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7:00 am Meetings ASA Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517B, 7:00-8:15am Society and Mental Health Editorial Board Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520B, 7:00-8:15am 8:30 am Meetings 2018 Public Understanding of Sociology Award Selection Committee Palais des congrès de Montréal, 523A, 8:30-10:10am Department Resources Group (DRG) Training Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516C, 8:30am-12:10pm Managing Editors Palais des congrès de Montréal, 523B, 8:30am-12:10pm Orientation for New Section Officers Palais des congrès de Montréal, 518B, 8:30-10:10am Section on History of Sociology Council Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512G, 8:30-9:30am Section on Sociology of Population Council Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512H, 8:30-9:30am Sociological Methodology Editorial Board Palais des congrès de Montréal, 524A, 8:30-10:10am Sociology of Education Editorial Board Palais des congrès de Montréal, 710A, 8:30-10:10am 8:30 am Sessions 307. Thematic Session. Higher Education/Shifting Processes Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511B, 8:30-10:10am 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, 8:30-10:10am Session Organizer: Christine A. Bachrach, University of Maryland Presider: Christine A. Bachrach, University of Maryland Transforming the Food System: A Cultural and Infrastructural 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 individual-level 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. 309. Thematic Session. Preserving Cultural Heritage: Hegemony, Sustainability, and Global Commodification Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511E, 8:30-10:10am 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,” 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.
Transcript

7:00 am Meetings

ASA Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517B, 7:00-8:15am

Society and Mental Health Editorial Board Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520B, 7:00-8:15am

8:30 am Meetings

2018 Public Understanding of Sociology Award Selection Committee

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 523A, 8:30-10:10am

Department Resources Group (DRG) Training Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516C, 8:30am-12:10pm

Managing Editors Palais des congrès de Montréal, 523B, 8:30am-12:10pm

Orientation for New Section Officers Palais des congrès de Montréal, 518B, 8:30-10:10am

Section on History of Sociology Council Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512G, 8:30-9:30am

Section on Sociology of Population Council Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512H, 8:30-9:30am

Sociological Methodology Editorial Board Palais des congrès de Montréal, 524A, 8:30-10:10am

Sociology of Education Editorial Board Palais des congrès de Montréal, 710A, 8:30-10:10am

8:30 am Sessions

307. Thematic Session. Higher Education/Shifting Processes

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511B, 8:30-10:10am 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, 8:30-10:10am Session Organizer: Christine A. Bachrach, University of

Maryland Presider: Christine A. Bachrach, University of Maryland Transforming the Food System: A Cultural and Infrastructural

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 individual-level 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.

309. Thematic Session. Preserving Cultural Heritage: Hegemony, Sustainability, and Global Commodification

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511E, 8:30-10:10am 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,” 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?

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 510C, 8:30-10:10am 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, 8:30-10:10am 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, 8:30-10:10am 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, 8:30-10:10am 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, 8:30-10:10am Session Organizer: 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, 8:30-10:10am 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

316. Regular Session. Boundary Stretching the Study of Religion

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512B, 8:30-10:10am 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, 8:30-10:10am

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

318. Regular Session. Critical Theory Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512D, 8:30-10:10am 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, 8:30-10:10am 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

Disaster-Affected 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, 8:30-10:10am Session Organizer: Kathleen J. Tierney, University of

Colorado-Boulder 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, 8:30-10:10am 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, 8:30-10:10am 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 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, 8:30-10:10am 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 Self-Interest 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

324. Regular Session. Labor Markets: Emerging Issues and New Approaches

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 510B, 8:30-10:10am 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, 8:30-10:10am 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, 8:30-10:10am 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, 8:30-10:10am 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, 8:30-10:10am 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

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, 8:30-10:10am 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

330. Section on Human Rights. The State of Human Rights across Different Contexts and Business Meeting

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520A, 8:30-9:30am Session Organizer: Lynette J. Chua, National University of

Singapore Section on Human Rights. The State of Human Rights across

Different Contexts and Business Meeting 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

331. Section on Latino/a Sociology. Latinas/os, Gender, and Sexuality

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513E, 8:30-10:10am 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, 8:30-10:10am 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, 8:30-10:10am 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 Turkmen-Dervisoglu, 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, 8:30-10:10am 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, 8:30-10:10am 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 State University

Discussant: Stephen Benard, Indiana University

336. Section on Sociology of Culture. Gender, Culture, Media

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513C, 8:30-10:10am 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 Science-fiction 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

337. Section on Sociology of Law. Law and Inequality: Criminal, Civil, and the Intersection of the Two

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514B, 8:30-10:10am 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, 8:30-9:30am 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, 8:30-10:10am 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 Became the 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 am Meetings

Section on History of Sociology Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512G, 9:30-10:10am

Section on Human Rights Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520A, 9:30-10:10am

Section on Sociology of Mental Health Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514C, 9:30-10:10am

Section on Sociology of Population Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512H, 9:30-10:10am

10:30 am Meetings

2017-18 ASA Council New Member Orientation Palais des congrès de Montréal, 518A, 10:30am-12:10pm

Award Selection Committee Chairs with the Committee on Awards

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 523A, 10:30-11:10am

Honors Program Careers Briefing Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514B, 10:30am-12:10pm

10:30 am Sessions

340. Presidential Panel. Immigration, Security, Islam in Europe

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516A, 10:30am-12:10pm 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, 10:30am-12:10pm 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 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

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511C, 10:30am-12:10pm 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.”

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, 10:30am-12:10pm 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 Peoples-Settler Relations in Canada. Daniel Salée, Concordia University

Indigenous Conquest, Genocide, Assimilation, Resistance to Settler Colonialism: Competing Models for First Nations Survivance and Revitalization 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, 10:30am-12:10pm 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

Trans-Atlantic 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.

345. Thematic Session. Youth Jobs and the Future: Problems and Prospects

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511D, 10:30am-12:10pm 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, 10:30am-12:10pm 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, 10:30am-12:10pm 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, 10:30am-12:10pm 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.

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, 10:30am-12:10pm 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, 10:30am-12:10pm 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

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512B, 10:30am-12:10pm 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 time-consuming 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.

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, 10:30am-12:10pm 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, 10:30am-

12:10pm 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 Social-Environmental 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 Photo-Documentary Study. Patricia Drentea, University of Alabama-Birmingham; 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 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

354. Open Refereed Roundtable Session Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517A, 10:30am-12:10pm 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, 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

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 Atudy 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 Gebhardt-Kram, 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 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

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, 10:30am-12:10pm Session Organizer: Kati Barahona-López, University of

California-Santa 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, 10:30am-12:10pm 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, 10:30am-12:10pm 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, 10:30am-12:10pm 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 California-San 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 Wisconsin-Milwaukee

359. Regular Session. Interracial Marriage/Assortive Mating

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 510B, 10:30am-12:10pm Session Organizer: Yang Hu, Lancaster University Presider: Yue Qian, University of British Columbia 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

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517B, 10:30-11:30am 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 Su 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

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, Winston-Salem 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 Table 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 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, Professor

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

Capital-based 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-to-moderate-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 Table 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 York-Buffalo; Aysegul Balta Ozgen, State University of New York-Buffalo; 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 Changing Racial Segregation in the New South Africa.

Michael J. White, Brown University; Richard Ballard, Gauteng City-Region 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 California-Irvine; Michael Timberlake, University of Utah

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 Semi-peripheries: The Case of Łódź, Poland. Magdalena Rek-Wozniak, University of Lodz

361. Section on Comparative-Historical Sociology. Politics and Power in Latin America

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 510A, 10:30am-12:10pm 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, 10:30am-12:10pm 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

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, 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

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 515C, 10:30-11:30am 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, 10:30am-12:10pm 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, 10:30am-12:10pm 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, 10:30am-12:10pm 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, 10:30-11:30am 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, The University of North Texas; Giselle Greenidge, University of North Texas; Shanae Jefferies, University of North Texas

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 Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512H, 10:30am-12:10pm 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 California-Irvine; Carter T. Butts, University of California-Irvine

369. Section on Organizations, Occupations, and Work. Making Organizational Compliance Real

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516D, 10:30am-12:10pm Session Organizer: Eunmi Mun, University of Illinois at

Urbana-Champaign 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, 10:30am-12:10pm 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, 10:30am-12:10pm 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, 10:30am-12:10pm 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, 10:30am-12:10pm 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

374. Section on Sociology of Law. Law and Culture Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513D, 10:30am-12:10pm 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

375. Section on Sociology of Mental Health. Biosociology, Neurosociology and Mental Health

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513F, 10:30am-12:10pm 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, 10:30am-12:10pm 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, 10:30am-12:10pm 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 Wisconsin-Madison

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, 10:30am-12:10pm 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 am Meetings

Committee on Awards Palais des congrès de Montréal, 523A, 11:10am-12:10pm

11:30 am Meetings

Section on Community and Urban Sociology Business Meeting

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517B, 11:30am-12:10pm

Section on Ethnomethodology and Conversational Analysis Business Meeting

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 515C, 11:30am-12:10pm

Section on Latino/a Sociology Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520A, 11:30am-12:10pm

12:30 pm Sessions

379. Plenary Session. The Pursuit of Inclusion through Law, Policies, Narratives and Other Means

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517D, 12:30-2:10pm 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 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 pm Meetings

Opportunities in Retirement Network (ORN) Advisory Board Palais des congrès de Montréal, 523B, 2:30-4:10pm

Section Officers with the Committee on Sections Palais des congrès de Montréal, 518B, 2:30-4:10pm

2:30 pm Sessions

380. Presidential Panel. ASA Town Hall: Promoting Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion in Sociology

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517D, 2:30-4:10pm 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.

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, 2:30-4:10pm Session Organizers: Swethaa S. Ballakrishnen, New York

University-Abu 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 between-country 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, 2:30-4:10pm 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, 2:30-4:10pm 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 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 Bourdieu-inspired 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).

384. Thematic Session. Secularism and Religion in the Public Sphere: Unintended Cultural Consequences

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511A, 2:30-4:10pm 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, Univ. 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 one-sided, 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, 2:30-4:10pm 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, 2:30-4:10pm 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, 2:30-4:10pm 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, 2:30-4:10pm 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

389. Professional Development Workshop. From Dissertation to Book

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512B, 2:30-4:10pm 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 Palais des congrès de Montréal, 515C, 2:30-4:10pm 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.

391. Teaching Workshop. GIFTS: Good Ideas for Teaching Sociology and for Publishing in TRAILS

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512C, 2:30-4:10pm 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, 2:30-4:10pm 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, 2:30-4:10pm 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, 2:30-4:10pm 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

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, 2:30-4:10pm 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

396. Regular Session. Fatherhood, Parental Leave and Gender Inequality

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516A, 2:30-4:10pm 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 Wisconsin-Madison; 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, 2:30-4:10pm 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, 2:30-4:10pm 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, 2:30-4:10pm 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, 2:30-4:10pm 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

401. Regular Session. Migrants and Global Labor Markets Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516B, 2:30-4:10pm 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; 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

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516D, 2:30-4:10pm 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

403. Section on Community and Urban Sociology. Creative Class Cities: Promises Made, Promises Broken

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513B, 2:30-4:10pm 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 Post-Industrial 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, 2:30-4:10pm 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, 2:30-4:10pm 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, 2:30-4:10pm 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, 2:30-4:10pm 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 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. Dinzey-Flores

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, 2:30-4:10pm 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

409. Section on Political Sociology. Politics, Culture, and Inequality in Latin America and the Caribbean

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512H, 2:30-4:10pm 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, 2:30-4:10pm 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, 2:30-3:30pm 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 B. C.; 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 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, Vanderbilt University

Table 09. Standards and Standardization 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 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

412. Section on Sociology of Culture. The Mediation of Cultural Conflict

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514B, 2:30-4:10pm 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, 2:30-3:30pm 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

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 Wisconsin-

Milwaukee Gender, Deference to Authority, and Judicial Gatekeeping

in Civil Rights Litigation. Timothy L. O'Brien,

University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee 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 California-Los Angeles; Aaron Panofsky, University of California-Los Angeles

Table 05. Mobilization, Meaning, and the Law Table Presider: Sam Jackson, Syracuse University

Principled Law Breaking in America: Nullification and Civil Disobedience. Sam Jackson, Syracuse University

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, 2:30-4:10pm 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, 2:30-4:10pm

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, 2:30-4:10pm 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 pm Meetings

Section on Science, Knoweldge, and Technology Business Meeting

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516C, 3:30-4:10pm

Section on Sociology of Law Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520A, 3:30-4:10pm

4:30 pm Meetings

2018 Program Committee Palais des congrès de Montréal, 523A, 4:30-6:10pm

Committee on Sections Palais des congrès de Montréal, 523B, 4:30-6:10pm

Department Resources Group (DRG) Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516C, 4:30-5:30pm

Honors Program Graduate School Briefing Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514B, 4:30-6:10pm

Section on Mathematical Sociology Council Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520A, 4:30-5:30pm

4:30 pm Sessions

417. Presidential Panel. Poverty Eradication and Social Inclusion

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516B, 4:30-6:10pm 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.

418. Thematic Session. Changing the Cultural Narrative Palais des congrès de Montréal, 511A, 4:30-6:10pm 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, 4:30-6:10pm 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, 4:30-6:10pm 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.

421. Special Session. Learning Race and Ethnicity: Socialization in the Family

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516D, 4:30-6:10pm 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

422. Special Session. Making the Case for Social Sciences in Canada and the United States: Challenges and

Opportunities Palais des congrès de Montréal, 518B, 4:30-6:10pm 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, 4:30-6:10pm 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, 4:30-6:10pm 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, 4:30-6:10pm 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, 4:30-6:10pm 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, 4:30-6:10pm 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, 4:30-6:10pm Session Organizer: Donald Tomaskovic-Devey, University of

Massachusetts 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

429. Regular Session. Environmental Policy Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512C, 4:30-6:10pm 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)

430. Regular Session. Ethnographic, Historical and Global Perspectives on Higher Education

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 515C, 4:30-6:10pm 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, 4:30-6:10pm 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 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

432. Regular Session. Indigenous Peoples Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516A, 4:30-6:10pm 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 Urbana-Champaign

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, 4:30-6:10pm 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, 4:30-6:10pm 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 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, 4:30-6:10pm 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

436. Regular Session. Qualitative Methodology I: Epistemology and Ethnography

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 510A, 4:30-6:10pm 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, 4:30-6:10pm 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, 4:30-6:10pm 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, 4:30-6:10pm 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, 4:30-6:10pm 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, 4:30-6:10pm 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 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, 4:30-6:10pm 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 University-Dominguez 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

443. Section on Organizations, Occupations, and Work. On the Margins of the Labor Market

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512F, 4:30-6:10pm 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, 4:30-5:30pm 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 Became the 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 Strike-Hard 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 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

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, 1786-1807. 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 Quamruzzaman, 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

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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 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 Duisburg-Essen

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

445. Section on Racial and Ethnic Minorities. Concepts Without Borders? Race, Racism, and Ethnicity in Global Perspective

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513F, 4:30-6:10pm 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, 4:30-6:10pm

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, 4:30-6:10pm 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, 4:30-6:10pm 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

449. Section on Sociology of Population. The Demography of Social Inequality

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513D, 4:30-6:10pm 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, State University of New York-Buffalo

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

450. Section on Sociology of Sex and Gender Refereed Roundtable Session and Business Meeting

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517C, 4:30-5:30pm 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

Marital Satisfaction, Fertility Intention, and Gender Ideology: 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

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 Meaning-Making 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; Thung-Hong Lin, Academia Sinica; Ya-Hsuan Chou, Academia Sinica

Table 15. Popular Culture Table Presider: Neal King, Virginia Tech

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, 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

451. Section on Sociology of Sexualities. Transnational Sexualities

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 515A, 4:30-6:10pm 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 California-Irvine

452. Section on the Sociology of the Family. New Data and Research Approaches for Studying Families

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 513E, 4:30-6:10pm 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. Francisco-Menchavez, 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 pm Meetings

Department Resources Group (DRG) Advisory Board Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516C, 5:30-6:10pm

Section on Mathematical Sociology Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520A, 5:30-6:10pm

Section on Political Sociology Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517B, 5:30-6:10pm

Section on Sociology of Sex and Gender Business Meeting Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517C, 5:30-6:10pm

6:30 pm 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, 6:30-8:10pm

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) Reception

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520F, 6:30-8:10pm

CAPACS Palais des congrès de Montréal, 523B, 6:30-10:30pm

Centenary Commemoration for Harold Garfinkel Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514C, 6:30-8:10pm

From Markets to Sensible Action: Memorial Event for Charles Smith

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 516A, 6:30-8:10pm

Global Health and Development Interest Group Palais des congrès de Montréal, 523A, 6:30-8:10pm

Sociological Focus Editorial Board Palais des congrès de Montréal, 525A, 6:30-8:10pm

Sociologists for Justice Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520C, 6:30-8:10pm

The Sociology of Anti-Semitism Palais des congrès de Montréal, 524A, 6:30-8:10pm

University of British Columbia and University of Toronto Reception

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520D, 6:30-8:10pm

Work/Culture Network Palais des congrès de Montréal, 524B, 6:30-8:10pm

6:30 pm Receptions

Joint Reception: Section on Body and Embodiment and Section on Sociology of Sexualities

Offsite, L'Assommoir N-D, 211, rue Notre-Dame Ouest, 6:30-8:10pm

Joint Reception: Section on History of Sociology; Section on Political Sociology; and Section on Comparative-Historical Sociology

Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517B, 6:30-8:10pm

Joint Reception: Section on Organizations, Occupations, and Work and Section on Inequality, Poverty, and Mobility

Offsite, TBD, 6:30-8:10pm

Joint Reception: Section on Sociology of Population and Section on the Sociology of the Family

Offsite, TBD, 6:30-8:10pm

Section on Alcohol, Drugs, and Tobacco Reception Offsite, TBD, 6:30-8:10pm

Section on Community and Urban Sociology Reception Offsite, Hambar Restaurant, 355, rue McGill, 6:30-8:10pm

Section on Disability and Society Reception (contact Sara Green, University of South Florida, for more information)

Offsite, TBD, 6:30-8:10pm

Section on Environment and Technology Reception Palais des congrès de Montréal, 517A, 6:30-8:10pm

Section on Latino/a Sociology Reception Offsite, Tapas 24, 420 Notre-Dame Ouest, Local 4, 6:30-

8:10pm

Section on Mathematical Sociology Reception Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520A, 6:30-8:10pm

Section on Peace, War, and Social Conflict Reception Offsite, TBD, 6:30-8:10pm

Section on Sociology of Religion Reception Palais des congrès de Montréal, 520B, 6:30-8:10pm

Sociological Practice and Public Sociology Reception Offsite, TBD, 6:30-8:10pm


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