Issue: 4 - 2008 - Northeastern Illinois University
Transcription
Issue: 4 - 2008 - Northeastern Illinois University
Page Sociology Matters Sociology Matters From the Chair: Inside This Issue: Summer Learn what is happening in some of our spectacular classes time and the living is easy…I sure hope you are finding some time to relax and have some outdoor fun. In this newsletter issue, you will read about some trips our Sociology majors have taken, and what others have been up to in the past few months. Read about exotic student fieldtrips and travels News from our Sociology faculty students and alumni This past March, a large group of us traveled to St. Louis to the Midwest Sociological Society (MSS) meetings. Fourteen of our faculty and instructors, and several of our alumnae and students presented and performed at the conference in a wide va- Events: Contents: - From the Chair & MSS 1 - News From the Classroom 2&3 - Research News - Students Abroad 4 4&5 - Sociology Internship Reports 5-7 - NEIU Symposium 7 - Grads & Alumni News 8 CENTERS OF GLOBALIZATION: GREEK AMERICA—AN INTERDISCIPLINARY APPROACH Organized By: Andrew Kourvetaris 13-14 November 2008 Northeastern Illinois University Chicago, Illinois Visit: www.neiu.edu/ ~sociolgy/index.htm for info riety of venues. In April, six of our students presented at NEIU’s 16th Annual Student Research and Creative Activities Symposium. Also, twenty-two of our Sociology students had some dynamite internships in the spring semester, and a few students were directly employed from their internship placements. Several of our faculty attended and presented at the American Sociological Association (ASA) Conference in Boston August 1-4, 2008. Dr. Andrew Kourvetaris is organizing an exciting conference here at NEIU on Greek Americans this fall, on November 13-14th. And it’s not too early to begin thinking about attending the Midwest Sociological Society (MSS) meetings to be held in Des Moines, Iowa on April 1-4, 2009. Why don’t you Spring-Summer 2008 Issue #4 plan on organizing a session, a roundtable, or creating a poster detailing your research? You can also present a paper, as NEIU students have done at past MSS meetings. Most of our faculty will be in attendance, and as the current MSS President I will be making a “presidential address” about public sociology in the classroom through servicelearning. Check out the MSS website for more information: www.TheMSS.org There will be numerous opportunities for you to engage with our department, the university and with the community this fall through selected classes, and through our Sociology Club. Hope you plan to get involved! - Susan Stall s-stall1@neiu.edu Midwest Sociological Society News: MSS Spring 2008 Edited / Designed by: Evan Chears Susan Stall, Oana Panaite (MSS Student Director) and Ingrid Castro: standing in front of the NEIU Sociology Club's Poster submitted for the MSS Poster Session. Continued → Sociology Matters Page 2 Midwest Sociological Society News Cont... Photos 1 & 2: Mike Armato performs in Six Sociologists in Search of Society—starring as Michel Foucault! Photo 3: Brett Stockdill presents his research in one of many provocative MSS sessions! News From The Classroom : Sociology of Latinas Class Visits LAS MUJERES LATINAS en ACCION During this second summer session, Instructor Maria LunaDuarte took our Sociology of Latinas class to the Pilsen neighborhood of Chicago to visit the organization Mujeres Latinas en Accion. Mujeres is a stronghold in the community for helping Latinas through an array of social services and assistance, such as childcare, and counseling. The organization not only offers classes that help empower Latinas to be community leaders, but it is a safe haven for women who are dealing with crisis issues such as domestic violence and sexual assault. Although the organization’s target audience is Latinas, their emergency and counseling services are available to all women and even male victims of sexual assault. Legal advice and parenting classes are also among the many services offered. One aspect of this visit that was very valuable was our ability to make sociologi- cal connections among the experiences of Latinas in the community. Mujeres has a deep understanding about why domestic violence occurs, and the social factors, such as the machismo culture, that keep Latinas from safely seeking help from organizations like Mujeres Latinas en Accion. One of the barriers that the organization is trying to overcome is the lack of male involvement in preventing domestic violence. We discussed and watched a video about how helping men to understand the social factors that allow them to be violent towards women, they can better understand how to break the cycle of domestic violence. In fact, Mujeres Latinas en Accion currently has five or six male volunteers. Another valuable discussion was in understanding how a woman’s immigration status plays a role in domestic violence or sexual assault. For example, Mujeres offers legal assistance to victims of domestic violence whose partners threaten them with either deportation or separation from their children when Left to Right: Maria Luna-Duarte, Aida Rodriguez, Janaya Parra, Angela Vela, Jacqueline Araujo, Alberto Colon Jr, Edgar Saavedra attempting to leave the abusive relationship or even in seeking medical attention. The language barrier for some women is another obstacle that the organization is able to overcome by offering bilingual hotlines for crisis intervention as well as bilingual counseling on an individual or group basis. Although the counselors that we spoke to mentioned that all women are able to seek assistance at their or- ganization, it is important to have a place specifically for Latinas to come to where their cultural experiences are understood, and their specific needs can be met in a familiar cultural environment. Mujeres Latinas en Accion is always looking for volunteers. They are located in the Pilsen neighborhood at 2124 W. 21st Place, Chicago, IL. By: Angela Vela Urban Sociology Class Visits Humboldt Park On June 11, my summer session Urban Sociology class met for a tour and discussion of the Humboldt Park neighborhood. Humboldt Park is a working class Puerto Rican ethnic enclave in Chicago. It’s also known for fighting ongoing struggles against police brutality and racial profiling as well as gentrification creeping in from its Wicker Park neighbor, processes that are linked as developers see the area as ripe for profits. Page 3 Sociology Matters News from the Classroom Cont... These types of pressures often topple working class communities, especiall y communities of color. But Humboldt Park has a long community tradition of fighting to retain this Latinocentered space in the city. Much of the local grass-roots organizing takes place out of the Puerto Rican Cultural plaining all of the projects spearheaded by the community including low-income housing; Pedro Albizu Campos Alternative High School; housing for the elderly; a day-care center; Batey Urbano, a youth-centered space; VIDA/SIDA, a community health center targeting Latinos living with HIV/ streets off Division. These streets provided a clear example of gentrification in the works in the community. A number of residential buildings had been gutted, rehabbed, and converted to condominiums, and are now being offered on the realestate market. These processes increase the value of housing in the area so that long-time residents can no longer afford to live there. To show students the outcome of the gentrification process, we walked a bit farther to the east into Wicker Park, a fully gentrified area of the city. Students immediately noticed the stark contrast between the two neighborhoods, a contrast marked by clear class and racial and ethnic differences. In the end, the trip was quite a success because it gave students the opportunity to see pressing urban issues at work in the real world, right in their own back yard. By Michael Armato Xavi Burgos, far left, explains the importance of Batey Urbano for Latino youth in the area. Center (PRCC). Whether or not residents will be successful in thwarting the political and economic onslaught on their community remains to be seen. I chose Humboldt Park as a field trip destination because it allows students in the class to see firsthand these processes that remain so central to the study of urban communities. We met our guide, Xavi Burgos, at the corner of California Ave. and Division St., the southeast corner of the park itself. Xavi is an NEIU Sociology major and community activist with the PRCC. Xavi walked us east along Division St., which is also known as the Paseo Boricua, pointing out and ex- AIDS; and other symbolically significant spaces in the neighborhood. Xavi’s tour helped reinforce a theme in urban research: politically engaged and organized community members can have successful outcomes despite limited economic and political resources. After Xavi’s tour, I took the class north up Campbell Ave. and then south down Artesian Ave., residential Sociology major and our guide on the field trip, Xavi Burgos, foreground, talks about the many programs spearheaded by the Puerto Rican Cultural Center Urban Sociology class poses in front of the giant metal Puerto Rican flags that designate the Paseo Boricua. Sociology Matters Page 4 Sociology Major/McNair Scholar Excited About Current Research! By: Emilio Caban, Sociology Major I am working with the McNair Scholars Program with Ingrid Castro as my mentor. The research project I am working on, “TwoSteppin' Into a Social Issue: Alcohol in Country Music Lyrics,” is coming along nicely and I am looking forward to completing the project by the beginning of this August, 2008. One of my preliminary findings is that out of the 294 songs that I have analyzed, 102 have some reference to alcohol. Furthermore, out of those 102 songs there are a total of almost 360 refer- ences to either alcohol, beer, wine, or liquor--some songs have as many as 10 15 alcohol references embedded within the lyrics of just one song! Another interesting finding is that the references to alcohol are primarily made by male performers and songwriters rather than by female performers and songwriters, very few are performed and/or written by women (e.g. Garth Brooks, Direks Bently, Rodney Atkins, Phil Vasser, Jo de Macina, Gretchen Wilson, Carrie Un der wood, etc). Also, references to alcohol in these lyrics are a more recent phenomenon (last ten to twenty years). In Brown Bag 2008 earlier country music recordings (e.g. Jerry Lee Lewis, Elvis, Johnny Cash, etc.) song lyrics were more focused on some form of love ballad (hurting, cheating, stealing, etc.) and were performed by both genders These are preliminary findings. I will have more information within the next couple of weeks. This project has been one of the most enjoyable that I have ever worked on. Also, it has given me a new focus within the discipline of Sociology on what I want to achieve academically with my Sociology Degree and in Grad School. Northeastern Illinois University, March 2008 Aneta Galary’s talk, Cultural Embeddedness of Workplace Transformations: The Case of Poland, was based on her participant observation research at a Polish Brewery. She presented at our Spring, 2008 Brown Bag Series sponsored by the Sociology Club. Student News: Students Abroad Human Rights in the Occupied Palestinian Territories Top Left: Palestinian women clear roadblock in the South Hebron Hills 2008, Bottom Left: Baby in cave home in South Hebron Hills 2007, Top Right: South Hebron Hills 2006, Bottom Right: Planting olive trees 2004 By: Joel Gulledge NEIU Sociology Major This summer, I will travel back to the South Heb- ron Hills of the West Bank where I’ve been involved in human rights work for a portion of each of the last five years. The South Hebron Hills, home to some one thousand Palestinians who reside in caves, has often been a site of violence and displacement for Palestinians at the hands of Israeli military and its nationalist settlers. Israeli settlements, Israeli-only highways, five hundred plus military checkpoints, home demolitions, and Israel’s separationbarrier—collectively create facts on the ground in the West Bank which force Palestinians into enclaves and restrict their access to food and water, a process Israeli anthropologist Jeff Halper (2005) has described as the matrix of control. It is here that Israeli and international human rights workers have come to join in solidarity with these Palestinians by monitoring the situation, jointly participating in non-violent acts of direct action, and working with Israeli lawyers to end physical and economic violence towards the Palestinian population. At the request of Palestinian leadership, international human rights workers live amongst villagers and accompany Palestinian children, shepherds, and women. We’ve been trained to put our bodies in the way of conflict in an effort to reduce the more immediate acts of physical violence. Working with oppressed groups, it is necessary for those of us from privileged positions to identify our location and consider potentially harmful impacts of our actions. Utilizing black feminist theory (Collins 2000) is beneficial in that it emphasizes the interconnectedness of race, class, gender, and other inequalities, while recognizing difference as Page 5 Sociology Matters Student News: Students Abroad Cont... strength. As a straight white male from America, I am afforded many privileges at the expense of others. In the Palestinian territories, I’m able to travel with relative ease and minimum harassment while Palestinians are denied equal mobility and treatment. My white skin privilege at times acts as a deterrent to potentially violent situations and gives me access to institutions such as media and government. I must also remain mindful of my inclusion as a male to social spheres that are denied to women, and to the genderbased oppressions my female co-workers encounter from both the field and from their male co-workers. Palestinian women living under military occupation, a voice least often heard in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Women who have had their homes demolished, women whose livestock and water cisterns have been poisoned, women denied access to clinics and markets, harassed and attacked by Israeli soldiers and settlers, yet are willing to stand and declare that they will eat the dirt before they leave their land. We must strive to hear this voice of struggle and hope of a better world for all people is truly our goal. I continually learn from References Collins, Patricia Hill. 2000. Black Feminist Thought: Knowledge, Consciousness, and the Politics of Empowerment. 2nd ed. New York, NY: Routledge. Halper, Jeff. 2005. Obstacles to Peace: A Re-Framing of the Palestinian-Israeli Conflict. Bethlehem, West Bank, Palestine: PalMap. Greece as a Catalyst for Sociological Research By: Pam Buschbacher Through the NEIU Honor’s Program I got an awesome opportunity to take a monthlong tour of Greece (Athens, Argos, Nafplion, Olympia, Nafpactos, Delphi, Crete, Santorini and Mykenos) this summer, 2008. The trip was entitled Greek Classics as a Catalyst for Contemporary Research. Because the Honor’s Program is interdisciplinary many of the students on the trip came from very diverse backgrounds, with majors such as education, psychology, media/ communication, biology, and, of course, myself in Sociology & Women’s Studies. Each student’s goal for the trip was to develop the research question from which his or her honor’s thesis would later be developed. My focus was on the connections between sexual iden- tity/behavior and gender conformity. By reading philosophy, such as Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics, and many Greek tragedies, such as Medea and Oedipus, through a feminist lens I was able to develop insight into the lives of the Ancient Greeks. With supplementary academic texts about homosexuality in Ancient Greece, my theoretical understanding grew. By the end of the trip I had not only narrowed down and specified my research question, but I also had a larger, and growing perspective about available resources and texts. This trip was often times tiring and difficult, but more often fun and transformative! I now have a better appreciation for studying abroad and would recommend it to anyone, but I would also recommend just stepping outside of the worlds that we’ve caught ourselves up in and take a chance to view the world a little differently. SOC 342: SOCIOLOGY’S INTERNSHIP SEMINAR This past spring, 2008, the 22 students in our capstone SOC 342: Internship Seminar were successfully placed in a vast array of organizations for their 144 internship hours (see below). Also, we were visited by four NEIU Sociology graduates who spoke both about their prior internships and their current work: Beth Sholtis interned at the Center for Neighborhood Technology and currently is pursuing an MA in Urban Planning & Policy Program (MUPP) at UIC; Maria Luna-Duarte interned at the Mexican Consulate and is now the Associate Coordinator of NEIU El Centro Campus; Robin Matthies, an activist with NEIU’s LGBT Student Organization is the Coordinator of Student Activities at the Illinois Institute of Technology; and Carolina Campos, who interned at the Logan Square Neighborhood Association just completed her first year as a Chicago Public School Teacher. --Susan Stall Top Left: Forrest Robinson presents his internship project, Top Right: SOC 342 students and their site supervisors listen attentively to student presenters, Bottom Right: Aida Rodriguez sharing her experience at ASPIRA, Bottom Left: Students partake of our delicious potluck dinner! Sociology Matters Page 6 SOC 342: SOCIOLOGY’S INTERNSHIP SEMINAR Cont... In the Arts: Bee Davis, RedMoon Theatre, In Business/Industry: Jamie, Keller, Blitz Logistics Edina Kahrimanovic, Ravenswood Bank In Community-Based Organizations: Yulye Suarez, United Neighborhood Organization (UNO) In Criminal Justice: Claire Engel, Chicago Police Department In Education: Roberta Kruszewski, Glencoe Central School Joyce Brown, Proviso West High School (Cooperative Education) Jessica Rosborough, The Council for Adult and Experiential Learning (CAEL) Joanna Jarosz, NEIU, Adult and Women Student Programs Non-Profit Organizations: Joann Atto, Arab American Action Network (AAAN) Internship Follow-Ups I have (2008 NEIU grad) secured a job with Clearbrook, a non profit organization that serves adults and children who have developmental disabilities. My title is Qualified Mental Retardation Professional (QMRP)/Project Manager. I Have 22 clients in a 92 bed intensive care facility. In this management role, I develop goals for my clients—which I update every three months, and hold annual staffings for each client with the entire service team. I LOVE this work. “Working for a non profit is great because the employees are there because they want to make a difference!” --Roberta Kruszewski My field experience this Spring through my Internship was an invaluable experience. Overall, it allowed me to put my sociological imagination into practice in a setting where I am truly invested in both the mission and overarching organizational goals. While I interned at Tree House Humane Society [we recently changed our name] I was able to bridge a departmental gap, between the area where I am a paid employee, and where I interned. This was useful, and actually opened up a new position which the organization offered to me after I completed my internship. This is an exciting opportunity, which has certainly opened doors and now, more than ever, I feel like an important part of the whole operation. Beyond that, I feel changed as a person, too, finding new challenges to my abilities as both an employee and as a sociologist. It’s all thanks to the opportunity to complete an internship. --Olga Steele Aida Rodriguez, ASPIRA, Inc of Illinois Oana Panaite, Midwest Sociological Society (MSS) Melissa Giamou, Avon Walk for Breast Cancer Olga Steele, Tree House Animal Foundation Demelza Phillips, Center for Neighborhood Technology (CNT) In Social Services: Isaura Guerrero, Humboldt Park Social Services Forrest Robinson, Generations Community Development Corporation Ethel Brison & Gloria Ajayi, Illinois Department of Children and Family Services (IDCFS) Michelle Mayer, Inspiration Corporation Rebecca Inlow, Metropolitan Family Services Elefteria Pashos, Mercy Housing Lakefront, I ended up extending my Internship with the Avon Breast Walk and worked 46 hours from Friday to Sunday of the walk. I was in charge of the Lakeview cheering/support station which had 187 people at the peak hour, which is a record! So my internship finally ended on June 2nd, it was an incredible experience to see the event come together! The Chicago Walk raised 9.1 million dollars (final total out in the fall). I got a lot of recognition from the staff at our closing dinner on June 2nd. There is a job opening up in mid July in the Chicago office, so I am going to apply for it. --Melissa Giamou Page 7 Sociology Matters I’m still working at DCFS, but I have become more active in the local union at my office. On June 23, 2008 I went to Springfield to a rally at the State Capital to hopefully meet with our Governor there. AFSCME union is asking for more front line workers and clerical staff. The Governor is asking workers to pay more for our benefits, such as health care and our retirement pension. AFSCME members were 5000 strong on the picket lines in Springfield. We didn’t see the Governor, but I’m sure he saw us. We marched around the State Capital and through the streets of Springfield. I was chosen to work at a Community Forum for my job. The Forum was held at a church on Ashland. I’m still pretty busy and using what I have learned in my Sociology classes to make a difference! --Ethel Brison I am working at Camp Manitowish for the summer. I have been working the leadership program here and was a facilitator for a scholar group for five days; it was amazing. Two weeks ago I got asked to lead a 24 day backpacking trip in Montana for the camp. My girls arrive Friday and we leave July 1st. I am so excited to get out there. I’ll write you and send you some pictures when I get back. Hope things are well with you. --Rebecca Inlow Sociology Student Presenters at NEIU’s 16th Annual Student Research and Creative Activities Symposium, April 18, 2008. Photo 1: L-R: Fernando Gonzalez, Andrew Kourvetaris and Joel Gulledge. Photo 2 & 3: Receiving Certificates of Participation from Provost Larry Frank. Demelza Phillips: “When the City Attacks: Examining Public Policy and its Role in the Process of Gentrification,” (Faculty Sponsor: Susan Stall). Fernando Gonzalez: “Reggaton and Latino Youth,” (Faculty Sponsor: Brett Stockdill). Joel Gulledge: “Solidarity with Palestinian Cave Dwellers: International and Israeli Human Rights Workers in the Southern West Bank,” (Faculty Sponsor: Andrew Kourvetaris). Krystle Pereira: “Impossible Ideals: The Commodification of Female Sexuality and its Effects on Perceptions of Beauty,” (Faculty Sponsor: Ingrid Castro). Olga A. Steele: “Have a ‘Heart’ for Animals—A Study of Emotional Labor in the Animal Welfare Industry,” (Faculty Sponsor: Aneta Galary). Toni K. Scott: “Reproductive Rights vs. Reproductive Justice,” ((Faculty Sponsor: Sarah Hoagland). Sociology Matters Page 8 Congratulations Sociology Graduates of May 2008 ! Gloria T. Ajayi Andrew A. Dyon Edina Kahrimanovic Katherine E. Nelson Tarlisha S. Berry Denise M. Franklin Jamie L. Keller Oana Panaite Ethel M. Brison Isaura Guerrero Roberta E. Kruszewski Elefteria Pashos Joyce L. Brown Rebecca J. Inlow Karl MacCoubrey Forrest A. Robinson Pamela J. Drake Joanna K. Jarosz Michelle N. Mayer Jessica M. Rosborough Alumni Achievements/Alumni News Loren Henderson • First Place Winner of the Graduate Student Paper Award, Black Sociologists Association, Summer, 2008. • Alumni Award of Excellence, NEIU Black History Month, February 29, 2008. • First Prize in Chicago United’s James W. Compton Research Competition. The article, “Organizational Factors that Influence Diversity in Management,” 2008. Eileen Hines Rollerson, Alumni Award of Excellence, NEIU Black History Month, February 29, 2008. Maria Luna-Duarte, Accepted into the Ph.D. program at UIC in Policy Studies in Urban Education with a full Scholarship for Fall, 2008. Christopher NEIU Sociology graduate (2002), Dr. Christopher Schneider has accepted a tenure track position in Sociology at the University of British Columbia Okanagan. He begins his appointment on August 1, 2008. Schneider, Alumni Present Women’s Studies: A Generational Retrospective Faculty, staff and students from the 70’s, 80’s, 90’s and present shared their experiences of Women’s Studies. Invited panelists included Sociology alumni Robin Matthies (left) and Maria Luna-Duarte (far right). An Excellent Website to Use in Finding a New Career to Go With Your Major: Idealist.org