News
Jenn Tostlebe's book review of Benjamin Steiner and John Wooldredge's Understanding and reducing prison violence: An integrated social control-opportunity perspective has been published in Rutgers' Criminal Law and Criminal
Dr. Rachel Rinaldo Associate Professor of Sociology Director of the Center for Asian Studies University of Colorado, Boulder Thursday, November 4th 12:30PM MST Zoom link Meeting ID: 998 8596 8353 Passcode: 487638 Amplifying Inequalities
Dr. Megan R. Underhill Assistant Professor of Sociology University of North Carolina, Asheville Thurs., Nov. 18 at 12:30PM MST Zoom: https://cuboulder.zoom.us/j/99948914551 Becoming Woke: White Racial Socialization During
Jill Harrison gave an invited presentation to the California Fish and Game Commission and executive leadership of California’s Natural Resources Agency on her research on the challenges facing government agencies’ environmental justice reform
The talk will be about her research on the challenges facing government agencies’ environmental justice reform efforts. October 6 3:30-4:30pm
Tune in for information on requirements for the major and minor, advising, study abroad, honors, internships and certificates. For Sociology majors and minors and those interested. When: Friday, October 1st Event start: 11am Where: Zoom https
Jason Boardman and Jason Fletcher’s (University of Wisconsin) paper entitled “Evaluating the Continued Integration of Genetics into Medical Sociology” was just published in the Journal of Health & Social Behavior.
“On-time, late, or never: Incorporating intersectionality to predict age-specific probabilities of initiating the HPV vaccine series.” Social Science & Medicine 287 (October): 114227. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2021
The article is titled, "Is Mexico beyond mestizaje? Blackness, race mixture, and discrimination" Abstract: In the 1980s and 1990s, a wave of multiculturalism swept across Latin America, following long-standing ideologies of mestizaje which
Amanda Stevenson posted a preprint version of a paper forthcoming in Demography. It provides estimates of the most predictable part of the mortality consequence of banning abortion in the US - the additional mortality that would occur because