the question of narrative impact has implications for how we study social inclusion and exclusion, group boundary making and solidarity efforts, and social resilience and well-being.

554. Special Session. The Future of Muslim Societies: Governance, Movements, and Religion

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511D, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizers: Rachel A. Rinaldo, University of Colorado, Boulder Colin J. Beck, Pomona College Panelists: Mounira Maya Charrad, University of Texas at Austin Kevan Harris, UCLA Fareen Parvez, University of Massachusetts- Amherst Mbaye Lo, Duke University In the wake of the Arab Spring, prospects for transnational movements and changes in governance across the Muslim World seem bleak in some places (e.g., Egypt, Mali) and brighter in others (Indonesia, Tunisia). This panel explores the past and future of politics and religion across different regions, including the Middle East, Asia, and Africa. Connections across Muslim societies and to the transnational system are emphasized. Possible topics include, but are not limited to, the nexus of religion and democratization, development, collective action, gender and sexuality, and globalization in various contexts.

555. Author Meets Critics Session. Pedigree: How Elite Students Get Elite Jobs (Princeton University Press, 2016) by Lauren A. Rivera

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511E, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Elizabeth A. Armstrong, University of Michigan Critics: Amy J. Binder, University of California, San Diego Florencia Torche, Stanford University Alexandra Kalev, Tel Aviv University Author: Lauren Rivera, Northwestern University

556. Regional Spotlight Session. Why is Quebec’s Labor Movement--and Left--Different? Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511A, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Jeff Goodwin, New York University Presider: Jeff Goodwin, New York University Class versus Special Interest: How the Canadian and U.S. Labor Movements Differ. Barry Eidlin, McGill University

Tuesday, August 15, 2017 The Canadian Labor Movement Beyond Quebec. Stephanie Ross, York University Understanding Union Power: Paths to Renewal. Gregor Murray, Université de Montréal North American Trade Unionism Under Neoliberalism. Ian MacDonald Discussant: Pascale Dufour, Université de Montréal

557. Professional Development Workshop. Transitioning from Graduate Studies at a Research-Intensive Institution to Teaching-Intensive Institution

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512A, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizers: John Paul DeWitt, University of Michigan William H. Frey, Brookings Institution Leader: John Paul DeWitt, University of Michigan Panelists: Jill Bouma, Berea College Katherine R. Rowell, Sinclair Community College Esther Isabelle Wilder, Lehman College Graduate students at research-intensive universities often receive substantial mentorship aimed at research activities, but mentorship aimed at teaching activities often goes overlooked. Often, graduate students may harbor a desire to pursue careers focused more on teaching than research, yet comparatively fewer opportunities for pedagogical mentorship exist. In this session, faculty will reflect on their experiences as teacher scholars and discuss strategies for promoting a culture of pedagogy in academe. This session will also examine tools for effective pedagogical training among sociologists as well resources for teaching sociology. In addition to graduate students, the session invites faculty at teaching-focused institutions to attend and contribute their insight.

558. Teaching Workshop. Selecting Readings for Introductory Sociology: Content and Format

559. Regular Session. Ethnomethodology and Conversation Analysis: Historical/Theoretical Readings of Ethnomethodology

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512C, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Anne Warfield Rawls, Bentley University Garfinkel’s “Sources of Issues and Ways of Working.” Douglas W. Maynard, University of Wisconsin Restoring Egon Bittner’s Ethnomethodological Contributions to Police Studies in the Digital Age. Albert J. Meehan, Oakland University Breaching and Gestalt-Switch: On the Significance of Trouble Making

in the Work of Harold Garfinkel. Andrea Ploder, Siegen University; Clemens Willi Eisenmann, University of Konstanz, University of Siegen; Christian Erbacher, University of Siegen

560. Regular Session. Gender and Work

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512D, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Mary Blair-Loy, University of California-San Diego Presider: Mary Blair-Loy, University of California-San Diego Inside the Black Box of Organizational Life: The Gendered Language of Performance Assessment. Shelley J. Correll, Stanford University; Katherine Weisshaar, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Alison Wynn, Stanford University; JoAnne Delfino Wehner, Stanford University The Gender of Genius: How Person-Based Ideals Impact Sex Segregation. Sharon Koppman, University of California, Irvine The Price of Crude and the Deserving Professional: Gender Inequality in the Oil Industry. Amanda Bosky, University of Texas at Austin; Chandra Muller, University of Texas; Christine L. Williams, University of Texas at Austin Understanding Perceptions of Career Barriers and the Gendered Career Strategies of Women Scientists in Academia. Sharon R. Bird, Oklahoma State University; Laura Rhoton Cool for Some: The Gendered Experiences of Precarious Work. Yasemin Besen-Cassino, Montclair State University; Richard E. Ocejo, John Jay College and the Graduate Center, CUNY Gambling with Life: The Occupational Risks of Being an Unauthorized Migrant Roofer in the United States. Sergio Chavez, Rice University

561. Regular Session. Internal Migration 2: The Health and Well-being of Internal Migrants

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512F, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Rachel E. Goldberg, University of California, Irvine Presider: Rachel E. Goldberg, University of California, Irvine Association of Internal Migration with Health Outcomes in Indonesia. Ernesto F. L. Amaral; Margaret M. Weden, RAND Corporation; Christine Peterson, RAND Corporation Decisions on Commuting and Migration and the Influence of Education and Overqualification. Silvia Maja Melzer, University of Bielefeld; Thomas Hinz, University of Konstanz Internal Migration and the Self-Rated Health of Indigenous Mexicans: A Longitudinal Study. Gabriela Leon-Perez, Vanderbilt University Migrating for Opportunity? Internal Migration and Economic Advancement among Black and White Women and Men. Christine Leibbrand, University of Washington Discussant: Michael J. White, Brown University

562. Regular Session. Law, Society, and Violence

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512E, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Angela P. Taylor, Fayetteville State University Presider: Kerice Doten-Snitker, University of Washington Collective Violence, Status ambiguity, and Elite Signals: Urban Lynchings 1910-1920. Justin Steil, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Color Violence, Deadly Geographies and the Meanings of “Race” in Brazil. Luisa Farah Schwartzman, University of Toronto Perceptions of State (il)legitimacy, the Provision of Security, and Vigilante Violence in South Africa. Mark Gross, University of Maryland-College Park Trouble in Paradigm: “Gender Transformative Programing” in Violence Prevention. Lisa D. Brush, University of Pittsburgh;

Tuesday

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512B, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Nancy A. Greenwood, Indiana University Kokomo Leader: Nancy A. Greenwood, Indiana University Kokomo Co-Leader: Stephanie Medley-Rath, Indiana University Kokomo The goal of this workshop is to help instructors who are teaching introductory sociology (especially for the first time) to become aware of the array of options available for readings in this course. We will discuss traditional and not so traditional textbooks and readers, the “no-text” option, as well as various formats for reading materials such as paper, e-books, and open access materials. We discuss the pros and cons of each option and tie that knowledge to the literature on the scholarship of teaching and learning, to selected learning goals, content and/or theoretical variation, student characteristics, as well as pedagogies for this class. We will offer some helpful handouts. Participants are encouraged to bring their questions or issues for discussion.

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Session 562, continued Elizabeth Miller, Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine The Effects of Corruption and Organized Crime on Homicide Rates Cross-Nationally. Carol L. S. Trent, St. Francis University Discussant: Lesley Erin Schneider, The Ohio State University

563. Regular Session. Life Course Insecurities: Individuals and Cohorts in Transition

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514C, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Richard A. Settersten, Oregon State University Presider: Miles G. Taylor, Florida State University Changing Times and Places: First Homeleaving among Late Baby Boomers and Early Millennials. Sung S. Park, University of California, Los Angeles The Impact of Insecure Work on Young Adults: The Experiences of Two Generations in Australia. Dan Woodman, University of Melbourne Body Size Reference Norms and Subjective Weight Status: A Gender and Life Course Approach. Robbee Wedow, University of Colorado-Boulder; Ryan K. Masters, University of ColoradoBoulder; Stefanie Mollborn, University of Colorado Boulder; Jason D. Boardman, University of Colorado-Boulder Trajectories of Work Disability and Economic Insecurity Approaching Retirement. Kim Shuey, University of Western Ontario; Andrea E. Willson, Univeristy of Western Ontario A Sequence Analysis of the De-standardization and Stratification in the Retirement Sequences of Older Americans. Esteban Calvo, UDP / Columbia University; Ignacio Madero-Cabib, Universidad Diego Portales; Ursula M. Staudinger, Columbia University

Tuesday

564. Regular Session. Social Capital

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 515A, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Richard M. Carpiano, University of British Columbia Presider: Ryan Stillwagon, University of British Columbia A New Multi-Dimensional Community Level Measure of Social Capital. Pamela M. Paxton, University of Texas at Austin; Inbar Weiss, University of Texas at Austin; Kristopher Velasco, University of Texas at Austin; Robert Wayne Ressler, University of Texas at Austin Marry Up, Socialize Up? Educational HypergAmy, Gender, and Social Capital in Three Societies. Lijun Song, Vanderbilt University; Cleothia Frazier, Vanderbilt University The Logic(s) of Dying: How Cultural Logics Shape the Networks of the Terminally Ill. Jacqueline Joslyn, University of Arizona; Corey M. Abramson, University of Arizona To Give or Not to Give? Ideas and Practices Surrounding Financial Obligation among Urban Ghanaians. Lindsay Bayham, University of California-Berkeley Discussant: David B. Tindall, University of British Columbia

565. Regular Session. Social Networks: Substantive Applications

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516D, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: James Moody, Duke University Micro-structural foundations of network inequality: Evidence from observational data and field experiments. Mathijs de Vaan, UC Berkeley; Dan Wang, Columbia University Network Diversity and Network Change in Creative Careers. Bryce Hannibal, Texas A&M Univeristy

Solving the Brokerage Paradox: Trait Homophily in Triads, and the Broker-in-between Hypothesis. Brian Rubineau, McGill University; Wyatt Taylor, University of Kentucky; Eric Gladstone, Cornell University; David Thompson, Community Solutions The Neural Roots of Future Liking and Affective Reciprocity. Noam Zerubavel, Columbia University; Mark Anthony Hoffman, Columbia University With Friends Like These: Aggression from Equivalence and Amity. Robert W. Faris, UC-Davis; Diane H. Felmlee, Pennsylvania State University; Cassie McMillan, Pennsylvania State University 566. Regular Session. Social Policy Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516B, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Adam Goldstein, Princeton University Presider: Adam Goldstein, Princeton University Periodic Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) Payment, Financial Stress and Well-being: A Longitudinal Study. Karen Z. Kramer, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; Flavia Andrade, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; Andrew J. Greenlee, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; Ruby Mendenhall, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; Dylan Bellisle, University of Chicago; Renee Lemons, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Dependency on Welfare: Duration Dependence or Unobserved Factors? A Case Study in Ontario, Canada. Kumiko Shibuya, The Chinese University of Hong Kong Unpacking the Welfare State Paradox: Corporate Responses to Parental Leave Policies in Japan. Eunmi Mun, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; Jiwook Jung, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

567. Regular Session. Social Psychology

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 515B, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Shane D. Soboroff, Eastern Illinois University Does Aggression Deter or Invite Reciprocal Behavior? Considering Coercive Capacity. Stephen Benard, Indiana University; Mark Berg, University of Iowa Gender and Leadership Expectations. Christabel L. Rogalin, Purdue University Northwest; Jeffrey W. Lucas, University of Maryland; Yu Guo, University of Maryland; Amy Baxter, University of Maryland Moral Boundaries Across Cultures. Steven Hitlin, University of Iowa; Hye Won Kwon, University of Iowa; Rengin Bahar Firat, Georgia State University Organizing the Commons: A New Solution for Solving the Problem of Acting Collectively. David Willer, University of South Carolina; Pamela E. Emanuelson, North Dakota State University Discussant: Christopher Patrick Kelley, United States Air Force Academy

568. Regular Session. Sociological Approaches to Population Processes

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 515C, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Colter Mitchell, University of Michigan A Decomposition of Trends in the Nonmarital Infant Mortality Ratios in the United States: 1983-2010. Wen Fan, Boston College; Liying Luo, The Pennsylvania State University Gender and the Residential Mobility and Attainment of Black-White Couples. Ryan Gabriel, Brigham Young University Marriage Delays and Fertility ‘Catch-Up’ in Post-Conflict Tajikistan. Michelle L. O’Brien, University of Washington

Tuesday, August 15, 2017 Precarious Employment and Entry into Marriage and Cohabitation. Matthew Stimpson, UC Berkeley; Daniel J. Schneider, University of California-Berkeley; Kristen S. Harknett, University of Pennsylvania Tenancy, Marriage, and the Boll Weevil Infestation, 1892-1930. Deirdre Bloome, University of Michigan; James Feigenbaum, Princeton University; Christopher Michael Muller, University of California, Berkeley 569. Regular Session. Stratification and Mental Health Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516A, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Richard Edward Adams, Kent State University Presider: Kristen Marcussen, Kent State University Financial Strain, Mastery, and Psychological Distress: A Comment on Spuriousness in the Stress Process. Jonathan Tomas Koltai, University of Toronto; Scott Schieman, University of Toronto Lasting Mental Health Consequences: Early Pregnancy and Unfulfilled Educational Expectations among Black and White Women. Noreen Kohl, University of Hawaii Manoa Masculinity Threats and Mental Health among Aging Men. Dena T. Smith, University of Maryland (UMBC); Dawne M. Mouzon, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey; Marta Elliott, University of Nevada, Reno The Role of Employment Adversity in Inequalities in Mental Health: An Intersectional Mixed Methods Analysis. Billy Gazard, King’s College London

570. Regular Session. Welfare State 2. New Comparative Perspectives on the Causes and Consequences of Welfare States

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516E, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Ann Shola Orloff, Northwestern University Competent, Committed and Constrained. Morten Frederiksen, Aalborg University Marketization of Long-Term Care Policies: Explaining Differences in Reform Pathways in Conservative Welfare States. Birgit PfauEffinger, University of Hamburg; Christopher Grages, University of Hamburg; Thurid Eggers, University of Hamburg Regulating the Poor: The Welfare State and the Governance of Marginality in Puerto Rico. Natalie Marie Delia Deckard, Davidson College; Alison Heslin, Emory University

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512H, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Ellen Benoit, National Development Research Inst Dynamic Associations of Network Isolation and Smoking Behavior. Molly Copeland, Duke University; Bryce J. Bartlett, Duke University; Jacob Charles Fisher, Duke University Incorporating Sexual Identity into Criminological Research: General Strain Theory, Sexual Anxiety, and Prescription Drug Misuse. Laura Frizzell, The Ohio State University; Michael Vuolo, The Ohio State University; Brian Christopher Kelly, Purdue University Informal Recycling, Income Generation and Risk: Health and Social Harms among People Who Use Drugs. Kaitlyn Jaffe, University of British Columbia; Lindsey Richardson, University of British Columbia; Kanna Hayashi, University of British Columbia; M-J Milloy, University of British Columbia; Huiru Dong, BC Centre For Excellence in HIV/AIDS STIs, HCV and Drug Use among a Longitudinal Cohort of MexicanAmerican Women in a Disadvantaged Community. Alice

Cepeda, University of Southern California; Jessica Frankeberger, University of Southern California; Esmeralda Ramirez, University of Southern California; Avelardo Valdez, University of Southern California Secondary Syringe Exchange: Collective Efficacy through Informal Public Health Practice in Vulnerable Communities. Sarah Brothers, Yale University

572. Section on Comparative-Historical Sociology. Theory, Epistemology, and Ethics in Historical Social Science

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514B, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: George Steinmetz, University of Michigan Presider: Samuel Clark, University of Western Ontario On the Ethics of Social Science. Philip S. Gorski, Yale University The Scientific Self: Epistemic Virtues as Embodied Research Ethics. Herman Paul, Leiden University Historical Foundations of the Social Sciences. Daniel Little, University of Michigan-Dearborn Feminist Theories, Sociologies of Gender and Historical Social Sciences. Ann Shola Orloff, Northwestern University Discussant: Isaac Ariail Reed, University of Virginia

573. Section on Disability and Society. Disability as a Dimension of Intersectionality and Inequality (cosponsored with Section on Race, Gender and Class; and Section on Body and Embodiment)

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513D, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizers: Sara E. Green, University of South Florida Linda M. Blum, Northeastern University Presiders: Linda M. Blum, Northeastern University Sara E. Green, University of South Florida Sociology’s Missing Other: Toward the Inclusion of Disability as a Central Axis of Stratification. Angela Frederick, University of Texas at El Paso; Dara Renee Shifrer, Portland State University Race/Ethnic and Nativity Differentials in Household Activity Limitations for Older Adults in the United States. Jennifer E. Melvin, Flagler College Anxious White Mothers and “Healthy Babies”: Neuropsychological Health and Race in International Adoption. Estye Fenton, Northeastern University Ontological In/security: An Intersectional Analysis of Disability and Immigration. Melissa Welch The Disability Rights Community was Never Mine: Neuroqueer as the Intersection of Neurodiversity and LGBTQIA Identities. Justine Egner, University of South Florida

574. Section on Environment and Technology. Environmental Movements

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513B, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Tammy L. Lewis, CUNY-Brooklyn College Presider: Beth Schaefer Caniglia, Regis University Preserving the Dark Night Sky: Bringing Culture to the Forefront of Environmental Movements. Megan S. Albaugh Bonham, Northwestern University Resisting Urban Exclusion: Citizen Science in a Southern California Waste Facility Siting Conflict. Carla May Dhillon, University of Michigan Food Sovereignty, Fair Trade, and Everyday Performance as Palestinian Resistance. Stephen Philip Gasteyer, Michigan State University The Bill McKibben Effect: Shifting the Institutional Debate on Climate

Tuesday

571. Section on Alcohol, Drugs, and Tobacco. Substance Use: Focus on Inequalities and Social Inclusion

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Tuesday, August 15, 2017

Session 574, continued Change through the Radical Flank. Todd Schifeling, University of Michigan; Andrew Hoffman, University of Michigan Surveillance, Neoliberalism and the Suppression of the Environmental Movement: The Power Elite in the Post-911 Era. S. Harris Ali, York University

Tuesday

575. Section on Inequality, Poverty, and Mobility Refereed Roundtable Session

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516C, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Martha Crowley, North Carolina State University Table 01. Class, Identity and Social Mobility Table Presider: Chenhong Peng, The University of Hong Kong Determinants of Discrepancy between Subjective and Objective Poverty: Social Comparison with Parents and Friends. Chenhong Peng, The University of Hong Kong Family Structure and Subjective Income Mobility. Bethany Smith, Baylor University How Class Status and Class Mobility Determine What Makes a Good Job. Brittany Dernberger, University of Maryland, College Park Housing and Class Identity of Urban Residents: An Empirical Study in China. Haidong Zhang, Shanghai University; ChengChen Yang, School of Sociology and Political Science, Shanghai University The Relation between Inequality and Social Mobility: A Multilevel Analysis of 30 Countries. Wonjeong Jeong, Yonsei University Table 02. Educational Investments, Wealth and Earnings Table Presider: Ole Hexel, Northwestern University False Beliefs and Denied Mobility: The Effects of Household Debt on Education Investment. Won Jun Chung Are Student Loans Worth It? Stratification in Work-Life Balance, Income, and Family. Arielle Kuperberg, The University of North Carolina at Greensboro; Allison McMillan, University of North Carolina at Charlotte; Joan Maya Mazelis, Rutgers University - Camden Social Stratification Processes and Educational Investments towards Men and Women. Juan Enrique Huerta-Wong, UPAEP; Rocio Espinosa-Montiel, Espinosa Yglesias Research Centre Household Wealth and inter vivos transfers in comparative perspective. Ole Hexel, Northwestern University Difference in Earnings and Wages between Partnered Lesbian and Heterosexual Women. Warren Waren, Texas A&M University; Xavier Luciano Guadalupe-Diaz, Framingham State University Table 03. Employment Benefits and Social Welfare Table Presider: Diana M. Pearce, University of Washington How Do Fringe Benefits Packages Shape Economic Inequality? Asaf Levanon, University of Haifa; Rona Geffen, Goethe University I Got Lucky: Parental Leave and the Mechanisms of Class Reproduction Across the Transition to Motherhood. Charity M. Hoffman, University of Michigan Social Welfare Program Participation and Material Hardship. Colleen M. Heflin, University of Missouri Intergenerational Welfare Use among Immigrants: Myth of Culture of Poverty and Welfare Dependency. Tyrone Chiwai Cheng, University of Alabama Stretching and Breaking the Safety Net: Inequality Trends in Noncash Assistance After the Great Recession. Diana M. Pearce, University of Washington Table 04. Family/Personal Attributes and Educational/

Occupational Attainment Table Presider: Sophie Clare Moullin, Princeton University Paths from Family Resources to Educational Attainment: A Demographic Model of Early Life Status Attainment. Samuel Fishman, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Do Family Practices Matter? Explaining Summer Literacy Gains and Losses among Students from Low Educated Families. Michael Holland, University of Waterloo; Scott Davies, University of Toronto; Owen Gallupe, University of Waterloo; Janice Aurini, University of Waterloo Class’ Character: Heterogenous effects of Self-Control in Occupational Attainment. Sophie Clare Moullin, Princeton University Table 05. Globalization, Social/Spatial Exclusion and Migration Table Presider: Jacob Richard Thomas, University of California-Los Angeles Globalization and Social Exclusion in the New South Africa: A Working Paper. Nicholas R. Ellig, Concordia CollegeMoorhead Arrested Development? Sub-Saharan Africa in the Stratified World-Economy 1965 - 2015. Marilyn Grell-Brisk, Universite de Neuchatel; Christian Suter, Université de Neuchâtel Forced Migration, Social Exclusion and Political Mobilization in Turkey. Gülay Kilicaslan Table 06. Housing and Neighborhoods; Qualitative Methods Past Due: Trade-Offs between Utility and Housing Hardship in the United States. Ryan Finnigan, University of California, Davis; Kelsey Meagher, University of California, Davis The Prevalence of Housing Eviction among Urban Children. Ian Lundberg, Princeton University; Louis Donnelly, Princeton University Welcome to the Jungle: Regulation and Resistance among Unsheltered Homeless People. Michele Wakin, Bridgewater State University Inequalities in Activity Spaces among Mexican Americans by Nativity and Legal Status. Aggie Jooyoung Noah, Arizona State University Table 07. Immigration and Occupational Attainment Table Presider: Jonas Wiedner, University of Cologne Origin of the American Dream: Intragenerational Occupation Attainment over the Life Course, 1880-1930. Xinguang Fan; Guangye He, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology The Citizenship Advantage: Immigrant Socioeconomic Attainment across Generations in the Age of Mass Migration. Peter Catron, UCLA Educational Mobility and Progression among Immigrant Families in the United States: The Role of Legal Status. Margot Jackson, Brown University The Social Ecology of Disadvantage for Mexican Immigrant Entrepreneurs. Dolores Trevizo, Occidental College Why did Immigrant-native Labor Market Gaps Grow in Germany? A Decomposition Analysis, 1976-2009. Jonas Wiedner, University of Cologne; Johannes Giesecke, Humboldt University Berlin Table 08. Income Inequality Around the World Table Presider: Florian R. Hertel, University Hamburg Income Polarization in Rich Democracies. Matthew C. Mahutga, University of California at Riverside; Michaela Kathleen Curran, University of California at Riverside Economic Freedom for the Free: The Contingency Effects of Neoliberalism on Inequality. Robert L. Dephillips, Temple University

Tuesday, August 15, 2017

to Elite University, Experiences of Spatial and Social Mobility. Carli Ria Rowell, Warwick University Paradise Lost? Patterns and Precarity in Working-class Academic Narratives. Debbie Warnock, Bennington College Operationalizing Class in Studies of College Students. Allison L. Hurst, Oregon State University Table 13. Social Welfare and Redistribution: Attitudes and Policy Table Presider: Stephanie Baran, University of WisconsinMilwaukee Symbolic Annihilation and Violence: An Exploratory Analysis of Online Discourse About Welfare Recipients. Stephanie Baran, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Parental Status, Marital Status, and Support for Social Welfare Programs in the United States. Rachel Wildfeuer, Temple University Equality of Opportunity and Tolerance Toward Outcome Inequality: Evidence from Two Survey Experiments. Fangqi Wen, New York University Explaining Restrictive TANF Policies: Group Threat Hypothesis Offering more Insight than State Economy. Tyrone Chiwai Cheng, University of Alabama Youth Poverty, Household Composition, and the Age Orientation of Social Welfare in 23 Countries. Tsui-o Tai, National Taipei University Table 14. Stratification, Health and the Life Course Table Presider: Catherine Sirois, Stanford University Health Endowment at Birth and Variation in Intergenerational Economic Mobility. Cassandra Robertson, Harvard University Trends in Economic Inequality over the Life Course. Patrick Mayne, Brown University The Effects of Income Inequality during Adolescence on the Level of Inflammation in Early Adulthood. Kiwoong Park, SUNY Albany The Effect of Sons’ Incarceration on Mothers’ Health. Catherine Sirois, Stanford University

576. Section on Organizations, Occupations, and Work. Emergence of Categories and Systems

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513C, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Elisabeth S. Clemens, University of Chicago History as Cause: A Formation Story of the Air Traffic Control System Emergence and Effects. Diane Vaughan, Columbia University Pricing Conflict: Legal Regimes, Uncertainty, and Price in Medical Marijuana Markets. Cyrus Dioun, University of California, Berkeley; Heather A. Haveman, University of California, Berkeley Market Mediators and the Tradeoffs of Legitimacy-seeking Behaviors in a Nascent Category. Brandon H. Lee, Melbourne Business School; Shon Hiatt, University of South Carolina; Michael D. Lounsbury, University of Alberta Moral Economy of Professional Practice: Diffusion of Managerialism in Healthcare Organizations. Alaz Kilicaslan, Boston University Discussant: Tim Bartley, Ohio State University

577. Section on Racial and Ethnic Minorities. Comparative Racial Formation: Arabs, Middle Easterners, and/or Muslims

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513E, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Bradley J. Zopf, University of Illinois at Chicago Presider: Maheen Haider, Boston College Developing and Testing a Middle Eastern and North African Response Category and Classification. Rachel Marks, U.S. Census Bureau; Jessica Phelan, U.S. Census Bureau

Tuesday

Compensation Disparity and Dispersion: Evidence from China. Mahmoud Ezzamel; Yang Zhao, Newcastle University Business School Income and Wealth Inequality in Egypt. Tamer ElGindi, Qatar University The Relation of Social Mobility and Social Inequality in 35 Countries. Florian R. Hertel, University Hamburg; Olaf GrohSAmberg, University Bremen Table 09. Precarious and Low-wage Work Table Presider: Sunday Idowu Ogunjimi, Federal University OyeEkiti Below the Poverty Line Despite a Job: In-Work Poverty in Germany, Switzerland and Austria. Roland Verwiebe, University of Vienna; Nina-Sophie Fritsch, University of Vienna The Role of Industry of Employment in Exposure to Work Precarity After Prison. Joe LaBriola, University of CaliforniaBerkeley Why Networks Sometimes Fail: Tie Strength and Job Referrals for Low-Wage Work. Lindsey M. Ibanez, Ohio State University Physically Challenge Peoples’ Accessibility to Productive Resources in Nigeria: Dream or Reality. Sunday Idowu Ogunjimi, Federal University Oye-Ekiti; Ajala Abiodun Oladayo, Landmark University Omu-Aran, Kwara Sate; Docas Lola Alabi, Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife. Nigeria Table 10. Race/Ethnicity, Economic Well-being and Community Table Presider: Mamadi Corra, East Carolina University A Post-Race Society? A Socioeconomic Analysis of Race During the Bush and Obama Presidencies. Mamadi Corra, East Carolina University; Jerry Lynn Johnson, East Carolina University Diverse Educators’ Perspectives on Factors Impacting Black Student Achievement: Insights from Black Suburbia in the South. Jerome Ellis Morris, University of Missouri-St. Louis Economic Optimism: The New Millennium Malaise among White Americans. Jessica F. Compton, University of California, Berkeley The Forgotten First Nations: Does Federal Recognition Improve Native American Outcomes? Robin Renée Robinson The Resilience Gap in Urban Latin America and the Caribbean: Normalizing Insecurity vs. Transforming Security. Tina Hilgers, Concordia University Table 11. Schooling, Social Class and Mobility Table Presider: Julie Falcon, Université de Lausanne Fall Fests and Spring Flings: The Soft Privatization of a Gentrifying Public School. Michelle Lea Mott, University of Texas False Choices: Does School Choice Reinforce Stratification and Exclusion? Jacob Lepie Rosch, Reinvestment Fund Consequences of the Expansion of Higher Education on the Intergenerational Transmission of Advantages in France. Julie Falcon, Université de Lausanne; Pierre Bataille, Université Libre de Bruxelles, Centre METICES Table 12. Social Class and Higher Education Table Presider: Allison L. Hurst, Oregon State University The Echoes of Childhood Poverty: Composing Lives in Higher Education A Narrative Inquiry. Elaine J. Laberge, University of Alberta College Students living the American Dream: A Path to Fulfillment or a Dream Deferred? Timothy D. Levonyan Radloff, East Stroudsburg University Working-Class and Educationally Successful: From ‘Sink-estate’

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Session 577, continued The Census, Racialized Groups, and Centrality of Threat to Counting Arab Americans [and Registering Muslims]. Louise Cainkar, Marquette University The Racialization of the Muslim Body and Space in Hollywood. Maheen Haider, Boston College Understanding Islamophobia through Blackness. Hanna Niner Will the Real Caucasian Please Stand Up? How Iranian Americans Negotiate Intergenerational Racial Narratives. Sheefteh Khalili, University of California, Irvine 578. Section on Rationality and Society. Theoretical Advances Using Rational Choice and Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512G, 2:30-3:30 p.m. Session Organizer: Jane Sell, Texas A&M University Presider: Jane Sell, Texas A&M University A Reformulation of the Cournot Competitions by Potential Games. Robert Hideo MAmada, Arizona State University Evolving Cooperation in Social Structures. George Berry, Cornell University Does Agent-based Modeling Flourish in Sociology? Mind the Gap between Social Theory and Agent-based Models. Yoshimichi Sato, Tohoku University

579. Section on Sociological Practice and Public Sociology. Sociological Perspectives on Evaluation Research Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514A, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Melissa S. Fry, Indiana University Southeast Presider: Melissa S. Fry, Indiana University Southeast Panelists: Gabriella C. Gonzalez, RAND Dennis P. Watson, Indiana U-Purdue U Indianapolis Arturo Baiocchi, California State University-Sacramento Harry Perlstadt, Michigan State University Discussant: Melissa S. Fry, Indiana University Southeast

Tuesday

580. Section on Sociology of Religion. Spirituality and Religion

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513F, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: Jaime Kucinskas, Hamilton College An Enchanting Variety of the Secular? A Charismatic Christian Claim to Secularity in Mexico City. Graham Wilson Hill, University of Bern Parents’ Perceptions of Spirituality of Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder. Susan Crawford Sullivan, College of the Holy Cross; Victoria Aramini, Independent Scholar Religious Composition and Political Views: Analyzing the Secular Effects of Religious Affiliation. Tyler C. Anderson, Purdue University What is at Stake? The Diffusion of Spiritual Care from the United States to Israel. Michal Pagis, Bar Ilan University; Orly Tal, Bar Ilan University; Wendy Cadge, Brandeis University Discussant: Stephen Ellingson, Hamilton College

581. Section on Sociology of Sexualities Refereed Roundtable Session and Business Meeting

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517B, 2:30-3:30 p.m. Session Organizers: Melinda D. Kane, East Carolina University Theo Greene, Bowdoin College Table 01. (Re)Situating Gender in Social Institutions Table Presider: Jason Lee Crockett, Kutztown University Ballsy Women on and off the Court: The Intersection of Female

Masculinity, Sexuality, and Sport. Anna Russian, Indiana Univeristy Man in the Bathroom: Normative Masculinities in Trans Men’s Accounts of Public Space. Miriam J. Abelson, Portland State University Gender, Sex and Sin in the Evangelical Mega-Church. Sarah Diefendorf, University of Washington Table 02. Attitudes toward Homosexaulity in Asia Table Presider: Lee Thorpe, West Virginia University Social Attitudes of Homosexuality in Three Chinese Societies. Alexi Tianyang Hu, University of Victoria Table 03. Claims and Frames: Contesting Rights through Policy and the Courts Table Presider: Anna Sorensen, SUNY Potsdam Social Movement Framing in the Media: The Case of Recent AntiLGBT Legislation in the United States. Connor Craig Gilroy, University of Washington Medicalized Citizenship: Transgender Rights Claims in Employment Discrimination Court Decisions. Kyla BenderBaird, CUNY Graduate Center Failing to Protect: A Historical Analysis of the Employment NonDiscrimination Act. Kelly McNamara, Texas A&M University Different Sides, Same Logic: Examining Support and Opposition for Religious Freedom Laws. Emily Kazyak, University of Nebraska-Lincoln; Kelsy Burke, University of Nebraska Lincoln; Mathew Stange, Mathematica Policy Research Table 04. Embodying and Enacting Sexual Scripts Table Presider: Julia Meszaros, University of South Florida Age, Aggression, and Pleasure in Popular Online Pornographic Videos. Eran Shor, McGill University Verbalising Sensations: Making Sense of Embodied Sexual Experiences. Myra Bosman; Rachel Spronk, University of Amsterdam Table 05. Family Relationships in Changing Legal and Cultural Contexts Before and After ‘I Do’: Marriage Processes For Mid-Life Gay and Lesbian Married Couples. Emma Ryan Bosley-Smith, The Ohio State University Something Old, Something New: Same-sex Marriage and Ongoing Struggles over African Marriage in South Africa. Michael W. Yarbrough, John Jay College (CUNY) In the Event of Death: Lesbian Families’ Plans to Preserve Stepparent-Child Relationships. Katie Linette Acosta, Georgia State University Table 06. Historical Transformations of Sexuality and Intimacy Table Presider: Carmen Rowe, Boston University Polyamory and the Transformation of Intimacy. Emily Pain, University at Albany, SUNY The First Israeli Gays: The Arrival of a New Discourse on SameSex Sexuality to Israel. Yuval Peretz Yonay, University of Haifa Table 07. Men and the Pursuit of Sexual Pleasure Emotional Intimacy and Sex: Exploring Sources of Men’s Sexual Pleasure in Hookups and Romantic Relationships. Nicole Bedera, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor; William R. Rothwell, University of Michigan Unwanted Sex: How Heterosexual Men’s Accounts Serve to Uphold Masculinity. Jessie Ford, New York University; Christopher Maggio, City University of New York-Graduate Center

Tuesday, August 15, 2017 Masculinity in Independent Escorting: The Case of Job Success. Navin Kumar, Queensland University of Technology Table 08. Science and Knowledge in Sexuality Research Becoming an Engineering LGBT Safe Zone Trainer: From Observer to Participatory Action Researcher in Ethnography. Tom J. Waidzunas, Temple University How Sexuality Knowledge Shapes LGBTQ Sociopolitical Life: The Case of Expert Evidence in Obergefell. Jamie Louise Budnick, University of Michigan Strategies for Sexual Subversion: Informing the Future of Sexualities Research and Activism. Andrea Pauline Herrera, University of Oregon Table 09. Sexual Behavior Over the Life Course Table Presider: Myron Strong, Community College of Baltimore County Increases in Sex with Same-Sex Partners Across U.S. Cohorts Born 1920-1996. Emma Mishel, New York University; Paula England, New York University; Jessie Ford, New York University; Monica Lisette Caudillo, University of Maryland Supporting the Sexual Life of Persons in Situations of Disability: Sketch of a Social History. Pierre Brasseur, Lille 1 Table 10. Sexual Identities, Sexual Communities, and the Production of Place Table Presider: Jeffrey W. Lockhart, University of Michigan Global Gay Tourism to Tel Aviv: Producing Socio-spatial Value. Gilly Hartal, McGill University Ethnicized Cosmopolitan Sexualities and Stratified Transition among Chinese International Undergraduate Students in American South. Yu-Ri Kim, Vanderbilt University Table 11. Sexual Orientation and Mental and Physical Health Pathways to Self-Esteem among Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Same-Sex-Attracted Mormons and Ex-Mormons. Lauren J. Joseph, Pennsylvania State University, Schuylkill Campus; Stephen Cranney, Baylor University Racial Disparities in Health and Health Behaviors among Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Heterosexual Men and Women. Zelma Lizeth Tuthill, Rice University; Justin Denney, Rice University; Bridget K. Gorman, Rice University Table 12. The Enduring Salience of LGBT Identity Formation and Disclosure Come Out, Whoever You Are! Coming Out and Identity Salience across the Life Course. Trenton M. Haltom, University of Nebraska-Lincoln; Shawn M. Ratcliff, University of Nebraska-

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Lincoln Sexual Identity Disclosure among Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual Individuals. Long Doan, University of Maryland; Trenton D. Mize, Indiana University

582. Section on the Sociology of the Family. Families, Health, and Well-being

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513A, 2:30-4:10 p.m. Session Organizer: David Warner, University of Nebraska-Lincoln Presider: Kelly Balistreri, Bowling Green State University Children’s Interpersonal Relationships at School, Mother-Child Relationships, and Mothers’ Psychological Well-being. Kei Nomaguchi, Bowling Green State University; Marshal Neal Fettro, Bowling Green State University Parental Incarceration and Child Overweight. Amelia R. Branigan, University of Illinois at Chicago; Christopher Wildeman, Cornell University Worried Sick? The Transition to Adulthood and Its Toll on African American Mothers’ Health. Ashley Brooke Barr, State University of New York, Buffalo Health Concordance among Same-sex and Different-sex Couples: Evidence from the National Health Interview Survey (1997-2015). Russell Leroy Spiker, University of Cincinnati A National Dyadic Study of Oral Sex, Marital Quality and Psychological Well-being among Older Couples. Hui Liu, Michigan State University; Shannon Shen, Michigan State University; Ning Hsieh, Michigan State University

3:30 p.m.

Meetings

Section on Rationality and Society Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512G, 3:30-4:10 p.m. Section on Sociology of Sexualities Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517B, 3:30-4:10 p.m.

Tuesday

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Wednesday, August 16, 2017

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Program Schedule • Wednesday, August 16, 2017 8:30 a.m.

Meetings

2017-18 ASA Council Palais des congrès de Montréal, 518A, 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m.

Comparative Sociology Editor-in-Chief: David Weakliem, University of Connecticut. Book Review Editors: Mehdi P. Amineh and Sander De Rijke

economists, anthropologists and others. Indeed, the journal is particularly keen to receive works of comparative political sociology, comparative legal sociology, comparative economic sociology and comparative cultural sociology. Articles for publication in Comparative Sociology may be submitted online through www.editorialmanager.com/compsoc. Selected Indexing and Abstracting: CSA Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Emerging Sources Citation Index (Web of Science); SCOPUS; Social Sciences Abstracts

Wednesday

• 2017: Volume 16, in 6 issues • ISSN 1569-1322 / E-ISSN 1569-1330 • Institutional Subscription rates Electronic only: € 668 / US$ 846 Print only: € 735 / US$ 931 Electronic & print: € 802 / US$ 1,015 • Individual Subscription rates Print or Electronic only: € 206 / US$ 260 • brill.com/coso

Comparative Sociology is an international scholarly journal, published in six issues per year, dedicated to advancing comparative sociological analyses of societies and cultures, institutions and organizations, groups and collectivities, networks and interactions. All submissions for articles are peer-reviewed doubleblind. The journal publishes book reviews and theoretical presentations, conceptual analyses and empirical findings at all levels of comparative sociological analysis, from global and cultural to ethnographic and interactionist. Submissions are welcome not only from sociologists but also political scientists, legal scholars,

226

Index of Session Participants Roundtable session table numbers appear after the program number with a hyphen.

A Aartsen, Marja 178-4 Abbasi, Ghazah 038-3, 444-19 Abbott, Andrew 388 Abbott, James 511-17 Abbott, Jared 409 Abdel Salam, Hassan 447 Abdelhadi, Eman 173, 517-8 Abdelhady, Dalia 068-11 Abdelnabi, Rasmieyh R 354-15 Abdul Rahim, Hanan 450-13 Abdulcadir, Issa 151-1 Abdulmoneim, Iman Jamal 282 Abel, Richard D. 093 Abelson, Miriam J. 581-1 Abend, Gabriel 272, 525 Abitang, August 427 Abji, Salina 350 Aboim, Sofia 147-7, 450-20 Abraham, Margaret 269 Abramson, Corey M. 018, 131, 564 Abrego, Leisy Janet 027, 355 Abrutyn, Seth 205, 347 Absalon, Jacob P. 151-12 Abul-Fottouh, Deena 106-12 Accominotti, Fabien 010, 383 Acevedo, Gabriel A 348 Acker, Julia 147-17 Ackerman, Edwin F. 361 Acosta, Christina Irene 427 Acosta, Katie Linette 436, 581-5 Acosta Gonzalez, Laura 435 Adams, Britni Leia 290 Adams, Julia Potter 116 Adams, Nicholas Brigham 050-19, 106-10, 106-11 Adams, Richard Edward 466, 532, 569 Adar, Sinem 333 Addae, Angela 360-15 Addo, Fenaba 416 Adelman, Robert M. 360-15, 449 Adem, Muna 032, 068-3, 264 Adeyinka-Skold, Sarah 034 Adjepong, Anima 063, 206 Adjetey, Wendell 350 Adkins, Donald 105-1 Admire, Amanda 256-18 Adua, Lazarus 360-22 Agadjanian, Victor 182 Agarwala, Rina 072-3, 157

Agee, Chris 203-1 Agius Vallejo, Jody 068-4 Aguilar, Hansel Alejandro 050-12 Aguilar, Jade 016, 331 Ahlm, Jody 496 Ahmed, Bashiruddin 353 Ahmed, Fauzia Erfan 072-3 Ahn, Lira 180-5 Ahn, Mihyang 228-10 Ahuja, Vishal 098 Ailon, Galit 465 Ailshire, Jennifer A. 022, 246 Ajrouch, Kristine J. 040, 178-9, 282 Akin, Afife Idil 050-6, 546 Aksaray, Gorkem 511-21 Al-Ashtal, Amal 500 Al-Dabbagh, May 157 Al-Turk, Akram 285 Alabi, Docas Lola 575-9 Alang, Sirry 186-5, 226 Alasuutari, Pertti 188 Albaugh Bonham, Megan S. 574 Alberio, Marco 178-1 Albert, Katelin 151-26, 411-7 Albert, Mathieu 006 Albertson, William Cory 450-16 Albrecht, Kat 371 Albright, Len 270 Aldana Marquez, Beatriz 038-9, 357 Aldikacti Marshall, Gul 518 Alegria, Sharla N. 244, 446 Aleman, Janet 130-4 Alemu, Matthew 520-12 Alemzadeh, Maryam 250 Alexander, Alyssa J 520-1 Alexander, Victoria D. 061 Ali, S. Harris 574 Allard, Scott W. 211, 366 Allen, Jason Sean 300-4 Allen, Marbella Eboni 520-9 Allen, Shaonta 151-21, 354-7 Allen, Summer 476-12, 476-21 Allendorf, Keera 487 Allison, Juliann 259-10 Allison, Marisa Camille 129 Almeling, Rene 174, 450-5 Alsahi, Huda 241 Altman, Claire E. 068-7, 449 Alvarado, Arturo 256-17, 511-3 Alvarado, Steven Elias 354-20 Alvare, Dana 035-5

Alvarez, Alexis Antonio 070-4 Alvarez, Anthony Steven 019 Alvarez, Camila Huerta 354-2 Alvord, Daniel R. 182, 444-18 Amaral, Ernesto F. L. 261, 561 Amaya, Nicole V. 128, 268 Ambord, Paige 106-14 Ambriz, Denise 073, 264 Amenta, Edwin 106-17, 255 Amicelle, Anthony 030-7 Amin, Iftekhar 178-1 Amiraux, Valérie 200 Ammerman, Nancy 348 Amorim, Mariana 520-11, 520-15 Amreen, Tasmiah 354-20, 511-6 Amsler, Sarah S. 318 An, Brian 151-2 An, Chen 353 Anacker, Katrin B. 360-9 Anangwe, Kathleen 545-15 Anckle, Stephanie Renee 265-1 Andercheck, Brita 517-7 Andersen, Jennifer Audrey 147-12 Andersen, Robert 130-11 Anderson, Eleanor 037 Anderson, Kathryn Freeman 147-17, 287 Anderson, Nadina Lauren 247 Anderson, Tyler C. 580 Andersson, Matthew 532 Andersson, Patrik 151-32 Andia, Tatiana Samay 038-2, 464 Andic, Tanja 268 Andrade, Flavia 566 Andrew, Megan 520-17 Andrews, Abigail L. 032 Andrews, Kenneth (Andy) 121, 217 Andriano, Liliana 414 Aneesh, Aneesh 228-1, 372 Angel, Cristal 130-12 Angel, Jacqueline L. 178-2, 215 Angeletti, Thomas 038-12 Angelo, Hillary 438 Angotti, Nicole 519 Anheier, Helmut K. 180-14 Anicich, Eric 186-5 Anisef, Paul 113 Ankoor, Nehemiah 436 Anskat, Paul 545-14 Anthony, Denise L. 235 Antonucci, Toni C. 178-9, 282 Antony-Newman, Max 151-4

227

Index of Session Participants Aparicio, Tania R. 142 Apkarian, Jacob 511-2 Appelbaum, Richard P. 503 Appelrouth, Scott 444-12 Appold, Stephen 360-15 Aptekar, Sofya 066, 243 Aragon Cooper, Nathanael 353 Arai, Yasuhiko 216-6 Aramini, Victoria 580 Aranda, Elizabeth M. 027 Arar, Rawan 068-7, 173 Arbuckle, J. Gordon 476-10 Arcagok, Ugur 517-10 Arcario, Erin 180-11 Archer, Melissa A. 151-33 Ard, Kerry 476-8 Arditi, David Michael 030-6 Arena, John D. 490 Arevalo, Sandra P. 050-16, 050-18 Arjomand, Noah Amir 469 Arjomand, Said 250 Armbruster-Sandoval, Ralph 442 Armenta, Amada 068-13, 357 Armony, Victor 276 Armstrong, Amy Ann 541-3 Armstrong, Elizabeth A. 126, 520-14, 555 Arnett, Stephanie M. 151-17 Aronczyk, Melissa Miriam 476-8 Arpan, Laura 476-21 Arredondo, Aaron 545-2 Arriaga, Felicia 367-3 Arroyo, Franklyn 360-6 Arroyo, Julia M. 280, 545-19 Arruda, Gabriel 039 Arsel, Zeynep 208 Arseniev-Koehler, Alina 262 Arthur, Mikaila Mariel Lemonik 229-2, 547 Artner, Lucia Wilma 161 Artzer, Rebecca 050-17 Asad, Asad L. 146, 184 Ash-Houchen, William 072-3, 545-16 Ashwin, Sarah 450-22 Asiedu, Christobel 030-4 Astor, Avi Y. 517-8 Atalay, Zeynep 250, 444-3 Atlas, Marina 285 Attwood-Charles, Will 332, 444-3 Auden, Dana McClellen 147-26 Auguste, Daniel 180-14 Augustine, Jennifer March 248, 290 Auriffeille, Deborah Marie 050-2 Aurini, Janice 575-4

Auspurg, Katrin Austin, Megan J. Aveldanes, Jose Martin Avendano, Mauricio Averett, Kate Henley Avery, Eileen E. Aviles, Natalie Brooke Ayala, Maria Isabel Ayala-Hurtado, Elena Aydin, Delal Ayella, Marybeth F. Azagba, Sunday Azar, Ariel Aziz, Hemin Khzir Azoulay, Pierre

166 151-8 248 209 151-29, 450-9 353 502 151-34, 545-2 346 222 256-7 506 070-4 444-4 143

B Baca Zinn, Maxine 289 Baccaro, Lucio 291 Bacchetta, Paola 071 Bachmeier, James Dean 068-7, 449 Bachrach, Christine A. 308 Backman, Carl B. 378 Bacon, J. M. 483-4 Baek, Jiwon 178-7 Baer, Alejandro 053, 412 Bagdadioglu, Ezgi 038-6 Baggetta, Matthew G. 444-14 Bai, Yikang 476-4 Bail, Christopher A. 042, 553 Bailey, Amy Kate 508 Bailey, Jasmón 321 Bailey, John 063, 541-3 Baiocchi, Arturo 579 Baiocchi, Gianpaolo 440 Bair, Jennifer L. 034, 212 Baker, Elizabeth Helene 147-17 Baker, James T. 545-17 Baker, Zeke 249 Bakker, Dieko M 515 Bakker, J. I. Hans 239 Bala, Adithya 147-10 Balaev, Mikhail 181-5 Balaj, Mirza 209 Balasubramanian, Savina Jewel 292 Baldassarri, Delia 170 Baldor, Tyler G. 462 Baldoz, Rick A. 410 Baldwin, Susan 151-23 Bali Kurtarir, Elif 068-12 Balistreri, Kelly 094, 582 Ball, Christopher 398

Ballakrishnen, Swethaa S. 157, 381 Ballard, Richard 360-16 Ballinas, Jorge 354-10 Balogun, Oluwakemi M. 181-1 Balta Ozgen, Aysegul 068-7, 360-15 Banaszak, Lee Ann 255 Banaszak-Holl, Jane 215 Banchik, Anna Veronica 228-5 Bancroft, Amanda 151-19 Bandelj, Nina 056, 096 Bandhauer, Carina A. 367-1 Bandini, Julia 178-2 Banerjee, Mitali 228-2 Banerjee, Pallavi 446 Banerjee, Tarun 511-17, 533 Banks, Patricia A. 273 Bansal, Pratima 511-4, 517-2 Bar-Haim, Eyal 095 Barahona-López, Kati 204, 241, 355, 427, 530 Baran, Stephanie 575-13 Barbee, Harry 105-2, 247 Barbee, Marta 104-1 Barber, Kristen 389, 478 Barclay, Kieron James 131 Barcus, Miriam 396 Bardo, Anthony Richard 178-8, 186-3 Barley, Stephen R. 524 Barman, Emily A. 179, 490, 536 Barna, Elizabeth Kathryn 104-1, 511-19 Barnard, Alexander Vosick 209 Barnard, Stephen R. 030-3 Barnes, Riché J 520-18 Barnett, Amanda 354-12 Barnett, Jessica Penwell 450-6 Barr, Ashley Brooke 052, 582 Barrie, Christopher 259-9 Barriga, Daniela 151-28 Bartels, Larry 119 Bartlett, Bryce J. 178-8, 215, 301, 571 Bartley, Tim 433, 576 Barton, Bernadette 450-15 Barton, Michael 403 Bartram, David 233 Bartram, Robin 102 Baskerville, Niamba 354-11 Bassel, Leah 370 Bassett, Sasha 511-9 Bastida, Elena M. 098 Bastos, Joao Luiz 035-2, 286 Bataille, Pierre 575-11 Bates, Diane C. 476-7

228

Index of Session Participants Bates, Julia 249 Bates, Julia 187 Battani, Marshall 228-6 Battle, Brittany 489 Bauerly, Brad 444-7 Bauldry, Shawn 147-2, 301 Baumann, Roger 066, 517-8 Baumer, Eric P. 256-2 Baumle, Amanda Kathleen 081, 550 Baunach, Dawn Michelle 469 Baxter, Amy 567 Bayham, Lindsay 564 Bea, Megan Doherty 178-3 Beach, Brian 180-5 Beach, Lindsey R. 354-13 Beaman, Jean 327, 445 Beaman, Lori 200 Beamish, Thomas D. D. 219, 429 Bean, Anjerrika Raishawn 050-7, 354-12 Beard, Renee Lynn 178-4, 178-6 Bearman, Peter S. 160, 308, 419 Beattie, Irenee R. 151-15 Beaver, Travis 054 Beck, Colin J. 181-4, 554 Beck, Kevin R. 360-9 Beck, Scott 130-8, 395 Becker, Brian 106-8 Becker, Elisabeth 294-3, 327 Becker, Joshua 546 Beckfield, Jason 453 Beckwith, Cary 228-13 Bedera, Nicole 497, 581-7 Beeson-Lynch, Cathryn 411-8 Behler, Rachel Leigh 018, 069 Behounek, Elaina Kay 050-10, 354-13 Behrman, Julia Andrea 261, 414 Bejan, Vladimir 256-12 Beljean, Stefan 013 Belkacem, Lila 193 Bell, Abigail 268 Bell, Joyce M. 059, 418, 538 Bell, Michael M. 476-14 Bell, Monica C. 360-20 Bell, Shannon Elizabeth 285, 405 Bellisle, Dylan 566 Bellman, Benjamin Howard 360-5 Belmessous, Saliha 475 Beltz, Lindsey Marie 474-1 Ben Romdhane, Samar 250, 517-5 Benard, Stephen 335, 567 Benavides, Maria Del Rosario 411-6 Bender, Erica C. 450-12, 511-11

Bender-Baird, Kyla 581-3 Benditt, Lauren 183 Benediktsson, Michael Owen 228-11 Benessaieh, Afef 343 Benites-Gambirazio, Eliza 450-12 Benjamin, Ruha 078 Bennefield, Zinobia Chara 520-2 Bennett, Pamela R. 051 Benoit, Ellen 473, 506, 571 Benski, Tova 260 Benson, Paul R. 050-16 Benson, Rodney 232, 521 Bentley, Michael 353, 545-9 Benton, Richard 140, 511-17 Benzecry, Claudio Ezequiel 298, 480 Berda, Yael H. 475 Berdahl, Terceira A. 184, 268 Berenson, Abbey B. 147-6 Berezin, Mabel 255, 304, 340, 387 Berg, Mark 567 Bergen, Clara Ann Blomgren 161 Berger, Benjamin 200 Bergesen, Albert J. 148 Bergstrand, Kelly 187, 293 Bergstrom, Carl T. 502 Berman, Elizabeth Popp 533 Bernau, John 050-14 Bernburg, Jon Gunnar 106-5 Bernier, Clark 099 Bernstein, Mary 081 Berry, George 535, 578 Berry, Marie E. 435 Berube, Maxime 030-7 Besamusca, Janna 511-6 Besbris, Max 257 Besek, Jordan Fox 476-20 Besen-Cassino, Yasemin 303, 560 Bettencourt, Luis 133 Bettinson, Tiana 520-1 Beulaygue, Isabelle Christine 147-22 Beveridge, Andrew A. 268 Beyer, Peter F. 200 Bhandari, Aarushi 072-2 Bhandari, Prem 068-13, 353 Bharali, Kannaki 104-1, 105-3, 511-15 Bhatta, Tirth Raj 178-2, 508 Bherer, Laurence 203-1 Bhuiyan, Md. Mahmudur Rahman 259-6 Bialas, Ulrike 471 Bianchi, Alison J. 368 Bibeau, Gilles 039 Bidwell, David 476-19

Bidwell, Matthew 408 Biegert, Thomas 180-5 Bierman, Alex E. 448, 532 Biernacki, Richard 188 Biggart, Nicole Woolsey 219 Bilge, Sirma 071 Billard, Thomas J 511-18 Billari, Francesco 414 Billimoria, Yauhann 180-11 Billings, Katie 151-2 Bills, David B. 228-13 Bin, Daniel 070-1 Binder, Amy J. 555 Binder, Melisa 549 Binte Abdullah Sani, Hanisah 444-9 Birch, Jonah Michael 300-1 Bird, Chloe E. 085, 483-8, 493 Bird, Omar Tariq 147-13 Bird, Sharon R. 450-7, 560 Birdsell Bauer, Louise 259-2, 299 Bischoff, Kendra 189, 393 Bishop, Johanna 483-10 Bishop, Katelynn 105-1, 176 Bista, Shikha 228-1 Bitektine, Alex 180-4 Bjerre, Mette Evelyn 151-12 Bjorklund, Eric 147-17 Blad, Cory 513 Blair, Sampson Lee 216-3 Blair-Loy, Mary 373, 485, 560 Blake, Mary Kate 151-19 Blake, Sarah 476-20 Blank, Grant 061 Blee, Kathleen M. 059 Bleich, Erik 488 Bliss, Catherine 386 Bliss, John 511-15 Block, Fred 424 Bloemraad, Irene H.I. 068-9, 122, 464 Bloom, Jack M. 444-1 Bloome, Deirdre 079, 568 Blum, Linda M. 225, 573 Blumberg, Rae Lesser 112 Blume, Amelia 050-10, 050-18 Bo, Boroka 545-11 Boardman, Jason D. 563 Bobo, Lawrence D. 005 Boch, Anna 397 Boden, Madison 392 Bodenheimer, Grayson Alexander 074 Boeckmann, Irene 396 Boehringer, Daniela 161

229

Index of Session Participants Boen, Courtney 050-20, 147-12 Boeri, Miriam W. 483-9 Boeri, Natascia 181-6, 450-2 Boettner, Bethany 362 Bogan, Rachel 208 Boggess, Lyndsay N. 134, 362 Boggs, Abigail Huston 043 Bohm-Jordan, Maggie 216-3, 520-21 Bohon, Stephanie A. 128 Bohr, Jeremiah 476-13 Bohrt, Marcelo A. 545-13 Bolger, Daniel 360-19, 484 Bollen, Kenneth A. 301 Bolon, Doug 050-11 Bolton, Kenneth H. 354-8 Bolton, Megan Elizabeth 448 Bolzendahl, Catherine I. 339, 444-20 Bonanno, Alessandro 050-1 Bonatti, Valeria 450-2 Bonikowski, Bart 058, 232 Bonilla-Silva, Eduardo 077, 310 Bonnes, Stephanie 132, 479-3 Bordt, Maria 513 Bordt, Rebecca 229-5 Borer, Michael Ian 023 Borland, Elizabeth 450-16 Bose, Sunita 035-7 Bosk, Emily 372, 411-10 Bosky, Amanda 560 Bosley-Smith, Emma Ryan 581-5 Bosman, Myra 581-4 Bostic, Amie 444-9 Boston, Nicholas Andrew 030-2 Botelho, Tristan L. 021 Botoeva, Aisalkyn 283 Bottia, Martha Cecilia 549 Botía-Morillas, Carmen 450-22 Bouchard, Gérard 005 Bouchard, Julie 495 Boucher, Jean Léon 106-3, 354-2 Bouek, Jennifer 360-5 Boulahanis, John G. 354-11 Boulianne, Shelley J. 434, 470 Bouma, Jill 004, 557 Bourne, Kyla 256-16 Boutcher, Steven A. 437 Boutilier, Sophia 074 Boutyline, Andrei G. 262 Bowen, Sarah 111, 229-5 Bower, Corey Bunje 151-23 Boyd, Melody L. 138, 360-17 Boyd, Monica 510

Boyd, Nathaniel H. Boylan, Rebecca L. Boyle, Elizabeth Heger Boyle, Kaitlin M. Bozorgmehr, Mehdi Bozzetto, Renata Bracey, Glenn Edward Brackbill, Devon Braddock, Jomills Henry Bradshaw, Matt Brady, David Braender, Morten Bragg, Cynthia Barbara Brahimi, Mohamed Amine Braimoh, Jessica Branch, Michael Scott Brandtner, Christof Branigan, Amelia R. Brashears, Matthew E. Brass, Jennifer Brasseur, Pierre Bratter, Jenifer L. Brauer, Simon George Braun, Jerome Braun, Robert Braun, Yvonne Alexandra Braunstein, Ruth Brayne, Sarah Brechin, Steven R. Brehm, Hollie Nyseth Breiger, Ronald L. Brekhus, Wayne H. Brenneman, Robert Brenner, Philip S. Brent, Edward E. Brenton, Joslyn Brenzel, Lauren M. Breton, Gilles Brett, Gordon Brew, Bridget Brewer, Alexandra E. Breznitz, Dan Brick, Carmen Bridges, Tristan Brint, Steven G. Brinton, Mary C. Brissette, Emily Brocato, Billy Ray Brocic, Milos Brockman, Amanda J. Brodyn, Adriana Broman, Clifford L.

130-12 050-9, 189 268, 447 185 282 130-2, 360-12 059 546 151-13 050-18 211 479-3 050-4 334 545-9 151-5 433 582 262 036 581-9 172, 416, 421 151-12 038-7 484 164, 429 333, 468 179, 531 542 205, 325, 518 390 489 325 484 256-18 111 413-5 039 105-3 189 147-15 476-19 444-9 389 422 194, 551 106-2, 444-5 151-18 106-6 354-19 009, 520-4 228-1

Bronson, Jennifer 353 Brooker, Megan E. 512 Brooks, Abigail T. 450-3 Brooks, Ann Irene 050-4 Brooks, Jennifer Dennison 356 Brooks, Joanna Veazey 147-25 Brooks-Gunn, Jeanne 473 Brophy, Sorcha Alexandrina 511-11 Brothers, Sarah 571 Brown, AJ 256-10 Brown, Bailey A. 151-28 Brown, Eliza 414 Brown, Eric S. 259-7 Brown, Karida 149 Brown, Kate Pride 038-6 Brown, Melissa 355, 534 Brown, Michael 410 Brown, Nikki-Marie 228-14 Brown, Paige 411-8 Brown, Phil 199, 285 Brown, Robert Stewert 113 Brown, Robyn Lewis 356, 508 Brown, Susan K. 068-8 Brown, Susan L. 178-7, 520-24 Brown, Taylor Whitten 096, 150 Brown, Tony N. 448 Brown, Tyson H. 223 Browne, Irene 264 Browne, Pierson Avery 030-5 Browne, Simone 344 Browning, Christopher R. 362 Bruce, Antonio 353 Bruce, Joshua R. 180-19 Bruch, Elizabeth 133 Bruch, Sarah K. 100, 402 Bruderer Enzler, Heidi 546 Bruderl, Josef 431 Bruhn, Alyssa 147-5 Brule, Elizabeth 311 Brulle, Robert 476-8 Brunelle, Dorval 082 Bruns, Angela 052 Brunsma, David L. 464 Brush, Lisa D. 485, 562 Bryan, Brielle Eileen 393, 441 Bryant, Emily 180-14, 511-2 Bryden, Anne 356 Bu, Qingyu 151-27 Bucerius, Sandra M. 284 Buchanan, Tom W. 356, 511-7 Buchholz, Larissa 021, 273 Buchler, Norbou 368

230

Index of Session Participants Buchmann, Claudia 312 Bucior, Christine 228-9 Buck, Andrew D. 501 Budak, Kemal 228-8 Budig, Michelle J. 130-11, 551 Budnick, Jamie Louise 415, 581-8 Bueker, Catherine Simpson 035-3 Buffel, Veerle 180-5, 541-4 Bugden, Dylan Edward 429 Buggs, Shantel Gabrieal 277, 545-19 Bugyi, Paul 147-19 Buher Kane, Jennifer 211, 449 Bukodi, Erzsebet 510 Bulmer, Martin 195 Bumpus, John Paul 151-24 Bunker Whittington, Kjersten 446 Burawoy, Michael 240 Burchardt, Marian 517-8 Burdick-Will, Julia 503 Burgard, Sarah 178-11, 223 Burgos, Giovani 207 Burke, Jordan Christopher 130-11, 256-1 Burke, Kelsy 581-3 Burke, Nancy J. 358, 506 Burkhalter, Elizabeth 229-4 Burland, Elizabeth 102 Burleson-Gibson, Ally 268 Burnett, Patrick John 411-3 Burnham, Morey 476-21 Burns, Gene 384 Burns, Thomas J. 135 Burris-Kitchen, Deborah Jean 030-5 Burroway, Rebekah 072-2 Busch-Heizmann, Anne 511-6 Bush, Melanie E. L. 168 Buskens, Vincent W. 515, 546 Bustamante, Carlos Felipe 179 Butera, Anita Cristina 173, 413-2 Butler-Sweet, Colleen C. 035-6 Butts, Carter T. 368, 511-18, 535 Bybee, Deborah 147-22 Bylander, Maryann 108 Byron, Reginald Anthony 549 Byun, Soo-yong 393

C Cabello, Patricio Cabello-Hutt, Tania Cabrera Arus, Maria A. Cadge, Wendy Cagney, Kathleen A. Cai, Changling

030-4 030-4 038-8 178-2, 580 131 222, 259-3

Cain, Cindy L. 131 Cain, Taylor 360-6 Cainkar, Louise 282, 340, 577 Cairns, Kate 208, 292 Calarco, Jessica McCrory 113, 519 Calasanti, Anna 228-5 Calasanti, Toni 178-10 Calder, Catherine 362 Calderon, Jose Zapata 516 Caldwell, Julia T. 184 Calhoun, Craig 041, 373, 540 Calkins, Thomas Anthony 066 Callahan, Jessica 026, 304 Callejas, Laura M. 052 Calnitsky, David 056 Calvillo, Jonathan 407 Calvo, Esteban 563 Calvo, Rocío 233 Camacho, Ariana Ochoa 530 Camarillo, Omar 367-3 Camba, Alvin 110 Cameron, Anna 030-5 Cameron, Christopher John 535 Cameron, Kolby 151-18 Cameron, Lindsey D. 360-16 Cammer-Bechtold, Selene M. 265-2 Campbell, Anthony David 147-14, 147-17 Campbell, Colin 399 Campbell, John L. 046, 382 Campbell, Kyla Marie 441 Campbell, Mary Elizabeth 416 Campero, Santiago 180-6 Campos, Edgar Jesus 228-8 Campos Manzo, Ana Lilia 187 Campos-Castillo, Celeste 235, 358 Caniglia, Beth Schaefer 476-5, 574 Canizales, Stephanie L. 068-5, 280 Cannon, Clare 476-16 Cansoy, Mehmet 257 Cao, Xuemei 215 Cao, Yang 511-1 Capek, Stella M. 405 Caporale, Lacey 354-20, 518 Cappeliez, Sarah 145-1 Caputi, Robert 203-1 Caputo-Levine, Deirdre D. 545-14 Carathers, JaDee Yvonne 327 Carbonaro, William J. 151-3 Card, Jesse 050-2 Cardenas-Conte, Soraya 476-6 Carey, Christine 052 Carian, Emily Kiyoko 335

Carll, Erin 052 Carlos, Chad 433 Carlson, Daniel L. 450-19, 520-16 Carlson, Jennifer 158, 371 Carlson, Jesse 038-1 Carmichael, Jason Thomas 047 Carmona, Alondra 130-1 Carnabuci, Gianluca 511-13 Carney, Christina 130-4 Carney, Nikita 068-11, 256-2 Caron, Louise 284, 500 Caronna, Carol A. 424 Carpenter, Laura M. 104-1, 176 Carpiano, Richard M. 493, 564 Carr, Andrew 130-1 Carr, Cynthia Evelyn 476-13 Carr, Deborah 184 Carr, Kyle Anthony 147-2 Carreira da Silva, Filipe 115, 228-6, 498 Carrera, Jennifer S. 147-5, 509 Carrillo, Dani 357 Carrillo, Hector 016, 451 Carrillo, Ian Robert 476-3 Carrington, Ben 142, 343, 467, 505 Carroll, Jamie M. 177 Carroll, Megan 462, 520-5 Carruthers, Bruce G. 236, 454 Carré, Françoise 324 Carter, J. Scott 545-10 Carter, Prudence L. 192 Carter, Shannon K. 292, 545-10 Carter, TaLisa J. 362 Casanova, Erynn Masi de 105-4, 259-8 Casarez, Raul S. 367-1 Casciaro, Tiziana 511-5 Castaneda, Ernesto 406, 483-2 Castaneda, Natalie 256-9 Castilla, Emilio J. 408 Castillo, Esther 068-10 Castillo, Esther Hio-Tong 360-7 Castro, Andres Felipe 414 Castro, Denise C. 106-16 Castro, Ingrid E. 265-6 Castro, Javier Sethness 260 Castro, Nayeli 427 Catron, Peter 163, 575-7 Caudillo, Monica Lisette 520-14, 581-9 Cavanagh, Shannon 483-6 Cavazos, Robert Lee 354-2 Caven, Meg 151-24, 151-33 Caviness, Courtney 450-9 Cebulko, Kara 068-5

231

Index of Session Participants Cech, Erin A. 010, 537 Celebi, Mehmet 147-24 Centner, Ryan 234, 403 Centola, Damon M. 546 Cepa, Kennan 151-20 Cepeda, Alice 571 Cerigo, Helen 432 Ceron-Anaya, Hugo 142 Cerulo, Karen A. 196 Cha, Hyungmin 511-6 Cha, Youngjoo 095 Cha, Yun 450-13 Chabot, Sean 106-2 Chacko, Soulit 181-1, 545-18 Chakrabarti, Parijat 452 Chalupa, Dana 331 ChAmberlain, Alyssa Whitby 134 ChAmbers, Darryl 360-14 Champagne, David 070-3 Chan, Loritta 068-13, 353 Chan, Stephanie 517-6 Chancer, Lynn Sharon 345 Chandler, Matthew J. 535 Chang, Hsin-Chieh 216-6, 520-13 Chang, Paul Yunsik 216-4, 532 Chao, Shih-Yi 248 Chapman, Carlos 050-20, 354-17 Chapman, Jamie J. 520-9 Chapman, Kelli R. 187 Charrad, Mounira Maya 554 Chatrath, Leana 351 Chaudhary, Ali R. 089, 181-3 Chaudhuri, Soma 164 Chauvel, Louis 095 Chauvin, Sebastien 055 Chaves, Mark 484 Chavez, Koji Rafael 180-15 Chavez, Lilian 354-7 Chavez, Mario Javier 549 Chavez, Sergio 560 Chayko, Mary 029 Cheadle, Jacob E. 067 Chen, Anthony S. 058, 100, 533 Chen, Aspen 068-5 Chen, Chien-fei 476-21 Chen, Chih-Jou 233 Chen, I-Chien 147-19 Chen, Jingjing 520-15 Chen, Kenneth Han 216-2 Chen, Lin 130-5 Chen, Shiwei 130-7 Chen, Ting 098

Chen, Wenhong 398, 434, 470 Chen, Yu 360-13 Chen, Zhenxiang 068-6 Cheng, Can 151-5 Cheng, Cheng 166 Cheng, Simon 520-4 Cheng, Siwei 088, 428 Cheng, Tyrone Chiwai 575-13, 575-3 Cheng, Yuching J. 035-2 Chenpitayaton, Keerati 463 Chepp, Valerie L. 389 Chermak, Steven Michael 256-12 Chernenko, Alla 033 Cherng, Hua-Yu Sebastian 027, 151-1, 295 Chernyak, Elena 318 Cherry, Elizabeth 062, 144 Cheun, Jacquelyn 147-8 Cheung, Pui Yin 070-2, 150 Chew, Matthew Ming-Tak 545-13 Chewinski, Max 437 Chiaraluce, Cara A. 106-9 Chiarello, Elizabeth 106-15, 158 Chien, Alyna 147-25 Chien, Yi-Chun 370 Child, Curtis D. 151-28, 354-20 Chin, Christina B. 216-5 Chin, Jeffrey 083 Chin, Lynn Gencianeo 185 Chin, Margaret M. 295 Chinn, Juanita J. 268 Chito Childs, Erica 445 Chiu, Chi-Tsun 033 Chmielewska-Szlajfer, Helena 322 Chmielewski, Anna Katyn 393 Cho, Esther Yoona 254 Cho, Yun Kyung 549 Choi, Jin Young 050-17 Choi, Seung-won 147-19 Choi, Susanne Yukping 552 Choi-Fitzpatrick, Austin 106-12 Chong, Phillipa K. 013, 061, 323 Choo, Hae Yeon 254 Chou, C. Edward 098 Chou, Ya-Hsuan 450-14 Chouhy, Gabriel 361 Chouinard, Omer 072-7 Chowdhury, Rashedur 436 Christensen, Michael 444-14 Christian, Michelle Marie 263 Christiansen, Lars D. 105-1 Christianson, Deanna 151-12 Christie, Robert MacNeil 038-12

Chu, James 097 Chu, Yin-wah 070-2, 216-4 Chua, Lynette J. 329 Chukhray, Irina 151-19 Chun, Jennifer Jihye 400 Chun, Sung David 354-7 Chung, Angie Y. 295 Chung, Thomas 545-14 Chung, Won Jun 575-2 Chykina, Volha 151-11 Ciabattari, Teresa 504 Ciccantell, Paul S. 171 Cicek-Okay, Sevsem 068-7 Ciciurkaite, Gabriele 147-23, 356 Cigales, Marcelo 038-4 Cilia, Laurent 104-1 Ciplet, David M. 020, 171 Ciupijus, Zinovijus 354-7 Claassen Thrush, Elizabeth 130-9 Clair, Matthew 080, 179, 184 Clarady, Carrie 186-4 Clark, Bridget Austin 547 Clark, Rob 022 Clark, Samuel 572 Clark, Shelley 520-11, 551 Clark, Stephanie 147-10 Clarke, Hannah E. 180-2 Clarke, Philippa J. 018 Clarno, Andy 410, 547 Claro, Magdalena 030-4 Clawson, Dan 240 Clay-Warner, Jody 515 Clayton, Kristen Annette 545-2 Clegg, Jennifer 161 Clemens, Elisabeth S. 075, 332, 341, 408, 443, 478, 576 Clemens, William Michael 256-4 Cleveland, H. Harrington 265-1 Clevenger, Casey R. 244 Clouston, Sean A. P. 147-17, 147-19, 301 Cobb, Jessica 151-33, 527 Cobb, Joel Adam 477 Cobb, Ryon J. 274, 448 Cockburn, Jenny 409 Cockerham, William C. 147-2 Cofie, Leslie E. 147-6 Cohen, Andrew C. 281 Cohen, Daniel Aldana 405, 438 Cohen, Diana Tracy 505 Cohen, Emma D. 151-16, 151-2 Cohen, Joseph Nathan 511-4 Cohen, Philip N. 140, 425

232

Index of Session Participants Cohn, Samuel 148 Coke, Pamela 267 Colatat, Phech 021 Coley, Jonathan Scott 106-15 Collett, Jessica L. 290 Collier, Megan 068-1 Collins, Caitlyn 450-22, 551 Collins, Mary B. 320 Collins, Nathan Russell 259-1 Collins, Randall 008 Collins, Timothy William 411-6, 476-6 Collins-Farmer, Heather R. 448 Collombat, Thomas 299 Colyvas, Jeannette Anastasia 454 Combs, Barbara Harris 028, 035-6 Comeau, Katherine 294-1 Comley, Caliesha Lavonne 065 Compernolle, Ellen 068-3 Compion, Sara 354-15 Compton, D’Lane R. 081, 450-1 Compton, Jessica F. 575-10 Condratto, Shelley 299 Conley, Dalton 090, 535 Connell, Catherine 237, 415 Connell, Raewyn 491 Connolly, Faith 503 Connor, Brian T. 228-6 Cons, Jason G. 171 Consterdine, Erica 182 Contorno, Lauren 147-5, 405 Contreras, Randol 158, 218 Contreras, Sheila Marie 151-34 Contreras-Medrano, Diego 068-14 Cook, Karen S. 236 Cook-Martín, David A. 182 Cooke, Lynn Prince 396, 428 Coombs, Julia 545-9 Cooney, Teresa M. 354-12 Cooper, Evan 450-15 Copeland, Molly 571 Copes, Heith 353 Corbett, Christianne 511-10 Corcoran, Katie E. 517-1 Cordeiro, Veridiana Domingos 038-1, 411-1 Cordner, Alissa 285 Cornelissen, Sharon 527 Corner, Shanna 365 Cornfield, Daniel B. 106-15 Cornwall, Marie 127, 268, 526 Corona, Elizabeth 353 Corra, Mamadi 186-1, 575-10 Correll, Shelley J. 560

Corritore, Matthew Corse, Sarah M. Corsten, Michael Corte, Ugo Cortez, Dagoberto Cortez, Dakota Cossu, Andrea Cossyleon, Jennifer Elena Costello, Emily Cote, Jean-Francois Cote, Rochelle R. Cotten, Shelia R. Cottingham, Marci D. Cottom, Tressie Courtwright, Andrew Cousin, Bruno Coutinho, Raquel Zanatta Coutinho-Sledge, Piper Couto, Bruno Covington, Heather Kristin Coyle, Lindsey Cozzolino, Elizabeth Crabbe, Rowena C. Crabtree, Arialle Kaye Cragoe, Nicholas G. Craig, Ailsa Craig, Lyn Craig, Maxine Leeds Crane, Joseph Lee Cranford, Cynthia J. Cranney, Stephen Crawford, Aaron Crawley, Sara L. Crawshaw, Trisha Lanae Cready, Cynthia M. Creighton, Mathew J. Crenshaw, Edward M. Cress, Margaret Crockett, Jason Lee Croft, Alicia Cronin, Cory Crosbie, Thomas Crosnoe, Robert Cross, Christina Cross, Jennifer Eileen Crossley, Alison Dahl Crowder, Catherine A. Crowder, Kyle Crowley, Edward Crowley, Kamaria Crowley, Martha Crubaugh, Bryant

511-10 145-1 038-3 228-2 147-10 549 023 106-11, 241 313 343, 388 180-12 178-10, 398 450-12, 520-9 549 178-2 055 286 176 360-11 147-4 321 413-3 187 059 432 228-9 511-7 043 106-6 400 581-11 189 105-3 106-17 147-24 147-20 512 267 169, 581-1 050-9 050-11, 354-17 132, 413-1, 544 113, 187 520-11 267, 516 106-5 511-7 210 180-18, 444-7 427 511-19, 574 360-22

Cruz, Taylor M. 411-5 Cruz-Cerdas, Charlene 367-2 Cserpes, Tunde 180-13 Cuddy, Max 151-28 Cullen, Greggory J. 256-18 Cummings, Jason Lamont 545-1 Cundiff, Kelsey 256-2 Cunningham, Brooke 147-25, 545-16 Cunningham, David 371 Cunningham, Jeanine 444-8, 476-20 Curington, Celeste 043, 280 Curran, Dean 035-7 Curran, Michaela Kathleen 070-2, 575-8 Curran, Sara R. 198 Curtis, Anna 165 Curtis, Josh P. 444-15 Cusatis, Rachel 147-1 Cutchin, Malcolm 147-13 Cuthbertson, Courtney A. 147-5, 147-6 Cutler, Marianne 520-4 Cutler, Matthew John 354-2 Cuvi, Jacinto 360-7 Czarnecki, Danielle 025

D D’amico, Ronald J. 256-6 D’Antonio, William V. 239 D’Unger, Amy V. 035-2 D. Martinez, Rodrigo 050-12 Da Silva, Derek Michael 130-7 Da Silva, Guilherme Chihaya 135 Dafnos, Tia 458 Dafonseca, Tibrine 285 Dahinden, Janine 545-11 Dahl, Malte Rokkjaer 545-10 Dahlin, Eric C. 180-13 Dai, Jingyun 106-7 Dai, Yue 439 Dallmman, Matheus 038-4 Damarin, Amanda K. 324 Dana, Lydia 241 Danaher, William F. 106-17 Danckert, Bolette 294-1 Dancy, Melissa 151-12 Daniel, Caitlin 228-7 Daniels, Heather A. 411-6 Daniels, Jessie 065, 107, 129, 355 Daniels, Kathryn Patricia 106-16 Dannefer, Dale 252, 326 Dantzler, Prentiss A. 403 Danziger, Sheldon 522 Darling, Katherine Weatherford 147-16

233

Index of Session Participants Darling, Rosalyn Benjamin 289 Darrah-Okike, Jennifer Rene 210, 360-10 Darwin, Helana 176 Dasgupta, Kushan 061 DaSilva, Blane 151-29 Dassopoulos, Andrea Jane 483-3 Daumler, Davis 450-5, 520-15 David, Emmanuel 181-1 David, Gary C. 483-10 David, LaKisha 545-15 Davidson, James Clark 444-15 Davidson, Thomas 255 Davidson Green, Hilary 145-3 Davies, Kim 229-4 Davies, Scott 430, 575-4 Davignon, Phil 050-14 Davis, Andrew 325, 444-4 Davis, Daniel 038-1 Davis, Deborah S. 233 Davis, Elyse L. 130-8 Davis, Gerald F. 271 Davis, Jasmine Lanisha 178-9, 545-17 Davis, Jenny L. 248 Davis, Katrinell M. 511-19 Davis, Sarah McGill 151-24 Davis, Shannon N. 215 Davis-Chanin, Zoe V. 506 Daw, Jonathan 265-1, 450-22 Daye, Christian 463, 498 De Castro, Julio 284 De Coster, Stacy 256-7, 511-19 de Fuentes, Claudia 082 de Jong, Julie 450-17 de Leon, Cedric 036, 361, 439 De Roeck, Mathias 214 de Swaan, Abram 119 de Vaan, Mathijs 565 De Vries, Raymond 147-25 Dean, Sarah Catherine 268 Deb, Nikhilendu 171 Debies-Carl, Jeffrey S. 281 Debs, Mira Catherine 037 Deceuninck, Jérôme 193 DeCostanza, Arwen 368 Decoteau, Claire Laurier 191, 318 Deen, Rebecca 520-6 Deener, Andrew 308 Degenshein, Anya 179, 499 DeGloma, Thomas 469 Deitch, Cynthia 406 Dekel, Irit 092 Del Real, Deisy 242, 401

Delale-O’Connor, Lori 151-31 Delaney, Ruth Elizabeth 413-2 Delbridge, Rick 511-3 Delehanty, Jack 106-13, 333 Delhey, Jan 181-3 Delia Deckard, Natalie Marie 570 Dellinger, Kirsten A. 449, 450-8 DeLong, Alia 035-2 Demant, Jakob 473 DeMarco, Laura 186-2 DeMichele, Matthew 059 Demireva, Neli 545-10, 545-18 Demirhan, Emirhan 444-4 Demos, Vasilikie (Vicky) 354-4 Dempsey, Nicholas P. 228-4 Denecheau, Benjamin 193 Denier, Nicole Genevieve 511-5 Denis, Jeffrey Steven 120 Denney, Justin 090, 581-11 Denton, Nancy A. 138 Deo, Meera 216-5 Dephillips, Robert L. 575-8 Derbey, Arnaud 256-16 Dereuddre, Rozemarijn 147-15 Dernberger, Brittany 511-5, 575-1 DeRoche, Courtney 325 Derpic, Jorge 413-1 Desai, Manisha 072-2 Desai, Shevon 353 Desan, Mathieu H. 507-1, 540 Desmond, Matthew 045, 417, 477 DeSoucey, Michaela 180-16, 266 Deterding, Nicole 469 Deutsch, Gal 511-7 Deutschlander, Denise 151-5 Deutschmann, Emanuel 181-3, 444-12 Devan, Pamela Mary 243 DeVault, Marjorie L. 311 DeWaard, Jack 108, 500 DeWitt, John Paul 004, 557 Dhillon, Carla May 574 Dhingra, Pawan H. 420 Di, Di 316, 517-4 Diamond, John B. 456 Diamond, Shari Seidman 337 Diamond-Brown, Lauren Ashley 147-21 Dias, Felipe Antonio 360-16, 511-14 Dias dos Reis, Samira 472 Diaz, Lucas 106-15, 468 DiBenigno, Julia 369 DiBennardo, Rebecca Ann 521 DiBranco, Alex 064

DiCicco-Bloom, Benjamin 541-1 Dickerson, Dennis 106-15 Diefendorf, Sarah 460, 581-1 Diekmann, Andreas 546 Dietz, Thomas M. 429, 509 Dignam, Pierce Alexander 450-10, 545-4 Dijkstra, Jacob 515 Dill, Brian J. 036 Dill, Janette S. 324 Dillaway, Heather E. 450-19 Dillon, Michele 384 DiMaggio, Paul J. 042 Dinesen, Peter Thisted 262, 294-1 Dingel, Molly J. 151-18, 411-4 Dinovitzer, Ronit 413-6 Dinsmore, Brooke 151-32 Dinzey-Flores, Zaire Z. 407 Dioun, Cyrus 576 Dirlam, Jonathan 256-19 DiSabatino, Lydia Faith 147-25 DiTomaso, Nancy 058 Dixon, Angela 226 Dixon, Jeffrey C. 214 Dixon, Marc 106-1, 291 Do, Duy 151-17 Doan, Long 581-12 Doane, Ashley Wood 445 Dobbin, Frank 271 Dobbs, Erica 183 DoCarmo, Tania Eileen 026, 096 Dodel, Matias 030-4 Dodier, Nicolas 231 Doehne, Malte 180-1 Doering, Jan 103, 170 Doering, Laura 212, 511-2 Doherty, Yuka 050-15 Dolgon, Corey 513 Domina, Thurston A. 189 Domingo, Andreu 078 Dominguez Folgueras, Marta 450-22 Dominguez-Villegas, Rodrigo 446 Donahue, Pat 360-18 Donato, Katharine 068-3, 500 Dondero, Molly 147-23 Dong, Huiru 571 Dong, Yige 110 Donnelly, Louis 575-6 Donnelly, Louis 473 Donnelly, Rachel 069, 246 Donoghue, Jed 360-9 Donovan, Joan M. 372 Doppenberg, Isaac 427

234

Index of Session Participants Dorado, Silvia 511-2 Doran, Kevin 072-4 Dorshorst, Emily Joo 444-15 Doten-Snitker, Kerice 507-2, 562 Douds, Kiara 151-11, 545-12 Dow, Dawn M. 167 Dowd, James J. 322 Dowd-Arrow, Benjamin 545-4 Downer, Brian 033 Downey, Dennis J. 267 Downey, Douglas B. 354-9 Downey, Liam 199 Doyle, Joshua Franklin 038-8 Doña Reveco, Cristian Alberto 068-2 Draelants, Hugues 193 Drakeford, Leah 147-14 Drapeau-Bisson, Marie-Lise 106-18 Draper, Elaine Alma 199 Dreby, Joanna 117 Dreiling, Michael 429 Drentea, Patricia 147-4, 353 Dreon, Ben 550 Dressel, Joanna 181-1 Drewski, Daniel 411-3 Driscoll, Daniel 106-3, 476-9 Drissi, Mounia 072-7 Dromi, Shai M. 036, 181-2 Drouhot, Lucas Germain 284, 481 Du, Yue 476-2 Duan, Ran 509 Dubin, Ann Horwitz 106-6, 444-10 Duck, Waverly 218 DuCros, Faustina M. 216-5 Duenas, Maria D. 034 Duffy, Horace Joseph 151-23 Dufour, Pascale 203-1, 556 Dufur, Mikaela 467, 520-1 Duggal, Sumeet 180-11 Duina, Francesco 082 Dumangane, Constantino Sansao 545-3 Dumont, Guillaume 465 Dunbar, Robert 151-18 Dunifon, Rachel 487 Dunlap, Riley E. 476-10, 476-5 Dunning-Lozano, Jessica L. 256-15 Dupont, Benoit 030-7 Duquette-Rury, Lauren 068-6 Duran, Robert J. 423 Durant, Steve 256-14 Durgun, Basak 360-19 Durrant, Valerie L. 085 Durso, Rachel M. 354-14

Duvoux, Nicolas Duxbury, Catherine Louise Duxbury, Scott W. Duyvendak, Jan Willem Dworkin, Shari L. Dwyer, Rachel E. Dwyer Emory, Allison Dyer, Shauna Dykema, Jennifer Díaz Cruz, Arturo

417 104-1 134, 535 488 349 257 093 223, 366 147-2 544

E Eads, Alicia 180-4 Earl, Jennifer 156, 235 Eason, John Major 141, 357 Eaton, Charlie 180-21 Ebbinghaus, Bernhard 180-5 Ecklund, Elaine Howard 316, 484 Eckstein, Rick 467 Eddens, Kate 506 Edgell, Penny 274, 548 Edin, Kathryn J. 045 Edles, Laura Desfor 017 Edmunds, Christina 050-8 Edwards, Frank 416 Edwards, Korie L. 348 Edwards, Linsey Nicole 360-21 Edwards, Michelle Lynn 482 Edwards, Zophia 072-1 Egan, Kathleen L. 506 Eggers, Joseph 412 Eggers, Thurid 570 Egner, Justine 105-3, 573 Egozy, Offer 256-2 Eickmeyer, Kasey 060 Eidlin, Barry 299, 404, 556 Eife, Erin 444-14 Eisenberg, Anne Frances 375, 504 Eisenhauer, Emily 353 Eisenmann, Clemens Willi 528, 559 Ejbye-Ernst, Peter 473 Ela, Nate 539 Elafros, Athena 012, 228-4 Elcioglu, Emine Fidan 068-8 ElGindi, Tamer 575-8 Ellialti-Kose, Tugce 450-6 Ellig, Nicholas R. 575-5 Ellingson, Stephen 197, 580 Elliott, Gregory Clark 037, 265-3 Elliott, James R. 317, 360-19 Elliott, Marta 450-18, 450-3, 569 Elliott, Michael A. 309

Elliott, Michael R. Elliott, Rebecca Elliott, Sinikka Elliott, Thomas Alan Elliott-Negri, Luke Ellison, Christopher G. Ellwardt, Lea Elo, Irma T. Elrick, Jennifer Elsey, Christopher Elson, Jean Elwert, Felix Emanuelson, Pamela E. Embrick, David G. Emeka, Amon S. Emeran, Christine M. Emerson, Michael O. Emirbayer, Mustafa Emlet, Charles A. Encarnacion, Tomas E. Ender, Morten G. Engeman, Cassandra Engin, Ceylan England, Paula Enriquez, Laura E. Epp, Charles Epstein, Cynthia Fuchs Epstein, Steven Erb-Medina, Caroline Erbacher, Christian Eren, Baris Erensu, Sinan Erevelles, Nirmala Ergas, Christina A. Erichsen, Kristen Erickson, Lance D. Erigha, Maryann Erikson, Emily Anne Erikson, Kai Erin, Sakin Ernest, J. Brooke Erola, Jani Erving, Christy LaShaun Erwin, Christopher Eshelman, Jill Esparza, Louis Espeland, Wendy Nelson Espinosa-Montiel, Rocio Espinoza, Lucas Enrique Espinoza, Luis Enrique Espinoza Higgins, Monica Estrada, Emir

018 539 111, 520-7 106-17, 255 106-10, 259-10 098 186-1 131 146, 242 461 520-22 246 567 011 545-18 106-9 197, 348, 385 075, 383 018 050-11 132 106-1, 402 450-17 173, 581-9 027, 530 423 157, 488 231 203-1 559 444-5 476-19 225 476-19 151-14, 545-4 151-5 165 404, 546 489 517-10 267 444-10 033, 069 549 327 240 126, 231 575-2 545-15 545-15 268 367-4

235

Index of Session Participants Etmanski, Brittany Evangelist, Michael Evans, Alice Evans, Candace Michele Evans, Chad Gregory Evans, Clare Rosenfeld Evans, Ethan J. Evans, Heather D. Evans, James A. Evans, Maddie Jo Evans, Mariah Debra Evans, Shani Adia Evans, Stacy D. Everett, Dallin Everhart, Donald A. Everson, David W. Ewing, Jeffrey A. Eyraud, Benoît Hippolyte Ezzamel, Mahmoud Ezzell, Matthew B.

151-6 360-18 450-21 130-12 050-10, 511-1 016 147-18 541-3 021, 133, 419 105-1 135, 214 017 267 180-13 461 026 228-5 178-1 575-8 114

F Faber, Jacob William 138, 179 Fabiani, Jean-Louis 540 Facio, Elisa 367-4 Fahlberg, Anjuli 327 Fairbairn, Jordan 165 Fajardo, Sophie Alysse 436 Falcon, Julie 575-11 Falcon, Luis 050-16, 050-18 Falconer, James 022, 178-11, 246 Fallon, Kathleen M. 112, 220 Falzon, Danielle 476-18 Fan, Lulu 221 Fan, Wen 246, 568 Fan, Xinguang 575-7 Fan, Yu-Kang 020 Fang, Jun 151-26 Fantone, Laura 216-5, 228-10, 228-12 Faris, Robert W. 483-6, 565 Farrell, Allan 172 Farrer, James 233 Farshchi, Ehsan 449 Faruque, M. Omar 106-9 Fast, Idit 151-4, 369 Faude, Sarah 151-28 Favell, Adrian 273 Feder, Tal 228-3 Fee, Molly 068-9 Feigenbaum, James 568 Feinberg, Mark 265-1 Feinberg, Seth 467

Feinstein, Yuval 242, 401 Feldberg, Alexandra Claire 137 Feldman, Anna-Lucia 072-3 Feliciano, Cynthia 117 Felmlee, Diane H. 151-3, 565 Fenelon, James V. 343, 475 Fenton, Estye 573 Fenyk, Heather M. 476-12 Ferguson, Roderick 071 Ferguson, Susan J. 238 Ferguson, Todd W. 517-7 Fernandes, April 354-13 Fernandez, Roberto M. 408 Ferree, Myra Marx 263 Fessler, Agnes 106-4 Fetner, Tina 009 Fettro, Marshal Neal 248, 582 Fey, Mira Anne 256-14 Fields, Jessica 009, 114 Filkobski, Ina 026 Fillingim, Angela Elena 330-1 Finch, Jessie K. 038-1, 367-2 Fine, Gary Alan 160, 489 Finke, Roger 268, 385 Finlay, Brandon 106-2 Finlay, William 465 Finnigan, Ryan 575-6 Firat, Rengin Bahar 375, 567 Fischer, Carolin 545-11 Fischer, Jocelyn 248 Fischer, Mary J. 151-4 Fischer, Nancy L. 145-1 Fisher, Dana R. 106-3, 121, 177 Fisher, Greg 511-4 Fisher, Jacob Charles 571 Fishman, Samuel 520-6, 575-4 Fisk, Calley 353 Fitch, Catherine A. 551 Fitzgerald, Amy J. 256-5 FitzGerald, David Scott 068-12, 500 Fitzgerald, Kathleen J. 190 Fitzhugh, Sean M. 368 Fitzmaurice, Connor John 180-1, 219 Fitzpatrick, Brian R. 151-26, 189 Fitzpatrick, Bridget 450-4 Fitzpatrick, Kevin M. 265-4 Flaherty, Colm 151-32 Fleming, Mark 358 Flesken, Anaid 444-17 Fletcher, Edward C. 151-10 Flewwellin, Joseph 300-2 Fligstein, Neil 046, 341

Flippen, Chenoa 180-2 Flood, Sarah M. 452, 520-13 Florence, Chelsi Chanel 281 Flores, Edward Orozco 106-11 Flores, Gerardo 050-8, 130-12 Flores, Glenda M. 331 Flores, Jerry 204, 530 Flores, René 359, 392 Flores-Gonzalez, Nilda 544 Florian, Sandra M. 520-18 Flowers, Hilary 203-1, 353, 520-5 Flynn, Matthew B. 068-1 Flynn, Michael 068-1 Foley, Benjamin Ray 294-2 Follo, Giovanna 229-5 Fomby, Paula W. 159 Fong, Eric 500 Fong, Kelley 052, 151-28 Fontana, Jason Joseph 130-4 Fontdevila, Jorge 169 Foran, John 181-8 Ford, Allison 050-3 Ford, Jessie 581-7, 581-9 Ford, Karly Sarita 520-17 Ford, Laura R. 038-5 Fortunato, Amelia 259-7 Fosse, Ethan 088, 392 Foster, Holly 441 Foster, Jacob Gates 230, 502 Fountain, Christine 180-6 Fourcade, Marion 116, 424 Fournier, Marcel 364, 388 Fox, Cybelle 249, 283 Fox, Mary Frank 446 Fox, Nicole 053 Fox, Samantha K. 069, 070-3 Fox-Hodess, Caitlin R. 221 Fox-Williams, Brittany Nicole 545-17 Foy, Steven Larrimore 050-19, 444-1 Fralich, Russell 180-4 Franceschelli, Michela 303 Francis, Jessica 398 Francis, Linda E. 205 Francis, Robert Donald 050-1 Francisco-Menchavez, Valerie A. 068-3, 452 Franco, Marla 331 Frank, David John 447 Frank, Robert H. 076 Franke, Felipe Augusto 038-4 Frankeberger, Jessica 571 Frankham, Emma 256-19 Franzen, Axel 515

236

Index of Session Participants Franzese, Alexis T. 147-3 Fraser, Nancy 076 Frazer, Jacqueline 130-1 Frazier, Cleothia 564 Frederick, Angela 411-6, 573 Frederick, Brittany Lee 035-3 Frederico, Krista 511-8 Frederiksen, Jan Thorhauge 511-16 Frederiksen, Morten 570 Fredkove, Windy 147-25 Fredriksen-Goldsen, Karen 018 Free, Janese 367-1 Freedman, Lori 424 Freedman, Michael 439 Freelon, Rhoda 351 Freeman, Erin 354-6, 545-6 Freeman, Laura 261 Freeman, Lindsey A. 228-12 Freese, Jeremy 386 Freilich, Joshua 256-12 French, Martin 531 Frenette, Alexandre 151-6 Fretwell, Joseph 106-5 Freudenberg, Maren 038-11 Frevert, Tonya 149 Frey, William H. 004, 557 Frezzo, Mark 279, 547 Frickel, Scott 006, 106-4, 482 Fried, Mindy L. 001 Friedman, Ellen 259-3 Friedman, Jennifer 145-2 Friedman, Jonathan Z. 430 Friedman, Sam 428 Friedman, Samuel R. 169, 260 Frieh, Emma 541-2 Friese, Carrie E. 502 Fritsch, Nina-Sophie 575-9 Fritz, Jan Marie 048, 547 Frizzell, Laura 165, 571 Frohlich, Katherine L. 376 Fry, Melissa S. 482, 579 Fry, Sarah Violet 098, 256-3 Frye, Margaret 118, 349, 452 Frye-Levine, Laura Alex 476-14 Frère, Frère Bruno 162 Fu, Albert S. 360-4, 476-4 Fu, Rong 147-4 Fu, Yang-Chih 015, 268 Fu, Zheng 221 Fuentes, Ana 476-6 Fujimoto, Tetsushi 411-2 Fujimura, Joan H. 492

Fukui, Haruna Miyagawa Fuller, Paul C. Fuller, Sylvia A. Funk, Alexander Furstenberg, Frank F. Furuta, Jared Furuya, Yukiko Fuwa, Makiko

050-15 050-13 428 151-34 414 393 050-15 450-7

G Gabriel, Ryan 210, 568 Gaby, Sarah 265-6, 413-2 Gaertner, Matthew 151-9 Gage-Bouchard, Elizabeth 147-10 Gagné, Thierry 376 Gaidyte, Teodora 177 Galindo, Jorge 038-5 Galinsky, Adam 186-5 Gallagher, Charles A. 141, 456 Gallagher, Dunla 474-3 Galli Robertson, Anya Mikael 106-3, 476-5 Gallo-Cruz, Selina R. 106-17, 181-4 Gallopin, Jean-Baptiste 507-1 Gallupe, Owen 575-4 Galperin, Roman V. 180-15, 472 Galvan, Briana 130-10 Gamino, Eric 068-10 Gamoran, Adam 382 Gangl, Markus 520-15 Gansen, Heidi 151-32, 497 Gantois, Maïlys 507-4 Ganz, Marshall 064, 100, 121 Garbarski, Dana 147-1, 147-2 Garboden, Philip M.E. 180-10, 210 Garcia, Angela S. 067, 068-15, 139 Garcia, Denia 399 Garcia, Magali 130-4 Garcia, Marc Anthony 033, 207 Garcia, Melissa J. 353, 545-1 Garcia, Nick 476-8 Garcia, Sarah 151-20, 375 Garcia del Moral, Paulina 339 Garcia Roman, Joan 452 García, Rocío R. 149, 514 García, San Juanita 366, 530 Gardecki, Rosella 268 Gardinier, Meg 227 Gargiulo, Martin 511-13 Garner, Betsie 503 Garner, Steve 445 Garrett, Cal 241 Garrison, Spencer Anthony 287, 520-14

Garth, Bryant 413-6 Garza, Alma Nidia 151-15 Gasteyer, Stephen Philip 574 Gaston, Pablo U. 180-16 Gates, Leslie C. 034 Gatewood, Britany 049, 353, 354-8 Gauchat, Gordon 038-11, 360-11, 502 Gaughan, Monica 446 Gaulden, Shawn 030-1 Gawerc, Michelle I. 479-2, 538 Gaydosh, Lauren M. 031, 376 Gazard, Billy 569 Gaztambide-Fernandez, Ruben A. 017, 055, 136 Ge, Jianhua 072-1 Geampana, Alina 174 Gebhardt-Kram, Lauren Elizabeth 354-17 Gebre-Medhin, Ben Hidru 511-9 Geckeler, Christian 256-6 Gecker, Whitney 100 Gee, Angela D 130-3 Geffen, Rona 575-3 Geist, Claudia 178-2, 520-16 Gelis-Filho, Antonio 070-1 Genadek, Katie 452, 520-13 Genkin, Michael 435 Gentile, Haley Jo 106-16, 444-12, 545-4 George, Kristin 463 George, Stacy Keogh 106-6 Gerber, Alison 013, 179 Gerbrandt, Roxanne 300-2 Gerhards, Juergen 411-3 Gerling, Heather M. 072-3, 545-16 Gerschick, Tom 457 Gershuny, Jonathan 145-3, 520-22 Gerson, Kathleen 306, 425 Gerteis, Joseph H. 444-11 Gertz, Evelyn Ann 205, 433 Ghatak, Saran 180-17 Ghazanjani, Mehri 435 Ghaziani, Amin 009 Ghedi-Ehrlich, Elizabeth 313 Ghosh, Apoorva 451, 497 Ghosh, Debaleena 478 Ghoshal, Raj Andrew 203-1 Giaquinta, Maya 147-10 Gibbons, Joseph R. 403 Gibbs, Benjamin G. 151-26, 151-5 Gibson, Christopher Laurence 072-1 Gibson, David R. 528 Gibson-Light, Michael 143, 511-14 Giesecke, Johannes 575-7

237

Index of Session Participants Giffort, Danielle 474-1 Gilbert, Jen 009 Giles, Kelly N 520-14 Gill, Timothy M. 409 Gillespie, Brian Joseph 178-5 Gillion, Daniel 255 Gillion, Leah 545-1 Gillis, Alanna 151-6, 151-7 Gillooly, Jessica White 366 Gilroy, Connor Craig 581-3 Gingras, Yves 540 Giordano, Peggy C. 256-4 Girard, Christopher S. 146 Girard, Gabriel 169 Girouard, Jennifer 444-18 Giuffre, Patti A. 449, 450-13 Gladstone, Eric 565 Glann, Sarah 012 Glass, Jennifer L. 248, 532 Glass, Pepper 188 Glauber, Rebecca 520-10 Gleeson, Shannon Marie 204, 443 Glenn, Evelyn Nakano 071, 410 Glover, Karen 423 Go, Julian 258, 275, 475 Goalwin, Gregory 026, 068-12 Goar, Carla 248 Gocek, Fatma Muge 275, 340 Godart, Frederic Clement 013, 186-5 Godechot, Olivier 194 Godwin, Kelly 035-5 Goettlich, Walter 023 Golann, Joanne W. 037 Golash-Boza, Tanya Maria 027, 139, 288, 355, 357, 380, 420, 530 Gold, Steven J. 068-4 Goldberg, Chad Alan 364, 498 Goldberg, Rachel E. 245, 561 Golden, Shannon 325 Goldman, Alyssa W. 018 Goldsby, William 545-12 Goldsmith, Pat Rubio 073, 397 Goldstein, Adam 209, 566 Goldstein, Alyssa 105-2 Goldstein, Jesse 405, 476-19 Goldstein-Kral, Jessica Caryn 354-19 Gomes, Ralph Christopher 260 Gomez, Charles Jonathan 496 Gomez, Victoria 360-8 Gomez Cervantes, Andrea 288, 544 Gonalons-Pons, Pilar 520-15 Gondal, Neha 257, 419

Gondo, Yasuyuki Gong, Fang Gong, XiaoYu Annie Gonsalves, Leroy Gonzales, Gabrielle Gonzales, Roberto G. Gonzalez, Alessandra L. Gonzalez, Belisa E. Gonzalez, Gabriella C. Gonzalez, Jax J. Gonzalez, Jorge Candelario Gonzalez-Lopez, Gloria Gonzalez-Sobrino, Bianca González-Ferrer, Amparo Good, Adrian Goodfriend, Erica Goodkind, Jessica Rose Goodwin, Jeff Goonatilake, Rohitha Goosby, Bridget Goossen, Martin C. Gorbatai, Andreea Daniela Gordon, Daanika Gordon, Katie Gordon, Rachel A. Gore, DeAnna Loraine Gorga, Allison Gorman, Brandon Gorman, Bridget K. Gorman, Elizabeth H. Gornick, Janet Gorski, Philip S. Gotham, Kevin Fox Gottfried, Heidi Gouge, Melissa Gould, Deborah B. Gould, Kenneth Alan Gourevitch, Peter Gowayed, Heba Gowda, Kallan Goyette, Kimberly Ann Grace, Breanne L Grace, Daniel Grace, Matthew K. Gracheva, Ksenia Graefe, Annett Grages, Christopher Graham, Laurel Graif, Corina Graizbord, Diana Gran, Brian Granger, Douglas A.

216-6 216-7 178-11, 450-19 175 050-4 117, 182 180-3 264 579 354-5 300-3 485 545-14 182 050-16 105-2 147-22 556 068-1, 256-11 067 511-13 180-21 256-13, 337 460 187 229-3 256-17, 450-3 096 450-9, 581-11 478 402 304, 572 319, 360-4 400 106-9 008, 144 199, 476-1 310 529 059 545-1 052 169 147-3 444-20 106-6 570 145-2 134, 360-1 036, 361 155, 227 031

Grant, Aimee 474-3 Grant, Don 320 Grattet, Ryken 429 Grauerholz, Elizabeth 103, 378, 545-2 Gravel, Brian 411-2 Gray, Ian 099 Grazian, David 125, 521 Graziul, Christopher Michael 360-18 Green, Autumn R. 494 Green, Gary P. 503 Green, Kyle 395 Green, Sara E. 541-1, 573 Greenberg, David F. 474-1 Greenberg, Greg 404 Greenberg, Max A. 054 Greenberg, Miriam 438 Greenberg, Pierce 185, 458 Greene, Daniel 107 Greene, Joss Taylor 035-7 Greene, Richard Neil 069 Greene, Theo 234, 486, 580 Greenidge, Giselle 068-14, 367-3 Greenlee, Andrew J. 566 Greenwood, Joleen Loucks 520-21 Greenwood, Margo 227 Greenwood, Nancy A. 086, 558 Greeson, Emma Pendzich 180-20 Greil, Arthur L. 094, 186-5 Greiner, Patrick Trent 285 Grell-Brisk, Marilyn 069, 575-5 Griera, Mar 517-5, 517-8 Griesbach, Kathleen Ann 259-1 Griese, Gesa 180-7 Griffen, Zachary Webster 006, 413-4 Griffin, Lauren 130-4, 520-15 Grigg, Jeffrey 503 Grigoryeva, Angelina 010 Grigsby, Alan V. 360-3 Grimaldo, Jonathan 050-8, 130-3 Grimsley, Edwin 354-14 Grindal, Matthew 256-18 Grindstaff, Laura 023, 322 Grineski, Sara Elizabeth 476-6 Griswold, Wendy 013, 269, 440, 553 Grodal, Stine 219 Grodsky, Eric 151-20 Groeneveld, Pim 134 Groh-SAmberg, Olaf 317, 575-8 Grol-Prokopczyk, Hanna 506 Grollman, Eric Anthony 129, 277, 450-9 Gross, Mark 562 Gross, Neil 075, 191, 192

238

Index of Session Participants Grossman-Thompson, Babs 164 Grov, Christian 147-16 Gruenewald, Jeffrey 256-12 Grunberg, Sarah D. 445 Grundy, Saida 149 Grusky, David B. 522 Gruys, Kjerstin 054, 244 Gu, Chien-Juh 288 Gu, Xiaorong 014 Guadalupe-Diaz, Xavier Luciano 575-2 Gualtieri, Gillian 013 Guetzkow, Josh 080, 154 Guhin, Jeffrey 040, 548 Gul Kaya, Duygu 228-9 Gulya, Lisa 136, 520-3 Gunderson, Ryan 476-14 Gunes, Fatime 354-12 Guo, Guang 185, 224, 386 Guo, Maocan 151-16 Guo, Yu 520-22, 567 Gupta, Achala 151-25 Guran, Gozde 137 Gurbuz, Mustafa 250 Gurney, Rachel 476-5 Gurung, Shobha Hamal 397 Gurusami, Susila 377 Guseva, Alya 101, 271 Gustavsson, Martin 251 Gutin, Iliya 147-23, 186-2 Gutman, Yifat 228-9 Guy, Jean-Sebastien 038-4 Guzman, Cinthya Johanna 339 Guzzo, Karen 060, 094, 520-16

H Ha, Jae-Kyung Haapajärvi, Linda Haber, Jaren Randell Hacker, Jacob Hadj-Moussa, Ratiba Hadler, Markus Hadziabdic, Sinisa Haedicke, Michael Haenfler, Ross Hagan, Jacqueline M. Hagan, John Haggerty, Kevin D. Haider, Maheen Haider-Markel, Donald Hailey, Chantal Annise Halauniova, Anastasiya Halcomb, Laura

219 068-13 511-20 310 250 020, 444-17 291 476-20 545-4 068-10, 500 441 235 165, 577 423 050-8, 151-23 228-15 101

Hale, James Weston 050-3 Hale, Scott 061 Halfmann, Drew 029, 402 Halim, Nafisa 147-5 Hall, Gregory Michael 474-4 Hall, Jean P. 147-15 Hall, John A. 364, 440 Hall, John R. 078, 152 Hall, Kim 225 Hall, Peter A. 046, 076 Hall, Peter M. 115 Hall, Peter V. 082 Hall, Stephanie P. 147-18, 545-15 Hall, Thomas D. 475 Hallett, Tim 061 Halley, Jeffrey A. 300-3 Hallgren, Emily 151-12 Halpern, Carolyn 268 Halpin, Brian William 443 Halpin, Michael Allan 410 Halpin, Peter 151-1 Haltom, Trenton M. 581-12 Halushka, John Michael 256-6 Hamann, Christian 360-16 Hamann, Julian 013 Hamel, Pierre 082 Hamidi, Camille 545-8 Hamil, Jenifer 479-2 Hamilton, Laura Theresa 312 Hamilton, Mark 404 Hamilton, Tod G. 033 Hammad Mrig, Emily Allia 287 Hammer, Ricarda 258, 439 Hammoudeh, Weeam 060 Hamplova, Dana 520-17 Hampshire, James 182 Han, Chong-suk 237, 496 Han, Hahrie 064 Han, Ling 511-12 Han, Siqi 151-31 Han, Yi 511-12 Hancock, Black Hawk 536 Handler, Lisa 228-15 Handsman, Emily 013, 228-8 Haney, Timothy James 319, 542 Hango, Darcy 151-22 Hanif, Kamran 147-11 Hanink, Peter A. 256-20 Hanna, Alex 059, 368 Hannah-Moffat, Kelly 047 Hannibal, Bryce 542, 565 Hannscott, Lauren Hughes 360-3

Hanrahan, Nancy Weiss 318 Hans, Silke 411-3 Hansard, Stephanie 147-13, 186-5 Hansen, Marianne N. 428 Hanser, Amy 450-11 Hanson, Sandra L. 239 Hanssmann, Christoph 411-9 Hao, Lingxin 376 Hara, Yuko 450-5 Haraway, Sam 544 Harcey, Sela 094, 186-5 Hardie, Jessica Halliday 151-1 Harding, David J. 366, 382, 510, 553 Hardison-Moody, Annie 111 Hardman, Emilie 188 Harger, Brent 265-3 Hargittai, Eszter 107, 156 Hargrove, Taylor 035-2 Harkness, Geoff 125 Harknett, Kristen S. 568 Harnois, Catherine E. 035-2, 286 Harrington, Blair 216-10 Harrington, Brooke 342 Harrington Meyer, Madonna 293 Harris, Angel Luis 151-24, 189 Harris, Heather M. 141 Harris, Joseph A. 072-4, 150, 539 Harris, Kathleen Mullan 031, 376 Harris, Kevan 554 Harrison, Roderick 353 Hart, Beth Ann 430 Hartal, Gilly 581-10 Hartless, Jaime 111, 277 Hartley, John Patrick 517-8 Hartmann, Douglas 044, 136, 444-11 Hartung, Anne 095 Hartwell, Stephanie W. 375 Harvey, Brenna 541-3 Harvey, Daina Cheyenne 234 Harvey, Hope 102 Harvey, Kimberly 093 Harvey, Penny 228-8 Harvey Wingfield, Adia M. 129, 380, 523 Haskins, Anna R. 441 Hassoun, Rosina 282 Hastings, Orestes Pat 290 Hatch, Anthony Ryan 334 Hatteberg, Sarah Jean 504 Hatton, Erin E. 183, 511-3 Haugh, Helen 511-4 Hausauer, Jessica 366 Hauschildt, Katrina 147-25, 358

239

Index of Session Participants Hauser, Orlee 050-7 Hauser, Robert M. 151-30 Haveman, Heather A. 454, 576 Haverda, Timothy 300-3 Havewala, Ferzana 360-22 Hayashi, Kanna 571 Hayes, Adam 180-8 Hayes, Matthew F. 038-7, 327 Hayford, Sarah R. 060, 414, 520-16 Haynie, Dana L. 134 Hayward, Dana 499 Hayward, Mark D. 223 Hazar, Caner 450-14 He, Guangye 575-7 He, Qian 014, 216-10, 520-20 Headworth, Spencer 337 Healy, Kieran 126, 272 Heaney, Kathleen 411-4 Heath, Melanie 519 Hecht, Jaime 087, 391 Heerwig, Jen 444-10, 460 Heflin, Colleen M. 449, 575-3 Heggebo, Kristian 541-4 Hegtvedt, Karen A. 008, 321 Heideman, Laura J. 068-12, 181-3 Heimer, Carol 126 Heimer, Karen 256-7 Heinskou, Marie Bruvik 473 Heinz, Erin 164 Heller, Patrick G. 212, 236 Helmes-Hayes, Richard 388 Helms, Heather M. 520-19 Helmuth, Allison Suppan 149 Hendawy, Abdallah 250 Henderson, Charley 354-17 Henderson, Jared Aurelius 130-10 Hendi, Arun 246 Hendricks, Kathryn 374 Hengstebeck, Natalie D. 520-19 Henke, Christopher R. 528 Henley, Megan 025 Hennigan, Brian 527 Henriksen, Lasse Folke 411-6 Henry, Adam Douglas 429 Henry, Laura 476-8 Herbert, Claire W. 102, 138, 210, 410 Herd, Pamela 178-6 Herman, Max Arthur 360-6 Hermsen, Joan M. 353 Hern, Lindy 106-16, 483-9 Hernandez, Elaine Marie 261 Hernandez, Estefania 476-6

Hernandez, Giovani 130-4 Hernandez, Johuan 427 Hernandez, Ruth Marleen 106-13 Hernandez-Leon, Ruben 182 Herrera, Andrea Pauline 581-8 Herrera, Joel S. 259-10 Hertel, Florian R. 575-8 Herzog, Patricia Snell 354-20 Heslin, Alison 570 Hess, Christian Lawrence 210 Hess, Julia 147-22 Hesse-Biber, Sharlene J. 185, 203-1, 353 Hesserus, Mattias 412 Hetland, Gabriel 034, 444-10 Hewitt, Cynthia M. 112 Hewitt, Ted 422 Hexel, Ole 575-2 Heymann, Orlaith 450-3 Hiatt, Shon 576 Hicken, Margaret 031 Higginbotham, J. Andrew 541-4 Hilgers, Tina 575-10 Hill, Dustin 320 Hill, Graham Wilson 580 Hill, Terrence D. 098, 147-26 Hills, Ornella 033 Hilmar, Till 055 Himmelstein, Mary 031 Hinkson, Leslie R. 111 Hinz, Thomas 166, 561 Hipp, John R. 511-18 Hipp, Lena 335 Hirschman, Daniel 180-9, 372 Hirshfield, Laura Ellen 151-12 Hiss, Stefanie 106-4, 180-7 Hitchens, Brooklynn K. 360-14 Hitlin, Steven 567 Hjorth, Frederik 262 Hlavka, Heather R. 485 Ho, Jessica Y. 022, 246 Ho, Jing-Mao 444-13 Ho, Phoebe 151-13 Ho, Szu Ying 186-3 Hoang, Kimberly Kay 204, 237, 349, 436, 527 Hochschild, Arlie Russell 384 Hodges, Melissa 095 Hodos, Jerome 360-14 Hoekstra, Erin 147-18 Hoey, Jesse 205 Hoff, Timothy James 147-3, 511-16 Hoffman, Andrew 574

Hoffman, Charity M. 520-14, 575-3 Hoffman, Mark Anthony 565 Hoffman, Steve G. 411-7 Hoffmann, Elizabeth A. 511-8 Hofmeister, Heather 446 Hofstra, Jorie 115, 395 Hogan, Jackie Lee 168, 228-9 Hohle, Randolph 050-1 Holbrook, Allyson L. 545-8 Holbrow, Hilary J. 095, 163 Holder, Michelle Beadle 111 Holla, Sylvia 228-3 Holland, Michael 575-4 Holleran, Max 181-3 Holley, John Christopher 203-1, 265-5 Hollingdale, Hazel 415 Hollingsworth, John 287 Hollis, Meghan Elizabeth 256-12 Holsting, Vilhelm Stefan 479-3 Holt, William G. 360-7 Holtmann, Anne Christine 151-10, 151-3 Holtzman, Deborah 268 Homan, Patricia Ann 147-6, 223, 376 Hommel, Elodie 336 Hommerich, Carola 216-7 Honari, Ali 030-7 Hong, Hae-Jung 411-3 Hong, Liu 552 Hong, Wei 411-8 Hood, Katherine 337, 366 Hood, Tiffany E. 354-20 Hooks, Gregory 402, 476-13 Hopcroft, Rosemary L. 031 Hopewell, Kristen 180-9 Hoppe, Alexander 181-5, 360-1 Hoppe, Trevor Alexander 519 Hordge-Freeman, Elizabeth 114 Horgan, Mervyn 203-1 Hormel, Leontina M. 260 Horne, Christine 106-4, 476-16 Horowitz, Adam L. 496 Horowitz, Jonathan 106-15 Horowitz, Veronica L. 256-16 Horvath, Aaron 050-5 Horvitz, Andrew 228-5 Hosman, Sarah S. 360-19 Hosoki, Ralph Ittonen 330-1 Hou, Feng 500 Houston, Derek Anthony 151-1 Houston, Stacey 151-21, 263 Houston, Taylor 038-9, 106-18 Hout, Michael 185, 384

240

Index of Session Participants Hovav, April 025 Howard, Jay R. 049, 228-15 Howard, Kerri Rachelle 445 Howe, Adam Colin 432 Howell, Aaron J. 520-20 Howell, Junia 317 Howell, Kathryn 503 Howells, Stephanie 151-20 Hoy, Aaron Michael 520-17 Hsieh, Michelle Fei-yu 212 Hsieh, Ning 582 Hsin, Amy 027, 068-5 Hsu, Becky Yang 233 Hsu, Carolyn L. 254 Hsu, Chieh 068-2 Hsu, Tze-Li 050-17 Hu, Alexi Tianyang 581-2 Hu, Yanfei 106-14 Hu, Yang 359 Huang, Chih-Chien 411-4 Huang, Elbert S. 098 Huang, Fang-Yi 178-11 Huang, Hwa-Yen 228-6 Huang, Kuo-Ting 398 Huang, Peng 520-3 Huang, Wenxuan 252 Huang, Xiaorui 542 Huang, Yangtao 470 Huante, Alfredo 207, 545-10 Hubbell, Bryan 353 Hudd, Suzanne S. 203-1 Hudson, Cassie 068-1, 367-3 Huebner, Daniel R. 463, 536 Huelskamp, Diane M. 229-5 Huerta-Wong, Juan Enrique 575-2 Huff, Brian 151-30 Hughes, Christina 108, 401 Hughes, Melanie M. 339 Hughes, Susan 178-10 Hughey, Matthew W. 418 Huhn, Merilys 353 Hull, Kathleen E. 028 Hummer, Robert A. 223 Humphreys, Lee 156 Hung, Ho-Fung 275 Hung, Koit 151-17 Hunt, Andrea Nicole 201 Hunter, Marcus Anthony 122 Hupp Williamson, Sarah 356 Hureau, David M. 170 Hurst, Allison L. 113, 575-12 Hurwitz, Joshua M. 360-11, 511-15

Husain, Fauzia Husain, Shariq Husting, Ginna Hutter, Mark Hutter, Michael Huyser, Kimberly R. Huß, Björn Hwang, An Na Hwang, Jackelyn Hwang, Karam Hwang, Maria C. Hwang, Monica Mi Hee Hydaralli, Saeed Hyde, Zachary Hyman, Mikell Alexandra

038-10, 497 368 410 360-18, 520-3 273 178-9, 432 487 181-9 360-17 520-1 451 545-20 360-19 360-7 180-10, 360-11

I Iacobucci, Alaina 105-2 Ian, Van Haren 146 Ibanez, Lindsey M. 443, 575-9 Idnani, Deepa 151-25 Idoko, Onya 511-18 Igarashi, Akira 394 Ikebe, Kazunori 216-6 Ilacqua, Samantha Jo 130-8 Ilten, Carla 038-11, 050-11 Im, Youngjo 151-10 Imai, Hironori 130-3 Imoagene, Onoso Ikphemi 068-9, 198 In, Jung 151-20 Ingram, Paul L. 228-2 Inlow, Alana R. 476-15 Inoue, Hiroko 360-20 Insolera, Noura E. 147-4, 520-19 Iorio, Michael F. 354-10 Irby-Shasanmi, Amy 069 Irizarry, Yasmiyn 059 Irwin, Veronique 151-19 Isaac, Larry W. 106-15 Isengard, Bettina 399 Ishida, Hiroshi 510 Ishioka, Yoshiko 216-6 Ishizaki, Tatsuro 216-6 Ispa-Landa, Simone 074, 114 Israel de Souza, Stefanie 103 Isupova, Olga 450-22 Iturra, Victor 402 Iturriaga, Nicole 464 Itzigsohn, Jose 149 Ivanich, Jerreed Dean 256-13 Iveniuk, James Duncan 098 Ivory, Tristan 135, 172

Iwai, Noriko Iwama, Janice Anne Izienicki, Hubert

268 362 068-6

J Jacinto, Martin 444-19 Jack, Anthony Abraham 010, 151-19 Jackson, Anthony Jerald 050-9, 354-8 Jackson, Aubrey L. 014 Jackson, Beth 493 Jackson, Brandon A. 180-11 Jackson, Christina R. 176, 360-18 Jackson, Margot 376, 520-24, 575-7 Jackson, Pamela Braboy 206 Jackson, Sam 413-5 Jacobs, Anna W. 147-26 Jacobs, Elizabeth 182 Jacobs, Jerry A. 524 Jacobs, Ronald N. 304, 440 Jacoby, Annette 068-10 Jaffe, Kaitlyn 172, 571 Jaffer, Amen 517-5 Jalili, Jaleh 360-20 James, Angela D. 421 James, Sarah 473 Jameson, Cade A. 476-15 Jamil, Cayce 549 Jang, Christine J. 138 Jang, Sung Joon 294-3 Janoski, Thomas Edward 443 Jansen, Robert S. 034 Jansson, Jenny 106-4 Jargowsky, Paul 270 Jaroszewski, Samantha Nicole 030-5 Jarvis, Jonathan A. 151-5, 216-7, 265-1 Jarymowycz, Christina Olha 529 Jasper, James M. 008, 144, 217, 272 Jasso, Guillermina 146, 368 Jaster, Daniel 162 Javadzadeh, Abdy 106-14, 444-4 Javed, Umair 444-6 Javidan, Pantea 499 Jay, Mark 222 Jean, Marshall Ryan 151-22, 151-31 Jefferies, Shanae 354-5, 367-3 Jeffrey, Phyllis Handan 444-12 Jeffrey, Wesley 151-26 Jeffries, Vincent 294-1 Jehn, Anthony 151-20 Jencks, Christopher 417 Jenkins, Austin Abernethy Stimpson 375 Jenkins, J. Craig 325, 435, 512

241

Index of Session Participants Jenkins, Kathleen E. 537 Jenkins, Raymond 256-19 Jenkins, Tania M. 006 Jensen, Jason O. 177 Jensen, Katherine Christine 471 Jensen, Kory J. 467 Jeong, Wonjeong 575-1 Jeske, Melanie 411-4 Jesmin, Syeda S. 147-11, 354-16 Jewell, Babz 354-3 Ji, Yingchun 520-17 Jiang, Jing 353 Jiang, Ting 444-2 Jijon, Isabel 303 Jimenez, Tomas R. 397 Jin, Lei 147-22, 511-15 Jing, Luo 072-1 Jochman, Joseph Charles 517-7 Johnson, Angela 411-2 Johnson, Anthony Matthias 430 Johnson, Arelia R. 354-19 Johnson, Cathryn 008, 321 Johnson, Chelsea Mary Elise 104-1, 105-4, 130-10 Johnson, Erik W. 476-15 Johnson, Heather Beth 265-2 Johnson, Jerry Lynn 575-10 Johnson, Karin A. 068-8 Johnson, Katherine M. 174 Johnson, Keith R. 511-15 Johnson, Moira Pauline 147-4 Johnson, Rebecca Ann 369 Johnson, Sarah R. 322 Johnson, Wendi Leigh 520-18 Johnson, Whitney D. 050-13 Johnson Gaither, Cassandra 072-7 Johnston, Erin F. 205 Johnston, Hank 029 Johnston, Josee 208 Johnstonbaugh, Morgan 035-5 Jones, Afton Jackson 050-20 Jones, Amy Elizabeth 228-7 Jones, Angela 277, 519, 550 Jones, Ann E. 450-18 Jones, Braxton 354-5 Jones, Chelle 181-1 Jones, Ellis 208, 476-12 Jones, Emerald 050-18, 354-13 Jones, James R. 024, 249 Jones, Jason Jeffrey 444-20 Jones, Karen 267 Jones, Leslie 065

Jones, Nicholas A. 353, 545-9 Jones, Nicole E 147-20 Jones, Nikki 485 Jones, Roderick 362 Jones, Stephanie Delise 065 Joniak-Grant, Elizabeth A. 474-4 Joosse, Paul 115 Joppke, Christian 051, 091 Jordan-Young, Rebecca 505 Jorgensen, Abigail 228-12 Jorgenson, Andrew K. 320 Joseph, Lauren J. 581-11 Joseph, Tiffany D. 387, 420 Joshi, Omkar 130-5, 520-18 Joslyn, Jacqueline 564 Joyce, Kelly A. 542 Joyner, Kara 520-13, 520-17 Ju, Daeshin Hayden 216-5, 520-22 Jun, Chaegyung 449 Jung, Jiwook 510, 511-16, 566 Jung, Minwoo 181-4, 220 Jung, Wooseok 472 Jungleib, Lillian Taylor 256-14 Jurado-Guerrero, Teresa 450-22 Juravich, Tom 259-5 Jurevich, Jason 438 Juteau, Danielle 195

K Kabiru, Caroline 520-11, 551 Kade, Tristen 450-20 Kadivar, Ali 512 Kadowaki, Joy 360-20 Kadylak, Travis 398 Kaelber, Lutz 541-2 Kafer, Alison 225 Kahana, Boaz 178-2, 508 Kahana, Eva 178-2, 508 Kahn, Joan R. 252 Kain, Edward L. 048 Kalbfeld, Jessica Rose 151-34, 179 Kalev, Alexandra 175, 406, 555 Kalish, Rachel 016 Kalleberg, Arne L. 345 Kallman, Meghan Elizabeth 106-4, 444-17 Kalman-Lamb, Nathan 142 Kalof, Linda Elizabeth 354-4 Kambara, Kenneth M. 038-4 Kamide, Kei 216-6 Kane, Anne 498 Kane, Melinda D. 580 Kang, Miliann 028, 043

Kang, Youbin 259-6 Kao, Grace 113, 151-13 Kao, Tzuyi 130-9 Kao, Ying-Chao 451 Kaplan, Rami 283 Kappel, Robert 474-4 Karakaya, Yagmur 228-9 Karatasli, Sahan Savas 148, 258 Karell, Daniel 108, 439 Karen, David 505 Karimi, Ahmad (Aryan) 284 Karkal, Shama 059 Karkazis, Katrina 142, 505 Karsak, Baran 106-3 Kashima, Yoshihisa 321 Kashkooli, Keyvan 180-21 Kasinitz, Philip 117 Kass, Dennis 050-8 Kass, Dennis 130-3 Kastoryano, Riva 340 Kasun, Paul 068-8 Katagiri, Shizuko 050-17 Kathiravelu, Laavanya 091 Katic, Ivana 533 Kato, Kelly 466 Kato, Yuki 360-19 Katz, Nathan 050-5 Katz, Sheila M. 494 Katz-Fishman, Walda 049, 260, 353, 354-8 Kauffman, Vanessa Madden 244 Kaufman, Debra 289 Kaufman, Gayle 431 Kaufman, Rebecca 292 Kawaguchi, Daiji 151-6 Kawakami, Atsuko 354-17 Kay, Fiona M. 478 Kay, Tamara 100 Kaya, Yunus 072-6 Kazemian, Lila 296 Kazyak, Emily 034, 081, 581-3 Keahey, Jennifer 035-1 Kearney, Matthew Lawrence 147-9 Kearns, Laurel 197 Keating, Avril 303 Keats-Osborn, William 354-11 Keck, Canada 268 Kefalas, Maria 345 Keidar, Noga 360-1 Keil, Roger 082 Keister, Lisa A. 342, 460 Keith, Shelley 255, 256-18 Keith, Verna M. 147-20, 448

242

Index of Session Participants Keles, Ali Esref 517-10 Keller, Carolyn Smith 180-17 Kelley, C.G.E. 135, 186-3 Kelley, Christopher Patrick 097, 567 Kelley, Jonathan 186-3, 510 Kelley, Kristin Kaye 244, 520-4 Kelley, S.M.C. 135, 186-3 Kelley-Moore, Jessica A. 178-5, 265-1, 293 Kelly, Brian Christopher 474-3, 571 Kelly, Chelsea Rae 097 Kelly, Erin 259-4, 332, 425 Kelly, Kristy 518 Kelly, Maura 327 Kelly, Paige 476-8 Kempner, Joanna 063 Ken, Ivy 149, 297 Kendig, Sarah M. 520-2 Kenn, Kristyn 531 Kenneavy, Kristin 483-6 Kennedy, Emily Huddart 050-3 Kennedy, Sheela 215, 452, 551 Kent, Blake Victor 050-18 Kent, Stephanie L. 047 Kentikelenis, Alexander 071, 096, 211 Keogh-George, Stacy 517-3 Keren, Ran 068-4 Kerr, Brinck 450-8 Kerrissey, Jasmine 297 Kesler, Christel 135, 350 Ketcham, Eric 151-34, 282 Ketchley, Neil 259-9, 512 Khachikian, Oshin 213, 416 Khalil, Hebatallah 036 Khalili, Sheefteh 577 Khalsa, Simranjit 316 Khan, Cristina 263, 450-17 Khan, Kamran 370 Khan, Saeed 040 Khan, Shamus Rahman 010, 342 Kharkhordin, Oleg 005 Khessina, Olga M. 472 Kibria, Nazli 520-8 Kidd, Dustin 002, 229-3 Kidd, Nancy 077 Kietzer, Lisa 461 Kilanski, Kristine 411-8, 443 Kilicaslan, Alaz 576 Kilicaslan, Gülay 575-5 Killewald, Alexandra A. 251 Killian, Mark 516, 517-2 Kim, Anna 511-4 Kim, ChangHwan 393, 428

Kim, Chigon Kim, Debbie Heesun Kim, Eunbi Kim, Harris Hyun-soo Kim, Hosu Kim, Hyejun Kim, Hyun Sik Kim, Jae Kyun Kim, Jaeeun Kim, Ji Hye Kim, Jibum Kim, Jinwon Kim, Joeun Kim, Jungmyung Kim, Keun-Tae Kim, Kwan Woo Kim, Lanu Kim, Minjae Kim, Minjeong Kim, Na Yoon Kim, Namjin Kim, Rebecca Y. Kim, Seokho Kim, Soohan Kim, Soomin Kim, Sunmin Kim, Tami Kim, Yangsook Kim, Yoonjeon Kim, Young K. Kim, Yu-Ri Kimbro, Rachel Tolbert Kimmel, Daniel Mifflin Kimport, Katrina E. Kincaid, John D. Kindel, Alexander King, Andrew King, Brayden G. King, Hayden King, Leslie L. King, Marissa King, Mike King, Molly M. King, Neal King, Sanna King, Valarie Kiper, Jordan Kirby, James B. Kirk, Gabriela Kirkland, Anna Kirley, Michael Kirschbaum, Charles

050-6 151-14 216-1 532 026 143 022, 094 545-11 020 265-3 268 438 450-22 396 022 034 537 369 216-8 321 055 197 268 180-5, 180-7 520-11 213 137 354-18 151-8 331, 354-10 581-10 090 473 156 444-1, 444-3 430 035-4, 511-20 217, 433 120 354-18 019 545-6 411-10 228-5, 450-15 256-8 487 385 268 256-3 374 321 511-18

Kirui, David K. 113 Kissling, Alexandra 414 Kist, Just 023 Kiviat, Barbara 140 Kivisto, Peter 364 Kizer, Jessica 063, 452 Klainot-Hess, Elizabeth Ann 465 Klassen, Aaron J. 228-14 Klassen, Sherri 411-7 Kleemann, Frank 511-1 Klein, Jesse 322 Klein, Josh R. 203-1, 444-16 Klein, Lloyd 256-14, 300-1 Klein, Ofra 029 Klein, Peter Taylor 409 Kleinbaum, Adam M. 478 Kleiner, Sibyl 532 Kleinod, Michael 300-4 Klett, Joseph 228-11, 471 Kleykamp, Meredith A. 132, 511-5 Klinenberg, Eric 455 Klochko, Marianna A. 256-10 Klopack, Eric Thomas 098, 256-1 Kluegel, Alan James 413-6 Kluttz, Daniel N. 180-12, 413-4 Knight, Carly 506, 507-3 Knoester, Chris 396 Knoll, Justin 468 Knoll, Justin 050-18 Knorr Cetina, Karin D. 116 Knudsen, Hannah K. 506 Knudsen, Marcel 511-20 Knudson, Paul Thomas 151-28 Knudson, Sarah 068-15 Ko, Pei-Chun 178-10 Kobayashi, Jun 216-7 Koch, Shelley L. 145-2 Kocijanksi, Meghan 165 Koenig, Matthias 220, 488 Kogan, Irena 068-15 Kohl, Noreen 569 Kohl-Arenas, Erica 490 Kohler, Hans-Peter 414 Kohli, Meenoo 360-2 Kojima, Hiroshi 517-7 Kojola, Erik 482 Kolanoski, Martina 461 Kolb, Kenneth H. 145-2 Koltai, Jonathan Tomas 569 Kolysh, Simone Alexandra 360-15 Konig, Alexandra 205 Konnikov, Alla 032

243

Index of Session Participants Konrad, Thomas R. 147-3 Konya, Sarah 353, 545-9 Koo, Jeong-Woo 181-9 Koontz, Amanda 228-7, 281 Koppelman, Carter M. 072-8 Koppman, Sharon 408, 560 Kopyciok, Svenja 050-20 Korbin, Jill 265-1 Korgen, Kathleen Odell 483-8 Korinek, Kim M. 216-9, 476-18 Kornberg, Dana 180-12, 360-12 Korteweg, Anna C. 481 Korver-Glenn, Elizabeth 103, 360-19 Koslov, Liz 455, 509 Kostko, Aaron 151-18 Kovacs, Balazs 137 Kowaleski-Jones, Lori 147-1 Kowalski, Alexandra Marie 309, 463 Kozimor-King, Michele Lee 229-1, 520-9 Kozlowski, Austin 021 Kozlowski, Karen Phelan 073 Kracke, Nancy 151-10 Kramer, Brandon Lee 031 Kramer, Karen Z. 431, 566 Kramer, Rory 360-17 Kranjac, Ashley Wendell 090, 147-23 Krause, Alexandra 356 Krause, Monika Christine 447, 471 Kreager, Derek 256-21 Kreisberg, Anna Nicole 068-1, 360-16 Krieg, Eric J. 320 Krippner, Greta R. 079 Krishnan, Preethi 212 Kriz, Katrin 367-1 Krlev, Gorgi 038-10, 180-14 Krogh, Marilyn 516 Krogman, Naomi Terese 476-17 Kronberg, Anne Kathrin 446 Kronenfeld, Jennie Jacobs 289 Kroska, Amy 302 Kruger, Rebecca Anne 072-3 Krull, Laura 520-1 Krymkowski, Daniel 151-29 Kucinskas, Jaime 580 Kuhl, Danielle C. 256-12 Kuhlemeier, Alena 432 Kuipers, Giselinde 228-3, 269 Kulpa, Anastasia 151-18 Kumar, Krishan 475 Kumar, Navin 581-7 Kumar, Vinay 038-7, 360-6 Kumral, Sefika 034, 258, 275, 512

Kuperberg, Arielle Kuperberg, Jeremy Kurakin, Dmitry Kural, Melis S. Kurasawa, Fuyuki Kurien, Prema Ann Kurjanska, Malgorzata Kuroshima, Satomi Kurtarir, Erhan Kurtulus, Aysenur Kurtz, Lester R. Kurtz, Mariam M. Kurwa, Rahim Kurzman, Charles Kus, Basak Kusenbach, Maggie Kuurne, Kaisa M. Kwan, Yvonne Y. Kwok, Oi-man Kwon, Hye Won Kwon, Hyeyoung Kwon, Ronald Kwon, Roy Kwon, Seok Woo Kwon, Soyoung Kymlicka, Will König, Ronny

057, 575-2 354-15 228-13 360-2 203-1, 440 163, 215, 370 480 161 068-12 147-19 479-2 479-1 360-10 491 180-2 178-6 360-8 545-15 151-18 567 111, 288 070-2 072-7 180-6 178-7 379 399

L L’Hommedieu, J. Gary Laberge, Elaine J. Laberge, Suzanne LaBriola, Joe Lacayo, Celia Olivia Lachapelle, Francois Joseph Lachmann, Richard Lacomba, Cristina Ladd, Anthony E. Ladegaard, Isak Lagaert, Susan Lageson, Sarah Esther Lagos, Danya Raquel Lahtinen, Hannu Lai, Alden Lai, Gina Lai, Jennifer Lai, Yuen Shan Laidley, Thomas Laird, Jennifer Lakkimsetti, Chaitanya Lam, Ming-Long Lamanna, Mary Ann

050-14 575-12 006 290, 575-9 445, 545-4 411-3 132, 444-19 182, 397 476-5 017 135 093, 134 147-7 444-10 147-25 069, 450-1 147-5, 482 025 090, 360-9 211 254, 451 151-10 239

LAmbert, Ainsley 354-6, 545-11 LAmbert, Nicole 130-2 Lamont, Ellen 247, 462, 497, 529 Lamont, Michèle 005, 076, 077, 116, 153, 154, 192, 231, 269,306, 310, 340, 346, 379, 380, 417, 422, 488 Land, Kenneth C. 246 Landes, Scott D. 147-2, 508 Landivar, Liana Christin 147-26, 511-1 Landolt, Patricia 276, 481 Lane, Jeffrey 156, 398 Lang, Markus 180-1 Lang, Vanessa Wanner 290, 520-16 Lange, Matthew 444-13 Langendoerfer, Kaitlyn Barnes 178-2 Langenkamp, Amy Gill 037, 073, 113, 189 Langlois, Simon 208, 281, 388 Langman, Lauren 260, 318 Lanuza, Yader R. 056, 520-2 LaParo, Kendall 151-1 Laperrière, Marie 111 LaPierre, Tracey A. 147-15 LaPlant, Eric 499 Lappe, Martine 377 Lareau, Annette 116, 436 Larkin, Amber Zappia 331 Larkina, Tatiana 101 LaRossa, Ralph 436, 469 Larsen Gibby, Ashley 216-7 Larson, Eric 106-13 Larson, Ryan P. 470 Laschever, Eulalie Jean 106-5 Laster Pirtle, Whitney Nicole 264, 357, 448 Laszlo, Sonia 551 Latif, Mehr 059 Latoni, Alfonso R. 367-1, 429 Laubepin, Frederique 256-5 Lauderdale, Pat L. 354-14 Laurel-Wilson, Marissa Aida 265-4 Laurent-Simpson, Andrea 186-1 Laurison, Daniel 177, 510 Lauster, Nathanael T. 102, 360-9 Lauterwasser, Steven 038-6 Lauve-Moon, Katie R. 360-4 Lavelle, Kristen 167 Law, Tina 360-21 Lawhorne, Jenelle 324 Lawlor, David 147-10 Lawrence, Bonita 120 Lawrence, Elizabeth 223 Lawrence, Kirk S. 354-1

244

Index of Session Participants Lawrence, Matthew Laxer, Emily J. Laybourn, Wendy Marie Lazar, Hillary Le, Andrew N. Le Bourdais, Celine Le Claire, Matthew M. Le Galès, Patrick Le Moigne, Yohann Leahey, Erin Leal, Diego Leap, Braden Leavell, Virginia Leazes, Francis J. Lechuga, Chalane E. Lederman, Jacob H. Lee, Bo Hyeong (Jane) Lee, Brandon H. Lee, Byungkyu Lee, Caroline W. Lee, Chengpang Lee, Elizabeth M. Lee, Eunji Lee, Francis Lee, Hana Lee, Hedwig Eugenie Lee, Jaein Lee, James Daniel Lee, Jennifer C. Lee, Jennifer Lee, Jenny Lee, Jess Lee, Jina Lee, John Lee, Jooyoung Kim Lee, Juyoung Lee, Kristen Schultz Lee, KyungSook Lee, Marlene A. Lee, Monica Lee, Rennie Lee, Sangjoon Lee, Se Hwa Lee, Subin Lee, Susan Hagood Lee, Tina Ching-Tien Lee, Yean-Ju Lee, Yeon Ju Lee, YeonJin Lee, Yonghoon Lee, Yun-Suk Lee, Yunsub

520-6 168 130-10, 241 144 070-2, 108 520-15 256-9 270, 346 360-11 262 401 476-17 222 547 545-3 181-5, 359 520-1 433, 576 535 468, 501 038-5 021, 151-2 216-6 368 216-1 031, 052 147-22, 216-7 483-10 151-2 007, 068-6 216-5 496 228-10 435 125 360-4 074 282 050-1 390 068-5 180-10 216-8 181-9 450-14 180-18 450-6 444-2, 477 178-11 511-13 216-9 097

Lee, Zong-Rong 180-12 Leech, Tamara G.J. 360-21 Leerkes, Arjen 134 Legette, Kamilah 189 Leggon, Cheryl B. 315 Leguizamon, Amalia 072-3 Lehnerer, Melodye Gaye 483-9 Lehpamer, Nicole 520-14 Lei, Man Kit 147-12 Leia, Madison Paige 031 Leibbrand, Christine 052, 561 Leicht, Kevin T. 477 Leitz, Lisa A. 512 Lekhak, Nirmala 178-2, 508 Lembcke, Jerry L. 479-3 Lembo, Alessandra 395 Lemons, Renee 566 Lena, Jennifer C. 266 Lence, Clare Tobin 147-1 Lendrum, Jenny 450-21 Lengefeld, Michael 476-13 Lengermann, Patricia Madoo 115 Lentz, Carola 317, 381 Lentz, Erin C. 164 Leon, Kenneth Sebastian 297 Leon-Perez, Gabriela 561 Leonard, Samantha 130-8 Leondar-Wright, Betsy 190 Lepadatu, Darina Elena 511-9 Lerch, Julia 354-8 Leschziner, Vanina 021, 143, 395 Leung, Ming De 408 Leupp, Katrina 520-10 Levanon, Asaf 575-3 Levenson, Zachary 527 Leverentz, Andrea M. 093 Levi, Ron 080, 374, 531 Levien, Michael 072-8, 450-21 Levine, Ethan Czuy 450-18 Levine, Judith A. 520-10 Levitt, Peggy 298, 440 Levonyan Radloff, Timothy D. 575-12 Levy, Benjamin 260 Levy, Brian L. 285, 366 Levy, David 444-19 Levy, Gal 151-7 Levy, Karen 372 Levy, Moran 411-5 Lewin, Philip George 501 Lewis, Amanda Evelyn 456 Lewis, Kevin 156, 419 Lewis, Tammy L. 405, 475, 482,

509, 542, 574 Lewis-McCoy, R. L’Heureux 129, 456 Li, Aijia 068-9 Li, Angran 151-4 Li, Haoyue 412 Li, Jenny Xin 216-5 Li, Jialin Camille 028, 450-11 Li, Jian Bai 180-4 Li, Linzhuo 030-1 Li, Lydia 520-14 Li, Miao 147-4 Li, Min 541-2 Li, Ningzi 180-9 Li, Qi 396 Li, Rebecca S.K. 444-2 Li, Shumeng 072-6 Li, Siyu 151-14 Li, Xiao 511-6 Li, Yao-Tai 089, 394 li, Zhonglu 151-11 Liang, Lily 055 Liang, Zai 216-9 Liao, Wenjie 450-1 Liberman, Kenneth B. 329 Lichtenstein, Matty 402 Lichter, Daniel T. 122 Lichterman, Paul R. 480 Lidz, Victor Meyer 038-11 Lie, John 491 Liebbrand, Christine 210 Liebe, Ulf 546 Liebler, Carolyn A. 167 Liebst, Lasse Suonperä 473 Lievanos, Raoul Salvador 476-16, 503 Light, Donald W. 297, 424 Light, Michael T. 134, 474-3 Light, Stephen C. 504 Light-Gibson, Karyn 545-14 Lightman, Naomi 401 Liinamaa, Saara 203-1 Lim, Chaeyoon 100, 253 Lim, Misun 520-22 Limburg, Aubrey 354-5 Lin, Fen 168, 437 Lin, Jan C. 210 Lin, Jean Yen-chun 064 Lin, Jielu 326 Lin, Jonathan 541-4 Lin, Ken-Hou 140, 477 Lin, Le 180-7, 297 Lin, Lefeng 259-8 Lin, Sixian 168

245

Index of Session Participants Lin, Sixian 437 Lin, Syaru Shirley 254 Lin, Thung-Hong 450-14 Lin, Yu-Hsuan 311 Lin, Zhiyong 178-1 Linares Ramirez, Noemi 050-4 Linders, Annulla 105-4 Lindner, Andrew M. 470 Lindquist, Maxwell 030-3 Lindsay, Beverly 151-8 Lindsay, Sade 165 Lingo, Mitchell David 151-2 Link, Bruce G. 147-17 Lipinsky, Anke 450-8 Lippert, Adam Matthew 449 Lippmann, Stephen 467 Lipsman, Jacob 476-9 Lisnic, Rodica 450-8 Lista, Peter 511-15 Litchfield, Robert C. 403 Little, Daniel 572 Littlejohn, Krystale 377 Littleton, Bridget J. 038-3 Liu, Chunyan 300-4 Liu, Hao 520-17 Liu, Hexuan 178-6 Liu, Hui 177, 178-3, 223, 582 Liu, Jia-Lin 027 Liu, Jifan 216-4 Liu, Jinyu 520-14 Liu, Jun 106-12 Liu, Jundai 015 Liu, Ran 151-30 Liu, Ruey-Ying 528 Liu, Ruo-Fan 228-13 Liu, Wenli 151-15, 151-17 Liu, Zhijun 216-9 Lively, Kathryn J. 205 Livingston, Eric 329 Livingston, Kathy 145-3 Livingstone, Anne-Marie Louise 050-12 Livne, Roi 525 Lizardo, Omar A. 075, 341 Lloyd, Richard D. 228-2, 360-8 Lo, Celia C. 072-3, 545-16 Lo, Mbaye 554 Lobao, Linda 360-22, 402 Lockhart, Jeffrey W. 462, 581-10 Loe-Sterphone, Joseph 168, 545-11 Loeb, Susanna 354-9 Loebach, Peter Joseph 476-18 Logan, John R. 360-17

Lom, Stacy E. Lomonosov, Matvey London, Andrew S. Long, Elizabeth Long, Joshua Long, Yan Longest, Kyle Clayton Longhofer, Wesley Longmore, Monica A. Longo, Gina Marie Longo, Stefano B. Lopez, Jane Lilly Lopez, Nancy Lopez, Rodolfo Antonio Lopez, Steven H. Lopez-Sanders, Laura Lorek, Melanie Lotesta, Johnnie Anne Loughran, Kevin P. Loughran, Thomas A. Louie, Patricia Louie, Vivian S. Lounsbury, Michael D. Love, Erik Love, Hannah Beth Love, Tony Loveday, Alyssa Loveman, Mara Lowe, Brian M. Lowe, Maria R. Lowe, Travis S. Lowney, Kathleen Loya, Jose Lu, Wan-Zi Lu, Yunmei Lu, Yuqi Lubin, Judy Lubitow, Amy Lubold, Amanda M. Lucas, Amy Lucas, Jeffrey W. Lucca, Marisa Lucken, Kristen Remington Ludwig, Bernadette Luft, Aliza Lugo, Betsabeth Monica Luhrs, Margarita Camarena Luhtakallio, Eeva Luke, Nancy Lukes, Steven Lukk, Martin Luna, Jessie K

369 507-2 147-2, 520-17 436 438 020, 150 265-5, 517-7 036, 096, 320 256-4 068-3 300-4 020, 288 367-4, 549 106-7 443, 465 242, 358 092 404 013 256-12 024, 466 351 219, 576 024, 173, 282 267 179 476-21 387, 489 323 549 511-14 083, 378 180-2 180-12, 444-2 256-16 399 423 327 147-21 520-2 567 378 517-5 068-3, 360-13 230, 439 367-4 082 444-16 450-22 272, 525 498 502

Lund, Anna Lund, Rebecca Lundberg, Ian Lunn, Anna Lunney, Carole Luo, Jar-Der Luo, Liying Luo, Wei Luo, Xiaoshuang Lurie, Elinore E. Luth, Elizabeth Anne Lutz, Amy Lybbert, Emily Lykke, Lucia Christine Lynch, Michael Lynch, Scott M. Lynn, Freda B. Lynn, Vanessa Lynne, Alyssa A. Lyon, David Lyons, Christopher J. Lê, Jennifer L.

038-9 311 575-6 245 268 216-4 088, 450-1, 568 507-4 265-3, 473 289 178-2 051 467 359 329 223, 301 137 545-14 105-3 235 218 216-5, 517-6

M Ma, Ying 411-8 Ma, Yingyi 151-22, 295 MacColman, Leslie Elva 444-13 MacDonald, Ian 556 MacDonald, Jason A. 545-20 Macias, Thomas 476-9 Macias-Rojas, Patrisia 499 MacIlroy, Kelsea 509 Mack, Johnny J. 435, 479-2 Mack, Karin A. 147-6, 268 MacKendrick, Norah 292 MacKenzie, Nicholas Daniel George 427 Mackin, Robert S. 517-9 MacLean, Alair 151-5 MacLean, Vicky 450-4 MacMillen, Sarah L. 385, 450-4 MacNamara, Jessica 012 Madanipour, Ali 072-5, 444-7 Madden, Janice 360-3 Mader, Sebastian 515 Madero-Cabib, Ignacio 563 Madhavan, Sangeetha 520-11 Madigan, Timothy 216-3 Madigan, Todd 038-6 Madsen, Kimberly 444-14 Madsen, Richard 233 Magee, William 018 Maggio, Christopher 357, 581-7

246

Index of Session Participants Maggor, Erez 283 Maghbouleh, Neda 172, 213 Maginot, Kelly Birch 032 Magliozzi, Devon 499 Magnus, Amy M. 413-2 Magubane, Zine 298 Mah, Alice 482 Mahadeo, Rahsaan 545-17 Mahmud, Hasan 068-2, 072-4 Mahutga, Matthew C. 072-5, 575-8 Mai, Quan Dang Hien 147-26 Maich, Katherine 110, 413-3 Maiers, Claire D’Elia 061 Mair, Christine A. 147-13, 399 Mair, Michael 461 Majumdar, Debarun 450-16 Malancu, Natalia Cornelia 068-15 Malat, Jennifer 147-13 Malczewski, Eric 162 Maldonado, Luis 070-4 Malhaire, Loïc 259-8 Malhotra, Ragini Saira 401 Malin, Stephanie Ann 509 Malinowski Weingartner, Rose 252, 551 Malone, Donal 300-2 Malpica, Daniel Melero 354-3 MAmada, Robert Hideo 578 Maman, Daniel 074 Mamo, Laura 009 Manago, Bianca 248, 448 Mandel, Hadas 324 Mangione, Gemma 266 Manikis, Marie 256-16 Mankel, Michaelyn 228-6 Mann, Alexis 360-2 Mann, Emily S. 377, 486 Mann, Marcus 411-10 Mannay, Dawn 474-3 Manning, Alex 136, 467 Manning, Ryann 106-8 Manning, Wendy Diane 256-4, 520-17 Mansbridge, Jane 488 Manski, Ben 106-5, 444-13 Manski, Sarah Grace 030-6 Mansouri, Vali 250 Manza, Jeff 058 Mao, KuoRay 476-2 Marahrens, Helge Johannes 186-4 Maralani, Vida 118 Marantz, Erez Aharon 170 Marchia, Joseph M. 354-5 Marcussen, Kristen 466, 569

Markens, Susan 025, 060, 101, 174, 292 Markofski, Wes 517-9 Marks, Rachel 577 Marks, Sabrina 378 Marley, Ben 110 Marom, Oded 050-6 Maron, Samuel 106-8 Maroto, Michelle Lee 251, 350 Marquart-Pyatt, Sandra T. 476-12 Marquez-Velarde, Guadalupe 147-20 Marsala, Miles 517-3 Marsden, Peter V. 185 Marsh, Kris 520-3 Marshall, Adj 190 Marshall, Emily A. 094, 220 Marshall, Linroy Joseph 533 Marsteller, Jill 147-25 Marston, Linda L. 203-1 Martel Cohen, Elise 180-1 Marteleto, Leticia 113, 261, 286 Marti, Gerardo 316 Martin, Andrew W. 106-1, 291, 437 Martin, Brittany 256-1 Martin, David A. 030-2 Martin, Isaac William 539 Martin, John Levi 383 Martin, Karin A. 151-32 Martin, Nathan D. 151-6, 202 Martinez, Airin Denise 031 Martinez, Brandon C. 517-7 Martinez, Elisa 471 Martinez, Girsea 068-15 Martinez, Lisa M. 514 Martinez, Maria 106-18, 130-2 Martinez, Matthew James 360-8 Martinez, Ramiro 134, 362 Martinez-Aranda, Mirian Giovanna 068-6 Marwah, Vrinda 142 Marwell, Nicole P. 170 Masood, Syeda Quratulain 168 Massalha, Mohammad Ibrahim 151-7 Massey, Douglas S. 270 Mast, Jason L. 468 Masters, Ryan K. 563 Masui, Yukie 216-6 Mataic, Dane R. 268, 517-2 Matcha, Duane A. 147-8, 178-6 Mathew, Schmidtlein 037 Mathews, Kelly 545-9 Mathias, Autumn 106-13 Maticka-Tyndale, Eleanor 450-6 Matlon, Jordanna Chris 055

Mattes, Seven 104-1 Matthews, Michael 132 Matthews-Vox, Dylan 045 Mattson, Christopher A. 180-13 Mattson, Greggor 403 Mauldin, Laura 225, 520-8 Maull, Amanda E. 106-4 Maume, David J. 396, 431 Mausolf, Joshua 058 May, Matthew 517-1 Mayer, Adam 476-18 Mayer, Brian 319 Mayer, Jean Francois 175 Maynard, Douglas W. 363, 559 Maynard-Moody, Steve 423 Mayne, Patrick 575-14 Mayorga-Gallo, Sarah 147-13, 218 Mazelis, Joan Maya 575-2 McAdam, Douglas 121, 341 McBee, David Jeremy 411-7 McCabe, Brian James 138, 360-5 McCabe, Janice 151-15 McCaffree, Kevin John 256-8, 517-4 McCain, Brandon 280, 315 McCall, James Richard S. 520-2 McCall, Leslie 119 McCallum, Jamie 130-1, 298 McCarthy, John D. 106-6, 538 McCaslin, Brianna 450-19 McCauley, Jaime 411-10 McClelland, Katherine 203-1 McClintock, Elizabeth Aura 450-13, 520-10 McClure, Paul Knowlton 537 McCormick, Jennifer 411-4 McCormick, Lisa 228-14, 412 McCormick, Sabrina 147-5, 285 McCoy, Charles Allan 147-9, 504 McCright, Aaron M. 476-10 McCrosky, Rachael 147-16 McDaniel, Anne 050-9 McDermott, Monica 380, 527 McDonald, Steve 324 McDonald-Harker, Caroline Beth 520-7 McDonnell, Cadhla 529 McDonnell, Erin Metz 019 McDonnell, Terence Emmett 196, 266 McDonough, Shannon Marie 265-2 McElhattan, David 256-4 McElrath, Kevin J. 113 McGee, Julius Alexander 285 McGettigan, Timothy 545-7 McGladrey, Margaret 147-6

247

Index of Session Participants McGloin, Jean 256-18 McGoey, Linsey 490 McInerney, Paul-Brian 180-17, 219 McIntosh, Keith 050-11 McIvor, Mitchell Dean 130-11 McKane, Rachel G. 263, 520-19, 520-8 McKay, Tara A. 519 McKeever, Matthew R. 072-6 McKendry-Smith, Emily 483-7 McKenna, Elizabeth 064 McKernan, Brian 030-5, 227 McKinzie, Ashleigh Elain 354-2 McLanahan, Sara S. 073, 473 McLaren Turner, Claudine D. 545-2 McLaughlin, Heather 105-1 McLeod, Jane D. 453 McLevey, John VP 455 McManus, Patricia A. 032, 068-3 McMillan, Allison 575-2 McMillan, Cassie 151-3, 565 McMillan Lequieu, Amanda 056 McNamara, Kelly 101, 581-3 McNamee, Lachlan 394 McNeely, Andrew Craig 050-14, 517-9 McPike, Jamie Lynn 072-1 McQuarrie, Michael 346, 501 McQuillan, Julia 094, 186-5 McVeigh, Rory M. 044 Meadows, Rachel 147-10 Meagher, Kelsey 575-6 Meanwell, Emily 151-16 Mears, Ashley E. 180-11, 383 Medley-Rath, Stephanie 504, 558 Medved Kendrick, Haley 130-12, 517-3 Medvetz, Thomas M. 382 Medwinter, Sancha Doxilly 406 Meehan, Albert J. 559 Meeker, Barbara F. 097 Meekins, Kelsey 268 Meetun, Cavita Devi 180-21 Mehta, Jal D. 382, 430 Mehta, Sharan Kaur 484 Meier, Ann 248 Mejia, Angie Pamela 277 Melamed, David M. 335 Mele, Christopher 360-10, 360-6 Melldahl, Andreas 251 Melvin, Jennifer E. 573 Melzer, Silvia Maja 257, 561 Mena Melendez, Lucrecia 265-4 Menchik, Daniel A. 006, 147-10 Mendenhall, Ruby 151-27, 566

Mendez, Maria-Luisa 041 Menger, Pierre-Michel 383 Menjivar, Cecilia 182, 552 Menon, Alka 410, 545-13 Menze, Laura 151-10 Mercado-Diaz, Mario 068-14 Mercier, Marie-Dumesle 035-4 Merhout, Friedolin 242 Merriman, Benjamin 383 Mesch, Gustavo S. 030-4, 434 Messerschmidt, James W. 339 Messineo, Melinda Jo 201, 305 Messner, Michael A. 425, 523 Meszaros, Julia 032, 581-4 Metzger, Ashley Noel 106-16 Metzger, Kelsey J. 151-18 Meyer, Jess M. 520-6 Meyer, John W. 269 Meyer, Katherine 268 Meyers, Marcia 402 Meyers, Nathan 297 Miao, Jia 147-19 Miceli, Marcia 256-10 Michaels, Erin 151-7 Michalowski, Ines 517-5 Michelson, Anna 336 Michelson, William 360-4, 509 Mickelson, Roslyn A. 354-9, 549 Mickey, Ethel 450-7 Mickey-Pabello, David Antonio 520-3 Migliaccio, Todd Anthony 037 Mikulyuk, Ashley 151-13 Mildenberger, Georg 180-14 Miles, Andrew 088 Milkie, Melissa A. 290, 431 Milkman, Ruth 077 Miller, Alexander 147-22 Miller, Amanda Jayne 256-11, 520-16 Miller, Andrea D. 038-8 Miller, Brennan J. 354-6 Miller, Brian J. 030-2 Miller, Elizabeth 562 Miller, Gabe 545-5 Miller, Graham 137 Miller, Laura J. 188, 208 Miller, Lisa Renee 178-10 Miller, Paula K. 035-9, 147-6 Miller, Reuben 296 Miller, Rhiannon 520-1 Miller, Sarah A. 450-20 Miller, Ty 134, 474-3 Miller-Idriss, Cynthia 106-6, 491

MillerMacPhee, Alice 151-12 Milloy, M-J 571 Mills, Meghan L. 541-3 Milman, Noriko 216-5 Milnes, Travis 511-7, 542 Milton, Trevor Brendon 203-1, 256-13 Min, Jie 151-13, 216-2 Min, Pyong Gap 139, 216-5 Min, Sarah 511-9 Min, Stella 018 Minaker, Joanne 470 Miner, Michael 151-14 Miner, Skye 147-15, 450-5 Miner, Zachary 256-7 Mingo, Meaghan 177 Minkus, Lara 444-12, 511-6 Mintz, Beth 151-29 Mireles, Amanda A. 095 Miric, Natasha 476-4 Mirola, William A. 197 Mironova, Anna 520-20 Mirzaie, Seyyed Ayatollah 502 Mische, Ann 078, 160, 480 Mishel, Emma 581-9 Misra, Joya 043, 401 Mitchell, Colter 031, 067, 568 Mitchell, Jade 509 Mittleman, Joel 151-32 Miwa, Satoshi 510 Mize, Trenton D. 448, 581-12 Mizruchi, Mark S. 533 Mo, Guang Ying 398 Mo, Li 520-20 Moaddel, Mansoor 450-17 Mobley, Catherine 483-8 Modi, Radha 265-4, 481 Modile, Adenife 228-13, 354-17 Modood, Tariq 340 Modrek, Sepideh 510 Moen, Phyllis 332, 520-13 Mogosanu, Andreea 035-4, 178-9 Mohamed, Besheer 040 Mohammed, Jihan Abdullah 130-6 Mohr, Anna 362 Mohr, John W. 042, 390 Mojola, Sanyu A. 150, 349 Molina, Carolina 106-16 Molina, Santiago José 334, 411-5 Molinaro, Dennis 413-1 Molinero, Yoan 182 Mollborn, Stefanie 090, 226, 563 Moller, Stephanie 151-12

248

Index of Session Participants Molnar, Virag 273 Moloney, Mairead Eastin 356, 483-7 Molotch, Harvey L. 438 Monaghan, David B. 151-20 Monden, Christiaan 414 Mondragon, Elver 130-1 Monforte, Pierre 370 Monk, Ellis Prentis 264 Monk, Ellis 079 Monson, Renee A. 504 Montazer, Shirin 050-18 Montes, Veronica 068-2, 139, 442 Montes, Vince 300-1 Montez, Jennifer Karas 223 Montgomery, Alesia 360-14 Montgomery, Scott K. 395 Montgomery, Sidra J. 508 Montgomery, William 360-6 Moody, James 535, 565 Moody, Myles 508 Mook, Anneloes 444-6 Moon, Dawne 415 Moon, Minyoung 106-13 Moon, Sue H. 511-5 Mooney, Hailey 353 Mooney, Heather 353 Moore, Brandon James 147-16 Moore, Jason W. 110, 171, 354-1 Moore, Kelly 106-8, 259-7 Moore, Kelly 035-2, 331 Moore, Mignon R. 009 Moore, Ravaris LaDale 151-23 Moore, Sara Brooke 203-1, 450-11 Moore, Wendy Leo 418 Mora, G. Cristina 232 Moraes D. Silva, Graziella 154, 236 Morales, Danielle Xiaodan 411-6, 476-6 Morales Sod, Gabriel 132 Moran, Catherine L. 147-22, 228-4, 240 Moran, Rachel Elizabeth 444-8 Moras, Amanda 473 Morash, Merry 164 Morgan, Melanie 474-3 Morimoto, Shauna A. 534 Morning, Ann J. 344, 492 Morosin, Alessandro 070-3, 432 Morrell, Erica 476-11 Morris, Aldon D. 192 Morris, Edward W. 179 Morris, Jerome Ellis 545-1, 575-10 Morris, Theresa 101 Morrison, Daniel Ray 536

Morton, Christine H. 025, 101 Morton, Katherine Ainsley 035-5, 463 Morton, Patricia M. 178-8 Mosbah-Natanson, Sebastien 364 Moss, Dana M. 029, 181-3 Moss, Geoffrey 360-1 Moss, Sonita 066, 545-12 Mosseri, Sarah Elizabeth 194 Mota, Rafael 035-1 Mott, Michelle Lea 575-11 Mottier Lopez, Lucie 193 Moullin, Sophie Clare 575-4 Moussawi, Ghassan 486 Mouw, Ted 175, 428 Mouzon, Dawne M. 448, 569 Mowry, Robert William 106-2, 528 Moye, Richard Greg 360-17, 360-4 Mozumder, Pallab 147-5 Mudge, Stephanie L. 046, 232 Mueller, Anna S. 347 Mueller, Collin William 215 Muis, Jasper 029, 030-7 Mukerji, Chandra 188 Mulas, Marta 023 Mullen, Ann L. 228-2 Muller, Chandra 177, 560 Muller, Christopher Michael 568 Mullins, Ian 480 Mun, Eunmi 369, 511-4, 566 Mundey, Peter John 030-2 Munger, Frank 365 Muniz, Ana 423 Muniz, Janet 407 Munoz, Lidia Esther 182 Munsch, Christin L. 054, 095, 166, 244, 286, 460, 511-7 Munson, Ziad W. 029 Muraco, Anna 018 Murase, Yoichi 216-7 Murga, Aurelia Lorena 366 Murillo, Monica 130-10 Murphy, Bell Alicia 450-4 Murphy, Chantrey J. 321 Murphy, James 265-3 Murphy, Jennifer M. 256-8 Murray, Brittany C. 189 Murray, Gregor 556 Murray, Ira Emil 151-31 Murray, Joshua 533 Murry, Velma McBride 421 Musaji, Serghei 284 Musick, Kelly 248

Musselin, Christine Mustillo, Sarah Musto, Michela Muthuri, Stella Muñiz, Michael De Anda Myers, Justin Sean Myers, Kit Mykhalovskiy, Eric

192 147-27 460 551 207, 547 476-11 174 311

N Nadler, Christina 038-3 Nagano, Tomonori 151-34 Nagaoka, Jenny 113 Nagel, Sebastian 106-4, 180-7 Nagle, Nicholas N. 511-18 Nakagawa, Mana 151-18 Nakagawa, Takeshi 216-6 Nakajima, Seio 228-4 Nakamura, Tomoyasu 429 Nakano, Dana Y. 089 Nakao, Keiko 050-15 Nalley, Jakob 509 Namaganda, Assumpta 263 Nanney, Megan 090 Nanni, Antonio 360-17, 511-13 Naples, Nancy A. 263, 534 Narisada, Atsushi 186-3 Nash, Shondrah Tarrezz 050-20 Naslund, Cambria 147-8 Nath, Saheli 180-8 Nations, Jennifer Marie 151-29 Natter, Katharina 068-8 Nau, Michael David 180-8 Nau, Mike 460 Naudet, Jules 381 Nault, Jean-Francois 545-18 Naus, Wendy 202, 422 Navot, Edo 328 Nawrotzki, Raphael J. 108 Nawyn, Stephanie J. 282 Nayak, Manan 147-20 Nazareno, Jennifer 295, 539 Nazif-Muñoz, José Ignacio 450-19 Near, Christopher 487 Near, Janet P. 256-10 Neely, Megan Tobias 450-7, 523 Neff, Timothy 412 Negraia, Daniela Veronica 290 Neitz, Mary Jo 200 Nelan, Mary 319 Nelson, Alondra 192, 372, 422, 492 Nelson, Jon Mikael 476-3

249

Index of Session Participants Nelson, Laura K. 390 Nemoto, Kumiko 450-12, 511-10 Neocosmos, Michael 552 Nerenberg, Kiara Millay 503 Neri, Hugo 038-11, 411-1 Nestor, Franchesca 545-20 Neuman, W. Lawrence 216-7 Nevarez, Leonard 023, 438 Neville, Joanna W. 060 Nevin, Andrew David 030-8 Newell, Jennifer C. 050-20 Newman, Alyssa Marie 167 Newman, Harmony Danyelle 450-11 Newman, Katherine Shelley 192 Newman, Simeon J. 361 Newson, Janice 311 Nguyen, Cam 106-13 Nguyen, Chi 216-8 Nguyen, Emerald Thai Han 139 Nguyen, Holly 256-12, 256-3 Nguyen, Jenny 545-10 Niazi, Tarique 180-19, 300-4 Nicholls, Walter Julio 367-1 Nichols, Clinton 203-1 Nichols, Lawrence T. 483-5 Nichols, Marcia 151-18 Nicholson, Daniel Adam 545-11 Nicholson, Michael David 370 Nicklett, Emily Joy 215 Nickow, Andre Joshua 072-8 Niebrugge-Brantley, Jill 115 Niedt, Christopher 360-9 Nielsen, Kelly J. 162, 553 Niemeier, Debbie 429 Nieri, Tanya A. 256-18 Nieuwbeerta, Paul 296 Nikolaou, Jaime 025 Niner, Hanna 577 Nippert-Eng, Christena 228-11 Nishizaka, Aug 363 Nix, Amanda 178-3 Nix, Jack 450-15 Noah, Aggie Jooyoung 202, 575-6 Nobles, Allison 518 Nobles, Jenna 088, 500 Noiseux, Yanick 259-8 Nolan, Brian 510 Nolan, Bridget Rose 511-11 Noll, Andrea 317 Nomaguchi, Kei 248, 290, 582 Nordmeyer, Kristjane 050-10 Nordquist, Michael 476-7

Norgaard, Kari Marie Norris, Dawn R. Nour, Daoud Noureldin, Laila Novoselova, Olga A. Nowotny, Kathryn M. Noy, Shiri Nunez, Adriana Nuyts, Nathalie Nyamnjoh, Francis

050-3 389 039 397 137 256-19, 473 150, 209 247 502 552

O O’Brien, Angie 151-27 O’Brien, Eileen 190 O’Brien, Jodi 129 O’Brien, John 198, 517-8 O’Brien, Kelly 104-1, 505 O’Brien, Laureen K. 259-2, 511-10 O’Brien, Michelle Esther 169, 360-22 O’Brien, Michelle L. 568 O’Brien, Timothy L. 413-4 O’Connor, Carla Dawn 456 O’Connor, John 106-8, 513 O’Connor, Lindsey Trimble 166, 511-7 O’Connor Shelley, Tara 267 O’Hara, Holly 549 O’Neill, Karen 476-12 O’Reilly, Jacqueline 354-4 Oakes, Michael 551 Oberlin, Kathleen C. 228-11, 278 OBrien, Rourke Liam 056, 140 Obstfeld, David 511-4 Obukhova, Elena 478 Ocampo, Angie Nathaly 068-6 Ocejo, Richard E. 560 Ochoa, Analidis 138 Ochoa, Gilda Laura 207, 280, 530 Ocobock, Abigail Ruth 057, 081, 462, 496 Oehmen, Nicole M. 256-17 Oeur, Freeden 149 Ogunjimi, Sunday Idowu 575-9 Oh, Byeongdon 182 Oh, Changdong 444-20 Oh, Eunsil 520-18, 551 Oh, Hyeyoung 101 Oh, Joohyun 030-4 Oh, Sang Teck 099 Oh, Sookhee 216-9, 295 Ohk, Jeonghye 520-21 Ohtsuki, Shigemi 354-16 Oishi, Nana 216-2 Okamoto, Dina G. 068-11

Okigbo, Karen 129, 204 Okura, Keitaro 216-1 Okuwobi, Oneya Fennell 141 Oladayo, Ajala Abiodun 575-9 Olafsdottir, Sigrun 150, 209, 358 Oleschuk, Merin 281 Olick, Jeffrey K. 053 Oliver, Pamela E. 059 Ollier-Malaterre, Ariane 524 Olson, Kathryn Ann 405 Ono, Hiroshi 151-6 Orionzi, Dimpho 147-25 Orkodashvili, Mariam 151-14 Orloff, Ann Shola 122, 402, 539, 570, 572 Orne, Jason 237, 360-8 Orr, Rebekah 462 Orrico, Laura A. 360-12 Ortega, Francesc 027 Ortiz, Cristina Marie 167 Ortiz, David G. 030-2 Ortiz, Vilma 207 Ortiz Ortiz, Roberto Jose 300-4 Orum, Anthony M. 327 Orzechowicz, David 144 Osborne, Melissa 210 Oser, Carrie B. 474-2, 506 Osgood, D. Wayne 151-3 Osinsky, Pavel I. 507-2 Ostergren, Jenny 411-4 Ostertag, Stephen F. 228-12 Osuji, Chinyere 421, 545-19 Oszkay Febres-Cordero, Yotala 105-4 Otero, Carolina 151-11, 520-1 Outland, Sarah A. 460 Overmyer-Velazquez, Mark 276 Ovink, Sarah M. 014, 052, 090 Oware, Matthew 545-5 Owen, Andrew Lowell 444-16 Owen-Smith, Jason 099, 287 Owens, Ann 270, 393 Owens, Jayanti Johanna 073 Owens, Jennifer Gatewood 474-3 Owens, Kellie 028 Owusu-Bempah, Akwasi 350 Ozawa, Wataru 500 Ozgen, Zeynep 220 Ozgenc, Basak 138

250

Index of Session Participants P Pace, Jennifer Ann 073, 090 Pacewicz, Josh 100, 436 Pachucki, Mark C. 419 Pack, Andrew 180-13 Packer, Beth D. 518 Padamsee, Tasleem Juana 147-10, 184, 439 Padolsky, Miriam 411-7, 476-21 Pagis, Michal 465, 580 Pahk, Sang-hyoun 208 Paik, Anthony 090 Pain, Emily 581-6 Paine, Emily Allen 147-16 Paino, Maria T. 151-14 Pais, Jeremy 360-16 Paixão, Marcelo JP 151-34, 180-18 Pak, Sunjin 431 Palmer, Jamie Lynn 444-11, 450-4 Palmer, Zachary D. 450-10 Pals, Heili 093, 450-17 Pan, Yung-Yi Diana 035-1, 545-3 Pandian, Roshan Kumar 220 Pang, Alexis 253 Panofsky, Aaron 372, 413-4, 502 Pantaleon, Jorge 276 Pantumsinchai, Penn 323 Papachristos, Andrew V. 256-20, 511-17 Papadantonakis, Max 469 Pape, Madeleine 100, 377 Paradies, Yin Carl 035-2 Parajuli, Jyotsana 072-3 Parbst, Matthew 444-15 Parcel, Toby L. 354-9, 392 Pardo-Guerra, Juan Pablo 502 Paredes, Cristian Luis 068-1, 545-5 Paret, Marcel 444-5 Paretskaya, Anna 106-18, 501 Parham, Angel Adams 249 Park, Arum 030-3 Park, Bo Yun 346, 468 Park, Dong-woo 444-12 Park, Hyun Ok 216-4 Park, Hyunjoon 151-13 Park, Ju Hyun 228-4 Park, Kendall Cox 137 Park, Keumjae 354-3 Park, Ki Tae 450-6 Park, Kiwoong 151-11, 575-14 Park, Sangyoub 050-15 Park, Soon Seok 216-9 Park, Sung S. 487, 563

Park, Sung-Choon Park, Tina M. Parker, Brandy R. Parker, Emily Anne Parker, Jeffrey Nathaniel Parker, Karen F. Parker, Rachel Parkin, William Parks, Virginia Parolin, Zachary Parrenas, Rhacel Salazar Parris, Christie L. Parsons, Ryan James Parthesius, Robert Partridge, Mark Parvez, Fareen Paré, Dylan Paschel, Tianna S. Pasciuti, Daniel Pascoe, C.J. Paskett, Electra D Paskov, Marii Patch, Jason Patel, Visha Paternoster, Ray Paterson, Mark W. D. Patil, Vrushali Patler, Caitlin Patrick, Mary Patros, Tyson Patterson, Evelyn Joy Patterson, Matt Patterson, Orlando Pattison, Evangeleen Paugam, Serge Paul, Herman Pavasovic Trost, Tamara Pavicevic, Yanko Pawson, Mark Paxton, Pamela M. Payne, Connie Payne, Corey R. Payne, Yasser A. Peabody, Janaina Saad Peale, Farris Pearce, Diana M. Pearce, Lisa D. Pearce, Matthew Pearce, Susan C. Pearson, Jennifer Pearson, Willie Peavey, Alyssa

545-3 411-9 098, 256-3 057, 131 360-8 362 503 256-12 259-10 406 237, 485 321 228-13, 515 309 402 554 190 024, 269 148 054, 158, 277 147-10 510, 532 360-6 151-12 256-12 228-15, 411-9 181-1, 258, 486 128, 443 414 444-5 024 360-1 007, 373 151-20 119 572 053 068-2 147-16 564 050-20 148 360-14 444-8 130-9 575-3 520-1 228-1 279 178-3 315 288

Pecenco, Laura 035-9 Pech, Corey 259-3 Pedersen, Daphne 354-12 Pedersen, Ove 046 Pedulla, David 396 Peek, M. 147-13 Peery, Destiny 344 Pei, Tong 474-4 Peirce, Jennifer 256-11 Pelton, Julie 391 Pena, Anthony 151-21 Pena, Milagros 274 Pena-Talamantes, Abraham E. 178-3 Peng, Chenhong 575-1 Peng, Ruijie 130-7 Peng, Thomas 511-21 Penn, Daphne Michelle 151-27 Penner, Andrew 172 Penner, Anna 014 Penner, Emily K. 354-9 Penta, Samantha 319 Penzkofer, Megan 147-10 Peoples, Crystal 050-20 Pepin, Joanna 247, 452 Percheski, Christine M. 520-9 Perdue, Robert Todd 537 Perera, Isabel M. 404 Pereyra, Omar 381 Perez, Amin 334 Perez, Joanna B. 442 Perez, Marcos Emilio 501 Perez, Victor W. 240, 444-8 Perkins, Kristin 520-11 Perkins, Tracy 476-6 Perlstadt, Harry 536, 579 Pernell, Kim 328 Perone, Angela 520-14 Perrin, Andrew J. 308, 390 Perrucci, Robert 289 Perry, Brea Louise 287, 474-2, 541-2 Persons, Emily 189, 511-20 Pesando, Luca 414 Pescosolido, Bernice A. 154, 347, 453 Pessin, Léa 520-1 Peterlin, Laveda J. 030-3 Peters, Benjamin Liam 072-5 Peters, Kim 321 Peterson, Christine 561 Peterson, Gretchen 186-1, 253 Petre, Caitlin 470 Pettinicchio, David Nicholas 350, 540 Petts, Richard J. 147-14, 396

251

Index of Session Participants Peña, Jessica Elaine 167, 520-3 Peña-Alves, Stephanie 092 Pfaffendorf, Jessica Ann 187 Pfau-Effinger, Birgit 570 Pfeffer, Carla A. 248 Pfeffer, Fabian T. 251, 312 Pharris, Mark H. K. 038-2 Phelan, Jessica 577 Phelps, Michelle S. 371 Philips, Miray Hany Wadie 053 Phillips, Erica 050-9, 433 Phillips, Jason B. 256-21 Phillips, Julie A. 347 Phillips, Lora A. 180-8, 465 Phillips, Nolan 535 Phillipson, Chris 326 Piché, Victor 195 Pickett, Robert 172 Piehowski, Victoria I. 413-5 Pierce, Kayla Danielle Russell 290, 520-13 Pierson, Paul 270, 346 Piggot, Georgia 476-12 Pike, Diane L. 229-2, 239 Pilnick, Alison 161 Pinar, Candas 529 Pineros Shields, Thomas 520-21 Ping, Ping 354-16 Pingel, Emily S. 184 Pinheiro, Diogo Lemieszek 411-7 Pinzur, David L. 180-7 Piotrowski, Martin P. 245 Pirkey, Melissa Fletcher 511-9 Pitluck, Aaron Z. 328 Pittman, Cassi L. 066 Pittman, Chavella T. 084 Pitzer, Heidi Katherine 151-33 Pivnick, Lilla 014, 187 Pizarro Milian, Roger 151-22, 511-11 Plaisime, Marie 050-16 Plante, Charles 180-6, 185 Plater, Allister Pilar 228-6 Plikuhn, Mari 229-1 Ploder, Andrea 559 Plough, Alonzo 382 Plummer, Samantha Snow 534 Polgar, Michael F. 151-7 Polillo, Simone 328 Polk, Brian Kelly 507-3 Polletta, Francesca 026, 304, 553 Pollmann-Schult, Matthias 487 Ponce, Aaron 213 Ponce, Adriana 520-1

Ponce, Ninez Poon, Hannah L. Popielarz, Pamela A. Porcelli, Apollonya Maria Porter, Lauren Portes, Alejandro Posey-Maddox, Linn Potter, Daniel J. Potvin, Sophie Pourtaher, Elham Powell, Brian Powell, Walter W. Powers, Bradford Powers, Ráchael Pragacz, Andrew J. Pragg, Brianne Prasad, Anshuman Prasad, Pushkala Prata, Ana Pratt, Beverly M. Pratt, Tia Noelle Prechel, Harland Preda, Alex Preiss, Doreet Rebecca Preito-Hodge, Kayla A. Pren, Karen A. Press, Alex Natasha Press, Andrea Presser, Lois Preteceille, Edmond Preves, Sharon Prew, Paul Pribesh, Shana Lee Price, Heather E. Price-Spratlen, Townsand Prickett, Kate C. Prickett, Pamela Pridemore, William Alex Prieto, Samuel Gregory Prince, Barbara F. Prince, Janis Pristavec, Teja Pritchard, Paul Proctor, Michelle Marie Proença, Adriano Puckett, Cassidy Pudrovska, Tetyana Puetz, Kyle Pugh, Allison Pugliese, Maude Pullum, Amanda Pullés, Stephanie A.

131 072-3 511-12 476-1 186-2 297 545-20 520-7 299 228-6, 353 081, 151-16 099 360-4 134 110 265-1, 396 180-17 180-17 513 545-9 548 320 328 037 371 268 444-15 336, 521 080 270 550 222 216-7, 265-1 469, 511-16 517-6, 545-12 290, 520-6 040 362 106-11, 106-14 520-17, 520-9 190 069 068-13 062, 352 472 411-2 286 143, 228-3 194, 425 257 106-7, 259-5 511-7

Pultz, Sabina Pulver, Simone Pupo, Norene Puri, Jyoti Purrier, Morgan Robert Purser, Gretchen Pyke, Karen D. Pyles, Micah Anthony Pârvulescu, Radu Andrei

443 320 259-3 486, 550 247 527 216-1 476-4 481

Q Qian, Hui 145-2 Qian, Yue 246, 359 Quadlin, Natasha 113 Quamruzzaman, Amm 444-13 Quan-Haase, Anabel 030-2, 165, 323, 398, 470 Quark, Amy Adams 212 Quesnel-Vallee, Amelie 246, 432, 493 Quillian, Lincoln G. 360-17 Quinn, Rand 216-8 Quinn, Sarah 056, 180-20 Quinsaat, Sharon 437 Quirke, Linda 511-11 Quiroz, Christopher 450-13, 520-13 Quisumbing King, Katrina 249 Qvist, Hans-Peter Yogachandiran 545-8

R Rabb, Brittany R. 265-1 Rabii, Watoii 360-15 Radaev, Vadim 145-3, 180-20 Radcliff, Benjamin 233 Raddon, Mary-Beth 180-16 Rademacher, Heidi E. 072-2 Radford, Alexandria 151-9 Radhakrishnan, Smitha 164, 298 Radonic, Lucero 509 Rafail, Patrick 538 Rafalow, Matt 037, 452 Ragnarsdottir, Berglind 520-16 Rahman, Md. Mosfequr 147-11 Rainey, Anthony 511-8 Rainock, Meagan 180-13 Rajagopalan, RAmya Madhavan 147-8 Rajasekar, Neeraj 353, 545-7 Raker, Ethan 319 Raley, Gabrielle 038-8 Raley, Kelly 520-23 Rambotti, Simone 147-17 Ramirez, Christian 545-2

252

Index of Session Participants Ramirez, Edith 450-3 Ramirez, Esmeralda 571 Ramirez, Francisco O. 307 Ramirez, Michael Eddie 505 Ramirez, Nayan 050-12 Ramirez Smith, Daniel Nicholas 068-12, 252 Ramos, Howard 009, 455 Ramos Flor, Maria Cristina 294-1 Randell, Richard 186-2 Randles, Jennifer 460, 520-5 Ranganathan, Aruna 212 Rangel, Guadalupe 130-12 Rankins, Noah 050-13 Rao, Aliya Hamid 415, 436 Raoult, Sacha 256-16 Raphael, Lutz 540 Raphael, Michael W. 186-2, 413-4 Rasit, Huseyin Arkin 106-6 Rasmussen, Annette 151-25 Rastogi, Ankit 130-9 Ratcliff, Shawn M. 106-14, 581-12 Raub, Werner 546 Rautalin, Marjaana 188 Rawls, Anne Warfield 161, 461, 495, 528, 559 Ray, Abhik 068-15 Ray, Allison 130-3 Ray, Colleen 094, 186-5 Ray, Dean R. 300-1 Ray, Ranita 430 Ray, Victor E. 141, 545-7 Raymo, James M. 178-7 Raymond, Chase Wesley 495 Raymond, Chris A. 353 Raymond, Geoffrey 329 Rea, Chris M. 180-18 Read, Jen’nan G. 453, 548 Reason, Max 147-13 Rechitsky, Raphi 444-11 Recksiedler, Claudia 178-3 Reczek, Corinne 081, 146, 326 Redbird, Beth 371 Redford, Jeremy 151-16 Redman, Jonathan Nathaniel 106-17 Reece, Robert L. 280 Reed, Allison 360-13 Reed, Holly E. 068-5, 245 Reed, Isaac Ariail 191, 572 Reed, Nathan 228-7 Reese, Ellen R. 259-10 Reeves, Aaron 428 Regas, Sam William 021

Reger, Jo 538 Rehkopf, David 510 Reibstein, Sarah 259-4 Reich, Adam D. 064, 259-4, 424 Reich, Jennifer A. 308, 358, 485 Reich, Robert 522 Reichelmann, Ashley Veronica 478 Reichelt, Malte 151-10 Reid, Keshia 018 Reid, Megan 520-7 Reidinger, Bobbi 248 Reinardy, Scott 030-3 Reineke, Martha J. 267 Reis, Elisa P. 119, 417 Rek-Wozniak, Magdalena 360-22 Reling, Timothy 403 Remster, Brianna 095 Ren, Chunhui 545-12 Ren, Qiang 216-9 Ren, Xuefei 360-12 Rendall, Michael S. 359 Rennick, Elizabeth A. 354-10 Renzetti, Claire M. 011, 485 Renzulli, Linda 011, 189 Reosti, Anna 374 Repchuck, Ruth 466 Ressler, Robert Wayne 113, 564 Restifo, Salvatore J. 444-1 Reuning, Kevin 255 Revers, Matthias 412, 446 Revier, Kevin 374 Reyes, Victoria 180-21, 258, 309, 359 Reyes-Foster, Beatriz M. 292 Reynolds, Amy Michelle 072-2 Reynolds, Celene Raymer 450-8 Reynolds, Edward John 228-12 Reynolds, John 151-14 Reynolds, Megan M. 033, 209 Reynolds, Robert 177 Reynolds-Stenson, Heidi 511-8, 538 Rezac, Sandra 504 Rho, Hye Jin 408 Rhoden, Stuart 265-2 Rhodes, Anna Catherine 151-4 Rhodes, James 360-2 Rhodes, Robert Colbert 354-19 Rhomberg, Chris 183, 221, 258, 299 Rhoton, Laura 560 Rice, Jennifer 438 Richards, Lindsay 532 Richards, Marcus 301 Richards, Patricia 059

Richardson, James T. 200 Richardson, Lindsey 493, 571 Richer, Zach 017, 136 Richman, Judith A. 203-1, 508 Richter, Jasmin Pritha 161 Richter, Lauren 285, 545-4 Ricucci, Roberta 517-5 Riegle-Crumb, Catherine 073 Rieker, Patricia P. 493 Riel, Virginia 392 Rigg, Khary K. 474-4 Rigles, Bethany 090 Rikard, RV 398 Riley, Alicia 147-23 Riley, James Whitcomb 180-14 Rilinger, Georg 536 Rinaldo, Rachel A. 518, 554 Rincón, Lina 530 Ring-Ramirez, Misty Dawn 106-10 Riordan, Christine A 259-2 Rios, Victor M. 045, 218, 331, 407, 442 Riosmena, Fernando 206 Rippel, Ryan 522 Risman, Barbara Jane 123 Ritter, Lacey 178-3 Rivera, Fernando I. 207, 429 Rivera, Lauren 010, 555 Roach, Teresa 178-3 Roberto, Elizabeth 088, 360-17 Roberts, Cheryl A. 151-24 Roberts, Christopher Nigel 155, 447 Roberts, Derek 228-10, 360-5 Roberts, Dorothy E. 492 Roberts, Evan 147-24, 354-4 Roberts, Helen Christie 130-6 Robertson, Cassandra 140, 575-14 Robertson, Roland 181-7 Robertson, Shanthi 216-8 Robins, Garry 321 Robinson, Brandon Andrew 519 Robinson, Bryan K. 229-4, 459 Robinson, Candice C. 354-9, 514 Robinson, Dawn T. 160 Robinson, Ellen 178-2 Robinson, J. Gregg 183 Robinson, Joan H. 377 Robinson, John N. 170 Robinson, John P. 520-22 Robinson, Laura 398, 434 Robinson, Megan 360-14 Robinson, Rachel Sullivan 036, 519 Robinson, Robin Renée 575-10

253

Index of Session Participants Robison, Kristopher K. 512 Robnett, Belinda 291, 514 Robson, Karen 113 Rocha Beardall, Theresa 256-20 Rochmes, Jane E. 354-9 Rodeo, Edgardo 427 Rodis, Paulina dela Cruz 151-3 Rodriguez, Cassaundra 288 Rodriguez, Cody Carlos 130-9 Rodriguez, Heather 147-11, 360-4 Rodriguez, Liliana V. 442 Rodriquez, Jason 511-20 Rodríguez-Muñiz, Michael 058, 078 Roesch-McNally, Gabrielle E. 476-10 Roesler, Katharina 397 Rogalin, Christabel L. 567 Rogers, Anna Sheree 520-13 Rogers, Nick 444-20 Rogers-Brown, Jennifer Bea 319 Rohall, David E. 132 Rohlinger, Deana 521 Rohr, Benjamin 106-7 Rojas, Fabio 147-25 Roksa, Josipa 393 Roll, Michael 106-2 Romero, Luis 068-9 Romero, Mary 155, 400 Romo, Rebecca 315 Ron-El, Yaniv 180-16 Rona-Tas, Akos 077, 411-10 Rondini, Ashley 035-4, 545-7 Ronen, Shelly 180-17, 478 Roose, Henk 135, 390 Rosado, Shantee 213 Rosaldo, Manuel Zimbalist 221 Rosch, Jacob Lepie 575-11 Roschelle, Anne R. 035-7 Roscigno, Vincent J. 406 Rose, Mary R. 337 Rosen, Christian 360-14 Rosen, Eva 210, 243 Rosenberg, Brian 050-2 Rosenberg, Michael M. 354-19 Rosenblatt, Peter 360-13 Rosenfeld, Jake 175 Rosenhek, Zeev 074 Rosenkranz, Tim 444-14 Rosino, Michael 106-17, 365 Rospenda, Kathleen M. 508 Ross, Alexander Reid 260 Ross, Stephanie 556 Ross, Stephanie 299

Rossetto, Irene 151-34 Rossman, Gabriel 019 Rote, Sunshine Marie 098, 178-2 Rotem, Nir 330-1 Roth, Adam 511-21 Roth, Benita 506 Roth, Benjamin 052 Roth, Louise Marie 025, 164 Roth, Reuben N. 299 Roth, Wendy D. 172, 195 Rothman, Barbara Katz 225 Rothmüller, Barbara 136 Rothwell, William R. 054, 581-7 Rouhana, Toni 517-9 Rousseau, Nicole 354-4 Roux, Ana Diez 031 Rowe, Carmen 520-7, 581-6 Rowe, Matthew 143 Rowell, Carli Ria 575-12 Rowell, Katherine R. 004, 557 Rowley, Kristie J. 151-28, 163 Roy, William G. 023 Roybal, Carmela Marie 432 Roychowdhury, Poulami 026, 155 Ru, Sung Hee 507-4 Rua Gomez, Carla Carolina 511-13 Rubin, Marcie 147-17 Rubin, Sara 147-8, 358, 506 Rubineau, Brian 180-11, 565 Rubinfeld, Mark 050-10 Ruch, Alexander Martin 106-1 Rucks-Ahidiana, Zawadi 141, 407 Rudel, Daniel 151-30 Ruef, Martin 010, 180-6 Ruelas, Lillian 031 Ruggles, Steven 551 Rugh, Jacob S. 360-17 Ruiter, Angelique 050-2 Ruiz, Daniel 050-8, 130-3 Ruiz-Junco, Natalia 115 Rule, Alix E 042 Running, Katrina 294-2, 476-21 Ruoppila, Sampo 360-12 Ruppanner, Leah 431 Russell, Carmen 124, 313 Russian, Anna 581-1 Russo, Chandra 106-13, 144 Russo-Tait, Tatiane 073 Ruther, Matt 360-3 Rutherford, Markella 264 Rutland, Sarah Briana 147-23 Ryan, Krysti N. 520-12

Ryan, Maura Ryo, Emily Ryu, Wonsun

473 337 151-9

S Sa, Zhihong 178-5 Saadatmand, Frough 050-17, 353 Sabbagh, Daniel 051 Sabella, Kathryn 353 Sabetta, Lorenzo 336 Sabin, Stanley 504 Sabourin, Paul 039 Sacco, Steven 050-13 Sacha, Jeffrey Owen 467 Sadeghi, Sahar 139 Saenz, Joseph 033 Safer, Adam 545-4 Saguy, Abigail C. 373, 521 Said, Atef S. 181-4 Saitoh, Yuya 354-12 Sakamoto, Arthur 216-2, 428, 477 Sakslind, Rune 136 Salam, Rifat A. 229-3 Salas Pujols, Jomaira 111, 151-9 Salazar Gonzalez, Carla 068-6 Saldana, Nelson Travis 050-7 Salem, Rania 450-13 Salerno, Stacy Lynn 442 Salgado, Casandra Danielle 167, 545-12 Salgado, Egle 130-12 Saliba, Jim 088 Sall, Dialika 397 Salzinger, Leslie 157 Salée, Daniel 343 Samari, Goleen 282 Samford, Steven 476-19 Samila, Sampsa 546 Samuels-Jones, Tameka Gaye 353 Sanchez, Ashley 130-1 Sanchez-Mira, Nuria 354-4 Sandberg, Jack 308 Sanderson, Matthew R. 072-8 Sandholtz, Kurt 408 Sandifer, J. Dylan 241 Sandoval, Efren 182 Sandusky, Emily 360-5 Santana, Emilce 359 Santana-Acuña, Alvaro 037, 214, 309 Santos, Xuan 530 Sanyal, Paromita 236, 417 Sapers, Howard 047 Saperstein, Aliya 118, 172

254

Index of Session Participants Sapia, Molly 450-18 Sapinski, J. P. 476-13 Sapiro, Gisèle 269, 540 Sarabia, Heidy 331, 357 Sargent, Jacob Alden 516 Sarigil, Zeki 394 Sarkar, Srijita 068-15 Sarkisian, Natalia 399 Sarmistha, Uma 068-4 Sass, Jensen 228-1, 283 Sassler, Sharon L. 416, 520-16 Satcher, Lacee 263 Sato, Yoshimichi 578 Sattar, Fatima 146 Sauder, Michael 061, 126, 307 Savage, Mike 041, 346 Savage, Ritchie 444-20 Savage, Scott V. 335 Savelsberg, Joachim J. 080, 447 Sayer, Liana C. 252, 551 Sbicca, Joshua 476-11 Scanlan, Stephen J. 021, 476-5 Scarborough, Roscoe C. 228-3 Scarborough, William Joslyn 166, 545-8 Scarlato, Andre 545-16 Schachner, Jared Nathan 360-21 Schachter, Ariela 172 Schaeffer, Nora Cate 147-2 Schafer, Markus H. 178-7, 326 Schaffer, Scott 038-3, 130-8 Schafran, Alex 360-11 Scheibling, Casey 520-5 Scheid, Teresa L. 147-25 Scherer, Mary Larue 151-19 Schieman, Scott 431, 569 Schifeling, Todd 574 Schilke, Oliver 019 Schippers, Mimi 486 Schlachter, Laura Hanson 476-14 Schleifer, Cyrus J. 151-12, 411-10 Schlembach, Christopher Herbert 498 Schmalzbauer, Leah Caroline 068-5, 139 Schmeeckle, Maria 227 Schmid, Carol L. 068-14 Schmidt, Kristen 265-2 Schmidt, Marshall 050-5 Schmiedeberg, Claudia 431 Schmitz, Rachel M. 247, 450-16 Schmutz, Vaughn 309 Schnabel, Landon 316 Schnable, Allison Youatt 036 Schneider, Barbara L. 178-3

Schneider, Daniel J. 251, 290, 568 Schneider, Daniel 291 Schneider, Emily 130-6, 325 Schneider, Joseph W. 411-1 Schneider, Lesley Erin 134, 562 Schneider, Simone Maria 209, 233 Schneiderhan, Erik 463 Schock, Kurt 029, 325 Schoen, Constantin 511-5 Schoene, Matthew 106-14 Schoepf, Caroline 545-13 Schonlau, Matthias 443 Schoolman, Ethan D. 050-3 Schoon, Eric 214, 444-4 Schor, Juliet B. 066, 257, 271 Schorpp, Kristen M. 178-4, 376 Schradie, Jen 259-5, 434 Schrank, Andrew 096, 212 Schrank, Zachary 354-11 Schrock, Doug 545-4 Schroering, Caitlin Hays 476-7 Schröder, Jette 431 Schubach, Sarah 220 Schuller, Kristin A. 050-11 Schultz, Michael 228-7 Schulz, Jeremy Markham 194, 342 Schutt, Russell K. 147-20, 185 Schutz, Amanda Marie 253 Schwadel, Philip 316 Schwartz, David (Jed) D. 354-6 Schwartz, Eric I. 075, 266 Schwartz, Jennifer 476-15 Schwartzman, Luisa Farah 024, 350, 562 Schwarz, Jonathan D. 151-6 Scipes, Kim 259-9 Scott, Gregory Shawn 353 Scott, Jerome 260, 354-8 Scott, Jordan 354-3 Scott, Lauren 482 Scott, Michael R. 151-27 Scoville, Caleb Richard 062 Scully, Maureen A. 180-17 Seabrooke, Leonard 096, 411-6 Seacrist, Marla 025 Seamster, Louise 410, 545-7 Seckin, Gul 147-8, 178-10 Sedaitis, Judith 545-1 Seeds, Christopher 531 Seefeldt, Kristin 019 Segal, Marcia Texler 035-3, 450-4 Seguin, Charles F. 096 Seim, Josh 170

Sell, Jane 578 Selod, Saher Farooq 149 Semenza, Daniel 256-9 Sendroiu, Ioana 035-8, 374 Senier, Laura 405 Sennott, Christie 147-15, 414 Senter, Mary Scheuer 048, 083 Sepulvado, Brandon 228-15 Serafini, Brian 520-10 Serna, Xavier 093 Serrano, Uriel 129, 241, 427, 545-2 Serrano Zapata, Angela 438 Settersten, Richard A. 178-3, 563 Sewell, Abigail A. 059, 184 Shaban-Nejad, Arash 147-8 Shaefer, H. Luke 045 Shafer, Emily Fitzgibbons 520-10 Shaffer, Jonathan David 038-4, 411-7 Shah, Sarah 286 Shakeshaft, Emma 545-19 Shalin, Dmitri 038-7 Shank, Daniel B. 321 Shannon, Lisa M. 050-20 Shannon, Sarah K.S. 483-8 Shapira, Harel 026 Shapiro, Adam D. 354-12 Sharkey, Amanda J. 137 Sharkey, Patrick 257 Sharone, Ofer 443 Sharp, Gregory 449 Sharp, Shane 517-3 Shattuck, Rachel 414 Shaw, Aaron 107 Shaw, Lynette 030-6, 133 Shaw, Vivian 065, 545-8 Shchekoturov, Aleksandr 434 Shchekoturova, Svetlana 434 Shea, Brent Mack 229-2 Sheehan, Connor 178-9 Sheehan, Shannon 354-5 Shefner, Jon D. 444-7, 513 Sheinheit, Ian 030-1 Shelby, Renee Marie 106-18, 537 Shelton, Beth Anne 520-6 Shelton, Jason E. 274 Shelton, Jeff Scott 511-16 Shelton, Nathan 374 Shen, Jing 068-15 Shen, Shannon 178-7, 582 Shen, Wensong 147-22, 508 Shen, Xirong Subrina 472 Shen, Yang 359

255

Index of Session Participants Shen, Yibing 411-3 Shen, Yuying 265-4 Shepherd, Hana 369, 398 Sheridan, Bethany 147-25 Sherman, Jennifer 211 Sherman, Rachel 342 Sherwood, Daniel A. 038-9 Shi, Jiaxin 130-11 Shi, Mary 360-5 Shi, Yongren 262 Shibuya, Kumiko 566 Shick, Sarah 147-9 Shiffer-Sebba, Doron Raoul 180-20 Shifrer, Dara Renee 573 Shih, Elena 400 Shim, Janet K. 358, 506 Shim, Kyusun 216-9 Shin, Dong Hoon 265-3 Shin, Eun Kyong 147-8, 511-5 Shin, Hwajin 089 Shin, Jean H. 280, 315, 380 Shin, Shoonchul 180-3, 219 Shinberg, Diane S. 147-17 Shipley, Kathleen 476-21 Shklyan, Karina 370 Shoffstall, Grant 334, 354-20 Shokooh-Valle, Firuzeh 450-2 Shor, Eran 581-4 Shorette, Kristen 220 Shortt, Nicole Clorinda 106-17 Shostak, Sara N. 386 Showalter, David 444-1 Showers, Fumilayo 068-11 Shpenev, Alex 520-15 Shreffler, Karina M. 094, 520-19 Shrider, Emily A. 068-9 Shriwise, Amanda Marie 038-4 Shu, Binbin 245 Shu, Xiaoling 295 Shuey, Kim 563 Shura, Robin 507-3 Shuster, Stef M. 074, 497 Shvarts, Alexander 068-4 Shwom, Rachael Leah 199, 476-18 Siciliano, Michael L. 228-11, 322 Sicotte, Diane M. 542 Sierra, Gracia 147-20 Sierra-Arevalo, Michael 256-19 Sikkink, David 151-6 Siliunas, Andreja 251 Sillo, Christie 520-19 Silva, Fabiana 141, 464

Silva, Jennifer M. 194, 553 Silva, Tony 016, 497 Silveira, Florencia 163 Silver, Alexis 068-13 Silver, Daniel 170, 360-1 Silver, Hilary 050-20, 270 Silver, Michelle Pannor 028, 511-1 Silverstein, Merril 215, 484 Simacek, Kristina Fasteson 147-2 Simeon, Eric J. 151-8 Simes, Jessica T. 362 Simi, Peter 059, 394 Simko, Christina 092 Simmons, Alicia D. 186-2, 392 Simon, Alexander Thomas 476-20 Simon, Patrick 195 Simon, Robin W. 532 Simon, Samantha Jones 026 Simon Moya, Virginia 511-2 Simonova, Olga Alexandrovna 294-2 Simons, Leslie Gordon 147-12, 256-1 Simons, Ronald L. 147-12 Simonsen, Kristina Bakkær 444-16 Simpkins, Joshua 035-7 Simpson, Audra 005 Simpson, John H. 181-7 Sine, Wesley 433 Singelmann, Joachim 050-1 Singer, Sara J. 147-25 Singh, Jennifer S. 534 Singh, Prerna 379 Singletary, Judith Ann 354-18 Sinkewicz, Marilyn 018 Sirois, Catherine 211, 575-14 Sirotkina, Elena 070-1 Sittner, Kelley J. 545-16 Sjoberg, Ola Cornelius 511-14 Skaggs, Rachel Elizabeth 228-2 Skaperdas, Eleni 292 Skarpelis, Anna Katharina 213 Skarpenes, Ove 136 Skotnicki, Tad P. 106-1, 162 Slatcher, Richard 147-13 Slaughter, Christine 336 Slavinski, Ilya 256-16 Sloan, Jennifer Catherine 354-10 Small, Jamie L. 450-18 Small, Mario Luis 007, 417 Smell, Adrianna K. 038-1 Smilde, David A. 373, 409 Smiley, CalvinJohn 354-13 Smiley, Kevin T. 476-16

Smirnova, Michelle Hannah 474-3 Smith, Bethany 575-1 Smith, Chad L. 476-13 Smith, Chris M. 179 Smith, Christian 469 Smith, Curtis 406, 483-2 Smith, David A. 171, 360-20 Smith, Dena T. 147-2, 569 Smith, E. Keith 476-18 Smith, Emily J. 511-18 Smith, Jackie 365 Smith, Jason A. 315, 354-11 Smith, Jeffrey A. 317, 511-18 Smith, Lori Diane 070-4 Smith, Michael Lee 151-30 Smith, Michelle A. 305 Smith, Robert Courtney 198 Smith, Stephen Samuel 354-9, 392 Smith, Suzanna 035-2 Smith, Tom W. 050-6, 268, 392 Smith-Doerr, Laurel 446 Smith-Tran, Alicia 035-8 Smithsimon, Gregory 360-11 Smolski, Andrew Robert 260 Snawder, Kara 022 Snipp, C. Matthew 432 Snook, Jennifer 545-4 Snow, David A. 231 Snyder, Benjamin Harrison 038-10 So, Alvin Y. 070-2 Sobering, Katherine 511-3 Soboroff, Shane D. 097, 321, 567 Sobotka, Tagart Cain 335 Soehl, Thomas Georg 163, 242, 284, 401, 500 Soenderskov, Kim Mannemar 262, 294-1 Soener, Matthew 070-1 Sohn, Bola 216-2 Soifer, Hillel 409 Sokolov, Mikhail 228-15 Solari, Cinzia 181-3 Solazzo, Alexa 184 Solga, Heike 151-10 Soller, Brian 014, 450-19 Somashekhar, Mahesh 360-6 Somers, Margaret R. 525 Son, In Seo 089 Son, Joonmo 253 Song, Eunkyung 106-9 Song, Hee-Chan 517-2 Song, Lijun 564 Song, Miri 195

256

Index of Session Participants Song, Yangbo 502 Sonmez, Burak 294-2 Sonnett, John 412 Sood, Sheena 545-8 Sorensen, Anna 106-18, 581-3 Sormani, Philippe 363 Soss, Joe 100 Soto, Michael 038-2 Soto-Marquez, Jose G. 068-11 Sotoudeh-Sherbaf, Abolfazl 148 Sousa-Rodriguez, Isabel 129, 241, 367-2, 427 Southwell, Brian 124 Sowers, Elizabeth A. 171 Soyer, Mehmet 106-4, 354-1 Soyer, Michaela 093 Soysal, Yasemin 307, 387, 440 Spalter-Roth, Roberta M. 315 Sparks, Johnelle 360-8 Spence, Cody 050-19 Spencer, Karen Lutfey 226, 287 Spencer, Sarah Busse 517-2 Spencer, Zoe 050-4 Sperry, Ryan C. 511-4 Spicer, Jason 100 Spiegler, Yuval 175 Spierling, Tiffany 520-19 Spiker, Russell Leroy 582 Spillman, Lyn 188, 231, 272 Spilsbury, James 265-1 Spires, Anthony J. 106-7 Spittel, Michael L. 085 Spitz, Gina 360-3 Spivak, Andrew S. 256-9 Spring, Amy L. 360-3 Springer, Emily 072-5, 181-5 Springer, Kristen W. 031, 286 Spronk, Rachel 581-4 Sraboni, Esha 444-8 Srinivasan, Shobha 085 St-Denis, Xavier 180-6 St. John, Sarah A. 483-3 Stablein, Timothy 187 Stabler, Samuel David 507-1 Stack, Steven 256-5, 347, 504 Staggenborg, Suzanne 455 Staiger, Annegret D. 105-3, 511-19 Stainback, Kevin 511-5 Stalp, Marybeth C. 267 Stambolis-Ruhstorfer, Michael 480, 520-4 Stamper, Ruth M. 476-17 Stange, Mathew 581-3 Staples, William G. 544

Stapleton, Orla 061 Stark, Laura 471 Starks, Brian 517-1 Starr, Chelsea 450-10 Staton-Tindall, Michele 506 Staubmann, Helmut 038-11 Staudinger, Ursula M. 563 Stearns, Elizabeth 151-12 Stedman, Richard 429 Steedman, Mercedes 299 Steele, Liza G. 251 Steele, Maritza Mestre 014, 264 Steelman, Burle 135 Steeves, Kathleen Anne 517-10 Stefanos, Sarah A. 050-2 Steger, Manfred B. 181-7 Steidl, Christina R. 151-12 Steil, Justin 562 Stein, Arlene 523 Stein, Rachel E. 267 Steinbach, Anja 484 Steinberg, Marc W. 318, 418 Steinmetz, George 341, 475, 491, 540, 572 Steinour, Heidi 541-1 Stephens, Michael Lee 035-1 Sternberg, Jeffrey L. 038-4, 403 Stets, Jan E. 044 Stevens, Corey Elizabeth 105-4 Stevens, James Dalton 050-7 Stevens, Jennifer 050-7 Stevens, Lindsay M. 060 Stevens, Mitchell L. 126, 312, 430, 491 Stevenson, Amanda Jean 144 Steward, Shelly 228-13, 511-14 Stewart, Brandon Michael 033 Stewart, Evan 333 Stewart, Karyn Alayna 261 Stewart, Mahala Dyer 151-27 Stewart, Robert Austin 256-4 Stewart, Ron 050-1 Stiglitz, Joseph 076 Stillerman, Joel P. 145-1, 221 Stillwagon, Ryan 564 Stiman, Meaghan 243, 360-9 Stimpson, Matthew 180-3, 568 Stingl, Alexander I. 030-8, 411-1 Stivers, Abby Jean 180-2 Stivers, Tanya 495 Stockstill, Casey Lorene 189 Stoddart, Mark C.J. 455 Stoeckle, Anabel 400 Stoltz, Dustin S. 019, 162

Stombler, Mindy 450-18 Stone, Amy L. 550 Stone, Christopher 379 Stone, Pamela 324 Storelli, Elizangela 215 Storer, Adam 259-4 Stovel, Katherine 537 Stowe, Angela M. 130-12 Strahm, Ann M. 299 Strapko, Noel Jaime 035-7 Strauss, Kendra 400 Straut Eppsteiner, Holly 032 Street, Debra 252 Streeter, Rayanne 105-4 Strings, Sabrina A. 063 Strobel, Connor 186-1 Strohecker, David Paul 104-1, 105-1 Strohl, Jared 449, 476-11 Strohschein, Lisa A. 520-14 Strong, Myron 035-7, 581-9 Stroope, Samuel 517-7 Struna, Jason Y. 259-10 Stryker, Robin 511-8 Stuart, Colleen 511-5 Stuart, Diana 476-9 Stuart, Forrest 125 Stuth, Stefan 180-15 Stykes, James 050-17 Su, Jessica Houston 416 Su, Liang 265-2 Su, Phi Hong 068-12 Su, Ruolin 147-22, 508 Su, Wenyang 163 Su, Ya 520-14 Suarez, David F. 433 Subramaniam, Mangala 059 Suchman, Mark C. 126, 543 Sudo, Naoki 444-6 Sue, Christina Alicia 206, 247 Suh, Chan S. 262 Suh, Stephen Cho 089 Suitor, J. Jill 178-2, 252, 520-23 Sukhov, Michael J. 300-3 Sullivan, Esther 366 Sullivan, John W. 131 Sullivan, Samuel Michael 538 Sullivan, Susan Crawford 517-10, 580 Sullivan-Alon, Oriel 145-3, 520-22 Summers, Brandi Thompson 503 Sun, Anna 233 Sun, Cathy 353, 401 Sun, Feinuo 130-5

257

Index of Session Participants Sun, Ken Chih-Yan Sun, Shengwei Surak, Kristin Surani, Sara Sussman, David D. Suter, Christian Sutton, Barbara Sutton, Tara Elizabeth Svec, Joseph Swaab, Roderick Swart, Elizabeth Swartz, David L. Swartz, Teresa Toguchi Swed, Ori Sweet, Stephen A. Swerts, Thomas Swidler, Ann Swiffen, Amy Swindle, Jeffrey Swisher, Marilyn E. Swisher, Raymond R. Swiss, Liam Swyngedouw, Eva Sykes, Bryan L. Symons, Jonathan Szafran, Robert F. Szott, Kelly Szydlik, Marc Szyf, Moshe Sánchez-Jankowski, Martín Séverine, Chauvel

139, 537 072-4 019, 091 130-12 106-1 575-5 450-16 256-1 151-18 186-5 450-6 115, 444-17 136 365, 544 044 144 042, 525 047, 531 036, 401 035-2, 331 441 220, 450-21 360-12 251 020 050-19 147-14 399 224 345 193

T Tabatabai, Ahoo Tabler, Jennifer Tabor, Jaclyn Ann Taborda-Whitt, Caitlin Tach, Laura M. Taddy, Matt Tai, Tsui-o Takahashi, Ryutaro Takata, Kei Takenoshita, Hirohisa Takezawa, Yasuko Takyar, Delaram Takács, Károly Tal, Orly Talbert, Ryan Tamborini, Christopher R. Tan, Catherine Do Tanaka, Yukiko Tang, Wen-hui Anna

520-8 147-1, 178-2 520-12 028 189, 520-15 021 575-13 216-6 444-17 135, 216-10 344 151-11, 392 229-5 580 024 393, 428 147-9 091 450-11

Tang, Zequn 360-13 Tang, Zhenyu 511-5 Taniguchi, Hiromi 431 Tao, Lin 515 Tao, Yu 411-8 Taplin-Kaguru, Nora E. 103 Tarkhanova, Oleksandra 450-11 Tarlau, Rebecca 409 Tarrow, Sidney 310 Tate, Alexandra 363 Tatum, Katharine 264 Tavares, Carlos D 206 Tavory, Iddo 152, 160, 304 Taylor, Angela P. 473, 562 Taylor, Baishakhi 035-6 Taylor, Brionca 354-8 Taylor, Catherine J. 067, 095, 244, 286, 335, 460 Taylor, Marshall Allen 019, 162 Taylor, Miles G. 018, 563 Taylor, Rosemary CR 046 Taylor, Sherese 050-3 Taylor, Wyatt 565 Taylor, Zachary 170 Teeger, Chana 053, 092, 119 Tejada, Karen Ivette 367-4 Teklu, Axumawit 147-5 Teller, Amy 476-3 Telles, Edward E. 195, 387 Telus, Herrica 545-18 Temko, Ezra Joseph 520-10 Templeton, Boris 405 Ternes, Brock 030-3, 509 Terrasse, Mélanie 284 Terriquez, Veronica 514 Tesfai, Rebbeca 102, 360-3 Tester, Aaron W. 096, 476-4 Tevington, Patricia 057, 100 Thai, Mai 204, 256-15 Thebaud, Sarah 335, 396, 478 Thevenot, Laurent 231 Thiel, Darren 490 Thiele, Megan Theresa 150 Thierry, Amy Danielle 178-8 Thomas, Christopher P. 256-5 Thomas, Clayton 147-25 Thomas, George M. 181-7 Thomas, Jacob Richard 368, 520-3, 575-5 Thomas, Jan E. 229-1 Thomas, Jason R. 448 Thomas, Kyle 256-18 Thomas, Mark Preston 299

Thomas, Patricia A. 069 Thomas, Sara E. 074, 265-6 Thomas, Shannell 050-14, 354-1 Thomas, Timothy 449 Thomas, Tori LaShan 151-11 Thomeer, Mieke Beth 326 Thompson, David 565 Thompson, Michael Franklin 072-5, 259-11, 444-7 Thompson, Sara 284 Thompson-Lastad, Ariana 147-8, 358 Thomson, Robert A. 316, 484 Thornton, Arland 118, 401 Thornton, Patricia H. 219 Thorpe, Lee 550, 581-2 Threlfall, Perry A. 494 Ticona, Julia B. 107 Tiemeyer, Stacy 060, 520-19 Tierney, Amber Celina 106-17 Tierney, Kathleen J. 285, 320 Tigges, Leann M. 396 Tilly, Chris 259-6, 324 Tilstra, Andrea 147-21 Timberlake, Michael 360-20 Timmermans, Stefan 006 Tindall, David B. 455, 564 Tinkler, Justine Eatenson 337 Tinsley, Meghan Elizabeth 444-11 Tiryakian, Edward A. 050-19 Tisdall, Kay 227 Titus, Bethany 123 Tkach, Ben 072-6 Tobin, Theresa 415 Todres, Jonathan 227 Togami, Chie Lorene 476-7 Toivonen, Tuukka H. 511-18 Toles-Patkin, Terri 353 Tollette, Jessica 420 Tom, Joshua 517-7 Toma, Sorana 214 Tomaskovic-Devey, Donald 140, 257, 271, 317, 428 Tomczuk, Sara Jean 228-1 Tong, Guangyu 216-10 Tong, Yuying 163, 216-5, 245 Toothman, Erica L. 176 Toprak, Vasfiye Betul 130-6, 360-12 Torche, Florencia 261, 357, 491, 555 Torpey, John C. 384, 444-20 Torres, Stacy 018 Torres Stone, Rosalie A. 353 Towne, Katelynn Patricia 353

258

Index of Session Participants Towns, Tangela G. 360-4 Townsley, Eleanor 162 Tran, Van C. 117 Tranter, Bruce Keith 360-9 Travers, Ann 462 Travis, Adam Silver 056, 360-10 Travis, Jeremy 296 Treas, Judith 178-5 Tredway, Kristi 505 Tremblay, André 039, 343 Trent, Carol L. S. 562 Trevino-Garza, Alma 093 Trevizo, Dolores 575-7 Tricou, Josselin 480 Trieu, Monica M. 216-1 Trinh, Ha Ngoc 147-6, 216-9 Trinitapoli, Jenny 316 Triplett, Jennifer Elise 507-4 Triplett, Jennifer Lynn 265-2 Tripodi, Francesca 336 Trost, Christine 345 Trovato, Frank 347 Truesdale, Beth 376 Trumino, Joseph G. A. 035-8, 035-9 Trumpy, Alexa Jane 106-16 Tsai, Shu-Ling 151-30 Tsang, Amy 245 Tsutsui, Kiyoteru 365 Tu, Siqi 106-10 Tubi, Omri 038-2 Tuch, Steven A. 354-10, 545-20 Tucker, Katherine L. 050-16, 050-18 Tufekci, Zeynep 064, 107, 121 Tulaeva, Svetlana 228-1, 476-4, 476-8 Tulinski, Hannah 106-17 Turkmen-Dervisoglu, Gulay 333 Turkoglu, Didem 106-10, 106-17 Turner, Bryan 155 Turner, Kennedy 050-10 Turney, Kristin 441, 520-8 Turowetz, Jason 363 Tuthill, Zelma Lizeth 450-9, 581-11 Tuttle, Joshua Daniel 070-1 Tuttle, Steven 360-15, 545-9 Tweet, Patricia E. 360-10 Tye, Eitan 147-19, 450-19 Tyler, Kimberly A. 450-16 Tyndall, John Charles 476-10 Tyrkkö, Jukka 188 Tysiachniouk, Maria Sergeevna 476-4, 476-8 Tyson, Karolyn 456

Tyson, Will Tzeggai, Fithawee

151-10 024

U Uba, Katrin 106-4, 217 Uecker, Jeremy E. 178-3, 265-5 Ueno, Koji 178-3, 356 Uggen, Christopher 256-16, 296, 518 Ugur, Dolunay 106-18 Uitermark, Justus 367-1 Umberson, Debra 008, 069, 109 Umeh, Zimife 151-24 Underhill, Megan R. 416 Underman, Kelly 287 Ungvarsky, Diane 368 Upadhyay, Smriti 072-8 Upenieks, Laura 035-8, 178-9 Upright, Craig 426 Upton, Aisha Ariantique 130-10, 538 Urbanik, Marta-Marika 235 Urena, Anthony 147-11 Ureña, Stephanie 178-5 Urwasi, Kadek Wara 092 Usmani, Adaner 183 Ustel, Pinar 354-18 Utama, Rahardhika Arista 070-3 Utrata, Jennifer 520-11 Uys, Tina 511-9, 547

V Vachon, Todd E. 259-1 Vaidyanathan, Brandon 145-3 Vaisey, Stephen 196, 548 Vaitkus, Elissa 050-5 Valdes, Gonzalo 180-13 Valdez, Avelardo 571 Valdez, Zulema 418, 530 Valdivia, Carolina 182 Valentino, Lauren 332 Vallas, Steven 332 Valle, Ariana Jeanette 068-2, 444-17 Valle, Melissa Mercedes 407 Valle, Trinidad 545-13 Vallee, Manuel 147-18 Valleriani, Jenna 474-2 Valles, Jessica Lynn 353 Van Cleaf, Kara M. 165 Van Cleve, Nicole Gonzalez 499 van de Rijt, Arnout 546 van de Ruit, Catherine 036, 147-11 Van de Velde, Cécile 538

Van de Velde, Sarah 180-5 Van Delinder, Jean L. 151-15 Van der Bracht, Koen 051 van der Does, Tamara 068-3, 135 Van Der Naald, Joseph Reynolds 129, 355 Van Dyke, Nella 106-16, 217 Van Gunten, Tod Stewart 328, 361 Van Hook, Jennifer 147-23 van Lent, Wim 180-9 Van Miltenburg, Nynke 546 Van Natta, Meredith 098, 358 Van Ness, Justin C. 038-5 Van Oort, Madison 372 Van Rossem, Ronan 214 Van Valey, Thomas L. 239 van Venrooij, Alex 228-14 Van Witsen, Tony 509 Vandenbergh, David 265-1 Vanderminden, Jennifer 265-1, 473 VanHeuvelen, Tom 287 Vann, Burrel James 106-15, 255 VanNatta, Michelle 203-1 Vaquera, Elizabeth 027, 303 Vaquera, Gloria S. 367-3 Varela, Kay Sarai 357 Vargas, Phillip 367-3, 442 Vargas, Robert 170, 218, 371 Vargas, Tracy 511-3 Varner, Charles 317, 510 Vasconcelos, Pedro 147-7 Vashevko, Anthony 180-1 Vasi, Ion Bogdan 106-1 Vasquez-Tokos, Jessica 207 Vassenden, Anders 228-15 Vaughan, Diane 576 Vega, Anthony 256-1 Velasco, Kristopher 564 Velasquez, Giselle 476-1 Velitchkova, Ana 136, 507-1 Velthuis, Olav 273 Velthuis, Olav 061 Venegas, Mario 106-11 Ventresca, Marc J. 387, 511-4 Vera, Hector 151-18 Vera Hernandez, Nelson Arnaldo 259-11 Verbalyte, Monika 181-3 Verboord, Marc 023, 228-15 Vercel, Kelcie 290 Verhaeghe, Pieter-Paul 051 Verstraete, Jan 395 Vertesi, Janet 196 Vertovec, Jack 360-12

259

Index of Session Participants Verwiebe, Roland 575-9 Vespa, Jonathan 102 Vicari, Basha 151-10 Vickerman, Milton D. 068-10 Vidal-Ortiz, Salvador 181-1 Vienne, Philippe 388 Viera, Janelle Ashley 068-14 Vieyra, Francisco Pablo Landeros 501 Vijayakumar, Gowri 258 Villanueva, Aida 072-6, 113 Villarreal, Ana 230 Ville, Cassandre 147-26 Vinitzky-Seroussi, Vered 092 Vinkhuyzen, Erik 461 Vinodrai, Tara 360-11 Vinson, Alexandra 287, 510, 511-21 Vinthagen, Stellan 106-2 Vissing, Yvonne M. 227 Vitek, Kali 359 Viterna, Jocelyn S. 298 Vithayathil, Trina 036 Vladimir, Volokhonsky 228-15 Voerknecht, Jeroen 030-7 Vogel, Mary E. 531 Vogler, Stefan 519 vom Hau, Matthias 409 von Hippel, Paul 354-9 Voss, Kim 307, 464 Voyer, Andrea M. 038-9, 228-5 Vrla, Stephen Patrick 062, 104-1 Vuolo, Michael 134, 571

W Wachtendorf, Tricia 319 Wacquant, Loic 196 Wadhwa, Hena 101 Wagenaar, Theodore C. 038-5, 130-9 Waggoner, Miranda R. 101, 377 Wagmiller, Robert L. 147-23, 449 Wagner, Johannes 329 Wagner, Luke 181-4, 444-3 Wagner, Noah 130-2 Wagner-Pacifici, Robin E. 191, 304, 390 Wahl, Chelsea 511-10 Wahutu, Nicholas James Siguru 323, 412 Waidzunas, Tom J. 016, 581-8 Waisberg, Isaac 408 Waite, Linda J. 098 Waite, Sean 511-5 Waitkus, Nora 317 Wakeham, Joshua 256-6 Wakin, Michele 575-6

Walby, Kevin 458 Waldfogel, Jane 211 Waldman, Devra 142 Waldron, Ingrid 147-13 Walker, Charlie 054 Walker, Edward T. 099, 433, 472 Walker, Hart 259-3 Walker, Mark Henry 226 Walkover, Lillian 072-4 Wallace, Derron O. 520-5, 545-6 Wallace, Jean E. 511-19 Wallace, Michael E. 403 Wallace, Samantha Ashley 256-17 Wallace, Steven P. 131 Walsh Koricke, Maureen 147-25 Walters, David Michael 151-20, 151-6 Walters, Susanna 523 Walther, Carol 545-5 Walton, Emily 358 Wang, Dan 565 Wang, Dan 294-2 Wang, Dashun 133 Wang, Donghui 022 Wang, Hanning 216-4, 291 Wang, Helen Hua 398 Wang, Jinpu 401 Wang, Junmin 283 Wang, Junxiu 256-1 Wang, Leslie Kim 216-3, 244 Wang, Leslie T.C. 190 Wang, Lihua 300-2 Wang, Rebecca 245 Wang, Rebecca 051 Wang, Rong 030-8 Wang, Sharron 216-2, 216-3 Wang, Weidong 268 Wang, Xiuhua 294-3 Wang, Yan 444-3 Wang, Yingyao 180-18 Wang, Youfa 147-4 Ward, Carol Jane 151-5 Ward, Jane 016 Ward, Kayleigh 476-15 Ward, Kelly Marie 026 Ward, Matthew 371 Waren, Warren 575-2 Warikoo, Natasha 193 Warner, Alexandra 050-9 Warner, Cody 256-4 Warner, David 582 Warner, Judith Ann 068-1, 256-11 Warner, Tara D. 256-12, 256-13

Warnock, Debbie 575-12 Warren, Jean-Philippe 039, 364 Warren, John Robert 088, 151-20 Warren, Kamryn Danielle 464 Washington, Chanell Nicole 353 Wass, Hanna 444-10 Wassink, Joshua Thomas 033, 500 Waters, Anita M. 048 Waters, Mary C. 469 Watson, Dennis P. 579 Watters, Brieanna Marie 412 Watts, Vanessa 120 Weatherby, Kristen 511-16 Webb, Curtis 050-6 Webb, Joseph 161 Webster, Noah 178-9 Weden, Margaret M. 561 Wedow, Robbee 563 Weeden, Kim 041 Weffer-Elizondo, Simon 065 Wehner, JoAnne Delfino 560 Weil, Joyce 050-17 Weinshenker, Matthew N. 431 Weinstein, Liza 234 Weiss, Anna 037 Weiss, Inbar 140, 564 Weiss, Jordan 178-4 Weisshaar, Katherine 324, 560 Weitzman, Abigail 286 Wejnert, Barbara 112, 444-18 Welburn, Jessica S. 154 Welch, Melissa 573 Welcome, H. Alexander 545-6 Wellman, Barry 398 Wellman, James K. 385 Wels, Jacques 180-5, 215 Welsh, William James 444-2 Wen, Fangqi 359, 575-13 Wen, Ming 216-9 Weng, Jeffrey 216-4 Werum, Regina E. 151-12 West, Elizabeth 215 West, Jessica 541-1 West, Jevin 537 Westbrook, Laurel 415, 450-20, 496 Westerberg, Charles 267 Westerheide, Jule Elena 511-1 Western, Bruce 211 Western, Mark 470 Wetts, Rachel 285 Wetzel, Dominic Vincent 517-10, 517-8 Wheaton, Blair 466

260

Index of Session Participants Wherry, Frederick F. 019 White, Alexandre 147-11, 147-9, 439 White, Gregory 268 White, Michael J. 360-16, 561 Whiteacre, Kevin W. 256-11 Whitehead, Ellen 172, 416 Whitham, Monica M. 187, 253 Whitley, Cameron Thomas 354-4 Whitlinger, Claire 106-5 Whitmeyer, Joseph M. 368 Whitworth, Tanya Rouleau 090 Wiborg, Oyvind Nicolay 428 Wickersham, Carol 267 Wickrama, Kandauda A. S. 098 Widener, Patricia 542 Wiedner, Jonas 575-7 Wiertz, Dingeman 253 Wiggins, Yolanda Maria 520-21 Wilbers, Loren 474-2, 541-4 Wilcox, Annika M. 324 Wilcox, Hui Niu 063 Wilcoxson, Anna 259-7 Wilde, Melissa J. 100, 274 Wildeman, Christopher 441, 582 Wilder, Esther Isabelle 004, 557 Wilderom, Rens 228-14 Wildfeuer, Rachel 360-1, 575-13 Wileden, Lydia 210 Wilkes, Rima 120 Wilkins, Amy C. 073, 114, 247 Wilkins-Laflamme, Sarah 050-19, 517-3 Wilkinson, Lindsay R. 178-3 Wilkinson, Lindsey 178-3, 286 Wilks, Mary-Collier 072-3 Willekens, Mart 228-14 Willer, David 567 Willetts, Marion C. 354-14 Williams, Adam 353, 354-7 Williams, Apryl A. 030-6, 072-6 Williams, Christine L. 523, 560 Williams, Daniel 068-6 Williams, David R. 147-13, 453 Williams, Deadric 186-5 Williams, Jason M. 423 Williams, Jerry L. 050-8, 476-17 Williams, Joan C. 310 Williams, Johnny E. 030-8 Williams, Joyce E. 450-4 Williams, Juliet 521 Williams, Kate 411-6 Williams, Kristi L. 338 Williams, Lawrence Hamilton 230, 395

Williams, Logan Dawn April 036, 411-3 Williams, Michelle 050-8 Williams, Nathalie E. 108, 401 Williams, Nathalie 068-13, 353 Williams, Rebecca J. 331, 450-2 Williams, Rhys H. 333, 348 Williams, Travis L. 354-1 Williams-Baron, Emma 265-5 Williamson, John B. 178-6 Willis, Don Edward 265-4 Willow, Moriah Wren 140 Willson, Andrea E. 178-8, 563 Wilmers, Nathan 257, 477 Wilmot, Zachary M. 249 Wilson, James A. 351 Wilson, John 253 Wilson, William Julius 045, 379 Wimer, Christopher 211 Wimmer, Andreas 079, 242 Winchester, Daniel A. 395 Wind, Caitlin Ella 479-1 Windawi, Jason 433 Winders, Bill 171 Windsor, Elroi J. 063 Winfield, Taylor Paige 228-13 Winship, Christopher 088 Winston, Erin 506 Winston, Fletcher 050-9, 106-3 Wissinger, Elizabeth A. 107 Withers, Erik Tyler 354-6, 545-20 Witteveen, Dirk 465 Wodtke, Geoffrey Thomas 088, 251, 301 Wohl, Hannah Linda 227, 228-2, 266 Wojtkiewicz, Roger A. 003 Woldoff, Rachael A. 403 Wolf, Andrew 058 Wolfe, Joseph Daniel 147-2 Wolfe, Matthew 507-3 Wolff, Marie 184 Wolfson, Mark 483-1, 506 Wollschleger, Jason 151-18, 517-9 Won, Jaeyoun 216-6 Wong, Jaclyn S. 520-2 Wong, Janelle 274 Wong, Odalia Ho 069, 450-1 Wong, Rebeca 033 Woo, Hyeyoung 286, 477 Wood, Lesley J. 437 Wood, Michael Lee 230 Wood, Richard L. 197 Woodman, Dan 563 Woodman, Sophia 015, 091

Woods, Rose Ann 268 Woodside, Sarah 511-11 Woody, Ashley 545-6 Woolley, Kyle 106-8 Wooten, Tom 017 Workman, Joseph 354-9 Wornell, Emily J. 397 Worthen, Meredith Gwynne Fair 256-17 Wotipka, Christine Min 151-18 Wozniak, Jesse S.G. 512 Wray, Linda A. 448 Wray, Matt 347 Wright, Devon Alanzo 507-1 Wright, Eric R. 541-2 Wright, Jared Matthew 291 Wright, Matthew 178-7 Wright, Stuart A. 106-11 Wrigley-Field, Elizabeth 088, 246 Wu, Ling Fei 133 Wu, Qiang 216-10 Wu, Qiong (Miranda) 403 Wu, Tina 354-18 Wu, Tongyu 411-8 Wu, Yuling 151-17 Wyant, Amanda 229-5 Wyatt, Joshua 050-8, 130-12 Wylie, Caitlin Donahue 411-2 Wynn, Alison 560 Wynn, Jonathan R. 125 Wyrod, Robert 112, 349 Wyrtzen, Jonathan 180-21 Wörn, Jonathan 178-4

X Xia, Shiming Xiang, Wei Xiao, Chenyang Xiao, Hong Xiao, Suowei Xu, Bin Xu, Duoduo Xu, Fang Xu, Feng Xu, Hongwei Xu, Hongwei Xu, Jun Xu, Man Xu, Xiaohong Xu, Xiaojing Xue, Hong

411-2 098 476-10 151-17 520-7 092, 275 151-30, 303 360-2 400 520-14 511-4 216-2, 216-7 481 463, 511-12 476-21 147-4

261

Index of Session Participants Y Yabiku, Scott Thomas 411-4 Yagatich, William Adam 106-3 Yahirun, Jenjira 487 Yamane, David 158 Yang, Adam 102 Yang, ChengChen 575-1 Yang, Dian 417 Yang, Myung Ji 072-6 Yang, Philip Q. 216-3 Yang, Song 180-11 Yang, Tiantian 408 Yang, Tse-Chuan 147-19 Yang, Yang Claire 246 Yang, Yulin 178-8, 252 Yarbrough, Michael W. 128, 412, 581-5 Yasumoto, Saori 216-6 Yates, Elizabeth Anne 468 Yavas, Mustafa 133 Yavorsky, Jill Evelyn 460 Yaw, Karissa 216-5 Yazdiha, Hajar 213 Ydesen, Christian 151-25 Ye, Minzhi 508 Yen, Emily Helen 360-22 Yen, Irene H. 358, 506 Yeon, Hye-won 055 Yetter, Alyssa 256-21 Yeung, Wei-Jun Jean 014, 178-10, 178-11 Yi, Shiya 353 Yi, Youngmin 178-3 Yim, Sejung Sage 139 Ynalvez, Marcus Antonius Hidalgo 265-4, 411-6 Yonay, Yuval Peretz 581-6 Yoon, Eunsung 297 Yoon, In-Jin 068-13, 089 Yoon, Soo-Yeon 414 York, Richard 320 York Cornwell, Erin 131, 337 Young, Allison 151-4 Young, Andrew 015 Young, Cristobal 019, 056, 137, 317 Young, Kathryne M. 374, 415 Young, Kevin 411-6 Young, Marisa Christine 466 Young, Michael P. 367-3 Young, Staci A. 147-14, 184 Young, Tiffany amorette 357 Young, Yvette 516

Young-DeMarco, Linda Younkin, Peter Yount, Kathryn M. Youssef, Maro Yu, Danqing Yu, Jiao Yu, Szu-Min Yu, Xiao Yuasa, Masae Yucel, Deniz Yue, Yuanyuan Yuen, Nancy Wang Yurdakul, Gökçe

108, 401 180-21 450-13 173 354-16 178-5 450-14 151-22, 151-30 203-1 399, 520-9 265-1, 520-1 216-5 481

Z Zahedi Nameghi, Nima 479-3 Zaidi, R. Batool 520-1 Zajacova, Anna 223 Zajicek, Anna 180-11, 450-8 Zamora, Sylvia 198, 420 Zamora-Kapoor, Anna 013 Zamudio Grave, Patricia 203-1 Zang, Emma 094, 246 Zarifa, David 151-22, 151-6 Zarnoch, Stanley 072-7 Zarrugh, Amina 173, 339 Zaunseder, Andreas Stefan 015 Zavadskaya, Margarita 070-1 Zavella, Patricia 514 Zayani, Mohamed 106-12 Zayim, Ayca 328 Zaykowski, Heather 362 Zelizer, Viviana A. 116, 525 Zelkowitz, Phyllis 450-5 Zeng, Fanmu 216-4 Zeno, Elissa 101 Zerubavel, Eviatar 143, 489 Zerubavel, Noam 565 Zevallos, Kevin 545-14 Zhang, Alice (Renwen) 398 Zhang, Cynthia Baiqing 186-4 Zhang, Haidong 575-1 Zhang, Jie 038-6, 347 Zhang, Letian 472 Zhang, Qian 476-2 Zhang, Shaozhe 098 Zhang, Shu 019 Zhang, Shuwan 221 Zhang, Simone 228-7

Zhang, Tony Huiquan 444-2 Zhang, Weiwei 354-16 Zhang, Wencheng 411-4 Zhang, Wenquan (Charles) 360-17 Zhang, Yan 147-6 Zhang, Yang 106-3 Zhang, Yang 130-5 Zhang, Yongjun 444-4 Zhang, Yueran 058 Zhang, Yunran 256-1 Zhang, Zhe 146, 520-8 Zhang, Zhenmei 178-4, 520-14 Zhao, Jing 216-3 Zhao, Litao 511-4 Zhao, Shanyang 434 Zhao, Wei 216-10 Zhao, Yang 575-8 Zhao, Yue 013 Zheng, Bingdao 180-15, 479-2 Zheng, Hui 088, 178-1 Zheng, Wenjuan 106-10 Zhong, Hua 256-1 Zhong, Jingwen 477 Zhou, Amy Yuan 150 Zhou, Bo 216-9 Zhou, Min 068-14 Zhou, Min 216-4 Zhou, Yisu 294-2 Zhou, Zhangjun 252 Zhu, Jingqi 511-3 Zhu, Lin 466 Zhu, Ling 072-1 Zi, Ye 517-4 Ziff, Elizabeth 174 Zimmer, Zachary 098 Zimmerman, Mary K. 147-15 Zinn, Isabelle Valérie 035-8, 511-3 Zippel, Kathrin 314, 450-8 Zito, Rena Cornell 057 Zoeller, Christoffer 444-6 Zohara, Fatema 216-5 Zollfrank, Angelika 178-2 Zonio, Henry 130-7 Zopf, Bradley J. 282, 577 Zubrzycki, Genevieve 379 Zuckerman, Ezra W. 143, 219 Zukas, Alex M. 354-8 Zukas, Lorna Lueker 112, 354-15 Zwakhalen, Sandra 215 Zwysen, Wouter 068-6, 545-10

262

Subject Index Roundtable session table numbers appear after the program number with a hyphen.

(E)valuation: 013, 026, 030-5, 050-16, 050-18, 061, 072-4, 133, 137, 143, 144, 151-13, 151-17, 151-9, 178-10, 180-14, 190, 219, 228-14, 228-6, 2289, 231, 253, 267, 369, 404, 407, 411-4, 471, 511-6, 570, 579 Africa: 030-1, 035, 036, 050-1, 055, 063, 068-8, 072-5, 112, 150, 173, 205, 206, 228-12, 245, 249, 258, 263, 264, 323, 325, 354-14, 360-4, 397, 401, 410, 444-12, 444-4, 450-5, 479, 484, 511-3, 519, 520-10, 551, 581-4 Arts: 013, 015, 023, 030-4, 038-7, 050-10, 050-12, 061, 066, 072-2, 106-12, 145, 151-5, 181-1, 207, 228-1, 228-11, 228-13, 228-2, 228-3, 228-9, 273, 300-2, 322, 360, 511-17 Asia: 015, 022, 023, 025, 050-14, 055, 059, 065, 068-12, 068-3, 069, 070-1, 070-2, 072, 0725, 072-7, 089, 095, 105-2, 106-6, 108, 110, 130-4, 130-7, 145-1, 147-10, 150, 151-15, 151-21, 151-24, 151-29, 151-4, 151-5, 163, 164, 166, 168, 173, 178, 178-10, 178-4, 178-9, 180-14, 180-17, 180-6, 212, 216, 216-1, 216-2, 216-3, 216-4, 216-5, 216-6, 216-7, 216-8, 216-9, 228-12, 228-9, 244, 245, 248, 252, 254, 259-5, 265-2, 294-1, 295, 297, 353, 354-15, 354-2, 360-12, 360-6, 370, 394, 400, 401, 411-3, 411-7, 414, 444-1, 444-2, 444-5, 450, 450-10, 450-4, 463, 466, 476-1, 476-5, 479-1, 487, 507-3, 511, 511-11, 511-2, 511-20, 511-4, 517-3, 517-4, 520-10, 520-13, 520-14, 520-16, 52019, 520-20, 520-21, 520-6, 545-10, 561, 568, 575-1, 575-7, 581-1, 581-9 Belonging: 017, 038, 038-1, 089, 091, 162, 167, 216, 2285, 228-8, 243, 264, 265-3, 284, 327, 360-7, 370, 397, 410, 444-15, 444-16, 481, 495, 517-3, 517-4, 545-14, 545-5, 573 Biosociology: 031, 035-6, 050-17, 147-3, 178-5, 178-7, 2294, 265, 375, 386, 411, 411-3, 448, 535 Body and Embodiment: 016, 026, 028, 038, 050-3, 050-6, 063, 105, 105-1, 105-2, 105-3, 130-11, 130-9, 142, 144, 147-1, 147-21, 147-22, 147-25, 147-8, 147-9, 174, 176, 228-5, 248, 292, 308, 354-1, 354-10, 354-12, 375, 377, 400, 411-8, 444-7, 450-14,

450-2, 471, 479-2, 505, 528, 537, 541-2, 5413, 563, 573, 581-3, 581-7, 581-8 Boundaries: 038, 055, 063, 068-12, 068-13, 068-5, 105, 107, 130, 147-14, 167, 176, 213, 219, 220, 228-5, 259, 341, 354-17, 367, 379, 394, 397, 411-5, 439, 444-13, 444-19, 445, 468, 476-13, 479, 488, 489, 499, 505, 519, 545-10, 545-17, 545-18, 545-19, 571, 577 Bourdieu: 017, 038-2, 038-3, 050-12, 055, 105-2, 10617, 115, 137, 145, 151-24, 151-3, 190, 228-13, 228-14, 228-3, 300-3, 332, 336, 360-1, 36013, 360-6, 383, 411-2, 412, 413-5, 430, 444, 444-17, 444-18, 476-10, 502, 511-14, 517-8, 520-6, 536, 545-5, 549, 575-11, 575-12 Children and Youth: 014, 025, 027, 028, 030-3, 030-7, 035-5, 037, 050, 050-11, 050-7, 052, 062, 068-2, 068-4, 072-5, 090, 098, 102, 106-5, 113, 117, 130-10, 130-11, 130-3, 130-6, 136, 145-1, 14718, 147-21, 147-22, 151, 151-10, 151-14, 151-16, 151-18, 151-2, 151-22, 151-23, 151-25, 151-27, 151-3, 151-31, 151-4, 151-5, 151-6, 151-9, 178-2, 187, 189, 208, 216-7, 216-9, 227, 248, 256-12, 256-7, 256-8, 265, 265-1, 265-2, 265-3, 2654, 265-5, 288, 290, 303, 319, 331, 354-11, 354-19, 354-7, 354-8, 367-3, 376, 393, 398, 413-1, 421, 427, 450-17, 450-18, 450-19, 456, 460, 467, 473, 487, 497, 499, 517-6, 519, 520, 520-1, 520-10, 520-11, 520-14, 520-18, 520-20, 520-5, 520-6, 530, 534, 538, 541-1, 545-16, 563, 565, 575-13, 575-3, 575-5, 582 Classification: 021, 041, 056, 137, 143, 147-17, 167, 172, 186-4, 213, 219, 228-13, 245, 334, 411-8, 448, 471, 476-13, 489, 499, 510, 511-13, 527, 562 Cognitive Sociology: 033, 038-2, 042, 092, 094, 105-2, 106-5, 130-6, 143, 151-13, 162, 175, 180-17, 186-1, 1862, 196, 228-2, 230, 262, 332, 375, 395, 411, 413-1, 413-3, 502, 520-9, 565 Collective Behavior/Social Movements: 009, 015, 020, 025, 026, 029, 030, 030-1, 030-6, 038-11, 038-4, 050-1, 050-2, 050-3, 050-4, 050-5, 050-8, 053, 058, 059, 064, 065, 068-7, 070-2, 072, 072-3, 072-7, 100, 105-3, 106, 106-1, 106-10, 106-11, 106-12, 10613, 106-14, 106-15, 106-16, 106-17, 106-2, 106-

3, 106-4, 106-5, 106-6, 106-7, 106-8, 106-9, 111, 120, 121, 130-1, 130-8, 144, 147-17, 148, 168, 169, 176, 177, 180-15, 181-3, 181-5, 181-6, 183, 187, 188, 203, 208, 212, 213, 216-3, 220, 221, 222, 228-8, 241, 253, 254, 255, 259, 259-1, 259-10, 259-2, 259-3, 259-4, 259-5, 259-6, 259-7, 259-8, 259-9, 260, 285, 291, 298, 299, 300, 318, 319, 321, 322, 323, 336, 354, 354-14, 354-7, 365, 367, 367-2, 367-3, 402, 405, 411-9, 413-4, 433, 434, 435, 437, 438, 442, 444, 444-12, 444-19, 444-2, 444-3, 444-4, 444-9, 450-15, 450-17, 450-9, 455, 462, 464, 468, 474, 476-10, 476-11, 476-19, 476-5, 476-6, 476-7, 479-1, 480, 488, 501, 505, 506, 507, 507-3, 511-11, 511-17, 511-3, 5116, 512, 514, 515, 517-1, 517-8, 533, 534, 538, 539, 545-11, 545-12, 545-3, 546, 556, 562, 574, 581-2 Community: 005, 030-1, 030-4, 038-1, 050-6, 057, 0688, 072-6, 089, 103, 106-1, 106-3, 130-8, 131, 136, 151-3, 151-30, 167, 178-5, 178-9, 184, 210, 216-3, 216-4, 216-7, 228, 228-3, 241, 243, 253, 256-11, 256-12, 256-15, 259-7, 285, 295, 327, 353, 354-16, 360, 360-1, 360-12, 36014, 360-15, 360-17, 360-18, 360-19, 360-20, 360-21, 360-3, 360-5, 360-8, 362, 366, 398, 403, 407, 476-10, 476-15, 476-16, 476-6, 486, 503, 509, 520-19, 520-4, 545-3, 545-7, 564, 571, 575-5, 575-9 Comparative Sociology: 029, 030-2, 034, 038-10, 038-4, 050-5, 053, 068-11, 070, 070-2, 072, 072-4, 072-6, 091, 106, 106-1, 106-6, 106-9, 115, 119, 135, 136, 147-14, 147-20, 148, 179, 180-4, 188, 212, 214, 215, 216-3, 228, 228-13, 229-4, 233, 242, 249, 256-4, 275, 283, 291, 316, 320, 328, 343, 350, 354-3, 358, 360-10, 360-11, 36012, 360-13, 361, 381, 384, 393, 401, 403, 404, 412, 439, 444-1, 444-11, 444-16, 444-18, 444-19, 444-4, 444-9, 445, 450, 450-20, 463, 469, 475, 476-3, 484, 491, 493, 507, 507-1, 507-2, 507-3, 510, 511-13, 517-4, 541-3, 551, 554, 556, 562, 570, 572, 575-1 Concentrated Poverty: 052, 130-2, 131, 256-11, 337, 360-20, 360-21, 362, 399, 511-1, 520-6, 571, 575-5, 575-6 Contagion: 106-9, 178-8, 180-12, 358, 368, 476-17, 515, 582

263

Subject Index Criminology/Delinquency: 030-3, 035-5, 035-6, 035-8, 037, 050-11, 057, 080, 093, 095, 098, 106-10, 130-10, 134, 141, 151-23, 158, 165, 179, 186-1, 218, 22812, 251, 256, 256-1, 256-10, 256-11, 256-12, 256-13, 256-14, 256-15, 256-16, 256-17, 25618, 256-19, 256-2, 256-20, 256-3, 256-4, 256-5, 256-6, 256-7, 256-8, 256-9, 265-2, 290, 294-2, 296, 297, 337, 353, 354-10, 35412, 354-13, 362, 367-2, 371, 374, 377, 413, 413-1, 413-4, 416, 434, 441, 444-13, 450-2, 473, 474, 474-1, 474-2, 474-3, 476-14, 479-1, 499, 504, 506, 511-16, 511-18, 511-2, 512, 519, 520-6, 530, 531, 536, 544, 545-16, 559, 562, 567, 571, 575-8, 582 Cultural Processes: 013, 017, 019, 021, 023, 026, 030, 030-4, 030-5, 030-7, 038, 038-3, 038-7, 050-12, 050-2, 050-6, 055, 056, 061, 063, 092, 094, 096, 104, 106-15, 106-16, 106-17, 106-3, 106-4, 106-5, 116, 130-11, 136, 139, 143, 145, 151-17, 178-7, 180-11, 180-14, 180-15, 186, 1862, 187, 188, 203, 214, 216-1, 216-4, 219, 228, 228-1, 228-10, 228-12, 228-14, 228-5, 228-8, 230, 231, 243, 247, 281, 285, 300, 316, 323, 328, 354-16, 354-18, 354-6, 360, 360-10, 360-11, 360-8, 367-2, 374, 403, 413-3, 432, 444-18, 444-7, 450-7, 463, 465, 471, 476-12, 476-7, 480, 486, 495, 498, 503, 511-13, 51118, 511-19, 511-2, 511-3, 511-9, 515, 517-4, 517-5, 520-17, 527, 528, 545-17, 545-2, 545-3, 564, 567, 575-11, 581-5 Cultural Sociology: 005, 007, 009, 013, 015, 017, 021, 023, 026, 030-4, 030-5, 035-7, 038-10, 038-4, 038-5, 038-7, 038-9, 041, 042, 050, 050-12, 05013, 050-14, 050-15, 050-17, 050-2, 050-5, 050-6, 053, 055, 058, 061, 066, 068-10, 079, 080, 092, 099, 102, 103, 104, 106-12, 106-15, 106-16, 106-17, 106-5, 106-8, 115, 119, 125, 126, 130, 130-7, 135, 136, 137, 143, 145, 150, 151-25, 151-26, 151-4, 155, 157, 162, 171, 177, 180-1, 180-11, 180-16, 180-20, 180-9, 181-1, 186-1, 188, 193, 194, 198, 203, 206, 208, 216-4, 219, 228, 228-1, 228-10, 228-11, 228-12, 228-13, 228-14, 228-2, 228-3, 228-4, 228-5, 228-6, 228-7, 228-8, 228-9, 230, 232, 233, 234, 249, 256-4, 265-5, 269, 275, 281, 282, 294, 300-2, 304, 306, 307, 308, 309, 318, 319, 322, 323, 328, 332, 336, 342, 343, 353, 354-10, 354-15, 354-17, 354-19, 354-5, 360,

360-10, 360-11, 368, 373, 381, 382, 383, 392, 395, 397, 404, 409, 411-9, 412, 416, 419, 430, 436, 440, 444, 444-10, 444-13, 444-15, 444-16, 444-6, 450-14, 451, 453, 463, 468, 469, 471, 478, 479-2, 480, 483-1, 501, 507, 511-9, 517, 517-3, 517-5, 517-7, 517-8, 545-11, 545-13, 545-14, 545-2, 545-7, 552, 553, 560, 574, 575-9, 580 Demography: 018, 021, 022, 031, 050-8, 052, 060, 069, 088, 094, 110, 117, 130-3, 130-8, 131, 134, 14716, 147-18, 147-19, 147-3, 147-5, 151-19, 151-26, 178, 178-2, 178-3, 186-4, 189, 216-2, 223, 246, 252, 256-3, 301, 353, 359, 360-16, 360-2, 360-7, 396, 399, 401, 406, 414, 416, 441, 449, 450-4, 452, 487, 520-12, 520-13, 52014, 520-15, 520-16, 520-18, 520-19, 520-5, 541, 545-8, 550, 551, 568, 573, 575 Development: 022, 029, 030-3, 030-7, 032, 035, 036, 068-7, 070-1, 070-2, 070-3, 072, 072-1, 0722, 072-3, 072-4, 072-5, 072-6, 072-7, 074, 096, 106, 106-8, 112, 142, 147-8, 148, 150, 164, 171, 178-2, 180-11, 180-12, 180-18, 209, 211, 212, 214, 216-3, 220, 221, 236, 245, 258, 259-5, 259-8, 283, 285, 303, 330, 331, 353, 356, 360-11, 360-12, 360-15, 360-18, 389, 409, 429, 438, 444-16, 444-5, 444-6, 4447, 450-1, 450-20, 471, 476, 476-1, 476-12, 476-16, 476-18, 476-2, 476-3, 501, 502, 503, 507-1, 507-3, 511, 511-1, 511-11, 511-14, 511-3, 539, 541, 542, 575-4, 575-7 Dignity: 005, 025, 106-1, 186-3, 260, 289, 409, 511-7 Disaster: 050-14, 104, 147-4, 216-3, 216-6, 285, 317, 319, 354-1, 354-10, 360-3, 368, 406, 470, 476-17, 508, 509, 541-3, 542, 568 Disciplines: 068, 115, 203, 483, 483-4, 483-7, 498 Discrimination: 017, 035-1, 051, 068-10, 104, 106-13, 134, 137, 140, 147-11, 147-12, 147-18, 151-30, 154, 184, 216-4, 226, 256, 256-13, 256-18, 256-3, 257, 264, 284, 324, 327, 335, 354-15, 354-5, 356, 357, 360-13, 371, 374, 408, 448, 450-8, 472, 479-1, 508, 511-18, 517-4, 530, 541-2, 541-3, 545, 545-10, 545-15, 545-7, 545-9, 566, 575-2, 575-8

Distribution: 022, 076, 251, 575-12 Durkheim: 038-4, 347, 354-18, 520-12 Economic Sociology: 013, 019, 023, 025, 030-5, 035-6, 038-11, 045, 050, 050-10, 050-12, 050-4, 056, 058, 061, 068-14, 068-3, 070, 072, 072-4, 072-5, 072-6, 072-7, 074, 096, 100, 101, 106, 106-3, 116, 130, 130-7, 133, 137, 143, 145-1, 145-2, 147-4, 151-26, 163, 170, 171, 178-10, 180, 180-1, 180-10, 180-11, 180-12, 180-13, 180-14, 180-15, 180-16, 180-17, 180-18, 180-19, 180-2, 180-20, 180-3, 180-4, 180-5, 180-6, 180-7, 180-8, 180-9, 208, 209, 212, 216-9, 219, 236, 251, 254, 257, 259-1, 259-2, 259-7, 270, 271, 273, 281, 283, 297, 298, 299, 300, 317, 320, 324, 328, 342, 354-19, 354-3, 360-10, 360-11, 360-4, 369, 392, 404, 408, 411-2, 413-5, 430, 433, 443, 444-1, 444-5, 444-6, 450-11, 450-6, 454, 465, 467, 472, 474, 476, 476-11, 476-18, 476-2, 476-20, 477, 479, 490, 507-3, 511-1, 511-11, 511-13, 511-14, 511-16, 511-20, 511-5, 511-6, 511-9, 533, 537, 546, 555, 561, 565, 566, 575-2, 575-6, 575-8, 576, 578 Education: 014, 017, 024, 027, 030-1, 030-7, 035-2, 035-3, 037, 048, 050-11, 050-6, 050-7, 050-9, 051, 055, 068-4, 072-5, 072-6, 073, 090, 095, 097, 100, 107, 113, 130-10, 130-3, 130-8, 136, 147, 147-18, 147-2, 147-21, 151, 151-1, 151-10, 151-11, 151-12, 151-13, 151-14, 151-15, 15116, 151-17, 151-18, 151-19, 151-2, 151-20, 151-21, 151-22, 151-23, 151-24, 151-25, 151-26, 151-27, 151-28, 151-29, 151-3, 151-30, 151-31, 151-32, 151-33, 151-4, 151-5, 151-6, 151-7, 151-8, 151-9, 163, 177, 178-2, 180-1, 180-5, 189, 190, 193, 204, 216-1, 216-2, 216-7, 223, 228-12, 228-7, 229, 229-1, 229-2, 229-3, 229-4, 240, 251, 256-14, 256-3, 265, 265-1, 265-2, 267, 287, 294-1, 301, 319, 354-11, 354-18, 354-19, 3547, 354-8, 354-9, 355, 360-20, 360-8, 366, 367, 369, 378, 392, 393, 397, 409, 411-1, 4115, 411-7, 413-1, 413-3, 427, 430, 442, 450-12, 450-18, 450-19, 450-7, 456, 460, 463, 467, 473, 483-9, 494, 495, 497, 503, 504, 511-10, 511-14, 511-15, 511-19, 511-8, 520-10, 520-16, 520-2, 520-4, 520-5, 530, 538, 541-1, 545, 545-1, 545-13, 545-19, 545-2, 549, 561, 575-1, 575-10, 575-11, 575-3, 575-7, 575-9

264

Subject Index Emotions: 008, 018, 030-1, 050-2, 056, 058, 059, 063, 068-14, 074, 105-1, 105-2, 106-2, 106-5, 1067, 106-8, 106-9, 114, 115, 130-1, 130-7, 139, 144, 147-24, 165, 180-20, 196, 205, 216-6, 228-11, 228-8, 230, 256-7, 259-6, 294-1, 318, 323, 354-1, 398, 410, 442, 443, 461, 473, 486, 511, 511-18, 511-2, 517, 520-12, 528, 537, 545-3 Environmental Sociology: 020, 038-11, 050-1, 050-2, 062, 064, 070-2, 072-2, 072-6, 104, 106-2, 106-3, 106-7, 108, 110, 147-4, 162, 171, 180-17, 180-18, 180-6, 1817, 199, 208, 216-6, 219, 228-4, 249, 256-4, 259, 263, 285, 292, 300-2, 300-3, 317, 319, 320, 321, 353, 354, 354-1, 354-13, 354-3, 360-1, 360-13, 360-18, 360-3, 405, 406, 411-9, 429, 433, 437, 438, 444-7, 455, 476, 476-1, 476-10, 476-11, 476-12, 476-13, 47614, 476-15, 476-16, 476-17, 476-18, 476-19, 476-2, 476-20, 476-3, 476-4, 476-5, 476-6, 476-7, 476-8, 476-9, 482, 509, 520-6, 537, 542, 546, 547, 574 Europe: 026, 034, 053, 068-11, 068-5, 106-17, 106-8, 134, 135, 147-14, 168, 178-2, 180-4, 181-2, 2282, 242, 284, 300-2, 354-6, 435, 450-10, 462, 481, 484, 501, 513, 545-17, 545-7, 575-8 Family: 014, 020, 027, 030-7, 031, 050, 050-14, 050-16, 052, 057, 060, 068-13, 068-14, 068-2, 069, 081, 090, 093, 094, 095, 098, 101, 102, 130-10, 130-2, 130-3, 130-4, 130-8, 139, 145-1, 147-14, 147-18, 147-20, 147-21, 147-5, 151-16, 151-27, 151-28, 151-4, 164, 166, 167, 172, 174, 178, 178-1, 178-2, 178-3, 178-4, 178-6, 180-4, 180-8, 186-4, 189, 203, 208, 215, 216-2, 216-6, 216-8, 216-9, 230, 241, 244, 246, 248, 250, 251, 252, 256, 256-17, 261, 265, 265-1, 281, 288, 290, 292, 295, 317, 353, 354-11, 354-12, 354-16, 354-18, 354-3, 354-6, 358, 359, 369, 377, 396, 399, 413-2, 414, 415, 416, 419, 421, 431, 436, 444-14, 450, 450-1, 450-10, 450-12, 450-21, 450-5, 450-6, 452, 460, 462, 466, 484, 487, 494, 500, 507-3, 511-4, 511-5, 511-6, 511-7, 517-6, 520, 520-1, 520-10, 520-11, 520-12, 520-13, 520-14, 520-15, 520-16, 520-17, 520-18, 52019, 520-2, 520-20, 520-21, 520-22, 520-23, 520-3, 520-4, 520-5, 520-6, 520-7, 520-8, 520-9, 529, 532, 537, 541, 545-18, 551, 563, 564, 568, 573, 575, 575-1, 575-13, 575-2, 580, 581-4, 582

Fields: 026, 072, 137, 143, 170, 180-2, 180-6, 203, 262, 330, 341, 369, 411-3, 411-5, 463, 476-14, 482, 502, 507, 511-15 Global and Transnational Sociology: 017, 019, 020, 022, 023, 029, 032, 036, 038-1, 038-3, 050, 050-19, 053, 054, 061, 068-1, 068-10, 068-11, 068-2, 068-3, 070, 070-1, 070-3, 072-1, 072-2, 072-3, 072-4, 072-5, 074, 089, 091, 096, 106-12, 106-13, 106-7, 106-8, 110, 112, 113, 130-2, 130-5, 130-8, 135, 139, 142, 145, 147-18, 147-8, 148, 149, 150, 151-16, 151-17, 151-7, 164, 168, 169, 171, 173, 178, 181-2, 181-7, 181-8, 182, 188, 198, 203, 209, 211, 212, 214, 215, 216-3, 220, 221, 228, 228-3, 228-5, 228-8, 228-9, 236, 244, 247, 249, 250, 258, 259-2, 259-5, 259-8, 260, 263, 269, 273, 275, 283, 286, 291, 297, 300-3, 307, 316, 325, 327, 330, 339, 353, 354-7, 360-13, 360-19, 360-3, 361, 367-3, 393, 397, 400, 401, 409, 411-2, 412, 431, 434, 437, 438, 439, 444-12, 444-13, 444-16, 444-18, 444-3, 444-8, 445, 450-1, 450-12, 450-15, 450-16, 450-3, 451, 452, 463, 464, 471, 476, 476-17, 476-3, 476-6, 486, 487, 497, 507, 511-15, 512, 517-4, 518, 519, 520-2, 529, 538, 542, 545-12, 545-2, 554, 575-4, 580, 581-9 Groupness: 050-6, 097, 321, 504 Health: 018, 020, 022, 031, 033, 035-1, 036, 038-10, 050-1, 050-15, 050-16, 050-19, 068-14, 069, 070-3, 072-1, 072-3, 088, 090, 098, 101, 102, 106-8, 111, 130-11, 131, 145-1, 147, 147-1, 147-10, 147-11, 147-12, 147-13, 147-15, 147-16, 147-17, 147-18, 147-19, 147-21, 147-22, 147-24, 147-25, 147-26, 147-3, 147-4, 147-5, 147-6, 147-7, 147-8, 147-9, 150, 151-19, 161, 169, 174, 178, 178-1, 178-10, 178-3, 178-4, 178-5, 178-6, 178-7, 178-9, 184, 186, 186-1, 186-2, 203, 207, 208, 209, 212, 215, 216-6, 223, 226, 228-6, 245, 246, 248, 252, 256-3, 258, 261, 265-3, 282, 286, 287, 292, 337, 349, 353, 354-12, 354-16, 354-19, 354-4, 356, 357, 358, 359, 360-3, 360-8, 363, 374, 375, 376, 395, 411, 411-3, 411-4, 411-6, 424, 427, 431, 432, 441, 448, 449, 450-21, 450-4, 473, 474-1, 474-2, 474-3, 476-17, 476-5, 506, 508, 511-15, 517-2, 517-6, 520-10, 520-13, 520-14, 520-18, 520-7, 534, 541, 541-1, 541-2, 541-3, 545-14, 545-15, 560, 561, 562, 563, 568, 571, 573, 575-13, 581-10, 582

Higher Education: 017, 021, 035-3, 039, 050-8, 050-9, 051, 054, 068-3, 068-4, 073, 099, 106-9, 111, 113, 130-8, 151-1, 151-10, 151-11, 151-14, 151-15, 151-17, 151-18, 151-19, 151-20, 151-21, 151-28, 151-33, 151-5, 151-7, 151-8, 190, 203, 216-1, 216-9, 229, 229-1, 229-2, 229-3, 229-4, 256-17, 267, 299, 307, 312, 331, 353, 354-7, 354-9, 374, 378, 393, 411-1, 411-2, 411-5, 430, 442, 446, 450-7, 465, 467, 468, 483-1, 491, 504, 511, 511-8, 520-1, 520-16, 520-20, 545, 545-1, 545-10, 545-2, 547, 549, 560, 575-10, 575-11, 581-7 Housing: 038-9, 050-16, 050-6, 051, 072-6, 072-7, 102, 103, 133, 138, 151-21, 180-1, 180-19, 180-7, 180-9, 181-2, 210, 211, 216-9, 256-2, 328, 36011, 360-12, 360-16, 360-18, 360-19, 360-4, 360-6, 360-8, 360-9, 366, 374, 406, 407, 441, 444-17, 449, 483-1, 503, 520-19, 527, 545-11, 575, 575-5 Identity: 021, 030-1, 035-2, 035-8, 038, 050-8, 053, 060, 066, 068-9, 089, 092, 096, 105-1, 1053, 106-12, 106-5, 130, 130-1, 130-6, 130-9, 135, 137, 139, 142, 143, 147-25, 151-32, 151-6, 162, 167, 168, 172, 177, 178-5, 178-8, 180-13, 182, 183, 186-1, 186-3, 187, 190, 205, 206, 216, 2164, 219, 228-10, 228-13, 228-3, 228-7, 228-8, 231, 242, 247, 256, 256-6, 264, 282, 284, 294-1, 294-2, 303, 321, 353, 354-17, 354-5, 356, 360-7, 367-1, 370, 372, 394, 395, 398, 409, 411-2, 432, 437, 444-12, 444-16, 45010, 450-15, 450-19, 450-9, 461, 462, 465, 467, 472, 474-3, 476-13, 479-2, 481, 483-2, 496, 505, 511-1, 511-10, 511-14, 511-15, 517-7, 517-9, 520-4, 520-7, 527, 529, 534, 541-2, 545-12, 545-14, 545-17, 545-3, 545-5, 545-8, 564, 573, 575, 575-11, 581-11 Inclusion and Exclusion: 024, 030-3, 032, 035-8, 038-8, 050-13, 050-14, 050-16, 055, 066, 068-12, 068-4, 068-5, 073, 100, 106-16, 107, 130-5, 130-7, 136, 139, 143, 146, 147-13, 151-1, 151-3, 151-33, 151-6, 153, 168, 182, 190, 192, 207, 213, 216-1, 216-4, 216-7, 221, 241, 249, 254, 259-7, 264, 295, 322, 325, 327, 331, 350, 354-17, 354-5, 354-9, 356, 357, 360-1, 360-11, 360-15, 36021, 367, 374, 378, 379, 394, 398, 410, 411-2, 417, 435, 439, 441, 444-11, 444-15, 444-16, 444-19, 444-2, 450-5, 478, 479-1, 481, 495, 496, 503, 510, 511-11, 511-2, 511-9, 528, 530, 541, 541-1, 541-2, 545-11, 545-3, 549, 562, 571, 573, 574, 575-4, 575-5

265

Subject Index Indigenous People: 047, 050-3, 068-7, 070-2, 112, 130-8, 180-11, 228, 410, 412, 427, 432, 463, 476-15, 476-3, 483-3, 545-15, 561, 574, 575-9

Interaction: 068-1, 104, 115, 116, 147-9, 161, 178-4, 228-11, 294, 321, 360-17, 360-18, 363, 436, 437, 452, 461, 495, 520-12, 528, 559

Inequality: 008, 013, 014, 017, 019, 022, 025, 028, 030-3, 030-7, 031, 033, 035-1, 035-3, 0354, 035-6, 039, 041, 050, 050-14, 050-19, 050-3, 050-7, 051, 054, 055, 056, 070-2, 072-1, 072-3, 072-4, 072-5, 072-6, 073, 079, 088, 090, 091, 095, 098, 101, 106-13, 107, 111, 113, 130-10, 130-2, 130-3, 130-7, 130-8, 130-9, 133, 135, 136, 137, 138, 140, 141, 142, 145, 145-1, 145-2, 146, 147, 147-12, 147-14, 147-16, 147-18, 147-21, 147-6, 149, 151, 151-1, 151-10, 151-11, 15112, 151-13, 151-14, 151-15, 151-16, 151-18, 151-19, 151-2, 151-21, 151-22, 151-23, 151-25, 151-27, 151-29, 151-3, 151-30, 151-32, 151-33, 151-5, 151-7, 151-8, 163, 164, 165, 166, 169, 170, 178-2, 178-5, 178-7, 178-8, 178-9, 179, 180-10, 180-11, 180-12, 180-14, 180-5, 180-7, 180-8, 183, 186, 186-2, 189, 192, 193, 194, 200, 210, 211, 216-1, 216-9, 222, 228-12, 228-13, 228-14, 228-2, 228-6, 243, 244, 245, 246, 251, 252, 256, 256-11, 256-13, 256-3, 257, 258, 259, 260, 261, 263, 265-1, 267, 269, 272, 281, 284, 285, 286, 288, 290, 295, 300, 300-1, 301, 316, 317, 321, 324, 325, 335, 337, 354-1, 354-2, 354-3, 354-8, 356, 359, 360-1, 360-11, 36018, 360-3, 360-5, 366, 372, 376, 383, 392, 393, 396, 398, 399, 402, 403, 405, 406, 408, 409, 411-1, 411-3, 411-9, 413-1, 423, 427, 428, 430, 431, 436, 441, 442, 443, 444-1, 444-6, 446, 449, 450-3, 452, 460, 467, 476-13, 476-16, 476-3, 476-4, 477, 478, 486, 490, 499, 503, 506, 508, 509, 510, 511-12, 511-13, 511-2, 511-20, 511-4, 511-5, 511-6, 511-7, 511-8, 513, 517-5, 520, 520-10, 520-19, 520-2, 520-20, 520-21, 520-5, 520-7, 520-9, 530, 531, 532, 534, 541-1, 542, 545, 545-11, 545-12, 545-14, 545-16, 545-9, 560, 563, 564, 565, 568, 569, 573, 574, 575, 575-1, 575-10, 575-11, 575-12, 575-13, 575-2, 575-4, 575-6, 575-7, 575-8, 575-9

Islam: 148, 149, 168, 173, 213, 216-4, 228-7, 250, 282, 283, 284, 294-2, 327, 340, 397, 427, 439, 444-10, 444-18, 444-3, 444-5, 497, 517-4, 517-6, 517-7, 518, 577

Integration: 027, 050-19, 068, 068-1, 068-11, 068-12, 068-2, 068-4, 068-5, 068-6, 068-8, 113, 130-5, 138, 147-23, 163, 168, 178-4, 180-14, 182, 203, 216-4, 265-3, 282, 284, 300, 331, 359, 360-19, 360-2, 370, 397, 398, 442, 444-11, 450-11, 481, 500, 508, 511-10, 517-6, 545-17, 545-19, 545-9, 575-10, 575-6

Journalism: 030-2, 124, 323, 354-10, 470 Knowledge: 006, 023, 030-4, 036, 038, 038-3, 050-12, 050-9, 061, 062, 065, 072-4, 078, 099, 115, 133, 137, 147-10, 147-4, 147-7, 147-8, 149, 151-17, 192, 203, 207, 213, 249, 292, 318, 330, 354-10, 363, 377, 382, 386, 390, 404, 411, 411-2, 411-3, 411-4, 411-5, 411-6, 411-8, 411-9, 413-3, 418, 444-13, 450-3, 461, 463, 471, 472, 476-13, 476-16, 479-2, 480, 482, 491, 498, 502, 507-3, 509, 531, 533, 536, 537, 544 Latino/A Sociology: 014, 027, 033, 050-11, 050-7, 068-10, 06813, 068-4, 068-5, 068-9, 073, 106, 106-13, 130, 130-11, 130-3, 130-9, 139, 147-10, 149, 151-26, 167, 178-1, 207, 213, 241, 247, 256-17, 265-3, 276, 288, 331, 354-2, 354-6, 354-9, 357, 367, 367-1, 367-2, 367-3, 397, 407, 420, 442, 444-11, 450-1, 450-2, 483-1, 500, 530, 545-1, 545-13, 571, 575-6 Law and Society: 027, 035-4, 038-4, 047, 068-2, 072-2, 080, 081, 093, 096, 104, 106-1, 110, 130-1, 151-33, 155, 158, 178, 179, 180-11, 182, 205, 227, 2284, 235, 242, 256, 256-1, 256-10, 256-15, 25616, 256-18, 256-19, 256-5, 259, 285, 288, 330, 337, 339, 354-12, 354-13, 354-14, 357, 360-13, 360-19, 360-6, 360-9, 365, 369, 371, 372, 374, 413, 413-1, 413-2, 413-3, 413-4, 413-5, 443, 444-1, 444-12, 444-17, 444-4, 444-6, 444-8, 450-17, 450-5, 450-7, 488, 499, 511-13, 511-14, 511-7, 512, 518, 519, 520-2, 520-3, 528, 531, 538, 539, 544, 545-18, 562, 575-13, 576, 581-2, 581-7 Life Chances: 014, 018, 178-5, 178-7, 203, 228-12, 252, 2562, 289, 303, 466, 500, 510, 563, 575-3 Mathematical Sociology: 021, 097, 133, 180, 262, 368, 419, 502, 515, 535, 567, 578

Meaning: 018, 026, 038-5, 038-6, 038-7, 092, 106-16, 106-17, 161, 174, 203, 243, 256-19, 323, 36018, 363, 444-11, 450-10, 468, 479, 498, 521, 545-8 Media: 001, 002, 023, 030, 030-1, 030-2, 030-3, 030-4, 030-5, 038, 050-18, 050-4, 050-6, 061, 063, 065, 092, 093, 104, 106-11, 106-15, 106-16, 107, 124, 130-9, 143, 165, 178-5, 186, 188, 203, 216-4, 219, 228-11, 228-14, 228-4, 228-7, 228-8, 241, 250, 256-8, 262, 265-5, 281, 313, 322, 323, 328, 335, 336, 353, 354, 354-10, 354-7, 367-2, 374, 398, 411, 412, 434, 444-14, 444-3, 450-14, 450-15, 470, 474-3, 511-17, 512, 517-8, 520-3, 520-4, 521, 528, 538, 545-11, 545-12, 545-13, 574, 581-3 Medical Sociology: 006, 018, 022, 025, 028, 030-2, 031, 033, 035-1, 050-15, 050-16, 050-17, 050-19, 060, 063, 068-6, 069, 074, 098, 101, 105-1, 105-2, 105-3, 106-14, 106-8, 147, 147-1, 147-10, 147-11, 147-12, 147-13, 147-14, 147-15, 147-16, 147-17, 147-18, 147-19, 147-2, 147-20, 147-22, 147-23, 147-24, 147-25, 147-26, 147-3, 147-4, 147-5, 147-6, 147-7, 147-8, 147-9, 150, 151-11, 161, 169, 174, 176, 178, 178-1, 178-10, 178-3, 178-5, 178-7, 178-8, 178-9, 184, 186-1, 203, 206, 208, 209, 220, 223, 226, 246, 261, 262, 287, 292, 308, 353, 354-16, 354-17, 354-19, 356, 358, 359, 360-3, 363, 375, 377, 404, 411-3, 411-4, 411-8, 414, 432, 448, 450-4, 450-8, 453, 461, 462, 466, 474-2, 474-3, 479-2, 493, 506, 508, 511-14, 511-19, 517-2, 520-18, 520-7, 532, 536, 541, 541-2, 545-15, 569, 571, 576, 581-2, 582 Mental Health: 033, 035-3, 035-8, 050-15, 050-17, 069, 093, 098, 105-1, 130-11, 132, 147, 147-1, 147-12, 147-19, 147-21, 147-26, 147-4, 147-5, 150, 151-1, 151-20, 165, 178, 178-10, 178-2, 178-4, 178-6, 178-8, 186-1, 186-4, 203, 209, 216-5, 216-8, 226, 248, 256-13, 256-18, 265, 265-3, 286, 325, 353, 354-12, 375, 431, 448, 450-17, 4502, 450-4, 466, 470, 474-3, 508, 511-15, 51118, 520-1, 520-13, 520-18, 520-7, 532, 539, 541, 541-1, 541-2, 545-14, 569, 581-10, 582 Migration/Immigration: 019, 020, 027, 031, 032, 033, 038-8, 050-14, 050-17, 050-19, 050-5, 052, 068, 068-1, 068-10, 068-11, 068-12, 068-13, 068-14, 068-2, 068-3, 068-4, 068-5, 068-6, 068-7,

266

Subject Index 068-8, 068-9, 072-3, 089, 091, 098, 106-12, 106-13, 108, 113, 117, 130-11, 130-3, 130-4, 130-6, 135, 139, 140, 144, 146, 147-12, 147-17, 147-19, 147-21, 147-9, 151-21, 151-3, 151-6, 163, 164, 168, 172, 173, 178, 178-5, 180-14, 181-2, 182, 188, 198, 203, 213, 215, 216, 216-1, 216-2, 216-4, 216-5, 216-7, 216-8, 216-9, 223, 242, 245, 254, 256-10, 256-17, 258, 259, 259-7, 265-1, 265-3, 276, 282, 284, 286, 288, 295, 303, 317, 319, 325, 330, 331, 334, 340, 353, 354-17, 354-2, 354-6, 354-9, 357, 358, 360, 360-14, 360-15, 360-16, 360-2, 362, 367, 367-2, 367-3, 368, 370, 392, 397, 400, 401, 407, 416, 420, 437, 438, 442, 443, 444-10, 444-16, 445, 446, 449, 450-10, 450-3, 451, 464, 466, 471, 474-2, 478, 479-1, 481, 499, 500, 511-20, 511-4, 520-1, 520-2, 520-20, 520-7, 527, 530, 545-10, 545-12, 545-17, 5452, 552, 561, 568, 573, 575-4, 575-5, 575-6 Morality: 019, 025, 026, 038, 038-6, 050-13, 143, 1452, 147-6, 180-15, 228-12, 228-7, 253, 256-7, 272, 294, 294-1, 294-2, 303, 363, 411, 412, 444-19, 511-11, 511-13, 515, 525, 531, 580 Occupations/Professions: 006, 013, 019, 024, 030-2, 032, 037, 05010, 050-14, 050-4, 050-9, 072-3, 106-14, 126, 130, 130-11, 132, 137, 142, 147-14, 147-2, 147-24, 151-17, 151-9, 178-2, 180-13, 180-14, 180-16, 180-5, 183, 203, 228-1, 228-11, 229-1, 256-9, 259-1, 259-3, 259-9, 287, 289, 294-1, 299, 324, 331, 332, 358, 360-13, 369, 372, 395, 403, 408, 411-1, 411-5, 411-9, 413, 413-5, 415, 433, 443, 446, 450-11, 450-6, 465, 471, 476-11, 478, 479-2, 505, 510, 511, 511-1, 511-10, 511-14, 511-15, 511-17, 511-18, 511-19, 511-2, 51120, 511-3, 511-4, 511-5, 511-6, 511-7, 511-9, 517-1, 543, 545-15, 560, 570, 575, 575-3, 576 Philanthropy: 050-4, 089, 145-2, 151-5, 180-15, 253, 294, 294-1, 294-2, 354-14, 360-4, 470, 476-20, 476-7, 490, 511-1, 517-2 Policy Analysis: 046, 056, 058, 072-7, 147-11, 147-17, 151-13, 151-24, 151-29, 178-5, 180-14, 180-4, 182, 184, 186-2, 228-2, 256-5, 354-8, 354-9, 360, 360-10, 360-12, 360-9, 369, 402, 413-1, 429, 444-1, 444-10, 450-7, 455, 476-1, 476-2, 483-1, 507-2, 536, 542, 570, 575-10, 575-2

Political Economy: 030-5, 034, 035, 050-1, 050-10, 070, 070-1, 070-2, 070-3, 072, 072-2, 072-4, 072-5, 072-6, 096, 104, 106-13, 106-4, 110, 120, 130-7, 148, 168, 171, 180, 180-17, 180-18, 180-2, 180-8, 180-9, 221, 222, 233, 254, 260, 271, 283, 287, 297, 299, 300, 300-1, 300-3, 318, 320, 328, 354, 354-2, 354-7, 360, 360-19, 360-21, 361, 400, 403, 410, 433, 444-13, 444-5, 444-6, 444-7, 476, 476-14, 476-18, 476-4, 477, 482, 507-2, 507-3, 513, 533, 542, 575-7 Political Sociology: 015, 017, 020, 024, 026, 029, 030, 030-2, 030-6, 034, 035-6, 036, 038-1, 038-2, 0386, 050-11, 050-2, 050-4, 050-5, 050-8, 053, 055, 058, 059, 064, 068-11, 068-5, 068-7, 068-8, 070, 070-1, 070-2, 070-3, 072, 0727, 082, 091, 096, 100, 106, 106-11, 106-12, 106-13, 106-14, 106-16, 106-2, 106-3, 106-4, 106-5, 106-6, 106-7, 112, 119, 122, 130-7, 132, 139, 151-28, 151-6, 168, 170, 171, 173, 175, 177, 180-15, 180-17, 180-18, 180-8, 181-2, 183, 203, 209, 212, 214, 216-3, 220, 221, 228, 228-3, 228-4, 228-5, 232, 249, 250, 253, 254, 255, 259-4, 259-5, 260, 264, 265-5, 271, 277, 291, 294, 300, 300-3, 309, 310, 316, 318, 319, 330, 333, 339, 343, 346, 353, 354-18, 360-13, 360-4, 361, 365, 370, 392, 394, 402, 404, 405, 409, 411-2, 412, 413-1, 413-4, 429, 430, 432, 434, 435, 437, 439, 444, 444-1, 444-10, 444-11, 444-12, 444-13, 444-14, 444-15, 444-16, 444-17, 444-18, 444-19, 444-2, 444-3, 444-4, 444-5, 444-6, 444-7, 444-8, 444-9, 450-13, 460, 464, 468, 471, 474, 476-1, 476-10, 476-17, 476-18, 476-19, 476-7, 476-8, 477, 479, 480, 481, 498, 501, 502, 507, 507-1, 507-2, 507-3, 511-11, 512, 513, 517-3, 517-7, 517-8, 517-9, 527, 529, 533, 536, 538, 539, 544, 545-3, 545-5, 545-7, 553, 556, 564, 570, 575-6, 575-9, 580, 581-2 Population: 021, 022, 031, 033, 050-15, 060, 068-2, 088, 108, 130-10, 131, 147-11, 147-18, 147-19, 147-20, 147-22, 147-23, 178-3, 178-8, 206, 209, 210, 223, 228-12, 245, 246, 261, 295, 334, 353, 359, 360-5, 388, 444, 449, 452, 500, 52014, 520-16, 520-5, 520-6, 529, 561, 563, 568, 575-13, 575-3, 577

Poverty and Mobility: 007, 035-1, 045, 050, 050-8, 056, 072-2, 072-6, 138, 151-22, 170, 178-3, 180-5, 211, 256-3, 256-5, 259-4, 261, 265, 290, 300-1, 354-2, 360-20, 360-4, 366, 399, 406, 417, 430, 441, 444-5, 444-8, 449, 474-3, 477, 503, 510, 520-4, 522, 545, 566, 575, 575-1, 575-11, 575-12, 575-13, 575-2, 575-3, 575-4, 575-5, 575-8 Power: 016, 038-1, 038-2, 038-7, 053, 072, 072-2, 079, 106-1, 106-8, 132, 147-21, 180-8, 186, 186-4, 190, 222, 241, 256-19, 259-5, 272, 310, 328, 354-13, 354-14, 354-19, 360-19, 363, 413, 444-17, 444-18, 450-16, 450-3, 463, 476-19, 482, 505, 506, 507-1, 511-12, 511-16, 513, 520-4, 528, 544, 545-5 Public Policy: 024, 037, 038-11, 040, 050, 050-6, 052, 056, 062, 068-6, 068-7, 068-8, 070-3, 072, 072-6, 082, 101, 102, 106-12, 106-15, 106-3, 129, 130, 139, 140, 146, 147-16, 147-7, 147-8, 151-13, 151-15, 151-23, 151-25, 151-26, 151-27, 151-28, 151-33, 151-7, 177, 178, 178-5, 180-1, 180-17, 180-18, 180-4, 180-7, 180-9, 186-2, 203, 209, 211, 215, 221, 228-10, 251, 255, 256-1, 256-13, 256-16, 256-20, 256-5, 256-7, 259-3, 265-1, 279, 297, 319, 324, 353, 354-5, 358, 360-11, 360-14, 360-18, 360-3, 360-6, 360-8, 365, 366, 369, 370, 378, 382, 392, 396, 402, 405, 406, 428, 429, 444-14, 4446, 444-7, 444-8, 450-10, 460, 474, 474-1, 476-10, 476-17, 476-19, 476-7, 479, 479-1, 483, 493, 510, 511-10, 520-11, 520-14, 520-18, 520-3, 520-4, 520-9, 522, 532, 539, 541-3, 542, 545-7, 547, 566, 570, 575-12, 575-2, 582 Public Understanding of Social Sciences: 038-7, 061, 085, 124, 203, 229-4, 278, 314, 353, 354-7, 469, 483, 483-5, 483-6, 483-7, 498, 547, 581-7 Qualitative Methodology: 027, 038-10, 038-3, 042, 050-16, 050-5, 054, 057, 060, 063, 068, 068-1, 068-5, 068-9, 072-2, 093, 105-2, 105-3, 106-13, 106-15, 106-9, 108, 111, 130-1, 130-6, 142, 147-1, 147-13, 147-14, 147-24, 147-4, 147-7, 151-25, 151-26, 161, 169, 178-1, 178-3, 180-13, 186, 208, 211, 228-14, 256-18, 256-20, 256-6, 259-10, 259-4, 267, 300-1, 322, 325, 354-6, 360-15, 367-3, 392, 395, 397, 401, 407, 408, 409, 411-2, 413-2, 415, 416, 436, 443, 444-11,

267

Subject Index 444-16, 444-4, 445, 450-9, 452, 461, 467, 469, 474-1, 476, 482, 495, 508, 511-1, 511-10, 511-11, 511-12, 511-18, 511-2, 511-3, 517-1, 520, 520-11, 520-13, 520-17, 520-21, 520-7, 520-8, 527, 528, 538, 541, 541-2, 545-8, 547, 551, 553, 559, 573, 575-11, 575-5, 576, 581, 581-4, 581-9 Quantitative Methodology: 016, 019, 035-3, 035-6, 037, 050-16, 050-17, 050-18, 050-5, 050-8, 058, 068-13, 069, 070, 072, 072-4, 088, 106-9, 113, 130-3, 1307, 133, 147-7, 148, 151-10, 151-12, 151-13, 151-15, 172, 178-1, 178-10, 178-3, 178-6, 178-8, 180-12, 180-3, 180-8, 186-1, 186-4, 195, 228-11, 246, 251, 256-15, 262, 265-2, 301, 354-1, 354-19, 354-4, 354-9, 360, 360-13, 360-16, 360-2, 360-20, 368, 371, 392, 428, 431, 444-11, 444-13, 444-14, 444-19, 460, 470, 472, 47612, 497, 511-12, 511-19, 511-3, 511-4, 511-5, 513, 515, 520, 520-15, 520-17, 520-19, 520-8, 535, 545-10, 545-15, 545-6, 545-8, 549, 564, 569, 575-10, 575-7, 578 Race, Class, and Gender: 018, 028, 030-4, 032, 035, 035-1, 035-2, 035-3, 035-4, 035-5, 035-6, 035-7, 035-8, 037, 038-8, 043, 050-11, 050-19, 050-3, 051, 055, 065, 066, 068, 068-10, 071, 073, 093, 106-12, 107, 110, 111, 113, 122, 130-10, 130-11, 130-3, 130-6, 130-9, 134, 140, 141, 145-1, 147-11, 147-16, 147-19, 147-22, 147-5, 149, 151, 151-1, 151-11, 151-19, 151-22, 151-23, 151-29, 151-8, 164, 165, 166, 167, 178-1, 178-8, 179, 180, 180-1, 180-10, 180-2, 184, 188, 190, 203, 206, 207, 211, 222, 228-4, 234, 241, 244, 256-12, 256-13, 256-14, 256-15, 256-16, 256-7, 258, 259-9, 263, 281, 284, 286, 289, 298, 300-1, 315, 318, 321, 322, 324, 331, 335, 339, 344, 350, 353, 354-13, 354-19, 354-3, 354-9, 359, 360-14, 360-7, 367-3, 371, 377, 399, 400, 406, 411-7, 411-8, 411-9, 413-2, 416, 418, 427, 444-15, 446, 450-3, 452, 462, 463, 467, 476-10, 476-15, 476-16, 478, 481, 486, 492, 496, 505, 511-18, 511-4, 511-5, 511-6, 517-5, 520-10, 520-13, 520-17, 520-2, 520-20, 520-4, 520-6, 529, 530, 534, 539, 541, 541-1, 545, 545-1, 545-10, 545-11, 545-15, 545-16, 545-2, 545-3, 545-4, 545-6, 545-7, 549, 551, 561, 563, 569, 573, 575-12, 575-2, 575-9, 577, 581-10

Racial and Ethnic Relations: 013, 017, 024, 028, 030-1, 034, 035-5, 0388, 050, 050-11, 050-14, 050-3, 050-5, 051, 058, 059, 065, 066, 068, 068-10, 068-11, 068-12, 068-9, 073, 089, 091, 100, 103, 1064, 115, 130-5, 130-6, 130-8, 130-9, 134, 139, 140, 141, 142, 147-12, 149, 151, 151-10, 151-12, 151-20, 151-31, 151-32, 151-6, 163, 165, 167, 172, 178-8, 180-11, 184, 188, 190, 195, 203, 206, 207, 213, 216, 216-1, 216-2, 216-4, 218, 223, 226, 228, 228-6, 249, 255, 256-10, 256-12, 256-18, 256-19, 259-6, 260, 262, 264, 265-3, 276, 280, 282, 284, 291, 295, 321, 334, 344, 353, 354, 354-14, 354-15, 354-5, 354-7, 3548, 354-9, 357, 359, 360-14, 360-15, 360-16, 360-17, 360-2, 361, 362, 367, 367-1, 371, 387, 394, 397, 403, 407, 410, 411-7, 411-8, 416, 418, 420, 421, 423, 432, 442, 444, 444-10, 444-8, 445, 448, 449, 456, 467, 472, 476, 479, 479-1, 481, 484, 496, 503, 507-1, 510, 512, 514, 520-1, 527, 538, 545, 545-1, 545-10, 545-11, 545-12, 545-13, 545-14, 545-15, 54516, 545-17, 545-18, 545-19, 545-2, 545-3, 545-4, 545-5, 545-6, 545-7, 545-8, 545-9, 562, 568, 575-9, 577 Racism: 024, 035, 035-1, 035-5, 035-6, 038-8, 050, 050-19, 051, 059, 068-9, 130-6, 130-9, 141, 147-11, 147-12, 149, 151, 151-20, 151-23, 151-26, 154, 165, 172, 186-1, 190, 203, 206, 207, 216, 216-4, 228, 228-6, 228-7, 242, 259-6, 300-1, 322, 354, 354-12, 354-15, 354-5, 360-10, 360-12, 360-13, 365, 367, 367-2, 372, 407, 410, 439, 444, 445, 467, 476-5, 479-1, 4833, 496, 507, 545-1, 545-10, 545-13, 545-15, 545-16, 545-17, 545-19, 545-3, 545-4, 545-5, 545-6, 545-9, 575-9, 577 Recognition: 076, 444-10, 450-19, 511, 517-4, 545-14 Religion and Religiosity: 025, 038-10, 038-4, 040, 050-13, 050-17, 057, 066, 070, 072-1, 098, 100, 106-10, 106-12, 106-13, 130-5, 130-6, 130-7, 147-13, 151-17, 151-5, 168, 173, 178-1, 178-6, 181-1, 197, 200, 205, 241, 244, 253, 265-4, 274, 294-2, 316, 348, 354-19, 360-17, 365, 366, 384, 385, 397, 407, 411-9, 415, 444-10, 444-14, 444-18, 444-8, 450-16, 450-18, 451, 463, 484, 507, 511-10, 511-6, 517, 517-1, 517-2, 517-3, 517-4, 517-5, 517-6, 517-7, 517-8, 517-9, 527, 548, 554, 580, 581, 581-10, 581-2

Rights: 059, 104, 155, 181-8, 200, 203, 210, 249, 256-10, 330, 356, 365, 444-18, 450-19, 4509, 464, 520-3, 581-1, 581-2 Science: 003, 004, 011, 028, 038-1, 044, 050-19, 062, 063, 067, 073, 077, 078, 084, 085, 087, 099, 123, 127, 128, 133, 147-10, 147-7, 172, 185, 202, 203, 220, 224, 228-10, 265-4, 268, 292, 305, 316, 326, 329, 334, 351, 353, 354-1, 354-19, 372, 377, 380, 390, 391, 411, 411-1, 411-2, 411-3, 411-4, 411-5, 411-6, 411-7, 411-8, 411-9, 422, 446, 450-17, 457, 458, 459, 461, 471, 482, 483-4, 484, 492, 498, 502, 503, 505, 516, 517-3, 519, 526, 527, 537, 539, 546, 557, 560, 574, 579 Security: 132, 186-2, 340, 413, 544, 574 Segregation: 024, 031, 035-7, 088, 092, 103, 131, 133, 138, 151-3, 207, 210, 270, 287, 360-14, 360-15, 360-16, 360-17, 360-2, 360-5, 393, 408, 503, 507, 545, 545-9, 575-9 Sex and Gender: 014, 016, 025, 028, 030-3, 030-4, 031, 032, 035-4, 035-6, 035-7, 038, 043, 050-3, 050-7, 054, 057, 060, 068, 068-2, 068-3, 068-7, 069, 072-1, 072-2, 073, 094, 095, 101, 104, 105, 105-1, 105-2, 105-3, 106-12, 106-17, 106-4, 110, 111, 112, 115, 130-2, 130-3, 130-4, 130-9, 132, 135, 145-1, 145-2, 147-13, 147-15, 147-2, 147-20, 147-25, 147-5, 147-6, 147-9, 149, 150, 151-11, 151-13, 151-17, 151-28, 151-29, 157, 164, 165, 166, 173, 174, 175, 176, 178-1, 178-2, 178-6, 178-8, 178-9, 180-13, 181, 184, 186, 186-1, 208, 215, 216-4, 216-5, 220, 228-2, 228-3, 228-5, 228-9, 237, 241, 244, 247, 248, 254, 256-13, 256-15, 256-16, 256-6, 256-8, 258, 263, 265-4, 265-5, 286, 288, 289, 290, 292, 300-1, 312, 322, 324, 327, 331, 335, 336, 339, 353, 354-18, 354-3, 354-4, 356, 359, 374, 377, 395, 396, 400, 401, 402, 408, 409, 411-1, 411-7, 413-3, 413-4, 415, 416, 431, 436, 444-14, 446, 450, 450-1, 450-10, 450-11, 450-12, 450-13, 450-14, 450-15, 45016, 450-17, 450-18, 450-19, 450-2, 450-20, 450-21, 450-3, 450-4, 450-5, 450-6, 450-7, 450-8, 450-9, 452, 460, 462, 473, 474, 4743, 478, 480, 485, 497, 499, 505, 511-12, 511-4, 511-5, 511-6, 511-7, 511-9, 513, 517-9, 518, 519, 520, 520-1, 520-10, 520-11, 520-13, 520-15,

268

Subject Index 520-18, 520-21, 520-3, 520-4, 520-5, 520-8, 520-9, 523, 529, 537, 541-1, 542, 549, 551, 560, 562, 564, 567, 569, 575-1, 581, 581-2, 581-4, 581-6, 581-7, 581-8 Sexualities: 009, 015, 016, 018, 032, 035, 050-11, 050-3, 054, 057, 059, 068-5, 081, 090, 106-13, 10617, 111, 147-15, 151-25, 151-31, 151-4, 165, 169, 178-2, 178-9, 184, 186-2, 187, 241, 247, 248, 254, 256, 256-16, 258, 336, 353, 354-19, 354-4, 360-14, 360-7, 415, 444-19, 450-14, 450-15, 450-18, 450-2, 450-3, 450-8, 451, 452, 462, 476-5, 486, 496, 497, 517-5, 519, 520-16, 520-3, 520-8, 523, 531, 545-4, 550, 571, 573, 581, 581-1, 581-10, 581-11, 581-2, 5813, 581-4, 581-5, 581-6, 581-7, 581-8, 581-9, 582 Social Change: 012, 017, 020, 038-10, 050-1, 050-14, 050-5, 050-8, 054, 070-3, 104, 106-13, 106-14, 10615, 106-17, 106-4, 111, 130-1, 130-8, 145-2, 156, 163, 168, 171, 173, 180-12, 189, 216-4, 228-10, 241, 250, 252, 255, 256-10, 259-3, 260, 281, 300, 303, 316, 318, 319, 322, 325, 327, 341, 353, 354-15, 360-21, 388, 392, 409, 435, 439, 442, 444-1, 444-3, 444-7, 450-13, 45015, 450-21, 462, 463, 464, 465, 470, 476-14, 476-16, 476-17, 476-5, 476-6, 483-8, 507, 507-2, 511-10, 511-11, 511-13, 511-14, 511-6, 511-8, 518, 520-12, 520-14, 523, 529, 534, 536, 539, 545-7, 563, 576, 581-5, 581-8 Social Class: 008, 035-7, 055, 056, 068-5, 074, 098, 106-14, 110, 130-8, 131, 136, 147, 147-1, 147-10, 147-2, 151-1, 151-12, 151-14, 151-27, 151-8, 187, 190, 206, 214, 221, 222, 223, 228-14, 251, 289, 290, 299, 300, 317, 318, 354-14, 354-2, 360-21, 411-5, 416, 430, 444-6, 450-18, 450-3, 474-2, 499, 506, 508, 510, 511-5, 513, 520-15, 545-5, 575, 575-11 Social Control: 035-1, 037, 038-10, 047, 073, 093, 106-10, 147-17, 179, 180-16, 186-1, 235, 256-10, 256-12, 256-14, 256-15, 256-17, 256-2, 256-3, 256-5, 265, 300, 323, 337, 354-13, 354-4, 365, 367-2, 372, 413, 423, 474, 474-2, 511-2, 541-1, 546, 570 Social Networks: 015, 018, 019, 030, 030-1, 030-4, 030-6, 030-7, 034, 038-10, 038-3, 038-9, 052, 055,

064, 068-13, 068-14, 069, 070-3, 089, 097, 099, 106-11, 106-2, 106-9, 108, 134, 138, 14716, 147-9, 151-16, 151-2, 151-27, 170, 175, 178-6, 178-8, 180, 180-10, 180-11, 180-17, 180-4, 186, 186-3, 186-4, 216-4, 216-5, 228-1, 228-2, 229, 229-1, 239, 245, 252, 254, 255, 262, 265, 265-2, 282, 287, 297, 323, 325, 353, 360-19, 361, 368, 369, 397, 398, 399, 403, 411-2, 411-6, 411-7, 412, 429, 435, 443, 444-19, 466, 472, 474-1, 476-16, 476-18, 476-8, 478, 5072, 511-1, 511-12, 511-16, 511-17, 511-3, 517-9, 52012, 533, 535, 545, 564, 565, 571, 575-8, 578 Social Organizations: 015, 033, 035-6, 036, 037, 038-4, 0389, 050-3, 050-5, 064, 070-3, 072, 099, 106-10, 106-12, 106-6, 132, 133, 141, 147-17, 151-13, 151-20, 151-24, 151-32, 170, 175, 180, 180-12, 180-13, 180-16, 180-2, 180-20, 180-4, 180-6, 180-7, 181-4, 186, 219, 228-13, 228-6, 229-1, 232, 250, 256-10, 256-5, 256-9, 259-1, 259-10, 259-8, 265-5, 285, 287, 294-1, 297, 311, 325, 332, 354-12, 354-17, 354-19, 360-10, 360-17, 360-21, 368, 369, 372, 404, 408, 413-3, 415, 433, 444-13, 446, 450-11, 450-2, 450-9, 460, 463, 472, 474-1, 476-12, 476-15, 477, 478, 501, 511-1, 511-10, 511-11, 511-16, 51118, 511-19, 511-2, 511-5, 511-7, 511-8, 511-9, 515, 517, 517-1, 541-3, 544, 547, 576 Social Psychology: 018, 021, 035-6, 038, 038-4, 038-5, 050-15, 050-17, 050-4, 052, 058, 068-14, 069, 074, 097, 105-2, 106-12, 130-11, 130-2, 132, 135, 141, 147-13, 147-2, 147-21, 147-5, 147-9, 151, 151-10, 151-16, 177, 183, 186, 186-1, 186-2, 186-3, 1864, 196, 205, 216-6, 226, 228-1, 228-10, 244, 247, 256-6, 256-7, 264, 265-2, 281, 290, 321, 335, 337, 353, 360-2, 392, 395, 434, 444-14, 444-5, 444-8, 450-17, 469, 476-11, 476-18, 476-20, 477, 483-4, 484, 504, 505, 509, 511-17, 511-6, 511-8, 515, 517, 520-11, 520-12, 520-17, 520-7, 528, 532, 545-1, 545-9, 546, 560, 565, 567, 581-11 Social Solidarity: 015, 038-4, 066, 070-1, 070-3, 097, 106-12, 106-2, 106-7, 144, 145-2, 147-23, 183, 221, 228-5, 243, 253, 294-1, 300, 321, 325, 353, 379, 444-6, 564 Social Welfare/Social Work: 050-16, 056, 068-12, 070-3, 072-3, 146, 14717, 169, 256-5, 259-5, 265-1, 294, 300, 337, 354-11, 354-19, 354-4, 366, 402, 416, 444-7,

511-1, 511-10, 539, 541-3, 566, 570, 575-12, 575-2, 575-8 Social and Spatial Exclusion: 035, 038-2, 068-12, 068-8, 092, 103, 130-5, 151-6, 208, 357, 360, 360-11, 360-2, 360-21, 360-6, 360-9, 365, 366, 400, 410, 438, 441, 444-3, 479, 489, 499, 550, 571, 575-4 Socialization: 014, 035-6, 058, 059, 062, 130-9, 151-31, 167, 189, 205, 228-1, 228-12, 411-1, 411-5, 416, 444-9, 450-2, 479-2, 545-13, 545-14 Sociological Practice: 038-5, 050-1, 050-18, 159, 169, 203, 229, 289, 325, 334, 353, 386, 436, 469, 483-1, 483-2, 483-3, 483-5, 483-6, 483-7, 483-8, 483-9, 509, 528, 547 Statistics: 030-4, 050-18, 088, 151, 178-8, 180-3, 180-4, 195, 216-3, 301, 372, 392, 411-8, 444-12, 500, 535, 575-3 Stigma, Stigmatization, and Destigmatization: 032, 035-8, 076, 106-1, 134, 147-15, 147-3, 147-5, 154, 169, 180-16, 203, 219, 220, 248, 253, 256-3, 256-6, 256-8, 257, 294, 327, 353, 354-16, 356, 411-3, 411-7, 417, 436, 448, 450-4, 474-1, 479-2, 483-2, 483-3, 499, 508, 518, 520-3, 541-2, 541-3, 545-10 Stratification/Mobility: 010, 021, 050-8, 052, 054, 068, 068-13, 068-4, 072-3, 072-5, 090, 095, 112, 113, 13010, 131, 140, 146, 147-25, 151, 151-14, 151-16, 151-18, 151-21, 151-22, 151-23, 151-26, 151-29, 151-30, 151-4, 151-8, 178-2, 178-5, 180-3, 1805, 184, 209, 211, 216-2, 223, 228-12, 228-6, 229-2, 251, 256-2, 256-3, 257, 259-9, 263, 289, 295, 297, 309, 312, 317, 324, 327, 342, 354-8, 359, 360-1, 360-12, 360-20, 367-1, 368, 381, 388, 399, 408, 411-6, 413-2, 413-5, 428, 430, 433, 444-9, 446, 449, 453, 460, 465, 467, 477, 510, 511-12, 511-20, 511-4, 52016, 520-2, 520-5, 522, 539, 563, 573, 575, 575-1, 575-10, 575-11, 575-12, 575-13, 575-3, 575-6, 575-7, 575-8, 575-9 Suicide: 106-1, 147-21, 147-23, 178-2, 216-6, 265-3, 347

269

Subject Index Symbolic Boundaries: 017, 035-2, 038-2, 054, 102, 106-10, 142, 151-13, 151-17, 228-13, 228-14, 242, 247, 253, 256-14, 327, 336, 360-7, 367-2, 394, 407, 462, 479-2, 481, 507, 508, 517-7, 521, 545-18, 552, 567 Symbolic Interaction: 023, 038-5, 038-7, 050-4, 052, 097, 104, 106-17, 132, 147-1, 162, 187, 228, 354-18, 360-7, 363, 398, 444-15, 462, 498, 520-12, 545-10 Technology: 023, 028, 030-1, 030-3, 030-4, 030-5, 030-7, 038-10, 038-7, 050-1, 050-12, 061, 062, 064, 065, 068-3, 072-5, 093, 099, 101, 106-11, 106-7, 107, 130-1, 134, 147-7, 156, 171, 174, 178-9, 180-20, 186-1, 216-1, 228, 228-4, 235, 256-8, 259-4, 267, 291, 332, 334, 35419, 356, 372, 377, 398, 405, 411, 411-1, 411-2, 411-3, 411-4, 411-5, 411-6, 411-7, 411-8, 411-9, 414, 434, 446, 450-1, 450-6, 454, 461, 470, 471, 476-13, 476-18, 476-19, 476-20, 482, 502, 504, 511-14, 511-19, 511-8, 511-9, 524, 528, 534, 537, 542, 544, 547, 576 Theory: 015, 016, 028, 030-5, 030-6, 035-7, 038, 038-1, 038-10, 038-11, 038-2, 038-3, 038-4, 038-5, 038-6, 038-7, 038-8, 038-9, 040, 043, 050, 050-13, 050-18, 050-2, 050-4, 075, 078, 097, 105, 105-2, 106-16, 106-17, 115, 130-7, 133, 136, 141, 149, 151-17, 152, 162, 177, 179, 180-16, 180-20, 186, 191, 203, 205, 208,

222, 226, 228-11, 228-5, 228-6, 229-4, 230, 246, 252, 260, 300-2, 300-3, 318, 330, 339, 344, 347, 354-15, 354-18, 360-20, 360-6, 360-7, 361, 363, 384, 395, 410, 411, 411-8, 413-3, 436, 437, 438, 439, 444-12, 444-15, 444-2, 444-3, 450-3, 461, 463, 469, 470, 476-12, 476-13, 476-16, 479-1, 479-2, 480, 498, 501, 511-15, 513, 515, 517, 517-2, 517-3, 517-7, 517-8, 531, 535, 536, 537, 540, 545-16, 545-5, 545-6, 550, 559, 567, 573, 578 Urban Sociology: 013, 014, 023, 024, 026, 050-1, 050-11, 050-12, 050-6, 062, 066, 068-9, 072-7, 082, 100, 102, 103, 105, 106-13, 130-4, 130-5, 131, 134, 138, 141, 142, 145-1, 147-10, 151-21, 151-22, 151-26, 151-27, 151-30, 151-32, 170, 176, 179, 180-19, 180-7, 188, 207, 210, 212, 228-10, 228-14, 228-3, 234, 243, 256, 256-12, 25616, 256-19, 262, 287, 295, 300-1, 327, 353, 354-1, 354-15, 360, 360-1, 360-10, 360-11, 360-12, 360-13, 360-14, 360-15, 360-16, 360-17, 360-18, 360-19, 360-2, 360-20, 360-21, 360-3, 360-4, 360-5, 360-6, 360-7, 360-8, 360-9, 362, 365, 366, 403, 405, 407, 410, 427, 429, 433, 438, 441, 444-12, 444-14, 444-5, 449, 450-20, 462, 474-3, 476-10, 476-15, 477, 486, 501, 503, 507-2, 509, 511-18, 527, 539, 545-13, 547, 550, 562, 571, 575-5, 575-9, 581-9 Violence: 026, 034, 035-3, 035-6, 053, 057, 072-2, 103, 106-1, 111, 132, 134, 148, 151-23, 164, 165, 170, 175, 228-8, 230, 256, 256-13, 256-16,

256-19, 256-20, 256-4, 256-8, 265-2, 286, 318, 325, 327, 339, 353, 354-4, 371, 375, 4134, 435, 436, 444-18, 450-17, 450-3, 450-5, 461, 473, 479, 479-1, 479-2, 496, 507, 508, 512, 520-12, 520-13, 529, 541-1, 544, 545-14, 562, 565, 581, 581-3 Work: 013, 030-2, 030-7, 032, 035-4, 038-9, 05010, 056, 068-10, 070, 095, 099, 101, 107, 110, 126, 130, 130-2, 130-6, 132, 134, 135, 140, 141, 142, 143, 147-13, 147-14, 147-25, 151-13, 151-5, 151-9, 157, 160, 166, 174, 175, 176, 178, 178-10, 180, 180-16, 180-4, 180-5, 180-7, 180-9, 181-5, 182, 183, 186-2, 186-4, 188, 203, 211, 216-5, 216-8, 221, 222, 223, 228-3, 229-1, 229-3, 256-2, 257, 259, 259-1, 259-10, 259-2, 259-3, 259-4, 259-5, 259-6, 259-7, 259-8, 259-9, 265-4, 295, 299, 300-1, 303, 322, 323, 324, 332, 335, 353, 354-11, 354-17, 354-2, 354-3, 356, 360-11, 367-1, 372, 395, 396, 400, 401, 403, 406, 408, 411-7, 411-9, 415, 425, 428, 431, 443, 446, 450-1, 450-11, 450-12, 450-21, 450-6, 450-7, 450-8, 461, 465, 466, 473, 478, 499, 500, 511, 511-12, 511-13, 511-14, 51115, 511-17, 511-18, 511-19, 511-2, 511-20, 511-3, 511-4, 511-5, 511-6, 511-7, 511-8, 511-9, 520-1, 520-14, 520-15, 520-17, 520-2, 520-21, 5208, 520-9, 527, 543, 545-1, 547, 551, 560, 561, 563, 565, 567, 568, 575, 575-1, 575-2, 575-3, 575-6, 575-8 Xenophobia: 024, 029, 068, 068-9, 168, 214, 242, 392, 444-2

270

ASA Officers Presidents 1906-07 1908-09 1910-11 1912-13 1914-15 1916 1917 1918 1919 1920 1921 1922 1923 1924 1925 1926 1927 1928 1929 1930 1931 1932 1933 1934 1935 1936 1937 1938 1939 1940 1941 1942 1943 1944 1945 1946 1947 1948 1949 1950 1951 1952 1953 1954 1955 1956

Lester F. Ward William G. Sumner Franklin H. Giddings Albion W. Small Edward A. Ross George E. Vincent George E. Howard Charles H. Cooley Frank W. Blackmar James Q. Dealey Edward C. Hayes James P. Lichtenberger Ulysses G. Weatherly Charles A. Ellwood Robert A. Park John L. Gillin William I. Thomas John M. Gillette William F. Ogburn Howard W. Odum Emory S. Bogardus Luther L. Bernard Edward B. Reuter Ernest W. Burgess F. Stuart Chapin Henry P. Fairchild Ellsworth Faris Frank H. Hankins Edwin H. Sutherland Robert M. MacIver Stuart A. Queen Dwight Sanderson George A. Lundberg Rupert B. Vance Kimball Young Carl C. Taylor Louis Wirth E. Franklin Frazier Talcott Parsons Leonard S. Cottrell, Jr. Robert C. Angell Dorothy Swaine Thomas Samuel A. Stouffer Florian Znaniecki Donald Young Herbert Blumer

1957 1958 1959 1960 1961 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001

Robert K. Merton Robin M. Williams, Jr. Kingsley David Howard Becker Robert E.L. Faris Paul F. Lazarsfeld Everett C. Hughes George C. Homans Pitirim Sorokin Wilbert E. Moore Charles P. Loomis Philip M. Hauser Arnold M. Rose* Ralph H. Turner Reinhard Bendix William H. Sewell William J. Goode Mirra Komarovsky Peter M. Blau Lewis A. Coser Alfred McClung Lee J. Milton Yinger Amos H. Hawley Hubert M. Blalock, Jr. Peter H. Rossi William Foote Whyte Erving Goffman Alice S. Rossi James F. Short, Jr. Kai T. Erikson Matilda White Riley Melvin L. Kohn Herbert J. Gans Joan Huber William Julius Wilson Stanley Lieberson James S. Coleman Seymour Martin Lipset William A. Gamson Amitai Etzioni Maureen T. Hallinan Neil J. Smelser Jill Quadagno Alejandro Portes Joe R. Feagin Douglas Massey

2002 Barbara F. Reskin 2003 William T. Bielby 2004 Michael Burawoy 2005 Troy Duster 2006 Cynthia Fuchs Epstein 2007 Frances Fox Piven 2008 Arne L. Kalleberg 2009 Patricia Hill Collins 2010 Evelyn Nakano Glenn 2011 Randall Collins 2012 Erik Olin Wright 2013 Cecilia Ridgeway 2014 Annette Lareau 2015 Paula England 2016 Ruth Milkman 2017 Michèle Lamont 2018 Eduardo Bonilla-Silva *died in office

271

ASA Officers Vice Presidents 1906 1st William G. Sumner 2nd Franklin H. Giddings 1912 1st Edward A. Ross 2nd George E. Vincent 1913 1st Edward A. Ross 2nd George E. Vincent 1914 1st George E. Vincent 2nd George E. Howard 1915 1st George E. Vincent 2nd George E. Howard 1916 1st George E. Howard 2nd Charles H. Cooley 1917 1st Charles H. Cooley 2nd Frank W. Blackmar 1918 1st Frank W. Blackmar 2nd James Q. Dealey 1919 1st James Q. Dealey 2nd Edward C. Hayes 1920 1st Edward C. Hayes 2nd J. P. Lichtenberger 1921 1st J. P. Lichtenberger 2nd Ulysses G. Weatherly 1922 1st Ulysses G. Weatherly 2nd Charles A. Ellwood 1923 1st Charles A. Ellwood\ 2nd Robert E. Park 1924 1st Robert E. Park 2nd John L. Gillin 1925 1st John L. Gillin 2nd Walter F. Willcox 1926 1st John M. Gillette 2nd William I. Thomas 1927 1st William F. Ogburn 2nd Emory S. Bogardus 1928 1st Frank H. Hankins 2nd Luther L. Bernard 1929 1st Howard W. Odum 2nd Edwin H. Sutherland 1930 1st Edwin H. Sutherland 2nd Dwight Sanderson 1931 1st Ellsworth Faris 2nd R. D. McKenzie 1932 1st C. J. Galpin 2nd Neva R. Deardorff 1933 1st Ernest W. Burgess 2nd Floyd N. House 1934 1st H. P. Fairchild 2nd Stuart A. Queen 1935 1st Arthur J. Todd 2nd Clarence M. Case 1936 1st Dwight Sanderson 2nd J. H. Kolb

1937 1st 2nd 1938 1st 2nd 1939 1st 2nd 1940 1st 2nd 1941 1st 2nd 1942 1st 2nd 1943 1st 2nd 1944 1st 2nd 1945 1st 2nd 1946 1st 2nd 1947 1st 2nd 1948 1st 2nd 1949 1st 2nd 1950 1st 2nd 1951 1st 2nd 1952 1st 2nd 1953 1st 2nd 1954 1st 2nd 1955 1st 2nd 1956 1st 2nd 1957 1st 2nd 1958 1959 1960 1961 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967

Charles S. Johnson Carl C. Taylor Warren S. Thompson Warner E. Gettys Dorothy Swaine Thomas Jesse F. Steiner Stuart A. Queen James H. S. Bossard James H. S. Bossard Howard Becker Harold A. Phelps Katherine Jocher Kimball Young Samuel A. Stouffer Read Bain Carl C. Taylor Carl C. Taylor Leonard S. Cottrell, Jr. Leonard S. Cottrell, Jr. E. Franklin Frazier E. Franklin Frazier Robert C. Angell Robert C. Angell Herbert Blumer Dorothy Swaine Thomas Philip M. Hauser Robert K. Merton Margaret Jarman Hagood Margaret Jarman Hagood Kingsley Davis Clifford Kirkpatrick Joyce Hertzler Herbert Blumer Jessie Bernard Jessie Bernard Philip M. Hauser Philip M. Hauser Robin M. Williams, Jr. Robin M. Williams, Jr Meyer F. Nimkoff Kingsley Davis August B. Hollingshead Robert E. L. Faris Harry Alpert Wilbert E. Moore George C. Homans William H. Sewell Leonard Broom Reinhard Bendix Robert Bierstedt Arnold M. Rose Rudolf Heberle

1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018

William J. Goode Ralph Turner Gerhard Lenski Morris Janowitz Mirra Komarovsky Raymond W. Mack Matilda White Riley Neil J. Smelser Alex Inkeles Suzanne Keller Alice S. Rossi Charles Y. Glock Helen MacGill Hughes Renee C. Fox Joan Huber Everett K. Wilson Edgar F. Borgatta Morris Rosenberg Rose Laub Coser Mayer N. Zald Richard J. Hill Glen H. Elder, Jr. Edna Bonacich Barbara F. Reskin Doris Y. Wilkinson Jill Quadagno Barrie Thorne Karen Cook Myra Marx Ferree Charles V. Willie Cora Bagley Marrett Patricia Roos Nan Lin Richard D. Alba Elijah Anderson Ivan Szelenyi Bernice Pescosolido Caroline Hodges Persell Lynn Smith-Lovin Bonnie Thornton Dill Douglas McAdam Margaret Andersen John Logan David Snow Edward E. Telles Jennifer L. Glass Brian Powell Cecilia Menjivar Barbara J. Risman Kathleen Gerson Christopher Uggen

272

ASA Officers Secretaries 1906-09 C.W.A. Veditz 1910-12 Alvan A. Tenney 1913-20 Scott E.W. Bedford 1921-30 Ernest W. Burgess 1931-35 Herbert Blumer 1936-41 Harold A. Phelps 1942-46 Conrad Taeuber 1947-48 Ernest Mowrer 1949 Irene Taeuber 1949-54 John W. Riley 1955-58 Wellman J. Warner

1959-60 1961-65 1966-68 1969-71 1972-74 1975-77 1978-80 1981-83 1984-86 1987-89 1990-92

Donald Young Talcott Parsons Robin M. Williams, Jr. Peter H. Rossi J. Milton Yinger William H. Form James F. Short, Jr. Herbert L. Costner Theodore Caplow Michael Aiken Beth B. Hess

1993-95 1996-98 1999-01 2002-04 2005-07 2008-10 2011-13 2014-16 2017-19

Arlene Kaplan Daniels Teresa A. Sullivan Florence B. Bonner Arne L. Kalleberg Franklin D. Wilson Donald Tomaskovic-Devey Catherine White Berheide Mary Romero David Takeuchi

Executive Officers 1949-60 Matilda White Riley 1960-61 Robert Bierstedt 1961-62 Robert O. Carlson 1963-66 Gresham Sykes

1966-70 1971-72 1972-75 1975-77

Edmund H. Volkart N.J. Demerath II Otto N. Larsen Hans O. Mauksch

1977-82 1982-91 1991-2002 2002-2016

Russell R. Dynes William V. D’Antonio Felice J. Levine Sally T. Hillsman

ASA 2017 Mobile Program App Download the ASA 2017 Program app to seamlessly navigate the Annual Meeting. To download the app, go to the App Store or Google Play and search for “ASA Annual Meeting” OR scan the QR code to the right. To access program content and much more, select the 2017 Meeting under “Upcoming Meetings.” For all other device types (including BlackBerry, Windows, and other web browser-enabled devices), point your mobile browser to m.core-apps.com/asaannual to be directed to the proper download version for your phone. Should you have any questions about downloading the app, please contact [email protected]. With the ASA 2017 mobile app, you can: • Stay organized with up-to-the-minute Exhibitor, Speaker, and Event information • Sync the app across all of your devices with Multi-Device Sync • Receive important real-time communications from the ASA • Build a personalized schedule and bookmark exhibitors • Take notes • Locate sessions and exhibitors on the maps • Find attendees and connect with your colleagues through Friends • Stay in-the-know and join in on social media with #asa17 • Watch ASA videos • And much, much more

Cover art Bharti Kher View from 6000 ft, 2010 Bindis on painted board 183 x 244 cm Courtesy of the artist and Hauser & Wirth

See You Next Year!

112TH ASA ANNUAL MEETING

FINAL PROGRAM

ASA Annual Meeting Services 1430 K Street NW, Suite 600 • Washington, DC 20005-2529 202.383.9005 ext. 305 • 202.638.0882 fax [email protected] • www.asanet.org

CULTURE, INEQUALITIES, AND SOCIAL INCLUSION ACROSS THE GLOBE

112th ASA Annual Meeting August 12-15, 2017 Montréal, Québec, Canada Palais des Congrès de Montréal

STAY CONNECTED! ACCESS THE ANNUAL MEETING APP #ASA17 @ASANEWS

FINAL PROGRAM