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Alumni Publications
Student Publications | Faculty Publications
Jean O'Malley Halley, CUNY Graduate Center Alum,
is an Assistant Professor in the Sociology and Anthropology
department at Wagner College in Staten Island, New York. Her book
(based on her dissertation) is coming out in July 2007 with the
University of Illinois Press. You can view it at: http://www.press.uillinois.edu/s07/halley.html Jeffrey Bussolini , CUNY Graduate Center Alum, has
published an article entitled: "The Wen Ho Lee Affair: Between Race
and National Security," in Implicating Empire: Globalization and
Resistance in the 21st Century World Order, edited by Stanley
Aronowitz and Heather Gautney. NY: Basic Books.
Alice Cepeda, CUNY Graduate Center Alum, has co-authored the
following articles: "Risk Behaviors Among Young Mexican American Gang
Associated Females: Sexual Relations, Partying, Substance use and
Crime," in Journal of Adolescent Research, 18 (1), 91-107
with Avelardo Valdez; "The Process of Paradoxical Autonomy and Survival
in the Heroin Careers of Mexican American Women," in Contemporary
Drug Problems, 22, 189-212 with Avelardo Valdez and Charles D.
Kaplan; and "The Legal Importation of Prescription Drugs in the United
States from Mexico: A Study of Customs Declarations," in Journal
of Substance Use and Misuse, 33 (12), 2485-2497 with Avelardo
Valdez, Zenong Yin, and Charles D. Kaplan.
Grace M. Cho, CUNY Graduate Center Alum, has published the
following articles: "Death and Yearning" in Qualitative
Inquiry, 9:6; "Murmurs in the Storytelling Machine" in Cultural
Studies - Critical Methodologies 4:2; and "Regression Analysis:
Mother, Memory, Data" in Cultural Studies - Critical Methodologies 4:3.
Melissa Ditmore, CUNY Graduate Center Alum, has published the
following articles: "Contemporary anti-trafficking legislation in the
United States," (forthcoming) at: http://www.nswp.org/mobility/analysis.html ; "Reaching Out to Sex
Workers," in Reaching the Hardly Reached (Program for Appropriate
Technology and Health), at: http://www.path.org/files/RHR-Article-3.pdf ; and "How immigration
status affects sex workers' health and vulnerability to abuse A
comparison of two countries," in Research for Sex Work 5. At: http://www.med.vu.nl/hcc/artikelen/ditmore5.htm
Ariel Ducey, CUNY Graduate Center Alum, has published the
following articles: "Regulating Affective Labor: Communication Skills
Training in the Health Care Industry," Research in the Sociology of
Work 12 and "What's the Use of Job Descriptions? Reflections from
the Health Care Industry" Working USA, 6 (2): 40-55 with Heather
Gautney and Dominic Wetzel.
Salvador Vidal-Ortiz, CUNY Graduate Center Alum, has published
the following articles: "Queering Sexuality and Doing Gender:
Transgender Men's Identification with Gender and Sexuality," in Gendered Sexualities (Advances in Gender Research Series, Volume 6,
pp. 181-233). Patricia Gagne, Richard Tewksbury, Editors. Elsevier
Science, Ltd; "On Being a White Person of Color: Using Autoethnography
to Understand Puerto Ricans’ Racialization.” Qualitative Sociology, 27, 2:179-203; "Puerto Ricans and the Politics of
Speaking Spanish.” Latino Studies Journal, 2 and "Sexuality and Gender in Santería: Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and
Transgender Identities at the Crossroads of Santería Religious
Practices and Beliefs.” Gay Religion: Continuity and Innovation in
Spiritual Practice. Edited by Scott Thumma and Edward R. Gray.
Boston Way Lanham, MD: AltaMira Press.
Jonathan Wynn, CUNY Graduate Center Alum, has published the
following articles: "Guiding Practices: Some Tricks
of Walking Tour Guides," Qualitative Sociology, 28(4) and "Bobos on the Road," Qualitative Inquiry 10(3).
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Gregory Anderson, Assistant Professor of Education at Columbia
University Teachers College,
and Sociology Department alum, has a new book out entitled: Building a People's University in South Africa: Race, Compensatory Education,
and the Limits of Democratic Reform. The book is published by
Peter Lang, Inc. 2002, and more information about it, including ordering
information, can be obtained at: http://commerce.peterlangusa.com. |
Ellen I. Rosen, GC Sociology alum (1976), Resident Scholar,
Women's Studies Research Center at Brandeis University has just
published a new book entitled: Making
Sweatshops: The
Globalization of the U.S. Apparel Industry
This book is published by University of California Press, 2002. She is
now writing a new book about Wal-Mart.
For more info on the book as well ordering information, please visit:
www.amazon.com
Nancy Lopez, Graduate Center Sociology
alum who has been appointed assistant
Professor of Sociology at the University of New Mexico, has a new book coming out entitled: HOPEFUL GIRLS, TROUBLED BOYS: Race and Gender Disparity in Urban
Education. The book is being published by Routledge, and is expected
to be out before the end of 2002. Professor Lopez can be contacted by email at: nlopez@unm.edu, or by phone at: 505-277-3101.
Stephen Duncombe, CUNY Graduate Center Class of 1996, has just published
his second book entitled CULTURAL RESISTANCE: A Reader.
More information on this book can be found at: http://www.versobooks.com/books/cdef/d-titles/duncombe_cultural_resist.shtml.
Stephen Duncombe has just received tenure at New York University, where he teaches
history and politics of media and culture in the interdisciplinary Gallatin School.
Currently, he is co-writing a book with CUNY Sociology ABD Andrew Mattson on "The
Bobbed-Haired Bandit" (a once famous, now forgotten, female criminal/media celebrity of
NYC in the 1920's). The book will be published by Pantheon/Vintage and is expected
to be out next year.
Jennifer Parker Talwar, who received her Ph.D. from the Sociology Program
in 1996, has just published her
first book-- FAST FOOD, FAST TRACK: Immigrants, Big Business, and the
American Dream-- an examination of the experiences and likely futures of different immigrant
groups who work in McDonalds and Burger King franchises in New York City. Under contract with
Westview Press, Jenn turned her dissertation, which was based on many, in-depth interviews with
workers and managers in these restaurants, as well as an analysis of the labor markets and
immigration, into a trade book. The book is designed for both undergraduate and graduate courses
in these areas and is a good example of qualitative research. You can read a positive review of
the book, published in the Wall Street Journal (of all places) on February 28, 2002, by
clicking here. The proud dissertation committee consisted of Sharon Zukin (chair), Cynthia Fuchs Epstein,
and Peter Kwong.
--By Sharon Zukin.
Bruce D. Haynes, CUNY Graduate Center Alumn, recently published a
new book about his research in Runyon Heights, community in Yonkers, New York.
This community has been populated by middle-class African Americans for nearly a
century. RED LINES, BLACK SPACES: The Politics of Race and Space in a Black
Middle-Class Suburb (Yale University Press: October, 2001) – the first
history of a black middle-class community – tells the story of Runyon Heights,
which sheds light on the process of black suburbanization and the ways in which
residential development in the suburbs has been shaped by race and class.
“No one experiences the cruel ironies of American racism more forcefully than does
the African American middle class. In this nuanced community study, Bruce
Haynes uses historical and ethnographic methods to tell the story of one long-standing
black suburban neighborhood. In so doing, he opens a window on the interaction
between race and place throughout twentieth century America.”
–Philip Kasinitz, City University of New York, Graduate Center
Bruce Haynes is currently assistant
professor of sociology at the University of California, Davis, and an alumni of
the CUNY Graduate Center.
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