- American Sociological Association
Transcription
- American Sociological Association
Final Program 100th Annual Meeting August 13-16, 2005 Philadelphia Marriott, Philadelphia Loews, and Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Comparative Perspectives, Competing Explanations Accounting for the Rising and Declining Significance of Sociology This is the centennial for the Association, so the meeting theme should be sufficiently expansive to address a wide historical sweep, and yet have sufficient focus to provide a framework in which to address key aspects of the social history of the discipline—its contemporary situation and its potential future development. Each of the three elements from the title “Comparative Perspectives, Competing Explanations” is designed to produce a fruitful meeting frame: First, the notion of “comparative perspectives” is itself “accordion-like” and can fit a number of purposes and goals. There is the international aspect, so that we can incorporate a comparison of American sociology with international developments. There is the internal evolution of perspectives inside of the United States, which would include the development and emergence of challenging and oppositional perspectives in the discipline, from the Society for the Study of Social Problems, to Sociologists for Women in Society, to the Association of Black Sociologists, to name but a few organizational manifestations of the challenges of the last half century. There are others that will surely surface from the general call. Second, there is the notion of “competing explanations.” Competing explanations (from psychological to biological to economistic), and their resonance or lack thereof in public policy debates (among the general population, political activists, and community organizers) is the way in which this whole matter of the significance of the discipline—including its variable status with such funding sources as the National Science Foundation, the National Institutes of Health, and a full range of private foundations—is segue to: Third, “What could be characterized as the ‘rising and declining significance of Sociology’”? Here, we encourage an explicit look back across the full century to try to account for the various periods in which there was a sense of ascendancy and a receptivity (along a continuum, of course) in the various arenas noted above. The “declining significance of sociology” is deliberatively provocative and could be the source of some scintillating debates and contestation. 2005 Program Committee Troy Duster, President and Committee Chair, New York University Judith D. Auerbach, American Foundation for AIDS Research Patricia Hill Collins, University of Cincinnati Joan H. Fujimura, University of Wisconsin, Madison Sally T. Hillsman, Executive Officer, American Sociological Association Arne L. Kalleberg, Past Secretary, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill John Lie, University of Michigan Ron Lembo, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Caroline Hodges Persell, Vice President, New York University Barbara Risman, North Carolina State University Jill Quadagno, Florida State University David Wellman, University of California, Santa Cruz Franklin D. Wilson, Secretary, University of Wisconsin, Madison 2 Annual Meeting Schedule The official days of the 2005 ASA Annual Meeting are Saturday to Tuesday, August 13-16, 2005. Program sessions are scheduled on all four days of the meeting at both hotels. There are also pre-meeting activities scheduled on Friday, August 12, and the meeting will officially open with the Opening Plenary Session and Welcoming Reception that evening. Most daytime program sessions are 1 hour and 40 minutes in length, followed by a 20-minute break. Exceptions are clearly noted in the detailed program schedule. The turnover schedule is as follows: 8:30 a.m.-10:10 a.m. 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. 12:30 p.m.-2:10 p.m. 2:30 p.m.-4:10 p.m. 4:30 p.m.-6:10 p.m. The 6:30 p.m. evening time slot is normally allocated for Section receptions, member-sponsored activities, and meetings of other groups. All sessions end by 4:10 p.m. on the fourth day. Please refer to the Program Schedule for a daily listing of all sessions, meetings, and social events. Session presiders and committee chairs are requested to see that sessions and meetings end on time to avoid conflicts with subsequent activities scheduled into the same room and to allow participants time to transit between facilities. If you have questions about the ASA Annual Meeting, contact: Attn: Meeting Services American Sociological Association 1307 New York Avenue, NW, Suite 700 Washington, DC 20005-4701 202-383-9005 202-638-0882 fax meetings@asanet.org ______________________________________ Program Cover Design by ExArte ______________________________________ Printed in the USA Table of Contents Accessibility Resources and Services...........................................................43 Airport Transportation ..................................................................................44 ASA Awards Ceremony .................................................................................4 ASA Bookstore .............................................................................................39 ASA Information ..........................................................................................40 ASA Office ...................................................................................................43 Book Panels...................................................................................................11 Business Meeting ............................................................................................5 Cartoon Caption Contest...............................................................................39 Centennial Sessions ........................................................................................8 Chair Conference ..........................................................................................26 Child Care .....................................................................................................42 Committee/Task Force/Board Meetings.......................................................36 Community College Faculty Breakfast ........................................................33 Courses..........................................................................................................17 Departmental Alumni Night .........................................................................32 Directors of Graduate Study .........................................................................26 Emergency Information ................................................................................38 Employment Service.....................................................................................41 Exhibits ...................................................................................................40, 46 Film Documentaries........................................................................................9 Film/Video Screenings..................................................................................29 First-Time Meeting Attendee Orientation ....................................................32 Governance Rosters and Historical Information ........................................239 Honorary Reception ......................................................................................33 Hotel Information..........................................................................................43 In Remembrance ...........................................................................................34 Index of Session Organizers .......................................................................331 Index of Session Participants......................................................................335 Index of Topics ...........................................................................................361 International Scholars Reception ..................................................................32 Membership and Section Information ..........................................................40 Message Center .............................................................................................40 Minority Fellowship Program Benefit Reception ........................................34 Open Forum ..................................................................................................23 Other Group Activities..................................................................................35 Plenary Sessions..............................................................................................4 Poster Sessions..............................................................................................16 Presidential Address........................................................................................4 Press Office ...................................................................................................43 Program Schedule .........................................................................................48 Regional Spotlight ........................................................................................10 Registration Services ....................................................................................38 Regular Sessions ...........................................................................................16 Research Support Forum ......................................................................12, 226 Roundtables.............................................................................................15, 16 Section Activities ....................................................................................24, 34 Seminars........................................................................................................17 Special Sessions ............................................................................................13 Student Forum...............................................................................................27 Student Reception .........................................................................................34 Teaching Enhancement Fundraiser “Just Desserts” .....................................33 Thematic Sessions...........................................................................................5 Theme..............................................................................................................1 Tickets ...........................................................................................................40 Tours .......................................................................................................28, 44 Welcoming Party ..........................................................................................32 Workshops ....................................................................................................18 3 Program Highlights Greetings from 2005 Program Committee Dear Colleagues, This is the Centennial year of the American Sociological Association, and we will use the gathering here in Philadelphia to celebrate and reflect upon one hundred years of gemeinschaft und gesellschaft, peace and conflict, theory and practice. The Program Committee has devoted twenty-two sessions to various aspects of the centennial, from a long look back over the social history of the discipline and the society (and the inter-relationships between), to current assessments and stock-taking – to some inevitable crystal ball gazing. The opening plenary on Friday evening, August 12, at 7:00 p.m., will be devoted to analyses of the aftermath of the tsunami, literally and metaphorically about devastation and rebuilding. We all know about the sudden and massive destruction and loss of human life, but we know little about the rebuilding and social transformations of the regions hardest hit. Kai Erikson will chair this session, and among those presenting will be Imam Prasodjo, a sociologist at the University of Indonesia, Director and Founder of Yayasan Nurani Dunia (Foundation for Humanitarian Aid to Victims of Social and Natural Disaster). The first decade of the new century has ushered in important shifts in the political terrain of the nation – most notably a new surge rightward in our major political institutions. How to best account for, and what “competing explanations and comparative perspectives” might be brought to bear to help better understand these developments? On Saturday, August 13, at 12:30 p.m., the second plenary, which is co-sponsored by SSSP, ABS, and SWS, will feature the distinguished historian, Dan T. Carter, two well-known legal scholars (Lani Guinier and Gerald Torres), and Tom Frank, author of What’s the Matter with Kansas. Picking up a version of this theme for the last plenary on Monday, August 15, at 12:30 p.m., will be political analyst Kevin Phillips, author of Wealth and Democracy. Patricia Hill Collins and Arlie Hochschild will contribute to this session by adding some of their own sociological commentary, placing the discussion in situated socio-historical contexts. As you browse through the program and wander through the exhibits, you will see that the centennial celebration is evident in many ways. Look for a series of timeline banners outlining notable events in sociology and the world-at-large. One special centennial highlight on Saturday night is the premiere showing of Lester F. Ward: A Life’s Journey, a new documentary film that chronicles the life and ideas of the first president of this society/association — his strong advocacy for women, fierce resistance to the eugenics movement, and recognition of the need for public sociology. Among several other tours and sight-seeing options, the local arrangements committee has arranged a walking tour of sites W.E.B DuBois described a full century ago in The Philadelphia Negro, most appropriate for the centennial. Your participation in this year’s centennial program helped create a new record—there are more than 600 program sessions on the roster this year. From the substantive regular paper sessions to special invited panels to the wide range of workshops, there is plenty for all. Welcome to Philadelphia! Troy Duster For the 2005 Program Committee 4 Major Plenary Sessions The Annual Meeting theme of “Comparative Perspectives, Competing Explanations: Accounting for the Rising and Declining Significance of Sociology” is being addressed from the Opening Plenary Session on August 12 to the final mid-day Plenary on August 15. Social Implications and Aftermath of the Tsunami Session 7, Friday, August 12, 7:00 – 8:45 p.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Millennium Hall Centennial Opening Welcome by ASA President Troy Duster Centennial Film Presentation: A Century of Progress: Presidential Reflections (produced by Gale Largey, 2005) This 20-minute film gives a brief overview of the founding of the American Sociological Society and continues with a review of each of the successive presidents of the society/association from 1905-2005. Plenary Organizer and Presider: Kai Erikson, Yale University Panel: Carol Bellamy, President of World Learning for International Development and former executive director of UNICEF Imam Budi Prasodjo, University of Indonesia Faculty of Social and Political Sciences, Director and Founder of Yayasan Nurani Dunia (Foundation for Humanitarian Aid to Victims of Social and Natural Disaster) The tsunami that struck suddenly and devastated the regions directly affected captured headlines and saturated media coverage for several weeks, in large measure because of the immediate vast toll on human life. While the long-term social and political effects of the tsunami will not receive much media attention, social scientists working in the area have much to tell us about how to better understand profound social adjustments and impacts that otherwise go unreported. This session brings together some of the leading experts on the topic to bring a sociological perspective to such matters as rebuilding infrastructure, material and non-material. Comparative Perspectives on the Rightward Turn in US Politics (co-sponsored by the Association for Applied and Clinical Sociology, the Association of Black Sociologists, the Society for the Study of Social Problems, and Sociologists for Women in Society) Session 86, Saturday, August 14, 12:30-2:15 p.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Millennium Hall Organizer and Presider: Troy Duster, New York University Panelists: Dan T. Carter, Historian, University of South Carolina and author of From George Wallace to Newt Gingrich: Race in the Conservative Counterrevolution, 1963-1994 Lani Guinier and Gerald Torres, authors of The Miner’s Canary Thomas Frank, author, What’s the Matter with Kansas The last election produced a situation where both houses of Congress, the Presidency, and increasingly the federal judiciary will be guided by a sharply rightward shift in politics, probably more so than at any time in the last eight decades. A historian, two legal scholars, and a social analyst of “middle America” come together on this panel to discuss different aspects of “the stakes” in play. The Shifting Political Terrain Session 428, Monday, August 15, 12:30-2:15 p.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Millennium Hall Organizer and Presider: Troy Duster, New York University Speaker: Kevin Phillips, Author, Wealth and Democracy Panelists: Patricia Hill Collins, University of Cincinnati Arlie Hochschild, University of California, Berkeley Continuing the theme that the country is experiencing notable seismic shifts in the political sphere, Kevin Phillips will add his current thinking to this topic. From The Southern Strategy to American Dynasty, Phillips has been one of the more astute and provocative analysts of the last four decades, and always provides a wide sociohistorical overview. Patricia Hill Collins and Arlie Hochschild will contribute to this session by adding some of their own sociological commentary, placing the discussion in situated socio-historical contexts. Address by President Duster ASA Awards Ceremony The Presidential Plenary featuring the formal address of ASA President Troy Duster will be held on Sunday, August 14, at 4:30 p.m. The ASA Awards Ceremony, conferring the 2005 major ASA awards, will open this session. All registrants are invited to attend this plenary session and a special reception afterwards to honor President Duster and the award recipients and to celebrate the Association’s centennial. ASA Awards Ceremony and Presidential Address Session 332, Sunday, August 14, 4:30-6:30 p.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Millennium Hall Presider: Caroline Hodges Persell, ASA Vice President, New York University Moment of Remembrance Centennial Recognition Award Ceremony Presider: Esther Ngan-ling Chow, American University 2005 Dissertation Award Recipients: Ann Morning, New York University, for “The Nature of Race: Teaching and Learning about Human Difference”; and Amélie Quesnell-Vallée, McGill University, for “Pathways from Status Attainment to Adult Health: The Contribution of Health Insurance to Socioeconomic Inequities in Health in the U.S.” 5 2005 Jessie Bernard Award Recipient: Evelyn Nakano Glenn, University of California, Berkeley 2005 Award for Excellence in the Reporting on Social Issues Recipient: to be announced 2005 Award for Public Understanding of Sociology Recipient: Pepper Schwartz, University of Washington 2005 Distinguished Career Award for the Practice of Sociology Recipient: William Kornblum, Graduate Center, City University of New York 2005 Distinguished Contributions to Teaching Award Recipient: Caroline Hodges Persell, New York University 2005 Distinguished Scholarly Publication Award Recipient: Beverly J. Silver, Johns Hopkins University, for Forces of Labor: Workers’ Movements and Globalization Since 1870 (Cambridge University Press, 2003) 2005 Career of Distinguished Scholarship Award Recipient: Charles Tilly, Columbia University Presidential Address Introduction. Caroline Hodges Persell, New York University Presidential Address. Comparative Perspectives and Competing Explanations: Sociology and Its Challengers: Old Wine in New Bottles—New Wine in Old Bottles. Troy Duster, New York University Honorary Reception & Centennial Celebration Sunday, August 14, 6:30-8:00 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Ballroom Salons E-F Sponsors: Binghamton University - Department of Sociology Bryn Mawr College – Department of Sociology University of California, Berkeley - Department of Ethnic Studies University of California, Berkeley - Department of Gender and Women's Studies City University of New York Graduate Center - Sociology Department Columbia University - Department of Sociology University of Delaware - Department of Sociology & Criminal Justice Harvard University - Department of Sociology Johns Hopkins University - Department of Sociology LaSalle University - Sociology, Social Work, and Criminal Justice Philadelphia University - School of Liberal Arts Princeton University - Department of Sociology Rider University - Department of Sociology Rutgers University, Camden - Department of Sociology, Anthropology & Criminal Justice St. Joseph's University - Sociology Department Swarthmore College - Department of Sociology & Anthropology Temple University - Department of Sociology Ursinus College - Department of Sociology & Anthropology Villanova University - Department of Sociology University of Washington - Department of Sociology Yale University - Department of Sociology ASA Business Meeting The ASA Business Meeting is an opportunity for members of the Association to discuss important issues facing the discipline and profession. Members are encouraged to attend this meeting convened by the ASA President Troy Duster. Summary reports on the Association and its key activities this year will be given by President Troy Duster and Executive Officer Sally T. Hillsman. The agenda also includes a discussion of Annual Meeting site selection. The meeting concludes with the traditional transfer of the gavel, marking the transition of duties from President Duster to incoming President Cynthia Fuchs Epstein. This open forum is an opportunity for members to share their insights, reactions, and suggestions. Please consult the flyer in your meeting folder for details on the Business Meeting agenda. As noted in the May/June issue of Footnotes and the posting of meeting information on the ASA website, members seeking to present formal resolutions should be prepared to provide background materials on the issue to be discussed. Members who missed the August 1 submission deadline may bring their resolutions and supporting background documentation to the ASA Office in Room 502 at the Philadelphia Marriott by 3:00 p.m. on Monday, August 15. All meeting attendees are invited to join ASA officers, Council members, and staff for continental breakfast and discussion at the ASA Business Meeting on Tuesday, August 16, 7:00 - 8:15 a.m. in Grand Salon E at the Philadelphia Marriott. Thematic Sessions The 2005 Program Committee allocated 38 session slots—more than twice the usual number—to the development of Thematic Sessions to explore aspects of this year’s meeting theme. A summary of Thematic Session topics, organizers, and locations is outlined below (alphabetically by session topic); please refer to the body of the Program Schedule for complete details. American Family Changes in International Perspective: Rearguard or Cutting Edge? Session 47, Saturday, August 13, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington A Organizer and Presider: Kathleen Gerson, New York University 6 Blind Patriotism: Theory and Research Session 288, Sunday, August 14, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Liberty Salon B Organizer and Presider: Thomas J. Scheff, University of California, Santa Barbara Can Sociology Explain Rising Income Inequality? Session 289, Sunday, August 14, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon C Organizer and Presider: John F. Myles, University of Toronto Color Matters: The Enduring Significance of Skin Tone for African Americans and Latinos Session 8, Saturday, August 13, 8:30 – 10:10 a.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon H Organizer and Presider: Margaret Hunter, Loyola Marymount University Explaining Racial Variations in Educational Achievement Session 429, Monday, August 15, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington A Organizer and Presider: Caroline Hodges Persell, New York University Feminisms Across Time and Space Session 204, Sunday, August 14, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth C Organizer: Barbara Jane Risman, North Carolina State University From Old Empire to New? Sociological Aspects of the EuroAmerican Rift Session 430, Monday, August 15, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon I Organizer and Presider: John C. Torpey, University of British Columbia Comparative Immigration Session 246, Sunday, August 14, 12:30 – 2:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 303 Organizer and Presider: Min Zhou, University of California, Los Angeles From the Others’ Perspectives: Pluralism across Borders (cosponsored by Sociologists without Borders) Session 165, Sunday, August 14, 8:30 – 10:10 a.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington A Organizer and Presider: Judith R. Blau, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Comparing the American and the European Models of Society Session 203, Sunday, August 14, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon G Organizer and Presider: Alberto Martinelli, International Sociological Association Globalization and Inequality Session 290, Sunday, August 14, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington A Organizer and Presider: Jill Quadagno, Florida State University Competing Explanations for U.S. Global Expansionism Session 479, Monday, August 15, 4:30 – 6:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon H Organizer and Presider: Clarence Y.H. Lo, University of Missouri at Columbia Competing Perspective on Comparative Explanations: Area Studies vs. Comparative Sociology Session 333, Monday, August 15, 8:30 – 10:10 a.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 303 Organizers and Presiders: Julian Dierkes, University of British Columbia; Marion Fourcade-Gourinchas, University of California, Berkeley Contesting Global Gender Issues in a Changing World Session 480, Monday, August 15, 4:30 – 6:10 p.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Anthony Organizer: Esther Ngan-ling Chow, American University Data Proof: The Immunity of US Drug Policy to Sociological Work—Implications for Civil Liberties and Social Justice Session 335, Monday, August 15, 8:30 – 10:10 a.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon H Organizer and Presider: Sheigla B. Murphy, Institute for Scientific Analysis Equal Opportunity in Post-Affirmative Action Era Session 9, Saturday, August 13, 8:30 – 10:10 a.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Congress C Organizer: David Wellman, University of California, Santa Cruz Globalization and the Sociology of Non-Western Societies Session 566, Tuesday, August 16, 12:30 – 2:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon G Organizer and Presider: Arvind Rajagopal, New York University Governance of Knowledge Session 382, Monday, August 15, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington A Organizer and Presider: Nico Stehr, Zeppelin University Has Racism Been Reorganized? Session 334, Monday, August 15, 8:30 – 10:10 a.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth A2 Organizer: David Wellman, University of California, Santa Cruz Impoverished, Dead, or Morally Corrupt: Should There Be a Sociology of Deviance? Session 520, Tuesday, August 16, 8:30 – 10:10 a.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 305 Organizer: Mark Konty, Auburn University International Perspectives on Race Session 87, Saturday, August 13, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon G Organizer: Edward E. Telles, University of California, Los Angeles Islamic Exceptionalism? Session 247, Sunday, August 14, 12:30 – 2:10 p.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth C Organizer and Presider: Charles Kurzman, University of North Carolina 7 Job Insecurity and Changing Employment Relations Session 291, Sunday, August 14, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington B Organizer and Presider: Arne L. Kalleberg, University of North Carolina Media Cultures I Session 431, Monday, August 15, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth C Organizer and Presider: Ronald A. Lembo, Amherst College Media Cultures II Session 481, Monday, August 15, 4:30 – 6:10 p.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth C Organizer and Presider: Ronald A. Lembo, Amherst College Terrorism: Interrogating the Concept Session 48, Saturday, August 13, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington C Organizer: Ronald A. Lembo, Amherst College The New Second Generation in New York and Los Angeles: Comparative Theory, Research, and Implications for Immigrant Incorporation Session 292, Sunday, August 14, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Liberty Salon C Organizer and Presider: Rubén G. Rumbaut, University of California, Irvine Thinking Differently about What It Means to Be “American” Session 126, Saturday, August 13, 4:30 – 6:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 303 Mental Health, Social Mirror: Reflections on the Changing Role of Sociology in Mental Health Research Session 521, Tuesday, August 16, 8:30 – 10:10 a.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 410 Organizer: Jane D. McLeod, Indiana University Towards a New Sociology of School Choice Session 205, Sunday, August 14, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 410 Organizers: Eric E. Rofes, Humboldt State University; Lisa Michele Stulberg, New York University Race and Ethnicity: Complex and Competing Frames of Population Variation Session 543, Tuesday, August 16, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 305 Organizer and Presider: Joan H. Fujimura, University of Wisconsin Towards a Sociology of Transnationalism and a Transnational Sociology Session 166, Sunday, August 14, 8:30 – 10:10 a.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 410 Organizers: Peggy Levitt, Wellesley College; Sanjeev Khagram, Harvard University Rethinking AIDS: The Big Picture Session 590, Tuesday, August 16, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 305 Organizer and Presider: Ann Swidler, University of California, Berkeley Sociology and Anthropology: Whither Native Americans Session 10, Saturday, August 13, 8:30 – 10:10 a.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon J Organizer and Presider: Russell Thornton, University of California, Los Angeles Sociology in Sexuality, Sexuality in Sociology: Competing Explanations Then and Now Session 11, Saturday, August 13, 8:30 – 10:10 a.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth C Organizer and Presider: Salvador Vidal-Ortiz, American University Sociology in the Culture Wars: From Public Issues to Personal Problems and Back Again Session 567, Tuesday, August 16, 12:30 – 2:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon C Organizer and Presider: Arlene Skolnick, New York University Sociology of the Future Session 591, Tuesday, August 16, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 410 Organizer: Joan H. Fujimura, University of Wisconsin When Social Policy Meets Penal Policy: The Punitive Turn in the Management of Poverty, Historical and International Perspectives Session 293, Sunday, August 14, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon G Organizers: Loic J.D. Wacquant, University of California, Berkeley; William Julius Wilson, Harvard University Special Acknowledgment The America Sociological Association wishes to acknowledge a generous grant from the Ford Foundation, which paid for ten scholars who are representatives from the ISA Council of National Associations to attend this Centennial Annual Meeting, and a generous contribution from New York University to support special program planning and plenary speakers. 8 Centennial Sessions Assessing the Scientific Basis of American Sociology: A Century of Knowledge Claims Session 206, Sunday, August 14, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon C Organizer and Presider: Bruce Keith, United States Military Academy The 2005 Program Committee created a Subcommittee on the ASA Centennial consisting of ASA Vice President Caroline Persell (New York University) as chair, Patricia Collins (University of Cincinnati), ASA President Troy Duster (New York University), Jill Quadagno (Florida State University), and ASA Executive Officer Sally Hillsman. This subcommittee selected more than 20 session topics, plus several films, and collaborated with the ASA Section on the History of Sociology to commemorate ASA’s centennial year. Sessions listed below represent the core centennial topics chosen by the subcommittee. Please note that Sessions 88 and 249 offer opportunities to hear about two centennial publications, A History of American Sociology, Craig Calhoun (editor), sponsored by ASA; and Diverse Histories of American Sociology, A.J. Blasi (editor), sponsored by the ASA Section on History of Sociology. From beginning to end of this year’s meeting, enjoy the many flavors of past and future as you look through the program celebrating this centennial year for the Association! Diverse Histories of American Sociology (co-sponsored by the ASA Section on History of Sociology) Session 249, Sunday, August 14, 12:30 – 2:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 410 Organizer: Anthony J. Blasi, Tennessee State University 100 Years of American Sociology: The ASA Centennial History Session 88, Saturday, August 13, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington B Organizer and Presider: Craig Calhoun, Social Science Research Council Envisioning Public Sociology in the 21st Century Session 384, Monday, August 15, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon H Organizer and Presider: Barbara Jane Risman, North Carolina State University 100 Years of Health Policy Research: A Retrospective Assessment of Sociological Contributions Session 167, Sunday, August 14, 8:30 – 10:10 a.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 304 Organizers: Kathy Charmaz, Sonoma State University; Donald W. Light, University of Medicine & Dentistry of New Jersey Formation of Intellectual Boundaries Session 12, Saturday, August 13, 8:30 – 10:10 a.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon C Organizer and Presider: Barbara Schneider, University of Chicago 100 Years of Self and Identity Research Session 383, Monday, August 15, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon J Organizer and Presider: Timothy J. Owens, Purdue University A Century’s Worth of Sociology’s Contribution to the Study of Disability Session 129, Sunday, August 14, 8:30 – 10:10 a.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Adams Organizer: Sharon N. Barnartt, Gallaudet University Assessing the Feminist Revolution: Gender Transformations in Sociology Session 294, Sunday, August 14, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon D Organizer and Presider: Myra Marx Feree, University of Wisconsin, Madison Comparative Perspectives on the Teaching of Sociology: A Century of Transmission Session 568, Tuesday, August 16, 12:30 – 2:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 305 Organizers: Wava G. Haney, University of Wisconsin Colleges; Diane Pike, Augsburg College Conventional Wisdom, Marginalizing Difference, and Other Sociological Blind Spots Session 248, Sunday, August 14, 12:30 – 2:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon C Organizer and Presider: David Wellman, University of California, Santa Cruz Curricula of the Future: What Should Students of Sociology Be Learning? Session 336, Monday, August 15, 8:30 – 10:10 a.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington B Organizers: Stephen F. Steele, Anne Arundel Community College; Caroline Hodges Persell, New York University Knowledge Accumulation in Sociology Session 592, Tuesday, August 16, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 403 Organizer and Presider: Barbara Schneider, University of Chicago Landmarks in Sociology (co-sponsored by the ASA Section on History Sociology) Session 522, Tuesday, August 16, 8:30 – 10:10 a.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon G Organizer and Presider: Edward A. Tiryakian, Duke University Sociology Faces the Holocaust and Genocide Session 482, Monday, August 15, 4:30 – 6:10 p.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington B Organizer and Presider: Suzanne Vromen, Bard College Stigma, Social Change, and the Centennial Session 13, Saturday, August 13, 8:30 – 10:10 a.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington C Organizer and Presider: Bernice A. Pescosolido, Indiana University 9 The Formation of American Sociology in International Context: Invited Panel of International Sociologists (co-sponsored by the ASA Section on the History of Sociology) Session 127, Saturday, August 13, 4:30 – 6:10 p.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington A Organizer and Presider: Susan Hoecker-Drysdale, The University of Iowa The Impact of Large Data Resources on Sociology Session 432, Monday, August 15, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington B Organizer: Tom W. Smith, NORC The Significance of Sociology for the American Public: 1880-2005 (co-sponsored by the ASA Section on the History of Sociology) Session 295, Sunday, August 14, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth C Organizers and Presiders: Patricia Madoo Lengermann, The George Washington University; Gillian Niebrugge, American University Three Decades of Social Change: Evidence from the General Social Survey Session 128, Saturday, August 13, 4:30 – 6:10 p.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington B Organizer: Robert Mare, University of California, Los Angeles W.E.B. Dubois and Philadelphia: The Philadelphia Negro and Beyond (co-sponsored by the ASA Section on History Sociology) Session 544, Tuesday, August 16, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon G Organizer: Donald Cunnigen, University of Rhode Island Many sessions on the program have used the meeting theme and the centennial focus to take retrospective and prospective views at sociology. With apologies to those not included due to space limitations, below is a short list of some sessions that focus on the 100-year mark. Do make sure you browse through the Thematic Sessions highlighted in the daily Program Schedule too. Section on History of Sociology Paper Session. The History of American Sociology: Disciplinary Currents and Crosscurrents, I Session 374, Monday, August 15, 8:30 – 10:10 a.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Anthony Organizer and Presider: Betsy Lucal, Indiana University South Bend Section on History of Sociology Paper Session. The History of American Sociology: Disciplinary Currents and Crosscurrents, II Session 420, Monday, August 15, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Anthony Organizers: Betsy Lucal, Indiana University South Bend; Lawrence T. Nichols, West Virginia University Section on Community and Urban Sociology Invited Session. 100 Years of U.S. Urban Sociology: What Difference Did It Make and How Can It Matter for the Future? Session 473, Monday, August 15, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon C Organizer and Presider: Jeff Goodwin, New York University Section on Comparative and Historical Sociology Paper Session. 100 Years of Sociology on Race and Ethnicity: Comparative and Historical Perspectives Session 589, Tuesday, August 16, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon D Organizer: Ashley Woody Doane, University of Hartford Section on Crime, Law, and Deviance Invited Session. 100 Years of Sociological Criminology Session 378, Monday, August 15, 8:30 – 10:10 a.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Adams Organizer: James F. Short, Washington State University Teaching Workshop. The ASA Centennial as a Teaching Resource (co-sponsored by the Section on History of Sociology) Session 21, Saturday, August 13, 8:30 – 10:10 a.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 409 Organizers and Co-Leaders: Patricia Madoo Lengermann, The George Washington University; and Gillian Niebrugge, American University Film Documentaries The commemoration of ASA’s centennial year will include premieres of two documentary films at the Annual Meeting in Philadelphia. Each film was specially developed to celebration the contributions of sociology to our understanding of social life in America. 100 Years of Progress: Presidential Reflections will be presented at the beginning of the opening plenary session on Friday evening, August 12, at 7:00 p.m. in Millennium Hall at the Philadelphia Loews. This 20-minute film begins with a brief overview of the founding of the American Sociological Society, ASA’s pre-1959 name, acknowledging the organization’s inclusion of applied, action-oriented social reformers as well as puretheoretical-academic scholars. The film recognizes some of the prominent founding members, including Nobel Prize recipients Jane Addams and Emily Balch, along with Charlotte Perkins Gilman, a renowned leader of the women’s rights movement. The documentary continues with glimpses of the sociological thought of each president of the American Sociological Association from 1906 to the present. This film was developed and produced by Gale Largey, Mansfield University, with the assistance of Michael Murphy, ASA Archivist. Craig Calhoun, President of the Social Science Research Council, served as a consultant for the project. 10 Lester Ward: A Life's Journey will premiere on Saturday, August 13, at 7:30 p.m. in Grand Salon H at the Philadelphia Marriott. This 90-minute documentary describes in detail the life and ideas of Lester F. Ward, founder of American sociology and first president of the American Sociological Society. The film takes note of Ward’s intense insistence about equal opportunity in education, his vigorous advocacy of the women’s movement, his staunch opposition to the classism and racism inherent in the early eugenics movement, and his recognition of the need for applied sociology in the functioning of government. The documentary was written, directed, and produced by Gale Largey in association with Mark Polonia, Phil Ogden, and many other individuals. Largey, who completed his doctorate in sociology from SUNY-Buffalo in 1972, recently retired from a 35-year teaching career at Mansfield University of Pennsylvania. He has produced several documentaries, including The Austin Disaster, 1911: A Chronicle of Human Courage, which has been shown on various PBS stations and selected for showing at the Full Frame/Double Take. All meeting attendees are invited to view these special films and celebrate the legacy of Lester F. Ward at this centennial meeting. Regional Spotlight More than half a century has elapsed since ASA last met in Philadelphia, although members of the Eastern Sociological Society have visited this historical city several times in recent years. The site of this year’s Annual Meeting affords meeting attendees many opportunities to brush up on their American history, explore areas important to sociological traditions, and sample the flavors and textures of the cultural, culinary, artistic, and ethnic treasures that abound in this city and its surrounding countryside. President Troy Duster appointed a local support committee comprised of Magali Sarfatti Larson, chair (Temple University), John Connors (LaSalle University), Mary J. Gallant (Rowan University), Karen Halnon (Pennsylvania State University-Abingdon), Ross Koppel (University of Pennsylvania and Social Research Corporation), Victor Lidz (Drexel University), Doug Porpora (Drexel University), Caleb Rosado (Eastern University), Kim Lane Scheppele (University of Pennsylvania), and Robin Wagner-Pacifici (Swarthmore College), to propose special panels, develop a program of local tours, prepare a restaurant guide, and write special articles for ASA Footnotes. You have already enjoyed some of the special feature articles about Philadelphia that have appeared in ASA’s newsletter Footnotes. To reread these special feature articles, visit the Annual Meeting homepage and click on the Philadelphia Articles link on the “Regional Sessions and Tours” page. Check the “Explore Philadelphia” section on page 28 for information about the guided tours and sightseeing opportunities being offered to meeting attendees. Don’t forget to review the local restaurant guide prepared by Jennifer Murray, Robin Wagner-Pacifici, Magali SarfattiLarson, and Ross Koppel. Each registrant will receive a copy of that guide in the Final Program packet distributed on-site in Philadelphia. Take a look below at the interesting Regional Spotlight session topics on this year’s program. Please note that one of these sessions is being held off-site at the Constitution Center. Complete session details are shown in the body of the Program Schedule. Assessing Metropolitan Fragmentation in Philadelphia Session 52, Saturday, August 13, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 303 Organizer: David Elesh, Temple University Black Philadelphia in the New Millennium: the Intersection of Race, Space and Culture Session 253, Sunday, August 14, 12:30 – 2:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 304 Organizer and Presider: Maggie R. Ussery, Ursinus College Community-Based Research in Philadelphia Session 434, Monday, August 15, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 304 Organizer and Presider: Douglas V. Porpora, Drexel University Social Capital in the Private City: Exploring Community in Philadelphia Session 548, Tuesday, August 16, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 404 Organizer: Richardson Dilworth, Drexel University The Constitution as Museum: Capturing America’s Constitutional History for Public Exhibit Session 388, Monday, August 15, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. The Constitution Center, Kirby Auditorium, 525 Arch Street Organizer and Presider: Kim Lane Scheppele, University of Pennsylvania The Philadelphia Negro Session 132, Saturday, August 13, 4:30 – 6:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 304 Organizer and Presider: Tukufu Zuberi, University of Pennsylvania 11 Book Panels These Author Meets Critics sessions and book panels are designed to bring authors of recent books deemed to be important contributions to the discipline together with discussants chosen to provide different viewpoints. The 2005 Program Committee selected eight books to be featured on this year’s program and agreed to co-sponsor one book panel with a sister association. Black Sexual Politics: African Americans, Gender and the New Racism (Routledge, 2004) by Patricia Hill Collins Session 211, Sunday, August 14, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Liberty Salon A Organizer and Presider: Elizabeth Higginbotham, University of Delaware Critics: Juan J. Battle, Hunter College and Graduate Center, City University of New York Abby L. Ferber, University of Colorado Carole C. Marks, University of Delaware Author: Patricia Hill Collins, University of Cincinnati Flat Broke with Children: Women in the Age of Welfare Reform (Oxford University Press, 2003) by Sharon Hays Session 51, Saturday, August 13, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington B Organizer and Presider: Demie Kurz, University of Pennsylvania Critics: Mimi Abramovitz, Hunter College Elaine Bell Kaplan, University of Southern California Nancy Naples, University of Connecticut Author: Sharon Hays, University of Virginia For the Common Good? American Civic Life and the Golden Age of Fraternity (Oxford University Press, 2003) by Jason Kaufman Session 386, Monday, August 15, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington B Organizer: John Skrentny, University of California, San Diego Presider: Michael P. Young, The University of Texas at Austin Critics: Michael Hechter, University of Washington Charles Tilly, Columbia University Debra Minkoff, Barnard College Miller McPherson, Duke University Author: Jason Kaufman, Harvard University Freedom Is an Endless Meeting: Democracy in American Social Movements (University of Chicago Press, 2004) by Francesca Polletta Session 524, Tuesday, August 17, 8:30 – 10:10 a.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 303 Organizer and Presider: Jeff Goodwin, New York University Critics: Rhys H. Williams, University of Cincinnati Jackie Smith, University of Notre Dame Richard Flacks, University of California, Santa Barbara Gary Alan Fine, Northwestern University Author: Francesca Polletta, Columbia University Interaction Ritual Chains (Princeton University Press, 2004) by Randall Collins (co-sponsored by the Association for the Sociology of Religion) Session 387, Monday, August 15, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Liberty Salon C Organizers: David E. Boyns, California State University, Northridge; N. J. Demerath, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Presider: David E. Boyns, California State University, Northridge Critics: Neil L. Gross, Harvard University Erika M. Summers-Effler, University of Notre Dame James Arthur Beckford, University of Warwick Lynn Smith-Lovin, Duke University Author: Randall Collins, University of Pennsylvania Remaking the American Mainstream: Assimilation and Contemporary Immigration (Harvard University Press, 2003) by Richard Alba and Victor Nee Session 297, Sunday, August 14, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Liberty Salon A Organizer and Presider: Nancy Foner, Hunter College, City University of New York Critics: Alejandro Portes, Princeton University Joel Perlmann, Bard College John Lie, University of California, Berkeley Authors: Richard D. Alba, University at Albany, State University of New York Victor Nee, Cornell University Shared Beginnings, Divergent Lives: Delinquent Boys to Age 70 (Harvard University Press, 2003) by John Laub and Robert Sampson Session 93, Saturday, August 13, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon A Organizer: Glen H. Elder, University of North Carolina Presider: Linda K. George, Duke University Critics: Bruce Western, Princeton University Peggy C. Giordano, Bowling Green State University Blair Wheaton, University of Toronto Authors: John H. Laub, University of Maryland Robert J. Sampson, Harvard University The Minority Rights Revolution (Belknap Press, 2002) by John D. Skrentny Session 547, Tuesday, August 16, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 303 Organizer: Francesca Polletta, Columbia University Presider: Catherine Y. Lee, University of Michigan Critics: Richard D. Alba, University at Albany, State University of New York Jeff Manza, Northwestern University Holly J. McCammon, Vanderbilt University Author: John Skrentny, University of California, San Diego The Time Divide: Work, Family, Gender Inequality (Harvard University Press, 2004) by Jerry A. Jacobs and Kathleen Gerson Session 433, Monday, August 15, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon A Organizers: Jacquelyn Litt, University of Missouri, Columbia; Pamela Stone, Hunter College, City University of New York Presider: Pamela Stone, Hunter College, City University of New York Critics: Jennifer L. Glass, University of Iowa Sharon Hays, University of Virginia Eviatar Zerubavel, Rutgers University 12 Authors: Jerry A. Jacobs, University of Pennsylvania Kathleen Gerson, New York University Three Sections also organized Author Meets Critics sessions as part of their formal programs. Section on Science, Knowledge, and Technology Author Meets Critics Session. Whole World on Fire: Organizations, Knowledge, and Nuclear Weapons Devastation (2004) by Lynn Eden Session 380, Monday, August 15, 8:30 – 10:10 a.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Liberty Salon A Organizer: Joan H. Fujimura, University of Wisconsin Presider: Michael Lynch, Cornell University Critics: Thomas Hughes, University of Pennsylvania Renee R. Anspach, University of Michigan Hugh Gusterson, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Author: Lynn Eden, Stanford University Section on Comparative Historical Sociology Authors Meet Critics Session. Remaking Modernity: Politics, History and Sociology (Duke University Press, 2004) Session 424, Monday, August 15, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Liberty Salon B Organizer and Presider: Richard Lachmann, University at Albany, State University of New York Panelists: Andrew Abbott, University of Chicago Mounira Maya Charrad, The University of Texas at Austin James Mahoney, Brown University Jack A. Goldstone, George Mason University Discussants: Julia P. Adams, Yale University Elisabeth S. Clemens, University of Chicago Ann Shola Orloff, Northwestern University Section on Organizations, Occupations, and Work Authors-MeetCritics Session and Business Meeting Session 586, Tuesday, August 16, 12:30 – 2:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon D 12:30-1:30 p.m., Author Meets Critics: Occupational Ghettoes: The Worldwide Segregation of Men and Women Organizer: Frank Dobbin, Harvard University Authors: Maria Charles, University of California, San Diego David B. Grusky, Cornell University 1:30-2:10 p.m., Business Meeting 14th Annual Research Support Forum This year marks the 14th anniversary of the Research Support Forum, which features research funding information, data resources, and discussion of science policy issues throughout the Annual Meeting. The Forum begins on Saturday, August 13, with a workshop on the status of IRBs. On Sunday, August 14, the day starts with sessions key to science policy issues and obtaining or developing sources of support and moves to afternoon workshops on data archives and international collaborations. The focus on Monday morning, August 15, is on poster exhibits featuring data resources and funding opportunities, and a grant-writing workshop. The Forum concludes Monday afternoon with more workshops on data resources. The Research Support Forum is designed to provide invaluable help, access, and consideration of important substantive and policy issues for new researchers and more experienced scholars. From the opening workshop on Saturday to the closing workshop on Monday, attendees can count on plentiful access to funding experts and data sources during this year’s Forum. A chronological summary of sessions in the Forum is outlined below; please see the full session listings in the body of the Program Schedule for details. Professional Workshop. The Current Status of Institutional Review Boards (Co-sponsored by the ASA Committee on Professional Ethics) Session 136, Saturday, August 13, 4:30 – 6:10 p.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Adams Leaders: Earl Babbie, Chapman University Thomas Van Valey, Western Michigan University Marjorie Speers, AAHRPP, Inc. Professional Workshop. Research Support and Federal Funding Opportunities for Sociology Session 168, Sunday, August 14, 8:30 – 10:10 a.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon I Organizer and Presider: Lee Herring, American Sociological Association Panelists: Keith Crank, Human and Social Dynamics Initiative (and social science cyber-infrastructure issues), National Science Foundation Vivian Ota Wang, National Human Genome Research Institute, National Institutes of Health Roberta Spalter-Roth, Fund for the Advancement of the Discipline, American Sociological Association Special Session. Science Policy, National Priorities, and Opportunities for the Social Sciences Session 209, Sunday, August 14, 10:30 a.m. – 12:30 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon I Organizer: Lee Herring, American Sociological Association Presider: Sally Hillsman, American Sociological Association Panelists: David Abrams, Director, Office of Behavioral and Social Science Research, National Institutes of Health Michael Feuer, Director, National Academies of Science – Division of Behavioral and Social Sciences and Education David Lightfoot, Assistant Director, National Science Foundation – Social, Behavioral and Economic Sciences Directorate Research Workshop. Data Archives: Building A Partnership to Preserve the Future of Social Research Session 215, Sunday, August 14, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 408 Organizer and Leader: Myron P. Gutmann, University of Michigan 13 Research Workshop. Wisconsin Longitudinal Study Session 258, Sunday, August 14, 12:30 – 2:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon K Organizer and Leader: Robert M. Hauser, University of WisconsinMadison Professional Workshop. Doing Sociological Research Abroad Session 299, Sunday, August 14, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon L Organizer: Anjana Narayan, University of Connecticut Panel: Mary Osirim, Bryn Mawr College Carolle Charles, Baruch College, City University of New York Kathrin Zippel, Northeastern University Bandana Purkayastha, University of Connecticut Research Workshop. Panel Study of Income Dynamics: An Introduction to Its Potential and Use Session 301, Sunday, August 14, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 408 Organizer and Leader: Frank Stafford, University of Michigan Informational Poster Session. Research Funding Opportunities & Data Resources Session 381, Monday, August 15, 9:00 a.m. – 12:00 noon Philadelphia Marriott, Franklin Hall Organizers: Roberta M. Spalter-Roth and Mercedes Rubio, American Sociological Association This poster/exhibit session provides a unique occasion to meet representatives of major research funding institutions and principal investigators, researchers, and managers of large-scale datasets that are publicly available for use. Each display by a funding institution provides a visual overview of research funding and the application process, materials for distribution, and time for direct individual discussion. Data resource representatives are available to talk about the featured datasets, their analytic potential, and issues relating to access and use, including state-of-the-art Internet services to access datasets. This is an opportunity for meeting attendees to learn about these datasets and their potential for research and teaching. All meeting participants, including students, are encouraged to attend. Participating institutions and their poster numbers are shown in the full session listing in the body of the Program Schedule. Professional Workshop. Writing a Successful Grant Proposal Session 391, Monday, August 15, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth A2 Leaders: Patricia E. White, National Science Foundation Beth Rubin, National Science Foundation and University of North Carolina, Charlotte Research Workshop. ASA and Regional Association Annual Program Database Session 392, Monday, August 15, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Room 104 Organizer and Leader: Kenneth Nyberg, California State UniversityBakersfield Research Workshop. NCOVR Web-Based Data Resources – Introduction to Data Cubes Session 439, Monday, August 15, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 408 Organizer and Leader: Jacqueline Cohen and Pat Edgar, Carnegie Mellon University Special Sessions The category of “Special Sessions” encompasses many of the member suggestions for invited panels. These sessions may be on topics that further investigate the meeting theme, contribute to the centennial review of the discipline, or focus attention on other timely and important issues. More than thirty sessions were constituted, including a set of sessions co-sponsored with sister sociological associations/organizations. A summary of Special Session topics, organizers, and locations is compiled below (alphabetically by session topic); please refer to the body of the Program Schedule for complete details. Comparative Perspectives on Deviance from the United States and Nigeria: An International Partner University Collaboration Session 89, Saturday, August 13, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon I Organizer and Presider: Sarah H. Matthews, Cleveland State University How Radical Sociology Changed the Discipline and the ASA Session 483, Monday, August 15, 4:30 – 6:10 p.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth D Organizer and Presider: Rhonda F. Levine, Colgate University How the Labor Movement and Sociology Shape Each Other Session 14, Saturday, August 13, 8:30 – 10:10 a.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Adams Organizer and Presider: Dan Clawson, University of Massachusetts, Amherst IRBs and Social Science Research Session 49, Saturday, August 13, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Adams Organizer: Sydney A. Halpern, University of Illinois at Chicago Legal Categories and Social Identities Session 91, Saturday, August 13, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 304 Organizer and Presider: Emmanuelle M. Saada, New York University (Mis)Interpreting the Significance of Race: Conceptual and Methodological Challenges for Studies of Race and Racial Inequality Session 296, Sunday, August 14, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 303 Organizerand Presider: Amanda Evelyn Lewis, University of Illinois at Chicago Open Forum on Public Sociology Session 92, Saturday, August 13, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 407 Organizer and Presider: Philip Nyden, Loyola University Chicago Public Sociology in Contested Areas Session 569, Tuesday, August 16, 12:30 – 2:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon H Organizer and Presider: Amy T. Schalet, University of California, San Francisco 14 Rethinking Sociological Paradigms: Latina/o Sociology in the 22nd Century Session 210, Sunday, August 14, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 305 Organizer and Presider: Havidan Rodriguez, University of Delaware Rose Series in Sociology Session 523, Tuesday, August 16, 8:30 – 10:10 a.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 409 Organizer and Presiders: Douglas L. Anderton, Dan Clawson, Naomi Gerstel, Joya Misra, Randall G. Stokes, and Robert Zussman, University of Massachusetts and Editors, Rose Series in Sociology Russian Sociology Session 545, Tuesday, August 16, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 409 Organizer and Presider: Marshall Botkin, Frederick Community College Science Policy, National Priorities, and Opportunities for the Social Sciences Session 209, Sunday, August 14, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon I Organizer: Lee Herring, American Sociological Association Social Change in Post-Colonial Hong Kong: Implications for the Future of China and Taiwan Session 170, Sunday, August 14, 8:30 – 10:10 a.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth A1 Organizer and Presider: David Post, Pennsylvania State University Social Construction of Intelligence: Towards a Sociology of the Institutionalization of Human Cognition Session 338, Monday, August 15, 8:30 – 10:10 a.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Liberty Salon C Organizer and Presider: David P. Baker, Pennsylvania State University Targeting, Race/Ethnicity, and Censuses: Past and Future (cosponsored by the ASA Section on Sociological Practice and the ASA Section on Racial and Ethnic Minorities) Session 485, Monday, August 15, 4:30 – 6:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 303 Organizer and Presider: Kathryn L. Goldman Schuyler, Alliant International University The Crisis of Rationalism and the Re-Election of George Bush: Merging Sociological and Psychoanalytic Ideas Session 171, Sunday, August 14, 8:30 – 10:10 a.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon G Organizer and Presider: Lynn Sharon Chancer, Fordham University The Continuing Relevance of Early American Sociology Session 250, Sunday, August 14, 12:30 – 2:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 305 Organizer and Presider: James J. Chriss, Cleveland State University The Myopia of American Sociology: Insights from East Asia Session 385, Monday, August 15, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Adams Organizers: Jeffrey Broadbent, University of Minnesota; Koichi Hasegawa, Tohoku University The Public Sphere in U.S. Sociology Session 593, Tuesday, August 16, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 310 Organizers: Mathieu Deflem, University of South Carolina; Jeffrey C. Alexander, Yale University The Significance of Sociology for the HIV/AIDS Pandemic Session 251, Sunday, August 14, 12:30 – 2:10 p.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Congress A Organizer and Presider: Eric R. Wright, Indiana University Purdue University Indianapolis Transitions to Adulthood in Early 21st Century America Session 172, Sunday, August 14, 8:30 – 10:10 a.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Liberty Salon B Organizer: Patrick Carr, St. Joseph’s University Co-sponsored Special Sessions The 2005 Program Committee used the occasion of the centennial Annual Meeting to reach out to sister sociological associations and other organizations to collaborate on development of a number of special cosponsored sessions, as shown below. Alpha Kappa Delta (AKD) Distinguished Lecture Session 129, Saturday, August 13, 4:30 – 6:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon A Organizer and Presider: Elizabeth Hartung, California State University, Fresno Assessing “Faith-Based” Initiatives Organizationaly, Politically, and Constitutionally (co-sponsored by the Association for the Sociology of Religion) Session 337, Monday, August 15, 8:30 – 10:10 a.m. Radisson Warwick Hotel, Warwick Room Organizer: N. J. Demerath, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Attacks on Academic Freedom (co-sponsored by the Society for the Study of Social Problems, the Association for Applied and Clinical Sociology (formerly SAS and SPA), the Association of Black Sociologists, and Sociologists for Women in Society) Session 6, Friday, August 12, 4:30 – 6:10 pm Crowne Plaza Hotel, Liberty B Organizer and Presider: Sherryl Kleinman, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Gender and Race Based Data: The Case of BLS Data (cosponsored by Sociologists for Women in Society, the Association of Black Sociologists, the Society for the Study of Social Problems, and the Association for Applied and Clinical Sociology) Session 90, Saturday, August 13, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Room 103 Organizer and Presider: Nancy A. Naples, University of Connecticut How Did You Do That? Examples of Doing Applied Sociology (cosponsored by the Association of Applied and Clinical Sociology, the Association of Black Sociologists, the Society for the Study of Symbolic Interaction, and Sociologists for Women in Society) Session 594, Tuesday, August 16, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 306 Organizer and Presider: Jammie Price, Appalachian State University 15 Local, Regional, and Global Sociologies: Social Conflicts and Social Movements (co-sponsored by the International Sociological Association) Session 50, Saturday, August 13, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Congress A Organizers: Sujata Patel, University of Pune, India; and A. Douglas A. Kincaid, Florida International University The Battle over Social Security’s Future (co-sponsored by the Society for the Study of Social Problems, Sociologists for Women in Society, the Association of Applied and Clinical Sociology, and the Association of Black Sociologists) Session 131, Saturday, August 13, 4:30 – 6:10 p.m. Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Grand Salon II Organizer and Presider: Fred Block, University of California, Davis Local, Regional, and Global Sociologies: Societies in Transition (cosponsored by the International Sociological Association) Session 15, Saturday, August 13, 8:30 – 10:10 a.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Congress A Organizers: Sujata Patel, University of Pune, India; and A. Douglas A. Kincaid, Florida International University The Rise or Decline of American Jews? Comparative Perspectives and Competing Explanations (co-sponsored by the Association for the Social Scientific Study of Jewry and the North American Jewish Data Bank) Session 546, Tuesday, August 16, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington A Organizer and Presiders: Arnold Dashefsky, University of Connecticut; Harriet Hartman, Rowan University Local, Regional, and Global Sociologies: Teaching Practices and Sociology Curricular in Comparative Perspective (cosponsored by the International Sociological Association) Session 130, Saturday, August 13, 4:30 – 6:10 p.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Congress A Organizers: Sujata Patel, University of Pune, India; A. Douglas A. Kincaid, Florida International University Local, Regional, and Global Sociologies: The Particular and the Universal Sociological Traditions (co-sponsored by the International Sociological Association) Session 207, Sunday, August 14, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Congress A Organizers: Sujata Patel, University of Pune, India; A. Douglas A. Kincaid, Florida International University Religion, Immigration, and Globalization (co-sponsored by the Association for the Sociology of Religion) Session 169, Sunday, August 14, 8:30 – 10:10 a.m. Radisson Warwick Hotel, Warwick Room Organizer and Presider: R. Stephen Warner, University of Illinois at Chicago Remembering Jacquelyne Jackson: Scholar, Mentor, and Social Activist for Women, Minorities, and Older People (cosponsored by the Association for Black Sociologists, the ASA Section on Aging and the Life Course, the ASA Section on Medical Sociology, and the ASA Section on Racial and Ethnic Minorities) Session 5, Friday, August 12, 4:00 – 5:30 p.m. Sheraton Society Hill Hotel, Ballroom C Organizer and Presider: Diane R. Brown, University Med. & Dentistry of NJ Religious Confrontation with Gender and Sexuality (co-sponsored by the Association for the Sociology of Religion) Session 208, Sunday, August 14, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Radisson Warwick Hotel, Warwick Room Organizer and Presider: Ruth A. Wallace, George Washington University Sex, Drugs, and Plan B: Political Assaults on Public Health Science (co-sponsored by the Integrity of Science Working Group) Session 484, Monday, August 15, 4:30 – 6:10 p.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington A Organizer and Presider: Judith D. Auerbach, American Foundation for AIDS Rsch Vulnerability, Vulnerabilities, and Human Rights (co-sponsored by Sociologists without Borders) Session 339, Monday, August 15, 8:30 – 10:10 a.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 410 Organizer: Hernan Vera, University of Florida Women and Science: Empirical Responses to the Summers’ Controversy (co-sponsored by Sociologists for Women in Society) Session 252, Sunday, August 14, 12:30 – 2:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon G Organizers: Marlese Durr, Wright State University; Barbara Jane Risman, North Carolina State University Open Refereed Roundtables The 2005 Program Committee has continued this open general roundtable component, which was added to the general program eight years ago to augment the specialized roundtables sponsored by many sections. Jennifer Lena and Richard A. Peterson (Vanderbilt University) were invited to review submissions and organize roundtables using a “mini-session” format: a general topic identified for each table, two to five paper presentations, and a table presider to coordinate presentations and discussion. Two large roundtable session comprised of 20 tables each were created for this year’s program. Look for Open Refereed Roundtables I (Session 262) on Sunday, August 14, at 12:30 p.m., and Open Refereed Roundtables II (Session 346) at 8:30 a.m. on Monday, August 15. Both roundtable sessions are being held in Grand Salon E at the Philadelphia Marriott. Please note that all roundtables presentations listed on a session are held simultaneously in one large meeting room; neither audio-visual equipment nor recording devices may be used. 16 Poster Sessions Regular Sessions This program component features a series of display presentations that allow face-to-face conversation between authors and viewers. By facilitating informal discussions between presenters and “browsers,” Poster Sessions provide a more direct forum for information exchange than do formal paper presentations. Informational poster presentations provide information on resources, materials, and opportunities. The annual Research Support Forum includes a major poster session to highlight research funding opportunities and data resources. As part of the Graduate Education focus, a resource poster area will be available for browsing throughout the meeting, and there are two designated times when attendees can expect to meet representatives from participating graduate departments of sociology. The varied roster of display presentations includes something of interest for every meeting attendee. Be sure to include some time in your schedule to visit this year’s poster displays, adjacent to the ASA Exhibits and the ASA Bookstore in Franklin Hall at the Philadelphia Marriott. Regular Sessions are comprised of research papers submitted in response to the 2005 Call for Papers. The 2005 Program Committee appointed organizers for 136 general Regular Session topics and announced that topics were open to submissions from ASA members. Paper submissions were due by January 18, 2005. Each Regular Session organizer received anywhere from 2 to 99 submissions for review. A total of 203 formal paper sessions were organized from the 2,000 submitted papers. Please refer to the Program Schedule for details on each Regular Session. Be sure to check the ASA website this fall for information on making your paper submission for next year’s Annual Meeting. The paper submission deadline is expected to be January 18, 2006. Research Poster Sessions: Applied and Clinical Sociology (co-sponsored by the Association for Applied and Clinical Sociology) Session 219, Sunday, August 14, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Franklin Hall Organizer: Joan Vitek Hiller, Social Research Associates, Inc. Communicating Sociology Session 445, Monday, August 15, 2:30 – 4:00 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Franklin Hall Organizer: Jeffrey Chin, Le Moyne College Informational Poster Sessions: Graduate Programs in Sociology Session 305, Sunday, August 14, 2:30 – 4:00 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Franklin Hall Organizer: Victoria Hougham, American Sociological Association Graduate Programs in Sociology II Session 444, Monday, August 15, 2:30 – 4:00 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Franklin Hall Organizer: Victoria Hougham, American Sociological Association Research Funding Opportunities and Data Resources Session 381, Monday, August 15, 9:00 a.m. – 12:00 noon Philadelphia Marriott, Franklin Hall Organizers: Roberta M. Spalter-Roth and Mercedes Rubio, American Sociological Association Informal Discussion Roundtables This popular program component is designed to bring together small groups of people interested in discussing specific topics. The Program Committee invited Ralph B. McNeal, Jr., (University of Connecticut) to receive proposals and coordinate topics and discussion leaders. Three informal discussion sessions have been created to enhance networking opportunities. Session times and locations are noted below; please see the full session listing in the body of the Program Schedule for complete details. All roundtable discussions are held simultaneously in one large meeting room; neither audio-visual equipment nor recording devices may be used. Informal Discussion Roundtables I Session 56D, Saturday, August 13, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon F Informal Discussion Roundtables II Session 396D, Monday, August 15, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon E Informal Discussion Roundtables III Session 445D, Monday, August 15, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon F 17 Courses This educational component provides opportunities for attendees to get in-depth training in four special subject areas. These day-long intensive sessions are held preconvention and led by expert faculty who have prepared a comprehensive curriculum to engage participants on all levels. Registrants will receive certificates documenting their participation and completion of these courses. Attendance at each course is limited to 30 registrants. Prepaid registration is required; fees are $50. Reservations for courses were accepted in order of receipt in the ASA Executive Office. Attendees who preregistered should have received their tickets with their name badges when they picked up their program packets as ASA Preregistration. Course fees were non-refundable after July 13. Key Developments in Sociology of Gender Session 2, Friday, August 12, 9:00 a.m. – 12:00 noon, 1:00 – 4:00 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 403 Ticket required for admission Organizer: Judith A. Howard, University of Washington Panelists: Judith A. Howard, University of Washington Alesha Durfee, University of Washington Karen Rosenberg, University of Washington Julie Brines, University of Washington Multicultural Infusion into Introductory Sociology Curriculum Session 4, Friday, August 12, 10:00 a.m. – 12:00 noon, 1:00 – 4:00 p.m. Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Room 102 Ticket required for admission Organizer and Leader: Susan J. St. John, Corning Community College, State University of New York Panelists: Elijah Anderson, University of Pennsylvania Carol A. Jenkins, Glendale Community College Lynn Weber, University of South Carolina Sociological Work on Global Warming and Climate Change Session 3, Friday, August 12, 9:00 a.m. – 12:00 noon, 1:00 – 4:00 p.m. Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Room 103 9:00am – 4:00 pm Ticket required for admission Organizer: Penelope Canan, University of Denver Regions, Carbon, Culture, Cities, Climate, Change and Consequences. Penelope Canan, University of Denver Urban and Regional Typologies Relevant to Global Warming and the Carbon Cycle. Melanie Hartman, Global Carbon Project Legacies of Development Pathways and of Decarbonization. Stephan Scholz, Global Carbon Project/University of Arizona Intentional Social Change and the U.S. Environmental Movement: Implications for Addressing Global Carbon Use. Robert Brulle, Drexel University Teachers Teaching Teachers (co-sponsored with the ASA Section on Teaching and Learning in Sociology) Session 1, Friday, August 12, 8:30 a.m. – 12:00 noon, 1:30 – 6:00 p.m. Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Room 104 Ticket required for admission Organizers and Leaders: Gregory L. Weiss, Roanoke College Jeanne H. Ballantine, Wright State University Seminars Methodological Seminars are designed to keep sociologists abreast of recent scholarly trends and developments. Experts considered to be at the forefront of a given field are invited by the Program Committee to conduct these intensive sessions. Seminar speakers will present materials to explain specialized developments within their topic areas. Seminars are scheduled for an hour and forty minutes or for three hours; please see the detailed listings below for session details and brief descriptions provided by the leaders. Attendance at each seminar is limited to 50 registrants. Prepaid registration is required; fees are $30. Seminar preregistrants should have received their tickets with their name badges when they picked up their program packets. Seminar fees were non-refundable after July 13. However, if the required enrollment was not reached by the time preregistration closed and a seminar was cancelled, all fees will be fully refunded. Reservations for seminars were accepted in order of receipt in the ASA Executive Office. Those who did not make advance reservations may check for possible openings at the ASA Tickets counter in Grand Ballroom Foyer at the Philadelphia Marriott. Ensemble Statistical Methods for Data Mining in the Social Sciences Session 94, Saturday, August 13, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon L Ticket required for admission Leader: Richard A. Berk, University of California, Los Angeles This workshop will focus is on “ensemble methods,” which are an especially promising special case of algorithmic methods. The term “ensemble predictors” is commonly reserved for bundled fits produced by a stochastic algorithm, the output of which is some combination of a large number of passes through the data. Bagging and random forests are two powerful illustrations Although ensemble methods are seeing increasing use in the natural sciences, they are virtually untried in the behavioral, social and economic sciences. In this workshop, there will be an overview of algorithmic methods, a more in depth consideration of ensemble approaches and illustrations of several kinds of applications. The applications will be five broad kinds: 1) description of the relationships between a set of predictors and a response, 2) classification problems, 3) forecasting, 4) improved covariance adjustments, and 5) regression diagnostics. All will involve social science data. There will be handouts, internet 18 links for more detailed treatments, and access to free software. Participants in the workshop should have a good working knowledge of at least the generalized linear model (e.g., linear regression, logistic regression). Familiarity with the bootstrap and classification and regression trees would be helpful. Event History Analysis Session 202, Sunday, August 14, 9:00 a.m. – 12:00 noon Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon L Ticket required for admission Leader: Trond Petersen, University of California, Berkeley This seminar gives an introduction to methods for analyzing event history data, often known as duration, failure time, waiting time, survival, or hazard rate analysis. Event history data typically contain information about the date a sample member (e.g., person, organization, nation) entered a social state, for example an employment state, the date the state was subsequently left or the date the person was last observed in the state, and if the state was left, the value of the next state entered, and so on. The goal of the analysis is to estimate how fast or slow groups of people move between states and which factors influence the rate of movement. Counterfactual Causal Modeling Session 254, Sunday, August 14, 12:30 – 2:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon L Ticket required for admission Leader: Felix Elwert, Harvard University This seminar provides an overview of central concepts from the counterfactual approach to causal inference (a.k.a. potential outcomes model, Rubin model). The seminar emphasizes the usefulness of the counterfactual approach for thinking about causal mechanisms and bridging the gap between social theory and statistical methods. We will stress intuition and heuristics over statistical recipes and proofs. However, some new statistical material will be introduced. Topics include: potential outcomes; the fundamental problem of causal inference; experimental analogy; matching and propensity scores; relationship with OLS and standard methods; point treatments versus timevarying treatments; confounding and the role of social theory in causal estimation. Background: an advanced course on applied multiple regression and a good understanding of the intuition behind standard methods (OLS, logit, instrumental variables). Participants are encouraged to read pages 659-69, 67178 in Winship and Morgan. 1999. “The Estimation of Causal Effects from Observational Data.” Annual Review of Sociology 1999. Qualitative Analysis and Qualitative Software: Strategies for Integration Session 340, Monday, August 15, 8:30 – 11:30 a.m. – SOLD OUT Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon L Ticket required for admission Leaders: Raymond C. Maietta, ResearchTalk, Inc. Sharlene J. Hesse-Biber, Boston College This session is based on two important premises: (1) the use of qualitative software does not have to threaten the methodological integrity of qualitative researchers’ work (2) qualitative software accommodates a wide range of data analysis techniques. Highlighting both innovative and classic features of ATLAS.ti, ETHNOGRAPH, HyperRESEARCH, MAXqda, and NVIVO we demonstrate how off-screen manual methods used to analyze qualitative data can be employed and enhanced with qualitative software. Areas of focus include: Variety of data formats: Options for analysis of text, audio, video and images Episode Profiles: Summaries and representations of data collection episodes Memo writing as stand alone analytical method. Codebook and theme evolution: The process of creating codes and themes and finding patterns in your data. Strategies for data review and presentation This session will be run seminar-style; there will be NO hands-on computer work. Presenters will encourage active participation throughout the session. This seminar will run for 3 hours, with one short break. Fuzzy Sets and Case-Oriented Research Session 389, Monday, August 15, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon K Ticket required for admission Leader: Charles C. Ragin, University of Arizona Fuzzy sets are used to scale degree of membership in sets, using values in the interval from 0 to 1 (ranging from full nonmembership to full membership). Fuzzy set analysis is gaining popularity in the social sciences today because of the close connections it enables between verbal theory, substantive knowledge (especially in the calibration of set membership), and data analysis, using basic set theoretic principles. This workshop focuses on the use of fuzzy sets in caseoriented research, where the investigator has a degree of familiarity with the cases included in the investigation and seeks to understand cases configurationally—as specific combinations of aspects or elements. Using fuzzy-set methods, case outcomes can be examined in ways that allow for causal complexity, where different combinations of causally relevant conditions combine to generate the outcome in question. Also, with fuzzy-set methods it is a possible to evaluate arguments that causal conditions are necessary or sufficient. Examinations of this type are outside the scope of conventional analytic methods. Participants are expected to have general familiarity with both qualitative and quantitative methods. Some prior exposure to set theory (Boolean algebra) or qualitative comparative analysis (QCA) is recommended. Structuring Discovery: A Model and Method for Multisite Team Ethnography Session 549, Tuesday, August 16, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p .m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon L Ticket required for admission Leaders: Linda Burton, Pennsylvania State University Stephen Matthews, Pennsylvania State University Debra Skinner, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill This seminar is intended for social scientists interested in conducting large longitudinal multi-site team ethnographies as part of program projects or multimethod studies which include observational and survey components. Using “structured discovery,” the framework we developed to successfully conduct two large longitudinal ethnographic studies of families and poverty in urban and rural settings (Welfare, Children, and Families: A Three-City Study www.jhu.edu/~welfare and The Family Life Project), we provide concrete examples of the highly effective systems of communication, data transfer, management, and analysis we used to orchestrate the activities of multisite ethnographic teams comprising over 215 members and produce high quality, reliable and valid ethnographic data. We also introduce a novel methodological strategy-Geoethnography. We developed Geoethnography to integrate ethnographic methods and data on families and communities with Geographic Information Systems (GIS) technology to inform our understanding of families’ use of time and space. Workshops One of the strengths of the educational component of the Annual Meeting is the breadth and variety of workshops offered. These sessions provide opportunities for attendees to update their knowledge and skills in a variety of professional areas. For 2005, workshop topics focus on careers and professional growth, academic department strategies, research skills and major datasets, teaching challenges, funding opportunities and grant writing skills, enhanced teaching of standard courses, ethical issues, and more. 19 All workshops emphasize interaction between leaders and audience, and attendees are encouraged to bring questions or problems for discussion. Every workshop is open to all meeting registrants. An overview of workshop topics is listed below. Please see the full session listings in the body of the Program Schedule for details. Hone a skill, push your career to the next level, strengthen your repertoire of teaching strategies, increase your knowledge: It’s all part of the ASA learning curve in this centennial year! Departmental Issues Approaches to Service-Learning Session 595, Tuesday, August 16, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 412 Organizer: Brenda M. Kowalewski, Weber State University ASA Guidelines for the Undergraduate Major Session 133, Saturday, August 13, 4:30 – 6:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 307 Leaders: Carla B. Howery, American Sociological Association; Kathleen McKinney, Illinois State University Opportunities and Obstacles to Faculty Professional Development at Community Colleges Session 95, Saturday, August 13, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 307 Organizer and Leader: Philip C. Dolce, Bergen Community College Recruiting and Retaining Quality Majors Session 570, Tuesday, August 16, 12:30 – 2:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 408 Organizer and Presider: Susan Lynn Caulfield, Western Michigan University Sociology and General Education: Can We Do Better? Session 435, Monday, August 15, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon K Leaders: Diane Pike, Augsburg College; Robert K. Shelly, Ohio University Teaching Honors Sociology (a college-level course) in High School (co-sponsored by the ASA Task Force on the AP Course in Sociology Session 486, Monday, August 15, 4:30 – 6:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 407 Organizer and Leader: Kathleen Piker-King, Mount Union College Teaching Online Courses Session 53, Saturday, August 13, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon K Organizer: Beth Tracton-Bishop, College of St. Elizabeth Teaching Research Ethics in Sociology Methods Courses Session 255, Sunday, August 14, 12:30 – 2:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Independence Salon III Organizer: Enrique S. Pumar, William Paterson University Using Distance-Learning Education and Other Virtual Resources in Sociology Courses Session 16, Saturday, August 13, 8:30 – 10:10 a.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon K Organizer: Meredith M. Redlin, South Dakota State University Grants and Research Doing Sociological Research Abroad Session 299, Sunday, August 14, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon L Organizer: Anjana Narayan, University of Connecticut Minority Fellowship Program (MFP) Proposal Writing Workshop Session 526, Tuesday, August 16, 8:30 – 10:10 a.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 310 Organizer: Mercedes Rubio, American Sociological Association Research Support and Federal Funding Opportunities for Sociology Session 175, Sunday, August 14, 8:30 – 10:10 a.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon I Organizer: Lee Herring, American Sociological Association Scientific Foundations of Qualitative Research Session 489, Monday, August 15, 4:30 – 6:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon J Organizers and Presiders: Joane Nagel, University of Kansas; Charles C. Ragin, University of Arizona; Patricia E. White, National Science Foundation “Surfing the Net”: How to Do So Efficiently and Effectively for Research Session 490, Monday, August 15, 4:30 – 6:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon K Organizer and Leader: Russell K. Schutt, University of Massachusetts, Boston The Current Status of IRBs (co-sponsored by the ASA Committee on Professional Ethics) Session 136, Saturday, August 13, 4:30 – 6:10 p.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Adams Organizers: Earl Babbie, Chapman University; Thomas L. Van Valey, Western Michigan University Writing a Successful Grant Proposal Session 391, Monday, August 15, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth A2 Leaders: Patricia E. White, National Science Foundation; Beth Rubin, National Science Foundation and University of North Carolina, Charlotte Using Major National Data Sets Add Health: New Educational Data Session 137, Saturday, August 13, 4:30 – 6:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon K Organizer: Kathleen Mullan Harris, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill 20 ASA and Regional Association Annual Program Database Session 392, Monday, August 15, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Room 104 Organizer and Leader: Kenneth Nyberg, California State University, Bakersfield Data Archives: Building a Partnership to Preserve the Future of Social Research Session 215, Sunday, August 14, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 408 Organizer: Myron P. Gutmann, University of Michigan NCOVR Web-Based Data Resources: Introduction to Data Cubes Session 439, Monday, August 15, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 408 Organizers and Leaders: Jacqueline Cohen and Pat Edgar, Carnegie Mellon University Panel Study of Income Dynamics: An Introduction to Its Potential and Use Session 301, Sunday, August 14, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 408 Organizer and Leader: Frank Stafford, University of Michigan Using Census Data for Research Session 572, Tuesday, August 16, 12:30 – 2:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon L Organizer: William H. Frey, University of Michigan Using the Integrated Public Use Microdata Series in Research (IPUMS) Session 98, Saturday, August 13, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon K Organizer: Matthew Sobek, University of Minnesota Wisconsin Longitudinal Study Session 258, Sunday, August 14, 12:30 – 2:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon K Organizer and Leader: Robert M. Hauser, University of Wisconsin, Madison Teaching Research Skills Computer Simulation and Social Theory Session 138, Saturday, August 13, 4:30 – 6:10 p.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Tubman Organizer: James A. Kitts, University of Washington Enhancing Quantitative Literacy in Lower Division Sociology Courses Session 302, Sunday, August 14, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 409 Organizer: Susan Lynn Caulfield, Western Michigan University Successfully Teaching Statistics without Watering Down Session 573, Tuesday, August 16, 12:30 – 2:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon K Leaders: Ferris J. Ritchey, University of Alabama-Birmingham; Thomas A. Petee, Auburn University Teaching Research Methods and Making It Exciting Session 178, Sunday, August 14, 8:30 – 10:10 a.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 412 Leaders: Kerry J. Strand, Hood College; Gregory L. Weiss, Roanoke College Teaching Social Research Across the Undergraduate Curriculum (co-sponsored by ASA’s Integrating Data Analysis Project) Session 492, Monday, August 15, 4:30 – 6:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon L Organizer: Stephen A. Sweet, Ithaca College Teaching Topical Survey Courses: Practical and Theoretical Concerns Session 260, Sunday, August 14, 12:30 – 2:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 409 Leaders: Denise A. Copelton, College at Brockport, State University of New York; Anne Frances Eisenberg, State University of New York at Geneseo Undergraduate Student Research: Lessons from IDA (cosponsored by ASA’s Integrating Data Analysis Project) Session 528, Tuesday, August 16, 8:30 – 10:10 a.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon L Organizer: Jill Bouma, Berea College Using Census Data in Teaching Undergraduate Sociology (cosponsored by ASA’s Integrating Data Analysis Project) Session 597, Tuesday, August 16, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon L Organizer: William H. Frey, University of Michigan What’s New with Student CHIP: An Update for Experienced Users and an Introduction for Newbies (co-sponsored by ASA’s Integrated Data Analysis Project) Session 554, Tuesday, August 16, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon K Organizer: Gregg Lee Carter, Bryant University Professional Development Developing Your Leadership Skills Session 488, Monday, August 15, 4:30 – 6:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 409 Organizer and Leader: Susan Boser, Indiana University of Pennsylvania Fundamentals of Program Evaluation Session 437, Monday, August 15, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Anthony Organizer and Leader: Stephen F. Steele, Anne Arundel Community College Serving as an Expert Witness in Courts Session 300, Sunday, August 14, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 411 Leaders: Steve Kroll-Smith, University of North Carolina, Greensboro; Pamela Jenkins, University of New Orleans Teaching as a Calling: Developing Effective Ways of Teaching Session 438, Monday, August 15, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 412 Organizer: Susan D. Rose, Dickinson College 21 On Publishing Opportunities Getting Your Book or Journal Article Published Session 525, Tuesday, August 16, 8:30 – 10:10 a.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 412 Organizer and Leader: Phyllis Moen, University of Minnesota Writing Sociology for a General Audience Session 176, Sunday, August 14, 8:30 – 10:10 a.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth A2 Leader: Pepper J. Schwartz, University of Washington For Graduate Students and New Professionals Balancing Work and Family Careers in Academia (co-sponsored by Sociologists for Women in Society) Session 174, Sunday, August 14, 8:30 – 10:10 a.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon K Organizer/Leader: Tanja St. Pierre, The Pennsylvania State University Ensuring a Successful, First Solo Teaching Experience as a Graduate Student Session 97, Saturday, August 13, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Adams Organizer: Shannon N. Davis, Carolina Population Center Launching an Academic Career in an Uncertain Economy: Advice from the Experts Session 550, Tuesday, August 16, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 410 Organizer: Barrett Lee, Pennsylvania State University Making the Most of Your Dissertation: Publishing Opportunities Session 135, Saturday, August 13, 4:30 – 6:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon L Organizer and Leader: Eric Klinenberg, New York University Navigating the Graduate Admission Process Session 213, Sunday, August 14, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 411 Organizer and Presider: William G. Roy, University of California, Los Angeles Preparing for Promotion and Tenure Session 342, Monday, August 15, 8:30 – 10:10 a.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 412 Organizer: Lisa G. Frohmann, University of Illinois at Chicago Preparing Your Credentials for a Teaching-Oriented Position (for advanced graduate students) Session 341, Monday, August 15, 8:30 – 10:10 a.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 408 Organizer and Presider: Laura M. Moore, Hood College Strategies for Getting Tenure Session 18, Saturday, August 13, 8:30 – 10:10 a.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon L Organizers: Rebecca S.K. Li, The College of New Jersey; and Ronda Priest, University of Southern Indiana Thesis and Dissertation Accomplished, Practical Steps to Getting Done Session 214, Sunday, August 14, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth A2 Organizer and Leader: Wendy Y. Carter, Dr. Carter’s Educational Group, LLC Employment and Career Issues Building a Career with a “ Lavender Vita” (co-sponsored by the Sociologist’s Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Caucus) Session 17, Saturday, August 13, 8:30 – 10:10 a.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 410 Organizer and Presider: Tracy E. Ore, Saint Cloud State University Life on the Smaller Side: Purposely Placing Teaching at the Center of Professional Development for Faculty at Small Liberal Arts Colleges Session 134, Saturday, August 13, 4:30 – 6:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 401-402 Organizer: Susan M. Ross, Lycoming College MFP Professional Development Workshop (co-sponsored by the ASA Committee on the Status of Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and Transgendered Persons in Sociology) Session 257, Sunday, August 14, 12:30 – 2:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 310 Organizer: Mercedes Rubio, American Sociological Association Minority Experiences in Academia Session 298, Sunday, August 14, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Anthony Leaders: Deanna Chang, Indiana University of Pennsylvania; Angie K. Beeman, University of Connecticut Negotiating the Job Market Session 390, Monday, August 15, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 408 Organizer: Jay R. Howard, Indiana University-Purdue University Columbus Portfolio Preparation (co-sponsored by Sociologist for Women in Society) Session 96, Saturday, August 13, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 412 Organizers and Leaders: Idee Winfield, College of Charleston; Catherine Zimmer, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Careers in Sociological Practice Career Opportunities for Sociologists in State Government Session 173, Sunday, August 14, 8:30 – 10:10 a.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 303 Organizer and Leader: Paul T. Melevin, State of California Employment Development Department Career Paths Outside the Academy (co-sponsored by the ASA Section on Sociological Practice) Session 436, Monday, August 15, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 414 Organizer: Leora Lawton, TechSociety Research Careers for Sociologists in the Justice System Session 487, Monday, August 15, 4:30 – 6:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 414 Organizer: Henry H. Brownstein, NORC at The University of Chicago 22 Consulting to Create Organizations of the Future (co-sponsored by the ASA Section on Sociological Practice) Session 212, Sunday, August 14, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon K Leaders: Kathy Shepherd Stolley, Northrop Grumman Information Technology; Kathryn L. Goldman Schuyler, Alliant International University Non-academic Job Search Session 256, Sunday, August 14, 12:30 – 2:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 408 Organizer and Presider: Cynthia L. Sipe, Youth Development Strategies, Inc. Teaching about Sociological Practice Community-Based Research: A Workshop on Teaching to Diversify Voices Session 54, Saturday, August 13, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Tubman Organizer: John Jason Green, Delta State University Developing an Internship Program in Applied Sociology Session 19, Saturday, August 13, 8:30 – 10:10 a.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 411 Organizer and Leader: Jammie Price, Appalachian State University Effective Clinical Sociology: From Practitioners to Program Session 177, Sunday, August 14, 8:30 – 10:10 a.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 411 Leaders: Jan Marie Fritz, University of Cincinnati; Ann Marie Ellis, Texas State University Promoting Civic Engagement in the College Classroom Session 393, Monday, August 15, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 404 Organizer and Leader: Melissa Jill Bonstead-Bruns, University of Wisconsin -Eau Claire Teaching Applied Sociology Session 55, Saturday, August 13, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 411 Organizer: Robert E. Kettlitz, Hastings College Teaching Social Policy Issues: Work and Family Policies Session 217, Sunday, August 14, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 409 Organizer: Marjorie Schaafsma The Place of Theory in Applied Sociology Session 552, Tuesday, August 16, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 411 Organizers: Jay A. Weinstein, Eastern Michigan University; Marvin S. Finkelstein, Southern Illinios University Edwardsville Teaching Sociology Courses Innovative Ideas for Teaching Introductory Sociology Session 303, Sunday, August 14, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 412 Leaders: Tracy L. Dietz, University of Central Florida; Joan M. Morris, University of Central Florida Teaching about Families Session 527, Tuesday, August 16, 8:30 – 10:10 a.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon K Organizer and Presider: Susan J. Ferguson, Grinnell College Teaching about the Holocaust, Genocide, and Human Rights Session 443, Monday, August 15, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 410 Organizer: Peter J. Stein, William Paterson University Teaching Criminology (co-sponsored by the Section on Crime, Law, and Deviance) Session 442, Monday, August 15, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 413 Leaders: Scott Allen Desmond, Purdue University; J. William Spencer, Purdue University Teaching Gender and Work: Observations from the Last Twenty Years (co-sponsored by the ASA Section on Sex and Gender) Session 139, Saturday, August 13, 4:30 – 6:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 411 Leaders: Sarah Fenstermaker and Denise A. Segura, University of California, Santa Barbara Teaching Latina/o Studies (co-sponsored by the Section on Latino/a Sociology) Session 20, Saturday, August 13, 8:30 – 10:10 a.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 303 Organizer: Hector L. Delgado, University of La Verne Teaching Marxism Session 343, Monday, August 15, 8:30 – 10:10 a.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 409 Organizer and Presider: Lauren Langman, Loyola University Chicago Teaching Racial and Ethnic Relations Session 304, Sunday, August 14, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 410 Organizer and Presider: Eduardo Bonilla-Silva, Duke University Teaching Social Psychology Session 574, Tuesday, August 16, 12:30 – 2:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 410 Organizer: Laura Fingerson, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee Teaching Sociology of the Middle East Session 596, Tuesday, August 16, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon K Organizer: Ali-Akbar Mahdi, Ohio Wesleyan University Teaching Sociology of Education Session 395, Monday, August 15, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 409 Organizers and Leaders: Jeanne H. Ballantine, Wright State University; Caroline Hodges Persell, New York University Teaching the Sociology of Death and Dying Session 56, Saturday, August 13, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 409 Organizer/Leader: Gerry R. Cox, University of Wisconsin, La Crosse Teaching the Sociology of Mental Health: Integrating Personal Memoirs (co-sponsored by the ASA Section on Medical Sociology) 23 Session 179, Sunday, August 14, 8:30 – 10:10 a.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 409 Organizer: Jane D. McLeod, Indiana University Teaching the Sociology of Peace, War, and Social Conflict Session 261, Sunday, August 14, 12:30 – 2:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 411 Organizer and Presider: Lynne M. Woehrle, Mount Mary College Teaching the Sociology of Work and Occupations Session 345, Monday, August 15, 8:30 – 10:10 a.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon K Organizer and Leader: Carol J. Auster, Franklin and Marshall College Teaching Tips and Assignments for Health and Medical Topics (cosponsored by the Section on Medical Sociology) Session 396, Monday, August 15, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Grand Salon IIIIV Organizer: Anne Figert, Loyola University Chicago Teaching Youth Culture Session 140, Saturday, August 13, 4:30 – 6:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 410 Organizer and Leader: Evan Cooper, Ithaca College Teaching Techniques and Innovations Constructing Cross-Cultural Gender Studies Courses Session 99, Saturday, August 13, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Tubman Organizer and Leader: Catherine G. Valentine, Nazareth College Facilitating Teamwork in Sociology Courses Session 216, Sunday, August 14, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 412 Organizer: Anne Frances Eisenberg, State University of New York at Geneseo Including the Sociology of the Future in the Undergraduate Curriculum Session 491, Monday, August 15, 4:30 – 6:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 413 Organizer: Peter Bishop, University of Houston, Clear Lake Incorporating Problem-Based Learning Into the Classroom Session 440, Monday, August 15, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 409 Organizers and Leaders: Jamie Mullaney, Goucher College; Janet Hinson Shope, Goucher College Integrating Queer Studies in the Sociology Curriculum Session 441, Monday, August 15, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Tubman Organizers: Erin Calhoun Davis, Antioch College; Karin E. Peterson, University of North Carolina at Asheville Sequencing Writing Across the Sociology Major: What to do about the Soft Middle? Session 551, Tuesday, August 16, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 412 Leaders: Sherri L. Grasmuck, Temple University; Eli Goldblatt, Temple University Teaching about Controversial Subjects Session 101, Saturday, August 13, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 410 Organizer: Jennifer Keys, North Central College Teaching as Performance Session 218, Sunday, August 14, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 403 Organizer and Leader: Jerry M. Lewis, Kent State University Teaching Courses Collaboratively and Electronically with Colleagues in other Countries Session 100, Saturday, August 13, 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 411 Organizer: Judith R. Blau, University of North Carolina Teaching Public Sociologies (co-sponsored by the ASA Task Force on Institutionalizing Public Sociology) Session 259, Sunday, August 14, 12:30 – 2:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 412 Leaders: Philip Nyden, Loyola University Chicago; Leslie H. Hossfeld, University of North Carolina at Wilmington Teaching Sociology and Disability Studies Session 394, Monday, August 15, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 410 Leaders: Diane E. Taub, Indiana University-Purdue University; Lynn Schlesinger, Plattsburgh State University of New York The ASA Centennial as a Teaching Resource (co-sponsored by the Section on History of Sociology) Session 21, Saturday, August 13, 8:30 – 10:10 a.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 409 Organizers and Co-Leaders: Patricia Madoo Lengermann, The George Washington University; and Gillian Niebrugge, American University Using Active Learning Exercises to Teach Sociology Session 493, Monday, August 15, 4:30 – 6:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 408 Organizer and Leader: Sara C. Hare, Indiana University, Southeast Using Popular Music to Frame Sociological Concepts Session 553, Tuesday, August 16, 10:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 302 Leaders: Benjamin D. Albers, Duke University; Rebecca Bach, Duke University Institutionalizing Public Sociology Open Forum The Task Force on Institutionalizing Public Sociology wants to hear from you! On Saturday, August 13, from 2:30 p.m. – 4:10 p.m. in Room 407 at the Philadelphia Marriott, join in the Open Forum. Hear about the work done by the Task Force and comment on ways you think public sociology can and should (or not) be institutionalized in ASA and in departments. For example, the Task Force has gathered examples of public sociology 24 to show the scope and variety of this work. They have drafted guidelines for promotion and tenure, to include and evaluate public sociology. Check the ASA website for drafts of their work. Your comments will help the Task Force make important, useful, and practical recommendations to ASA Council. Section Activities Looking for a way to find colleagues with similar research interests? Section activities offer one convenient avenue for connecting with like-minded scholars. These specialized sessions range in format from formal paper presentations to panels and discussion roundtables. Sectionsponsored sessions are open to all meeting registrants. Sections promote ongoing communication among their members by publishing newsletters, supporting cooperative research ventures, recognizing outstanding work by professionals and students in their specialties, and sponsoring program activities at each Annual Meeting. ASA members with interests in specialized areas of sociological inquiry may join any Section of the Association. Stop by the ASA Membership table in the Grand Ballroom Foyer at the Philadelphia Marriott to browse through recent section newsletters and pick up section membership information. Of course, if you join a section before September 30, your membership will help support that section’s program allocation for 2005. The number of sessions allocated to each Section is based on the size of the Section membership. For the 44 sections, including one section-in-formation (Evolution & Sociology), there are a total of 180 sessions/meetings scheduled. Section activities are summarized on the next page for quick reference. Section Council Meetings The total formal allocation of space for each section is comprised of two parts: (a) one “business” slot for holding a one-hour Council meeting followed by a 40minute Business meeting; and (b) the earned program session allocation. ASA Council does permit Sections to use their Council meeting time (one hour) for other purposes. However, a Section that chooses to use this option forfeits the services of the ASA Office in the arrangement of an alternate Council meeting time and location. The Council meetings listed below are the extent of the information available at press time. Check at the ASA Information Desk in the Grand Ballroom Foyer for any updates provided by section chairs during the course of the convention. Aging and the Life Course—Sunday, August 14, 7:00-8:00am— Philadelphia Marriott, Conference Suite II Animals and Society—Saturday, August 13, 10:30-11:30am — Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon L Children and Youth—Sunday, August 14, 7:00-8:15am— Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Parlor 1 Collective Behavior and Social Movements—Saturday, August 13, 4:30-5:30pm— Philadelphia Marriott, Room 310 Community and Urban Sociology—Monday, August 15, 8:309:30am— Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon C Crime, Law, and Deviance—Sunday, August 14, 10:30-11:30am— Philadelphia Loews, Commonwealth B, Table 11 Culture, Sociology of—Sunday, August 14, 7:00-8:00am— Philadelphia Marriott, Room 308 Education, Sociology of—Saturday, August 13, 8:30-9:30am — Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon B Emotions, Sociology of—Saturday, August 13, 7:00-8:15am— Philadelphia Marriott, Conference Suite III Environment and Technology—Monday, August 15, 4:30-6:10pm— Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Room 101 Ethnomethodology and Conversation Analysis—Monday, August 15, 10:30-11:30am— Philadelphia Marriott, Room 403 Family, Sociology of the—Tuesday, August 16, 2:30-3:30pm— Philadelphia Marriott, Room 303 Medical Sociology—Friday, August 12, 1:30 to 5:30pm—Philadelphia Marriott, Room 309 Methodology—Sunday, August 14, 8:30-9:30am— Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Tubman Peace, War, and Social Conflict—Tuesday, August 16, 10:3011:30am— Philadelphia Marriott, Room 304 Population, Sociology of—Monday, August 15, 10:30-11:30am— Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Tubman Racial and Ethnic Minorities—Tuesday, August 16, 8:30-9:30am— Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon C Rationality and Society—Tuesday, August 16, 10:30-11:30am— Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington B Religion, Sociology of—Monday, August 15, 7:00-8:15am— Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Room 101 Science, Knowledge, and Technology—Monday, August 15, 7:008:15am— Philadelphia Marriott, Room 309 Sexualities, Sociology of—Tuesday, August 16, 10:30-11:30am— Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon J Social Psychology—Sunday, August 14, 8:30-9:30am— Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon J Sociological Practice—Tuesday, August 16, 8:30-9:30am— Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon J 25 Meeting days are Saturday, August 13; Sunday, August 14; Monday, August 15; and Tuesday, August 16. Hotel Codes: C = Courtyard by Marriott, L = Philadelphia Loews, M = Philadelphia Marriott __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ SECTION Aging & the Life Course HOTEL PRIMARY M Sunday Alcohol, Tobacco, & Drugs M Tuesday Animals and Society M Saturday Asia & Asian America L Sunday COUNCIL 7:00am BUSINESS SESSIONS 12:30pm 197, 234, 287, 323 RECEPTIONS Sat., 6:30pm 11:30am 534, 562, 58 Sun., 7:30pm 10:30am 11:30am 41 Sat., 6:30pm 9:30am 198, 236, 279 Children and Youth L Sunday 7:00am 3:30pm 235, 278, 327 Sat., 6:30pm Collective Behavior & Social Movements M Saturday 4:30pm 5:30pm 45, 81, 121, 320 Sat., 6:30pm Communication & Information Technologies M Saturday 11:30am 83, 117 Sat., 6:30pm Community & Urban Sociology M Monday 9:30am 423, 472, 514, 579 Sun., 12:30pm Comparative & Historical Sociology M Tuesday 3:30pm 424, 473, 542, 565, 589, 609 Mon., 6:30pm 8:30am Crime, Law, & Deviance L Sunday 10:30am 11:30am 245, 283, 328, 378 Culture, Sociology of M Sunday 7:00am 11:30am 200, 233, 277, 331, 367, 418 Sat., 6:30pm Economic Sociology M Sunday 9:30am 199, 240, 321, 427, 474 Sat., 6:30pm Education, Sociology of M Saturday 8:30am 9:30am 84, 120, 158, 196 Emotions, Sociology of M Saturday 7:00am 3:30pm 124, 156 Sat., 6:30pm Environment & Technology M Tuesday Mon., 4:30pm 1:30pm 532, 557, 585, 603 Mon., 6:30pm Ethnomethodology & Conversation Analysis M Monday 10:30am 11:30am 471, 515 Evolution and Sociology* M Saturday 5:30pm 161 Family, Sociology of the M Tuesday 3:30pm 372, 509, 533, 564, 580 Mon., 6:30pm History of Sociology L Monday 11:30am 374, 420 Mon., 6:30pm 2:30pm Sat., 6:30pm International Migration L Saturday 5:30pm 80, 119, 160 Sat., 6:30pm Labor & Labor Movements C Sunday 11:30am 194, 241, 324 Sun., 8:00pm Latina/Latino Sociology L Monday 11:30am 369, 425, 469 Mon., 7:00pm Law, Sociology of C Monday 5:30pm 370, 467, 518 Marxist Sociology C Sunday 3:30pm 195, 242, 281, 329 Mathematical Sociology M Monday 9:30am 379, 466 Medical Sociology M Saturday Mental Health, Sociology of M Monday Methodology L Sunday Fri., 1:30pm Sun., 8:00pm 4:30pm 42, 78, 122, 155, 237, 280, 322 Sat., 6:30pm 3:30pm 373, 421, 477, 511 Mon., 6:30pm 8:30am 9:30am 239, 326 1:30pm 371, 419, 508, 535, 563, 586, 605 10:30am 11:30am 538, 578, 606 3:30pm 43, 82, 123, 159 Organizations, Occupations, & Work M Tuesday Peace, War, & Social Conflict M Tuesday Political Economy of the World System L Saturday Political Sociology M Monday Population, Sociology of L Monday Race, Gender, & Class L Saturday Racial & Ethnic Minorities M Tuesday 8:30am Rationality & Society L Tuesday 10:30am Religion, Sociology of M Tuesday Mon., 7:00am Science, Knowledge, & Technology M Monday Mon., 6:30pm 5:30pm 377, 422, 470, 516, 539 11:30am 368, 478, 513 Mon., 6:30pm 9:30am 46, 79, 118, 157, 238, 282 Sun., 8:00pm 9:30am 468, 507, 558, 587, 602 Mon., 6:30pm 11:30am 540, 608 Mon., 6:30pm 1:30pm 510, 537, 559, 588, 604 Mon., 6:30pm 7:00am 3:30pm 380, 426, 475, 512 10:30am Sat., 6:30pm Sex & Gender M Monday 10:30am 376, 476, 517, 536, 560, 582 Sexualities, Sociology of M Tuesday 10:30am 11:30am 541, 583, 607 Social Psychology M Sunday 8:30am 9:30am 163, 243, 284, 330, 375 Sociological Practice M Tuesday 8:30am 9:30am 561, 584 Mon., 6:30pm Teaching & Learning in Sociology C Sunday 9:30am 201, 244, 285, 325 12:30pm Theory M Saturday 3:30pm 44, 85, 125, 162, 286 Sat., 6:30pm *in-formation Mon., 6:30pm 26 It’s the Law Twelfth Annual ASA Chair Conference The theme of the eleventh annual ASA Chair Conference is “It’s the Law.” Designed for new and current chairs at all types of institutions, the conference provides “briefings” on issues of critical importance for departmental leadership. Panels, roundtables, and informal conversation facilitate sharing information and advice. Attendees also meet with chairs from similar institutions to discuss common issues. In addition, the ASA Research Program on the Discipline and Profession will present data on important trends. The Chair Conference begins in Grand Salon D at the Philadelphia Marriott on Friday, August 12, at 12:15 p.m. and concludes at 12:10 p.m. on Saturday, August 13. The major briefing sessions will focus on: The Role of the Chair: Legal and Ethical Pitfalls Legal Issues for Chairs I: 1) Hiring Processes 2) Promotion and Tenure Procedures 3) Family Leave and Worklife Issues Legal Issues for Chairs II 1) Managing Student Complaints 2) Partner and Spousal Employment 3) IRB and Human Subject Issues 4) Compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) Issues Linked to the Institutional Context 1) AA and BA Granting Institutions 2) MA Granting Institutions 3) PhD Granting Institutions A Briefing on Key ASA Projects 1) Rethinking the Sociology Major and Curriculum 2) Evaluating and Rewarding Public Sociology in Tenure and Promotion Decisions 3) Assessment of Student Learning Evaluation Issues 1) Evaluating Service and Public Sociology 2) Evaluation of Teaching: By Students and Peers 3) Evaluation of the Chair: Who and How? 4) Evaluation of Your Program/Major: Program Review 5) Preparing for an Accreditation Review Preregistration and fee payments are required. Chair Conference attendees must preregister for the Annual Meeting in order to register for this conference. Fees for the Chair Conference are $55 for chairs from Department Affiliate departments; $75 for chairs from non-affiliate departments. The Chair Conference fee includes all conference materials and coffee/beverage breaks. Attendees who preregistered should have received an advance mailing from APAP staff indicating where to go to sign in for the Chair Conference and pick up their tickets with their name badges and program materials. Those who did not make advance reservations may check for openings at the ASA Tickets counter in the Grand Ballroom Foyer at the Philadelphia Marriott. Directors of Graduate Study Directors of Graduate Study (DGS) are important leaders in shaping department policies and opportunities for effective graduate programs. On Monday morning, August 15, ASA’s Academic and Professional Affairs Program (APAP) has planned a series of events for sociologists in the DGS role, focusing on such issues as effective recruitment and mentoring, professional socialization, ethics, preparing graduate students for the job market, and more. Fees are $30 for chairs from Department Affiliate departments, and $50 for Chairs from non-affiliate departments. DGS attendees must register for the Annual Meeting in order to register for this conference. The DGS registration fee includes continental breakfast and DGS meeting materials. Only departments that are renewed for the 2005-2006 Academic Year are eligible for the Affiliate price. The DGS events begin in Room 414 at the Philadelphia Marriott on Monday, August 15, at 8:00 a.m. The DGS agenda includes: Your Life as a Chair: 1) Surviving and Thriving in Your First Years as Chair 2) Considering a Career in Academic Administration 3) Demographic Shifts in the Profession and in the Department 4) Working Well with the Dean 8:00 a.m., Get-acquainted continental breakfast 8:30-9:20 a.m., Data Trends in Graduate Education 9:20-10:10 a.m., Effective Recruitment and Retention of Graduate Students of Color 10:30-11:15 a.m., Breakout Discussions: 1) The Role of the Director of Graduate Studies 2) Proseminars and Other Professional Socialization 3) Student Preparation for the Job Search and Job Placement BA and Beyond: What We Know about Our BA Graduates’ Career Paths 11:20 a.m.-12:10 p.m., Teaching about Ethics across the Graduate School Curriculum 27 Attendees who preregistered should have received their tickets with their name badges when they picked up their program materials at ASA Preregistration. Those who did not preregister may check for possible openings at the ASA Tickets counter in the Grand Ballroom Foyer at the Philadelphia Marriott. Undergraduate Advisers and Students Take Note! Graduate Programs Poster/Resource Area This dedicated display area features exhibits on graduate training from over 30 PhD programs. Participating graduate programs will display information and provide handouts describing their programs, special emphases, financial aid and admissions criteria, and opportunities to work with faculty researchers and instructors. Information and displays will be available throughout the Annual Meeting during hours that the ASA Exhibit Hall is open. Department representatives will be available to answer questions from undergraduate students and their advisors, MA students looking to pursue a PhD, and other interested parties at two designated times: 2:30-4:10 p.m. on Sunday, August 14, and 2:30-4:10 p.m. on Monday, August 15. This is an excellent opportunity for undergraduate advisors, undergraduate students, and MA-level students to see displays on graduate programs and meet directly with representatives. Graduate departments that responded to the invitations issued by the ASA Academic and Affairs Program are listed in the program schedule under Poster Sessions #305 and #444. Student Forum The ASA welcomes the attendance of undergraduate and graduate students at the Annual Meeting. Special arrangements for students include discounted registration fees, workshops oriented to issues of interest to students, student paper and roundtable sessions, and an informal Student Lounge area in the exhibit hall. Student Forum. To facilitate students’ engagement in the Association and the discipline, the ASA Council approved the formation of a Student Forum in 1998. Anyone who joins ASA as a student member automatically becomes a member of the Student Forum. Students are encouraged to attend the Annual Meeting, meet with the Forum leadership, and participate in the formal and social events that will be held. The business meeting of the Student Forum will be held on Sunday, August 14, at 2:30 – 4:10 p.m. in the Grand Salon A at the Philadelphia Marriott. Orient Yourself to the Meeting. Plan to attend the Welcoming Party on Friday night and the Orientation for First Time Attendees on Saturday morning to kick off your Annual Meeting experience. Browse thoroughly through the exhibits, posters, and the ASA Bookstore. Don’t be shy about asking staff at the ASA Information Desk for assistance in finding various activities. Student Reception. All students registered to attend the Annual Meeting are invited to a special student reception on Monday, August 15, at 6:30-7:30 p.m. in Grand Salon F at the Philadelphia Marriott. Student Lounge. Located with the ASA Exhibits in Franklin Hall at the Philadelphia Marriott, the informal Student Lounge is adjacent to the Graduate Programs in Sociology Resource displays and the poster sessions. All students attending the Annual Meeting are welcome to take advantage of this general resource area. Graduate Programs in Sociology Displays. At 2:304:10 p.m. on Sunday and Monday, August 14 and 15, representatives from graduate departments will be available in the Graduate Programs in Sociology Resource area to talk with students and undergraduate advisers. Posters and handouts will be available throughout the meeting. Data Resources and Funding Sessions. Be sure to attend poster sessions 381 and familiarize yourself with the various funding opportunities and data resources which can advance your work in sociology. Student Sessions. The Program Committee allocates five session slots to the Student Forum each year for student sessions. From an open call for student papers, four paper sessions and one roundtable session were organized under Student Forum auspices. An additional undergraduate student roundtable session was sponsored by the ASA Minority Fellowship Program. For details on these student sessions, please see sessions 57, 180, 263, 347, 397, and 446 in the Program Schedule. Whether you are planning to attend graduate school, or are further along and look to employment in sociological practice or the academy, please take a look at the career, professional, and teaching workshops. Don’t let the huge program overwhelm you. Start by looking at the Student Forum sessions noted above and then check the Topic Index to identify other sessions in your particular areas of interest. 28 Explore Philadelphia One of the best ways to get a feel for the people and communities in Philadelphia is to take advantage of one or more of this year’s local tours. The schedule of tours is provided below, with descriptions and capacity limits. Reservations were mandatory. Those who are already enrolled in tours should have received their tickets in their badge envelopes. Most tours have already sold out, as shown below, but there are a few tickets remaining for Tour 7 (Philadelphia Mainline) and Tour 8 (Philadelphia Murals). If you wish to buy one of the remaining tickets or check on the status of a tour, please stop by the ASA Tickets desk in the Grand Ballroom Foyer at the Philadelphia Marriott. Most tour sites are accessible to persons with disabilities; however, tour buses are generally not accessible to attendees in wheelchairs unless arranged in advance. Attendees needing wheelchair-accessible transportation for a tour should contact the on-site ASA Office in Room 502 at the Philadelphia Marriott at least 24 hours in advance of the scheduled tour departure. Fees are noted with the descriptions below and include all entrance fees. All fees go toward tour handling, entrance fees, handouts (if any), and group transportation costs. Tour fees are non-refundable. If a tour has been cancelled due to insufficient enrollment, however, fees will be refunded in full. The type of transportation involved is noted with each tour description. Attendees who opt to use an alternate mode of transportation, e.g., taking a cab instead of walking or riding the bus, will be completely responsible for the cost of that transportation. All tour groups will depart from the 12th Street entrance of the Philadelphia Marriott. Attendees are advised to arrive promptly; there are no refunds for “missing the bus.” Keep in mind that the arrival times back to the hotel are estimates only and may vary somewhat due to traffic conditions. Tours 1 & 2: The Barnes Collection – SOLD OUT Friday, August 12, 10:00 a.m.-1:00 p.m. (Tour 1) ; or 12:30 – 3:30 p.m. (Tour 2) Fee: $20 The Barnes Foundation in Lower Merion, PA, is probably the world’s most important private collection of late nineteenth century and twentieth century French paintings. Dr. Barnes made his extraordinary art collection and his home into the basis of the Foundation, which is housed in Dr. Barnes’s home, designed by the great neo-classic architect Paul Cret. The hanging of the works reflects Dr. Barnes’s theories of aesthetic appreciation; while these theories are not self-evident, the extraordinary number and unparalleled beauty of the paintings and sculptures immediately stun the visitor. Cézanne, Renoir, and Matisse shine above all others, but the collection also includes masterpieces by Manet, Seurat, Modigliani, Soutine, Degas, Rousseau, Picasso, and others. African art and Pennsylvania Dutch crafts grace the rooms, and the gardens and Arboretum are also superb. The Barnes can only be seen by reservation, and Lower Merion is not that simple to reach. For this reason, the Regional Spotlight Committee considered it a duty to make this extraordinary art experience available to the ASA convention guests. We urge you to reserve this tour (which only includes transportation and reserved entrance to the galleries and gardens) as soon as possible. (Bus/walking tour, limited to 23 participants) Tour 3: Germantown Avenue – SOLD OUT Saturday, August 13, 9:30 a.m. – 12:00 noon Fee: $20 Leader: Elijah Anderson, University of Pennsylvania This will be a bus tour down Germantown Avenue, one of Philadelphia's most historic streets. The avenue is a major Philadelphia artery that dates back to colonial days. Eight and a half miles long and running mostly southeast, it links the northwest suburbs with the heart of inner-city Philadelphia. It traverses a varied social terrain as well. Germantown Avenue provides an excellent cross section of the social ecology of Philadelphia. Along this artery live the well-todo, the middle classes, the working poor, and the very poor—the diverse segments of urban society. The story of Germantown Avenue can therefore serve in many respects as a metaphor for the whole city. The avenue, we will see, is a natural continuum characterized largely by a code of civility at one end and a code of conduct regulated by the threat of violence—the code of the street—at the other. The tour will end by visiting Philadelphia neighborhoods, now parts of Center City Philadelphia, that were studied by W.E.B. DuBois at the turn of the last century. (Bus tour, limited to 30 participants) Tour 4: The Eastern Penitentiary, a Baseball Field, and an Art Collection: Conflict, Control and Resolution in Urban Life (easternstate.org) – SOLD OUT Saturday, August 13, 3:00 – 5:00 p.m. Fee: $24 Leader: Sherri Grasmuck, Temple University A bus will take us from the hotel, down the magnificent Parkway, toward the Eastern Penitentiary, a foremost example of radial jail, focus of Tocqueville's visit in the early nineteenth century. Dr. Grasmuck will narrate the buildings of the Parkway as we descend it but also, and above all, recent conflicts that have been centered on the avenue and involved issues of gentrification and city/suburbs relations. The guided visit of the penitentiary, a unique Philadelphia monument will take one hour. If possible, we shall contemplate the sunset on the Schuykill on our way back to the hotels. (Bus/walking tour, limited to 30 participants) Tour 5: Reflections of Philadelphia’s History in its Built Environment – SOLD OUT Sunday, August 14, 9:30 a.m. – 12:00 noon Fee: $20 Leader: David Elesh, Temple University Philadelphia’s history is reflected in its physical environment. Its structures and streets express its origins as a colonial walking city, its rise to 19th and early 20th century prominence as an industrial city, and its 21st century efforts to become a national center for higher education and medical services. This tour through residential, commercial, and industrial neighborhoods shows how the physical environment symbolizes changing economic objectives, socioeconomic status, tastes, and technologies, and shapes recent and current redevelopment. We will tour areas that succeeded in redeveloping, areas that are currently redeveloping, and areas that failed to redevelop—asking how their physical structures constrain their current characteristics and future possibilities. The areas we will visit include the American Street Corridor, a failed effort to create a suburban manufacturing district within a 19th industrial neighborhood; the Penn area, home to the university’s continuing effort to remake its surroundings; and Manayunk, an upscale commercial and residential 29 neighborhood created from a 19th century manufacturing area that slowly went downhill for a century until reinvented in the 1980s. (Bus tour, limited to 30 participants) Tour 6: Society Hill and Independence National Park: A Stroll for Sociologists – SOLD OUT Sunday, August 14, 10:00 a.m. – 12:00 noon Fee: $5 Leader: George Dowdall, St. Joseph’s University Philadelphians call their downtown “Center City.” It is the third-largest residential downtown in the US, after New York and Chicago, and during the past decade has been booming. This tour, led by a Center City sociologist, highlights two of the most sociologically interesting parts of its life. We begin at the Independence National Park Visitors Center, itself a short walk from the ASA Convention Hotel. We walk past Independence Hall, where America’s national political institutions were founded. But we also walk past some of the places where American civil society was founded or shaped, including the first learned society, the first jail, the first general hospital, and the first institution to care for the mentally ill. A short distance away is the site where W.E.B. DuBois lived and gathered his insights for The Philadelphia Negro. Nearby is the country’s first urban playground, and near it the Mother Bethel AME Church, the oldest parcel of land owned by African Americans in the US. We walk on cobblestone streets and through hidden pathways in Society Hill, the city’s most historic residential neighborhood—one of the first and probably the most successful example of urban renovation in America. The tour ends with instructions on how to order an authentic Philly cheesesteak at the best purveyor on lively South Street (“Where do all the hippies meet?” as they sang in the 60’s, and once the center of the Philadelphia Jewish community); veggie alternatives are available for the risk-aversive. (Walking tour, limited to 30 participants) Tour 7: The Philadelphia Main Line Sunday, August 14, 1:00 – 3:00 p.m. Fee: $20 Leader: Victor Lidz, Drexel University The Philadelphia Main Line is the country's first modern suburb, developed in the latter part of the 19th century by the Pennsylvania Railroad, first as a series of elegant, upper class, summer vacation communities, then as commuter suburbs. Land that had earlier been devoted to farming and industry (mills and foundries) was reorganized into elegant country estates with nearby villages as commercial centers and places of residence for the working and middle classes. Over time the communities have become multi-class commuting suburbs anchored by historic institutions serving the region, all superimposed over landscapes that often are exceptionally beautiful while also readily accessible to Philadelphia. The tour will drive by such institutions as Haverford and Bryn Mawr Colleges, the nation's first shopping center at Suburban Square, the old working class suburb of Narberth, some of the beautiful estates of Bryn Mawr, Gladwyne, and Villanova, and some of the public parks of the area. The tour will examine the area's visible history of transformations: old mill sites, streams, and ponds; great 19th and early 20th century estates of the Philadelphia upper class, old estates divided into middle class developments, and the now rapidly growing phenomenon of expensive "McMansions". (Bus tour, limited to 30 participants) Tour 8: Philadelphia Murals Monday, August 15, 10:00 a.m. – 12:00 noon Fee: $20 Since its inception in 1984, the Mural Arts Program has completed more murals than any other public art program in the nation. Our murals—historical scenes and allegories, landscapes, abstractions, and portraits of community heroes—are rightly famous for their high quality and their numbers. Philadelphia has about 2,500 indoor and outdoor murals, blooming on formerly graffiti-scarred walls, above vacant lots, and in half-abandoned streets. This effort of bringing art to the cityscape has far reaching effects. They grace a beautiful but often impoverished city, and they create a sense of community, as artists and community members develop relationships that will turn their artistic visions into reality. Visiting the murals with the Mural Arts Program will not only touch and delight you, but show you the many faces of this city, taking you across many neighborhoods you would not otherwise visit. The Mural Arts Program also works to involve the city's residents in the creative process, offering art education programs at recreation centers, homeless shelters, and other sites throughout Philadelphia. (Bus tour, limited to 40 participants) Tour 9: The Seventh Ward – SOLD OUT Tuesday, August 16, 10:00 a.m. – 12:00 noon Fee: $5 Leader: Reynolds Farley, University o f Michigan W.E.B. DuBois’ study of Philadelphia initiated empirical investigations of American cities. His Seventh Ward is a fascinating area, since when he described it in 1897, a large segment of it was a Negro slum with much crime. Today it is a very prosperous and attractive, even elegant, urban neighborhood with many of the most expensive homes to be found in Philadelphia. The walking tour consists of four miles of historic venues, neighborhoods and streets, and takes approximately two hours. Highlights include the Clinton Street Historic District, the home of Susan Wharton, and the Mother Bethel African Methodist Church. (Walking tour, limited to 40 participants) Film/Video Screenings Seventeen films have been selected for the 2005 film/video screening series, organized by Victoria Hougham, ASA Academic and Professional Affairs Program. Room 301 at the Philadelphia Marriott has been set aside for use as a Film/Video Screening room for showing these recent video and film releases throughout the Annual Meeting. Videos and films to be shown include: Against the Grain (The Way We Live, Video 7): The Way We Live is a comprehensive introduction to Sociology distance learning course. This video looks at differing views on sexuality and violent crime as well as explores some of the moral, religious and psychological factors that play a role in understanding deviant behavior. Programs like Delancey Street, shown in the video, may provide an effective means of assisting former criminals to become productive members of mainstream society. 30 minutes, 2005. INTELECOM/Prentice Hall: www.intelecom.org. All Together (The Way We Live, Video 6): The Way We Live is a comprehensive introduction to Sociology distance learning course. This video looks at organizational behavior and includes discussion around the ideas of Frederick Taylor and “scientific management,” corporate culture and the pitfalls of bureaucracy. As we see in the video’s look at the Outward Bound program, every organization has it own unique culture that is linked to the values and norms of the wider society. 30 minutes, 2005. INTELECOM/Prentice Hall: www.intelecom.org. American Nightmare: In studies of homelessness in America the voices of the homeless themselves are often ignored. Not in this movie. In American Nightmare, a senior capstone project, a dozen homeless people and two community activists speak their minds. They describe the failure (or absence) of many governmental programs that are supposed to help solve the problem of homelessness as well as inadequate employment opportunities and overpopulated shelters. From 30 the woods and bridge underpasses of Columbus, to the alleys and shelters of Cincinnati this powerful film illuminates the struggles that homeless people in Ohio face on a daily basis. 120 minutes, 2005. Written, directed and reported by Ryan "Rhino" Lentz: www.jmlentz@aol.com. BRATS: Our Journey Home: This film features a hidden American subculture - a lost tribe of over 4 million adult children from widely diverse backgrounds, raised on military bases around the world, whose shared experiences have shaped their lives so powerfully, they are forever different from their fellow Americans. This film chronicles American military children during primarily the Cold War, using interviews, testimonials, archived footage, and clips from popular films such as The Great Santini. The film highlights elements of a military occupation’s lifestyle and culture such as the risk of death and injury, frequent separations, geographic mobility, foreign residence, normative constraints, shiftwork and long working hours, a masculine-dominated culture, and early retirement to civilian life--all of which have implications for the children coming of age in this social structural context. 90 minutes, 2005. Directed by Donna Musil. Brats Without Borders, Inc.: www.bratsourjourneyhome.com. Bride Kidnapping in Kyrgyzstan: This film documents the ancient custom of bride kidnapping, an ancient marriage tradition in Kyrgyzstan. Bride Kidnapping documents in harrowing detail four such abductions, from the violent seizures on city streets and the tearful protests of the women, who are physically restrained and persuaded to accept their fate by the women of the groom’s family, to the often tense negotiations between the respective families, and either the eventual acquiescence or continued refusal of the young women. Although bride kidnapping has been illegal in Kyrgyzstan since 1994, it is a law that is rarely enforced, and one in three rural ethnic Kyrgyz women have been forced into such marriages. This film is an illuminating look at an ancient social custom, and at the same time raises provocative questions about the nature of love and marriage. 50 minutes, 2004. Directed by Petr Lom. First Run/Icarus Films: www.frif.com. Detroit: Ruin of a City: Detroit, known as Motor City, home of the Ford Motor Company, General Motors and other major car manufacturers, is nowadays a city in serious decline, which has lost more than half its population and much of its real estate. This film looks back over the history of the city in the twentieth century: over the rise and fall of the social system identified by social theorists as “Fordism”; the way the city was shaped by the automobile; and its decline. 92 minutes, 2005. Directed by Michael Chanan and George Steinmetz. Bristol Docs: http://humanities.uwe.ac.uk/bristoldocs/. Human Rights in China: The Search for Common Ground: This documentary focuses on human rights in contemporary China, beginning with an explanation of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. It offers a revealing in-depth exploration of practices in China, such as Falun Gong, and the response of many in the West who believe these practices are violations of Chinese citizen’s rights. 50 minutes, 2004. Directed by sociologist Raymond Olson. Sacred Mountain Productions: www.sacred-mountain.com. Ida B. Wells: A Passion for Justice: Though virtually forgotten today, Ida B. Wells-Barnett was a household name in Black America during much of her lifetime (1863-1931) and was considered the equal of her well-known African American contemporaries such as Booker T. Washington and W.E.B DuBois. This film documents the dramatic life and turbulent times of the pioneering African American journalist, activist, suffragist and anti-lynching crusader of the postReconstruction period. Author Toni Morrison reads selections from Wells’ memoirs and other writings in this film. 53 minutes, 1989. Directed by William Greaves. California Newsreel: www.newsreel.org. Keeping it Real: This documentary examines why an increasing number of people in Western countries are eagerly seeking “authentic,” real-life experiences. One result has been the development of an “experience economy,” in which companies offer “authentic” experiences, a chance to witness or even participate in real-life adventures. Keeping it Real examines this increasing demand for “authenticity,” while at the same time trying to fathom the meaning of the concept itself. 51 minutes, 2004. Directed by Sunny Bergman. First Run/Icarus Films. www.frif.com. Maid in America: They clean other people’s homes and raise other families’ children—often leaving their own families behind. Maid in America offers an intimate look into the lives of three Latina immigrants working as nannies and housekeepers in Los Angeles, three of the nearly 100,000 domestic workers living in that city today. These women’s lives dramatically reveal how immigrants are redefining their roles and underscores their vital role in many American households. A rare view into what is becoming an increasingly common scenario, this film offers insight both into the immigrant experience and contemporary Latina culture. 57 minutes, 2004. Directed by Anayansi Prado. Women Make Movies, www.wmm.com. Neighborhood at the Crossroads: This film looks at community change controlled and directed by residents in a low-income central city neighborhood. This approach, known as incumbent upgrading, is a clear alternative to gentrification in community renewal. The focus of the film is on partnerships and collaborations, particularly communityuniversity collaborations, as primary tools for neighborhood improvement. Through archival footage and recent interviews, the documentary shows the power local residents can have in shaping the future of their community. 53 minutes, 2005. Directed by Kim Hood Jacobs, WFYI (PBS Indianapolis): tmaher@uindy.edu On A Roll: Family, Disability & The American Dream: Greg Smith and his family bare all in this unflinching portrait of a 65-pound man striving for the American Dream. Fueled by discrimination, Smith created "On A Roll Talk Radio on Life and Disabilities" from his power wheelchair in 1992. The father of three travels the globe in a new civil rights movement, but finds his own nation’s capital inaccessible - a minor challenge compared to living independently and having safe intimate relationships with facilitated sex. 54 minutes, 2005. Directed by Joanne Caputo. A presentation of the Independent Television Service Broadcast on the PBS series Independent Lens: www.onarolldocumentary.com. Quick Brown Fox: This documentary is a gripping personal investigation into the director, Ann Hedreen’s mother’s battle with Alzheimer’s disease. This powerful and poetic film combines a moving family journey with an insightful look at the science and politics of Alzheimer’s—a disease that now affects more than 18 million people worldwide. Hedreen’s uncompromising pursuit of possible causes and potential cures takes her from the copper mines of her mother’s childhood in Butte, Montana, to an Alzheimer’s research center in Washington where she volunteers as a research subject. This timely film bravely confronts the disease that has mangled the mind of her once beautiful and brainy mom, and raises profound questions about just how important our memories are. 63 minutes, 2003. Directed by 31 Ann Hedreen, and Rustin Thompson. Women Make Movies: www.wmm.com. Red Hook Justice: In 2000, an experimental court opened its doors in Red Hook, Brooklyn—a neighborhood plagued by a cycle of unemployment, poverty and crime. The Red Hook court is at the center of a legal revolution—the community justice movement. Instead of jail time, offenders are sentenced to job training, drug counseling, and community service. Red Hook Justice profiles the early years of this bold new approach to stopping crime and healing a community. 55 minutes, 2004. Directed by Meema Spadola. Women Make Movies: www.wmm.com. Red Road: Barry Hambly has spent all but four of his forty years living in a white world. His native features are the only reminders of an early childhood on a First Nation reserve in Saskatchewan before being taken by child welfare workers in the late 1960s. This era, known as the “Sixties Scoop”, saw thousands of aboriginal children adopted into non-Native homes. Some children remained in Canada while others were sent to the U.S. and around the globe. While some have called it “assimilation”, many claim the “scoop” era to have been a cultural genocide. After recently being called an “apple” –red on the outside, white inside, Barry has packed his belongings to travel the “red road” in search of his native soul. 47 minutes, 2004. Produced by Conrad Beaubien and Dan Petrusich: www.novamulti.com. Selling Sickness: Today, drug manufacturers aggressively market diseases previously unknown to the public, or known by some other name. Shyness thus becomes branded as “Social Anxiety Disorder,” and premenstrual tension is now “Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder.” The sale of SSRI anti-depressant medications used to treat these and other diseases, such as Paxil, Zoloft and Prozac, has become an annual $20 billon market. Selling Sickness exposes this unhealthy relationship between society, medical science, and the pharmaceutical industry. The film features commentary from drug company consultants, patients, researchers, patient advocates, advertisers, attorneys, and a psychiatrist, critical of the industry. 52 minutes, 2004. Directed by Catherine Scott. Women Make Movies: www.wmm.com. Where do you Stand: Stories from an American Mill: After a quarter century of struggle, mill workers in Kannapolis, North Carolina won the single largest industrial union victory in the history of the South. For decades, these mill workers tended to submit more or less willingly to sub-standard working conditions, paltry pensions and, at times, outright harassment from company managers. For many of the film’s main characters, the degradation experienced by their parents and grandparents was an important catalyst – one that would eventually prompt them to action. This documentary is a haunting new documentary film about the rise and fall of an American town and the epic struggle of the people who live there. In the process it tells the story of dramatic changes in labor and demographics, in the nature of corporations, the rise of multinationals, and changes in the American South in the post-industrial age. 60 minutes, 2004. Directed by Alexandra Lescaze. California Newsreel: www.newsreel.org. Viewing Schedule Saturday, August 13: 8:30-10:00 a.m. 10:30-11:25 a.m. 2:30-4:00 p.m. 4:30-5:20 p.m. 5:25-6:10 p.m. Detroit: Ruin of a City On A Roll BRATS: Our Journey Home Red Road Keeping it Real Sunday, August 14: 8:30-9:25 a.m. 9:30-10:25 a.m. 10:40-11:10 a.m. 11:30 a.m.-12:20 p.m. 12:30-2:00 p.m. 2:30-4:10 p.m. On A Roll Selling Sickness All Together Bride Kidnapping in Kyrgyzstan Maid in America American Nightmare Monday, August 15: 8:30-9:30 a.m. 9:40-10:10 a.m. 10:30-11:30 a.m. 2:30-4:10 p.m. 4:30-5:25 p.m. 5:30-6:30 p.m. Tuesday, August 16: 8:30-9:20 a.m. 9:30-10:15 a.m. 10:30-11:30 a.m. 12:30-1:25 p.m. Red Hook Justice Against the Grain Ida B. Wells: A Passion for Justice BRATS: Our Journey Home Selling Sickness Quick Brown Fox Human Rights in China Red Road Where do you Stand: Stories from an American Mill Neighborhood at the Crossroads 32 Special Events Welcoming Party All meeting registrants are invited to the Welcoming Party on Friday evening, August 12, that marks the opening of the 100th Annual Meeting. This social hour kicks off at 9:00 p.m., after the Opening Plenary, and provides opportunities to renew past acquaintances, chat with old friends, and find a newcomer to befriend while enjoying a snack and a drink. New members and first-time meeting attendees are particularly encouraged to come and have fun! Orientation for First-Time Attendees If this is the first time you have attended an ASA Annual Meeting, please plan to attend an orientation session at 10:30-12:10 a.m. on Saturday, August 13, prior to the mid-day Plenary on the first full day of program sessions. This special orientation hour provides the opportunity to meet Association officers and staff and begin networking with professional colleagues. Advice from ASA Officers and experienced attendees will help you chart a course through the myriad activities and substantive attractions. ASA Secretary Franklin D. Wilson and Executive Officer Sally T. Hillsman host this orientation at the Philadelphia Loews Hotel in the Commonwealth B room. Pointers on navigating the Annual Meeting will be shared in informal roundtable discussion. First-time attendees who pre-registered should look for a reminder ticket in their badge envelopes as soon as they pick up their program packets and come prepared to ask “What makes it work?” Reception for International Scholars Scholars from countries outside the U.S. are invited to meet U.S. sociologists interested in international collaboration at a reception for international scholars on Saturday, August 13, at 6:30-7:30 p.m. in Commonwealth D at the Philadelphia Marriott. A highlight of this year’s reception will be the opportunity to meet the contingent of international scholars who have come north after attending the ISA Council of National Associations meeting in Miami, Florida, on August 9-11, 2005. Departmental Alumni Night (DAN) The Departmental Alumni Night (DAN), now in its 32nd year, is a social event held after the first full day of sessions, where attendees can connect with friends, colleagues, and foes to reminisce about graduate school days, create new coalitions, and catch up on the latest news. This traditional gathering will begin at 9:30 p.m. on Saturday, August 13, in Grand Salon E-F at the Philadelphia Marriott, with conversation sets interspersed by the blues offerings of “Lost Faculties”—the Penn State Department of Sociology band, which includes Paul Amato, Wayne Osgood, Rich Felson, Stacy, Rogers, Mark Hill, and several others. Each graduate department of sociology in the United States and Canada was given the opportunity to sponsor a table to attract alumni and friends. Participating schools are listed below. Tables will also be provided for sociologists in business and industry as well as for international scholars and guests. University at Albany, SUNY University of Arizona Boston College Bowling Green State Brandeis University Brown University University at Buffalo, SUNY University of California, Irvine University of California, Los Angeles University of California, Riverside University of California, San Diego University of California, Santa Barbara University of California, Santa Cruz University of Cincinnati City University of New York, Graduate Center Cornell University Duke University Fordham University University of Georgia University of Hawaii, Manoa Howard University University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Indiana University, Bloomington University of Iowa Iowa State University Johns Hopkins University Louisiana State University Loyola University Chicago University of Maryland Michigan State University University of Minnesota University of Missouri, Columbia University of Nebraska, Lincoln 33 University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill North Carolina State University Northwestern University University of Notre Dame Ohio State University University of Pennsylvania Pennsylvania State University Purdue University Rutgers University Southern Illinois University, Carbondale Stanford University Stony Brook University University of Texas, Austin Texas A&M University Texas Woman's University / University of North Texas Vanderbilt University University of Virginia University of Washington Washington State University Community College Faculty Breakfast Colleagues teaching in community colleges are invited to a special continental breakfast at 7:00 a.m. on Sunday, August 14, in Room 401-402 at the Philadelphia Marriott. Please mark your schedule and remember to set your alarm for this early-bird event where you can meet other sociologists teaching at community colleges while enjoying a muffin or bagel and some coffee. Just Desserts! A Teaching Enhancement Fundraiser Looking to escape the pressures of presenting papers, searching book displays, and participating in committee meetings? Come and relax with friends at this benefit event for the Teaching Enhancement Fund (TEF), “Just Desserts.” As the name implies, you should bring your sweet tooth along to enjoy special desserts, good coffee, stimulating conversation, and then smile that all this pleasure goes to a good cause. Sunday, August 1, 2005 9:30-11:00 p.m. Philadelphia Marriott, ASA Suite $25—donor, $50—sponsor; $100—benefactor Admission is by ticket only. All proceeds from ticket sales will go toward supporting the Teaching Enhancement Fund, a small grants program designed to support teaching-related projects that have long lasting and transferable impact. Those who enrolled in advance should have received their tickets with their name badges. Others may purchase tickets at the ASA Tickets counter in the Grand Ballroom Foyer at the Philadelphia Marriott. Ticket sales for this event will close at 1:00 p.m. on Sunday, August 14. Honorary Reception & Centennial Celebration After the conclusion of the 2005 Presidential Address, all meeting attendees are invited to attend the Honorary Reception at 6:30 p.m., Sunday, August 14, in Grand Salon E-F at the Philadelphia Marriott to express appreciation and congratulations to President Duster and the major ASA award recipients and best wishes to the sociological world on the occasion of the ASA Centennial. Since 1984, social science departments and regional societies have joined the American Sociological Association in co-sponsoring the annual Honorary Reception. The Association is pleased to acknowledge the following co-hosts of the Honorary Reception & Centennial Celebration. Binghamton University – Department of Sociology Bryn Mawr College – Department of Sociology University of California, Berkeley – Department of Ethnic Studies University of California, Berkeley – Department of Gender and Women's Studies City University of New York Graduate Center – Sociology Department Columbia University – Department of Sociology University of Delaware – Department of Sociology & Criminal Justice Harvard University – Department of Sociology Johns Hopkins University – Department of Sociology LaSalle University – Sociology, Social Work, and Criminal Justice Philadelphia University – School of Liberal Arts Princeton University – Department of Sociology Rider University – Department of Sociology Rutgers University, Camden – Department of Sociology, Anthropology & Criminal Justice St. Joseph's University – Sociology Department Swarthmore College – Department of Sociology & Anthropology Temple University – Department of Sociology Ursinus College – Department of Sociology & Anthropology Villanova University – Department of Sociology University of Washington – Department of Sociology Yale University – Department of Sociology 34 In Remembrance At the beginning of the Presidential Plenary (Sunday, August 15, 4:30-6:15 p.m.), there will be a Moment of Remembrance to honor those members of the profession, and those close to them, who died during the past year. Names submitted to Footnotes since last year's Annual Meeting are listed below. If you know of other sociologists who should be on this list but whose names do not appear below, please contact ASA Meeting Services staff in California Room on the Ballroom level at the Hilton San Francisco by 5:00 p.m. on Saturday, August 14. Robert K. Bain Leonard E. Bloomquist William K. Bunis Stephen Bunker Frederick H. Buttel Paul K. Clare Elizabeth G. Cohen Mildred Peacock Crowder James Curtis Tanis Doe Otis Dudley Duncan James Ecks Samih K. Farsoun Marijean Ferguson Thomas R. Forrest Loren Frankel Dante Germanotta Morris Goldman Charles Gordon William Byrd (Bill) Hanson Warren E. Kalbach Witold Krassowski Che-Fu Lee Gene Levine Coramae Richey Mann Joal B. Montague, Jr. Harold Lyle Nix Frank Riessman Matilda White Riley Ellen Mara Rosengarten Jerry Salomone Linda Saltzman John F. Schnabel Ethel Shanas Laure M. Sharp Tamotsu Shibutani William Silverman Benjamin B. Tregoe Norma Williams MFP Benefit Reception Set aside time during the busy convention schedule to join good friends and supporters of the ASA’s Minority Fellowship Program (MFP). Plan to relax after dinner, satisfy your sweet tooth, and meet current Fellows and MFP alumni. Please attend this special event and reaffirm your commitment to the MFP Program. Monday, August 15, 2005 9:30-11:00 p.m. Grand Salon I, Philadelphia Marriott $25—donor; $50—sponsor; $100—benefactor Admission is by ticket only. Ticket sales benefit the Minority Fellowship Program, which supports predoctoral training for students of color. Those who enrolled in advance should have received their tickets with their name badges. Others may purchase tickets at the ASA Tickets counter in the Grand Ballroom Foyer at the Philadelphia Marriot. Ticket sales for this event will close at 1:00 p.m. on Monday, August 15. Student Reception ASA welcomes the attendance of undergraduate and graduate students at the Annual Meeting. All students registered to attend the Annual Meeting are invited to the open Student Reception on Monday, August 15, at 6:307:30 p.m., in Grand Salon F at the Philadelphia Marriott. Section Receptions In addition to sponsoring substantive program sessions, ASA Sections often host receptions for their section members during the Annual Meeting. These informal social events are primarily held in the evenings on the first and third days of the meeting, and all members of the sponsoring section are welcome to attend. Sometimes several sections will co-host a joint reception, which doubles or triples the fun! Look for the following Section receptions during this centennial Annual Meeting. Saturday, August 13: Aging and the Life Course, 6:30 p.m. Animals and Society, 6:30 p.m. Children and Youth with Social Psychology, 6:30 p.m. Collective Behavior and Social Movements with Political Sociology, 6:30 p.m. Communication and Information Technology, 6:30 p.m. Economic Sociology with Sociology of Culture, 6:30 p.m. Evolution and Sociology, 6:30 p.m. International Migration, 6:30 p.m. Medical Sociology, 6:30 p.m. Theory Section with Sociology of Emotions, 6:30 p.m. Sunday, August 14 Aging and the Life Course (with Riley Award Lecture), 12:30 p.m. Alcohol, Drugs, and Tobacco Reception (with SSSP Division on Drinking and Drugs)—7:30 p.m. Community and Urban Sociology Reception, 12:30 p.m. Labor and Labor Movements with Marxist Sociology and Race, Gender, and Class)—8:00 p.m. Teaching and Learning in Sociology (with showcase session), 12:30 p.m. Monday, August 15 Comparative and Historical Sociology with Rationality & Society and Sociology of Religion, 6:30 p.m. Environment and Technology, 6:30 p.m. History of Sociology, 6:30 p.m. Latina/o Sociology, 7:00 p.m. Peace, War, and Social Conflict, 6:30 p.m. Racial and Ethnic Minorities, 6:30 p.m. 35 Sex and Gender, 6:30 p.m. Sociological Practice (with Sociological Practice Association), 6:30 p.m. Sociological Practice Reception (with the Association for Applied and Clinical Sociology), 6:30 p.m. Sociology of Mental Health, 6:30 p.m. Sociology of the Family with Sociology of Population, 6:30 p.m. Activities of Other Groups The wide-ranging interests of ASA members generate meetings of special interest groups during each year's Annual Meeting. Space is assigned as available to these groups to hold their meetings and/or sessions in evening time slots when no program sessions or other ASA activities are scheduled. Some groups will also have membership information and publications on display in the Table Space Area in foyer of Franklin Hall at the Philadelphia Marriott. Alpha Kappa Delta (AKD) Council Meeting—Friday, August 13, 8:00 a.m. – 6:30 p.m.— Hilton San Francisco, Mason Room AKD Sociological Inquiry Editorial Board—Saturday, August 13, 8:30-10:10 a.m.—Philadelphia Marriott, Room 302 Alpha Kappa Delta (AKD) Executive Council—Friday, August 12, 8:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m.—Philadelphia Marriott, Room 305 American Journal of Sociology Editorial Board—Saturday, August 14, 12:30-2:10 p.m.—Philadelphia Marriott, Room 401-402 Association for Applied and Clinical Sociology (AACS)—Monday, August 15, 8:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m., 4:30-8:00 p.m.—Philadelphia Marriott, Conference Suite II; Tuesday, August 16, 8:00 a.m.6:00 p.m.—Philadelphia Marriott, Rooms 306-307; Wednesday, August 17, 8:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m.—Philadelphia Marriott, Rooms 405-409 Astrosociology Forum (Jim Pass)—Sunday, August 14, 8:00-10:00 p.m.—Philadelphia Marriott, Room 305 Caucus on Transnational Approaches to Gender and Sexuality (Frances Hasso)—Saturday, August 13, 6:30-8:00 p.m.—Philadelphia Marriott, Room 310 Christian Sociological Society (Thomas C. Hood)—Sunday, August 14, 8:00-10:00 p.m.—Philadelphia Marriott, Room 310 Commission on Applied and Clinical Sociology (CACS)—Monday, August 15, 2:30-6:10 p.m.—Philadelphia Marriott, Room 309 Consumers, Commodities, and Consumption Special Interest Group (Dan Cook)—Monday, August 15, 6:30-8:00 p.m.—Philadelphia Marriott, Room 310 Integrity of Science Working Group Reception—Monday, August 15, 6:30-8:00 p.m.—Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington A International Visual Sociology Association (Judith Friedman)— Sunday, August 14, 8:00-10:00 p.m.—Philadelphia Marriott, Independence Salon I ISA Research Committee 32 on Women and Society session on “The Quality of Social Existence and Resistance in a Globalizing World” (co-sponsored by SWS)—Saturday, August 13, 6:30-8:00 p.m.—Philadelphia Marriott, Room 306 ISA Research Committee 39 on Disasters session on “The 2004 Indian Ocean Tsunami: Social and Economic Impacts and Consequences” (Havidan Rodriguez)—Saturday, August 13, 6:30-8:00 p.m.—Philadelphia Marriott, Room 303; session on “Crises, Disasters, and Other Threats” (Havidan Rodriguez)— Sunday, August 14, 8:00-10:00 p.m.—Philadelphia Marriott, Room 303 Japan Sociologists Network (Patricia G. Steinhoff)—Sunday, August 14, 8:00-10:00 p.m.—Philadelphia Marriott, Room 307 Memorial Gathering in Honor of George Uri Fischer, 1923-2005 (Kevin Anderson, Stanley Aronowitz, Roslyn Bologh, William DiFazio)—Saturday, August 13, 6:30-8:00 p.m.—Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon A National Academy of Science Fellows (Stanley Lieberson)—Monday, August 15, 2:30-4:10 p.m.—Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Jefferson National Council of State Sociological Associations—Monday, August 15, 6:30-8:00 p.m.—Philadelphia Marriott, Conference Suite I North American Chinese Sociologists Association (NACSA)—Friday, August 12, 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.—Philadelphia Marriott, Room 407 Sociological Imagination Group meeting on “The Web or Part/Whole Approach to Education” (Bernard Phillips)—Saturday, August 13, 6:30-8:00 p.m.—Philadelphia Marriott, Room 305 Sociological Imagination Group meeting on “The Web or Part/Whole Approach to Education, Part II “ (Bernard Phillips)—Sunday, August 14, 8:00-10:00 p.m.—Philadelphia Marriott, Room 404 Sociological Imagination Group meeting on “The Web or Part/Whole Approach to Education, Part III” (Bernard Phillips)—Monday, August 15, 6:30-8:00 p.m.—Philadelphia Marriott, Room 306 Sociological Research Association—Sunday, August 14, 7:30-10:30 p.m.—Philadelphia Marriott, Liberty Salon C Sociologists Interested in the Intersections between Social Action and Public Sociology (Amitai Etzioni)—Sunday, August 14, 8:0010:00 p.m.—Philadelphia Marriott, Room 304 Sociologists without Borders panel on “The UN Transforming: Social Scientists’ Role” (Judith Blau)—Monday, August 15, 6:30-8:00 p.m.—Philadelphia Marriott, Room 303 Sociologists’ AIDS Network business meeting (Matt Mutchler)— Saturday, August 13, 6:30-8:00 p.m.—Philadelphia Marriott, Room 307 Sociologists’ Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Caucus business meeting (Diane Illig)—Monday, August 15, 6:30-8:00 p.m.—Philadelphia Marriott, Room 304 “The Values Question in American Political Life: Analysis and Constructive Action” (Amitai Etzioni and Steve Brint)— Saturday, August 13, 6:30-8:00 p.m.—Philadelphia Marriott, Room 304 University of Pennsylvania Department of Sociology Reception— Sunday, August 14, 8:00-10:00 p.m.—Philadelphia Marriott, Room 401-402 University of Wisconsin, Madison Department of Sociology Reception—Sunday, August 14, 8:00-10:00 p.m.—Philadelphia Marriott, Liberty Salon B 36 Meetings of ASA Council & Committees, Editorial Boards, Program Advisory Panels & Related Groups, and Task Forces ASA COUNCIL AND COMMITTEES: 2004-05 ASA Council Members-at-Large only—Tuesday, August 16, 8:3011:15am— Philadelphia Marriott, Conference Suite III Full Meeting—Tuesday, August 16, 2:30-6:10pm— Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon I 2005-06 ASA Council Orientation for New Members—Tuesday, August 16, 10:3012:10pm— Philadelphia Marriott, ASA Suite Full Meeting—Wednesday, August 17, 8:30am-4:00pm— Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon I Award Selection Committee Chairs with the Committee on Awards Monday, August 15, 10:30-12:10pm— Philadelphia Marriott, Room 302 Awards, Committee on Awards Monday, August 15, 10:30-12:10pm, with award selection committee chairs—Philadelphia Marriott, Room 302 Monday, August 15, 2:30-4:10pm— Philadelphia Marriott, Room 308 Career of Distinguished Scholarship Award Selection Committee Saturday, August 13, 10:30-12:10pm — Philadelphia Marriott, Room 309 Committees, Committee on Sunday, August 14, 8:30-4:10pm— Philadelphia Marriott, Conference Suite III Dissertation Award Selection Committee Saturday, August 13, 2:30-6:10pm— Philadelphia Marriott, Conference Suite III Distinguished Career Award for the Practice of Sociology Selection Committee Sunday, August 14, 8:30-10:10am— Philadelphia Marriott, Room 308 Distinguished Contributions to Teaching Award Selection Committee Sunday, August 14, 8:30-10:10am— Philadelphia Marriott, Room 309 Distinguished Scholarly Publication Award Selection Committee Saturday, August 13, 8:30am-12:10pm — Philadelphia Marriott, Room 308 DuBois-Johnson-Frazier Award Selection Committee Saturday, August 13, 4:30-6:10pm — Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Parlor 1 Editors of ASA Publications Saturday, August 13, 4:30-6:10pm— Philadelphia Marriott, Room 302 Excellence in the Reporting on Social Issues Award Selection Committee Sunday, August 14, 2:30-4:10pm— Philadelphia Marriott, Conference Suite I High School Outreach State Representatives Tuesday, August 16, 10:30-12:10pm— Philadelphia Marriott, Room 308 Jessie Bernard Award Selection Committee Saturday, August 13, 8:30-10:10am — Philadelphia Marriott, Room 309 Nominations, Committee on Saturday, August 13, 8:30 a.m. – 12:10 p.m., 2:30 – 6:10 p.m.—Philadelphia Marriott, Conference Suite I Professional Ethics, Committee on Saturday, August 13, 2:30-6:10pm — Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Jefferson 2005 Program Committee Monday, August 15, 6:30-7:30pm— Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Presidential Suite 2006 Program Committee Monday, August 15, 8:30-11:30am— Philadelphia Marriott, Conference Suite I 2007 Program Committee Monday, August 15, 2:30-4:10pm— Philadelphia Marriott, Room 302 Public Understanding of Sociology Award Selection Committee Sunday, August 14, 8:30-10:10am— Philadelphia Marriott, Conference Suite I Publications, Committee on Sunday, August 14, 8:30-4:10pm— Philadelphia Marriott, Room 302 Section Officers Orientation for New Officers—Monday, August 15, 8:3010:10am— Philadelphia Marriott, Room 401-402 with the Committee on Sections—Monday, August 15, 2:304:10pm— Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon L Sections, Committee on Monday, August 15, 2:30-4:10pm, with Section Chairs— Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon L Monday, August 15, 4:30-6:10pm— Philadelphia Marriott, Room 302 State, Regional, and Aligned Sociological Association Officers Tuesday, August 16, 8:30-10:10am— Philadelphia Marriott, Conference Suite II 37 Status of Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and Transgender Persons in Sociology, Committee on the Monday, August 15, 10:30-12:10pm— Philadelphia Marriott, Room 309 Status of Persons with Disabilities in Sociology, Committee on the Sunday, August 14, 10:30am-12:10pm— Philadelphia Marriott, Conference Suite II Status of Racial and Ethnic Minorities in Sociology, Committee on the Sunday, August 14, 10:30am-12:10pm— Philadelphia Marriott, Conference Suite I Status of Women in Sociology, Committee on the Sunday, August 14, 12:30-2:10pm— Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Room 101 ASA EDITORIAL BOARD MEETINGS: American Sociological Review Editorial Board Saturday, August 13, 2:30-4:10pm— Philadelphia Marriott, Room 302 Contemporary Sociology Editorial Board Sunday, August 14, 12:30-2:10pm— Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Parlor 1 Contexts Editorial Board Saturday, August 13, 8:30-10:10am — Philadelphia Marriott, Liberty Salon A Journal of Health and Social Behavior Editorial Board Monday, August 15, 8:30-10:10am— Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon D Rose Series in Sociology Editorial Board Monday, August 15, 8:30-10:10am— Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Parlor 1 Social Psychology Quarterly Editorial Board Saturday, August 13, 8:30-10:10am— Philadelphia Marriott, Liberty Salon B Sociological Methodology Editorial Board Saturday, August 13, 2:30-4:10pm— Philadelphia Marriott, Room 308 Sociological Theory Editorial Board Monday, August 15, 8:30-10:10am— Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Jefferson Sociology of Education Editorial Board Monday, August 15, 8:30-10:10am— Philadelphia Marriott, Room 308 Teaching Sociology Editorial Board Saturday, August 13, 2:30-4:10pm— Philadelphia Marriott, Room 309 ASA PROGRAM ADVISORY PANELS AND RELATED MEETINGS: Department Resources Group Advisory Board and Business Meeting—Tuesday, August 16, 8:30-10:10am— Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon I Training: Training: Effective Program Reviews—Monday, August 15, 4:30-6:10pm— Philadelphia Marriott, Room 307 Training Session—Monday, August 15, 7:45-9:00pm— Philadelphia Marriott, Room 307 Fund for the Advancement of the Discipline Advisory Panel —Tuesday, August 16, 11:30am-2:10pm—Philadelphia Marriott, Conference Suite I Honors Program Orientation—Friday, August 12, 4:00 to 6:00pm — Philadelphia Marriott, Room 401-402 Kickoff—Saturday, August 13, 8:30-10:10am — Philadelphia Marriott, Room 401-402 Roundtable Discussions—Saturday, August 13, 10:3012:10pm — Philadelphia Marriott, Room 401-402 Briefing—Sunday, August 14, 10:30am-12:10pm— Philadelphia Marriott, Room 310 Briefing on Career Options—Monday, August 15, 2:304:10pm— Philadelphia Marriott, Room 310 Wrap-up—Tuesday, August 16, 8:30-10:10am— Philadelphia Marriott, Room 413 Advisory Panel—Tuesday, August 16, 10:30-12:10pm— Philadelphia Marriott, Room 309 Minority Fellowship Program Advisory Panel—Tuesday, August 16, 12:30-2:10pm— Philadelphia Marriott, Conference Suite II Current MFP Fellows—Saturday, August 13, 8:30-10:10am — Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon D Orientation for New Fellows—Friday, August 12, 9:30am to 4:30pm— Philadelphia Marriott, Room 404 Spivack Program in Applied Social Research Advisory Panel —Monday, August 15, 2:30-4:10pm— Philadelphia Marriott, Conference Suite II Student Forum Advisory Board—Monday, August 15, 4:30-6:10pm— Philadelphia Marriott, Room 308 Business Meeting—Sunday, August 14, 2:30-4:10pm— Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon A 38 ASA TASK FORCES: Assessment of the Undergraduate Major, Task Force on Sunday, August 14, 2:30-4:10pm— Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Jefferson Institutionalizing Public Sociologies, Task Force on Working Group A—Sunday, August 14, 8:30-10:10am— Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Jefferson Working Group B—Sunday, August 14, 10:30am12:10pm— Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Jefferson Full Meeting—Monday, August 15, 4:30-6:10pm— Philadelphia Marriott, Conference Suite III Revise the ASA Areas of Specialty, Task Force to Sunday, August 14, 2:30-4:10pm— Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Room 101 Master’s Degree in Sociology, Task Force on the Saturday, August 13, 4:30-6:10pm— Philadelphia Marriott, Room 309 Sociology and General Education, Task Force on Sunday, August 14, 12:30-2:10pm— Philadelphia Marriott, Room 309 Emergency Information To report an emergency in the hotel: Philadelphia Marriott – dial 51 on any house phone Philadelphia Loews – dial "5500" on any house phone Courtyard by Marriott – dial "0" on any house phone Closest Hospital: Jefferson Hospital 11th Street between Chestnut & Walnut (215) 955-6840 – emergency number (215) 955-6460 – main number/patient information (5-7 minutes from the Marriott) Nearest Pharmacy: CVS 1046 Market Street (Market at 10th Street) Hours: Mon-Fri 8am-7pm, Sat 9am-6pm, Sun Closed (215) 592-1539 prescriptions 2 blocks from Marriott CVS 1826 Chestnut Street (215) 972-1401 open 24 hours General Information This listing provides information about many of the services and activities available to you during the conference. The 100th ASA Annual Meeting is being held at three hotels: Philadelphia Marriott, Philadelphia Loews, and Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott. Sessions and events are being held at all three facilities. ASA Registration, Bookstore, ASA Exhibits, Child Care Service, Poster Sessions, and Student Lounge are at the Philadelphia Marriott. The ASA Employment Service activities are at the Philadelphia Loews. Location of Services The locations of ASA services are shown below. Accessibility Resources ASA Information ASA Office Bookstore Child Care Comfort Zone Comfort Zone Employment Service Exhibits Membership Message Center Message Center Message Center Preregistration Press/Media Office Registration Section Tables Situations Student Lounge Table Space Tickets ASA Office Grand Ballroom Foyer Room 503 Franklin Hall Suite 362 Parlor 2 Room 405 Regency Ballroom Franklin Hall Grand Ballroom Foyer Commonwealth Foyer Franklin Hall Grand Ballroom Foyer Grand Ballroom Foyer Room 406 Grand Ballroom Foyer Grand Ballroom Foyer Grand Ballroom Foyer Franklin Hall Franklin Hall Foyer Grand Ballroom Foyer Philadelphia Marriott Philadelphia Marriott Philadelphia Marriott Philadelphia Marriott Philadelphia Marriott Philadelphia Loews Philadelphia Marriott Philadelphia Loews Philadelphia Marriott Philadelphia Marriott Philadelphia Loews Philadelphia Marriott Philadelphia Marriott Philadelphia Marriott Philadelphia Marriott Philadelphia Marriott Philadelphia Marriott Philadelphia Marriott Philadelphia Marriott Philadelphia Marriott Philadelphia Marriott Registration Services Registration confirmations were mailed for all meeting preregistrations received by the announced deadline. Attendees who sent materials after the deadline will find their paperwork held for registration processing at the ASA Situations counter in the Grand Ballroom Foyer at the Philadelphia Marriott. Preregistration Pickup. Attendees who preregistered may pick up badges, program packets, and special tickets at the Preregistration counters in the Grand Ballroom Foyer at the Philadelphia Marriott. See registration service hours below. 39 On-Site Registration. Those who missed the July 13 preregistration deadline should go to the On-Site Registration counters in the Grand Ballroom Foyer at the Philadelphia Marriott to register for the meeting. Registration Services Hours: Friday, August 12 - 1:30-7:00 p.m. Saturday, August 13 - 8:00 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Sunday, August 14 - 8:00 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Monday, August 15 - 8:00 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Tuesday, August 16 - 8:00 a.m.-1:00 p.m. On-Site Fees. Rates for Members and Non-members are shown below. Forms are available in the ASA Registration area. Registration for the Annual Meeting is on a flat fee basis; no “day rates” are available. Rates for Members: Member/Associate Member $180 Student Member $100 Retired sociologist $100 Unemployed sociologist $100 Rates for Non-Members: Non-Member $270 Non-Member outside the U.S. $180 Non-Member non-sociologist $180 Non-Member student $135 Non-Member secondary school teacher $100 Name Badges. Your name badge is required for admission to all conference functions including entry to the ASA Exhibits, Employment Service, and Child Care Service areas. Attendance at events which require fee payment (e.g., Courses, Seminars, Chair Conference, Director of Graduate Studies Series, TEF Just Desserts, MFP Benefit, Tours) is restricted to meeting registrants. A general registrant may sign up for one guest registration ($20) to provide a courtesy badge for a spouse, partner, family member, or other guest. This guest pass provides only a name badge; the Final Program packet is not supplied. Information printed on a guest badge is restricted to the name of the guest; affiliation will not be printed. Individuals attending the meeting in a professional capacity are expected to register in one of the full registration categories listed above. Refunds/Cancellations. All registration-related fees are non-refundable as of July 13, 2005. Unfortunately, under no circumstances can ASA issue refunds for noshows. Program participant registration fees are nonrefundable; cancellations will not be accepted nor refunds issued. ASA Bookstore The ASA Bookstore features works published by the Association. Located near ASA Exhibits in Franklin Hall at the Philadelphia Marriott, the Bookstore will be staffed by ASA Executive Office personnel and open throughout the four days of the Annual Meeting during the same hours as ASA Exhibits. All attendees are welcome to browse through this area filled with recent journal issues, timely books, teaching resources and syllabi sets, career publications, sociological practice materials, directories, and reference volumes. Cartoon Caption Contest Who says sociologists have no sense of humor? Help prove them wrong by submitting the winning entry in the Missing Cartoon Caption Contest. In The Sociologist’s Book of Cartoons (available in the ASA Bookstore), the caption for the cartoon on page 34 was inadvertently omitted. ASA members and meeting attendees are invited to suggest a new caption for this cartoon. Entries for the Caption Contest will be accepted until 12:00 noon on Monday, August 15, 2005, in the ASA Bookstore, located inside Franklin Hall at the Philadelphia Marriott. Creative individuals may submit more than one idea for the caption. Entries will be judged on humor, originality, and sociological relevance by Troy Duster, ASA President, and Caroline Persell, ASA Vice President. The winning caption will be announced at the ASA Business Meeting on Tuesday morning. The winner will receive a framed and matted print of the cartoon on the cover of The Sociologist’s Book of Cartoons (specially commissioned by ASA), signed by the cartoonist, Peter Steiner. 40 Exhibits ASA Information The ASA Exhibits are located in Franklin Hall, Level Four, at the Philadelphia Marriott. Exhibits will be open to meeting registrants on all four days of the meeting this year! ASA Exhibit Hours: Saturday, August 13 2:00 -6:00 p.m. Sunday, August 14 9:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m. Monday, August 15 9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. Tuesday, August 16 9:00 a.m.-1:00 p.m. The location of the Exhibits offers excellent accessibility to meeting attendees, due to its close proximity to escalators leading to the lobby level and other meeting room floor. Always one of the most popular activities at the Annual Meeting, Exhibits offer variety, convenience, and an opportunity to discover current trends in sociological publishing, information processing, and services. Meeting attendees are encouraged to schedule several visits to the Exhibit area so that ample time can be given to exploring the many offerings. Browse through the latest sociological publications, explore current computer software, chat with representatives of statistical resources and informational literature, and meet the editor of your next publication! See the Directory of Exhibitors elsewhere in this Program for the names and booth numbers of all exhibitors. Don't forget to look through the Program for special ads too. All persons wishing access to ASA Exhibits must be paid registrants for the Annual Meeting; badges are required for entrance into this area. The ASA Information desk is located in the Grand Ballroom Foyer at the Philadelphia Marriott. This desk is staffed with ASA Executive Office personnel who will be able to assist attendees who have questions about meeting events, activities, and other events. Information hours correspond to hours for Registration Services. ASA Message Center Electronic message centers are located at the Philadelphia Marriott and the Philadelphia Loews hotels. These stations offer access to your web and internet services as well as to the ASA Message Service. The ASA Message Service enables the on-site exchange of messages as well as offers access to those not at the meeting site. Message stations in the Grand Ballroom foyer at the Marriott and the Commonwealth foyer at the Loews are available on a 24-hour basis. Access to the stations inside Franklin Hall is permitted only during hours that exhibits are open. Membership Desk Information on ASA membership and subscriptions will be provided at the Membership tables in the Grand Ballroom Foyer at the Philadelphia Marriott. The Membership desk will be staffed by ASA Executive Office personnel and will be open during the same hours as ASA Registration. Attendees may learn about current membership benefits and join the Association, sign up for Section memberships, and subscribe to ASA journals. Display copies of current journals will be available for reference. Section Information Looking for information about the ASA Sections and sections-in-formation, or copies of 2005 section newsletters? Check the Section Display Tables near the ASA Membership desk in the Grand Ballroom Foyer at the Philadelphia Marriott. Every Section was invited to designate representatives to staff the display table during each meeting day and provide information on special section activities. Staff from the ASA Executive Office will be nearby at the Membership Desk to answer questions about joining any and all sections. Tickets for Events and Services Registrants already signed up for seminars, courses, tours, employment or child care services, and special events should have received tickets with their meeting packets. Those who did not make advance reservations may check at the ASA Tickets counter in the Grand Ballroom Foyer at the Philadelphia Marriott for ticket availability. The Tickets counter will be open during posted On-Site Registration hours. Event tickets are non-refundable and cancellations cannot be accepted. You may, however, sell your ticket to someone else if you are unable to attend. 41 Employment Service The American Sociological Association assists sociologists and prospective employers by sponsoring an Employment Service during each year’s Annual Meeting. This service augments the monthly Employment Bulletin, now available in print and online as part of ASA’s home page (www.asanet.org). During the Annual Meeting in San Francisco last year, 79 employers listed 114 positions, including 21 openings outside academia and 3 post-doctoral opportunities. 351 candidates registered with the service, and 1,540 screening interviews were scheduled. Location and Hours. The 2005 Employment Service is located in the Regency Ballroom at the Philadelphia Loews. The service is open during the following hours. Friday, August 12 1:30-5:30 p.m. Saturday, August 13 8:00 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Sunday, August 14 8:00 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Monday, August 15 8:00 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Tuesday, August 16 8:00 a.m.-1:00 p.m. Fees. Individuals wanting to use this service, whether as Candidate or Employer, must register first for the Annual Meeting; please see “Registration Services” for on-site registration rates. Once registered for the Annual Meeting, fees for using the Employment Service are $150 for employers, $25 for candidates who are members of ASA, and $50 for non-member candidates. All employer listings must be prepaid; post-meeting billing is not available. When fully registered, you will be issued a pass permitting your entrance to the Service any time it is open. No one will be admitted without a pass; “browsing” by non-registered attendees is not permitted. Forms. Forms for listing positions (Employer Forms) and applications for individuals (Candidate Profile Forms) were printed in the May/June issue of Footnotes and the May and June issues of the Employment Bulletin, and also posted on the ASA website. Extra copies of these forms are available in the Employment Service Registration areas for those unable to preregister. Facilities are available in the Grand Ballroom Foyer at the Philadelphia Marriott for reviewing listings, exchanging messages, and interviewing. Position listings supplied by preregistered employers will be available for viewing by candidates when the Service opens on Friday afternoon, August 12. Listings supplied by employers who register on-site will be posted as the listings are received and processed. On-site Processes. As soon as possible after arrival in Philadelphia, preregistered service users should first pick up their name badges and program packets at the ASA Preregistration desk at the Philadelphia Marriott, then go over to the Philadelphia Loews Hotel and report to the Employment Service registration areas in the Regency Ballroom on the second floor mezzanine. Facilities will be available at the Philadelphia Loews Hotel for reviewing position listings, exchanging messages, and interviewing. Position listings supplied by preregistered employers will be available for viewing by candidates when the Service opens on Friday afternoon, August 12. Listings supplied by employers who register on-site will be posted as listings are received and processed. Employers. Please check in with the Employment Service to schedule interview appointments and receive candidate forms for candidates who register on-site. All initial interview appointments are to be scheduled through the Employment Service. Candidates. It is important that you check in with the Employment Service after your arrival in Philadelphia in order to activate your candidate profile, indicate your availability for interviews, view position listings, and deliver two copies, three-hole punched, of your full resume/vita to the Service. These resumes will be used to create two supplemental resume reference books for use by registered employers during the meeting. It is recommended that candidates bring 5-10 printed copies of their full curriculum vitae with them for their use during potential interviews. For candidates unable to preregister, your first step on-site in Philadelphia is to register for the Annual Meeting, then proceed to the Employment Service to fill out the necessary paperwork and start the required processing. Interview Scheduling. All initial interview appointments are to be scheduled by employers through the Employment Service at the meeting site. Since employers need some time to review profiles, there will be a lag time between on-site activation of a candidate file and the scheduling of interviews. Because of this processing/review time, those intending to make full use of this service should check in with the Employment Service no later than 5:30 p.m. on Saturday, August 13 to activate their files/listings. No new candidate files will be 42 activated on the last day (Tuesday, August 16) of Employment Service operations. Child Care ASA is continuing the tradition of providing an innovative program of activities for children of Annual Meeting registrants. Arrangements have again been made with KiddieCorp to offer a full childcare program during daytime session hours for preregistered children between the ages of 6 months to 12 years. KiddieCorp is dedicated to providing quality childcare services across the nation for meeting attendees. Staffing is based on a 1:2 ratio for children 6 months to 1 year, 1:3 ratios for children 1-2 years of age, and a 1:5 ratio for children 3-12 years of age. The program includes a customized hourly schedule of creative and educational activities, age-appropriate toys and games, popular arts and crafts projects, and child-pleasing movies and cartoon videos. The Child Care Service registration is located in Suite 362 at the Philadelphia Marriott. This service is available to preregistrants only. The non-refundable preregistration deposit of $50 per child will be applied to the daily usage fees on-site. Daily use fees per preregistered child are $50 per full day, $30 per half day. For children using the service for shorter periods, the half-day fee will apply to encourage stable populations. Fees include on-site activities and snacks; lunch is not included but meal arrangements can be made through KiddieCorp. Service hours are 8:00 a.m. – 6:30 p.m. on SaturdayMonday, August 13-15, and 8:00 a.m. – 4:30 p.m. on Tuesday, August 16. Parents/guardians using these services must be registrants for the Annual Meeting. There is no guarantee that non-preregistered families can be accommodated on-site. Child care providers reserve the right to refuse admittance to nonpreregistrants. IF there are any openings, fees for children who were not preregistered will be $75 per day per child. No half-day rates are available for non-preregistered children. Accessibility Resources and Services The ASA offers several services and oversight arrangements to facilitate attendance at the Annual Meeting. The ASA Office will coordinate resources during the meeting week for registrants with physical disabilities who are attending the Annual Meeting. Special services, which were arranged in advance, may be verified with ASA staff to ensure that you receive the assistance you need. Should you encounter any problems during the meeting or need any additional information while at the Annual Meeting, please contact Meeting Services staff in the on-site ASA Office. Comfort Zone. Attendees coping with illness, meeting fatigue, or stress may use the small room set aside by ASA as a “safe haven” to escape briefly from the noise and bustle of meeting activities. The designated Comfort Zone at the Philadelphia Marriott, is Room 405. At the Philadelphia Loews, the Comfort Zone is in Parlor 2. Sessions. ASA has made arrangements for sign language interpreters, sighted guides, and other communication avenues for meeting registrants who provided information in advance of the meeting. Housing. Attendees who requested accessible rooms or other resources when making room reservations, and who have not received the desired equipment or accommodations, are asked to contact the ASA Office immediately. Travel. Attendees with mobility impairments who are flying in and out of Philadelphia International Airport (PHL) are advised to notify their airline 24 hours before departure if they will need assistance in getting from their arrival gate to the baggage claim area. Airline and airport personnel will gladly assist any meeting attendee needing transportation aid. Travelers who need ground transportation in wheelchair accessible vehicles from PHL should make arrangements in advance of their arrival at the Airport. The Airport’s website, www.phl.org, has a list of these providers. Additional information is available by calling the PHL Ground Transportation hotline at 215937-6958. In the City. People with disabilities who are planning to visit Philadelphia can obtain information relating to accessibility in the city by visiting the website www.phila.gov/aco. Other Services. Registrants who did not make advance arrangements for services or equipment are requested to contact staff in the ASA Office in Room 502 at the Philadelphia Marriott. Every reasonable effort will be made to assist registrants on-site. However, if you have a physical disability and need special services, equipment, or accommodations, and did not notify ASA in advance of your arrival at the meeting site, ASA may not be able to provide appropriate services due to the limited availability of some equipment and services. 43 Press/Media Office Hotel Information Press and media representatives are invited to check in at the on-site ASA Press Office for program information and interview assistance. The Press Office is located in Room 406 at the Philadelphia Marriott. Office hours are 1:30-5:30 p.m. on August 12, 8:00 a.m.-5:30 p.m. on August 13-15, and 8:00 a.m.-1:00 p.m. onAugust 16. Meeting attendees are also encouraged to drop by the on-site Press Office and provide information on their availability to discuss their work with the media while in Philadelphia. The 100th ASA Annual Meeting is headquartered at the Philadelphia Marriott, the Philadelphia Loews hotels, and the Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott. For the convenience of meeting attendees, a list of hotels is given below where registrants will be staying for the ASA Annual Meeting and for meetings of sister associations and societies. ASA Office To support ASA activities at the three hotels, there will be an ASA Office staffed with Executive Office personnel at the Philadelphia Marriott. Located in Room 502, this on-site office will be open at 1:30-7:00 p.m. on August 12, 8:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m. on August 13-15, and 8:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. on August 16. ASA Executive Office Staff Janet L. Astner, Operations & Meeting Services Redante Asuncion-Reed, Publications Les Briggs, Business Office Kevin Darrow Brown, Information Technology Karen Gray Edwards, Publications & Membership Girma Hirpassa Efa, Business Office Bill Erskine, Research Sarah Frazier, Administrative Assistant Kendra Eastman, Meeting Services Johanna Ebner Olexy, Public Information Felicia Evans, Minority Affairs Glen Grant, Membership & Customer Services K. Lee Herring, Communications Sally T. Hillsman, Executive Officer Victoria Hougham, Academic & Professional Affairs Carla B. Howery, Deputy Executive Officer Kareem D. Jenkins, Meeting Services Shannon Lymore, Membership & Customer Services David Matthews, General Services Michael Murphy, Sections & Governance Jamie Panzarella, Administrative Assistant Mercedes Rubio, Minority Affairs Craig Schaar, Membership & Customer Services Roberta Spalter-Roth, Research Jessica Spickard, Sections & Governance Donya Williams, Operations American Sociological Association (ASA) Philadelphia Marriott (ASA Headquarters) 1201 Market Street (215) 625-2900 Philadelphia Loews (ASA Co-headquarters) 1200 Market Street (215) 627-1200 Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott 21 N. Juniper Street (215) 496-3200 Association for Applied and Clinical Sociology (AACS) formerly the Society for Applied Sociology (SAS) and the Sociological Practice Association (SPA) August 16-17, 2005 Philadelphia Marriott 1201 Market Street (215) 625-2900 Association for the Sociology of Religion (ASR) August 13-15, 2005 Radisson Warwick Hotel 1701 Locust Street (215) 735-6000 Association of Black Sociologists (ABS) August 10-13, 2005 Sheraton Society Hill Hotel One Dock Street (2nd and Walnut Streets) (215) 238-6000 Society for the Study of Social Problems (SSSP) August 12-14, 2005 Crowne Plaza Hotel 1800 Market Street (215) 561-7500 Society for the Study of Symbolic Interaction (SSSI) August 13-14, 2005 Hilton Garden Inn 100 Arch Street (215) 923-0100 Sociologists for Women in Society (SWS) August 13-16, 2005 Courtyard by Marriott 21 N. Juniper Street (215) 496-3200 44 Airport Transportation There are many ways to get from the Philadelphia International Airport (PHL) to your downtown destination. Taxicab fare from the airport to Center City Philadelphia (downtown) is a flat $25. If you prefer a train, ride SEPTA for $5.50 one-way. Information on shuttle van/limousine service is available at the Centralized Ground Transportation Counters in all baggage claims or by calling 215-937-6958. For more details, check http://www.phl.org/taxis_trains.html. Philly Delights Center City and the Reading Market The following is an excerpt from an article by Magali Sarfatti Larson, Temple University, which was published in ASA Footnotes as part of a series highlighting the centennial Annual Meeting in Philadelphia. The complete article is posted at http://www.asanet.org/footnotes/mayjun05/indextwo.html. Walk two blocks west toward City Hall, at the intersection of Market and Broad Streets. It is worth visiting the Council chambers and the observation deck, which are free. One block north on Broad, at the corner of Cherry Street, you can admire the renovation of the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, Frank Furness’s eclectic masterpiece, but you should also find some time for the great collection of American art (its most famous painting may well be Peaceable Kingdom, by Edward Hicks, but my favorite is Horace Pippin’s Hanging of John Brown). South and east of City Hall, Lord and Taylor’s clothing store occupies the building of the celebrated John Wanamaker department store by Daniel Burnham; you can take the kids to hear the world’s largest pipe organ playing at noon and at 5 pm. Three blocks south on Broad Street, on your right, you will see the historic Union Club, and continue past the old Academy of Music, the very modern Wilma theater by Hardy, Holzmann, Pfeiffer, on your left, and the Merriam on your right, toward the brand new, rather flashy, but acoustically perfect Kimmel Center for the Performing Arts, home of the Philadelphia Orchestra, by the fashionable architect Rafael Viñoly. Tours are free every day except Monday, at 1 pm. If you cross Broad going east, retracing your steps to Locust Street, you will find the Library Company of Philadelphia, at number 1314, the first subscription library in the United States, founded in 1731 by Ben Franklin, of course. From there, turn left on 12th Street, cross Market, walk one block, cross Filbert; you are about to enter one of our most cherished living monuments, the Reading Terminal Market. Walk around, taste, drink, enjoy! From Wednesday to Saturday, you can buy pretzels and shoofly pie from Amish and Mennonite farmers. The market is open every day except Sunday, and you can also find jewelry, somewhat unusual clothes, organic soaps, and any kitchen tool you may ever have wanted at Foster’s Gourmet Cookware. Citizens managed to save this beloved shopping and eating place from destruction by the Convention Center, and you will be grateful, as we are. Chinatown surrounds the Reading Terminal, north to Spring Garden and east to about 8th Street. It is open for dinner and enriched by a variety of Asian restaurants. You find classic stores and markets, but check also Lily Song’s New China Bookstore at 1010 Race Street for music and videos as well as books, and her brand new Shanghai Bazaar at 1016 Race. On Market Street, the Gallery, at 10th Street, is linked underground by an enormous food court to Market Place, eastward, all the way to 7th. Chain stores like K-Mart and a sometimes better variety of clothing and shoe stores, perfumes, and candies proliferate. The anchor store strives to maintain the elegance of the old Strawbridge and Clothier. You can walk with air conditioning to 7th Street and visit the exceptional African American Museum at 7th and Arch Streets before getting to Independence Hall: you will find there over a million photographs of African American life in Philadelphia, as well as records of the slave trade and all aspects of enslaved and free Black life in America, including the epochal struggle for liberation. The Atwater Kent Museum is immediately south of Market, at 15 South 7th, and it contains one of the most extensive collections of Americana in the country, including Norman Rockwell paintings. Across the street, the Balch Institute of Ethnic Studies still houses artifacts, collections and a very important library, even though it has merged with the Historical Society of Pennsylvania. If you do not feel like walking around the city, the blue bus called “PHLASH” stops at 12th and Market Streets in front of the Marriott and at most tourist sites, all the way to the Art Museum. It costs $4 for all day, $10 for a family, or $1 each time you board (for more details, see www.gophila.com/phlash). 45 ASA is pleased to acknowledge the sponsorship of four publishing partners for the Centennial Annual Meeting program tote bag Please make a special effort to visit the booths of sponsors who are also Exhibitors at the 100th Annual Meeting here in Philadelphia: Blackwell Publishing Inc. – 305, 307, 309 University of California Press – 200, 300 46 Exhibits The 2005 Exhibits will be located in the Grand Ballroom at the Philadelphia Marriott. Exhibitors are listed below by company name, with booth numbers shown in parentheses. Exhibit hours are: Saturday, August 13 Sunday, August 14 Monday, August 15 Tuesday, August 16 Allyn & Bacon (114, 116) Amber Waves Sofware (402) Ashgate (111) Association Book Exhibit (317) Association of Canadian Publishers (411) Blackwell Publishing (305, 307, 309) Brill Academic Publishers (409) Bullfrog Films (119) Cambridge University Press (121, 123) Consortium Book Sales & Distribution (505) Cornell University Press (315) Council for International Exchange of Scholars (513) CSA Sociological Abstracts (323) Duke University Press (118) EBSCO Publishing (426) Elsevier (207, 209) Guilford Publications (320) HarperCollins Publishers (314, 316) Harvard University Press (219) Holtzbrinck Publishers (108, 110) ICPSR (306, 308) Idea Works, Inc. (112) International Specialized Books Services (420) The Johns Hopkins University Press (224) Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company (222) LFB Scholarly Publishing, LLC (407) Lynne Rienner Publishers (106) McGraw-Hill Higher Education (302, 400, 401) Minnesota Population Center (424) National Longitudinal Surveys (511) NYU Press (205) Oxford University Press (419) Palgrave Macmillian (109) Paradigm Publishers (313) 2:00-6:00 p.m. 9:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m. 9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. 9:00 a.m.-1:00 p.m. Pearson Custom Publishing (117) Penguin Group (USA) (301) Penn State Press (410) Perseus Books Group (406, 408) Prentice Hall (221, 223) Princeton University Press (416) Random House, Inc. (413, 415, 417) ResearchTalk (509) The Roper Center for Public Opinion Research (211) Routledge Books (122, 124) Routledge Journals (120) Rowman and Littlefield (421, 423, 425) Roxbury Publishing Company (105, 107) Russell Sage Foundation (218) Rutgers University Press (214) SAGE Publications (206, 208, 210, 212) The Scholar's Choice (405) Sloan Publishing (507) Springer (319, 321) Stanford University Press (310) State University of New York Press (322, 324) Temple University Press (312) Transaction Publishers (418) U.S. Department of Education, Institute of Education Sciences (318) University of California Press (200, 300) University of Chicago Press (113, 115) University of Illinois Press (216) University of Minnesota Press (311) University of Wisconsin - Madison, CDHA (412) University Press of America (422) Vanderbilt University Press (220) W. W. Norton & Company (414) Wadsworth, Thomson (213, 215, 217) 47 GRADUATI! PROGRAM Philadelphia Marriott Exhibit Floor Plan • BOOK STORE• I GARAGE Ill • ! ±.~ 1 lXII PARKING • • I I I I I I I I I I IV~t'~ I ...0 ±I± • ::iIll •a: I I 113 1 nn I !~I . __ ! w w .. w w•w 1414 L10S:' I !J I ___! '~06J !_ __ I L20~' '::'~ I __! LJOS:' !_ __ I '~06J H~fl ~ . I _J ! __ I I ___! L---· p .. • 4ti --FUNCTION~ ~ r=-1 T r=-T"1- r=-1 .. r=-1 r=-1 r=-1 AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION AUGUST 13 - 16, 2005 PHILADELPHIA MARRIOTT FRANKLIN HALL -[T"'='1 T r=-1 48 Friday, August 12 Program Schedule Program Corrections: The information printed here reflects session updates received from organizers through July 11, 2005. Changes received after that date will appear in the Program Changes section of the Convention Bulletin distributed with Final Program packets. Please check that bulletin for the latest updates. Friday, August 12 Courses 1. Course. Teachers Teaching Teachers (co-sponsored with the ASA Section on Teaching and Learning in Sociology) Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Room 104 8:30am-6:00pm Ticket required for admission Organizers and Leaders: Gregory L. Weiss, Roanoke College Jeanne H. Ballantine, Wright State University Graduate students and beginning teachers will focus on the teaching and learning process in this one-day course. Experts in the field will present panels, workshops, breakout discussion groups, and small group mentoring for approximately 25 participants. Participants will select from workshop and discussion topics including how successful teachers teach, process of creating courses, dealing with controversial issues in the classroom, managing classroom dynamics, learning styles/multiple intelligences, assessment in teaching, evaluating teaching performance, writing and presenting on teaching and learning, getting a job, and tips for successful teaching from award winning teachers. This pre-conference course will be supplemented by ASA sessions on teaching during the Annual Meeting. Applications will be accepted on a first come, first serve basis; fees cover course materials and refreshments. For further information about course content, contact Jeanne Ballantine (jeanne.ballantine@wright.edu) or Greg Weiss (greg.weiss@roanoke.edu). 2. Course. Key Developments in Sociology of Gender Philadelphia Marriott, Room 403 9:00am-4:00pm Ticket required for admission Organizer: Judith A. Howard, University of Washington Panelists: Judith A. Howard, University of Washington Alesha Durfee, University of Washington Karen Rosenberg, University of Washington Julie Brines, University of Washington This course will assess recent developments and emphases in the sociology of gender, moving also to speculations about major priorities for the future. Among these emphases are the growth of both transnational and global analyses of gender; the relationship between transnational analyses of gender and U.S.-based diversity studies of gender; the role of activism and civic engagement in the sociology of gender; and the connections between disciplinary and interdisciplinary scholarships of gender. The course facilitators will use a variety of pedagogical techniques, illustrating by example ways of teaching sociologies of gender. 3. Course. Sociological Work on Global Warming and Climate Change Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Room 103 9:00am - 4:00pm Ticket required for admission Organizer: Penelope Canan, University of Denver Regions, Carbon, Culture, Cities, Climate, Change and Consequences. Penelope Canan, University of Denver Urban and Regional Typologies Relevant to Global Warming and the Carbon Cycle. Melanie Hartman, Global Carbon Project Legacies of Development Pathways and of Decarbonization. Stephan Scholz, Global Carbon Project/University of Arizona Intentional Social Change and the U.S. Environmental Movement: Implications for Addressing Global Carbon Use. Robert Brulle, Drexel University Human practices since the Industrial Revolution have had such a large impact on the planet that the Earth has moved well outside the range of the natural variability exhibited over the more than half million years. Already we are dealing with the impacts of just a one-degree rise in the global temperature and associated extreme weather events. Predictions for increasing global warming over the next few decades vary, but each scenario is alarming. Carbon dioxide emissions from fossil fuel use (industrialization, transportation, urbanization) and the loss of carbon sinks (deforestation) are major culprits. What do we as sociologist have to say about theoretical directions for social change to alter the patterns of a global carbon culture? We will produce a collection of examples of sociological work relevant to global warming, the carbon cycle, and climate change. Participants will be asked to prepare a brief oral overview of an assigned selection. We anticipate that selections will include contributions covering environment and... demographic change, energy consumption patterns, equity, impact analysis, carbon culture, land use changes (deforestation), urbanization, and globalization. 4. Course. Multicultural Infusion into Introductory Sociology Curriculum Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Room 102 10:00am - 4:00pm Ticket required for admission Organizer and Leader: Susan J. St. John, Corning Community 49 Friday, August 12 College, State University of New York Panelists: Elijah Anderson, University of Pennsylvania Carol A. Jenkins, Glendale Community College Lynn Weber, University of South Carolina Designed to provide instructors with strategies and resources to develop multicultural teaching modules for basic sociological concepts. Multicultural infusion is a modification of curriculum designed to heighten awareness of cultural differences without polarizing students. We will explain how multicultural infusion differs from simply presenting singular race/ethnic, class, or gender lessons. Distinguished faculty will help participants move from selectively “highlighting” minority issues toward lectures and activities that bring multiple perspectives into a single lesson. Faculty will discover how to adapt sociological concepts they already teach, such as, socialization or social stratification, to encompass diverse perspectives. This approach connects faculty to a wider range of students and students, especially minorities, see themselves in the curriculum they are presented. In addition, multicultural infusion enhances critical thinking, draws from local history and experiences relevant to various student populations, and provides historically more accurate description of social phenomena. There will be time for “handon” curriculum development and sharing of ideas with workshop presenters and participants. Chair Conference Chair Conference: The Role of the Chair: Avoiding Legal and Ethical Pitfalls Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon D 12:15 - 6:00pm Ticket required for admission Meetings Orientation for First-Year MFP Fellows (9:30am to 4:30pm)— Philadelphia Marriott, Room 404 Honors Program Orientation (4:00 to 6:00pm)—Philadelphia Marriott, Room 401-402 Sections and Other Groups Alpha Kappa Delta (AKD) Executive Council (8:00am to 7:00pm)—Philadelphia Marriott, Room 305 Communication and Information Technology Section Miniconference (10:00am to 4:00pm)—Temple University Center City Group Processes Conference (8:30amto 5:30pm)—Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington A Latina/o Sociology Section Professional Development Workshop (Hector Delgado, Jane Doe, John Adams) (1:00 to 6:00pm)—Philadelphia Marriott, Room 306 North American Chinese Sociologists Association (NACSA) (8:30am to 5:30pm)—Philadelphia Marriott, Room 407 Section on Asia and Asian America Conference (David Takeuchi) (1:30 to 6:00pm)—Philadelphia Marriott, Room 405 Section on Medical Sociology Council Meeting (1:30 to 5:30pm)—Philadelphia Marriott, Room 309 Section on Sociology of Education Conference (8:30am to 5:30pm)—Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington B Tours Tour 1: The Barnes Collection (10:00am to 1:00pm; ticket required for admission)—Philadelphia Marriott, Lobby (at 12th Street)—SOLD OUT Tour 2: The Barnes Collection (12:30pm to 3:30pm; ticket required for admission)—Philadelphia Marriott, Lobby (at 12th Street) -SOLD OUT Co-sponsored Sessions 5. Special Session. Remembering Jacquelyne Jackson: Scholar, Mentor, and Social Activist for Women, Minorities, and Older People (co-sponsored by the Association for Black Sociologists, the ASA Section on Aging and the Life Course, the ASA Section on Medical Sociology, and the ASA Section on Racial and Ethnic Minorities) Sheraton Society Hill Hotel, Ballroom C 4:00-5:30pm Organizer and Presider: Diane R. Brown, University Med. & Dentistry of NJ Panelists: Mary R. Holley, Montclair State University Delores P. Aldridge, Emory University Gordon Morgan, University of Arkansas Charles U. Smith, Florida A&M University 6. Special Session. Attacks on Academic Freedom (cosponsored by the Society for the Study of Social Problems, the Association for Applied and Clinical Sociology (formerly SAS and SPA), the Association of Black Sociologists, and Sociologists for Women in Society) Crowne Plaza Hotel, Liberty B 4:30 - 6:10pm Organizer and Presider: Sherryl Kleinman, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill What Is Academic Freedom? Michael L. Schwalbe, North Carolina State University Contested Meanings of Academic Freedom and Diversity. Melanie E. L. Bush, Adelphi University 50 Friday, August 12 Session 6, continued 9:00 pm Malign Neglect: A University’s (Non)Response to Heterosexism. Elyse Crystall, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Academic Realpolitik: The Case of the University of California Institute for Labor and Employment. Ruth Milkman, University of California, Los Angeles Welcoming Party (to 10:00pm)—Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth Hall Opening of the 100th Annual Meeting 7:00 pm Plenary 7. Plenary Session. Social Implications and Aftermath of the Tsunami Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Millennium Hall Centennial Opening Welcome by ASA President Troy Duster Centennial Film Presentation: A Century of Progress: Presidential Reflections (produced by Gale Largey, 2005) This 20-minute film gives a brief overview of the founding of the American Sociological Society and continues with a review of each of the successive presidents of the society/association from 1905-2005. Plenary Organizer and Presider: Kai Erikson, Yale University Panel: Carol Bellamy, President of World Learning for International Development and former executive director of UNICEF Imam Budi Prasodjo, University of Indonesia Faculty of Social and Political Sciences, Director and Founder of Yayasan Nurani Dunia (Foundation for Humanitarian Aid to Victims of Social and Natural Disaster) The tsunami that struck suddenly and devastated the regions directly affected captured headlines and saturated media coverage for several weeks, in large measure because of the immediate vast toll on human life. While the long-term social and political effects of the tsunami will not receive much media attention, social scientists working in the area have much to tell us about how to better understand profound social adjustments and impacts that otherwise go unreported. This session brings together some of the leading experts on the topic to bring a sociological perspective to such matters as rebuilding infrastructure, material and non-material. Reception 51 Saturday, August 13 Saturday, August 13 The length of each daytime session/meeting activity is one hour and forty minutes, unless noted otherwise. The usual turnover schedule is as follows: 8:30 am—10:10 am 10:30 am—12:10 pm 12:30 pm—2:10 pm 2:30 pm—4:10 pm 4:30 pm—6:10 pm Session presiders and committee chairs are requested to see that sessions and meetings end on time to avoid conflicts with subsequent activities scheduled into the same room and to allow participants time to transit between facilities. 7:00 am Meetings Section on Sociology of Emotions Council Meeting (to 8:15am)—Philadelphia Marriott, Conference Suite III 7:30 am Meetings Chairs Conference, continued (to 12:10pm; ticket required for admission)—Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon A 8:30 am 8:30 am Sessions 8. Thematic Session. Color Matters: The Enduring Significance of Skin Tone for African Americans and Latinos Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon H Organizer and Presider: Margaret Hunter, Loyola Marymount University Fairness on the Job? Skin Tone, Beauty, and Labor Market Inequalities among Latinas and African American Women. Cedric Herring, University of Illinois at Chicago Gender, Complexion, and Emotional Well-Being. Verna M. Keith, Arizona State University Exporting the Color Complex: Skin Bleaching in the United States and Around the Globe. Margaret Hunter, Loyola Marymount University Rethinking the Color Complex: Skin Color, Race, and Identity in Post-Civil Rights America. Kerry Ann Rockquemore, Boston College In the post-civil rights era, is light skin tone still an advantage for African Americans and Latinos? Does skin color matter more for women than men? Panelists will address the politics of skin tone in employment, mental health, marriage patterns, and identity in the African American and Latino communities. Meetings 2006 Jessie Bernard Award Selection Committee (to 10:10am)—Philadelphia Marriott, Room 309 Contexts Editorial Board (to 10:10am)—Philadelphia Marriott, Liberty Salon A Committee on Nominations (to 12:10pm)—Philadelphia Marriott, Conference Suite I Honors Program Kickoff (to 10:10am)—Philadelphia Marriott, Room 401-402 MFP Fellows (to 10:10am)—Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon D Social Psychology Quarterly Editorial Board (to 10:10am)— Philadelphia Marriott, Liberty Salon B Section on Sociology of Education Council Meeting (to 9:30am)—Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon B 9. Thematic Session. Equal Opportunity in Post-Affirmative Action Era Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Congress C Organizer: David Wellman, University of California, Santa Cruz Presider: Abel Valenzuela, University of California, Los Angeles Panelists: Walter R. Allen, University of California, Los Angeles Michael K. Brown, University of California, Santa Cruz Margaret Weir, University of California, Berkeley Discussant: Abel Valenzuela, University of California, Los Angeles 52 Saturday, August 13, 8:30 a.m. 10. Thematic Session. Sociology and Anthropology: Whither Native Americans Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon J Organizer and Presider: Russell Thornton, University of California, Los Angeles Sociology and Anthropology and the Study of Native Americans: The Early Decades. Russell Thornton, University of California, Los Angeles The “Sociological Turn” in North American Archaeology. Robert Preucel, University of Pennsylvania The Canary in the Coal Mine: What Sociology Can Learn from American Indians. C. Matthew Snipp, Stanford University; Lisa Garoutte, Boston College Trends and Transformations: Recent Sociological Interests in Indigenous Peoples. Angela A. Gonzales, Cornell University 11. Thematic Session. Sociology in Sexuality, Sexuality in Sociology: Competing Explanations Then and Now Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth C Organizer and Presider: Salvador Vidal-Ortiz, American University Panelists: Janice M. Irvine, University of Massachusetts Stephen Valocchi, Trinity College Roderick A. Ferguson, University of Minnesota Discussant: Karl Bryant, University of California, Santa Barbara 12. Centennial Session. Formation of Intellectual Boundaries Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon C Organizer and Presider: Barbara Schneider, University of Chicago Paradigm Shifts. Barbara Schneider and Zack Kertcher, University of Chicago Varieties of Academic Excellence. Michele Lamont, Harvard University Reconceptualizing Knowledge Accumulation Beyond Sociology: A Cross-disciplinary Analysis of Knowledge Accumulation. Karin D. Knorr Cetina, University of Konstanz, Germany Discussant: Saskia Sassen, University of Chicago Physical and natural sciences and social sciences have developed their own intellectual boundaries - by utilizing specific methods, relying on certain forms of evidence, having specialized journals, and addressing particular issue areas. Increasingly, however, research in both hard sciences and social sciences has become more interdisciplinary, integrating varieties of methods, constructs, and forms of evidence. This trend has been reinforced by institutional training grants that encourage collaboration across disciplines, as well as research funding agenda. All this poses challenges to existing intellectual boundaries. Our proposed session will examine how social scientists, with a particular focus on sociologists, are defining the intellectual boundaries of their discipline. We will pay attention to what paradigms are being privileged; what constructs are being used to define disciplinary fields; how researchers are conducting their work (processes of peer review, standards of publication, choice of methods); what constitutes evidence; and what the implications are for causal inference. These ideas are examined in order to investigate how the intellectual boundaries of sociology are being modified as a response to the increased focus on interdisciplinary work. Papers in this session will focus on the following questions: Do knowledge and research practices cut across fields or remain confined within intellectual boundaries? How does sociology compare to other disciplines with respect to the organization of knowledge and the protection of intellectual boundaries? And finally, relying on recent work of National Research Council and the National Science Foundation, what kinds of knowledge and research practices are being privileged, and what are the implications for knowledge accumulation? 13. Centennial Session. Stigma, Social Change and the Centennial Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington C Organizer and Presider: Bernice A. Pescosolido, Indiana University Goffman’s Legacy and the Future of the Sociology of Stigma. Bernice A. Pescosolido, Indiana University The Contributions and Cutting Edge of the Sociology of Stigma: Basic and Applied. Bruce G. Link, Columbia University The Contributions and Cutting Edge of the Psychology of Saturday, August 13, 8:30 a.m. Stigma: Basic and Applied. Jennifer Crocker, University of Michigan View from the Trenches of Social Change: The ADS. Shannon Flanagan, ADS Center Sociological and psychological insights have traditionally been brought to understand the larger causes, consequences and societal response to stigma. This session focuses on the unique history, perspective and contributions that these two disciplines have brought and continue to bring to the study of the stigma of mental illness given the current priorities directed at changing the level and consequences of prejudice and discrimination toward adults with serious mental illness and children with serious emotional disorders. Panel members will also discuss future theoretical and intervention directions. 14. Special Session. How the Labor Movement and Sociology Shape Each Other Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Adams Organizer and Presider: Dan Clawson, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Panelists: Ruth Milkman, University of California, Los Angeles Marshall Ganz, Harvard University Carolina Bank Munoz, Brooklyn College, City University of New York Discussant: Henry Nicholas, District 1199C The rise and decline in the influence of sociology is shaped by its connection to larger social movements, and those movements’ ability to influence the larger world. In turn, labor and other movements are shaped by the results of sociological research, and sociologists’ ability (or inability) to influence the public. 15. Special Session. Local, Regional, and Global Sociologies: Societies in Transition (co-sponsored by the International Sociological Association) Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Congress A Organizers: Sujata Patel, University of Pune, India; and A. Douglas A. Kincaid, Florida International University Presider: Alberto Martinelli, International Sociological Association The Changing Role of Sociology and Sociologist in PostCommunist Societies. Piotr Sztompka, Jagiellonian University Social Trust in Post-Soviet Societies. Pamela Abbott, Glasgow Caledonian University Social Commitment and Academic Values in Sociology: Rediscovery of Sociology in a Society of Transition. Pepka Boyadjeiva, Bulgarian Sociological Association The Great Transformation in Europe: Modernisation, Solidarity, and National Welfare State Systems in a Borderless Global Economy. Josef Hochgerner, Austrian Sociological Association 53 Discussant: Alberto Martinelli, International Sociological Association 16. Academic Workshop. Using Distance-Learning Education and Other Virtual Resources in Sociology Courses Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon K Organizer: Meredith M. Redlin, South Dakota State University Leaders: Meredith M. Redlin, South Dakota State University Laura M. Hecht, California State University, Bakersfield Cornelia B. Flora, Iowa State University This workshop will encompass a three-step introduction to models and levels of distance learning integration in sociology. First, a model will be presented of two forms of web-based and distance projects for traditional classroom models. These exercises are developed for lowerlevel and introductory sociology courses and encompass active research assignments and inter-campus shared exercises. Student outcomes are included. Second, a model of a fully web-based course design will be demonstrated, including teaching modules, exercises, and readings. This model is developed for an upper level undergraduate sociology course, and student outcomes are included. Third, a model for development of an on-line multi-university and multi-disciplinary Masters program will be presented. Here, presenters will address the possibilities of multiuniversity participation in virtual course offerings at the graduate level to expand opportunities for students in the region. 17. Career Workshop. Building a Career with a “ Lavender Vita” (co-sponsored by the Sociologist’s Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Caucus) Philadelphia Marriott, Room 410 Organizer and Presider: Tracy E. Ore, Saint Cloud State University 18. Professional Workshop. Strategies for Getting Tenure Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon L Organizers: Rebecca S.K. Li, The College of New Jersey; and Ronda Priest, University of Southern Indiana Panelists: Rebecca S.K. Li, The College of New Jersey Melinda Jo Messineo, Ball State University Benita Roth, Binghamton University Ronda Priest, University of Southern Indiana This workshop provides pointers for untenured, assistant professors in their first years on their road toward tenure. Topics discussed include: (1) Documenting one’s work and the review process-important information one should know about the review process and one’s rights, the politics of reappointment and tenure review process, and helpful tips on preparing the dossier; (2) Managing one’s workload to maximize one’s productivity and effectiveness-tips on know how to prioritize one’s work and manage one’s time effectively; and (3) Avoiding common pitfalls-tips on understanding politics in academia, adjusting to the new role and life, learning to reflect and seek help, and taking care of oneself. Panelists will share their personal experiences and participants are welcome to bring questions. 54 Saturday, August 13, 8:30 a.m. 19. Teaching Workshop. Developing an Internship Program in Applied Sociology Philadelphia Marriott, Room 411 Organizer and Leader: Jammie Price, Appalachian State University 20. Teaching Workshop. Teaching Latina/o Studies (cosponsored by the Section on Latino/a Sociology) Philadelphia Marriott, Room 303 Organizer: Hector L. Delgado, University of La Verne Leaders: Hector L. Delgado, University of La Verne Rogelio Saenz, Texas A&M University We invite veterans and neophytes to share old and new pedagogical ideas in the area of Latina/o Studies. This area of study and instruction is a broad one and the approaches to teaching courses on the subject are virtually limiltless. Some courses compare each of these groups to one another, while other courses focus on a group (e.g. Chicanas/os or Mexican-Americans). Some courses examine a wide range of topics, while others focus on one topic or a handful of topics (e.g. Gender and Sexuality). Some professors prefer more traditional pedagogical models, while others prefer non-traditional approaches, such as student-centered teaching and participatory action research with an emphasis on social activism ans social change. One model does not fit all. In the end, each instructor must decide what works best for her/him. This workshop hopesto make the taskeasierby providing participants with a shopping list of approaches, including bibliographies of readings used by colleagues in Latina/o Studies courses and exercises, assignments, instructional techniques, and resources designed to engage students intellectually and to instill in them an appreciation of and respect for Latinas/os in the United States and their shared and varied histories, experiences, and traditions. 21. Teaching Workshop. The ASA Centennial as a Teaching Resource (co-sponsored by the Section on History of Sociology) Philadelphia Marriott, Room 409 Organizers and Co-Leaders: Patricia Madoo Lengermann, The George Washington University; and Gillian Niebrugge, American University 22. Regular Session. Attachment to Work Organizations Philadelphia Marriott, Room 306 Organizer: Steven H. Lopez, Ohio State University Burnout and Turnover Intention in Substance Abuse Counselors: The Protective Role of Coworker Support. Lori J. Ducharme, Hannah K. Knudsen, Aaron Johnson, and Paul M. Roman, Universitiy of Georgia Commitment, Cohorts, and the New Social Contract. Charles J. Brody, University of North Carolina, Charlotte; Beth A. Rubin, National Science Foundation and University of North Carolina, Charlotte Exit and Voice: Job Loyalty and Dispute Resolution Choices. Elizabeth A. Hoffmann, Purdue University Network Coupling and Workplace Perceptions. Kathy J. Kuipers, University of Montana Discussant: Ashley P. Finley, Dickinson College 23. Regular Session. Beyond the Economic: Work in Life Course Perspective Philadelphia Marriott, Room 404 Organizer: Karl Alexander, Johns Hopkins University Presider: Cheryl Elman, The University of Akron Educational and Work Strategies from Adolescence to Early Adulthood: Consequences for Educational Attainment. Jeremy Staff, The Pennsylvania State University; Jeylan T. Mortimer, University of Minnesota Gendered Trajectories of Work Control and Health Outcomes in the Middle Years. K.A.S. Wickrama and Frederick O. Lorenz, Iowa State University Racial, Ethnic and Gender Disparities in the Work Environment and the Role of Job Strain in Delaying Changes in Health-related Behavior. Margaret M. Weden, University of Wisconsin, Madison; Nan M. Astone and Margaret E. Ensminger, Johns Hopkins University A Trajectory Approach to Study on Work and Health. Reiping Huang, University of Minnesota Discussant: Eliza K. Pavalko, Indiana University 24. Regular Session. Citizenship Philadelphia Marriott, Room 305 Organizer and Presider: Stanley B. Aronowitz, Graduate Center, City University of New York Citizenship, Welfare Reliance, and the Politics of Subject Formation in the United States and the Netherlands. Anna C. Korteweg, University of Toronto Indigenous Peoples, Nationalism, and Citizenship in the Free Market: Ironies and the Poverty of Language. Rebecca L. Overmyer-Velazquez, Whittier College Locating Citizenship: Transnational Organizing, Urban Spaces and Gendered Labor in the Garment Industry. Ethel C. Brooks, Rutgers University Transformations of Citizenship Position and Practices in a Globalizing Steel City. Eric Boria, Hammond, IN 25. Regular Session. Collective Memory I: Methods and Theories Philadelphia Marriott, Room 310 Organizer and Presider: Jonathan Markovitz, University of California, San Diego Movements and Memory: The Making of the Stonewall Myth. Saturday, August 13, 8:30 a.m. Elizabeth A. Armstrong and Suzanna M. Crage, Indiana University What Do These Memories Do?: Civil Rights Remembrance and Racial Attitudes. Larry J. Griffin, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Texts, Bodies, and the Memory of Bloody Sunday. Lynette Spillman and Brian Patrick Conway, University of Notre Dame Mnemonic Communities in the Making of Holocaust Memories. Arlene J. Stein, Rutgers University Discussant: Barbie Zelizer, University of Pennsylvania 26. Regular Session. Community and Social Context and HIV Risk, Prevention, and Care Philadelphia Marriott, Room 304 Organizer: Ricky N. Bluthenthal, RAND Presider: Alexis Nicole Martinez, University of California, San Francisco A Multilevel Analysis of Extramarital Sex in Zambia. Kofi D. Benefo, Lehman College, City University of New York Investigating Longitudinal STD/HIV Risk Behaviors among U.S. Rural High School Students. Devon J. Hensel and James G. Anderson, Purdue University Differences by Race/ethnicity and Partner Gender in Safer Sex Strategies and Stigma among HIV+ MSMW. Matt G. Mutchler, Leonardo Colemon, Katie Neith, and Mariam Davtyan, AIDS Project Los Angeles Factors Associated with Delayed Care Seeking among HIVInfected Individuals in New York City. Angela Aidala, Columbia University; Elizabeth Needham Waddell, New York Ctiy Department of Health and Mental Hygiene and Columbia University; Jo L. Sotheran, Brooklyn, NY Discussant: Kim M. Blankenship, Yale University 27. Regular Session. Culture and Inequality Philadelphia Marriott, Room 307 Organizer and Presider: David L. Harvey, University of Nevada, Reno Beyond Bourdieu’s Beaux Arts: Parental Educational Involvement as Cultural Capital. Nathan Edward Fosse, Harvard University Egalitarian Consciousness vs. Status-seeking Consciousness: Chinese Attitudes towards Social Inequality. Haidong Zhang, Jilin University (South Campus) Gender Inequality, Misrecognized: Family Structure, Filial Piety, and the Household Division of Labor in Taiwan. Hsiao-Li Sun, New York University Living in Their Parents’ Basements: How Traditional Mechanisms of Social Reproduction are Failing Middle Class Kids. Michaela DeSoucey, Northwestern University 55 28. Regular Session. Deviance and Social Control Philadelphia Marriott, Room 407 Organizer and Presider: Peggy C. Giordano, Bowling Green State University Delinquency, Schools, and Families: Elaborating and Testing Social Control Theories with the NLSY97. Stephen B. Plank and Joe Gasper, Johns Hopkins University Neighborhood Effects on Street Gang Behavior. Andrew V. Papachristos and David S. Kirk, University of Chicago Parenting Practices and Adolescents’ Friendship Networks. Chris Knoester, Dana L. Haynie, and Crystal M. Stephens, Ohio State University School Contexts and Marijuana Use among Adolescents. Dejun Su, The University of Chicago Discussant: Bradley R. Entner Wright, University of Connecticut 29. Regular Session. Economic Innovation and Change: Micro and Macro Perspectives Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth A2 Organizer and Presider: Bruce G. Carruthers, Northwestern University The State-Led Transition to Liberal Capitalism. Lawrence Peter King, Yale University So Small Firms Produce Better Entrepreneurs? Jesper B. Sorensen, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Damon Jeremy Phillips, University of Chicago Great Oaks from Little Acorns Grow: Strategies for New Venture Growth. Mukti V. Khaire, Columbia University Investment Networks and Merchant Elites in Early Modern England. Henning Hillmann, Stanford University Power and Post-Socialism, a Radical View: Lessons from Enterprise Restructuring. Jeffrey K. Hass, University of Reading 30. Regular Session. Gender and Politics Philadelphia Marriott, Room 408 Organizer: Nancy A. Naples, University of Connecticut Presider: Ellen K. Scott, University of Oregon Mobilization, Strategies, and Elite Support: An Institutionalist Analysis of State-level Woman Suffrage Movement Outcomes. Marie Cornwall, Brigham Young University; Eric C. Dahlin, University of Minnesota; Brayden King, University of Arizona Gendering Chicago Politics: Institutionalization and Legitimization of Power Positions for Women. Zohar Lechtman, University of Chicago Women’s Political Resources, National Legislatures, and Welfare State Spending in Twelve Capitalist Democracies. 56 Saturday, August 13, 8:30 a.m. Session 30, continued Catherine I. Bolzendah and Clem Brooks, Indiana University Gender/Family/State: Reproduction and Sexuality in Nicaragua, 1979-2002. Emily S. Mann, University of Maryland, College Park Discussant: Ellen K. Scott, University of Oregon 31. Regular Session. History of American Sociology Philadelphia Marriott, Independence Salon I Organizer and Presider: Stephen Turner, University of South Florida Beginnings of U.S. Pragmatism, Sociology, and Empire: Dewey, Mead, and the Philippine Problem, 1900-1930s. Peter Chua, San José State Unversity The Rise of Homans at Harvard: Pareto and the English Villagers. Lawrence T. Nichols, West Virginia University Merton’s Intellectual Legacy: Influences from Merton. Charles Crothers, Auckland University of Technology Towards a Theory of the Talking Class. Christian Fleck, University of Graz 32. Regular Session. Housing Supply, Housing Consumption Philadelphia Marriott, Independence Salon II Organizer and Presider: Franklin D. Wilson, University of Wisconsin, Madison Modeling Home: Ideals of Residential Life in Builders’ Show Houses. Krista E. Paulsen, University of North Florida Housing Discrimination as a Multi-Dimensional Phenomenon: Social Exclusion and Day-To-Day Discrimination. Diana Leilani Karafin, Griff M. Tester, and Vincent J. Roscigno, The Ohio State University The Impact of Family Assistance on the Transition to Homeownership: Racial/Ethnic Differences. Karina M. Shreffler, The Pennsylvania State University The Missing Link: Housing Non-Profits in Chicago Suburbs. Bonnie J. Lindstrom, Northwestern University Discussant: Franklin D. Wilson, University of Wisconsin, Madison This session focuses on the production of housing “taste” by developers; alternative sources of housing for low income/minority households; and discriminatory barriers to access to housing. 33. Regular Session. Labor Markets Philadelphia Marriott, Independence Salon III Organizer and Presider: Arthur Sakamoto, The University of Texas at Austin Deterioration in the Japanese Employment Practice and Career Images. Yoshimichi Sato, Tohoku University Exploitation in Contemporary Capitalism: Some Empirical Evidence for Taiwan. Jeng Liu, Tung-hai University; Arthur Sakamoto, The University of Texas at Austin; Kuo-Hsien Su, National Taiwan University Occupation and Growing Wage Inequality in the United States, 1983-2002. Changhwan Kim, The University of Texas at Austin Socialist Workers in Market Transition: Voluntary and Involuntary Job Mobility and Social Stratification in Urban China. Xiaogang Wu, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology; Yu Xie, University of Michigan Discussant: Theodore P. Gerber, University of Wisconsin, Madison 34. Regular Session. Mobilization as a Dynamic Process: Emotions, Organizations, and Coalitions Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Grand Salon I Organizer: Michael Biggs, University of Ilinois at UrbanaChampaign Presider: Daniel J. Myers, University of Notre Dame Collective Emotions and Mobilizing Congregation-Based Protest. Kraig Beyerlein, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill; Michael P. Young, The University of Texas at Austin Strange Bedfellows: Coalition Formation, Organizational Form and Strategic Advantage. Stephen R. Viscelli, Indiana University Housing LA: Political and Cultural Contexts in the Formation of Coalitions. Robert A. Penney, George Washington University Navigating the Minefield: The Effects of Competition, Opposition, and Social Movement Organization Media Strategies on Media Coverage Outcomes in the Abortion Debate. Deana Rohlinger, Florida State University Discussant: Daniel J. Myers, University of Notre Dame 35. Regular Session. Poverty Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Congress B Organizer: Michael E. Wallace, University of Connecticut Black Male Imprisonment as Contributors to Black Child Poverty. Pamela E. Oliver, Jessica Jacubowski, Gary D. Sandefur, and James E. Yocom, University of Wisconsin, Madison Coping with Rural Poverty. Jennifer Sherman, Universitiy of Califiornia, Berkeley Curbside Contenders: Dignity and Distancing among Immigrant Day Laborers. Gretchen Purser, University of California, Berkeley Understanding Macro-Level Variation in Women’s, Men’s and Saturday, August 13, 8:30 a.m. Feminized Poverty in Affluent Western Democracies, 19692000. David Owen Brady and Denise M. Kall, Duke University 36. Regular Session. Public Sociology and Public Policy Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Anthony Organizer and Presider: Pamela Herd, University of Wisconsin, Madison The Social Scientist as Public Intellectual. Charles F. Gattone, University of Florida Professional Advocacy for Social Justice in the Global Era. Andrew L. Barlow, Diablo Valley College The Effect of Family Size on Incentive Effects of Welfare Transfers in Two-Parent Families: An Evaluation Using Experimental Data. Alisa C. Lewin, University of Haifa and University of Chicago; Eric Maurin, Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, Paris The Political Economy of Pension Reform in Russia: Why did Russia Adopt the World Bank Model? John B. Williamson, Boston College; Michelle Maroto, University of Washington, Seattle Economists, not sociologists, are far more likely to represent social scientists in the public policy arena. But sociologists can, and should contribute to current day public policy debates. The papers in this session demonstrate the varied and important ways that sociologists can contribute, from welfare and public pension reforms, to the effects of globalization. Further, this panel explores more broadly what the role intellectuals should have in the public domain and policymaking process. 37. Regular Session. Uncertainty and Risks in Professional Work Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington B Organizer and Presider: Joan E. Manley, Ochsner Clinic Foundation Normalizing Risk: Web Workers Adapt to Employment Instability and Insecurity in the New Economy. Jonathan Michael Isler, University of California, Davis The Effect of Formal and Informal Governance Structures on Professional Risk-Taking. Theo van der Zee, Peter Muehlau, and Rafael P.M. Wittek, University of Groningen Uncertainty at Work and Gender Differences in Promotions: The Case of Large Law Firms. Elizabeth H. Gorman, University of Virginia Challenges to Professional Socialization: The Case of Surgical Residents and Duty-Hour Restrictions. James E. Coverdill and William Finlay, University of Georgia; John D. Mellinge,and Gina L. Adrales, Medical College of Georgia; Kimberly D. Anderson, University of Texas, Houston; Bruce W. Bonnell, Michigan State University, Grand Rapids; Joseph B. Cofer, University of Tennessee, Chattanooga; 57 Douglas Dorner, The Iowa Clinic, Des Moines; Carl Haisch, East Carolina University; Kristi L. Harold, Mayo Clinic, Scottsdale; Paula Termuhlen, Wright State University; Alexandra Webb, Emory University 38. Regular Session. Violence in Families and Relationships Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington A Organizer and Presider: Julie A. Phillips, Rutgers University Childhood Abuse as a Risk Factor for Adult Victimization among Persons with Severe Mental Illness. Virginia Aldige Hiday, Karl Jicha, and Stacy DeCoster, North Carolina State University Why Do Children in Single-Parent and Step-Families Experience More Victimization? Heather A. Turner, University of New Hampshire Stability and Change in the Experience of Partner Violence among Low-Income Women. Sonia M. Frias and Ronald J. Angel, The University of Texas at Austin Relationship Violence in Early Adulthood: A Comparison of Daters, Cohabitors, and Marrieds. Susan L. Brown and Jennifer Roebuck Bulanda, Bowling Green State University 39. Regular Session. Visual Sociology 1 Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Grand Salon II Organizer and Presider: Steven J. Gold, Michigan State University “Postmortem Photography: Historical and Cultural Reflections.” Laurel Elizabeth Hilliker, Michigan State University How to Pose Photographs: One Sociological Contribution to Visual Studies. Marshall Battani, Grand Valley State University On Visualizing Sociology. John R. Hall, University of Calfornia, Davis Using Visual Methods to Study Residential Integration in a Small City over a Century. Judith J. Friedman, Rutgers University Discussant: Gregory C. Stanczak, Williams College This session deals with the theory and practice of visual sociology 40. Regular Session. Welfare State: International Perspectives Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Grand Salon III-IV Organizer: Debra Street, University at Buffalo, State University of New York Presider: Melissa Barnett, Florida State University From Moscow to Brussels via Washington: Remaking the Welfare State in Central and East Europe. Kaan Agartan, 58 Saturday, August 13, 8:30 a.m. Session 40, continued State University of New York, Binghamton Regime Shift of the ‘European Social Model’ in European Union Policymaking: 2000 to 2004. Stephanie L. Mudge, University of California, Berkeley The East Asian Welfare State Debate: the Cases of Japan and South Korea. Pil Ho Kim, University of Wisconsin, Madison A Comparative Analysis of Children’s Rights. Lynn M. Gannon, Robin Shura Patterson, Brian Gran, and Michael Flatt, Case Western Reserve University Discussant: Ito Peng, University of Toronto 41. Section on Animals and Society Paper Session. Animal and Homo Sapien Interactions: Theory, Symbolic Interaction, and Policy Philadelphia Marriott, Room 403 Organizer and Presider: Rebecca F. Plante, Ithaca College The Construction of the Meaning of Animal in Early Sociological Theory: Case of Edvard Westermarck. Salla Maria Tuomivaara, University of Tampere Commemorating Samson: Articulating Boundaries between the Human Community and Wildlife. Paul Colomy, University of Denver; Robert T. Granfield, University at Buffalo, State University of New York Meat for Our Table: Retro Frontier Masculinity and the War Against Alaska’s Wolves. Sine Anahita and Tamara L. Mix, University of Alaska, Fairbanks An Analysis of Breed Discrimination of Domesticated Dogs. Josh Frank and Pamela L. Carlisle-Frank, FIREPAW The papers selected for this session all pose key questions about some aspect of animal and human interactions. Whether via the historical question of how sociologists theorised about animals, or via contemporary cases of the symbolism imputed to animals, each author interrogates a crucial policy-relevant aspect of the relationships of animals and homo sapiens. 42. Section on Medical Sociology Paper Session. Medicalized Bodies and Suffering Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon G Organizer and Presider: Dana Rosenfeld, Royal Holloway/ University of London Masculinity and the Social Construction of Cluster Headache. Joanna Kempner, The University of Michigan Tuberculosis and Urban Growth: Class, Race and Disease in Early Phoenix, Arizona. Sara Elizabeth Grineski, Bob Bolin, and Victor Agadjanian, Arizona State University Public Health and Refugee Detention: Conflicts in the Social Construction of the “Traumatized Refugee.” Tracy Chu, Graduate School and University Center, City University of New York From Victims to Patients: Sexual Assault Nurses, Forensic Examination, and the Medicalization of Rape. Lara Foley, University of Tulsa Discussant: Graham Nigel Scambler, University College London 43. Section on Political Economy of the World System Paper Session. Black Worlds and the World-System Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth A1 Organizer and Presider: William G. Martin, Binghamton University Black Internationalism and the Decline of White World Supremacy. Roderick D. Bush, St. John’s University Challenging the Dominant Paradigm: The World Market in Cotton, Forced Labor Migrations and Disruption of U.S. Slave Families. Wilma A. Dunaway, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Historical-Methodological Issues in ‘The Making of the Black Radical Tradition’: Recovering the Robinson-Hopkins Convergence. Kelvin Antonio Santiago-Valles, State University of New York, Binghamton Presents new research on the centrality of racial processes to the formation and development of a global social system. 44. Theory Section Paper Session. Open Topic in Theory Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon I Organizer: David G. Wagner, University at Albany, State University of New York Presider: Robert K. Shelly, Ohio University Exploring the “Sequence Effect” in Exchange Networks. Lisa Michelle Dilks and Kirk Sean McGrimmon, University of South Carolina Connection Configuration: Implications for Power in Compound Networks. Blane DaSilva, University of South Carolina Negative Emotional Energy: Reflections on the “Dark-Side” of Interaction Action Ritual Chains. David E. Boyns, California State University, Northridge Social Capital as a Relationally Contingent Construct: A Theoretical Resolution of a Sociological Debate. Teresa Marie Tsushima, Iowa State University 45. Section on Collective Behavior and Social Movements Refereed Roundtables Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon E Organizer: Guobin Yang, Barnard College 1. Space, Place, and Transnational Networks Saturday, August 13, 8:30 a.m. Presider: John A. Noakes, University of Pennsylvania Whose Streets?: Police and Protester Struggles over Space in Washington DC, September 29-30, 2001. John A. Noakes, University of Pennsylvania; Brian Klocke, University of Colorado, Boulder; Patrick F. Gillham, University of Alaska The Influence of Space on Student Protest. Bryan David Rookey, Leah M. Christian, and Nella Van Dyke, Washington State University (Trans)National Advocacy Networks and the Construction of Spatial Alliances: A Comparative Analysis of Two Local Women’s Movements in Eastern Germany. Katja M. Guenther, University of Minnesota The Invisible Hands: Latent Transnational Networks in Chinese Development. Stephanie Chan, University of California, San Diego 2. Globalization and Social Movements Presider: Joel P. Stillerman, Grand Valley State University Glocalization and the Transformation of Working-Class Identities among Chilean Metalworkers. Joel P. Stillerman, Grand Valley State University Ecofeminism Revisited: Diane Wilson, Union Carbide and the Struggle for Environmental Justice. Phoebe Christina Godfrey, Texas A&M International Universtiy The Effects of Economic Globalization on Regional Autonomy Movements: Evidence from Spain. Michelle Bata, Fordham University World Culture and the Emergence of Animal Rights. Lora Stone, University of New Mexico 3. Networks and Coalitions in Movement Mobilization Presider: Victoria L. Carty, Niagara University Protest, Cyberactivism, and New Social Movements: The Reemergence of the Peace Movement Post 9/11. Victoria L. Carty, Niagara University Movement Crossovers, Threats, and Sudden Mobilization: The Suprising Rise of the U.S. Antiwar Movement. Ellen R. Reese and Christine Petit, University of California, Riverside; David S. Meyer, University of California, Irvine The Politics of Human Rights: Framing Coalitions in the Israeli Radical Left, 1997-2000. Avi Goldberg, Concordia University Spotlight on the Organized Resistance towards Ending Domestic Violence in Bangladesh. A.K.M. Saiful Islam, Southern Illinois University 4. Identity Formation and Negotiation in Social Movements Presider: Belinda Robnett, University of California, Irvine We Don’t Agree: Collective Identity Justification Work in Social Movement Organizations. Belinda Robnett, University of California, Irvine 59 From Community of Support to Social Movement: The Vietnamese Adoptee Community. Natalie Cherot, State University of New York, Binghamton Dissident Identity Organizations: Negotiating Institutional Loyalty and Exit. Kelsy Noele Kretschmer, University of California, Irvine Building Solidarity through Difference: A Critical Multicultural Model of Organizing. David Dobbie, University of Michigan Can Imported Movement Identities Override Non-compatible Opportunity Structures? Conny Roggeband, Free University Amsterdam; Hans Pruijt, Erasmus University, the Netherlands 5. Identity Transformation in Social Movements Presider: Chris Bobel, University of Massachusetts, Boston Doing Activism, Being Activist and the Perfect Standard in a Contemporary Movement. Chris Bobel, University of Massachusetts, Boston Collective Identity Transformation from National Movements to Local Organizations: Transgender Inclusion in the LGB Movement, 1990-1994. Amy L. Stone, University of Michigan Social Movement Participation among Youth: An Examination of Social-Psychological Correlates. Catherine J. Corrigall-Brown, University of California, Irvine The Politics of Protest: Subjectivity, Migration and the New Urban Order. Anne L. Bartlett, University of Chicago 6. Art, Emotions, and Morality in Movement Mobilization Presider: Markus S. Schulz, New York University From Rancheros to Punk Rock: The Music of the Zapatista Movement. Markus S. Schulz, New York University Political Energies as Manifested through Art: Cultural Appeals and Mobilizational Processes within Social Movements. Daniel Sarabia, Roanoke College Culture and the Medical Marijuana Movement. Manuel Roberto Torres, University of Delaware Where Culture, Structure, and the Individual Meet. Charity Elizabeth Crabtree, Emory University 7. Threats, Repression, and Protest Presider: Sharon Erickson Nepstad, Duquesne University The Latent Functions of Social Movement Repression. Sharon Erickson Nepstad, Duquesne University Promoting or Preventing Social Change? Perceived Threat (Instrumental/Ideological) and Identity as Protest Participation Motives. Jacquelien van Stekelenburg and Bert Klandermans, Free University, The Netherlands The Effects of Temporal and Spatial Decay on Patterns of Repression and Protest. David G. Ortiz, University of Notre Dame From “The Anarchist Problem” to “A Respectable Method”: 60 Saturday, August 13, 8:30 a.m. Session 45, continued Terrorism, Direct Action, and the Political Legitimization of Anarchism in Catalunya, 1904-1908. Suzanne Hamilton Risley, New York University 8. Community Mobilization: New Organizational Types and Strategies Presider: Richard Sullivan, Illinois State University Do Unions Make us Strong? Worker Centers as Alternative Labor Movement Organizations. Richard Sullivan, Illinois State University Examining the Drivers of Philanthropic Investment in Chicago Neighborhoods. Heather MacIndoe, University of Chicago Social Movement Research: A Creative Approach to Understanding the Local Social Movement Sector. Maria Khorsand Dillard, East Carolina University Congregation-Based Community Organizing and the Future of Progressive Social Movements. Robert Kleidman, Cleveland State University 9. Opportunities and Challenges in Women’s Movements Presider: Randa I. Nasser, Birzeit University, Israel Palestinian Women’s Movement’s Empowerment and Resistance in Light of Oslo and the Tide of Foreign Aid. Randa I. Nasser, Birzeit University, Israel Feminism in the University. Suzanne Staggenborg, McGill University Parochialism of the U.S. Women’s Movement. Rachel V. Kutz-Flamenbaum, Stony Brook University, State University of New York Ideological Context and the Framing of Female Genital Mutilation. Lisa Dawn Wade, University of Wisconsin, Madison 10. Media Framing and Movement Mobilization Presider: Melinda S. Miceli, University of Hartford An Analysis of Newspaper Coverage of High School GayStraight Alliance Clubs 1984-2004. Melinda S. Miceli, University of Hartford How Media Frames Influence Movement Support. Rens Vliegenthart and Bert Klandermans, Free University, Amsterdam Getting into the Media or Getting Out the Message: Evaluating Mediated Protest Actions as a Tool for Delivering Social Movement Messages. Jeffrey Cormier, King’s College, University of Western Ontario; David B. Tindall, University of British Columbia Defenders of Nature and the Comarca: Contested Frames of Ethnicity, Sustainability, and Nationalism in Eastern Panama. Lynn Horton, Chapman University 11. Testing/Resurrecting Established Models Presider: Ira Martin Wasserman, Eastern Michigan University Testing the Resource Mobilization Model: Gender and Regional Attitudes toward Federal Anti-Lynching Legislation in 1937. Ira Martin Wasserman, Eastern Michigan University Resurrecting Smelser: Collective Power, Generalized Belief, and Hegemonic Spaces. Mikaila Mariel Lemonik Arthur, New York University The Power of Feelings and Social Movement Theorizing: Psychoanalytic Theory Meets the “Political Process Model.” Cheryl Ann Holzmeyer, University of California, Berkeley Collective Resistance in Post-Mao Rural China: An Examination of Two Social Movement Models. Dongtao Qi, Stanford University 12. Tactics and Recruitment Processes Presider: Lesley J. Wood, Columbia University We Who Resist: Deliberation, Codification, and the Diffusion of Direct Action Tactics. Lesley J. Wood, Columbia University The Politics of Antislavery Organizing. Cecelia Catherine Walsh-Russo, Columbia University 13. Section on Collective Behavior and Social Movements Relational Approaches to Movement Organization and Mobilization Presider: Larry L. Burmeister, University of Kentucky Contesting U.S. Farm Policy: The Sustainable Agriculture Movement Challenge. Larry L. Burmeister, Patrick Mooney, and Brian Foudray, University of Kentucky The Relationship between Lobbyists and Social Movements. John Scott, Cornell University Veganism as a Cultural Movement: A Relational Approach. Elizabeth Regan Cherry, University of Georgia Splitting a Social Movement: Collaboration vs. Environmental Regulations in New Jersey. Karen O’Neill and Caron Chess, Rutgers University 14. Diversity and Specialization in SMOs Presider: Joshua D. Freilich, John Jay College Criminal Justice Mismeasuring Militias: The Limitations of State-level Studies of Paramilitary Groups. Joshua D. Freilich, John Jay College Criminal Justice; William Alex Pridemore, Indiana University; Richard Spano, University of Alabama Niche Activism: Negotiating Organizational Heterogeneity in Contemporary American Social Movements. Sandra R. Levitsky, University of Wisconsin, Madison and University of California, Los Angeles 15. Leadership in Social Movements Presider: Andrew W. Martin, The Ohio State University Saturday, August 13, 8:30 a.m. Authority Structure and Collective Action: Leadership as Institutionalized Power in U.S. Union Organizing Outcomes in the Late Twentieth Century. Andrew W. Martin, The Ohio State University The Source of Grievance and Patterns of Mobilization in the 2nd Wave Japanese Feminist Movement. Kosuke Nikaido, University of Chicago From Idealism to Profitability: The Transformation of Participatory Incentives in Green Energy Movements. Koichi Hasegawa, Tohoku University; Jeffrey Broadbent, University of Minnesota 16. Interest Groups, NGOs, and Social Movements in Emerging Civil Societies Presider: Rita Jalali, Bethesda, MD From Conflict to Consensus: Foreign Funds and the Transformation of Contentious Politics in the South. Rita Jalali, Bethesda, MD An Organizational Approach to Recent Protest among Polish Farmers. Sarah K. Valdez, University of Washington Making Movements Institutionalize: The Dual Choice under Democratic Consolidation. Young-hwa Kim, Korea University Marketing Social Change after Communism: The Case of Domestic Violence in Slovakia. Magdalena Vanya, University of California, Davis 17. Cultural Expression, Conflict, and Activism Presider: Steven J. Tepper, Vanderbilt University Contentious Cities: Cultural Conflict in America. Steven J. Tepper, Vanderbilt University The Never Ending Dispute: How Framing and Language Have Prolonged the Abortion Debate in America. Michelle Lee Maroto, University of Washington “By Any Means Necessary”: Examining the Relationship between Popular Culture and Youth Activism. Andreana L. Clay, San Francisco State University 18. Social Movements and the Cultural Politics of Inclusion Presider: Eric Paul Magnuson, Loyola Marymount University Making ‘Good Black’ Citizens: Symbolic Citizenship, Martin Luther King and the Civil Rights Movement. Randolph H. Hohle, University at Albany, State University of New York “Changing the World One Man at a Time”: Transforming Cultural Conceptions of Masculinity and the American Dream. Eric Paul Magnuson, Loyola Marymount University The Meaning of Modern Day Vagrancy Laws: Advocates for the Homeless Shape the Debate. Mirella Landriscina, University of Pennsylvania 61 46. Section on Race, Gender, and Class Roundtables and Business Meeting Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth B 8:30-9:30am, Roundtables: Organizer: Donald C. Naylor, University of Southern California 1. Global Inequalities, Refugees, and Cross-Cultural Perspectives Presider: Stephanie J. Nawyn, University of Southern California Blackness as Masculine: How the Japanese Imagine Black Americans. Yuko Fujino, University of Florida Gender, Ethnicity, and “Problem” Refugees. Stephanie J. Nawyn, University of Southern California Global Inequalities and Activism: The Politics of Race, Gender, and Class in and among Societies. Bernice McNair Barnett, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign 2. Well Being and Locus of Control in African Americans Presider: Lauren Rauscher, Emory University Understanding the Paradox of Black Women’s Mental Health. Lauren Rauscher, Emory University The Effects of Group Identity and Perceived Discrimination on the Locus of Control. Olivia Nichole Perlow, Howard University 3. Constructing Black, White, and Hispanic Masculinities Presider: Suzel Bozada-Deas, University of Southern California “Black Power”: Fighting Racism While Recreating Patriarchy. James McKeever, University of Southern California Masculinity through the Eyes of Hispanic South Texas Men. Suzel Bozada-Deas, University of Southern California High-Tech Masculinities: Informal Interaction and Homosocial Reproduction in an Engineering Firm. Tom Waidzunas, University of California, San Diego 4. Exclusion, Inclusion and Diversity Presider: Joan S.M. Meyers, University of California, Davis Workplace Democracy Comes of Age: Creating Diversity and Economic Growth. Joan S.M. Meyers, University of California, Davis Defining Inclusion through a Framework of Intersectionality. Trina S. Smith, University of Minnesota 5. Race, Class, Gender and Families Presider: Natalia Sarkisian, Boston College Family Type, Economic Disadvantage and Residential Segregation: Empirical Patterns in Houston, TX. Lindsay Michelle Howden, Texas A&M University Extended Family Integration among Latinos/as and Euro 62 Saturday, August 13 Session 46, continued Americans: Cultural and Structural Determinants of Ethnic Differences. Natalia Sarkisian, Boston College; Mariana Gerena, University of Massachusetts 6. Students, Curriculum and Educational Institutions Presider: Jeanne Gazel, Michigan State University The Effect of Gender and Race on Student Engagement at a Predominantly White Institution. Christin Lee Munsch, Cornell University; Joseph A. Marolla, Virginia Commonwealth University Theorizing and Practicing Race, Class, Gender Intersectional Analysis in a Race Relations Curriculum. Jeanne Gazel, Michigan State University Educational Schizophrenia: Black Middle Class Students Making Sense of Hyper-racialization and Deracialization. Carol Ann Wright, Wesleyan University 7. Work and Social Transformation (or not) Presider: Jennifer Louise Hanis, University of Chicago Presence and Persistence: Poverty Ideology and Inner City Teaching. J. Gregg Robinson, Grossmont College Embodying Contradictions at the Bottom and the Top: The Case of Women’s Professional Basketball. Jennifer Louise Hanis, University of Chicago 8. Work: Entrepreneurship, Social Capital, and Labor Force Participation Presider: Adia M. Harvey, Johns Hopkins University The Influence of Race, Gender, and Class on Working-Class African American Women’s Entrepreneurship. Adia M. Harvey, Johns Hopkins University Social Capital Resources and Social Programs: Advancement Mechanisms for Disadvantaged Groups. Rochelle E. Parks-Yancy, Texas Southern University; Nancy DiTomaso, Rutgers University; Corinne Anne Post, Pace University Labor Force Participation of Women: Young Children, Race/Ethnicity, and Nativity. Kurt Gore, University of Texas 9:30-10:10am, Business Meeting 8:30 am Other Groups AKD Sociological Inquiry Editorial Board (to 10:10am)— Philadelphia Marriott, Room 302 9:30 am Meetings 2006 Distinguished Scholarly Publication Award Selection Committee (to 12:10pm)—Philadelphia Marriott, Room 308 Section on Race, Gender, and Class Business Meeting (to 10:10am)—Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth B Section on Sociology of Education Business Meeting (to 10:10am)—Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon B 9:30 am Tour Tour 3: Germantown Avenue (to 12:00pm; ticket required for admission)—Philadelphia Marriott, Lobby (at 12th Street)—SOLD OUT 10:30 am Meetings 2006 Career of Distinguished Scholarship Award Selection Committee (to 12:10pm)—Philadelphia Marriott, Room 309 Honors Program Discussions (to 12:10pm)—Philadelphia Marriott, Room 401-402 Orientation for First-Time Meeting Attendees (to 12:10pm)— Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth B Section on Animals and Society Council Meeting (to 11:30am)—Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon L 10:30 am Sessions 47. Thematic Session. American Family Changes in International Perspective: Rearguard or Cutting Edge? Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington A Organizer and Presider: Kathleen Gerson, New York University Work-Family Reconciliation Policies: The U.S. in CrossNational Perspective. Janet Gornick, Baruch College, City University of New York Farewell to Maternalism? State Policies and Mothers’ Employment. Ann Shola Orloff, Northwestern University A Social Demographic Overview of Family Change. Lawrence L. Wu, New York University Changes in American family life pose a paradox. Some dimensions of family change are positioned on the cutting edge of international developments, while others are lagging behind other post-industrial nations. The panel will consider U.S. family trends and policies in cross-national perspective, with a focus on how this paradox leaves contemporary American families facing new contradictions and cross-pressures. Saturday, August 13, 10:30 a.m. 48. Thematic Session. Terrorism: Interrogating the Concept Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington C Organizer: Ronald A. Lembo, Amherst College Presider: Margaret Cerullo, Hampshire College Panelists: Christopher Dole, Amherst College Setha Low, New York University Stephen Pfohl, Boston College 49. Special Session. IRBs and Social Science Research Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Adams Organizer: Sydney A. Halpern, University of Illinois at Chicago Deference and Scrutiny on a General IRB. Raymond Devries, University of Minnesota How a Social and Behavioral IRB Works: What Investigators Should Know. Jan Jaeger, University of Pennsylvania IRB Oversight: Disciplinary Processes and Regulatory Policy. Sydney A. Halpern, University of Illinois at Chicago Research Regulation and Ethics: A Complaint, a Remedy, and a Research Agenda. Charles L. Bosk, University of Pennsylvania The application of human-subjects protections to social research has generated considerable controversy. It is now also stimulating serious empirical study. This session presents new findings on the regulation of social science research, exploring both the formulation of oversight policies and the operation of IRBs. Following paper presentations, the session will shift to a structured panel discussion with audience participation. The focus here will be clarifying directions for future study. 50. Special Session. Local, Regional, and Global Sociologies: Social Conflicts and Social Movements (co-sponsored by the International Sociological Association) Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Congress A Organizers: Sujata Patel, University of Pune, India; and A. Douglas A. Kincaid, Florida International University Presider: Sujata Patel, University of Pune, India Development, Dictatorship and Democratisation: Trajectories of Brazilian Sociology. Maria Stella Grossi Porto and Tom Dwyer, Brazilian Sociological Society South African Sociology in Transition: Tradition, Imagination and Transformation. Tina Uys, University of Johannesburg Globalization and the Weakness of Social Protest. Karl SiebertRehberg, German Sociological Association Urban Violence and Citizenship. The Sociological Theory on Health and Violence in Latin America. Roberto Briceño León, Universidad Central de Venezuela Discussant: Sujata Patel, University of Pune, India 63 51. Author Meets Critics Session. Flat Broke with Children: Women in the Age of Welfare Reform (Oxford University Press, 2003) by Sharon Hays Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington B Organizer and Presider: Demie Kurz, University of Pennsylvania Critics: Mimi Abramovitz, Hunter College Elaine Bell Kaplan, University of Southern California Nancy Naples, University of Connecticut Author: Sharon Hays, University of Virginia 52. Regional Spotlight Session. Assessing Metropolitan Fragmentation in Philadelphia Philadelphia Marriott, Room 303 Organizer: David Elesh, Temple University Panelists: George Galster, Wayne State University Paul A. Jargowsky, University of Texas at Dallas John R. Logan, Brown University 53. Academic Workshop. Teaching Online Courses Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon K Organizer: Beth Tracton-Bishop, College of St. Elizabeth Leaders: Beth Tracton-Bishop, College of St. Elizabeth Mary T. Chayko, College of St. Elizabeth This workshop on “Teaching Online Courses” will engage the participants in a lively discussion and presentation of some of the best practices for teaching web-based classes. The topics covered will include (1) course management issues, such as lengthy or abbreviated threaded discussions, (2) innovative multimedia techniques to enhance class activities, such as interactive games, audiofiles and streaming videos and (3) explore faculty concerns with course asssessment, such as online testing, group projects and course feedback. Participants will learn specific techniques to enhance their courses. These techniques can be used on a variety of platforms, including, but not limited to, WebCT and Blackboard. 54. Teaching Workshop. Community-Based Research: A Workshop on Teaching to Diversify Voices Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Tubman Organizer: John Jason Green, Delta State University Co-Leaders: John Jason Green, Delta State University Anna M. Kleiner, Southeastern Louisiana University Community-based research involves professional researchers, students, organizers, service providers and residents working together to answer questions crucial for improving quality of life. The goal is to help diversify and amplify voices in the construction, acquisition and application of knowledge. It brings together approaches that are “participatory” and “action” oriented, all sharing several common themes, including meaningful participation, collaboration and pursuit of social change. The 64 Saturday, August 13, 10:30 a.m. Session 54, continued Participants are invited to bring syllabi, course projects, course activities, bibliographies, and other course materials. It is recommended that the ASA Teaching Resources manual on teaching the sociology of dying and death be brought to the workshop. In my nearly forty years of work in this field, I have learned a great deal of information, approaches, and insights that I will share with participants. Participants will receive handouts, web sites with great information, share knowledge, and great ideas for teaching what I consider to be the best, most interesting, most student-involve course that I teach 2. Natural Resources: Predictors for War. Leda E. Nath and Margarita V. Alario, University of Wisconsin, Whitewater 3. Untangling the Relationship between Welfare Receipt and Drug Abuse. Celia C. Lo and Tyrone Cheng, University of Alabama at Birmingham 4. Culture Conflict and Integration in Comprehensive Colleges: Sociological and Faculty Development Perspectives. Susanne Morgan, Ithaca College; Becky Glass, State University of New York, Geneseo; Diane Pike, Augsburg College; Richard Reddy, State University of New York, Fredonia 5. Poverty, Social Exclusion, and Women. Fatima Gunes, Anadolu University 6. Teaching Research Methods Using Classics and Hands-on Experiences. Chuck Ditzler, University of Wisconsin, Madison 7. The Emerging Social Movement for the Black Belt South. Ronald C. Wimberley, North Carolina State University; Libby V. Morris 8. Transforming Dominant Discourse: The Interrelationship between Theory, Policy, and Practice. Susan R. Takata, University of Wisconsin, Parkside; Jeanne Curran, California State University, Dominguez Hills 9. Continuity and Rapture: Negotiation between Christian Spirits and Chinese Culture. Gehui Zhang, Georgia State University 10. Stepping Away from the Everyday: Engaging Students through Special Topics Courses. Joel Nathan Rosen, Debra Wetcher-Hendricks, Daniel A. Jasper, Bettie M. Smolansky, and Michelle Deegan, Moravian College 11. It’s About Time: Social Class Differences in the Allocation of Time Among Youth and Their Parents. Diane Hernandez, Cornell University 12. HIV/AIDS Mortality and Households in Rural South Africa. Sangeetha Madhavan, Harvard University 13. Crime and Violence in the Countryside. Matthew R. Lee, Louisiana State University 14. The Conceptualization of Patriotism Among African Americans: An Exploratory Study. Olivia Nichole Perlow, Howard University 15. The Classroom Culture as Living Experiences to Learn about Sociology. Leslie T.C. Wang, University of Toledo 56D. Informal Discussion Roundtables I Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon F Organizer: Ralph B. McNeal, Jr., University of Connecticut 1. A Profile of the Georgia Caregiver. Janice K. Purk, Mansfield University 57. Student Session. Gender and the Construction of Identity Philadelphia Marriott, Room 305 Organizer: Laura M. Tach, Harvard University Presider: Lori Ann Peek, Colorado State University workshop will first focus on the community-based research framework, synthesizing a wide array of theoretical and methodological perspectives. This will involve review of real-world research projects undertaken with graduate students. Sustantive topics include poverty, health and healthcare, workforce development and sustainable alternatives. The second section concerns political, economic and disciplinary opportunites and challenges to this form of research and teaching. Third, workshop participants will engage in group discussions aimed at identifying community-based research topics, processes and partners for diversifying voices to create and applied learning environment. 55. Teaching Workshop. Teaching Applied Sociology Philadelphia Marriott, Room 411 Organizer: Robert E. Kettlitz, Hastings College Panelists: Robert E. Kettlitz, Hastings College John E. Glass, Colin County Community College Laurie M. Joyner, Loyola University, New Orleans Jammie Price, Appalachian State University Tillman Rodabough, Baylor University Stephen F. Steele, Anne Arundel Community College Jay A. Weinstein, Eastern Michigan University This workshop will provide insights and strategies for teaching applied sociology. Presentations will cover three themes. (1) Topics - How do conceptual and theoretical materials differ between teaching applied sociology and the standard sociology curriculum? (2) Tools - What tools do students taking applied sociology acquire that are not provided to students taking traditional sociology courses? (3) Tasks - What are the purposes and nature of the active learning strategies that are employed in teaching applied sociology versus the traditional sociology curriculum? 56. Teaching Workshop. Teaching the Sociology of Death and Dying Philadelphia Marriott, Room 409 Organizer/Leader: Gerry R. Cox, University of Wisconsin, La Crosse Saturday, August 13, 10:30 a.m. 65 “Bully Broads and Black Bitches: Another Chapter in Sexism and Racism in the Corporation.” Gwendolyn Royal-Smith, North Carolina State University Girls Rule: The Recent Movement for Women’s Sports. Alexa Yesukevich, Cornell University Sex Differences in Gender Role Attitudes. Jamie Michelle Lewis, The Ohio State University A Matter of Timing: Age at Transition to Parenthood and Father Involvement. Matthew N. Weinshenker, University of Chicago Female Action Heroes: Different but Equal, or Equal and the Same. Patrick Burke, Carleton University “Che” Guevara and the Rise of the Pop Martyr. Kerry Michael Dobransky, Northwestern University Divided Reactions: Contestation over the Memory of the Dawson Family. Corey D. Fields, Northwestern University Representing Violence: National Memory and Personal History in the U.S. Press. Alexandra Halkias, Panteion University Cautious Commemoration of a National Minority: Monuments for Palestinian Martyrs in Israel. Tamir Sorek, Cornell University Discussant: Jonathan Markovitz, University of California, San Diego This session investigates the social construction of masculine and feminine identities and the influence of gender on individual and collective experiences. The papers featured in this session examine women and men’s roles at work and home; explore gendered beliefs, attitudes, and behaviors; and analyze representations of masculinity and femininity in the media. Using both quantitative and qualitative methodological approaches, these studies demonstrate how individuals take on gendered qualities and characteristics and ultimately acquire a sense of self. 60. Regular Session. Conversation Analysis and Sociolinguistics Philadelphia Marriott, Room 403 Organizer and Presider: John Heritage, University of California, Los Angeles Doing Things with “Risk”: Some Uses of “Risk” in Primary Care Visits. Timothy Halkowski, University of Wisconsin Medical School Mentioning Additional Symptoms: A Resource for Negotiating the Diagnostic and Treatment Outcome. Tanya Stivers, Max Planck Institute On Problems of Meaning in Everyday Life: The Organization of Diagnostic Interpretations in the Clinic. Douglas W. Maynard, University of Wisconsin Patient “Demand” for Medical Interventions in Primary Care. Virginia Teas Gill, Illinois State University 58. Regular Session. Addressing Problems in Survey Research Philadelphia Marriott, Room 307 Organizer and Presider: Robert M. OBrien, University of Oregon Comparison of Methods for Handling Missing Data in the Context of a Cox Regression Model Using Restrictive and Inclusive Strategies. Hongyu Wang, National University of Singapore; Paul D. Allison, University of Pennsylvania Application of a Test for Evaluating Ignorability of Missing Survey Income Data. Michael R. Wood, Hunter College, City University of New York Respondent Driven Sampling and Social Networks: A New Sampling Method. Cyprian Wejnert and Douglas Heckathorn, Cornell University “Can I Change Your Depression?”: Understanding the Role of Interviewer Effects. Aaron Peeks, University of Nebraska, Lincoln The session focuses on problems in survey research. Two papers examine missing data: what to do about it and when is it ignorable. One paper investigates the use of respondent driven sampling in social network studies. The final paper examines the perennial problem of interviewer effects using a hierarchical linear modeling approach. 59. Regular Session. Collective Memory II: Nationalisms, Ethnicity, and Racial Identities Philadelphia Marriott, Room 310 Organizer and Presider: Jonathan Markovitz, University of California, San Diego 61. Regular Session. Crime and Control: Social Institutions and Their Relationship to Reporting and Offending Philadelphia Marriott, Room 407 Organizer: Amy Victoria D’Unger, Emory University Presider: Michael E. Ezell, Vanderbilt University An Analysis of the Self-Reported Effects of Crime and Police Protection. Vincent Ferraro, Northeastern University Collective Efficacy in Schools Too? Comparing the Influence of School and Neighborhood Context on Arrest. David S. Kirk, University of Chicago Family and School-related Factors Predicting Arrest in Adolescence and Early Adulthood. Emily M. West, University of Pennsylvania The Effects of Routine Activities and Bonds to Society on Adolescent Alcohol and Marijuana Use. Lizabeth Ann Crawford, Bradley Unversity; Katherine B. Novak, Butler University Local Institutions, Crime, and Social Control: A MixedMethods Approach. Erin R. Powers, University of Washington 66 Saturday, August 13, 10:30 a.m. Session 61, continued The papers in this session all deal with the ability of social institutions (neighborhoods or communities, families, schools, etc.) to regulate offending or the reporting of crime. Substantive issues to be covered in this session include routine activities and adolescent drug use, collective efficacy in schools, and the effects of community on crime reporting. 62. Regular Session. Feminist Research Methods Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Grand Salon I Organizers: Denise A. Copelton, College at Brockport, State University of New York; Julie Childers, Planned Parenthood League of Massachusetts Presider: Julie Childers, Planned Parenthood League of Massachusetts Making Positionality Visible in Feminist Research: Some Methodological Considerations for Personal Narrative Analysis. MJ Maynes and Jennifer L. Pierce, University of Minnesota Researching Sexuality and Stigma. Kathleen Guidroz, Mount St. Mary’s University; Michele Berger, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Tripping Over the Tulips: Using Feminist Methods to Study Contemporary U.S. Quilters. Marybeth C. Stalp, University of Northern Iowa 63. Regular Session. Gender Composition, Segregation, and Networks Philadelphia Marriott, Room 408 Organizer: Jacqueline Johnson, Fordham University Presider: Maria Charles, University of California, San Diego Informal Job Search and Employment in the Service Sector: The Role of Female Network Ties. Danielle Farrie and Julie E. Press, Temple University Gendering Jobs: Networks and Queues in the Hiring Process. Roberto M. Fernandez and Marie Louise Mors, Massachusetts Institute of Technology How Many Women?: Job Gender and Wage Bias in Three Organizations. John B. Kervin, University of Toronto at Mississauga 64. Regular Session. History of European Sociology Philadelphia Marriott, Independence Salon I Organizer: Stephen Turner, University of South Florida Presider: Gianfranco Poggi, European University Institute Changing Readings of Legitimacy in Max Weber’s Sociology of Domination. Nicolas Eilbaum, Cornell University Emile Durkheim Engages the Pragmatist Divide. Robert C. Prus, University of Waterloo Marcel Mauss in America. Marcel Fournier, University of Montreal, Canada Robert Merton and British Sociology. Jennifer Platt, University of Sussex, England 65. Regular Session. Islam: Fate, Law and Revival Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon H Organizer and Presider: Ahmad Sadri, Lake Forest College Weber’s Misunderstanding of Traditional Islamic Law. Gulseren Kozak-Isik, University of Minnesota Is There Such a Thing as Islamic Fatalism: Classic Social Theory Speaks to the “Clash of Civilizations” Debate. Gabriel Acevedo, University of Texas, San Antonio The Sovereignty of God, Natural Law and Legitimation through Shared Values: Constitutional Processes in Islam and Christianity. Mark Gould, Haverford College Islamic Revival among Second Generation Arab Muslims in Chicago: The American Experience and Globalization Intersect. Louise Cainkar, Univerisity of Illinois, Chicago “Sorry, but It’s the Law”: The Westernization of Islam. Gwendolyn Yvonne Alexis, Monmouth University Discussant: Mahmoud Sadri, Texas Woman’s University This session will start with re-examining general Western perspectives on the limitations of the Islamic Law and vicissitudes of Muslim Fatalism and continue with a study of Shariah as a basis of an Islamic constitution. Two shorter and more practical papers will focus on the evolving conditions of Muslim émigré population in Europe and United States. 66. Regular Session. Local Communities and Global Contexts Philadelphia Marriott, Independence Salon II Organizer and Presider: Thomas Lyson, Cornell University Constructing the State One Community at a Time: The Mahallah Initiative and State Formation in Uzbekistan. Neema Noori, Columbia University Decentralization and the Neo-Liberal Roll Out: Are Communities Racing to the Bottom? Linda Lobao, Ohio State University Participatory Development in Honduras: A Process Across Institutions, Cultures, and Continents. Denese Ashbaugh Vlosky, Duke Discussant: Michael Irwin, Duquesne University This session focuses on how global economic and political contexts shape community processes. Saturday, August 13, 10:30 a.m. 67. Regular Session. Methods: Integrating Qualitative and Quantitative Approaches Philadelphia Marriott, Independence Salon III Organizer: Robert F. Freeland, University of Wisconsin Presider: Jeremy Freese, University of Wisconsin Qualitative Comparative Analysis. Is There a Difference between Random and Real Models? Axel Marx, Hogeschool Antwerpen Integrating Qualitative and Quantitative Approaches to Rresearching Effects of Transnational Networks on Local AIDS Organizations. Nielan Barnes, University of California, San Diego Using Qualitative Methods to Improve Measurement Error in Quantitative Data. Stephanie Willson and Kristen Miller, National Center for Health Statistics 68. Regular Session. Organizational Competition and Collaboration Philadelphia Marriott, Room 306 Organizer: Jesper B. Sorensen, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Presider: Olga M. Khessina, University of California, Berkeley Differentiation and Imitation in the Graphical Trademark Designs of Internet Firms, 1994-2003. James I. Bowie, University of Arizona Dyad and Network: Models of Manufacturer-Supplier Collaboration in the Japanese TV Manufacturing Industry. James R. Lincoln, University of California, Berkeley; Didier Guillot, INSEAD Predicting Multiple Commodity Flows in Interorganizational Flow Networks. Pamela E. Emanuelson, University of South Carolina The Ecological Interdependence of Emergent and Established Organizational Populations. Stanislav D. Dobrev, University of Chicago; Albert Chu-Ying Teo, National University of Singapore; Salih Zeki Ozdemir, University of Chicago Discussant: Olga M. Khessina, University of California, Berkeley 69. Regular Session. Population Processes and Demographic Change Philadelphia Marriott, Room 304 Organizer and Presider: Pamela J. Smock, University of Michigan Demographic Change in China: Trends in Chinese Sexual Behavior. William Parish, Edward O. Laumann, and Sanyu A. Mojola, University of Chicago Community Migration History and Patterns of Change in Migrant Characteristics: Evidence from Nang Rong, Thailand. Filiz Garip and Sara R. Curran, Princeton 67 University Cohabitation in Comparative Perspective: Educational Differences in the Characteristics and Meaning of Consensual Unions. Sheela Kennedy, University of Wisconsin Racial Residential Segregation in Rust Belt Metropolises. Reynolds Farley, University of Michigan; Maria Krysan, University of Illinois at Chicago; Mick Couper, University of Michigan Discussant: Anne Pebley, University of California, Los Angeles 70. Regular Session. Punishment and Confinement Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Congress C Organizer and Presider: Christopher Uggen, University of Minnesota From Rights to Revolution: The Impact of the Prisoners’ Rights Movement on the Carceral State in the United States. Marie Gottschalk, University of Pennsylvania Preparing for Prison? Inner-city Schools and the Extended Reach of Criminal Justice. Paul Hirschfield, Rutgers University Inside and Out: Community Re-entry and Change among Incarcerated Urban Youth. Jamie J. Fader, University of Pennsylvania Health Consequences of Incarceration. Michael Massoglia, University of Minnesota Racial Politics and Death Sentences: A Panel Analysis. Jason Thomas Carmichael and David Jacobs, Ohio State University 71. Regular Session. Risk Factors across the Life Course Philadelphia Marriott, Room 410 Organizer: Karl Alexander, Johns Hopkins University Presider: Jane D. McLeod, Indiana University Disparities in Psychological Distress Across Education and Sex in Adulthood: Is the Formative Stage Recent or Remote? Richard A. Miech, Johns Hopkins University; Chris Power, Institute of Child Health, London; William W. Eaton, Johns Hopkins University Stress in Childhood and Adulthood: Effects on Marital Quality Over Time. Debra Umberson and Hui Liu, University of Texas at Austin Does Parental Death Increase the Risk of Cardiovsacular Diseases? Shalon MauRene Irving, Purdue University; Kenneth F. Ferraro, Purdue University Adolescent Substance Use, Successful Development in Young Adulthood, and Adult Substance Abuse and Dependence. Sabrina Oesterle, Karl G. Hill, and J. David Hawkins, University of Washington Discussant: Richard A. Settersten, Case Western Reserve University 68 Saturday, August 13, 10:30 a.m. 72. Regular Session. Social Psychology Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon C Organizer and Presider: Pamela Braboy Jackson, Indiana University Attribution and Commitment in Different Types of Exchange. Alexandra M. Gerbasi, Stanford University Verifying and Maintaining Social Actors: The Role of Resources. Jan E. Stets, University of California, Riverside; Alicia D. Cast, Iowa State University The Social Stigma of Obesity: Does Body Weight Affect the Quality of Interpersonal Relationships ? Deborah Carr, Rutgers University The Captive Heart: Women’s Satisfaction and Commitment in Prison Inmate Relationships. Susan Miller, Palomar College; Diane H. Felmlee, University of California, Davis 73. Regular Session. Sociology of Emotions Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon B Organizer and Presider: Steven L. Gordon, California State University, Los Angeles Elastic Social Structures and Compromised Selves: Some Empirical Implications of Goffman’s EmbarrassmentInteraction Link. Omar A. Lizardo, University of Arizona The Sociology of Work Values: A New Perspective. Jennifer M. Ashlock, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill William James on Sentiment, Self, Cognition, Meaning, and Conduct. Frank J. Page, University of Utah 74. Regular Session. The Nature and Effect of Migrant Transnationalism Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Congress B Organizer: Elizabeth Heger Boyle, University of Minnesota Presider: Erika Busse, University of Minnesota Comparative Analysis of Diasporas in the United States and Their Contributions to Homeland Development. Rubin Patterson, University of Toledo Dynamics of Taiwan Independence Movement in the United States. Chi-Chen Chiang, The University of Chicago Transnational Household Economies, Guerrero-New York. Robert Courtney Smith, Baruch College, City University of New York; Ernesto Castaneda, Columbia University Learning Transnationalism: Social Capital and Students’ Socialization to Transnational Practices. Erin Lyn Metz, Northwestern University Women’s Stories: Brazilian Immigrant Women as “Transnational” Migrants. Judith McDonnell and Cileine Izabel de Lourenco, Bryant University 75. Regular Session. Voluntary and Non-Profit Organizations Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Grand Salon II Organizer: Kieran Healy, University of Arizona Presider: Emily A. Barman, Boston University The Implications of Transitions in the Volunary Sector for Civic Engagement: A Case Study. Sarah Sobieraj, Tufts University Explaining the Survival of Poor People’s Social Movement Organizations: Coalitions, Membership Composition, and Resources. Edward T. Walker and John D. McCarthy, Pennsylvania State University Keeping the Faith? Examining Faith-Based Organizations as Quasi-State Agents. Amie P. Hess, New York University Effectiveness in Civic Associations: Leader Development, Member Engagement, and Public Influence in the Sierra Club. Kenneth T. Andrews, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Marshall Ganz, Matthew G. Baggetta, and Chaeyoon Lim, Harvard University; Hahrie Han, Stanford University Discussant: Emily A. Barman, Boston University 76. Regular Session. Wealth Philadelphia Marriott, Room 404 Organizer and Presider: Wei-Jun Jean Yeung, New York University Gender, Marriage, Parenthood and Wealth: The Assets of Single Females in the United States. Alexis Yamokoski and Lisa A. Keister, Ohio State University When Wealth Matters: Parental Wealth and Child Development. Lori A. Campbell, Ohio State University Wealth Inequality: Differences among Five Asian Immigrant Groups in the U.S. Ying Yang and Elena Vesselinov, University of South Carolina Discussant: Lingxin Hao, Johns Hopkins University 77. Regular Session. Welfare State: North American Perspectives Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Grand Salon III-IV Organizer: Debra Street, University at Buffalo, State University of New York Presider: Brandy D. Harris, Florida State University Legitimating Social Welfare Policies through Work? A Comparison of Old Age Insurance and the Works Progress Administration, 1935-1950. Chad Alan Goldberg, University of Wisconsin, Madison The Role of Interests and Values in Declining Support for the Saturday, August 13, 10:30 a.m. Welfare State. Kevin W. Riley, University of California, Los Angeles The Rise and Fall of Provincial Minimum Wages: Labor Movements, Business Interests and Partisan Theory. Sebastien St-Arnaud, University of Toronto Taxing and Spending in the US Welfare State: Social Welfare Winners and Losers. Debra Street and Melissa Kondrak, University at Buffalo, State University of New York Towards a Regional Welfare State? Restructuring the Welfare State in the Age of “New” Regionalism. Tuba Inci Agartan, State University of New York, Binghamton Discussant: Melissa Barnett, Florida State University 78. Section on Medical Sociology Paper Session. Health, Illness and Care in an Aging Society Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon G Organizer and Presider: Jennie Jacobs Kronenfeld, Arizona State University Divergent Perceptions of Nursing Home Care as a Barrier to Organizational Change. Janet S. Severance, Midwestern University Emergency Medicine and Older Adults: Predicting Caregiver Burden Levels among Emergency Physicians. John G. Schumacher, University of Maryland, Baltimore County; Bert Woolard, Brown University; Gary T. Deimling, Case Western Reserve University Is This a Sustainable Occupation? A Profile of the Direct Care Giver Workforce in the United States. Sharyn J. Potter and Allison Churilla, University of New Hampshire; Kristin Smith, U.S. Bureau of the Census; Cynthia Mil Duncan, University of New Hampshire The Social Organization of Paid Long Term Care: Trapped at the Bottom and Still Caring. Jennifer Craft Morgan, University of North Carolina 79. Section on Race, Gender, and Class Paper Session. Historical Precursors and Theorizing Intersectionality Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Anthony Organizers and Presiders: Tomas Enrique Encarnacion, Washington, DC; Gail Wallace, Iowa State University Native American Women, Poverty and the Reservation: The Pull of Gemeinshaft. Shirley Rombough, Great Basin College; Diane C. Keithly, Louisiana State University Racing Gender or Gendering Race? Theorizing Empirical Intersectional Research. Amy C. Wilkins, University of Missouri, Columbia; C. Shawn McGuffey, University of Massachusetts Saphhire vs. Sambo: A Comparative Analysis of the Hegemonic Perpetuation of Black Gender Identity in Mainstream Film, 1930-1940 and 1990-Present. Zoe Spencer and Sheldon 69 Applewhite, Howard University Submerge Networks and Predicting Movement Emergence in Resource Mobilization Theory. John Allen Barnshaw, The University of North Carolina, Charlotte Du Bois and the Sociological Conceptualization and Theoretical Discussion of Race. Michael L. Siegfried, Coker College 80. Section on International Migration Paper Session. Multiple Transnational Migrations Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth A2 Organizer and Presider: Peter Kivisto, Augustana College Transnationalist or Nationalist? Mexican Catholic Emigration Policies, 1920-2004. David Fitzgerald, University of California, Los Angeles From National Inclusion to Economic Exclusion in Ethnic Hungarian Labor Migration to Hungary. Jon Edward Fox, University of Bristol The Impact of Internet Use on Transnational Entrepreneurship: The Case of Chinese Immigrants to Canada. Wenhong Chen, University of Toronto Immigration and Socioeconomic Transnationalism in Vietnam. Dzung Thi Kieu Vu, Vietnam National University Discussant: Steven J. Gold, Michigan State University 81. Section on Collective Behavior and Social Movements Paper Session. New Methods for Studying Culture in Social Movements Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon J Organizer and Presider: Marc W. Steinberg, Smith College War Pictures: The Grotesque as Moral Repertoire in the Antislavery and Antiabortion Movements. Drew Halfmann, University of California, Davis; Michael P. Young, The University of Texas at Austin Changing Minds: Cognition and Culture in the Opposition to Workfare in New York City. John D. Krinsky, City College, City University of New York Studying Audience Reception of Cultural Repertoires. Verta A. Taylor, University of California, Santa Barbara Translation and Transformation in Collective Action: The Environmental Movement in China. Guobin Yang, Barnard College Discussant: Nina Eliasoph, University of Southern California 82. Section on Political Economy of the World System Paper Session. Imperialism and Nation-Building Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth A1 Organizer and Presider: Gay W. Seidman, University of Wisconsin-Madison Elasticity of Size and the Geopolitics of European Integration. Jozsef Borocz, Rutgers University 70 Saturday, August 13, 10:30 a.m. Session 82, continued End of Ethnic Movements? Religious Extremism in South Asia. Laila Bushra, Johns Hopkins University Overstretch and Underdevelopment: Export Processing Zones, US Hegemony, and the Limits to “Soft Power.” Andrew Schrank, Yale University The Origins of a Developmental State: The Case of Mysore, 1881-1947. Chandan Gowda, University of Michigan World-Systems, Borders, Boundaries, and Frontiers: An Exploration. Thomas D. Hall, DePauw University 83. Section on Communications and Technology Roundtables and Business Meeting Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon D 10:30-11:30am, Roundtables: Organizer: Gina Neff, University of California, San Diego 1. News and the Net Presider: Anne M. Holohan, University of Trento Privacy and Technology: Newspaper Coverage from 1985 to 2003. Christena Nippert-Eng, Illinois Institute of Technology; Meghan Carlock, Chicago-Kent College of Law; Nicholas Nimchuk, Illinois Institute of Technology; Jay Melican, Microsoft; Nalini P. Kotamraju, University of California, Berkeley; James C. Witte, Clemson University Blogging for Votes: An Examination of the Interaction between Weblogs and the Electoral Process. Remy Cross, University of California, Irvine Public Service and the Transformations of the Journalistic Field: Local Reporting in US News Media, 1890-2000. Eric Klinenberg and Monika Christine Krause, New York University 2. Social Networks and Technological Networks Presider: Ari B. Goelman, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Visualizing the Structural Signature of Social Roles. Howard T. Welser, University of Washington; Danyel Fisher, University of California, Irvine; Eric Gleave, University of Washington; Marc A. Smith, Microsoft Research Network Size and Media Selection: Findings from the Pew Social Ties Survey. Jeffrey Boase, University of Toronto Personal Information Management and Personal Network Structure. Bernard J. Hogan, University of Toronto 3. Social Problems, Inequality, and Technology Presider: Markus S. Schulz, New York University Computer Anxiety and Reproduction of Inequality. Zeynep Tufekci, University of Maryland Domesticating the Internet: Household Internet Use and the Domestic Division of Labour. Tracy L.M. Kennedy, University of Toronto Longitudinal Effects of Internet Uses on Depression: A Social Resources Approach. Katherine Bessiere, Robert Kraut, and Sara Kiesler, Carnegie Mellon University Discussant: James C. Witte, Clemson University 4. Sociological Technology: Research, Teaching and Knowledge Production Presider: Gustavo S. Mesch, University of Haifa A Century of Sociological Computing: Some Highlights. David D. McFarland, University of California, Los Angeles Automating the Assessment of Sociological Reasoning in Essays. Edward E. Brent, U. of Missouri Issues in Internet Research Ethics for Sociologists. John M. Kennedy, Indiana University 5. Technology and the Organization of Knowledge Work Presider: Siobhan Clare O’Mahony, Harvard Business School Practices, Processes, and Systems Design: Reformulating ERP system Architecture. Gary C. David, Bentley College Scientific Collaboration Community: Organizational Citizenship Behavior, Computer-Mediated Communication and Productivity. Shu-Fen Tseng and Hsin-i Huang, Yuan-Ze University The Influence of Information Technology in the Structure of Health Care Organizations. Ya-chien Wang, Michigan State University 6. Youth and Technology Use Presider: Salvador Rivas, University of Wisconsin Internet Access and Use among High School Students in Barbados. Michele M. Ollivier and Ann B. Denis, University of Ottawa; Eudine Barriteau and Anthony Layne, University of the West Indies Music, Mavens and Technology. Steven J. Tepper and David Touve, Vanderbilt University; Eszter Hargittai, Northwestern University The Social Construction of Internet Use among Parents and Teachers and Its Relation to Teenagers’ Digital Literacy. Esther Brainin and Shirly Bar-Lev, Ruppin Academic Center Using Symbolic Interactionism to Delineate the Process Through Which Internet Usage May Impact WellBeing among College Students. Shameeka Miasia Bowman, University of Maryland, Baltimore; Shelia R. Cotten, University of Alabama at Birmingham 11:30am-12:10pm, Business Meeting Saturday, August 13, 10:30 a.m. 84. Section on Sociology of Education Roundtables Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon E Organizers: John Robert Warren, University of Minnesota; Amy J. Binder, University of California, San Diego 1. Extracurricular Activities and Education Elementary School Students’ Extracurricular Activities: The Effects of Participation on Achievement and Teachers’ Evaluations. Susan A. Dumais, Louisiana State University Girls and Clubs: The Influence of Individual and School Attributes on Extracurricular Activity Participation. Elizabeth J. Glennie, Duke University; Elizabeth Stearns, University of North Florida; Domini Castellino, Duke University Loisada (Lower East Side Story): Dancing Under the Williamsburg Bridge. Susan E. Cavin, New York University; Rhonda Levy, Stuart Pyle, Mark DeGarmo, and Maria Mitchell, PS 142 2. Labor Markets Not Married, but Not Single: Contrasting the SocioEconomic Experiences of Cohabiting Community College Students with Single, Divorced, and Married Students. Lahoma Jayne Howard, Santa Fe Community College Post-Graduate Educational Attainment of Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics Majors. Anna Tolentino, University of South Florida Self-Assessed Returns to Adult Education: Life-long Learning and the Educationally Disadvantaged. Karen Louise Myers and John F. Myles, University of Toronto 3. Immigration and Education Effects of Educational Expectations and Performance on College Graduation for Voluntary and Involuntary Minorities. Roger A. Wojtkiewicz, Ball State University Latino Population Growth and Public School Response in the Nuevo South. William A. Kandel, USDA Economic Research Service; Emilio Parrado, Duke University School Segregation and Academic Achievement of Latino Immigrant Children. Igor Ryabov, Bowling Green State University 4. Pedagogy Home Schooling and Canadian Educational Politics: Rights, Pluralism, and Pedagogical Individualism. Scott Davies and Janice Aurini, McMaster University Predicting Teacher Implementation of a Culturally Relevant Pedagogy. Melanie Sberna, University of Illinois The Impact of High School ESL Course-Taking on the Academic Outcomes of Mexican-American Immigrant Students. Lindsey Nicole Wilkinson and Rebecca Callahan, The University of Texas at Austin; Michelle 71 Frisco, Iowa State University The Sociology of Education: Losing Influence in an Age of Accountability. Suellen Gawler Butler, Pennsylvania State University, Delaware County 5. Secondary School Outcomes School Discipline and the Differential Likelihood of Graduation for “At-Risk” Students. Sandra M. Way, New Mexico State University The Contribution of High School Experiences to Gender Differences in College Graduation Rates. Brandy J. Ellison and William J. Carbonaro, University of Notre Dame The Effects of Critical Thinking Pedagogy during the Ninth Grade on High School Dropout. Christopher Michael Boccanfuso, University of Maryland, College Park 6. Race/Ethnicity and School Organizations Race and Track Placement: A Multi-Level Analysis. Donna Marie Harris, Wellesley College Schools, Communities and Demographic Change: Organizational Responses to Population Growth and Changes in Racial Composition. Cecile T. David, University of Wisconsin, Madison The Discursive Construction of Diversity: A Policy Discourse Analysis of U.S. University Diversity Action Plans. Susan Iverson, University of Maine 7. Issues in Higher Education I “Better Dead than Coed?” Survival and Decline of SingleSex College in the United States. Heather M. Geraci, Cornell University “Unmarketable” College Graduates: The Transition from School to Work in a College Career Center. Sarah Anne Damaske, New York University Contributions to College Costs by Married and Divorced Parents. Ruth N. Turley and Matthew Stephen Desmond, University of Wisconisn-Madison The “High-Fee, High-Loan” Model of Student Finance in U.S. Higher Education: Consequences for Low-Income Students. Gordon C. Chang and Colin W. Ong-Dean, University of California, San Diego Pop Music in the Classroom: Further Exploration of Its Use in Courses on Crime. Glenn W. Muschert, Miami University 8. Social Capital in Elementary and Secondary Schooling All Choices Created Equal? The Role of Choice Sets in the Selection of “Failing” Schools. Courtney Bell, University of Connecticut Forms of Capital, Extracurricular Activities, and Employment Outcomes for High School Graduates. Brian H. Colwell, Stanford University Reopening the Debate on Social Capital: Parental Intergenerational Closure, School Racial Composition, 72 Saturday, August 13, 10:30 a.m. Session 84, continued and Math Achievement. A Multilevel Approach. Martín Christian Santos, University of Wisconsin, Madison Religious Tradition, Family Size, and Educational Attainment. David Sikkink and Brooke Fischer, University of Notre Dame 9. Social Capital in Higher Education Social Capital and the Hispanic Community College Student. Noga Admon, New York University Aligning Action and Promoting Complementary Ties: School Support in Adolescents’ Transition to Postsecondary Education. Doo Hwan Kim, University of Notre Dame Producing Social Capital at the University. Cynthia J. Bogard, Hofstra University Unveiling the Hidden Curriculum of Higher Education through the Academic Mentoring Process. Buffy Smith, University of St. Thomas 10. Issues in Higher Education II Cultural Observances at American University Campuses: Juxtaposing Indigenous Domestic and International Values. Beverly Lindsay and Tara Scales, Pennsylvania State University The Economics of Career Decisions for Students Considering Public Interest Law. Robert B. Saute, Graduate Center, City University of New York The Institutional Context of Campus Diversity: The Case of Korean Adoptees in Early Adulthood. Jiannbin Lee Shiao and Mia Tuan, University of Oregon Using Social Networks Methods to Examine Student Experiences in Higher Education. Rebecca Marie Tippett, Duke University Higher Education and Change in Religious Belief and Practice: A Longitudinal Analysis. Jonathan Hill, University of Notre Dame 11. Race/Ethnciity and Achievement Biliteracy and Latino Students’ Educational Achievement. Amy Christine Lutz, Syracuse University Educational Achievement and School Attachment among Multiracial Adolescents. Grace Kao and Jamie Mihoko Doyle, University of Pennsylvania The Effects of School Racial and Ethnic Composition on Academic Achievement in Adolescence. Hedwig Eugenie Lee, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill 12. Gender and Education I “Ladies” or “Loudies”? Perceptions and Expectations of Black Girls in Classrooms. Edward W. Morris, Ohio University Girls Learning Alone: Social Transgression and a Singlesex Math Classroom. Jodi H. Cohen, Bridgewater State College Intra-household Resource Allocation in India: Is There a Mother-Daughter Link? Amrita Pande, University of Massachusetts 13. Education in Asia Gender Inequality and the Opportunity for Children’s Schooling in Taiwan. Ying-Shan Wei, University of Hawaii, Manoa Political Capital and Educational Inequality in China. Jianying Wang, Yale University The Historical Development of Private Education in Mainland China. Xiaojiong Ding, The University of Hong Kong 14. Education Reform Can Large Urban Districts Find and Keep “Highly Qualified” Teachers? Lessons from Philadelphia. Elizabeth L. Useem, Research for Action; Ruth Curran Neild, University of Pennsylvania New Charter Schools in New York: Race and the Conservative Alliance. Benjamin W. Dalton, American Institutes for Research Opting Out or Staying In: School Choice in Chicago Public High Schools. Julia A. Gwynne, University of Chicago Cognitive Behavior, Cognitive Development, and Emergence of Inequality in Learning Groups:Implications for the Classroom. Ann Converse Shelly, Ashland University; Robert K. Shelly, Ohio University 15. Special Education “Just a Bunch of SPEDS”: Resistance to Disability and Alternative School Dropout, Pushout, and Fadeout. Sarah OKeefe, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Whose Voices Are Heard? Due Process Hearings in Special Education. Colin W. Ong-Dean, University of California, San Diego 16. Environmental Effects on Educational Outcomes Disproportionate Exposure to Neighborhood Disorder and School Violence for Black First-Graders in U.S. Public Schools. Jessica L. Kenty-Drane, Southern Connecticut State University The Impact of Lead on Children’s Educational Outcomes. Denise M. Kall and Marie Lynn Miranda, Duke University The Surveillance Curriculum: Risk Management and Social Control in the Neoliberal School. Torin Monahan, Arizona State University 17. Gender and Education II Measuring Up as Men: Hegemonic Masculinity’s Foothold in School Structures. Lisa Michele Nunn, University of California, San Diego Transitions and Trajectories: Early Pubertal Timing and Girls’ Academic Careers. Shannon Eileen Cavanagh 73 Saturday, August 13, 10:30 a.m. and Catherine Riegle-Crumb, The University of Texas at Austin 18. Comparative Education Policy Consequences of Social Organization and Government Policy for Equality of Educational Opportunity: A Cross-national Comparison. Stephanie M. Arnett, University of Notre Dame Legislation or Litigation for Educational Exclusion and Accomodation: New York and San Francisco Compared. Floyd M. Hammack, New York University Institutional Contexts and the Literary Education Curriculum. Marc Verboord, Erasmus University; Kees Van Rees, Tilburg University 19. Culture and Education Competing Narrations of Service Learning within the Chronicle of Higher Education. Nicholas D. Pagnucco, University at Albany, State University of New York Locating School Culture in Everyday Interactions. Sarah E. Jones, American Institutes for Research Whither Disciplines? Consequences and Functions of the Disciplinary Organization of Knowedge in Academia. Kyle Sean Siler, Cornell University 85. Theory Section Mini-Conference I. Contemporary Theories of Micro Structures and Processes Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon I Organizer: Murray Webster, University of North Carolina, Charlotte Presider: Lisa Slattery Rashotte, University of North Carolina, Charlotte The Present and Future of Identity Theory. Peter J. Burke, University of California, Riverside To be announced. Edward J. Lawler, Cornell University The Micromechanisms of Forms of Exchange: Reciprocity, Risk, and Conflict. Linda D. Molm, University of Arizona The Development of Status Beliefs. Cecilia L. Ridgeway, Stanford University Discussant: Dawn T. Robinson, University of Georgia 11:30 am Meetings Section on Animals and Society Business Meeting (to 12:10pm)—Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon L Section on Communication and Information Technologies Business Meeting (to 12:10pm)—Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon D 12:30 pm Plenary 86. Plenary Session. Comparative Perspectives on the Rightward Turn in US Politics (co-sponsored by the Association for Applied and Clinical Sociology, the Association of Black Sociologists, the Society for the Study of Social Problems, and Sociologists for Women in Society) Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Millennium Hall Organizer and Presider: Troy Duster, New York University Panelists: Dan T. Carter, Historian, University of South Carolina and author of From George Wallace to Newt Gingrich: Race in the Conservative Counterrevolution, 1963-1994 Lani Guinier and Gerald Torres, authors of The Miner’s Canary Thomas Frank, author, What’s the Matter with Kansas The last election produced a situation where both houses of Congress, the Presidency, and increasingly the federal judiciary will be guided by a sharply rightward shift in politics, probably more so than at any time in the last eight decades. A historian, two legal scholars, and a social analyst of “middle America” come together on this panel to discuss different aspects of “the stakes” in play. 2:30 pm Meetings 2005 Dissertation Award Selection Committee (to 6:10pm)— Philadelphia Marriott, Conference Suite III American Sociological Review Editorial Board (to 4:10pm)— Philadelphia Marriott, Room 302 Committee on Nominations, continued (to 6:10pm)—Philadelphia Marriott, Conference Suite I Committee on Professional Ethics (to 6:10pm)—Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Jefferson Sociological Methodology Editorial Board (to 4:10pm)— Philadelphia Marriott, Room 308 Teaching Sociology Editorial Board (to 4:10pm)—Philadelphia Marriott, Room 309 74 Saturday, August 13, 2:30 p.m. 2:30 pm Sessions 87. Thematic Session. International Perspectives on Race Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon G Organizer: Edward E. Telles, University of California, Los Angeles Presider: Howard Winant, University of California, Santa Barbara Racial Violence and the Origins of Segregation in South Africa and the American South, 1870-1940. Ivan Evans, University of California, San Diego Racial Regulations: A View from the United Kingdom. France Winddance Twine, Duke University and University of California, Santa Barbara The Enigma or Race in Brazil. Edward E. Telles, University of California, Los Angeles Discussant: Howard Winant, University of California, Santa Barbara 88. Centennial Session. 100 Years of American Sociology: The ASA Centennial History Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington B Organizer and Presider: Craig Calhoun, Social Science Research Council Panelists: Alan Sica, Pennsylvania State University Stephen Turner, University of South Florida Patricia Lengermann, George Washington University; and Gillian Niebrugge, American University Charles Camic, Northwestern University Shamus Khan, University of Wisconsin, Madison 89. Special Session. Comparative Perspectives on Deviance from the United States and Nigeria: An International Partner University Collaboration Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon I Organizer and Presider: Sarah H. Matthews, Cleveland State University A Comparative Examination of the General Theory of Crime. Teresa LaGrange, Cleveland State University; Sadiq Isah Radda and Salisu Abdullahi, Bayero University HIV/AIDS Awareness and Prevention: Conceptual Issues, Strategies, and Preliminary Findings. Salisu Abdullahi and Ismaila Zango Mohammed, Bayero University; Philip D. Manning and William R. Morgan, Cleveland State University Surveying Domestic Violence in Hausa Society: A Case Study of Kano State. Ismaila Zango Mohammed, Bayero University; Dana Hubbard and Wendy Regoeczi, Cleveland State University; Aminu Fagge Mohammed, Bayero University Children without Parents in Cleveland, Ohio and Kano, Nigeria: Socio-Cultural Accommodations. William R. Morgan, Cleveland State University; Bala Saleh Dawakin Tofa and Salisu Abdullahi, Bayero University Discussants: Musa Abdullahi, Bayero University; and Michael Schwartz, Cleveland State University Sociologists at Cleveland State and Bayero Universities have been using a Fulbright partnership grant in order to develop a collection of essays and research reports on comparative issues in deviance. This session will present results of this collaboration, and in so doing also provide information on our collaborative procedure. 90. Special Session. Gender and Race Based Data: The Case of BLS Data (co-sponsored by Sociologists for Women in Society, the Association of Black Sociologists, the Society for the Study of Social Problems, and the Association for Applied and Clinical Sociology) Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Room 103 Organizer and Presider: Nancy A. Naples, University of Connecticut Panelists: Philip N. Cohen, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Paula England, Stanford University Heidi Hartmann, Institute for Women’s Policy Research 91. Special Session. Legal Categories and Social Identities Philadelphia Marriott, Room 304 Organizer and Presider: Emmanuelle M. Saada, New York University The Indian Identity between Hindouism and Colonial Law: the Case of Pondichéry, India. Anne Raffin, National University of Singapore The Extra-Judicial and the Search for Order under Uncertainty. Vida Bajc, University of Pennslyvania Discussant: Emmanuelle M. Saada, New York University 92. Special Session. Open Forum on Public Sociology Philadelphia Marriott, Room 407 Organizer and Presider: Philip Nyden, Loyola University Chicago The Task Force on Institutionalizing Public Sociology wants to hear from you! On Saturday, August 13, from 2:30pm-4:10pm at the Philadelphia Marriott, join in the Open Forum. Hear about the work the Task Force has done and comment on ways you think public sociology can and should (or not) be institutionalized in ASA and in departments. For example, the Task Force has gathered examples of public sociology to Saturday, August 13, 2:30 p.m. show the scope and variety of this work. They have drafted guidelines for promotion and tenure, to include and evaluate public sociology. Check the ASA website in late July for drafts of their work. Come with your comments to help the Task Force make important, useful, and practical recommendations to ASA Council. Task Force Members are: Susan H. Ambler, Maryville College; Andrew L. Barlow, Diablo Valley College; Kevin J. Delaney, Temple University; Peter Dreier, Occidental College; Ann Goetting, Western Kentucky University; Leslie H. Hossfeld, University of North Carolina at Wilmington; Carla B. Howery, American Sociological Association (staff liaison); Paul Edward Lachelier, University of Wisconsin, Madison; Donald W. Light, University of Medicine & Dentistry of New Jersey; April Linton, Princeton University; Cynthia Negrey, University of Louisville; Carmen Sirianni, Brandeis University; Roberta M. SpalterRoth, American Sociological Association (staff liaison); Gregory D. Squires, George Washington University; Randy Stoecker, University of Toledo; Diane Vaughan, Boston College (ASA Council Liaison); and William Velez, University of Wisconsin, Madison 93. Author Meets Critics Session. Shared Beginnings, Divergent Lives: Delinquent Boys to Age 70 (Harvard University Press, 2003) by John Laub and Robert Sampson Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon A Organizer: Glen H. Elder, University of North Carolina Presider: Linda K. George, Duke University Critics: Bruce Western, Princeton University Peggy C. Giordano, Bowling Green State University Blair Wheaton, University of Toronto Authors: John H. Laub, University of Maryland Robert J. Sampson, Harvard University 94. Methodological Seminar. Ensemble Statistical Methods for Data Mining in the Social Sciences Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon L Ticket required for admission Leader: Richard A. Berk, University of California, Los Angeles This workshop will focus is on “ensemble methods,” which are an especially promising special case of algorithmic methods. The term “ensemble predictors” is commonly reserved for bundled fits produced by a stochastic algorithm, the output of which is some combination of a large number of passes through the data. Bagging and random forests are two powerful illustrations Although ensemble methods are seeing increasing use in the natural sciences, they are virtually untried in the behavioral, social and economic sciences. In this workshop, there will be an overview of algorithmic methods, a more in depth consideration of ensemble approaches and illustrations of several kinds of applications. The applications will be five broad kinds: 1) description of the relationships between a set of predictors and a response, 2) classification problems, 3) forecasting, 4) improved covariance adjustments, and 5) regression diagnostics. All will involve social science data. There will be handouts, internet links for more detailed treatments, and access to free software. 75 Participants in the workshop should have a good working knowledge of at least the generalized linear model (e.g., linear regression, logistic regression). Familiarity with the bootstrap and classification and regression trees would be helpful. 95. Academic Workshop. Opportunities and Obstacles to Faculty Professional Development at Community Colleges Philadelphia Marriott, Room 307 Organizer and Leader: Philip C. Dolce, Bergen Community College Panelists: David L. Levinson, Norwalk Community College Carla B. Howery, American Sociological Association Community Colleges were founded on the Wisconsin Idea that the total community becomes the campus for each of these educational institutions. Professional development opportunities for faculty are essential in fulfilling this mandate. Given this wide-ranging mission and the interdisciplinary structure of many academic departments at community colleges, it is essential that faculty be afforded opportunities for professional development so that they can excel as teachers, community leaders and professionals in their field of expertise. The lack of these opportunities would not only curtail the mission of community colleges but liken them to academic monasteries. The workshop will explore the examples of and obstacles to professional development opportunities. This workshop also will focus on the responsibilities faculty, faculty associations, administrators, and professional organizations have in advocating and fostering these opportunities. 96. Career Workshop. Portfolio Preparation (co-sponsored by Sociologist for Women in Society) Philadelphia Marriott, Room 412 Organizers and Leaders: Idee Winfield, College of Charleston Catherine Zimmer, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill 97. Professional Workshop. Ensuring a Successful, First Solo Teaching Experience as a Graduate Student Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Adams Organizer: Shannon N. Davis, Carolina Population Center Panelists: Shannon N. Davis, Carolina Population Center Cristina Morales, University of Nevada, Las Vegas Edan L. Jorgensen, University of Nebraska, Lincoln Robert Vann (R.V.) Rikard, North Carolina State University Entering the classroom for the first time as the instructor rather than the student can be somewhat daunting for even the most confident of people. The panelists will discuss their first teaching experience, including preparation for the first course and lessons learned during the semester. This workshop is designed to explore the variety of ways in which instructors prepare to enter the classroom, all while completing their own graduate education. We will also offer examples of best practices and survival strategies, as well as an opportunity for discussion. 76 Saturday, August 13, 2:30 p.m. 98. Research Workshop. Using the Integrated Public Use Microdata Series in Research (IPUMS) Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon K Organizer: Matthew Sobek, University of Minnesota Co-Leaders: Trent Alexander, University of Minnesota Matthew Sobek, University of Minnesota Panelists will provide an overview and introduction to using the Integrated Public Use Microdata Samples Series database (IPUMS). The IPUMS is the world’s largest collection of publicly available, individuallevel census microdata, and researchers can access the data at no cost. The IPUMS-USA data files include 150 years of harmonized U.S. Census data. There are also parallel web sites providing integrated international census data (IPUMS-International) and integrated data from the March Current Population Survey (IPUMS-CPS). The session will highlight the U.S. census data, but questions on all of the different series are welcome. In addition to demonstrating the interface, panelists will discuss the strengths and limitations of both the U.S. and international census data series. Topics will include newly available samples, common user problems and questions, and plans for future improvements. Handouts will be provided, and discussion from new and established IPUMS data users is invited. 99. Teaching Workshop. Constructing Cross-Cultural Gender Studies Courses Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Tubman Organizer and Leader: Catherine G. Valentine, Nazareth College This interactive workshop will address materials and methods for teaching gender studies courses that move beyond the borders of the contemporary U.S. to examine the social construction of gender across cultures. Goals for the workshop include: (1) discussion of the value and challenges of incorporating cross-cultural materials in gender studies courses, (2) overview of available texts and films, (3) discussion of exercises and assignments that engage students in comparative crosscultural analysis, (4) organization of a cross-cultural gender studies course. 100. Teaching Workshop. Teaching Courses Collaboratively and Electronically with Colleagues in other Countries Philadelphia Marriott, Room 411 Organizer: Judith R. Blau, University of North Carolina Co-Leaders: Judith R. Blau, University of North Carolina Vincent N. Parrillo, William Paterson University International teaching collaboration is a great challenge but a rewarding one. This session will include presentations about simultaneous and/or cooperative teaching at multiple worldwide sites. In this “sociologists without borders” approach, Professors Blau and Parrillo will describe their experiences, rewards and setbacks in working with NGOs and African, European, and Latin American colleagues. They will also lead a discussion on how to face the challenges of differences in culture, language, and perspective in engaging the students to provide an exciting, productive learning experience. 101. Teaching Workshop. Teaching about Controversial Subjects Philadelphia Marriott, Room 410 Organizer: Jennifer Keys, North Central College Co-Leaders: Tamara L. Smith, University at Albany, State University of New York Heather Sullivan-Catlin, State University of New York, Potsdam Jennifer Keys, North Central College In this workshop, we will grapple with issues that arise when contentious subject matter is brought into the classroom. We will share some of the lessons we have learned from teaching about affirmative action, abortion, gay marriage, the animal rights movement, bilingual education, raising the minimum wage, euthanasia, and the death penalty. In Part I, we will raise pedagogical questions: What are the pros and cons of revealing our own positions? Are there some positions (i.e. racist, homophobic) that we should refuse to acknowledge as legitimate? Is it appropriate to ask students to consider opposing viewpoints that violate their religious beliefs? In Part II, we will present different strategies for setting classroom conduct guidelines, deescalating angry confrontations, and attending to students who feel uncomfortable or emotionally sensitive about a topic. We will also assess the potentials and pitfalls of various techniques, including the use of debates, writing one-minute reflections, and anonymous opinion polling. We hope that you will join us for what is sure to be a lively conversation. 102. Minority Fellowship Program (MFP) Roundtable Session Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon D Organizer: Mercedes Rubio, American Sociological Association 1. Social Capital, Consumerism and Education Presider: Brandy D. Harris, Florida State University Pivotal Moments, Social Capital, and Educational Success: A Comparison of White and Latina Doctoral Candidates. Roberta M. Espinoza, University of California, Berkeley American Indian Boarding Schools: A Review of the Literature and an Empirical Test. Ethel G. Nicdao, University of New Mexico Disengaging Education: The Experiences of Chicano/ Latino Students in Special Education. Brianne Amber Davila, University of California, Santa Barbara The Growing Gray Market: The Elderly Consumer in the Search for a “Home” in Assisted Living. Brandy D. Harris, Florida State University 2. Health and the Lifecourse Presider: AC Campbell, Purdue University Adolescent Girls’ Body Image Attitudes and Behaviors. Gloria Gonzalez, University of California, Los Angeles Relapsing/Remitting Disease as a Source of Caregiver Saturday, August 13, 2:30 p.m. 77 Stress. Michael Juan Chavez, University of California, Riverside The Athletic Identity: The Signficant Difference between Injury and Hurt. Rashawn Jabar Ray, Indiana University Race, Class, Marijuana Use and Dating. AC Campbell, Purdue University 3. Immigration, Economic Development and Labor Presider: David Flores, University of Michigan Research Proposal: An Ethnographic Study of Day Labor Workers in Detroit and Los Angeles. David Flores, University of Michigan Tikkun Olam: A Topographical Analysis of a Day Labor Center and the Mental Health Conditions among Latino Day Laborers in Rockland County, New York. Jesse Diaz, University of Riverside Addiction, Death and Economic Development in Northern New Mexico: The Growth of a Lumpen Proletariat Economy. W. Azul La Luz B., University of New Mexico The Consequences of Mass Imprisonment: The Effect on Neighborhoods. Donald T. Hutcherson, The Ohio State University 4. Status, Social Institutions and Health Presider: Nicole E. James, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Black Women and Depression. Nicole E. James, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Regional Differences in Graduation Rates in 12 New York State Drug Courts, 1996-2002. Leslie S. Paik, University of California, Los Angeles Chronicity of Workplace Harassment, Gender, and the Utilization of Professional Services. Candice A. Shannon, University of Maryland Strength of Hispanic Ethnic Identity: Investigating Antecedents Across Subgroups. Andrew M. Cislo, Florida State University Processes. Molly A. Martin, Pennsylvania State University Social Experience and Subjective Age Identity: Differentiation in Self-Perceived Adulthood. Monica Kirkpatrick Johnson, Justin Berg, and Toni Sirotzki, Washington State University Discussant: D. Wayne Osgood, Pennsylvania State University 103. Regular Session. Adolescence and Adulthood in Life Course Perspective Philadelphia Marriott, Room 404 Organizer: Karl Alexander, Johns Hopkins University Presider: Timothy J. Owens, Purdue University Is 30 the New 20? Trends in Age Distribution of Problem Behaviors in Young Adulthood. Sarah R. Hayford and Frank F. Furstenberg, University of Pennsylvania Pathways into Parenthood: Race, Gender, and the Role of Family in the Transition to Adulthood. Ronda Copher and Ross F. Macmillan, University of Minnesota American Girls’ Early Transition to Adulthood: Linking Intergenerational Status Attainment and Family Formation 106. Regular Session. Group Processes: Norms, Justice and Exchange Processes Philadelphia Marriott, Room 409 Organizer: Shelley J. Correll, Cornell University Presider: Stephen W. Benard, Cornell University Explaining Norm Enforcement. Christine Horne, Washington State University Votes, Favors, Toys and Ideas: Resource Characteristics and Power in Exchange Networks. David R. Schaefer, University of Arizona Affective Responses and Attributions in Positively Connected Exchange Networks. Gretchen Peterson, California State 104. Regular Session. Animals and Society Philadelphia Marriott, Room 403 Organizer and Presider: Jessica Greenebaum, Central Connecticut State University Emotion Work by Animal Foster Care Providers. Denise L. Roemer, University of South Florida Guardians vs. Owners: Differing Styles with Pets. Pamela L. Carlisle-Frank and Josh Frank, FIREPAW Hunting, Meat, and Morality. Linda Cornwell, University of Pennsylvania The Dynamics of Friendship between Cats and Dogs in the same Household. Janet M. Alger, Siena College; Steven F. Alger, College of St. Rose The Rise and Fall of Horse Culture among the Plains Indians in the Americas. Shawn McEntee, Salisbury University 105. Regular Session. Gender in/and Parenthood Philadelphia Marriott, Room 408 Organizer: Linda M. Blum, University of New Hampshire Presider: Maura Flynn Kelly, University of New Hampshire “Man of War”: The Social Construction of Fatherhood during the Second World War. Ralph LaRossa, Georgia State University Predictors of Father Involvement: Which Men Do More? Allison P. Deschamps, University of Chicago Blaming Mothers: Gender, Race, and the Meaning of Parenthood after Child Sexual Abuse. C. Shawn McGuffey, University of Massachusetts Gendered Anticipation: Parents’ Preferences for Sons and Daughters. Emily W. Kane, Bates College 78 Saturday, August 13, 2:30 p.m. Session 106, continued University, Los Angeles Conflict and Fairness: Explaining Effects of the Form of Exchange. Jessica L. Collett, University of Arizona; David R. Schaefer and Linda D. Molm, University of Arizona Inferring Just Rewards. Kimmo Eriksson, Mälardalen University College; Barry Markovsky, University of South Carolina Selfista, Subgroupista, Groupista: New Results on These Emergent Subgroups and the Coalitions They Represent among Pre-Existing Subgroups. Guillermina Jasso, New York University 107. Regular Session. Homelessness Philadelphia Marriott, Independence Salon I Organizer: Adalberto Aguirre, University of California, Riverside Presider: Shoon Lio, University of California, Riverside Different Welfare Regimes, Similar Outcomes? The Impact of Social Policy on Homeless People’s Life Courses and Exit Chances in Berlin and Los Angeles. Jurgen R. Von Mahs, University of Southampton Escaping Homelessness in Los Angeles: A Qualitative Comparative Analysis of Barriers and Strategies Shaping Housing Outcomes of Transitional Shelter Users. Matthew D. Marr, University of California, Los Angeles Homelessness and Poverty: A Cross Cultural Study of Homelessness and Social Policy. Alicia Beth Lacher, New Mexico State University The Trajectories of Homeless Parents with Children: The Role of Institutional Ties and Parent’s Definitions of the Situation. Alex Trillo, St. Xavier University 108. Regular Session. Job Satisfaction, Commitment, and Productivity Philadelphia Marriott, Independence Salon II Organizer: Jacqueline Johnson, Fordham University Presider: Elizabeth Agosto, Fordham University Predictors of Organizational Commitment by Gender and Management Level. Patrick Kulesa, Rebecca Masson, and Katherine Simonds, International Survey Research Solving the Productivity Puzzle: Research Specialization as a Missing Link. Erin Leahey, University of Arizona Subjectivities of Women Temporary Workers in the Context of Flexibilization of Labor in Japan in the Era of Globalization. Shizuko Oyama, University of California, Davis So Less Happy Too? Subjective Well-Being and the Job Satisfaction Premium of British Women Employees. Michael Rose, University of Bath 109. Regular Session. Moral Boundaries and the Economy Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Grand Salon I Organizer: Bruce G. Carruthers, Northwestern University Presider: Paul D. McLean, Rutgers University Institutional Emergence in an Era of Globalization: The Rise of Social and Environmental Certification Systems. Tim Bartley, Indiana University Ownership and Corporate Responsibility: Translating Social and Environmental Values into Economic Goals. M. Kai Ho, Columbia University Why Would Corporations Behave in Socially Responsible Ways? An Institutional Theory of Corporate Social Responsibility. John L. Campbell, Dartmouth College From Communitarian to Commercial Exchange: Experiments in the Organizational Transformation of Scientific Exchange in Population Genetics. Steven Wayne Casper, Keck Graduate Institute; Fiona Murray, Massachusetts Institute of Technology A Multi-Level Theory of Organizational Deviance: Corruption and Corporate Governance in a Comparative Perspective. Ruth V. Aguilera and Abhijeet Vadera, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign 110. Regular Session. Qualitative Methodology Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Grand Salon II Organizer and Presider: Douglas Harper, Duquesne University Rich Data through Humility, Generosity, and Respect: Native Scholarship Principles in Interviewing and Participant Observations. Doreen E. Martinez, Northern Arizona University Studying Up: Qualitative Methods and the Global Power Elite. Joseph A. Conti and Moira E. O’Neil, University of California, Santa Barbara Qualitative Quality: Criteria for Evaluating Ethnographic Accounts. Gabrielle Raley, University of California, Los Angeles The qualitative misfit: Evaluating the interpretive complexity of IRBs. Zoe Blumberg Corwin and William Tierney, University of Southern California Discussant: D. Angus Vail, Willamette 111. Regular Session. Rural Place as a Product of Population Flows: Land, Labor and Migration Philadelphia Marriott, Room 306 Organizer: E. Melanie Dupuis, University of California, Santa Cruz Networks of Exploitation: A View from North Carolina Farm Labor Camps. Rafael Jorge Balderrama and Hilario Saturday, August 13, 2:30 p.m. Molina, University of Texas, Pan American Large-scale Land Redistribution in Contemporary Rural China: A Boolean Analysis of 60 Villages, 1990-2000. Jundai Liu, Harvard University Should I Stay or Should I Go? Migration Expectations among Youth in Icelandic Fishing and Farming Communities. Thoroddur Bjarnason, Unversity at Akureyri; Thorolfur Thorlindsson, University of Iceland The Effects of Geographic Amenity Migration: Occupational Status among Residents of High Growth Rural Communities. Jarron M. Saint Onge and Jason Boardman, University of Colorado at Boulder Discussant: Gregory Hooks, Washington State University These papers analyze the results of population flows in, out, and around rural places. Topics include land redistribution in China, disparate in-migrants such as labor camp networks and rural amenity seekers and outmigrants in search of greater opportunity. 112. Regular Session. Transnational Sociology Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington C Organizer and Presider: Elizabeth Heger Boyle, University of Minnesota Distance Matters: Place, Political Legitimacy and Popular Support for European Integration. Mabel Berezin, Cornell University; Juan Diez Medrano, University of Barcelona The Accountability of Nation-States: Global Trends and CrossNational Variations. YongSuk Jang, Korea University; Gili S. Drori, Stanford University; Gil-Sung Park, Korea University Has the Transnational Human Rights Movement Experienced a Resource Curse?: Challenges of Abundance in the Late Twentieth Century. Kathleen Rodgers and James Ron, McGill University; Howard Ramos, Dalhousie University Changing Contours of Transnational and International Integration since 1840. Christopher Chase-Dunn, University of California, Riverside; Tom Reifer, University of San Diego; Christopher Schmitt, Ken Barr, Anders John Carlson, and Richard Evan Niemeyer, University of California, Riverside Discussant: Francisco Ramirez, Stanford University 113. Regular Session. Voting and Electoral Processes Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington A Organizer and Presider: Keith W. Reeves, Swarthmore College Moving Out of the Margins?: Insights into Latinos’ Political Integration. Lisa M. Martinez, University of Denver Voting Your Values and Moral Visions. Wayne E. Baker, University of Michigan Voting for Race: A Vignette Survey Approach to Electoral Behavior. Gabriela Sandoval, University California, Santa Cruz 79 When Incumbents Lose: The 2004 Election in Historical Context. Bill Winders, Georgia Institute of Technology Discussant: Keith W. Reeves, Swarthmore College 114. Regular Session. Ways of Becoming in the Informal Economy Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon J Organizer and Presider: Michaeline Adelle Crichlow, University of Iowa Free Stuff and the Transaction of Different Resources. Noah McClain, New York University Informal Intermediaries and Civic Organizations in StateBusiness Relationships in Russia. Irina Olimpieva, Centre for Independent Social Research Information, Influence, or Insurance?: Social Embedding among Vietnamese Small Businesses. Stephen Appold, National University of Singapore; Quy Thanh Nguyen, National University of Vietnam Struggling with Informality: A New Class Movement in India. Rina Agarwala, Princeton University This session comprises papers that examine the operation of informal economies in different geographies. The authors examine the ways in which informalization influences the conduct of business whether as social capital, as new forms of class struggle or its general integration into the practice of everyday living. In general, they argue informalization may be considered as sets of strategies or simply as a way of living, which provides certain economic, cultural and social leverage for a ‘profitable’ inter-relation with any level of that deemed formal. 115. Regular Session. Welfare Reform Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth A1 Organizer: Robin H. Rogers-Dillon, Queens College, City University of New York How the Declines in AFDC/TANF Are Related to Changes in Other Policies, 1994-2002. Hsien-Hen Lu, Columbia University; J. Lawrence Aber, New York University; Yumiko Aratani, Columbia University Personal Responsibility: Membership Has Its Privileges. Dorith Geva, Amie P. Hess, and Miranda March, New York University “Contracting Citizenship” for the New Economy: The Inner Workings of the Wisconsin Welfare Reform Project. Victoria L. Mayer, University of Wisconsin, Madison Were the Assumptions behind Welfare Reform Right? Comparing Recipients’ Attitudes and Experience Pre- and PostPRWORA. Judith A. Levine, University of Chicago 80 Saturday, August 13, 2:30 p.m. 116. Regular Session. Work and the Workplace Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Grand Salon III-IV Organizer and Presider: Steven H. Lopez, Ohio State University Hairstyling in Capitalism: Where Work Relations “Solve” Structural Constraints of the Industry. Rachel Cohen, University of California, Los Angeles Negotiating Time in Four Health Care Occupations. Dan Clawson, Naomi Gerstel, and Dana Joy Huyser, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Ser hombre: Working Masculinity in the Workplace. Carolyn Pinedo Turnovsky, Graduate Center, City University of New York Sexual Harassment in Context: Organizational and Occupational Foundations of Abuse. Lindsey Joyce Chamberlain, Martha Crowley, Daniel B. Tope, and Randy Hodson, The Ohio State University Discussant: Rachel E. Sherman, Yale University 117. Section on Communication and Information Technologies Paper Session. Hansel’s Pebbles: Theory as Wayfinding in Communication and Information Technology Research Philadelphia Marriott, Room 305 Organizer: Christena Nippert-Eng, Illinois Institute of Technology Presider: Mary T. Chayko, College of St. Elizabeth Homophily and Quality of Online and Offline Social Relationships among Adolescents. Gustavo S. Mesch, University of Haifa A Theory of Relational Signals in Online Groups. Uwe Matzat, Eindhoven University of Technology The Constitution of Mutual Knowledge on the Internet: A Phenomenological Approach. Shanyang Zhao, Temple University; Jieming Chen, Texas A&M University, Kingsville The Online Layer: How Text Shapes Social Interactions. Daniel Aron Menchik and Xiaoli Tian, University of Chicago 118. Section on Race, Gender, and Class Paper Session. Occupational Segregation by Race, Gender, and Class Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Anthony Organizer and Presider: Natalia Sarkisian, Boston College Occupational and Residential Segregation: Racial Crowding in Metropolitan Labor Markets. Niki T. Dickerson, Rutgers University Race, Residential Segregation, Suburbanization, and the Spatial Segregation of Jobless Men. Robert L. Wagmiller, University at Buffalo, State University of New York Racial Inequalities in Paid Care Work: An Historical Perspective. Mignon C. Duffy, University of Massachusetts, Lowell Projects of Solidarity and Gender Relations at Work: Latina/o Immigrant Janitors in Los Angeles. Cynthia J. Cranford, University of Toronto Discussant: Zeynep Tufekci, University of Maryland 119. Section on International Migration Paper Session. Study of International Migration in Different World Regions: A Comparative Assessment Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth A2 Organizers: Pierrette Hondagneu-Sotelo, University of Southern California; Ewa Morawska, University of Essex Presider: Pierrette Hondagneu-Sotelo, University of Southern California Defining Nations Across Borders: State Preferences for CoEthnic/Return Migrants in Europe and East Asia. John Skrentny and Stephanie Chan, University of California, San Diego; Jon Edward Fox, University of Bristol; Denis Kim, University of California, San Diego Different or Similar? Immigration Research Agendas in the US and Canada. Eric Fong and Elic Chan, University of Toronto Immigration Studies in Europe and the United States: A Comparative Assessment. Ewa Morawska, University of Essex Emerging Trends in International Migration in Asia. Graeme Hugo, University of Adelaide The Gendered Nature of Migration and Nationality Policies in Spain, Italy and Argentina, 1853-1919. David A. Cook, University of California, Los Angeles 120. Section on Sociology of Education Paper Session. PostSecondary Education in the United States Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon B Organizer: John Robert Warren, University of Minnesota Presider: Regina Deil-Amen, Pennsylvania State University Supporting College Transitions through Collaborative Programming: A Conceptual Model for Guiding Policy. Katherine L. Hughes, Melinda Mechur Karp, Baranda Fermin, and Thomas Bailey, Teachers College, Columbia University Declining Sex Segregation in Higher Education: The Role of Early Work and Family Orientations. Stephanie Woodham Burge, Florida State University Examining the Black Gender Gap in Post-Secondary Enrollment. Rachelle Jeneane Brunn and Grace Kao, University of Pennsylvania College Degree Completion: Institutional Effects and Student Propensity. James E. Rosenbaum and Jennifer L. Stephan, Saturday, August 13, 2:30 p.m. Northwestern University Discussant: Mitchell L. Stevens, New York University 121. Section on Collective Behavior and Social Movements Invited Session. Awkward Movements: How to Study Illegal, Unpopular, Too-Popular, and Strange Movement Groups Philadelphia Marriott, Room 310 Organizer and Presider: Francesca Polletta, Columbia University Panelists: Kathleen M. Blee, University of Pittsburgh Janice M. Irvine, University of Massachusetts David A. Snow, University of California, Irvine Gay W. Seidman, University of Wisconsin, Madison Panelists will discuss the methodological, theoretical, and political challgenges involved in studying movement groups that fall outside movement scholars’ customary purview. 122. Section on Medical Sociology Roundtables Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon E Organizers: Lora Bex Lempert, The University of Michigan, Dearborn; Amy Schulz, University of Michigan 1. Socioeconomic Factors and Health The Social, Cultural, and Economic Dimensions of Socioeconomic Status and Investment in Health. Patrick M. Krueger, University of Pennsylvania The Effects of Race, Ethnicity, and Income on Dental Utilization. Sam Kim and Jennie Jacobs Kronenfeld, Arizona State University Labor Displacement and Health: Investigating Alternative Causal Pathways. Kate W. Strully, New York University Discussant: Paul Joseph Draus, Wright State University 2. Identity, Culture, and Health Examining Health Disparities through the Lens of Mixed Race. Cathy J. Tashiro, University of Washington, Tacoma Crystal Methamphetamine and Sexual Sociality in an Urban Gay Subculture: An Elective Affinity. Adam I. Green, York University; Paul Galatowitsch, and Perry Halkitis, New York University Discussant: Nadine J. Barrett, Texas Women’s University 3. Situational Responses to SARS A Pedagogy for Liberation in Public Health through Community Universities in Taiwan: A Grassroots Action after SARS Epidemic. Meei-Shia Chen, National Chen Kung University The New Public Health Hegemony: Response to Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) in Toronto. Sarah Sanford, York University; S. Harris Ali, York University 81 Discussant: Adina Nack, California Lutheran University 4. Health and Aging Obesity and Central Obesity in Elderly People in Latin America and the Caribbean: Are We Fat? Flavia Andrade, University of Wisconsin Older Diabetes Patients’ Access to Diabetes Information and Shared Clinical Decision-making. Lei Jin, Marshall Chin, and Elbert Huang, The University of Chicago Religious Salience and Health Behaviors among Older Adults in Mexico. Maureen Reindl Benjamins, Urban Health Institute; Anna Marie Campbell, University of Michigan Discussant: Kristine J. Ajrouch, Eastern Michigan University 5. Social Support and Health What Is a Friend? A Study of the Health Benefits of Different Kinds of Friendships for Older Women. Robin D. Moremen, Northern Illinois University The Effects of Marital Trajectories on Mortality among Adults at Midlife. Audrey N. Beck, Sarah O. Meadows, and Matthew E. Dupre, Duke University Discussant: Kelly A. Joyce, College of William & Mary 6. Constructing Medical Relationships A Symbolic Interactionist Approach to Boundary Maintenance in Nurse Patient Relationships. Andrew Ruffner, University of Cincinnati What Would You Like Us to Call You? Karen Marguerite Staniland, University of Salford The Structure of Relational Messages in Medical Interviews. Timothy J. Gallagher, Kent State University Discussant: Kathleen O. Slobin, North Dakota State University 7. Emergent Studies of HIV/AIDS Effectiveness of Culturally-Grounded HIV/AIDS Prevention Intervention. Ya-chien Wang and Stan A. Kaplowitz, Michigan State University Social and Economic Stress Related to the HIV/AIDS Epidemic in Botswana. J. Gary Linn, Tennessee State University; Thabo Fako, University of Botswana Socio-cultural Barriers to Support Services among HIV Positive Women: Provider and Consumer Perspectives. Carrie Elizabeth Foote-Ardah and Jeremy C Roseberry, Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis Discussant: Judy Aulette, University of North Carolina, Charlotte 8. Medicalization and Adolescence Adolescents’ Medicalization of Menstruation. Laura Fingerson, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee The “Textbook Case”: Medical Contraceptive Encounters 82 Saturday, August 13, 2:30 p.m. Session 122, continued with Adolescents in Theory and Practice. Julie Lynn Fennell, Brown University Transitioning from Child to Adolescent in the Mental Health System: A Symbolic Interactionist Perspective. Quinn Gentry, Phyllis Gyamfi, Natalie Henrich, and Anika Keens-Douglas, ORC Macro Discussant: Doreen S. Watson, Texas Woman’s University 9. Media Representations of Health The Use and Context of Health Care Reform Terms on National News Programs. Duane A. Matcha, Siena College In the Bedroom: Midwives and Homebirth in the Media. Nell Haynes, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale What’s the Big Deal about Being Fat? Health, Beauty, and Fat in the United States. Karen Joy Jaffe, Rutgers University Discussant: Jessie Daniels, Hunter College 10. Health Care Systems An Analysis of Medicare: How Well Is It Serving Its Constituencies? Diane L. Muehl, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Nursing Home Staff Turnover and Facility Characteristics. Christopher Donoghue, William Paterson University What Do We Know about the Effects of the U.S. Health Care Financing System? Pamela S. Behan, University of Houston, Downtown Discussant: Paula M. Lantz, University of Michigan 11. Organizing Health Care Helping Others in Disasters: The Volunteer Potential of Inactive Nurses. Alice Fothergill, Mary Val Palumbo, Betty Rambur, Kyndaron Reinier, and Barbara McIntosh, University of Vermont Talking about Health and Well-Being in Post-Soviet Ukraine and Russia. Pamela Abbott, Glasgow Caledonian University; Claire Wallace, University of Aberdeen The Singapore State: An Instrument of Class rule? Cheng X. Sophie, National University of Singapore Discussant: Jennifer Ruth Fosket, McGill University 12. Gender and Health Women Physicians in Post-communist and Scandinavian Societies. Elianne K. Riska, University of Helsinki All Tied Up: Tubal Ligations among American Women. Mary Nicole Warehime and Loretta Bass, University of Oklahoma; Dominic Pedulla, The Women’s Choice Institute Discussant: Debbie Billings, IPAS 13. Marginalization and Mental Health Organizations Promoting Continuity of Care in a Mental Health System for Young Adults. Michael Polgar, Pennsylvania State University, Hazleton A Review of Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender Adolescent Research: Depression and Suicide. R. David Parker, University of South Carolina The Effects of Health Sector Market Factors, Poverty, and Population Race/Ethnicity on Access to Alcohol, Drug, and Mental Health Care. Susan E. Stockdale, University of California, Los Angeles Discussant: Susan J. Stall, Northeastern Illinois University 14. Marriage, Fertility and Birth Outcomes The Infant Mortality Rate in Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Century Philadelphia. Gretchen A. Condran and Jennifer M. Murphy, Temple University Discussant: Kathryn M. Yount, Emory University 123. Section on Political Economy of the World System/ Roundtables and Business Meeting Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth B 2:30-3:30pm, Roundtables: Organizers: Yvonne Alexandra Braun, University of Oregon; Matthew Case Mahutga, University of California, Irvine 1. Cities and Social Movements in the World-System The Rise to Prominence of Toronto as the Financial Center of Canada: A Comparative Approach. Nathanael K. Matthiesen, University of California, Irvine Religious Fundamentalist Movements: Social Movements in the World System? Case Study of the Maitatsine Movement in Nigeria, 1980-85. Katarzyna Zofia Skuratowicz, University of Maryland, College Park 2. From Past to Present: The Social and the Ecological of World-Systemic Development Ecological Crises in the Making of the Modern World, 1300-1600. Jason W. Moore, University of California, Berkeley The Impact of Foreign Direct Investment on Urbanization in China. Xiulian Ma, University of Utah The Making of Post-Socialist Citizenship in China. Jaeyoun Won, Yonsei University, Korea 3. Globalization, Development and Income Inequality Globalization, Democracy and Gender. Barbara Wejnert, University at Buffalo, State University of New York Income Inequality Reconsidered: Evidence from PostSocialist Countries. Nina Bandelj and Matthew Case Mahutga, University of California, Irvine 4. Manufacturing and the Semi-Periphery: Case Study Approaches Wal-Mart in Mexico: The Limits of Growth. Chris Tilly, University of Massachusetts, Lowell State-Firm Dynamics in the South African Automobile Saturday, August 13, 2:30 p.m. Component Industry. Nicole Aschoff, Johns Hopkins University 5. Measuring the Structure of the World-System World-System Gaps and Glissandos: A Dynamic Network Analysis of International Trade, 1965-2000. Matthew Case Mahutga and David A. Smith, University of California, Irvine Uncovering the Structure of the World-Economy: An Introduction to the SWE Analytical Tool. Salvatore J. Babones, University of Pittsburgh 3:30-4:10pm, Business Meeting 124. Section on Sociology of Emotions Roundtables and Business Meeting Philadelphia Marriott, Room 401-402 2:30-3:30pm, Roundtables: Organizer: Tim Hallett, Indiana University 1. Emotions, Movements, Culture and Politics Presider: Jason Aaron Rosow, Indiana University, Bloomington A Ritual Analysis on the Send-Down Movement in China: Conflicting Roles and Contradictory Evaluations. Ke Liang, Unviersity of Pennsylvania Of Movements and Moralism: The Emotional Undercurrents of ACT UP’s Decline. Deborah Gould, University of Pittsburgh The Self and the Development of Political Consciousness. Simone Polillo, University of Pennsylvania; Erika M. Summers-Effler, University of Notre Dame Emotional Responses to Death: Nurses and Their Grief. Wendy Grove, University of Akron Discussant: Jason Aaron Rosow, Indiana University, Bloomington 3:30-4:10pm, Business Meeting 125. Theory Section Roundtables and Business Meeting Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon F 2:30-3:30pm, Roundtables: Organizer: Alison J. Bianchi, Kent State University 1. Better Models for Working Definitions Presider: Sarah Harkness, Kent State University A Sociology of Simulation: Process, Artifact, and Technique. Steven Greg Hoffman, Northwestern University A Theory of Institutions. Marc Garcelon, Middlebury College 2. Culture and Theory Presider: Robert V. Clark, Indiana University Cultural Logic: Against Economic Determinism. Carey L. Sargent and Evren Savci, University of Virginia Staggering the Sociological Imagination: 9/11 and the 83 Reflexive Critique of Neo-Weberian Verstehen. Blasco José Sobrinho, University of Cincinnati The Virtual Pilgrimage: the Disappearing Body from Place to Space. Sarah L. MacMillen, University of Notre Dame 3. Epistemology Presider: Vicki L. Hunter, Kent State University Defending Narrative: A Virtue Ethics Approach to Narrative Sociology. Todd L. Goodsell, Indiana UniversityPurdue University, Indianapolis Gadamer’s Hermeneutics as a Model for the Feminist Standpoint Theory. Ismail Demirezen, University of Maryland, College Park Marginality and the Epistemic Privileges: P.H. Collins’ “Outsider Within” Standpoint Epistemology and Simmel’s “the Stranger.” Masa J. Higo, Boston College 4. The Process of Social Bonds: Theories of Trust, Bonds, and Obligation Presider: Reef Youngreen, University of Iowa Trust as a Process: A Three-Dimensional Approach. Dmitry Khodyakov, Rutgers University Un pari pragmatique sur l’analyse de l’action: la socianalyse. Jacques Arthur van Bockstaele and Maria Van Bockstaele, Centre de Socianalyse; Nathalie van Bockstaele and Martine Godard-Plasman, CAP 5. Sociological Theory for the New Century Presider: Yan Li, Stanford University Space and “the Modernities Riddle”, Comprising Multiple, Postcolonial/Alternative, Entangled Modernities. Burcak Keskin Kozat, University of Michigan The Blackian Revolution and the Future of Sociology: Sociological Discovery in Deep Social Space. Joseph H. Michalski, King’s University College Sociology for the Twenty-First Century. Richard Dewey, Durham, NH 6. New Theories of the Self Presider: Justine Eatenson Tinkler, Stanford University Speculating on Dreams and the Origins of Social Emotions. Christopher Schmitt, University of California, Riverside A sociological theory of human cognition and emotions. Hiroko Inoue, University of California, Riverside Identity Control Theory and Theory of the Effects of Legitimacy on the Stability of Authority. Donna A. Lancianese, Kent State University 7. New Directions for the Classics Presider: Bridget A. Conlon, University of Iowa Embracing a Practical Postmodernism in Interactionist Theorizing. Denise Bullock, Indiana University East Revisiting the Functional Analyses of Parsons and Merton. Berit Irene Vannebo, Northwestern University 84 Saturday, August 13, 2:30 p.m. Session 125, continued The Early American Sociology: Individual Autonomy and the Construction of Social Institutions. Berit Irene Vannebo, Northwestern University Social Causation: Logical, Substantive, and Ethical Considerations. Leon H. Warshay and Diana W. Warshay, Wayne State University 8. Theoretical Integration: Three Approaches Presider: Paul Thomas Munroe, Towson University Concepts as Cookies: A 50-year Perspective on Social Interaction in Groups. A. Paul Hare, Ben-Gurion University From Middle-Range to Grand Theory: Three Emergent Pathways. Akihiko Hirose, University of California, Riverside The Problem of Ontology in Sociological Analysis. Martin Ruef, Princeton University 9. Theories Concerning Frames Memes, Metaphors, and Moral Vocabularies: Competing Explanations of Moralistic Discourse. Brian M. Lowe, State University of New York, College at Oneonta The Structure of Dissent: A Prolegomenon to Framework Theory. Matthew E. Brashears, University of Arizona 10. Theories of Rational Choice Presider: Christabel Rogalin A Framework for Analyzing Mixed Organizational Forms. David John Roelfs, Stony Brook University, State University of New York The good order of nature. Progress and criticism in Adam Smith’s sociology of modernity. Pekka Juhani Sulkunen, University of Helsinki “Sticky Theory.” Linda Dorsten, State University of New York Fredonia; Harold Lawrence Hotchkiss, University of Delaware 11. Theories of Resistance and Dissent Presider: Pamela M. Hunt, Kent State University A Dialogue of Resistance: Comparing Bakhtin and Foucualt on the Question of Resistance. Owen Whooley, New York University Patriots and Terrorists: The Politics of Dissent and War. Julie Pelton, Pennsylvania State University 12. Unearthing Ideas from the History of Sociology Presider: Blane DaSilva, University of South Carolina 19th Century Theories of Suicide. How Useful Are They? Interpreting Suicide in East European context. Cristina Bradatan, University of Central Florida On the Possibility of Natural Right. James R. Abbott, Rowan College Outlines for a Sociology of Self-Knowledge (Appendix: Comparative Perspectives, Competing Explanations: Reconstructing the History of the Sociology of Knowledge Project). Mohammad H. Tamdgidi, University of Massachusetts Boston 3:30-4:10pm, Business Meeting 3:00 pm Tour Tour 4: The Eastern Penitentiary, a Baseball Field, and an Art Collection: Conflict, Control and Resolution in Urban Life (easternstate.org) (to 5:00pm; ticket required for admission)-Philadelphia Marriott, Lobby (at 12th Street)—SOLD OUT 3:30 pm Meetings Section on Political Economy of the World-System Business Meeting (to 4:10pm)—Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth B Section on Sociology of Emotions Business Meeting (to 4:10pm)—Philadelphia Marriott, Room 401-402 Theory Section Business Meeting (to 4:10pm)—Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon F 4:30 pm Meetings 2006 DuBois-Johnson-Frazier Award Selection Committee (to 6:10pm)—Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Parlor 1 Editors of ASA Publications (to 6:10pm)—Philadelphia Marriott, Room 302 Section on Collective Behavior and Social Movements Council Meeting (to 5:30pm)—Philadelphia Marriott, Room 310 Section on Medical Sociology Business Meeting (to 6:10pm)— Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon G Task Force on the Master’s Degree in Sociology (to 6:10pm)— Philadelphia Marriott, Room 309 Saturday, August 13, 4:30 p.m. 4:30 pm Sessions 126. Thematic Session. Thinking Differently about What It Means to Be “American” Philadelphia Marriott, Room 303 Organizers: David Wellman, University of California, Santa Cruz; Ronald A. Lembo, Amherst College Presider: Ronald A. Lembo, Amherst College Panelists: Jon D. Cruz, University of California Rhacel Salazar Parrenas, University of California, Davis Herman S. Gray, University of California, Santa Cruz How have conventional sociological understandings of culture over the past century contributed to the construction of what it means to be American and not-American? On the one hand, there are those who propose a unifying conception of culture, focusing on what was and is held in common, what could be held in common, or what was and is potentially unifying. On the other hand, there are those who leave open the issue of any resolution of the idea of cultural difference in relation to what it meant to be American. What difference does difference make in the sociological meaning of being an “American”? 127. Centennial Session. The Formation of American Sociology in International Context: Invited Panel of International Sociologists (co-sponsored by the ASA Section on the History of Sociology) Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington A Organizer and Presider: Susan Hoecker-Drysdale, The University of Iowa Modes of Exchange between British and US Sociology. Jennifer Platt, University of Sussex, England French Sociology in North America. Marcel Fournier, University of Montreal, Canada An Anglo-Canadian Perspective on American Sociology. Neil G. McLaughlin, McMaster University, Canada The Impact of German Social Theory on American Sociology: A two-way passage. Uta Gerhardt, Ruprecht-Karls University, Heidelberg, Germany Cultural Traffic between American and Australian Sociology. Peter Beilharz, Latrobe University, Australia 85 128. Centennial Session. Three Decades of Social Change: Evidence from the General Social Survey Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington B Organizer: Robert Mare, University of California, Los Angeles Presider: David R. Harris, Cornell University We Might Call It the Genderal Social Survey: U.S. Gender Role Attitudes over Three Decades. Karen E. Campbell, Vanderbilt University What Is Conservative about Conservative Protestants? Michael Hout, University of California, Berkeley; Andrew Greeley, NORC Changing Work Values in the U.S., 1972-1994. Arne L. Kalleberg, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill; Peter V. Marsden, Harvard University Crime, Punishment and Social Disorder: Trends in Public Opinion over Three Decades. James D. Wright and Jana L. Jasinski, University of Central Florida Discussant: David R. Harris, Cornell University 129. Special Session. Alpha Kappa Delta (AKD) Distinguished Lecture Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon A Organizer and Presider: Elizabeth Hartung, California State University, Fresno Lecture: Can Men Mother? Judith Lorber, Graduate School, City University of New York 130. Special Session. Local, Regional, and Global Sociologies: Teaching Practices and Sociology Curricular in Comparative Perspective (co-sponsored by the International Sociological Association) Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Congress A Organizers: Sujata Patel, University of Pune, India; A. Douglas A. Kincaid, Florida International University Presider: Ari Sitas, University of Kwazulu-Natal, Durban, South Africa Academic Excellence and Social Relevance: Israeli Sociology in Universities and Beyond. Victor Azarya, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel Teaching Sociology in the Czech Republic. Jiri Subrt, Czech Sociological Association Challenges in the Teaching of Sociology at Universities in Canada and the Commonwealth Caribbean: A Comparison. Ann B. Denis, University of Ottawa, Canada Global Deficit: The Limited Purview of US Sociology Curricula. A. Douglas A. Kincaid, Florida International University Discussant: Carlos Fortuna, University of Coimbra, Portugal 86 Saturday, August 13, 4:30 p.m. 131. Special Session. The Battle over Social Security’s Future (co-sponsored by the Society for the Study of Social Problems, Sociologists for Women in Society, the Association of Applied and Clinical Sociology, and the Association of Black Sociologists) Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Grand Salon II Organizer and Presider: Fred Block, University of California, Davis Panelists: Heidi Hartmann, Institute for Women’s Policy Res. Kilolo Kijakazi, Ford Foundation Jeff Manza, Northwestern University John F. Myles, University of Toronto 132. Regional Spotlight Session. The Philadelphia Negro Philadelphia Marriott, Room 304 Organizer and Presider: Tukufu Zuberi, University of Pennsylvania The Old Seventh Ward Today: Notes on the Philadelphia Negro. Elijah Anderson, University of Pennsylvania Studying the Philadelphia Negro: Then and Now. Camille Zubrinsky Charles, University of Pennsylvania The Health of the “Philadelphia Negro” Revisited. Irma T. Elo, University of Pennsylvania Appplying GIS to Du Bois’s Philadelphia Negro. A. Hillier and Dennis Culhane, University of Pennsylvania 133. Academic Workshop. ASA Guidelines for the Undergraduate Major Philadelphia Marriott, Room 307 Organizer: Carla B. Howery, American Sociological Association Co-Leaders: Carla B. Howery, American Sociological Association Kathleen McKinney, Illinois State University The ASA Task Force on the Undergraduate Major completed its work and produced a report on “Liberal Learning and the Sociology Major Updated: Meeting the Challenge of Teaching Sociology in the Twenty-First Century.” That report contains sixteen recommendations for departments to consider in building programs of excellence for their undergraduate students. This workshop will orient departments to the key recommendations and how to achieve them, given the variety of institutional missions and contexts. The leaders, who were members of the Task Force, will share the rationale for the recommendations, and how departments might approach making changes in their curricula. 134. Career Workshop. Life on the Smaller Side: Purposely Placing Teaching at the Center of Professional Development for Faculty at Small Liberal Arts Colleges Philadelphia Marriott, Room 401-402 Organizer: Susan M. Ross, Lycoming College Panelists: Michael Donnelly, Bard College Sarah Hernandez, New College of Florida Susan M. Ross, Lycoming College Debra Harvey Swanson, Hope College This workshop is designed to stimulate discussion pertaining to issues of teaching and research at smaller colleges and universities. It should be beneficial for both individuals considering positions at smaller institutions and those who have already dedicated a significant portion of their careers at such institutions. Topic coverage includes 1) approaches to successful research agendas, 2) striving for teaching excellence when teaching is THE number one priority of the institution, 3) dynamics of faculty-student relationships, and 4) guarding against faculty burn-out. 135. Professional Workshop. Making the Most of Your Dissertation: Publishing Opportunities Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon L Organizer and Leader: Eric Klinenberg, New York University Panelists: Devah Pager, Princeton University Mary E. Pattillo, Northwestern University 136. Professional Workshop. The Current Status of IRBs (co-sponsored by the ASA Committee on Professional Ethics) Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Adams Organizers: Earl Babbie, Chapman University; Thomas L. Van Valey, Western Michigan University Panelists: Earl Babbie, Chapman University Thomas L. Van Valey, Western Michigan University Marjorie Speers, AAHRPP, Inc. The workshop will analyze the current status of Institutional Review Boards (IRBs), including their originating purpose and history, subsequent legislation and professional association actions, local procedural issues, and problems. A panel will open up and guide a discussion among those attending the session. 137. Research Workshop. Add Health: New Educational Data Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon K Organizer: Kathleen Mullan Harris, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Panelists: Chandra Muller, The University of Texas at Austin Kathryn S. Schiller, University at Albany, State University of New York Kenneth A. Frank, Michigan State University Add Health is a longitudinal study of a nationally representative Saturday, August 13, 4:30 p.m. sample of more than 20,000 adolescents in grades 7-12 in the United States in 1994-95 who have been followed through adolescence and the transition to adulthood with three in-home interviews. In this workshop Add Health researchers will discuss the availability of new educational data from high school transcripts and unique opportunities for research. Presenters will describe the types of educational data available, the kinds of research questions that can be addressed with the educational data linked to the longitudinal Add Health data, and present early findings on the relationships between friendship networks, high school academic curriculum and achievement, and health. Information on how to obtain Add Health data and new directions for the future of Add Health will also be presented. 138. Teaching Workshop. Computer Simulation and Social Theory Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Tubman Organizer: James A. Kitts, University of Washington Panelists: James A. Kitts, University of Washington Martina Morris, University of Washington Michael W. Macy, Cornell University Phillip Bonacich, University of California, Los Angeles Robert Alan Hanneman, University of California, Riverside Researchers are increasingly using computer simulation to explore and refine dynamic models of social processes. Instructors may similarly elucidate social theory by inviting students to observe and manipulate ‘artificial worlds’ that operate according to the theory. Workshop participants will discuss tools and strategies for training students to think rigorously about social dynamics through computational modeling 139. Teaching Workshop. Teaching Gender and Work: Observations from the Last Twenty Years (co-sponsored by the ASA Section on Sex and Gender) Philadelphia Marriott, Room 411 Organizer: Sarah Fenstermaker, University of California, Santa Barbara Leaders: Sarah Fenstermaker, University of California, Santa Barbara Denise A. Segura, University of California, Santa Barbara In this workshop presenters Fernstermaker and Segura will share their the experience they have had for the last two decades teaching an upper division undergraduate lecture class, entitled “Women and Work.” First tauguht by Fernstermaker in 1976, the course has moved from the periphery to the center of the UC Santa Barbara undergraduate curriculum, and serves as one popular mainstay of UCSB’s offerings in feminist sociology. Indeed, on could argue that over time the course has reflected the remarkable changes in the teaching of gender in the last twenty years. The presenters will address the following issues: How “Women and Work” teaches gender inequality Changes overtime in the range of readings and scope of how women and work is conceptualized Preparation of students for practical feminist analysis of women and work Race, class, gender and sexuality of focal points of analysis Contrasting and comparable aspects of course from the two presenters “Best practices” in 87 student writing about gender and work Teaching the course outside the U.S.: changing approaches and perspectives Incorporating digitized cultural depictions into lectures Ample time will be given to group discussion of issues and problems in the teaching of gender, “going” global and blending the practical and theoretical in feminist sociology courses. 140. Teaching Workshop. Teaching Youth Culture Philadelphia Marriott, Room 410 Organizer and Leader: Evan Cooper, Ithaca College 141. Regular Session. Cool Tools of Cultural Analysis Philadelphia Marriott, Room 407 Organizer: Elizabeth Long, Rice University Cascades of Culture: Exploring Extreme Variation and Extreme Unpredictability with Modeling and Experiments. Matthew J. Salganik, Peter Dodds, and Duncan J. Watts, Columbia University Conceptualizing Identity as Ideology: A Quantitative Measure of Subcultural Identity. Pamela M. Hunt, Kent State University Dancing to Darwin’s Beat: Cultural Niche Dynamics in Sociodemographic Space. Bart Bonikowski, Duke University Network Cultural Analysis: Texts, Graphs, and Tools. Hyung Sam Park, University of Pittsburgh 142. Regular Session. Culture, politics, religion and responses to the AIDS pandemic Philadelphia Marriott, Room 305 Organizer: Ricky N. Bluthenthal, RAND Presider: Sheba M. George, Charles R. Drew University Is Voluntary Counseling and Testing of Drug Users in China Feasible? Oscar Grusky, University of California, Los Angeles; Hongjie Liu, Wayne State University; Xiaojing Li, Hefei CDC; Aimee-Noelle Swanson, University of California, Los Angeles Routines under Constraint: How Classification Systems Shape the Work of AIDS Care. Rebecca J. Culyba, Northwestern University Modeling the Effects of Spirituality/Religion on Patients’ Perceptions of Living with HIV/AIDS. Magdalena Szaflarski and Phillip N. Ritchey, University of Cincinnati Religious Responses to AIDS in Sub-Saharan Africa: An Examination of Religious Congregations in Rural Malawi. Jenny Ann Trinitapoli and Mark D. Regnerus, The University of Texas at Austin Discussant: Paul Root Wolpe, University of Pennsylvania 88 Saturday, August 13, 4:30 p.m. 143. Regular Session. Digital Inequality Philadelphia Marriott, Room 413 Organizer: A. Aneesh, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee Presider: Eric Kaldor, College at Brockport, State University of New York Digital Inequality: A Five Country Comparison Using Microdata. Hiroshi Ono, Stockholm School of Economics; Madeline Zavodny, Agnes Scott College Exploring Cognitive and Occupational Explanations for Educational Differences in Home Internet Adoption among Older Adults. Jeremy Freese, University of Wisconsin Exploring the Divide: The Effect of Race/Ethnicity on Computer Ownership in United States, 1984-2003. Salvador Rivas, University of Wisconsin Using Family Income to Measure the Extent and Persistence of the U.S. Digital Divide. Steven P. Martin and John Robinson, University of Maryland Discussant: Eszter Hargittai, Northwestern University With increasing access to the Internet, the study of digital inequality is beset with new challenges both internationally and institutionally. Differences in skills, autonomy, education, equipment, social organization and purpose assume importance in understanding the evolving patterns of inequality even while old forms of the divide may be on the decline. 144. Regular Session. Economic Networks and Relations Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington C Organizer: Bruce G. Carruthers, Northwestern University Presider: Ryon Lancaster, University of Chicago Network Growth and Consolidation: The Effects of Cohesion and Diversity on the Biotechnology Industry Network. Jason D. Owen-Smith, University of Michigan; Walter W. Powell, Stanford University Choice for Control or Consideration for Compatibility? Use of Within-Network Exchange in the Selection of Home Remodelers. Ezra W. Zuckerman, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Routes into Networks: The Structure of English Trade in the East Indies, 1601-1833. Peter S. Bearman and Emily Anne Erikson, Columbia University Social Structure, Employee Mobility, and the Circulation of Client Ties. Joseph P. Broschak, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; Keri Niehans, University of Texas, El Paso Binding Conflict: Competitive Embeddedness in the Venture Capital Industry. Denis Trapido, Stanford University 145. Regular Session. Gender Philadelphia Marriott, Room 408 Organizer: Bandana Purkayastha, University of Connecticut Presider: Celine-Marie Pascale, American University Gendered Aspects of International Violence. Shahin Gerami and Melodye Gaye Lehnerer, Southwest Missouri State University Creating New Political Moulds?: Women’s Movements in the Transitioning Countries of Ghana and El Salvador. Kathleen M. Fallon, McGill University Group Participation and Women\’s Perceived Autonomy in Rural India. Dina Banerjee and Mangala Subramaniam, Purdue University Inner-City African American Women’s Adolesence as Stressful Life Events. Eloise Dunlap and Ellen Benoit, National Development and Research Institutes Men’s Heterosexual Initiation: Sexual Agency and Empowerment in Post-World War II American Culture. L. A. Mundy, Gettysburg College 146. Regular Session. Group Processes: Developments in Status Research Philadelphia Marriott, Room 409 Organizer: Shelley J. Correll, Cornell University Presider: Robert B. Willer, Cornell University Gift Exchange and Status Differences: An Experimental Test of Behavior-Status and Social Exchange Theories. Alison J. Bianchi, Elisa Jayne Bienenstock, Donna A. Lancianese, and Vicki L. Hunter, Kent State University Legitimacy, Status, and the Acoustic Signature of Influential Speech. Christopher Moore and Dawn T. Robinson, University of Georgia Expectation States Theory and Research: New Observations from Meta-Analysis. Will Kalkhoff, Kent State University; Shane Thye, University of South Carolina Status and the Legitimacy of Power. Jeffrey W. Lucas, University of Maryland, College Park; Michael J. Lovaglia, University of Iowa The Emergence of Status Structures. Peter J. Burke, University of California, Riverside Structural Power and Status in Groups. New Theoretical Approach. Kinga Anna Wysienska, Jagiellonian University 147. Regular Session. Institutional Logics and Organizations Philadelphia Marriott, Room 306 Organizer: Jesper B. Sorensen, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Presider: Mark Joseph Zbaracki, University of Pennsylvania Saturday, August 13, 4:30 p.m. Institutional Logics as Shapers of Strategic Action: Mapping the Terrain of Societal Logics and Organizational Forms in Western China. Bradley J. Koch, University of Arizona Intermediary Organizations and the Coordination of Social Practices. Michael McQuarrie and Doug Guthrie, New York University Reinventing the University as an Economic Engine: SelfPortrayals of University Presidents to Congress. Elizabeth Popp Berman, University of California, Berkeley The Role of Boundary Institutions in Reconciling Convergent and Divergent Interests. Siobhan Clare O’Mahony, Harvard Buisness School Discussant: Mark Joseph Zbaracki, University of Pennsylvania 148. Regular Session. New Methods of Data Analysis Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Congress B Organizer and Presider: Robert M. OBrien, University of Oregon Causal Inference with Panel Data. Paul D. Allison, University of Pennsylvania Usefulness and Uselessness of the Decomposition of Tobit Coefficients. Jeong-han Kang, The University of Chicago A New Extension of the Binomial Error Model for Responses to Items of Varying Difficulty. John L. Martin, University of Wisconsin, Madison; James Wiley, San Francisco State University; Stephen Herschkorn, Rutgers University Modality Analysis: A Semantic Grammar for Imputations of Intentionality in Texts. Carl W. Roberts, Iowa State University; Cornelia Zuell, ZUMA; Yong Wang, Montclair State University; Juliane Landmann, ZUMA The session focuses on innovations in the analysis of data: Causal inference in panel models, decomposition of tobit coefficients, extensions of the binomial error model in item response theory, and modality analysis for the imputation of intentionality in texts. 149. Regular Session. Sociology of Aging Philadelphia Marriott, Room 404 Organizer and Presider: Jennifer Keene, University of Nevada, Las Vegas Cohabitation among Older Adults: A National Portrait. Susan L. Brown, Gary R. Lee, and Jennifer Roebuck Bulanda, Bowling Green State University Health Benefits of Volunteering in Late Mid-Life. Jane Allyn Piliavin, University of Wisconsin Military Service and Self-Rated Health in Later Life:Insight into Life Course (Dis)Continuity. Janet M. Wilmoth and Andrew S. London, Syracuse University The Power of Purpose in Aging and Dying Well. Monika Ardelt, University of Florida Widowhood Influences on Volunteer Participation and Well- 89 being in Later Life. Yunqing Li, New Jersey Department of Health and Senior Services; Kenneth F. Ferraro, Purdue University 150. Regular Session. Sociology of Development: Poverty, Industrial Policy and Local Capital Philadelphia Marriott, Independence Salon I Organizer and Presider: Ben Crow, University of California Measuring Standard of Living. The Asset Approach and Its Implications. Guillermo R. Cantor and Kim B. Nguyen, University of Maryland Economic and Non-economic Determinants of Poverty in Developing Countries: Competing Theories and Empirical Evidence. Ming-Chang Tsai, National Taipei University Conquering, Comprador, or Competitive: The National Bourgeoisie in the Developing World. Andrew Schrank, Yale University Redefining State Embeddedness for the Global Economy: The Rise of China’s Silicon Valley. Elena Obukhova, University of Chicago Discussant: Peter B. Evans, University of California, Berkeley This session provides a sample of strong, critical research emerging from the study of the developing world of the global south. The session is diverse. It includes two papers on poverty, a study of the rise of semiconductor industry in Shanghai, and a call to reconsider the role of local capital in a world dominated by neoliberal ideas. 151. Regular Session. Sociology of Reproduction I: Embodied Reproduction Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Congress C Organizer and Presider: Christine H. Morton, ReproNetwork Bearing the Fetus: The Normalization of Pregnancy Symptoms. Danielle Bessett, New York University “I Know Because I’ve Had One”: Biological Empathy as Expertise among Obstetrician-Gynecologists. Carrie Lee Smith, Millersville University Silent Witness or Strident Advocate: Reproductive Activism in Context. Nicole Gallicchio, University of Chicago Genomics, Gender and Genetic Capital: The Need for an Embodied Ethics of Reproduction. Elizabeth Mary Ettorre, University of Plymouth Discussant: Christine H. Morton, ReproNetwork This session consists of papers which explore how embodiment and personal expertise are utilized as resources for authoritative knowledge or as the basis for professional expertise through the lens of pregnant women, ob/gyns, doulas. The final paper provides a theoretical examination of embodied ethics in reproduction. 90 Saturday, August 13, 4:30 p.m. 152. Regular Session. The Impact of Law on Social Inequality Philadelphia Marriott, Room 412 Organizer and Presider: Saundra Davis Westervelt, University of North Carolina, Greensboro Transnational Law, Governance, and Labor Movements: The Emergence of a Labor Rights Regime in North America. Tamara Kay, University of California, San Diego Managerial Discretion, “Subtle” Bias, and the Politics of Expertise: Litigating Statistical Proof of Employment Discrimination. William T. Bielby, Hate Crime Legislation in Indiana, Kentucky, and Ohio: A Regional Analysis. Paul John Becker, Bryan Byers, and Arthur J. Jipson, University of Dayton The Impact of Determinate Sentencing Policies on Imprisonment. Traci Schlesinger, Princeton University Discussant: Tamara Kay, University of California, San Diego 153. Regular Session. The Military Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth A2 Organizer: Morten G. Ender, United States Military Academy Presider: David E. Rohall, Western Illinois University Comparison and Evolution of State-Systems: A Dynamic Approach. Dieter Reicher, Karl-Franzens-University, Graz Military Spending and Economic Development: A New Perspective. Jeffrey D. Kentor, University of Utah; Edward Kick, Middle Tennessee State University Outsourcing in the Army: Social-Psychological Effects of Civilian Contractors on Soldiers’ Retention Intentions. Ryan D. Kelty, University of Maryland Boredom, Iraq, and U.S. Soldiers. Morten G. Ender, United States Military Academy 154. Regular Session. Wage and Occupational Changes Over Time Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Grand Salon III-IV Organizer: Jacqueline Johnson, Fordham University Presider: Sandy Trappen, Fordham University Gender, Education, and Job Instability: Exploring Job Mobility and Wage Growth Over Time. Sylvia A. Fuller, The University of British Columbia Employment Gains and Wage Declines: The Erosion of Black Women’s Relative Wages through the 1990s. Becky Pettit, University of Washington Real Progress or Safe Progress?: The Integration of Women in Management in US Workplaces, 1966-2000. Tiffany L. Taylor and Catherine Zimmer, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill A Matter of Degrees: Female Underrepresentation in Computer Science Programs Cross-Nationally. Maria Charles and Karen Bradley, University of California, San Diego 155. Section on Medical Sociology. Reeder Award Ceremony and Business Meeting Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon G Organizer and Presider: Kathy Charmaz, Sonoma State University Introduction. Carol Boyer, Rutgers University Reeder Award Lecture. Critical Contemporary Questions of Health and Health Care: Can Medical Sociology, Social Networks, and the Network Episode (NEM) Provide Answers? Bernice Pescosolido, Indiana University Business Meeting 156. Section on Sociology of Emotions Paper Session. Research on Emotions Philadelphia Marriott, Room 403 Organizer: Cathryn Johnson, Emory University Presider: Kathryn J. Lively, Dartmouth College Emotion as Resource in Caring Labor: The Case of Caregiving for the Frail Elderly. Miriam Beth Ryvicker, New York University Expressing Emotional Responses to the Injustice of Others: It’s Not Just What You Feel. Natasha Walker Morgan, Karen A. Hegtvedt, and Cathryn Johnson, Emory University Ambivalent Passion and Passionate Ambivalence: Emotions and the Historic Preservation Movement. Melinda J. Milligan, Sonoma State University The Failure of Political Rituals in China’s Cultural Revolution. Yuping Zhang, University of Pennsylvania Discussant: Kathryn J. Lively, Dartmouth College 157. Section on Race, Gender, and Class Paper Session. Shifting Conceptions of Race, Gender, and Class Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Anthony Organizers: Carla Devonn Brailey, Howard University; Maxine Craig, California State University, East Bay Presider: Carla Devonn Brailey, Howard University Patrolling Bodies: The Social Control of Race through Gender and Class in Japanese American Beauty Pageants. Rebecca C. King-O’Riain, National University of Ireland, Maynooth Race-ing Men: Boys, Cars, Risk, and the Politics of Race. Amy L. Best, George Mason University The Impact of Transnationlism on the Sociology of Race, Class, Gender, and Nation: Exploring New Territories and Methodological Terrains. Emily Noelle Ignacio, Loyola University Chicago Saturday, August 13, 4:30 p.m. The Production of Institutional Racism. Barbara Trepagnier, Texas State University at San Marcos Toward a Deconstruction of Black Womanhood: Distinguishing Prescriptive and Descriptive Forms of Strength. Tamara Michelle Beauboeuf, DePauw University Discussant: Jessica Fields, San Francisco State University 158. Section on Sociology of Education Paper Session. Comparative and Historical Perspectives on the State and Formal Educational Institutions Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon B Organizer: John Robert Warren, University of Minnesota Presider: Mitchell L. Stevens, New York University The Normative Construction of Modern Education System: Analysis of Foundings of Educational Ministries and Laws, 1800-2000. Jong-Seon Kim, Stanford University Contextual Influences on Educational Achievement: The Family and the State Compared. Patrick Heuveline, NORC & The University of Chicago National Educational Policies and their Consequences for Quality and Equity. Creso Franco, Pontifical Catholic University of Rio de Janeiro; Valerie E. Lee, University of Michigan; Natália Satyro, Pontifical Catholic University of Rio de Janeiro Sorting Out the Relationship between Education and the Welfare State: An Analysis of 16 OECD Countries. Stefan Adessa Wilkens, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Interpreting Worldwide Expansion and Change in Universities. David John Frank, University of California, Irvine; John W. Meyer, Stanford University Discussant: Evan Schofer, University of Minnesota 159. Section on Political Economy of the World System Paper Session. World Inequalities Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth A1 Organizer and Presider: Timothy P. Moran, Stony Brook University, State University of New York The Evolution of Inequality Under Globalization: Toward a Macroeconomic View. James Galbraith, University of Texas The Political Sociology of World Income Inequality. Giovanni Arrighi and Astra Nandina Bonini, The Johns Hopkins University The Global Allocation of Individual Income: First Results from the Standardized Income Distribution Database. Salvatore J. Babones and Maria Jose Alvarez, University of Pittsburgh Discussant: Roberto Patricio Korzeniewicz, University of Maryland 91 160. Section on International Migration Roundtables and Business Meeting Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth B 4:30-5:30pm, Roundtables: Organizer: Steven J. Gold, Michigan State University 1. Transnationalism and the Life Course Presider: Greta A. Gilbertson, Fordham University Aging, Citizenship, Belonging and Migration: An Exploration of Trajectories of Age among Immigrants in New York City. Greta A. Gilbertson, Fordham University “I’ll Go Back Next Year”: Local Level Transnational Life Across the Life Course. Robert Courtney Smith, Baruch College, City University of New York International Retirement Migration: A Case Study of US Retirees Living in Mexico. Thankam S. Sunil and Viviana Rojas, University of Texas at San Antonio 2. Transnational Lives of Latin American Migrants Presider: Peggy Levitt, Wellesley College Rethinking Transnationalism through Peruvian Women’s Experiences: Families, Race, and Ethnicity. Erika Busse, University of Minnesota Transcultural Embeddedness and Latin American Transnational Migrations. Elizabeth Marie Aranda, University of Miami 3. Causes of Migration Presider: Sara R. Curran, Princeton University International Migration and Free Market Reform in China. Ming Tsui, Millsaps College Contracting Labor Migration: Philippine States Policy and International Migration Flows, 1969-2000. Kristel Acacio, University of California, Berkeley 4. Immigrants and Economic Integration I Presider: Rubén G. Rumbaut, University of California, Irvine Re-Conceptualizing the Economic Integration of Immigrants. Shannon Marie Gleeson, University of California, Berkeley Separation Anxiety: Capital and Nation. Harel Shapira, Columbia University 5. Immigrants and Economic Integration II Presider: Frank D. Bean, University of California, Irvine Mexican Immigrant Entrepreneurs in Los Angeles. Dolores Trevizo, Occidental College Highly Skilled Immigrants in the U.S. Labor Market: Job Context and Earnings Competition with Natives. Jeanne Batalova and Frank D. Bean, University of California, Irvine 6. Identities, Rituals, and Marriage Presider: Carl L. Bankston, Tulane University After Ethnic Cleansing: Bosnian Refugees and the Dilemma of Collective Identity. Kathie Friedman, 92 Saturday, August 13, 4:30 p.m. Session 160, continued University of Washington The Demilitarization of Thai Wives: Thai American Exogamy, 1980-2000. Danielle Antoinette Hidalgo and Carl L. Bankston, Tulane University 7. Discrimination, Naturalization, and Citizenship Presider: Silvia Pedraza, University of Michigan “My Eyes Didn’t Turn to Blue”: U.S. Citizenship among Mexicans and Salvadorans in Houston, Texas. Marilyn Espitia, University of Houston A Theory of Law: Durkheim’s Justice and Latino/a Immigrants. Belinda Herrera, Arizona State University Ambivalent Prejudice toward Immigrants: The Role of Social Contact and Ethnic Origin. Hisako Matsuo and Kevin McIntyre, Saint Louis University 8. Migration, Mobility, and Identity Presider: Min Zhou, University of California, Los Angeles Linking Educational Aspirations and Motivations for Migration among Caribbean Immigrants: Notes from the Field. Ivy Forsythe-Brown, University of Maryland Creating Symbolic Identity among Contemporary Professional Asian Indians in US. Manashi Ray, Michigan State University 5:30-6:10pm, Business Meeting 161. Section-in-Formation Evolution and Sociology Invited Session and Organizational Meeting Philadelphia Marriott, Independence Salon II 4:30-5:30 pm, Sociology and Evolutionary Science: A Natural Alliance: Organizers: Timothy Crippen, University of Mary Washington; Alexandra Maryanski, University of California, Riverside Presider: Timothy Crippen, University of Mary Washington Panelists: Rosemary L. Hopcroft, University of North Carolina, Charlotte Richard S. Machalek, University of Wyoming Jonathan H. Turner, University of California, Riverside 5:30-6:10 pm, Organizational Meeting 162. Theory Section Mini-Conference II. Contemporary Theories of Macro Structures and Processes Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon I Organizer: Murray Webster, University of North Carolina, Charlotte Presider: Mathieu Deflem, University of South Carolina Measuring Inequality and Social Class: The Heavy Weight of Convention and the Case for Overcoming. David B. Grusky and Kim Weeden, Cornell University Practicing Gender at Work. Patricia Yancey Martin, Florida State University To be announced. Miller McPherson, Duke University Exploring Two Frontiers: Developing and Extending Legitimacy Theory. Henry A. Walker, University of Arizona Discussant: Andrew J. Perrin, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill 5:30 pm Meetings Evolution and Sociology Section-in-Formation Organizational Meeting (to 6:10pm)—Philadelphia Marriott, Independence Salon II Section on Collective Behavior and Social Movements Business Meeting (to 6:10pm)—Philadelphia Marriott, Room 310 Section on International Migration Business Meeting (to 6:10pm)—Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth B 6:30 pm Sessions 163. Section on Social Psychology Cooley-Mead Award Ceremony Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon I 6:30-7:30pm, ceremony: Organizer: Jane Sell, Texas A&M University Presider: Edward J. Lawler, Cornell University Introduction: Edward J. Lawler, Cornell University Cooley-Mead Award Address: Interaction Difference and Inequality. Cecilia L. Ridgeway, Stanford University 7:30-8:30pm, joint reception with the Section on Children and Youth in Room 414 6:30 pm Receptions Reception for International Scholars (to 8:00pm)—Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth D Section on Aging and the Life Course Reception (to 9:00pm)— Maggiano’s Little Italy, Reading Market Terminal Section on Animals and Society Reception (to 8:00pm)— Philadelphia Marriott, Room 308 Section on Children and Youth and Section on Social Psychology Reception (to 8:30pm)—Philadelphia Marriott, Room 414 Section on Collective Behavior and Social Movements and Section on Political Sociology Joint Reception (to 8:00pm)—Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon J Section on Communication and Information Technology Reception (to 8:00pm)—Philadelphia Marriott, Indepen- 93 Saturday, August 13, 6:30 p.m. dence Salon III Section on Economic Sociology and Section on Sociology of Culture Joint Reception (to 8:00pm)—Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon C Section on Evolution and Sociology Reception (to 8:00pm)— Philadelphia Marriott, Independence Salon II Section on International Migration Reception (to 8:00pm)— Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth C Section on Medical Sociology Reception (to 8:00pm)— Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon G Theory Section and Section on Sociology of Emotions Joint Reception (to 8:00pm)—Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon D 6:30 pm 7:30 pm Sessions 164. Special Film Premiere. Lester F. Ward: A Life’s Journey Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon H Organizer and Producer: Gale Largey, Mansfield University This new documentary about Lester Ward, first president of the American Sociological Society, chronicles the life and ideas of Ward-his staunch egalitarianism, advocacy for women, fierce resistance to the racism of the eugenics movement, and recognition of the need for public sociology. All meeting attendees are invited to this special centennial event. Other Groups “The Values Question in American Political Life: Analysis and Constructive Action” (Amitai Etzioni and Steve Brint) (to 8:00pm)—Philadelphia Marriott, Room 304 Caucus on Transnational Approaches to Gender and Sexuality (Frances Hasso) (to 8:00pm)—Philadelphia Marriott, Room 310 ISA Research Committee 32 on Women and Society session on “The Quality of Social Existence and Resistance in a Globalizing World” (co-sponsored by SWS) (to 8:00pm)— Philadelphia Marriott, Room 306 ISA Research Committee 39 on Disasters session on “The 2004 Indian Ocean Tsunami: Social and Economic Impacts and Consequences” (Havidan Rodriguez) (to 8:00pm)— Philadelphia Marriott, Room 303 Memorial Gathering in Honor of George Uri Fischer, 19232005 (Kevin Anderson, Stanley Aronowitz, Roslyn Bologhi, William DiFazio) (to 8:00pm)—Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon A Sociological Imagination Group meeting on “The Web or Part/ Whole Approach to Education” (Bernard Phillips) (to 8:00pm)—Philadelphia Marriott, Room 305 Sociologists’ AIDS Network business meeting (Matt Mutchler) (to 8:00pm)—Philadelphia Marriott, Room 307 9:30 pm Receptions Departmental Alumni Night (DAN) (to 11:30pm)—Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon E-F Participating departments are: University at Albany, SUNY University of Arizona Boston College Bowling Green State Brandeis University Brown University University at Buffalo, SUNY University of California, Irvine University of California, Los Angeles University of California, Riverside University of California, San Diego University of California, Santa Barbara University of California, Santa Cruz University of Cincinnati City University of New York, Graduate Center Cornell University Duke University Fordham University University of Georgia University of Hawaii, Manoa Howard University University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Indiana University, Bloomington University of Iowa Iowa State University Johns Hopkins University Louisiana State University Loyola University Chicago University of Maryland Michigan State University University of Minnesota University of Missouri, Columbia University of Nebraska, Lincoln University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill North Carolina State University Northwestern University University of Notre Dame Ohio State University University of Pennsylvania Pennsylvania State University Purdue University Rutgers University Southern Illinois University, Carbondale Stanford University Stony Brook University University of Texas, Austin Texas A&M University Texas Woman’s University / University of North Texas Vanderbilt University University of Virginia University of Washington Washington State University 94 Sunday, August 14 Sunday, August 14 The length of each daytime session/meeting activity is one hour and forty minutes, unless noted otherwise. The usual turnover schedule is as follows: 8:30 am – 10:10 am 10:30 am – 12:10 pm 12:30 pm – 2:10 pm 2:30 pm – 4:10 pm 4:30 pm – 6:10 pm Session presiders and committee chairs are requested to see that sessions and meetings end on time to avoid conflicts with subsequent activities scheduled into the same room and to allow participants time to transit between facilities. 7:00 am Meetings Community College Faculty Breakfast (to 8:15am) — Philadelphia Marriott, Room 401-402 Section on Aging and the Life Course Council Meeting (to 8:00am) — Philadelphia Marriott, Conference Suite II Section on Children and Youth Council Meeting (to 8:15am) — Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Parlor 1 Section on Sociology of Culture Council Meeting (to 8:00am) — Philadelphia Marriott, Room 308 8:30 am Meetings 2006 Distinguished Career Award for the Practice of Sociology Selection Committee (to 10:10am) — Philadelphia Marriott, Room 308 2006 Distinguished Contributions to Teaching Award Selection Committee (to 10:10am) — Philadelphia Marriott, Room 309 2006 Public Understanding of Sociology Award Selection Committee (to 10:10am) — Philadelphia Marriott, Conference Suite I Committee on Committees (to 4:10pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Conference Suite III Committee on Publications (to 4:10pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Room 302 Section on Methodology Council Meeting (to 9:30am) — Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Tubman Section on Social Psychology Council Meeting (to 9:30am) — Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon J Task Force on the Institutionalization of Public Sociology, Working Group A (to 10:10am) — Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Jefferson 8:30 am Sessions 165. Thematic Session. From the Others’ Perspectives: Pluralism across Borders (co-sponsored by Sociologists without Borders) Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington A Organizer and Presider: Judith R. Blau, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Panelists: Keri E. Iyall Smith, Stonehill College Alberto Moncada, Sociologists without Borders Havidan Rodriguez, University of Delaware Alan Sica, Pennsylvania State University Liberal social science presumes a singular perspective, but globalization challenges that presumption and requires we consider plural perspectives. What implications do borders and pluralism have for a more inclusive but particularlizing social science? For epistemological assumptions? For ethics? For our inquiries? What universals do we want to defend? 166. Thematic Session. Towards a Sociology of Transnationalism and a Transnational Sociology Philadelphia Marriott, Room 410 Organizers: Peggy Levitt, Wellesley College; Sanjeev Khagram, Harvard University Presiders: Sanjeev Khagram, Harvard University; Peggy Levitt, Wellesley College Transnational Social Movements. Jackie Smith, University of Notre Dame Transnational Migration. Luis Eduardo Guarnizo, University of California, Davis Transnational Capitalism. Beverly Silver, Johns Hopkins University Transnational Religion. Jose Casanova, New School University Transnational Crime. David J. Kyle, University of California, Davis 167. Centennial Session. 100 Years of Health Policy Research: A Retrospective Assessment of Sociological Contributions Philadelphia Marriott, Room 304 Organizers: Kathy Charmaz, Sonoma State University; Donald W. Light, University of Medicine & Dentistry of New Jersey Presider: Ivy Bourgeault, McMaster University Institutional Racism: A Century of Progress and Barriers Sunday, August 14, 8:30 a.m. Remaining. David R. Williams, University of Michigan How Did We Get Corporate Managed Care? A Centennial Perspective. Donald W. Light, University of Medicine & Dentistry of New Jersey Why the U.S. Has No National Health Insurance. Jill Quadagno, From Lydia Pinkham to Levitra: A Century of Medicalization. Peter Conrad, Brandeis University; Valerie R. Leiter, Simmons College 168. Centennial Session. A Century’s Worth of Sociology’s Contribution to the Study of Disability Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Adams Organizer: Sharon N. Barnartt, Gallaudet University Presider: Bonnie O’Day, Cornell University One Hundred Years of Sociological Theories about Disability and Rehabilitation: Deviance, Stigma and Beyond. Corinne Kirchner, American Foundation for the Blind One Hundred Years of the Evolution of the Social Definition of Disability: Models, Concepts and Measurements. Barbara M. Altman, National Center for Health Statistics One Hundred Years of Social Change: Policies, Protests and Progress. Sharon N. Barnartt, Gallaudet University The session focuses upon sociological work regarding disability in three areas: sociological theories about the nature and causation of disability, sociological attempts at empirical clarification of social definitions and measurements, and the interplay between social policies and social movement activism. 169. Special Session. Religion, Immigration, and Globalization (co-sponsored by the Association for the Sociology of Religion) Radisson Warwick Hotel, Warwick Room Organizer and Presider: R. Stephen Warner, University of Illinois at Chicago The Process of Immigrant Incorporation Today: Religious, Secular, and Otherwise. Alejandro Portes, Princeton University Not Just Made in the USA: The Nexus between US Religious Pluralism and Global Religion. Peggy Levitt, Wellesley College Immigrant Religious Networks Across Borders: Implications for Globalization. Helen Rose Ebaugh, University of Houston Discussant: R. Stephen Warner, University of Illinois at Chicago 95 170. Special Session. Social Change in Post-Colonial Hong Kong: Implications for the Future of China and Taiwan Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth A1 Organizer and Presider: David Post, Pennsylvania State University A Haven No More? Whither Hong Kong in Human Rights Struggles of Global Asia after 1997. Ming-yan Lai, University of California, Santa Barbara Governance Crisis in Post-1997 Hong Kong: Causes and Implications. Tai-Lok Lui, The Chinese University Globalization, National/Regional Integration, and the Rescaling Experiment in Hong Kong after 1997. Alvin Y. So, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology From Political Apathy to Political Activism? Changes in Political Attitudes and Participation in Post-Colonial Hong Kong. Alfred Ko-Wai Hu, Academia Sinica; Raymond Sinkwok Wong, University of California, Santa Barbara Discussant: David Post, Pennsylvania State University 171. Special Session. The Crisis of Rationalism and the ReElection of George Bush: Merging Sociological and Psychoanalytic Ideas Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon G Organizer and Presider: Lynn Sharon Chancer, Fordham University Sociological Resistance to Psychoanalytic Ideas. Lynn S. Chancer, Fordham University; Catherine Silver, Brooklyn College, City University of New York Psychoanalysis, Creativity, and Ideas. Neil G. McLaughlin, McMaster University, Canada Crossing the Psycho-Social Divide: Freud, Weber, Adorno, and Elias. George Cavelletto, Brooklyn College Sociological Perspectives on Trauma and Illness: Narrating Social Illness in a Diagnostic World. Thomas E. DeGloma, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey 172. Special Session. Transitions to Adulthood in Early 21st Century America Philadelphia Marriott, Liberty Salon B Organizer: Patrick Carr, St. Joseph’s University Presider: Jennifer A. Holdaway, Social Science Research Council Coming of Age in “America’s Finest City”: Transitions to Adulthood among Children of Immigrants in San Diego. Linda Borgen and Rubén G. Rumbaut, University of California, Irvine Straight from the Heartland: Coming of Age in Ellis, Iowa. Patrick Carr and Maria J. Kefalas, St. Joseph’s University Transitions to Adulthood in the Land of Lake Wobegon. Teresa 96 Sunday, August 14, 8:30 a.m. Session 172, continued A. Swartz, Douglas R. Hartmann, and Jeylan T. Mortimer, University of Minnesota The Meanings and Markers of Early Adulthood. Richard A. Settersten, Case Western Reserve University 173. Career Workshop. Career Opportunities for Sociologists in State Government Philadelphia Marriott, Room 303 Organizer and Leader: Paul T. Melevin, State of California Employment Development Department Panelists: Annemarie Scarisbrick-Hauser, KeyCorp Bill Hauser, University of Akron This workshop will inform participants of the career opportunities available to sociologists in state government. Initially, the workshop will focus on employment opportunities. Mandates from the federal government coupled with shrinking budgets have created an increasing need for state governments to employ professionals who have the skills to conduct a variety of social and behavioral science research (i.e., social surveys, focus groups, experiments, or evaluation research). Dr. Paul Melevin of the State of California’s Employment Development Department will help workshop participants identify employment opportunities for sociologists. In addition to providing a list of available opportunities, he will show participants how to access the websites where specific positions are posted. In doing so, he will provide practical advice on how to search for available positions, how to complete applications for employment, what to expect when called to a job interview, as well as provide specific advice on what they should expect after being interviewed. Career opportunities in state government (as well as those in federal and local government) are not limited to full or part-time employment. Often, many contract opportunities exist for sociologists in private consulting or for academic sociologists seeking funding opportunities to conduct research. Dr. Annemarie Scarisbrick-Hauser of KeyCorp and Dr. William Hauser of the University of Akron’s Marketing Department have extensive experience in seeking and obtaining contracts for research. They will share their experiences. In doing so, they will identify the various funding opportunities available to sociologists and they will instruct participants on how to identify these opportunities as well as provide information on how to seek out these opportunities and advise them of the skills needed to secure the funding. Initially, the workshop will focus on providing participants with general information, after which there will be time for attendees to interact and participate in a question and answer session. 174. Professional Workshop. Balancing Work and Family Careers in Academia (co-sponsored by Sociologists for Women in Society) Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon K Organizer/Leader: Tanja St. Pierre, The Pennsylvania State University 175. Professional Workshop. Research Support and Federal Funding Opportunities for Sociology Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon I Organizer: Lee Herring, American Sociological Association Panelists: Keith Crank, National Science Foundation Vivian Wang, National Institutes of Health Roberta M. Spalter-Roth, American Sociological Association 176. Professional Workshop. Writing Sociology for a General Audience Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth A2 Organizer/Leader: Pepper J. Schwartz, University of Washington 177. Teaching Workshop. Effective Clinical Sociology: From Practitioners to Program Philadelphia Marriott, Room 411 Organizer: Jan Marie Fritz, University of Cincinnati Leaders: Jan Marie Fritz, University of Cincinnati Ann Marie Ellis, Texas State University The presenters will provide an overview of the field of clinical sociology with an emphasis on international developments (e.g. in Japan, Malaysia, Italy and the International Association of French-Speaking Sociologist). Participants will identify and discuss critical skills for clinical sociologists including strategies for identifying funding sources for interventions. We will examine models for effective clinical sociology programs and look at the format of two programs in Italy. 178. Teaching Workshop. Teaching Research Methods and Making It Exciting Philadelphia Marriott, Room 412 Organizer: Kerry J. Strand, Hood College Leaders: Kerry J. Strand, Hood College Gregory L. Weiss, Roanoke College Sociology students typically view the required Research Methods course as the most rigorous-and frequently, the most dry and boring-in the sociology curriculum. For that and other reasons, it can be a real challenge to teach. How can we help students appreciate the contributions of research to sociological understanding as we also see to it that they gain some familiarity with the wide range of methodological approaches and techniques? How can we help students become critical consumers of social research as we also empower them as potential producers and discoverers of knowledge about the social world? And, perhaps most difficult, how can we best convey to them some of our own appreciation for and excitement about doing social research? In this workshop, we will detail some of the distinctive challenges in teaching research methods and then will share many tried and true exercises, assignments, resources, and teaching strategies drawn from our combined decades of teaching undergraduate research methods. Sunday, August 14, 8:30 a.m. 179. Teaching Workshop. Teaching the Sociology of Mental Health: Integrating Personal Memoirs (co-sponsored by the ASA Section on Medical Sociology) Philadelphia Marriott, Room 409 Organizer: Jane D. McLeod, Indiana University Panelists: Jane D. McLeod, Indiana University Phil Brown, Brown University William W. Eaton, Johns Hopkins University This workshop focuses on the use of personal memoirs in courses on the sociology of mental health. Panel members will discuss: (1) the challenges of teaching courses in this area (e.g., the diversity of the audience, personal expectations that students bring to the course); (2) the contributions of personal memoirs to addressing those challenges; (3) and alternative strategies for integrating personal memoirs into course discussions and exercises. Workshop participants are encourage to share their own classroom experiences; the will receive an annotated list of personal memoirs and examples of related course exercises. 180. Undergraduate Student Roundtables Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Junipers Organizer: Mercedes Rubio, American Sociological Association 1. Identity and Personality Presider: Lashaune Patrice Johnson, University of California A “White Washed” Culture: A look at the Way NonSpanish Speaking Mexican Americans View Their Identity. Ursulina Rene Ramirez, University of California, Santa Barbara Racial and Religious Reconciliation: A Discussion of Minority Identity Transformation among Second Generation Asian-American Christians. Dennis Chin, The College of New Jersey Black Males in the St. Bernard. Daniel A. Eaglin, II, Southern University, New Orleans Differences in Stereotypes about Black Americans and Black Immigrants. Kristen Brown, Hunter College 2. Education Presider: R. L’Heureux Lewis, University of Michigan Environment and Technology or Sociology of Education. Kenneth Love, Rochester Institute of Technology Video Games and Gender: Focus Groups among Elementary School Children. Ben Snyder, Pennsylvania State University The Cultural of Poverty in the St. Bernard. K. G. Thibodeaux, Southern University at New Orleans 3. Sexuality Presider: Jesse Diaz, University of Riverside Analyzing Attitudes Toward Homosexuality Over Time. Beth Barrett Hurley, The College of New Jersey Pornography Use and Rape Myth Acceptance: Different 97 Effects for Different Groups. Krystal Wyatt, Southwestern University Teen Pregnancy and Its Effects in the St. Bernard. Gail Nixon, Southern University, New Orleans Why Was Female Labor Targeted for the New Industry of Centrally Organized Linen Spinning in Scotland in the Eighteenth Century? Savanna Samuela Stillgess and Richelle Bolea, University of Pittsburgh 4. Social Structure and Family Presider: Gloria Gonzalez, University of California, Los Angeles An Examination of the Continued Existence of an Institution of Racism. Cristen Anne Stump, Millersville University of Pennsylvania Always with Wings: A History of Menstrual and Genital Shame in Women. Sheiva Rezvani, University of California Santa Cruz The Impact of Family and Household on Life in the St. Bernard. Tamika M. Johnson, Southern University at New Orleans 5. Development and Services Presider: Jason Lamont Cummings, Indiana University, Bloomington Comparison of Theories to Explain the Occurence of Rape. Michelle Brickley, Millersville University Inequality and the Effectiveness of Developmental Aid in West Africa: An analysis of Ghana, Guinea, and Gambia. Kevin David Doran, University of Pittsburgh Building and Maintaining Strong Public Housing Community through Social Services Program Integration in the St. Bernard. Jeffrey Fairley, Southern University at New Orleans Public Housting: Relocation and Housing Opportunities for Residents of St. Bernard. Patricia A. Smith, Southern University at New Orleans 181. Regular Session. Black Studies Philadelphia Marriott, Room 306 Organizer and Presider: Delores P. Aldridge, Emory University W.E.B. Du Bois’s and Robert E. Park’s Understanding of Race Relations. Sean Elias, Texas A&M University Bringing Back in the Black Working Class: A Critique of the “Underclass” and Urban Politics Literature. John D. Arena, Tulane University Network Theory and Black Entrepreneurship: An Application of Threshold Theory to Firm Behavior. Robert Colbert Rhodes, University of Texas (emeritus); John Sibley Butler, The University of Texas at Austin “We Did It for the Kids”—Housing Policies, Race, and Class: An Ethnographic Case Study of a Resident Council in a 98 Sunday, August 14, 8:30 a.m. Session 181, continued Public Housing Neighborhood. Tiffany G. Chenault, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University “Say It Loud, I’m Black and I’m Proud”: Analyzing the Relationship between Afrocentricity and Black Volunteer Involvement.” Assata Richards, University of Pittsburgh Discussant: James Turner, Cornell University 182. Regular Session. Dynamics of Hegemony and Resistance Philadelphia Marriott, Room 307 Organizer: Nancy A. Naples, University of Connecticut Presider: Clare Weber, California State University Dominguez Hills Political Justice since Seattle: The Intersection of the U.S. Criminal Justice System and Global Justice Activism. Amory Starr, Chapman University; Luis Fernandez, Grinnell College Framing Policy after 9/11: Hegemony, Resonance and Resistance. Gregory M. Maney, Hofstra University; Patrick G. Coy, Kent State University; Lynne M. Woehrle, Mount Mary College A Braided Rope: Interweaving Three Theoretical Strands for a Vision of Democracy in Everyday Life. David W. Woods, Fordham University Seen and Heard: The Socio-Spatial Dynamics of Adolescent Political Empowerment. Hava Rachel Gordon, University of Oregon Discussant: Mary Bernstein, University of Connecticut 183. Regular Session. Gentrification, Segregation, and Health: Community Processes for the 21st Century Philadelphia Marriott, Room 310 Organizer: Thomas Lyson, Cornell University Presider: Daniel Ahlquist, Cornell University Does Gentrification bring Neighborhood Effects? Evidence from a Qualitative Inquiry. Lance Freeman, Columbia University Holding the Reins: Fighting Political Displacement in Gentrifying Neighborhoods. Leslie Martin, Boise State University African American Commuter and Community Congregations: Lessons from East Wilmington. Hara Wright-Smith WrightSmith, University of Pennsylvania Are People More Likely to Die in Declining Communities? Frank W. Young, Cornell University Discussant: Ann R. Tickamyer, Ohio University Communities will be constituted and reconstituted through many different social processes in the 21ST century. 184. Regular Session. Immigrant Communities Philadelphia Marriott, Independence Salon II Organizer and Presider: Ruben Hernandez-Leon, University of California, Los Angeles From Filial Piety to Religious Piety: Evangelical Christianity Reconstructing Taiwanese Immigrant Families in the United States. Carolyn Chen, Northwestern University Mexican Immgrant Communities in Formation on the DelMar-VA Peninsula. Tim J. Dunn, Salisbury University Reconciling America: Symbol Creation and Immigrant Integration from the Ground Up. Arpi Misha Miller, University of California, Los Angeles Religion and Transnational Migration: Haitian Catholics in Miami, Montreal and Paris. Margarita A. Mooney, Princeton University 185. Regular Session. Inequality, Crime, and Victimization: Exploring the Linkages between Race, Gender, and Place Philadelphia Marriott, Room 404 Organizer andPresider: Amy Victoria D’Unger, Emory University Community Economic and Social Capital and Racial Hate Crime in Chicago. Christopher J. Lyons, University of Washington Inequality, Race, and Place: Does the Structure of Inequality and Racial/Ethnic Composition Increase Neighborhood Violent Crime? John R. Hipp, University of North Carolina Examining the Linkages between Structural Conditions and Female Offending in Urban and Rural Communities. Stephanie A. Hays and Karen F. Parker, University of Florida Sexual Victimization and Female Criminality: An Ethnographic Exploration of the Link. Lindsay M. Monte and Dan A. Lewis, Northwestern University The Love of a Good Man? Romantic Relationships as a Source of Support or Hindrance for Female Ex-offenders. Andrea M. Leverentz, University of Chicago This session includes papers that deal with the intersection of gender, race, and social “place” and how they work to produce criminal offending and/or victimization. Papers in this session deal with such substantive topics as racially-motivated hate crime, female offending in urban and rural areas, and the relationship between sexual victimization and subsequent criminal offending. 186. Regular Session. Informal Structures and Organizational Outcomes Philadelphia Marriott, Room 407 Organizer: Jesper B. Sorensen, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Sunday, August 14, 8:30 a.m. Presider: Kate Kellog, Massachusetts Institute of Technology An Intergroup Approach to the Study of Post-Acquisition Integration. David L. Ager, Harvard University Danger Work and an Oppositional Culture of Safety. Gregory Wayne Walker, Lock Haven University of Pennsylvania Embedding Durable Movement Outcomes in Organizations: The Life and Death of Black Studies in Two American Universities. Fabio Rojas, Indiana University Knowledge Work in Challenging Organizational Environments. Martine R. Haas, Cornell University Discussant: Kate Kellog, Massachusetts Institute of Technology 187. Regular Session. Narrative, Biography, and Culture: Narrative at Work Philadelphia Marriott, Independence Salon III Organizer and Presider: Ann Goetting, Western Kentucky University The Institutional Construction of Autobiographical Memory: Mnemonic Consequences for the Alcoholics Recovery Narrative. Jenna Howard, Rutgers University The Political Work of Narratives: A Dialogic Analysis of Two Slave Narratives. Owen Whooley, New York University Organizational Narratives and Membership Control. Joshua Carreiro, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Crossing Divides: Personal, Organizational, Political and Cultural Constructions of Narrative Identity. Donileen Loseke, University of South Florida Discussant: Sarah Fenstermaker, University of California, Santa Barbara 188. Regular Session. Nativist Ideologies and Resistance in Latino/as Communities Philadelphia Marriott, Room 408 Organizer and Presider: Lorna Rivera, University of Massachusetts, Boston Politics, Ethnicity, and Bilingual Education in Massachusetts: The Case of Referendum Question 2. Jorge A. Capetillo, University of Massachusetts Language and Oppression: Latinos/as in the United States. José A. Cobas, Arizona State University; Joe Feagin, Texas A&M University Borders: Solving the Mexican (American) Problem. Monica Dianna Sosa, University of Michigan “Ella no Inventa Na”: Constructions of Whiteness by Lower East Side Puerto Rican Community Gardeners. Miranda J. Martinez, Vassar College Discussant: Lorna Rivera, University of Massachusetts, Boston 99 189. Regular Session. Peace and Conflict Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington B Organizer and Presider: Robert D. Benford, Southern Illinois University Carbondale Repression and Its Paradoxes. Lester R. Kurtz, University of Texas; Lee A. Smithey, Swarthmore College The Militarization of Race, Gender, and Sexuality in the Iraq War. Joane Nagel and Lindsey Feitz, University of Kansas How America Morally Debates War: Ethical Reasoning in U.S. Editorials on Whether to Attack Iraq. Douglas V. Porpora, Alexander Nikolaev, and Dina Awerbuch, Drexel University Feeling Safe (Enough) to Support an Aggressive Foreign Policy: Atomic Civil Defense and Homeland Security. Andrew Szasz, University of California, Santa Cruz Discussant: Clarence Y.H. Lo, University of Missouri, Columbia 190. Regular Session. Race and Ethnicity: Theorizing Race and Racism Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Congress A Organizer and Presider: Vilna Francine Bashi, Rutgers University Indigenes: the Miner’s Canary of Race, Ethnicity, and Racism. James V. Fenelon, California State University, San Bernardino The Racial Vectors of Empire: Classification and Competing Master Narratives in the Colonial Philippines. Rick A. Baldoz, Stanford University Place and Native Hawaiian Identity: Keeping the Light. Shawn Malia Kanaiaupuni, PASE, Kamehameha Schools The New Racisms. Peter Knapp, Villanova University Discussant: Vilna Francine Bashi, Rutgers University The four papers united on this panel each focus a lens on a unique phenomenon in racial dynamics as it contributes uniquely to the construction of race theory. One looks at the ways indigenous peoples have historically been incorporated into racial hierarchy. Another studies the role of empire and nation building in creating and shoring up racial hierarchy, while a third studies the role of place in situating a racial/ethnic identity. The fourth paper shows classifies types of racism to show they relate to the development of the “new racism.” Together, their studies suggest ways of using empiricism to build upon race theory 191. Regular Session. Sociology of Reproduction II: Renegotiating Reproduction Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Congress C Organizer: Christine H. Morton, ReproNetwork Presider: Susan Markens, Temple University Thinking about Motherhood. Julia McQuillan, University of Nebraska-Lincoln; Arthur L. Greil, Alfred University Women’s Use of Emotion Management Techniques in the 100 Sunday, August 14, 8:30 a.m. Session 191, continued Abortion Experience. Jennifer Keys, North Central College “We Can’t Afford It”: Women’s Infertility and Social Class. Jeni Loftus, Purdue University “It’s Like that Dirty Little Secret No One Wants to Talk About”: Negotiating Money, Meaning, and Risk in the Surrogate Experience. Kiley Michelle Kraskouskas, New York University Discussant: Susan Markens, Temple University The papers in this session highlight the political and experiential contexts in which women experience non-normative reproduction, specifically, abortion, infertility and surrogacy. The first paper provides a theoretical framework for re-thinking the notion of becoming pregnant as a conscious, rational process. The papers, taken together, underscore the importance of raced, classed and gendered meanings of non-normative reproductive experiences. 192. Regular Session. The Political Impacts of Social Movements Philadelphia Marriott, Liberty Salon C Organizer: Kenneth T. Andrews, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Presider: Holly J. McCammon, Vanderbilt University Effects of Social Movements on State-Level Policy Regimes for Gays, Lesbians, Bisexuals, and Transgender Individuals. Stephen E. Corral, University of Arizona Where Is a Hate Crime Not a Hate Crime? It Depends on the Multiorganizational Field. Rory M. McVeigh, Carl Neblett, and Sarah Shafiq, University of Notre Dame The Civil Rights Movement and the Right to Vote: A ReExamination of the Role of Segregationist Violence. Wayne Santoro, University of Iowa It Takes an Organization, but What Kind?: Mobilizing Members and Volunteers in Environmentalist Organizations. Matthew G. Baggetta, Harvard University Discussant: Holly J. McCammon, Vanderbilt University 193. Regular Session. Youth Cultures: Goths, Ravers, Beatniks ‘n Indie Rockers Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington C Organizer and Presider: Manolo Guzman, Marymount Manhattan College “It’s an Aesthetic”: Goth Freakiness and the Reproduction of White Middle Classness. Amy C. Wilkins, University of Missouri-Columbia Locating the Political: Art, Everyday Life, and the Legacy of the Beat Generation. Judith R. Halasz, Graduate Center, City University of New York Cultural Change in the Post Rave Era. Tammy L. Anderson, University of Delaware The Indie Rock Movement As Utopian. Alexandre Frenette, Graduate Center, City University of New York 194. Section on Labor and Labor Movements Paper Session. The Wal-Martization of America and the World: Implications for Labor Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Grand Salon I Organizer and Presider: Edna Bonacich, University of California, Riverside Is Wal-Mart the New Standard Bearer of Industrial Relations in America? Jennifer L. Bair, Yale University Racialized Labor and Wal-Mart’s Global Empire. Jake B. Wilson, University of California, Riverside Is There a “Wal-Mart Effect?” Examining the Impact of WalMart Market Entry on County-Level Retail Sector Wage Patterns. Barry Boehringer Eidlin, Arindrajit Dube, and Bill Lester, University of California, Berkeley Behind the Smiley Face Veneer: An Insider’s Observations of Wal-Mart’s Anti-Labor Practices. Steven Rose, IPFW Stressed: Customer Service Rrepresentatives at Verizon. Tom Juravich, University of Massachusetts Discussant: Richard Appelbaum, University of California, Santa Barbara 195. Section on Marxist Sociology Paper Session. Imperialism and War: Past, Present, and Future Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Grand Salon III-IV Organizer and Presider: Jacqueline A. Carrigan, California State University, Sacramento Globalization and War: State Power and the Enforcement of Neoliberalism. Daniel Egan, University of Massachusetts, Lowell Imperialism and Risk: The Financial Logic of the Terror War. Randy Martin, New York University Imperialism, Yesterday and Today: Hardt and Negri’s Empire and Arrighi’s The Geometry of Imperialism. Carl H.A. Dassbach, Teaching about Imperialism and War. Steven J. Rosenthal, Hampton University 196. Section on Sociology of Education Paper Session. Primary Education in the United States Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon C Organizer: John Robert Warren, University of Minnesota Presider: Elizabeth Souza, Amherst College Socializing Students: Do Early School Experiences Matter? William J. Carbonaro, University of Notre Dame Do Instructional Practices Contribute to Inequality in Achieve- Sunday, August 14, 8:30 a.m. ment? The Case of Mathematics Instruction in Kindergarten. Katerina Bodovski, Pennsylvania State University, University Park; George Farkas, Pennsylvania State University Race and Social Class Disparities in First Grade Literacy Learning: Ability Grouping and Contextual Effects. Douglas David Ready, University of Oregon; Ron Beghetto, University of Oregon; Laura F. LoGerfo, The Urban Institute Strategy for Success: Building Community and Cultural Capital among Teachers and Students in Urban Schools. Kathleen Grove, University of San Diego Discussant: Douglas B. Downey, Ohio State University 197. Section on Aging and the Life Course Refereed Roundtables and Research Groups Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon E Organizer: Merril Silverstein, University of South California; J. Jill Suitor, Purdue University 1. Cumulative Advantage and Disadvantage Disparities in Cognitive Function of the Oldest Old: Social, Cultural, Physical, and Human Capital Advantage. Merril Silverstein, University of South California; Mats Thorslund, Karolinska Institute Economic Inequality in Old-Age among Ethnic Groups in Israel: A Comparison over Time. Varda Levanon, TelAviv University Health Trajectories over the Life Course: The Consequences of Childhood Health and Social Background Factors. Steven Haas, Harvard School of Public Health The GED as a Signifier of Later Life Health and Economic Well-Being. Richard K. Caputo, Yeshiva University The Matthew Effect and Social Processes: Cumulative Advantage/Disadvantage as a “Law of the Life Course.” Dale Dannefer and Lynn M. Gannon, Case Western Reserve University 2. Educational Gerontology Breaking Barriers: The Story of Physically Challenged Student’s School Life in General Education Institutions of Taiwan: Qualitative Research. Yee-Zu Iris Lin, YuanZe University Continuing to Develop: The Educational Interests and Motivations of Older Students in the OASIS Program. Joseph D. Yenerall, Duquesne University 3. Intergenerational and Family Relations A Life Course Perspective on Stress and Well-Being among Gay Men: The Role of Family Relationships. Anna Muraco, University of Michigan; Allen J. LeBlanc, MDRC; Stephen T. Russell, University of Arizona Grandparents as Caregivers: An Exploratory Analysis of 101 Black Grandfathers. Elena Marie Fazio and Kim B. Nguyen, University of Maryland Pathways of Mastery in the Stress Process among Alzheimer’s Caregivers. Mark F. Pioli, University of Missouri Portraits of Paternity: Older Fathers’ Involvement with Adult Children. Brent Taylor, San Diego State University; Roseann Giarrusso and Vern Bengtson, University of Southern California 4. Life Course: Conceptual Frameworks Desiring Theory: On the Incomplete Conceptualization of the Aging Experience. James J. Dowd, University of Georgia Framing Generational Equity: how media and academic discourse shape policy. Renee Lynn Beard, University of California, San Francisco Narrating Identity through Radical Memory Loss: Dilemmas in Oral History. Althea Eannace Lazzaro, Oberlin College Two Militaries? Veterans Reflect on Military Service in the Life Course. Alair MacLean, The RAND Corporation Dimensions of Change in Well-Being Across the Life Course. Tetyana Pudrovska and Robert M. Hauser, University of Wisconsin, Madison 5. Marriage, Cohabitation, and Well-being Marital Patterns Across the Life Course and Wealth Accumulation. Tyson H. Brown, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill; Amy M. Pienta, University of Michigan; Glen H. Elder, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill The Timing of Family Transitions and Depression: Differences by Sex and Educational Level. Julie McLaughlin, University of North Carolina, Charlotte 6. Religion in Aging Families Family and Religious Ties among Elders from Non-western Traditions. Susan A. Eisenhandler, University of Connecticut The Ties That Bind: Intergenerational Transmission of Religious Values within American Families. Casey Elizabeth Copen, Timothy J. Biblarz, Merril Silverstein, and Vern Bengtson, University of Southern California 7. Research Group on Aging Well: Informal Discussion Presider: Tanya Fusco Johnson, University of South Carolina, Spartanburg 8. Research Group on Comparative Gerontology Presider: Eldon L. Wegner, University of Hawaii at Manoa Residence, Financial Support, and Transitions in Functional Limitations in China. Mira M. Hidajat and Latrica E. Best, Pennsylvania State University Elderly Living Arrangements and Life Satisfaction in 102 Sunday, August 14, 8:30 a.m. Session 197, continued Korea. Jibum Kim, NORC; Eung-Ryul Kim, Korea University; Yunseok Lee, University of Seoul An Update on the German Long-Term Care Insurance Program. Eldon L. Wegner, University of Hawaii at Manoa 9. Research Group on Disability Presider: Eva Kahana, Case Western Reserve University Coping with Disability in Late Life: A Longitudinal Study of Proactive Adaptations. Eva Kahana, Case Western Reserve University; Boaz Kahana, Cleveland State University; Jessica A. Kelley-Moore, University of Maryland, Baltimore County Disentangling the Impact of Race and Place on Disability Disparities among Black and White Older Adults. Jessica A. Kelley-Moore, University of Maryland, Baltimore County Parents of Children with Disabilities: Is “Normalization” Still the Goal? Rosalyn Benjamin Darling and D. Alex Heckert, Indiana University of Pennsylvania “You Don’t Have to Hide Yourself Here”: A Comparative Case Study of the Social Construction of Rehabilitation for Multiple Sclerosis Patients. Karis Pallone, Purdue University 10. Research Group on Parent-Child Relations in the Later Years Presider: Deborah M. Merrill, Clark University A Web of Latent Relationships: Determining the Quality of In-Law Bonds. Deborah M. Merrill, Clark University Daughters’ Coming-of-age as a Parental Milestone. Barbara Vinick, Trends in Senior Children Caregiving: Comparisons of the First and Second Wave of the NSFH. Twyla J. Hill, Wichita State University 11. Research Group on Race and Ethnicity across the Life Course Presider: Sherrill L. Sellers, University of Wisconsin, Madison Cohorts, Discrimination, and Causal Attributions: System Blame Ideology among African Americans. Tyrone A. Forman and Mosi Adesina Ifatunji, University of Illinois at Chicago Parenthood and Education: A Study of Jamaican Families. Michelle Harris, Wheaton College On Race and Mental Health. Colwick Mervyn Wilson, Loma Linda University Historical Review of Studies of Race/Ethnicity and Life Course. Sherrill L. Sellers, University of Wisconsin, Madison Racial Disparity in Cardiac Care Length of Stay. Tetyana I. Pylypiv and Kenneth F. Ferraro, Purdue University 12. Research Group on Work and Retirement Presider: Maximiliane E. Szinovacz, Eastern Virginia Medical School Retirement and Social Isolation. Robert S. Weiss, University of Massachusetts The Need to Work: Social and Financial Considerations Effecting the Retirement Decision. John Markert, Cumberland University 13. Research Group on the Life Course: Informal Discussion Presider: Cheryl Elman, The University of Akron 198. Section on Asia and Asian America Roundtables and Business Meeting Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth B 8:30-9:30am, Roundtables: Organizer: Zai Liang, University at Albany, State University of New York 1. Asian Culture in Asia and America Presider: Yanmei Xu, Kent State University Cultural and Social-Structural Causes of Perceived Personal Control: A Comparative Look at Americans and Chinese. Yanmei Xu, Kent State University Cultural Continuity as a Moderator of Intergenerational Conflict among Korean Immigrants. Byeong-Chul Ben Park, The Pennsylvania State University The Positioning of the New 1.5 and Second Generations within Asian America. Monica M. Trieu, University of California, Irvine 2. Democracy, Economic Development, and Civil Society Presider: Robert M. Marsh, Brown University State, Civil Society, and Economic Development in Sports Life Cyle: The Case of Boxing in Korea. Eui-Hang Shin, University of South Carolina Tolerance of Civil Liberties in a New Democracy. Robert M. Marsh, Brown University 3. Globalization, Social Trust, and Ethnic Identification Presider: Jong-sung You, Harvard University Globalization and Ethnic Identification: A Study of High School Students in Taiwan. Johannes Han-yin Chang, Fu Jen University Is Social Trust Declining in South Korea? Jong-sung You, Harvard University 4. Stratification, Gender, and Unemployment in China Presider: Yuping Zhang, University of Pennsylvania Exposure to Media and Unemployed People’s Attitudes toward Market Justice in Urban China. Chunping Han, Harvard University Gender-Based Employment and Wage Differences in Urban China: Considering the Contributions of Marriage and Sunday, August 14, 8:30 a.m. Parenthood. Yuping Zhang and Emily Carroll Hannum, University of Pennsylvania; Meiyan Wang, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences 5. Religion in Asia and Asian America Presider: Hyunsun Choi, University of Southern California Regulating Faith-based Organization by Government Funding: A Case Study of the Methodist Church in Hong Kong. Shun Hing Chan, Hong Kong Baptist University Religious-Based Social Capital in Los Angeles Korean Community. Hyunsun Choi, University of Southern California 6. Demographic Changes in China Presider: Guangya Liu, Georgia State University Patterns of Intra-Provincial and Inter-Provincial Migration in China, 1995-2000. Li Zhang, Texas A&M University Factors Associated with Place of Death among Chinese Oldest-Old. Guangya Liu, Georgia State University; Danan Gu, Duke University 7. Comparative Studies of Mental Health Presider: Fang Gong, Indiana University Living Arrangements and Mental Health of the Elderly in Taiwan. Rosa Feichiung Ho, Chung Shan Medical University Perceived Racial and Ethnic Discrimination and Mental Health among Chinese Americans: A Longitudinal Analysis of Multiple Outcomes. Fang Gong, Indiana University 8. Globalization and Outsourcing Presider: Jiaming Sun, University of Illinois at Chicago Global Connections Impact Local Communities Satisfaction: A Case of Shanghai. Jiaming Sun and Xiangming Chen, University of Illinois at Chicago Service on the Line: Indian Telephone Call Centers and Customer Care. Margaret Abraham and Emily Susan Manning, Hofstra University 9. Assimilation and Interracial Relationships Presider: Nahrin Chowdhury, State University of New York College at Old Westbury Masculinity Politics in Asian American and White American Interracial Relationships. Kumiko Nemoto, The University of Texas at Austin The Assimilation of Bengali Immigrants in the United States. Nahrin Chowdhury, State University of New York College at Old Westbury 10. Identity, Dating, and Voting Behavior of Asian Americans Presider: Cynthia B. Sinha, Georgia State University “Being Indian” and “Being American”: Exploring the Social Space of Second-Generation Indian American Dating. Cynthia B. Sinha, Georgia State University 103 Asian Immigrants National Voting Propensity. Aliya Kuerban, Fordham University Asian American Youth and Identity Formation Work. Monica M. Trieu, University of California, Irvine 11. Affirmative Action, Discrimination in the U.S. and SelfStarvation in India Presider: Morrison G. Wong, Texas Christian University “Saving” Affirmative Action Programs and Excluding Asian Americans. Yvonne M. Lau, De Paul University Where Is the Culture in “Culture- Bound” Phenomena of Self-Starvation? Conceptual Challenges in Understanding Self Starvation Patterns in a Metropolis City of India. Jaita Talukdar, University of Cincinnati Understanding Everyday Race Encounters: Punjabi Taxi Drivers and Their Analysis of Racial Discrimination. Diditi Mitra, Brookdale Community College 9:30-10:10am, Business Meeting 199. Section on Economic Sociology Roundtables and Business Meeting Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon F 8:30-9:30am, Roundtables: Organizer: Thomas D. Beamish, University of California, Davis 1. Case Studies of Exchange Relations Presider: Jonathan Michael Isler, University of California, Davis The Google IPO. Martin L. Barron, Stony Brook University, State University of New York Engagement of the Elderly in Time Banking: The Potential for Social Capital Generation in an Aging Society. Ed Collom, University of Southern Maine Nonprofit Arts Labor Market and Organizational Compensation Environments. Diane M. Grams, University of Chicago Tangled Property-Corporations, Franchises and the Motorization of New York City. Eric Bruce Johnson, Columbia University Cultural Embeddedness and Agricultural Entrepreneurship in the Field of Strawberry Production. Kenneth M. Kambara, California State Universityi, Long Beach, and The KV Group 2. Case Studies of National Markets Presider: Eileen M. Otis, Stony Brook University, State University of New York Market Globalization of National Industries: A Sociological Analysis. Francisco J. Granados, University of Minnesota The Economic Spatial Behavior of Street Markets: Santiago de Chile in a Context of Commerce Modernization. Lissette Aliaga, The University of Texas at Austin 104 Sunday, August 14, 8:30 a.m. Session 199, continued The Source, Structure, and Stability of Control over Japan’s Financial Sector. Douglas E. Grbic, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign The Interdependency of Institutional Environment: Boom and Bust of Venture Firms in South Korea, 1980-2002. Youngjoo Cha, Cornell University Economic Transition and Subjective Subjective Well-being: A Comparison between China and East Germany. Hao Yuan and Hilke Brockmann, University of Bremen Political Connection, Credit Rating, and Bank Loans in Chinese Private Sector. Hongxing Yang, University of Chicago Transnational Business Networks and Sub-ethnic Nationalism? Chinese Business and Nationalist Activities in Inter-war Singapore (1919-1941). Huei-ying Kuo, State University of New York, Binghamton The Emergence of Corporate Forms in China, 1872-1949. An Analysis on Institutional Transformation. WaiKeung Chung, Singapore Management University 3. Theorizing Transnational Economic Trends Presider: Preston Rudy, San Jose State University Globalization and Change: The Nature, Dynamics, and Impact of Globalization in the 21st Century. Berch Berberoglu, University of Nevada, Reno Globalization and Development: The Effect of Foreign Subsidiary Concentration on Economic Growth, 19801998. Jeffrey D. Kentor, University of Utah Globalization in the Steel Industry: The Market and Commodity Chain Transitions from Industrial to PostIndustrial Capitalism. Jamie W. Wolf, North Carolina State University Theorizing Social Value Shifts and Normlessness in PostCommunist Countries from Structural Economic Change. Christopher Scott Swader, University of Bremen Creating Competition and Mastering Markets: New Entrants, Monopolists, and Regulators in Transforming Public Utilities across the Atlantic. Willem Hulsink, Erasmus University The Social Organization of Access, Standardization, and Profits in Asian Timber Flows from Indonesia to Japan. Paul K. Gellert, Cornell University 4. Theory Building in Economic Sociology Presider: Dina Biscotti, University of California, Davis Economic Life, Institutions, and Social Action: Reflections on Polanyi’s Approach to Studying Economic Life. Kurtulus Gemici, University of California, Los Angeles Embeddedness as a Process. Leszek S. Chajewski, Social Studies of the Economy: New Directions. Severyn T. Bruyn, Boston College Tipping Points: Personal Understandings of the Culture of Gratuities. Kieran Bezila, Northwestern University Pricing Signals: A Sociological Alternative. Frederick F. Wherry, University of Pennsylvania A State under Siege: Military Origins of Command Economies. Pavel I. Osinsky, Northwestern University 9:30-10:10am, Business Meeting 200. Section on Sociology of Culture Invited Panel. The Cultural Pragmatics of Social Performance Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon B Organizer and Presider: Jeffrey C. Alexander, Yale University Changing Music Sociology: Defusing the Elements of Musical Performance. Lisa Lorraine McCormick, Yale University How Social Movements Move. Ron F. Eyerman, Yale University The Politics of Defusion: Clinton/Lewinsky as Failed Performance. Jason L. Mast, University of California, Los Angeles The Cultural Pragmatics of Power: Performance, Actors, and Audiences. Jeffrey C. Alexander, Yale University Discussant: Andreas Glaeser, University of Chicago 201. Section on Teaching and Learning in Sociology. Hans O. Mauksch Award Ceremony and Business Meeting Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Grand Salon II Organizer: Diane Pike, Augsburg College Presider: Wava G. Haney, University of Wisconsin Colleges 2004 Hans O. Mauksch Award Lecture. Elizabeth Grauerholz, Purdue University Presentation of the 2005 Hans O. Mauksch Award. Idee Winfield, College of Charleston Business Meeting 9:00 am Sessions 202. Methodological Seminar. Event History Analysis (to 12:00 noon) Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon L Ticket required for admission Leader: Trond Petersen, University of California, Berkeley This seminar gives an introduction to methods for analyzing event history data, often known as duration, failure time, waiting time, survival, or hazard rate analysis. Event history data typically contain information about the date a sample member (e.g., person, organization, nation) entered a social state, for example an employment state, the date the state was subsequently left or the date the person was last observed in the state, 105 Sunday, August 14, 9:30 a.m. and if the state was left, the value of the next state entered, and so on. The goal of the analysis is to estimate how fast or slow groups of people move between states and which factors influence the rate of movement. 9:30 am Meetings Section on Asia and Asian America Business Meeting (to 10:10am) — Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth B Section on Economic Sociology Business Meeting (to 10:10am) — Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon F Section on Methodology Business Meeting (to 10:10am) — Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Tubman Section on Social Psychology Business Meeting (to 10:10am) — Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon J Section on Teaching and Learning in Sociology Business Meeting (to 10:10am) — Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Grand Salon II 9:30 am Tour Tour 5: Reflections of Philadelphia’s History in Its Built Environment (to 12:00pm; ticket required for admission) — Philadelphia Marriott, Lobby (at 12th Street) 10:00 am Tour Tour 6: Society Hill and Independence National Park: A Stroll for Sociologists—SOLD OUT (to 12:00pm; ticket required for admission) — Philadelphia Marriott, Lobby (at 12th Street) 10:30 am Meetings Committee on the Status of Persons with Disabilities in Sociology (to 12:10pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Conference Suite II Committee on the Status of Racial and Ethnic Minorities in Sociology (to 12:10pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Conference Suite I Honors Program Briefing (to 12:10pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Room 310 Task Force on the Institutionalization of Public Sociology, Working Group B (to 12:10pm) — Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Jefferson 10:30 am Sessions 203. Thematic Session. Comparing the American and the European Models of Society Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon G Organizer and Presider: Alberto Martinelli, International Sociological Association British Structural Exceptionalism; The Enduring Effects of Being the First to Industrialize. Margaret Archer, University of Warwick Mirrors of Reality: The Social Role of Macroeconomic Accounts in the European Union and the USA. Maria Angeles Duran, Council for Research, Madrid Spain Everybody an Exception? Cultural Styles, Universities, and Political Realities in American and European Sociology. Neil J. Smelser, University of California, Berkeley Aim of the session is describing, interpreting and analysing some of the major similarities and differences, convergences and divergences of the United States and the European Union taken as whole societies, in the hope of fostering systematic comparative studies which would fill a void in to-day social science literature. In fact, there are studies comparing the US with one or more European countries, but there is no comparative study of the US and the EU USA taken as whole societies (Gestalten). This comparison has important theoretical and political implications too for the analysis of Trans-atlantic relations and the respective roles of the US and of a United Europe in global governance. The main questions asked to the panelists are: on the one hand, whether the structural arrangements, cultural values and individual behaviours and attitudes of the European societies and peoples have become more similar in recent years, which convergent trends of the EU member states are becoming more similar ‘spontaneously’ and which are the outcome of the conscious efforts of European policies, and whether a European model of society is emerging, which is comparable for its importance to the American model of society; and, on the other, whether American exceptionalism is undergoing basic changes because of the changing demographic mix, socio-economic transformations of the US, and the ndew response to global terrorism. These questions are problematic and even controversial and are at the center not only of scholarly debate but of public discourse. They will be articulated in the introductiion and discussed by the panelists with reference to specific aspects of the American and European societies. 106 Sunday, August 14, 10:30 a.m. 204. Thematic Session. Feminisms Across Time and Space Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth C Organizer: Barbara Jane Risman, North Carolina State University Presider: Benita Roth, Binghamton University Thinking Globally: Women’s Movements and Feminism. Myra Marx Ferree, University of Wisconsin, Madison In Search of Contemporary Feminism. Joanne E. Reger, Oakland University Feminism(s) in the Middle East. Valentine M. Moghadam, Illinois State University Each panelist will address the emergence and shape of feminism in a different time and place. When and why does feminism as a social movement come to exist? Is it a transnational movement? How do social conditions effect the definition of feminism and its manifestation? What are some likely futures for feminisms cross-nationally for the 21st Century? 205. Thematic Session. Towards a New Sociology of School Choice Philadelphia Marriott, Room 410 Organizers: Eric E. Rofes, Humboldt State University; Lisa Michele Stulberg, New York University Presider: Eric E. Rofes, Humboldt State University History’s Lessons for Progressive School Choice Scholarship. Lisa Michele Stulberg, New York University Independent Black Schools and the Charter School Movement. Patty Yancey, Humboldt State University Community Resistance to Privatized Charter Schools. Janelle T. Scott, New York University Native American Charter Schools: Culture, Language, and Self-Determination. Mary Jiron Belgarde, University of New Mexico In response to the highly polarized debate and scholarship on school choice, charter school researchers and practitioners on this panel address the socio-politics of school choice and offer a new sociological analysis of school choice that also contributes to a broader discussion of how public schools can serve social equality. 206. Centennial Session. Assessing the Scientific Basis of American Sociology: A Century of Knowledge Claims Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon C Organizer and Presider: Bruce Keith, United States Military Academy Foundations of Sociology: In Search of the Disciplinary Core. Jonathan H. Turner, University of California, Riverside Sociology as a Historical Science. Elisabeth S. Clemens, University of Chicago Comparative Science: Sociology and the Biological Sciences. Douglas S. Massey, Princeton University Disciplinary Knowledge Revisited: The Social Construction of Sociology. Stephen Cole, Stony Brook University, State University of New York 207. Special Session. Local, Regional, and Global Sociologies: The Particular and the Universal Sociological Traditions (co-sponsored by the International Sociological Association) Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Congress A Organizers: Sujata Patel, University of Pune, India; A. Douglas A. Kincaid, Florida International University Presider: Bert Klandermans, Vrije Universiteit Sociology, Science, and Profession: Portugal’s Recent Experiences. Analia Torres, Portuguese Sociological Association Welfare Theory Today: Nordic Perspectives. Pekka Juhani Sulkunen, University of Helsinki Sociology in India: Engagements with Western Sociological Paradigms. Partha Mukherji, Indian Sociological Society Local Knowledge and Global Knowledge: Toward a New Sociology of Knowledge and an Idea of Socio-pedia. Kenji Kosaka, Kwansei Gakuin University Discussant: Karl Siebert-Rehberg, German Sociological Association 208. Special Session. Religious Confrontation with Gender and Sexuality (co-sponsored by the Association for the Sociology of Religion) Radisson Warwick Hotel, Warwick Room Organizer and Presider: Ruth A. Wallace, George Washington University Gendered Divisions of Congregational Labor: Continuities, Ironies, and Contemporary Tensions. Nancy Ammerman, Boston Univiversity Men of Faith:Masculinities and Religion. John P. Bartkowski, Mississippi State University Religion and the Control of Women: An Examination of Patriarchy in a Sex-Negative and Sex-Positive Religion. Sunday, August 14, 10:30 a.m. Mary Jo Neitz, University of Missouri, Columbia Women Bishops/Gay Bishops: Controntation, Linkages, Crisis Networks and Cultural Change. Paula D. Nesbitt, University of California Discussant: Mary Jo Neitz, University of Missouri, Columbia 209. Special Session. Research Support Forum Special Session. Science Policy, National Priorities, and Opportunities for the Social Sciences Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon I Organizer: Lee Herring, American Sociological Association Presider: Sally T. Hillsman, American Sociological Association Panelists: David Abrams, Director, Office of Behavioral and Social Sciences Michael Feuer, NAS Division of Behavioral and Social Sciences 210. Special Session. Rethinking Sociological Paradigms: Latina/o Sociology in the 22nd Century Philadelphia Marriott, Room 305 Organizer and Presider: Havidan Rodriguez, University of Delaware Immigration, Low Skill Workers, and Informality: Latino Employment in the U.S. Abel Valenzuela, University of California, Los Angeles The Complex Racial Formation of 21st Century America: Observations on the Latin Americanization of Racial Stratification. Eduardo Bonilla-Silva, Duke University Malinche Speaks: Chicana Feminisms in Sociology. Elisa Facio, University of Colorado, Boulder; Denise A. Segura, University of California, Santa Barbara Discussant: Silvia Pedraza, University of Michigan 211. Author Meets Critics Session. Black Sexual Politics: African Americans, Gender and the New Racism (Routledge, 2004) by Patricia Hill Collins Philadelphia Marriott, Liberty Salon A Organizer and Presider: Elizabeth Higginbotham, University of Delaware Critics: Juan J. Battle, Hunter College and Graduate Center, City University of New York Abby L. Ferber, University of Colorado Carole C. Marks, University of Delaware Author: Patricia Hill Collins, University of Cincinnati 107 212. Career Workshop. Consulting to Create Organizations of the Future (co-sponsored by the Section on Sociological Practice) Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon K Organizer: Kathryn L. Goldman Schuyler, Alliant International University Leaders: Kathy Shepherd Stolley, Northrop Grumman Information Technology Kathryn L. Goldman Schuyler, Alliant International University The workshop combines presentations on specific consulting projects with experiential activities designed to assist participants in clarifying their own goals, strengths, skills, and learning needs as consultants. Dr. Stolley discusses the group decision support software (GDSS) that she uses in consulting to the NATO Allied Command Transformation and the US Joint Forces Command. Dr. Goldman Schuyler shares her work with over 200 executives to show key factors of success in organizational transformation and change. Session includes structured reflection and action planning. 213. Professional Workshop. Navigating the Graduate Admission Process Philadelphia Marriott, Room 411 Organizer and Presider: William G. Roy, University of California, Los Angeles Panel: Donnie Charleston, North Carolina State University Bobbie Chen, University of California, Irvine Meera E. Deo, University of California, Los Angeles Alicia Juskewycz, Princeton University 214. Professional Workshop. Thesis and Dissertation Accomplished, Practical Steps to Getting Done Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth A2 Organizer and Leader: Wendy Y. Carter, Dr. Carter’s Educational Group, LLC 215. Research Workshop. Data Archives: Building a Partnership to Preserve the Future of Social Research Philadelphia Marriott, Room 408 Organizer: Myron P. Gutmann, University of Michigan Panelists: Erik W. Austin, Institute for Social Research Micah Altman, Harvard University Caroline Arms, Library of Congress Kenneth A. Bollen, University of North Carolina Michael Carlson, National Archives and Records Administration Amy M. Pienta, University of Michigan David Weakliem, University of Connecticut Copeland Young, Murray Research Center, Harvard University 108 Sunday, August 14, 10:30 a.m. Session 215, continued In 2004, six of the major social science data repositories in the United States joined together in a partnership with the Library of Congress to work on ensuring the long-term preservation of their holdings and of materials that they have not yet collected. In this workshop the leaders of that project will describe the services that they now offer, and discuss among themselves and with the audience the need to locate and preserve classic social science data, and the potential for future research based on them. The discussion will serve as an important starting point for ensuring that data used in the most important sociological discoveries of the past century are preserved for future research. 216. Teaching Workshop. Facilitating Teamwork in Sociology Courses Philadelphia Marriott, Room 412 Organizer: Anne Frances Eisenberg, State University of New York at Geneseo Co-Leaders: Melissa Jill Bonstead-Bruns, University of Wisconsin -Eau Claire Lisa Meyer, State University of New York at Geneseo The purpose of the workshop is three-fold. First, it provides detailed information and discussion about how to effectively use teamwork to accomplish course-specific and pedagogical goals. Second, the workshop leaders bring a unique combination of experience in terms of the types of classes in which such activities are used—from introductory classes to required theory classes to classes addressing international issues. Finally, participants will leave the workshop with handouts that highlight some of the activities used for possible implementation in their own classrooms. 217. Teaching Workshop. Teaching Social Policy Issues: Work and Family Policies Philadelphia Marriott, Room 409 Organizer: Marjorie Schaafsma Co-Leaders: Mindy L. Fried, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Kathleen Gerson, New York University Jennifer L. Glass, University of Iowa Erin Kelly, University of Minnesota This workshop brings together sociologists who have broad experience in social research and development of policy/legislative ideas in the area of work and families. This policy issue largely focuses on the social consequences and problems created by a lag between profound changes in the organization of families in the US, the impacts of economic changes on the labor force, and more incremental changes in work practices and workplace norms to meet the needs of employees who are responsible for families. We will each speak briefly and address a central question in developing a course on a social policy: How do we decide what our courses on work and family policy are about? Addressing ths core question will lead us to share with you our thoughs about course goals, learning strategies and substantive issues in the policy area. In answering this question we will introduce five important elements that we think about in building a social policy course. These are: (1) social, historical and political contexts of work and family issues; (2) a range of issues raised in policy debates; (3) concrete policy proposals and legislation; (4) social science research that contribute to understanding problems of work and family conflict and provides frameworks for policy solutions; and (5) a respect for a diversity of social perspectives in understanding both the nature of social problems and political policy solutions 218. Teaching Workshop. Teaching as Performance Philadelphia Marriott, Room 403 Organizer and Leader: Jerry M. Lewis, Kent State University This workshop focuses on the performance aspects of teaching sociology, particularly introductory sociology. The performance dimension of teaching, independent of sociological ideas, is a fact that professors must face in lecturing. Four components of performance are examined: voice, script, drama and physicality. Participants in the workshop will have an opportunity for hands on work related to teaching sociology as performance. This will be facilitated through individual and team role plays. 219. Research Poster Session. Applied and Clinical Sociology (co-sponsored by the Association for Applied and Clinical Sociology) Philadelphia Marriott, Franklin Hall Organizer: Joan Vitek Hiller, Social Research Associates, Inc. 1. Deaf Prison Inmates: Characteristics and Conditions. Margaret Weigers Vitullo, Gallaudet University 2. “I’m Tired, Not Sad”: Benefits and Burdens of Mothering a Child with a Disability. Sara E. Green, University of South Florida 3. Five-Decade Analysis of Gender Disparities in Japanese Mother’s Day and Father’s Day Comic Strips. Saori Yasumoto, Georgia State University 4. Man’s Best Friend? Stage of Family Life, Dog Ownership, and Self-Esteem. Krista Marie Clark, Purdue University 5. Comparing the Long Term Consequences of Drug Treatment Using Latent Growth Curve Models. Tihomir N. Enev, Steven S. Martin, and James A. Inciardi, University of Delaware 220. Regular Session. Affirmative Action Philadelphia Marriott, Room 304 Organizer: Bart Landry, University of Maryland Presider: Sharon Maureen Collins, University of Illinois at Chicago Ending Affirmative Action: Public Opinion and Media Depiction of the California Civil Rights Initiative. Marnie Salupo Rodriguez, Cleveland State University; Elaine J. Hall, Kent State University Sunday, August 14, 10:30 a.m. Enforcement of Civil Rights Law in Private Workplaces: Compliance Reviews and Lawsuits before Reagan and After. Alexandra Kalev, Princeton University; Frank Dobbin, Harvard University Predictors of Organizational Equal Opportunity and Affirmative Action Policy Adoption. Julie A. Kmec, Washington State University; Sheryl L. Skaggs, University of Texas, Dallas The Civil Rights Legacy Meets Diversity Management: Ethnographic Perspectives on the Affirmative Action Debates at the University of Michigan. Ellen C. Berrey, Northwestern University 221. Regular Session. Disasters form Above: Managers’ Perspectives and Policy Implications Philadelphia Marriott, Independence Salon I Organizer and Presider: Marla Perez-Lugo, University of Puerto Rico A Typology of Organizational Improvisation in Disasters. Tricia Wachtendorf, University of Delaware; James Kendra, University of North Texas Digital Inequality and the Implementation of New Technologies: Problems with Technological Diffusion among Oklahoma Emergency Managers. Daniel Edward Marks, University of Delaware Disaster Research Center Discursive Framing of Drought. John Sonnett, University of Arizona; Barbara J. Morehouse, Institute for the Study of Planet Earth; Thomas D. Finger, University of Arizona; Gregg Garfin, Institute for the Study of Planet Earth; Nicholas Rattray, University of Arizona New Hazards and New Complexities: Building Institutional Resilience in Hospitals. Benigno E. Aguirre and Russell R. Dynes, University of Delaware; James Kendra, University of North Texas 222. Regular Session. Feminist Theory Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Grand Salon I Organizer and Presider: Lisa D. Brush, University of Pittsburgh Bringing the “Sex” Back In: Unintended Consequences of the Feminist Sex/Gender Distinction. Asia May Friedman, Rutgers University Feminist Globalizations: Transnationalism and Women’s Human Rights. Jonathan D. VanAntwerpen, University of California, Berkeley Making Trouble for the Binary in Second and Third Wave Feminism: Reconceptualizing “Waves” and “Generations.” Hokulani Aikau, University of Hawaii, Manoa; Karla A. Erickson, Grinnell College; Jennifer L. Pierce, University of Minnesota 109 Re-Presenting Feminisms: Past, Present and Future. Catherine Eve Harnois, University of North Carolina The Bodily Scars of Neoliberal Economics: A Feminist Analysis. Barbara Sutton, University of Oregon Discussant: Mimi Schippers, Tulane University 223. Regular Session. Globalization: Ideologies, Knowledge, and Pollution Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Congress B Organizer and Presider: Sing C. Chew, Humboldt State University The Islamist Ethic and the Spirit of Terrorism. Albert J. Bergesen, University of Arizona Neoliberalism in Crisis: Polanyi, Keynes, and the Future of Globaliztion. Farshad A. Araghi, Mark Frezzo, and Marina Karides, Florida Altantic University Globalization and Universities: A Comparative Analysis of British and Chinese World University Rankings. Jesus M. De Miguel, Harvard University; Marga Mari-Klose and Jara D. Sanchez, University of Barcelona Globalization and Persistant Organic Pollutants: A Quantitative Cross-National Study of Water Pollution Intensity. Andrew K. Jorgenson, Washington State University; Thomas J. Burns, University of Oklahoma 224. Regular Session. Ground Zero: Local Views on National Policies Philadelphia Marriott, Room 407 Organizer and Presider: Saundra Davis Westervelt, University of North Carolina, Greensboro Accounting for Differences in Local and State Alcohol Laws, North Carolina in 1908. Michael A. Lewis, Christopher Newport University Domestic Violence Crime Control Policy and Practice: Implications for Arguments Concerning Penal Theory. Gabrielle Ann Ferrales, Northwestern University Round Up the Usual Suspects: African Americans’ Views of Drug Enforcement Policies. Devon Johnson, George Mason University Legal Consciousness: Public Housing Residents Reactions to the One-Strike and You’re Out Policy. Wenona C. RymondRichmond, Northwestern University Discussant: Michael A. Lewis, Christopher Newport University 225. Regular Session. Immigrants in Western Societies. Philadelphia Marriott, Liberty Salon C Organizer: Jimy M. Sanders, University of South Carolina Presider: Milton D. Vickerman, University of Virginia Dynamics of Context on Attitudes towards Immigration: Regional Differences in Southern European Countries. 110 Sunday, August 14, 10:30 a.m. Session 225, continued Xavier Escandell, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign Secondary Migration: Why Do Immigrants Re-Migrate from the U.K. and Japan to the U.S.? Ayumi Takenaka, Bryn Mawr College Race, Gender, and Immigrant Status: Assessing Differences in Earnings among Persons of African Origin. Mamadi K. Corra, East Carolina University The U.S. New Immigrant Survey: Overview and First Results from the Baseline Round of the NIS-2003 Cohort. Guillermina Jasso, New York University; Mark R. Rosenzweig, Harvard University; James P. Smith, RAND Corporation; Douglas S. Massey, Princeton University 226. Regular Session. Indigenous Peoples Philadelphia Marriott, Independence Salon II Organizer and Presider: Gary D. Sandefur, University of Wisconsin, Madison Place and Native Hawaiian Identity: Keeping the Light. Shawn Malia Kanaiaupuni, PASE, Kamehameha Schools Building Sustainable Communities with Indigenous People: The Role of Transboundary Environmental Organizations in Innovation Transfer and Dissemination. Johnathan Reisman, intern; Maria Sergeevna Tysiachniouk, Center for Independent Social Research Negotiating Neoliberal Multiculturalism: Mapuche Workers in the Chilean State. Yun-Joo Park, The University of Texas at Austin; Patricia Richards, University of Georgia Responding to a Globalized World: Changes in PehuencheMapuche Leadership Structure in the Biobio Highlands, Chile. Claudio J. Gonzalez-Parra and Jeanne W. Simon, University of Concepcion, Chile The Construction of Collective Identity in the Discourse of the EZLN. Aquiles Chihu Amparan, Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana Iztapalapa Discussant: Susan E. Mannon, Utah State University 227. Regular Session. Mental Health Philadelphia Marriott, Room 307 Organizer and Presider: Fernando I. Rivera, Rutgers University Look (Again) at All the Lonely People: Why the Elderly do not Suffer from Loneliness. Jason Schnittker, University of Pennsylvania Telling the Whole Story of Divorce as a Stressful Life Event: The Role of Pre-Divorce Context vs. Post-Divorce Situation. Blair Wheaton and Rachel Eccles, University of Toronto Income and Happiness in the United States. Glenn Firebaugh, Pennsylvania State University; Laura M. Tach, Harvard University The Problem of Attrition in Survey Research on Health: Evidence from Ten Longitudinal Surveys. John Reynolds, Karen C. Frank, and Heyman Kathy, Florida State University 228. Regular Session. Nations and Nationalisms: Locally Imagined Nations Philadelphia Marriott, Independence Salon III Organizer and Presider: Joane Nagel, University of Kansas “Arabism” as Ethnic Mobilization in the Darfur region of the Sudan. Erik Nielsen, University of Kansas Between Soccer and Martyrdom: The Bi-focal Localism of a Palestinian Town in Israel. Tamir Sorek, Cornell University; Aleksandra Sasha Milicevic, Colgate University Nationalizing Post-Soviet Borderlands: Reterritorialisation of Social Space in Narva on the Estonian-Russian Border. Elena Nikiforova, Centre for Independent Social Research Secularity, Religiosity, and Nationalism: Producing a Zionist Simulation in a Jewish American Summer Camp. Dani Vos, Columbia University Taming the Nation: Forced Migration of Kurds and Politics of Internal Displacement in the Making of Modern Turkey, 1925-1947. Murat Yuksel, Columbia University 229. Regular Session. Place, Space, and Neighborhood Attachments Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington B Organizer and Presider: Bruce D. Haynes, University of California, Davis Business Location, Segregation and Neighborhood Demographic Composition: A First Look at Patterns Based Upon Forty-One United States Communities. Julie Ford, College at Brockport, State University of New York; Andrew A. Beveridge, Queens College and Graduate Center, City University of New York Gang Spaces: How Street Gangs Transform Urban Space. Ray Hutchison, University of Wisconsin, Green Bay Neighborhood Attachment in Urban Environments. Sharon L. Harlan, Arizona State University; Larissa Larsen, University of Michigan; Edward Hackett, Shapard Wolf, Bob Bolin, Diane Hope, and Andrew Kirby, Arizona State University; Amy Nelson, Ohio State University; Tom Rex, Arizona State University The Emergence of Outside Perception of Neighborhood Disorder: Individual Characteristics and Social Structure. Haijing Dai, University of Michigan The Revanchist City: Downtown Chicago and the Rhetoric of Redevelopment in Bronzeville. Theodoric Manley, Sunday, August 14, 10:30 a.m. Discussant: Philip Kasinitz, Graduate Center, City University of New York 230. Regular Session. Politics of Regulation Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington C Organizer: Nancy A. Naples, University of Connecticut Presider: Yvonne Alexandra Braun, University of Oregon Pawns, Knights, or Kings: The Role of Regulators in Public Policy. Sandra Bender Fromson, University of Connecticut Banks in Crisis: Public Policy and Mergers in the New Economy. Theresa Morris, Trinity College A Fluid Divide: Domestic and International Considerations in U.S. Trade Policy Formation. Nitsan Chorev, Central European University Politics Against Markets? Social Protection and Tax Revolt in the U.S. and Denmark. Isaac W. Martin, University of California San Diego Discussant: Davita Silfen Glasberg, University of Connecticut 231. Regular Session. Sociology of Reproduction III: Reproduction, Politics and Social Policy Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Congress C Organizer: Christine H. Morton, ReproNetwork Presider: Susan Markens, Temple University Choice, Rights, and Policy Boundries: Triple Marker Screening in Canada. Arminee Kazanjian, University of British Columbia Religious Belief, Perceptions of Human Suffering and Support for Reproductive Genetic Technology. John H. Evans, University of California, San Diego Pro-Life Picketing at Abortion Clinics in the 1990s: The Role of Resources, Elites, and Institutions. Jon Christopher Pennington, University of California, Berkeley “Reclaiming What Is Ours”: Managing Intra-Occupational Conflict during Professionalization among Traditional and Licensed Midwives in California. Heather Brooke Wylie, University of California, Davis Discussant: Barbara Katz Rothman, City University of New York This session features papers which explore dimensions of reproductive issues from the perspectives of culture, politics, policy and professionalization. The research findings in these papers highlight the macro structures which shape the local contexts in which individuals consider and have access to reproductive options. 232. Regular Session. Strategies for Negotiating WorkFamily Arrangements Philadelphia Marriott, Room 306 Organizer: Miliann Kang, University of Massachusetts, Amherst 111 Presider: Amrita Pande, University of Massachusetts The Twenty-First Century Family’s “Stalled Revolution”: Can Fathers Fix It? Karen V. Hansen, Brandeis University For Love or Money? Rethinking Split-Shift Parenting. Samuel Jacob Yount, NORC; Lisa Hoogstra, University of Chicago Religious Influences on Work-Family Tradeoffs. Samantha K. Ammons, University of Minnesota The Best Laid Plans: Expectations for Child Care and the Stability of Care Arrangements. Rachel A. Gordon and Robin Shirer, University of Illinois at Chicago 233. Section on Sociology of Culture Panel and Business Meeting Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon D 10:30-11:10am, Panel on Culture, Violence, and War: Organizer and Presider: Philip Smith, Yale University Searching for the Good War. James William Gibson, California State University, Long Beach Cultural Formations of Militancy: “Tradition”and Radical Contention in India. Arafaat A. Valiani, Williams College Violent Repertoires. Charles Tilly, Columbia University The section explores the role of culture in motivating, legitimating or otherwise sustaining collective violence and in dealing with its consequences. Particular attention is given to the symbolic and performative repertoires that structure action patterns and their accountability. 11:30am-12:10pm, Business Meeting 234. Section on Aging and the Life Course Invited Session. Milestones in the Study of Aging and the Life Course Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon B Organizer and Presider: Duane Francis Alwin, Pennsylvania State University Increasing Understanding of Differential Aging and Life Course through Biodemography. Eileen Crimmins, University of Southern California Reframing (Gendered) Career and Retirement Mystiques: Structural Lags, Strategic Selections, and Converging Divergences. Phyllis Moen and Noelle A. Chesley, University of Minnesota Race and Ethnic Differences in Healthful Aging. Jacqueline L. Angel and Ronald J. Angel, The University of Texas at Austin Collision Course: The Second Demographic Transition and Population Aging. Mary Elizabeth Hughes, Duke University; Linda J. Waite, University of Chicago Social Inequality, Aging and the Life Course. Angela M. O’Rand, Duke University Discussant: David R. Williams, University of Michigan 112 Sunday, August 14, 10:30 a.m. 235. Section on Children and Youth Paper Session. Children’s Pathways to Adolescence and Adulthood: Continuity and Change Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington A Organizer amd Presider: Lori Kowaleski-Jones, University of Utah Adolescent Romantic Relationships and Young Adult Relationship Formation. Ann Meier, Gina M. Allen, and Christina Dawn Falci, University of Minnesota Parent-Child Relationships and the Transition to Parenthood. Scott Thomas Yabiku and Wei Zeng, Arizona State University Assessing Economic Disadvantage during Childhood: A Group-Based Modeling Approach. Robert L. Wagmiller, University at Buffalo, State University of New York; Mary Clare Lennon, Columbia University; J. Lawrence Aber, New York University; Phillip Alberti, Columbia University Links between Poverty and Obesity through the Life Course into Young Adulthood. Kathleen Mullan Harris, Hedwig Eugenie Lee, and Penny Gordon-Larsen, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Discussant: Nicholas H. Wolfinger, University of Utah 236. Section on Asia and Asian America Paper Session. New Frontiers in Asian and Asian American Studies Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Tubman Organizer and Presider: Zai Liang, University at Albany, State University of New York Emergence of the “Comfort Women” Issue and the Victims’ Breaking Silence in South Korea. Pyong Gap Min, Queens College, City University of New York Geography and Educational Inequality in China. Emily Carroll Hannum, University of Pennsylvania; Meiyan Wang, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences The Logic of Ethnic Business Distribution in Multiethnic Cities. Eric Fong, University of Toronto; Emily Anderson, University of Toronto The New Shanghailanders: Gender and Sexuality in a Cosmopolitan Subculture. James Farrer, Sophia University Discussant: Victor Nee, Cornell University 237. Section on Medical Sociology Paper Session. Reading, Writing and Ranking Science: An Examination of the Legitimacy of Science in Medical Work Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon H Organizer and Presider: Debora A. Paterniti, University of California, Davis Coverage and Cost: What Has a 30-year American “Experiment in National Health Care” Shown? Nancy G. Kutner, Emory University Medicalization and Demedicalization of Abortion in the United States and Britain, 1861-Present. Drew Halfmann, University of California, Davis No Longer in Your Best Interest: When Public Health Campaigns Change Messages. Martine Hackett, Graduate Center, City University of New York Return Visits and Supplier-Induced Demand for Emergency Department Services. Mark Peyrot and Sandra Speck, Loyola College; Chiao-wen Hsiao, Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences “AIDS Brides” in Taiwan: Stigma and Discrimination against Female Marriage Immigrants from Southeast Asia. Yu-Ling Huang, State University of New York, Binghamton 238. Section on Race, Gender, and Class Paper Session. Diaspora and Dislocation Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Anthony Organizer: Ethel C. Brooks, Rutgers University Presider: Roksana Badruddoja Rahman, Rutgers University Building “Situated” Immigration Policy: Listening to Women. Elizabeth J. Clifford, Towson University; Susan Pearce, University of Maryland; Reena Tandon, Johns Hopkins University Eritrean Immigrants in the United States. Lia Mezengi, University of Clifornia, Santa Barbara Left in the Dark: The Collective Amnesia of African among Black Peruvians. Tanya Maria Golash-Boza, University of North Carolina Movin’ On Up? Residential Mobility and Locational Attainment among Black and White Immigrants in the Post-Civil Rights Era. Amon S. Emeka, University of Southern California Discussant: Ethel C. Brooks, Rutgers University This session will explore the effects of various diasporas and dislocations, especially with regard to their gendered, raced, classed and national manifestations, and to the ways in which the sociology of diaspora and dislocation can inform our notions of belonging, identity formation and citizenship. 239. Section on Methodology Paper Session. Methodology 1 Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Adams Organizer and Presider: Ted Mouw, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill A Hazard-Model Approach to Propensity Score Estimation for Studying the Treatment Effect of an Event. Jui-Chung Allen Li, New York University Age-Period-Cohort Analysis of Repeated Cross-Section Surveys: Fixed or Random Effects? Yang Yang, The University of Chicago; Kenneth C. Land, Duke University An Assessment of Ecological Inference. Robert M. Bossarte, Sunday, August 14, 10:30 a.m. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; Felicia LeClere, University of Notre Dame Answering the Career Criminal Debate: Comparing Finite Mixture Modeling with Growth Mixture Modeling. Bert O. Burraston, Brigham Young University Scar Effects of Unemployment: A Cross-national Comparison. Markus Gangl, University of Mannheim Discussant: John R. Hipp, University of North Carolina 240. Section on Economic Sociology. Exchange, Interaction, and Interpretation in Economic Transactions Roundtable Session Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon F Organizers: Nicole Woolsey Biggart, University of California Davis; Thomas D. Beamish, University of California, Davis 1. Market Dynamics Making, Marketing, Manipulating Identity: A Genealogy of Market Research. Peter Younkin, University of California, Berkeley “Who’s Afraid of Market Value?” Performance Measurement and Division of Labor in UK Pensions. Yally Avrahampour, University of Essex Marketization and Income Dynamic in Transitional China. Ying Lu, Princeton University Embeddedness and International Trade Flow. Sangmoon Kim, University of South Carolina Small Parties, Corporations, and Superfund: A Case Study in the Distribution of Liability. Suzanne B. Maurer, Kutztown University 2. Self interest, Collective Interests, and Trusting in Economic Contexts Trust in Cities, Trust in Villages. Ko Kuwabara, Cornell University Trust and Embedded Exchange: A Multi-Method Investigation. Brent Simpson, University of South Carolina Joint Liability and Trust: How Structural Embeddedness Affects Credit Flows. Luis Carlos R. Nogales, Radnor, PA 3. Social Construction and Meaning of “Value” and of “Valuable” The Social Construction of Online Dating: Towards an Understanding of Technological Use and Consumption. Kenneth M. Kambara, California State University, Long Beach, and The KV Group Remaking Money: Local Currency and the Meaning of Money in the United States. Alan Schussman, University of Arizona Contexts of Exchange and the Pricing of Visual Art. Kathleen M. O’Neil, University of Arizona Appraisals for Fine Art: Market Prices and Authorized 113 Prices. Peter Levin, Barnard College Everybody’s Going: The Emergence of Movie-going and the Mass Market in Urban Life. Paul S. Moore, University of Chicago 4. Networks and Exchange Relations What Is the Conceptual Validity of a Social Tie? Insight from Factory Floors. Michel James Anteby, Harvard Business School Taxing Social Ties: The Fiscal Incidence of Lottery Syndicates. Roberto Garvia, Universidad Carlos III of Madrid The Social Production of Intergenerational Exchange: The Value of Social Capital. Eric Christopher Hedberg, University of Chicago The Emergence of Corporate Networks in the United States and Germany 1896-1938. Paul H. Windolf, University Trier Attracting and Retaining Volunteer Software Developers. Sonali Shah, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign 241. Section on Labor and Labor Movements Roundtables and Business Meeting Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Junipers 10:30-11:30am, Roundtables: Organizers: Mary Nell Trautner, University of Arizona; Anne M. (Daisy) Rooks, University of California, Los Angeles 1. Case Studies of Labor and Labor Movements Presider: Marc Dixon, Ohio State University Action Motown: The Detroit Newspaper Strike, 1995-2000. Chris D. Rhomberg, Yale University Negotiating Race, Immigration, and the State: A Case Study of SEIU Local 434b’s Long Term Care Organizing Campaign. Belinda C. Lum, University of Southern California The Piece Work System and “New Slaves” of the Apparel Industry. Piyasuda Pangsapa, University at Buffalo, State University of New York Obstacles to Social Movement Unionism: A Case Study of the United Steelworkers of America. Jill Ann Harrison, Ohio State University 2. Labor Movements in International Perspective Presider: Leslie C. Gates, Binghamton University Recent Global Trends in Research Themes in the Sociology of Work. Daniel B. Cornfield, Steve S. Lee, Melissa Marie Sloan, and Haihong Wang, Vanderbilt University Labor’s Foreign Policy Under John Sweeney: Are “Misteps” Aberations—or Return to “Traditional” Labor Imperialism? Kim Scipes, Purdue University, North Central European Trade Unions: Influence and Members—A 114 Sunday, August 14, 10:30 a.m. Session 241, continued Comparative Analysis of Workplace Influence and Member Composition among Trade Unions in Europe. Carsten Strøby Jensen, University of Copenhagen Organized Labor’s Changing Situation in Indonesia: Does Reformasi Matter? Lionel Kian Wee How, National University of Singapore 3. Social Movement Theory in Labor Movement Research Presider: Steven H. Lopez, Ohio State University Social Movement Theory and Labor Movements: StateCentric Assumptions and Class-Centered Challenges. Dale W. Wimberley, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Communities Fight Back: Neoliberalism, Living Wage Ordinances, and Organized Labor, 1994-2002. Michael John Mulcahy, University of Connecticut, Stamford; Mary Nell Trautner, University of Arizona The Human Rights of Labor in the Vew of New Institutionalism. Kyung min Baek and Hang-Young Lee, Korea University 4. Lessons from the Contemporary Labor Movement Presider: Dorian T. Warren, University of Chicago Perceptions of Leadership: Organizer and Worker Relationships in Working Class Collective Activity. Robert A. Penney, George Washington University; Anne M. (Daisy) Rooks, University of California, Los Angeles Building Coalition in the Ivory Tower: Lessons from a Campus Living Wage Campaign. Jennifer Bickham Mendez, College of William & Mary; James Spady, University of Mary Washington The US Labor Unions and Teir (Non)Response to Workplace Diversity. Darina Elena Lepadatu and Timothy P. Thompson, University of Kentucky 11:30am-12:10pm, Business Meeting 242. Section on Marxist Sociology Invited Session. Marxist Perspectives on Electoral Process Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Grand Salon III-IV Organizer and Presider: Lauren Langman, Loyola University Chicago Mannheim 2004: The Problem of Generations Revisited. Lauren Langman, Loyola University Chicago Big Bold and Brazen Lies, A Cowardly Media, and Dicey Voting Machines: How the Republicans Did It Again. Douglas M. Kellner, University of California, Los Angeles The Left and Elections: Will It Ever Learn? G. William Domhoff, University of California, Santa Cruz How do we understand Bush’s election? Despite a stagnant economy, an growingly unpopular war and poor performance in the debates, Bush narrowly won. What social and cultural factors might explain this victory, what are the implications for progressive politics? Each participant will present some brief comments, a general discussion will ensue. 243. Section on Social Psychology Invited Session. Across the Social Psychological Spectrum: New Developments in Methods Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon J Organizers: Jodi O’Brien, Seattle University; Timothy J. Owens, Purdue University Presider: Jodi O’Brien, Seattle University Panelists: Sherryl Kleinman, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Douglas W. Maynard, University of Wisconsin Jane Sell, Texas A&M University Richard T. Serpe, California State University, San Marcos 244. Section on Teaching and Learning in Sociology Invited Session. Emerging Themes in Sociology: Issues for Undergraduate Teaching Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Grand Salon II Organizers: Peter Meiksins, Cleveland State University; John F. Zipp, University of Akron Panelists: Michael Burawoy, University of California, Berkeley Ruth D. Peterson, Ohio State University Amy S. Wharton, Washington State University Kevin T. Leicht, The University of Iowa Marlese Durr, Wright State University 245. Section on Crime, Law, and Deviance Roundtables and Business Meeting Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth B 10:30-11:30am, Roundtables: Organizer: Ross L. Matsueda, University of Washington 1. Collective Efficacy, Networks, and Neighborhood Crime Presider: Ronald L. Simons, University of Georgia A New Approach to Violence in Disadvantaged Neighborhoods: The Sources and Consequences of Street Efficacy. Patrick T. Sharkey, Harvard University Is Murder Transitive? Andrew V. Papachristos, University of Chicago I Want It, I See It, I Take It: Physical Disorder, Social Disorder, Collective Efficacy and Robberies. Peter K.B. St. Jean, University at Buffalo, State University of New York Collective Efficacy, Authoritative Parenting, and Delinquency: A Longitudinal Test Integrating Community 115 Sunday, August 14, 10:30 a.m. and Family-Level Processes. Ronald L. Simons and Callie Harbin Burt, University of Georgia 2. Incarceration, Coercive Mobility, and Inmate Release Presider: Robert D. Crutchfield, University of Washington Inmates’ Perception of Stigma and Anticipated Coping Strategies upon Release. Terri A. Winnick and Mark Bodkin, Ohio State University, Mansfield Social Networks and Coercive Mobility: A Theoretical Model of the Impact of Incarceration on Communities. Andres Rengifo, John Jay College and Graduate Center, City University of New York; Elin J. Waring, Lehman College, City University of New York Coercive Mobility, Neighborhood Ties, and Crime: Inmate Release in Seattle, 1990-2003. Kevin M. Drakulich, Robert D. Crutchfield, and Ross L. Matsueda, University of Washington 3. Key Issues in Criminal Justice Processing Presider: Jeffery T. Ulmer, Pennsylvania State University Girls and Delinquency: Reconstructing Status Offenses. Carla P. Davis, Effects of Gender on Court Official’s Decision-Making across Case-Processing Stages. Hua Zhong, Pennsylvania State University Variation in Trial Penalties among Serious Violent Offenses. Jeffery T. Ulmer, Pennsylvania State University; Mindy Wilson Bradley, University of South Florida 4. New Evidence on Support for the Death Penalty Presider: Steven Stack, Wayne State University South vs. Non-South Differences in White Support for the Death Penalty: A Research Note. Steven E. Barkan and Steven F. Cohn, University of Maine Support for the Death Penalty: A Cross-National Analysis. Steven Stack, Wayne State University 5. Social Control: From Prison Riots to Faith-Based Initiatives Presider: Assata Richards, University of Pittsburgh Examining Faith-based Treatment as a Form of Informal Social Control with Drug-involved Offenders. Meridith Hill Thanner, Christina Yancey, and Faye S. Taxman, University of Maryland Prison Turmoil?: Trends and Explanations of Prison Collective Unrest, 1984-1995. Assata Richards, University of Pittsburgh 6. Studies of Urban Crime Presider: Ramiro Martinez, Florida International University Toward a Unified Ecology of Crime Theory: An Exploration of Interactions between Criminal Impetus and Opportunity in a Multi-Level, Hierarchical Analysis. Kennon John Rice, Albright College Reexamining the Urban Crime: The Impact of Urban Planning on Crime Occurrence in the Global City Taipei. Yu-Jui Ou, YuanZe University Incorporating Race, Space and Drug Markets in Social Disorganization Theory: Findings from a Comparison of Violent Deaths in an Immigrant City. Ramiro Martinez, Florida International University; Dennis Mares, Florida Atlantic University; Jacob I. Stowell, University at Albany, State University of New York 7. Research Issues in Criminology Presider: Donald B. Wallace, Drexel University The Importance of Being Specific: Offense, Victim, Offender, and Arrest Rates in NIBRS. Roland Chilton, University of Massachusetts, Amherst; Wendy Regoeczi, Cleveland State University A Gendered Analysis of Situational Dimensions of Interpersonal Violence. Nancy Hirschinger-Blank, Widener University; Donald B. Wallace, Drexel University 8. Terrorism, Civil Liberties, and Crime as “Evil” Presider: Pat L. Lauderdale, What’s the Matter with Civil Liberties: The USA Patriot Act and Erosion of Constitutional Rights. Lloyd Klein, Bemidji State University The Discourse of Crime as “Evil” in Media. Michael J. Coyle, Arizona State University Women, the State and Terrorism. Pat L. Lauderdale, Arizona State University 9. Effects of Racial Disadvantage and Disenfranchisement Presider: Charis E. Kubrin, George Washington University Deindustrialization, Disadvantage, and Suicide among Young Black Males. Charis E. Kubrin, George Washington University; Tim Wadsworth, University of New Mexico; Stephanie Dipietro, University of Maryland Locked Out: The Impact of Felon Disenfranchisement Laws on Individuals and Communities. S. David Mitchell, University of Colorado at Boulder 10. Issues in Law and Society Presider: Michael H. Fox, Hyogo College Japan’s Animal Protection Law: All Bark, No Bite? Michael H. Fox, Hyogo College 11:30am-12:10pm, Business Meeting 11:30 am Meetings Section on Crime, Law, and Deviance Business Meeting (to 12:10pm) — Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth B Section on Labor and Labor Movements Business Meeting (to 12:10pm) — Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Junipers Section on Sociology of Culture Business Meeting (to 12:10pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon D 116 12:30 pm Sunday, August 14, 12:30 p.m. Meetings Contemporary Sociology Editorial Board (to 2:10pm) — Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Parlor 1 Committee on the Status of Women in Sociology (to 2:10pm) — Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Room 101 Section on Aging and the Life Course Business Meeting (to 1:10pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon B Task Force on Sociology and General Education (to 2:10pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Room 309 12:30 pm Sessions 246. Thematic Session. Comparative Immigration Philadelphia Marriott, Room 303 Organizer and Presider: Min Zhou, University of California, Los Angeles Comparative Analysis of Immigration from Latin American and the Caribbean. Douglas S. Massey, Princeton University Recent Migration patterns in Europe. David Reher, Universidad Computense de Madrid Through the Eyes of Women: Immigration and the Creation of Cultural Difference in Post-WWII Israel. Aziza Khazzoom, Recent Trends of Chinese Immigration to the United States and Europe: A Comparative Perspective. Zai Liang, University at Albany, State University of New York Discussant: Peggy Levitt, Wellesley College The aim of the session is two-fold: 1) to highlight and analyze new patterns of contemporary human migration in the era of globalization and the diverse migration experiences of both people on the move and those left behind; 2) to suggest theoretical perspectives for comparing various strands of migrations around the world and for examining consequences on the sending and receiving countries. 247. Thematic Session. Islamic Exceptionalism? Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth C Organizer and Presider: Charles Kurzman, University of North Carolina Historicizing Muslim Exceptionalism: Findings of Comparative Research. Mansoor Moaddel, Eastern Michigan University The Politics of Islam in the Ottoman Empire: Changing Modalities of Accommodation. Karen Barkey, Columbia University The Uniqueness of Islamic Disestablishmentarianism. Ahmad Sadri, Lake Forest College The Making of the Iraqi Constitution: Interim Imposition in Comparative Perspective. Andrew Arato, New School University The recent burst of attention to Islam, in both policy and academic circles, often leaves the impression that Muslims form a world apart from the rest of humanity. Scholars who wish to debunk this dichotomous perspective, however, face their own dilemmas: if Muslims’ social and political behavior can be analyzed with the conceptual tools developed for Western societies, then what are we to make of certain Muslims’ claims to cultural difference? 248. Centennial Session. Conventional Wisdom, Marginalizing Difference, and Other Sociological Blind Spots Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon C Organizer and Presider: David Wellman, University of California, Santa Cruz Panelists: Melvin L. Oliver, University of California, Santa Barbara Stephen Steinberg, Queens College Dana Y. Takagi, University of California, Santa Cruz Hernan Vera, University of Florida 249. Centennial Session. Diverse Histories of American Sociology (co-sponsored by the Section on History of Sociology) Philadelphia Marriott, Room 410 Organizer: Anthony J. Blasi, Tennessee State University Presider: Jan Marie Fritz, University of Cincinnati Archiving in the Margins: Early Sociology at Historically Black and Women’s Colleges. Joyce E. Williams, Texas Woman’s University (emeritus); Vicky M. MacLean, Middle Tennessee State University Digging for Southern Sociologists: Uncovering Foremothers and Forefathers in Unrecognized Regions. Kay Richards Sunday, August 14, 12:30 p.m. Broschart, Hollins University Investigating the History of Sociology at Berkeley. Jonathan D. VanAntwerpen, University of California, Berkeley Wny American Sociologists Should Know about Maurice Halbwachs. Suzanne Vromen, Bard College Looking Back on Methodological Triangulation in the Work of W.E.B. DuBois. Robert Wortham, North Carolina Central University 250. Special Session. The Continuing Relevance of Early American Sociology Philadelphia Marriott, Room 305 Organizer and Presider: James J. Chriss, Cleveland State University Lost Orgins: Lester Ward’s Dynamic Sociology. Harry F. Dahms, University of Tennessee, Knoxville Peirce and Social Theory. Norbert F. Wiley, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign On Mead’s Movement of Thought in the 19th Century. Victor Meyer Lidz, Drexel University The Self in Early American Sociology. James J. Chriss, Cleveland State University 251. Special Session. The Significance of Sociology for the HIV/AIDS Pandemic Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Congress A Organizer and Presider: Eric R. Wright, Indiana University Purdue University Indianapolis Gender, Sexuality, and HIV/AIDS. Beth E. Schneider, University of California, Santa Barbara Communities of Color and HIV Prevention. Benjamin P. Bowser, California State University, Hayward Pandemic and Global Responses to HIV/AIDS. Judith A. Levy, University of Illinois at Chicago HIV/AIDS Politics and Social Policies. Barry D. Adam, University of Windsor 252. Special Session. Women and Science: Empirical Responses to the Summers’ Controversy (co-sponsored by Sociologists for Women in Society) Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon G Organizers: Marlese Durr, Wright State University; Barbara Jane Risman, North Carolina State University Presider: Marlese Durr, Wright State University Implicit Bias, Performance, and Perceived Ability in the Workplace. Cecilia L. Ridgeway, Stanford University The Adaptive Landscape of Academe: Why Female Scholarly Fitness Is Not Maximized. Gail Simmons, College of New Jersey 117 Multiplied Jeopardies: Race, Gender, Genes and Science(?). Bonnie Thornton Dill, University of Maryland Vive la Variance? On Genetic Differences in Science Aptitude between the Genders. Marta Wayne, University of Florida Limiting the Limitless Academic Work Load. Jerry A. Jacobs, University of Pennsylvania Discussant: Mary Frank Fox, Georgia Institute of Technology 253. Regional Spotlight Session. Black Philadelphia in the New Millennium: the Intersection of Race, Space and Culture Philadelphia Marriott, Room 304 Organizer and Presider: Maggie R. Ussery, Ursinus College Race Relations in Everyday Life: The Case of the City of Brotherly Love. Elijah Anderson, University of Pennsylvania To be announced. Kali Nicole Gross, Drexel University (Re-)Imagining North Philadelphia: The Cultural Foundation of the Black American Dream. Kesha S. Moore, Bryant College Race, Class, and Work in Philadelphia. Maggie R. Ussery, Ursinus College This spotlight session focuses on the black experience in Philadelphia. The papers presented here will examine the economic, cultural, and historic position of blacks in the city and will also include papers that discuss how space and race interact. 254. Methodological Seminar. Counterfactual Causal Modeling Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon L Ticket required for admission Leader: Felix Elwert, Harvard University This seminar provides an overview of central concepts from the counterfactual approach to causal inference (a.k.a. potential outcomes model, Rubin model). The seminar emphasizes the usefulness of the counterfactual approach for thinking about causal mechanisms and bridging the gap between social theory and statistical methods. We will stress intuition and heuristics over statistical recipes and proofs. However, some new statistical material will be introduced. Topics include: potential outcomes; the fundamental problem of causal inference; experimental analogy; matching and propensity scores; relationship with OLS and standard methods; point treatments versus time-varying treatments; confounding and the role of social theory in causal estimation. Background: an advanced course on applied multiple regression and a good understanding of the intuition behind standard methods (OLS, logit, instrumental variables). Participants are encouraged to read pages 659-69, 671-78 in Winship and Morgan. 1999. “The Estimation of Causal Effects from Observational Data.” Annual Review of Sociology 1999. 118 Sunday, August 14, 12:30 p.m. 255. Academic Workshop. Teaching Research Ethics in Sociology Methods Courses Philadelphia Marriott, Independence Salon III Organizer: Enrique S. Pumar, William Paterson University Panelists: Enrique S. Pumar, William Paterson University Thomas L. Van Valey, Western Michigan University Theodore C. Wagenaar, Miami University The workshop discusses several approaches to teaching research ethics in graduates and undergraduates research methods courses with particular emphasis on two popular pedagogical strategies, the use of case studies and events to illustrate specific ethical principles and the integration of the code of ethics in each phase of the research process. It will demonstrate the practical applications of the ASA Code of Ethics in executing collaborative research projects. The panelists will share insights from their considerable experiences teaching research ethics to discuss relevant cases and professional research ethic controversies; highlights of the ASA Professional Code of Ethics; university IRBs and the approval of student research projects; useful strategies to integrate ethics into the research curriculum; and the politics of field research. 256. Career Workshop. Non-academic Job Search Philadelphia Marriott, Room 408 Organizer and Presider: Cynthia L. Sipe, Youth Development Strategies, Inc. Panelists: Deborah Holtzman, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Benjamin Ben-Baruch, CPRI and Eastern Michigan University Nancy Weinberg, Corporate Executive Board Panelists: Linda Lopez, APSA Juan J. Battle, Hunter College and Graduate Center Jodi O’Brien, Seattle University Yonette Tomas, National Institute of Drug Abuse The MFP Professional Development workshop is designed to expose students to sociologists and other professionals who have been able to transition from graduate programs into academic and nonacademic positions. The panelists will share with the audience about job negotiation tips; how to be more competitive in the job market; discuss pros and cons of post-doctoral training; their professional experience and development; and discuss caree options outside academe for individuals with PHDs. 258. Research Workshop. Wisconsin Longitudinal Study Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon K Organizer and Leader: Robert M. Hauser, University of Wisconsin, Madison 259. Teaching Workshop. Teaching Public Sociologies (cosponsored by the ASA Task Force on Institutionalizing Public Sociology) Philadelphia Marriott, Room 412 Organizer: Philip Nyden, Loyola University Chicago Leaders: Philip Nyden, Loyola University Chicago Leslie H. Hossfeld, University of North Carolina at Wilmington Attendees of the panel can expect to gain an understanding of how to be more successful in various segments of the non-academic job market. The panelists represent, or have worked in, a variety of nonacademic positions, including government agencies, private industry, state government, charitable foundations, policy research firms, and independent consulting. In particular, we have asked each of the panelists to address the following topics as it relates to their area of expertise: • Getting to the interview: networking, job ads, attitude, presentation of self. • Interviewing: getting them, behaving in them, following up after, the first, second, third...offers, negotiations. • Getting to the next job: networking on the job, getting recognition for work done, dealing with adversaries. • Non-academic soft skills: being proactive, continuous education, getting it done...from calendars, to knowing MS Office, to whatever. The workshop will focus on how undergraduate and graduate currical can be used to both familiarize students with public sociology and prepare them to engage in publiv sociology — sociology seeks to engage broader audiences or partners outside of academia. Public sociology can range from working with community partners in community-based participatory research (CBPR) to writing about research results in popular publications such as newspapers and magazines. The workshop will focus on issues such as: how engaged methods (e.g. CBPR, participatory evaluation research, and action research) can be intergrated into existingcourses; and how hands-on community-based research can be woven into substantive courses. Other topics will include; what are our ethical obligations to communicate our research to broader publics?; how do sociologusts maintain rigorous research in “political” environments?; and are their effective writing for non-academic audiences? The workshop will include information collected by the ASA Task Force on Institutionalizing Public Sociology. Additional resource persons in the workshop will include: Donald Light (Princeton University), Kevin Delaney (Temple University), and Rebecca Gasior Altman (Brown University). 257. Professional Workshop. MFP Professional Development Workshop (co-sponsored by the ASA Committee on the Status of Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and Transgendered Persons in Sociology) Philadelphia Marriott, Room 310 Organizer: Mercedes Rubio, American Sociological Association 260. Teaching Workshop. Teaching Topical Survey Courses: Practical and Theoretical Concerns Philadelphia Marriott, Room 409 Organizer: Denise A. Copelton, College at Brockport, State University of New York Co-Leaders: Denise A. Copelton, College at Brockport, State University of New York Sunday, August 14, 12:30 p.m. Anne Frances Eisenberg, State University of New York at Geneseo 261. Teaching Workshop. Teaching the Sociology of Peace, War, and Social Conflict Philadelphia Marriott, Room 411 Organizer and Presider: Lynne M. Woehrle, Mount Mary College Panelists: David E. Rohall, Western Illinois University Meyer Kestnbaum, University of Maryland Mathew Johnson, West Virginia Wesleyan College In this interactive workshop, leaders will pose key issues and concepts to be covered in teaching about the social processes of war, peace, and social conflict. Critical questions in the 21st century around the impact of war, the processes of peace-building or peacemaking, and the role of conflict analysis will be central to the discussion. What is it we want our students to learn as they grow into global citizens? What are the key forces shaping war and peace in the 21st century? How can Sociology contribute to students’ understanding of the nexus of peace and war? Examples from their own courses will be provided. Participants will be invited to share their own teaching strategies as well. This workshops is intended to enhance dialogue among those who teach regularly about these issues and those who are interested in bringing them into the classroom for the first time. Handouts provided. 262. Open Refereed Roundtables I Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon E Organizers: Jennifer C. Lena and Richard A. Peterson, Vanderbilt University 1. Organizations Presider: Jay Gabler, Harvard University The Realities of the Re-regulation of Employment: From Accommodation to Colonisation. Robert MacKenzie, Leeds University; Miguel Martinez Lucio, University of Bradford The Social Construction of Discretion in Public Welfare Agencies: Emerging Questions and Issues. Louis Nalley, University of Arkansas; Anna Zajicek, Transparency as an Organizational Characteristic: The Critical Role of Information Flow. Christopher B. Yenkey, Cornell University What Does Measuring Isomorphism Actually Measure? Eleanor T. Lewis, University of Tennessee, Memphis 2. Theory Presider: Bridget M. Costello, University of Pennsylvania A Typology for Understanding the Connections among Different Forms of Social Capital. Jennifer Glanville, University of Iowa; Elisa Jayne Bienenstock Agency: An Empirical Model of an Abstract Concept. Steven Hitlin, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Glen H. Elder, University of North Carolina, 119 Chapel Hill Social Systems Theory and Emotions: A Comparison of Luhmann and Parsons. Helmut Staubmann, University of Innsbruck What Passes for Theory. Barry Markovsky, Lisa Michelle Dilks, and Kyle W. Irwin, University of South Carolina 3. Education Presider: Randi Rosenblum, Columbia University Creating a Family: Incorporating African American Men into Elementary School. Kelly Goran Fulton, The Universityof Texas at Austin Gender Differences in the Effects of Sports Participation on Academic Outcomes. Sarah R. Crissey, Jennifer Pearson, and Catherine Riegle-Crumb, The University of Texas at Austin Homeschooling: Education Redefined? Lan Yu Lim, National University of Singapore The Influence of Course Mates’ Parent Education Attainment on Four-year College Enrollment. Kate Hee Young Choi, Kelly Raley, Chandra Muller, and Catherine Riegle-Crumb, The University of Texas at Austin 4. Ethnicity and Structure Presider: Faye Louise Allard, University of Pennsylvania An Analysis of Racial Profiling in La Crosse: Considering Subculture and the Context of Race Relations. Pao Lee, University of Minnesota Asian Indians in Small Towns: Struggling or Settling? Ho Hon Leung and Fida Mohammad, College at Oneonta, State University of New York English Non-fleuncy and Income Panelty for Hispanic Workers. Song Yang, University of Arkansas Middleman Minorities in Black-White Affirmative Action Debate. Elena M. Ermolaeva, Shepherd College 5. Welfare and National Organizations Presider: Paromita Sanyal, Harvard University A Liminal Moment? Third Sector Organizations and the Transformation of State-Society Relations in Urban Tanzania. Brian J. Dill, University of Minnesota From Welfare Reform to Welfare Justice: The Impact of TANF Implementation on Fair Hearing Appeals. Frank Ridzi, Le Moyne College The Inter-relationship between Government and NPOs:Case Study of 921 Earthquake Relief in Taiwan and Hanshin- Awaji Earthquake Relief in Japan. Chieh-Wen Liu, Rutgers University Welfare and Culture: Beyond an Individual-level Conception of Needs. David V. Bartram, University of Reading 6. Feminism Presider: Lyndi N. Hewitt, Vanderbilt University Critical Evaluation on Women and Poverty Discourse in 120 Sunday, August 14, 12:30 p.m. Session 262, continued Advanced Capitalist and Under-Developed Countries. Fatime Gunes, Anadolu University Resurrecting Traditional Family: Promoting Marriage, Reconstituting Gender Roles, in the Wake of First Wave Feminism. Michele Ann Adams, Tulane University Wolves in Sheep’s Clothing or New Kind of Sheep? ProLife Feminists. Patty Hipsher, Oklahoma State University Reflections on the Role of the Scholar-Activist in Feminist Sociology: Dilemmas, Frustrations, and Visions for the Future. Lyndi N. Hewitt, Vanderbilt University 7. Youth, Families, and Fathers Presider: Sarah R. Hayford, University of Pennsylvania Status Maximization or Identity Theory?: A Theorectical Approach to Understanding the Racial Identification of Multiracial Adolescents. Matthew Oware, DePauw University The Importance of the Coparental Relationship in Fostering Nonresident Fathers’ Ties to Their Children. Juliana McGene Sobolewski, University of Notre Dame; Valarie King, Pennsylvania State University Understanding Adolescent Pregnancy: Resistance and Trends Towards Adulthood. Tamika Corinne Odum, University of Cincinnati Reaction Strategies of Adolescents in Patriarchal and NonPatriarchal Households. Timothy A. McCorry, Buffalo State College 8. Race, Wealth, and Immigration Presider: Norma E. Fuentes, Fordham University Afro-Caribbean Wealth in the U.S: The Power of Race and Immigration Status on Asset Building. Yndia S. LorickWilmot, Northeastern University Determinants of the Rate of Occupational Sex and Race Integration: 1980-2000. Beth Mintz and Daniel Krymkowski, University of Vermont New Dimensions of Entrepreneurship among Foreign- and U.S.-Raised Asian Americans in the Global Economy. C.N. Le and Miliann Kang, University of Massachusetts, Amherst 9. Newspapers, Identity and Public Memory Presider: Wendy D. Roth, Harvard University Hybridized Patriarchal Hegemony: Two Newspapers and Their Reports of the Qu Mei-fong Scandal in Taiwan. Gloria Tsai, Nazareth College; Hui-Chuan Cheng, National Chengchi University From Minjung to Citizen: The Politics of Public Memory in South Korea (1987-2002). William A. Hayes, University of California, Berkeley Minneapolis/St. Paul African American’s Engagement with Africa, 1965-1975: Using a Local Case to Explore the Transnational. Sadie R. Pendaz, University of Minnesota How Does Public Discourse Crystallize? Representation and DIffusion in Debates over Guaranteed Income Policy. Brian S. Steensland, Indiana University 10. Globalization Presider: Vera L. Zolberg, New School University Foreign Economic Policymakers and their Motives: A Case Study of North American Integration Till 1993. Malcolm Fairbrother, University of California, Berkeley Globalization, Politics and Contingency in Turkey’s Shift to Islamism. Cihan Ziya Tugal, Northwestern University Moral Politics of Globalization: the European Union Confronts Human Trafficking and Prostitution. Greggor Mattson, University of California, Berkeley The Factory World: The Intersection of Gender, Caste, Class, Ethnicity, and Kinship. Shobha Hamal Gurung, University of Connecticut 11. Stress, Tension, and Work Presider: Tom Juravich, University of Massachusetts Motivations and Mechanisms of Overwork. Julio Martin Tsuha, University of California, Riverside Sheltered Lives: Tension Management in a Metropolitan Animal Welfare Facility. Lisa L. Sarmicanic, University of Nevada, Las Vegas Workers’ and Supervisors’ Perceptions of Workplace Problems: An Examination of Nurses and Their Managers. Barbara K. Chesney and Barbara Thomas Coventry, University of Toledo Stressed: Customer Service Representatives at Verizon. Tom Juravich, University of Massachusetts 12. Making Enemies Presider: Murray Milner, University of Virginia Views Held about Arab Americans before 9/11. Marylee C. Taylor and Suzanne E. Agha, Pennsylvania State University Propaganda the Information War: Media, Power, and Politics in Democracy. Heather Kaufman, Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis The Importance of Enemies: Alliances and Conflicts between Elites and Non-elites in the Contemporary U.S. Murray Milner, University of Virginia 13. Liberty, Religion, and Homosexuality Presider: Alison Denton Jones, Harvard University Late to the Party: Organizing Religious Human Rights. David V. Brewington, Emory University 14. Crime, Law and Deviance Presider: Billie Gastic, Stanford University Sunday, August 14, 12:30 p.m. “I Know Hundreds Like You”: Imposed Identities, Discretionary Decision Making, and Relational Contexts in Parole. Danielle S. Rudes, University of California, Irvine A Cross Cultural Comparison of How Globalization Produces Youth Violence in Large Cities of the Developing World. Barry Weisberg, University of Illinois at Chicago A New Kind of Justice: Therapeutic Jurisprudence and Drug Courts. Kimberly Michelle Baker, University of Texas 15. Organizations and the Economy Presider: Marcus L. Britton, Northwestern University Are Asian Americans Disadvantaged? Examining the Role of Job-related Human Capital on Earnings Returns. Minxing Chen, Ohio State University Geometry of Power: Vertical and Horizontal Aspects of the State—Big Business Relations in Contemporary Russia. Anna Sher, Stony Brook University, State University of New York The Role of Human Agency and Context in Institutional Change: Decline of Familism in Taiwanese Business Groups. Chi-Nien Chung, Stanford University; Xiaowei Luo, University of Illinois Community Involvement, Organizational Hieararchy, and Capital Access: Business Banking in Central Cities and Suburbs. Marcus L. Britton, Northwestern University 16. Social Psychology Presider: Emily Tanner-Smith, Vanderbilt University Narrating the Racial Self: Symbolic Boundaries and the Reference Group Identification among Biracial Black Jews. Bruce D. Haynes, University of California, Davis Self-Verification, Status, Self-Evaluations, and Emotions. Michael Harrod, University of California, Riverside Volunteer work and trajectories of depression. Joongbaeck Kim, University of Texas at Austin 17. Globalization and Nationalism Presider: Vida Bajc, University of Pennslyvania Contracting Labor Migration: Philippine State Policy and International Migration Flows, 1969-2000. Kristel Acacio, University of California, Berkeley Hegemonic Regime? Globalization, Market Reform and Changing Labor Politics in China’s Automobile Industry. Lu Zhang, Johns Hopkins University Stalking Modernity: Sugarcane and the Political Ecology of Europe’s Colonial Expansion, 1450-1750. Jason W. Moore, University of California, Berkeley The Diffusion of Local Actions against Global Climate Change in Australia, Canada and the US. Ion Bogdan Vasi, Cornell University 18. Children 121 Presider: Jamie J. Fader, University of Pennsylvania Does Ethnicity Matter in Juvenile Delinquency Studies? Natacha Stevanovic, Columbia University Model Minority? Korean Immigrant Children in Kansas City Metropolitan Area. Kyoung-ho Shin, Northwest Missouri State University What about the Children?: Black/White Children, Family Approval of Interracial Relationships, and Contemporary Racial Ideology. Rachel E. Sullivan, Long Island University, C.W. Post Campus 19. Ethnicity and Ideas Presider: Kathryn A. Sweeney, Emory University Creating “Psychological Hygiene” from the Ground Up: African American Women and Psychological WellBeing. LaShawnDa L. Pittman, Northwestern University Varied Degrees of Vision: Recognition of Race for White and Black Women in Same-Race and Interracial Families. Kathryn A. Sweeney, Emory University 20. Social Movements Presider: Cecelia Catherine Walsh-Russo, Columbia University Dynamics of Diffusion: Analysing Cross-national Sxchange and Learning Processes between Social Movements. Conny Roggeband, Free University, Amsterdam Mobilizing Emotional Firepower. George Ernest Mortimore, Beacon Hill Communications Group The Dual Choice: Institutionalizing Social Movements under Democratic Consolidation. Young-hwa Kim, Korea University What Are the Issues?: The Protest Agenda at State Capitols, 1998-2001. Bayliss J. Camp, Texas Christian University; Matthew E. Kaliner, Harvard University 263. Student Session. Chronic Stress and Social Location Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon A Organizer: Laura M. Tach, Harvard University Presider: Val Episcopo, Syracuse University The Managerial Gaze: Reading Braverman through Foucault. Samuel Gregory Prieto, Whittier College Social Capital and Female Labor Force Participation. Yasuko Urano, University of Hawaii at Manoa Public Health Inequalities: Local Government Practices, Processes, and Policies. Craig Leroy Gertsch, University of California at Berkeley The Effect of Marital Status and Marital Happiness on General Happiness and Life Outlook. Christine M. Yakimec, The College of New Jersey The Effects of Educational Attainment on Subjective Wellbeing. Nicole Hartman, The College of New Jersey 122 Sunday, August 14, 12:30 p.m. Session 263, continued The Hierarchical Stress Model argues that socioeconomic status is responsible for health inequality. Health problems have changed as science and public health have learned about diseases, but the inequality of who experiences the illnesses and who lives the longest has endured. This session will look at different social locations, and how they create chronic stress. We will look at control in the work environment, social factors influencing if women enter employment, how policy and gatekeepers create unequal access to health care, education’s effect on sense of wellbeing, and how marriage changes a person’s outlook on life. All of these presentations will help us build a better understanding of the social construction of stress and health inequality. 264. Regular Session. Cultural Approaches to the Economy Philadelphia Marriott, Room 403 Organizer: Bruce G. Carruthers, Northwestern University Presider: Peter Levin, Barnard College “A Special Camaraderie with Colleagues”: Business Associations and Cultural Production for Economic Action. Lynette Spillman, University of Notre Dame Epistemic Performativity in Financial Markets: The Case of Financial Chartism. Alexandru Preda, University of Edinburgh Securities Analysts as Frame-Makers. Daniel Beunza, Universitat Pompeu Fabra; Raghu Garud, New York University Social Capital and Microfinance in the Dominican Republic: “Bringing Culture Back In.” Claudia W. Scholz, University of Texas at San Antonio Constructing Perceptions of Value: Acquisition Location and Market Value, 1997-2002. Brayden G. King, University of Arizona 265. Regular Session. Disability and Social Life: Session I Philadelphia Marriott, Room 306 Organizer andPresider: Steven P. Dandaneau, University of Dayton “Going the Extra Mile”: Experiences of Stigma Management among Working Women with Disabilities. Mairead Moloney, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill “If I Had Blue Eyes”: Motherwork, Deafness, and Communication in Families. Cheryl G. Najarian, University of Massachusetts Lowell Sexual Intimacy among Individuals with Spinal Cord Injury: An Evaluation of Biomedical and Social Models of Disability. Esther Wilder, Lehman College and the Graduate Center, City University of New York 266. Regular Session. Disasters from Below: A Victims’ Centered Approach to Sociology of Disasters Philadelphia Marriott, Independence Salon I Organizer: Marla Perez-Lugo, University of Puerto Rico Presider: Jenniffer M. Santos, University of Delaware Families and Disaster Behavior: A Reassessment of Family Preparedness. Alan B. Kirschenbaum, Israel Institute of Technology Sorrow and Solidarity: Why Americans Volunteered for 9/11 Relief Efforts. Kraig Beyerlein, University of North Carolina; David Sikkink, University of Notre Dame Disaster and Deritualization: A Re-examination of Early Disaster Research. Alex Thornburg, J. David Knottnerus, and Gary R. Webb, Oklahoma State University 267. Regular Session. GLBT Identities in Context Philadelphia Marriott, Room 407 Organizer: Abby L. Ferber, University of Colorado at Colorado Springs Presider: Tracy Wentling, University of Colorado at Colorado Springs Conformity and Difference in Gay/Lesbian Identity: An Analysis of Egalitarian Outcomes among Monogamous Partners. Nicholas C. Delsordi, Arizona State University Local Structures and the Coming Out of the Gay Movement in Ireland 1970-79. Paul A. Ryan, University College Dublin Intrinsically Disordered or Gay by God? The Negotiation of Sexual and Religious Identity in Three Sites. Nadine Rosechild-Sullivan, Temple University Just One of the Guys? FTMs, Male Privilege and the Workplace. Kristen Rose Schilt, University of California, Los Angeles Discussant: Heather Powers Albanesi, University of Colorado at Colorado Springs Familial, religious, social movement, and workplace structures are explored as they shape GLBT identities and politics. 268. Regular Session. Globalization: Economic and Spatial Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Congress B Organizer and Presider: Sing C. Chew, Humboldt State University Time Space Intensification: Karl Polanyi, the Double Movement and Global Informational Capitalism. Sean O Riain, National University of Ireland, Maynooth Creating Liquidity Out of Spatial Fixity: Globalization and the U.S. Real Estate Sector. Kevin Fox Gotham, Tulane University Economic Globalization and the World Cities Hypothesis: The Global/Local Distinction. Derek S. Hyra, University of Chicago Sunday, August 14, 12:30 p.m. Globalization and Firm Internationalization: The Case of the Largest U.S.-Multinationals from 1980-2000. Ricardo Flores and Ruth V. Aguilera, University of Illinois Discussant: Christopher Chase-Dunn, University of California, Riverside 269. Regular Session. Ideology and Institutions: The Case of Schools Philadelphia Marriott, Room 307 Organizer: Annette Lareau, University of Maryland, College Park; Kim Goyette, Temple University Presider: Wendy Nelson Espeland, Northwestern University Providing for the Priceless Student: Ideologies of Choices in a Private School Market. Scott Davies, McMaster University; Linda Quirke, McMaster University Giving to Local Schools: Corporate Philanthropy and the Receding Welfare State. Josipa Roksa, Douglas Guthrie, Richard Arum, and Sarah Anne Damaske, New York University “Keeping Young Minds Sharp”: Schooling, Children’s Cognitive Stimulation and the Rise of Parenting Magazines, 1959-2003. Linda Quirke, McMaster University Sponsored Mobility in Higher Education. Eric S. Grodsky, University of California, Davis Discussant: Cynthia Miller-Idriss, New York University 270. Regular Session. Interracial Marriage/Assortive Mating Philadelphia Marriott, Room 404 Organizer: Joshua R. Goldstein, Princeton University Presider: Sharon M. Lee, Portland State University Intermarriage and Dating of Dominican and CEP (Colombians, Ecuadorians and Peruvians) Second-Generation Immigrants in New York City. Sara S. Lee, Kent State University Matches and Mismatches: Homogamy and Divorce in Israel. Alisa C. Lewin, University of Haifa and University of Chicago The Differences and Similarities between Biracial and Monoracial Couples: A Sociodemographic Sketch Based on the Census 2000. Simon Cheng and Seena Mostafavipour, University of Connecticut When Institutions Meet Networks: Educational Homogamy in Urban China. Lijun Song, Duke University 271. Regular Session. Labor Mobilization Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Grand Salon II Organizer: William F. Danaher, College of Charleston Presider: Andrew W. Martin, The Ohio State University 123 Strikes, Repression, and Turning Points: A Comparative Analysis of IWW Strikes in Lawrence and Patterson. Robert Biggert, Assumption College The Configuration and Causes of Strike Fatalities in U.S. Labor History. Paul F. Lipold, John Carroll University Desperate Measures: Strikes and Wages in Post-Accord America. Jake Hoffmann Rosenfeld, Princeton University The Irony of Power: Efficacy and Collective Action in Working Class Struggle. Rachel E. Meyer, University of Michigan Discussant: Marc Dixon, Ohio State University 272. Regular Session. Multi-Racial Classification and Identity Philadelphia Marriott, Independence Salon II Organizer: C. Matthew Snipp, Stanford University Presider: Karl Eschbach, University of Texas Med. Branch Aloha on Empty: An Analysis of the Health and Wellbeing of Multiracial Native Hawaiians. Shawn Malia Kanaiaupuni and Nolan J. Malone, Kamehameha Schools Redrawing the Color Line: The Cultural Persistence of Black Exceptionalism. Jennifer Lee, University of California, Irvine; Frank D. Bean, University of California, Irvine Thirty Years of Mixed Heritage Reports among Part-American Indians. Carolyn A. Liebler, University of Minnesota One Drop, No Rule: Identity Options among Multiracial Children in the U.S. Anthony Daniel Perez, University of Michigan Multiracial vs. Collective Black Categories: Census Classification Debates in Brazil. Stanley R. Bailey, University of California, Irvine; Edward E. Telles, University of California, Los Angeles This session deals with the relationship of multiracial classifications and social behavior in several different contexts. These contexts vary across across national boundaries and involve different combinations of race and ethnicity. 273. Regular Session. Post-Authoritarian Democracy and Political Opportunities Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington C Organizer: Nancy A. Naples, University of Connecticut Presider: Dylan John Riley, University of Calfornia, Berkeley Fascism, Authoritarianism and Post-Authoritarian Democracy. Dylan John Riley and Juan J. Fernandez, University of California, Berkeley The Trajectory of Democracy: The Social Roots of Political Change in Turkey 1946-2002. Cetin Eren, Johns Hopkins University How Legal Structures Shape Political Participation: Case Studies of Turkey and Egypt. Aysegul Kozak, University of Minnesota 124 Sunday, August 14, 12:30 p.m. Session 273, continued The European Union, Political Opportunities, and National Environmental Movements: The Case of Bergama, Turkey. Nahide Konak, Buffalo State College; Daniel Faber, Northeastern University Interest-Driven Group Affiliation. Nika Kabiri, University of Washington 274. Regular Session. Race and Ethnicity: Interracial/ Interethnic Interaction Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Congress C Organizer: Vilna Francine Bashi, Rutgers University Presider: Charles A. Gallagher, Georgia State University Teachers’ Racial and Ethnic beliefs and Teachers’ Perception of Students: Reexamining Teacher-Student Racial Mismatch Theory. Antonia M. Randolph, Northwestern University Practicing Panethnicity: Boundary Spanning in Asian American Organizations. Dina G. Okamoto, University of California, Davis Steppin’ Out of Whiteness. Black Hawk Hancock, DePaul University Youth Culture in the Global City: Non-Dominant Cultural Capital and Status among Children of Immigrants in London and New York City. Natasha Kumar Warikoo, Harvard University Discussant: Charles A. Gallagher, Georgia State University The papers in this session remind us that race and ethnicity, while categories with social and economic import, are also dynamic processes. The four authors’ papers provide empirical illustrations of the ways that group interactions change or shape racial thinking, sometimes in quite unexpected ways. 275. Regular Session. Sociology of Science I Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington B Organizer: Joan H. Fujimura, University of Wisconsin Presider: Maren Elise Klawiter, Georgia Institute of Technology Negotiating the Ethics of Deception: Methods, Morality, and Human Subjects in American Psychology, 1966-1973. Laura Stark, Princeton University Bucolic and Machinic Epistemologies in Nuclear Sciences: The Laboratory Lives of Lawrence and Oppenheimer. Gregoire H. Mallard, Princeton University The Politics of Rediscovery in the History of Science: Tacit Knowledge of Concrete before Its Discovery. Chandra Mukerji, University of California, Davis NHICs, Cuts and Task Forces: Developing Standardized Tools for Population Health in Canada. Beth E. Jackson, York University Discussant: Kelly Moore, Brooklyn College, City University of New York 276. Regular Session. Workplace Diversity Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Grand Salon I Organizer: Ivy Kennelly, George Washington University Missing Links: Referral Processes and Job Segregation. Brian Rubineau and Roberto M. Fernandez, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Organizational Response to Institutional Pressures for Equal Employment Opportunity Since the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Tricia McTague, Kevin M. Stainback, and Donald Tomaskovic-Devey, North Carolina State University; Catherine Zimmer, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Race, Sex, and Mentoring: Understanding Inequality in Developmental Relationships at Work. Gail Marie McGuire, Indiana University, South Bend; Matthew Larner, University of Notre Dame Upstairs, Downstairs: Ethnic Divisions of Work Authority in Global Workplaces with Ethnic Ties. Yen-Fen Tseng, National Taiwan University 277. Section on Sociology of Culture Paper Session. Culture, Violence, and War II Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon D Organizer: Philip Smith, Yale University Presider: James William Gibson, California State University After Nationalism: Tourism and the Production of Post-war Croatian Identity. Lauren Audrie Rivera, Harvard University Crimes Against Culture. Diane Barthel-Bouchier, Stony Brook University, State University of New York Power, the Social Construction of Friend and Foe, and the War in Iraq. Shlomit Bornstein and Wendy M. Christensen, University of Wisconsin at Madison Screening Memories of Ethnic Cleansing: German Commemoration of Expulsion and Its European Context. Daniel Levy, Stony Brook University, State University of New York; Natan Sznaider, Academic College of Tel Aviv, Yaffo The session explores the relationship of meaning to collective violence. Particular attention is given to themes of collective memory, cultural heritage and symbolic boundaries. 278. Section on Children and Youth Paper Session. Parental Employment and Child and Youth Outcomes Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington A Organizer: Nancy L. Marshall, Wellesley College Presider: Elizabeth G. Menaghan, Ohio State University Sunday, August 14, 12:30 p.m. Bullying and Parents’ Time. C. Andre Christie-Mizell, University of Akron; Jennifer Stewart, Grand Valley State University Urban Dads: Illegal Work and Fatherhood. Rachael A. Woldoff and Michael G. Cina, West Virginia University Beneficiaries of Sacrifice: Educational Reprecussions for Mexican Children Whose Parents Work in the US. Joanna Dreby, Graduate Center, City University of New York Welfare Reform and the Well-being of Children. Jillian Lee Garratt, The Ohio State University Discussant: Nancy L. Marshall, Wellesley College 279. Section on Asia and Asian America Paper Session. Second-Generation Asian Americans: Socioeconomic Attainment and Ethnic/Racial Identities Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Tubman Organizer and Presider: Pyong Gap Min, Queens College, City University of New York Am I South Asian?: Personal, Organizational and Political Understandings of Second Generation South Asians’ Ethnic Identity. Rifat A. Salam, New York University Joining the Hijabees Club:Construction of Pan-Islamic Identity among the “New” Second-Generation Muslim Female Youth. Etsuko Maruoka-Ng, Stony Brook University, State University of New York Educational Attainment and Intermarriage: Asian Indian and Filipino Americans Compared. Zhenchao Qian and Priyank G. Shah, Ohio State University The Socioeconomic Attainments of Non-Immigrant Cambodian, Hmong, Laotian, and Vietnamese Americans. Arthur Sakamoto and Hyeyoung Woo, University of Texas at Austin Discussant: Philip Q. Yang, Texas Woman’s University This session covers two important aspects of second-generation Asian Americans’ adjustment: ethnic identity and socioeconomic attainment. Two papers examine ethnic and pan-ethnic identities and the other two focus on socioeconomic attainment and assimilation. 280. Section on Medical Sociology Paper Session. The Experience of Illness: New Empirical Directions and Theoretical Contributions Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon H Organizer and Presider: Graham Nigel Scambler, University College London Similarities and Differences between Acute Illness and Injury Narratives and Their Implications for Medical Sociology. Dana Rosenfeld, Royal Holloway, University of London How Health Status Impacts the Types of Health Information Consumers Seek Online. Melinda Goldner, Union College Electronic Support Groups and Contested Chronic Illness: An Exploration in Electronic Ethnography. Kristin Kay Barker, 125 Oregon State University The Illness Experience of Dementia. Heather L. Menne, Benjamin Rose 281. Section on Marxist Sociology Paper Session. Political Economy, Race, and Gender in a Post-September 11 World Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Grand Salon III-IV Organizer and Presider: Karen Bettez Halnon, Pennsylvania State University 9/11, the Media, and Bush Hegemony. Douglas M. Kellner, University of California, Los Angeles “Blood, Culture, and Vicious People”: Right-Wing Strategies for Protecting America Post-9/11. Days of War and Cut-Backs: Class, Race, and Gender in the Post 9/11 United States. Barbara H. Chasin, Montclair State University The Politics of Imperial Plunder and War: Its Impact on Filipino Women on the Home Front and Across National Borders. Ligaya Lindio-McGovern, Indiana University, Kokomo 282. Section on Race, Gender, and Class Paper Session. Politics and Citizenship Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Anthony Organizer and Presider: Thomas W. Brignall, Tennesee Tech University A Devil’s Bargain: Ideational Realignment and the Perversity Thesis in the American Welfare Revolution. Lloyd Dale Grieger, University of Michigan Neither “Woman”‘ or “‘Worker”? Narrative, Identity, and Subjectivity in the Life Story of an Indian Factory Worker. Jayati Lal, University of Michigan Race, Law, and Politics: The Anti-Affirmative Action Movement of the 1990s. Dula J. Espinosa, University of Houston, Clear Lake 283. Section on Crime, Law and Deviance Invited Session. Socio-legal Control Efforts and Their Consequences Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Adams Organizer: Christopher Uggen, University of Minnesota Can Crime Be Reduced by Social Control? Evidence for the Effects of Legal and Social Regulation on Violent and NonViolent Crime. Robert Nash Parker, University of California, Riverside The Support and Oppression of Death Penalty Abolitionists in the Deep South. John F. Galliher, University of Missouri, Columbia; Larry Koch, University of Michigan 126 Sunday, August 14, 12:30 p.m. Session 283, continued Conflating Crime and Positive Deviance: Errors of Conceptualization, Interpretation, and Application: The Case of Formal-. Paul Thomas McFarlane, The Johns Hopkins University Discussant: Christopher Uggen, University of Minnesota 284. Section on Social Psychology Roundtables. Across the Social Psychological Spectrum: Questions We Haven’t Asked Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon F Organizers: Alicia D. Cast, Iowa State University; Martha Copp, East Tennessee State University 1. Perceived Control: Structural and Interactional Influences Presider: Alex E. Bierman, University of Maryland Changing Locus of Control: Steelworkers Adjusting to Forced Unemployment. Elizabeth Miklya Legerski, The University of Kansas; Brock O’Neil, Brigham Young University Effects of Childhood Physical and Emotional Maltreatment on Adults’ General and Domain-Specific Perceived Control. Alex E. Bierman, University of Maryland 2. Ideal, Ought, and Authentic Selves in Interaction Presider: Amy Kroska, Kent State University Exploring the Relationship between Identities, Self-Esteem, and Distress: An Application of Identity Discrepancy Theory. Kristen Marcussen, Kent State University To Thine Own Self Be True? Says Who!: A Theoretical Model of Authenticity. Alexis T. Franzese, Duke University 3. Identities and Marginalization: Consequences for the Self Presider: Koji Ueno, Florida State University Ethnic Identity and Self-Concept in Adolescents and Young Adults. Aya Kimura, Nancy B. Miller, R. Frank Falk, and Samuel Noh, University of Toronto Sexual Minorities’ Transitions to Adulthood and the Mental Health Consequences: A Perspective from Coping Behaviors. Koji Ueno, Florida State University 4. Status in Interactions Presider: Alison J. Bianchi, Kent State University Minority Influence, Status, and Divergent Thinking in Group Problem Solving. Reef Youngreen, University of Iowa Social Psychological Correlates of Social Movement Participation among Youth. Catherine J. CorrigallBrown, University of California, Irvine Why Don’t They Demand More? Entitlement and Work Values. Dahlia Moore, College of Management, Rishon Lezion 5. Table 05: Emotional Framing and Storytelling Presider: Martha McMahon, Take the Shackles Off My Soul, Lord”: Emotions, Framing, and Church Commitment in Lesbian and Gay-Affirming Protestant Congregations. Krista B. McQueeney, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Storytelling as a Way to Better Understand Illness: The Case of Women in Breast Cancer Support Groups. Jacqueline Clark, North Carolina State University 6. Goffman’s Legacy Presider: Philip D. Manning, Cleveland State University Goffman’s Legacy: Toward a New Microsociology. Thomas J. Scheff, University of California, Santa Barbara 285. Section on Teaching and Learning in Sociology Roundtables, Showcase, Keynote and Reception: Teaching Well/Learning More Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Junipers Organizers: Diane Pike, Augsburg College; Katherine R. Rowell, Sinclair Community College 1. E-learning, Technology and Sociology Computer-assisted versus Online Courses: Which Is Better for Students at Community Colleges? V. WilsonCorzen, Suffolk County Community College Web-based Assignments and Deep Learning: Examples from Face-to-Face, Online and Blended Courses. Wava G. Haney, University of Wisconsin Colleges Teaching Students about Social Survey Research: A UK Initiative. Julie Lamb, Harshad Keval, and Martin Bulmer, University of Surrey 2. Public Sociology Making Sociology Public for Introductory Students: An Example of Campus-Community Connections in Action. Janet K. Lohmann, Bowdoin College Stratification Walk: Exploring the Local Community. Susan J. St. John, Corning Community College, State University of New York Social Entrepreneurship through Liberal Learning in Sociology. Idee Winfield, College of Charleston; Adam Stein Weinberg, Colgate University 3. Interdisciplinary Ideas It Takes a Community to Educate a Student: EmotiveCollaborative Learning and Learning Communities Connecting Sociology, History and Political Science. Lee G. Streetman, Delaware State University Teaching with the Enemy: A Team Taught Interdisciplinary Introductory Course in Psychology and Sociology. Kim Davies and Sabina Widner, Augusta State University Integrating Research Methods into Diversity Courses: Rationale and Strategies. Dennis J. Downey, University of Utah 127 Sunday, August 14, 12:30 p.m. Using Team-Based Learning to Teach Teaching Critical Thinking in Undergraduate Courses. Jean L. Van Delinder and Susanne Weinberger, Oklahoma State University Teaching a Sociological Study Tour to Amsterdam: The Culture of Addiction. George W. Dowdall, St. Joseph’s University; Robert Chapman, La Salle University 4. Tactics and Strategies for Effective Teaching Order in the Course: Serial and Parallel Strategies for Teaching Courses. Robert C. Liebman, Portland State University The Hot Topic(al) Alternative to a Survey-based “Introduction to Sociology” Course. Tyson Smith and Michael Schwartz, Stony Brook University, State University of New York 5. The Showcase: Invited Ideas for Good Teaching Using Journaling to Reduce Anxiety about Statistics. Jacqueline Amy Bergdahl, Wright State University The Sociological Imagination As Transformational Learning. Alan L. Kahn, South University How to Introduce Sociology at Large Research Universities without Mortgaging Your Soul. Michael Lewis, Melissa Fugiero, Hilton Keon Kelly, and Dana Joy Huyser, University of Massachusetts, Amherst International Distance Education as a Tool for Promoting Democratic Dialogue. Craig B. Little, State University of New York, Cortland; Larissa Titarenko, Belarus State University Making Introductory Sociology More Fun and Empowering Students in the Process. William Feigelman, Nassau Community College; Yih-Jin Young, University of Washington 6. Classroom Practices: Debates, Peer Review, and Group Exercises An Assessment of Group Exercise Effectiveness in an Introductory Sociology Course. Joseph Donnemeyer and Shauna Lea Sowga, The Ohio State University Learning to Think Critically: Debating as a Full-Class Teaching Activity. Jacob Heller, State University of New York, Old Westbury Peer Review Assignments and Student Perceptions: Social Context, Ownership, and Engagement. Teal Kristen Rothschild, Roger Williams University 7. Mini-Keynote Discussant: Daniel F. Chambliss, Hamilton College 286. Theory Section Mini-Conference III. Challenges and Solutions in Theory Growth Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon I Organizer and Presider: Murray Webster, University of North Carolina, Charlotte Three Challenges for Sociological Theorists. Joseph NMI Berger, Stanford University Toward a Unified Theory of Basic Sociobehavioral Processes. Guillermina Jasso, New York University To be announced. Robin Stryker, University of Minnesota From Small Problems to the Big Challenge. David Willer, University of South Carolina 287. Section on Aging and the Life Couse Business Meeting and Riley Award Lecture Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon B 12:30-1:10 pm, Business Meeting 1:10-2:10 pm, Matilda White Riley Distinguished Scholar Award Lecture: Organizer and Presider: Kenneth F. Ferraro, Purdue University Lecturer: Linda K. George, Duke University This Riley Award Lecture is co-sponsored by the Duke Department of Sociology and Research on Aging. 12:30 pm Receptions Section on Community and Urban Sociology Reception (to 2:10pm) — Reading Terminal Market, Independence Brew Pub 12:30 pm Other Groups American Journal of Sociology Editorial Board (to 2:10pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Room 401-402 1:00 pm Tour Tour 7: The Philadelphia Main Line (to 3:00pm; ticket required for admission) — Philadelphia Marriott, Lobby (at 12th Street) 2:30 pm Meetings 2005 Award for Excellence in the Reporting on Social Issues Selection Committee (?) (to 4:10pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Conference Suite I Student Forum Business Meeting (to 4:10pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon A Task Force on Assessment of the Undergraduate Major (to 4:10pm) — Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Jefferson Task Force to Revise ASA Areas of Interest (to 4:10pm) — Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Room 101 128 2:30 pm Sunday, August 14, 2:30 p.m. Sessions 288. Thematic Session. Blind Patriotism: Theory and Research Philadelphia Marriott, Liberty Salon B Organizer and Presider: Thomas J. Scheff, University of California, Santa Barbara Panelists: Lisa Aronson, University of Virginia Dinka Corkalo, University of Zagreb Thomas J. Scheff, University of California, Santa Barbara Discussion on a key problem in human survival; the kind of blind patriotism of large majorities in nations, racial, ethnic, and other groups that fosters lethal collective violence 289. Thematic Session. Can Sociology Explain Rising Income Inequality? Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon C Organizer and Presider: John F. Myles, University of Toronto Is There a Sociological Explanation for Rising Inequality in America? Lessons from Europe. Thomas A. DiPrete, Columbia University Sociology and Inequality: A Comparative View. Lane Kenworthy, University of Arizona Rent Distribution and the Evolution of Inequality. Stephen L. Morgan, Cornell University Organizations and Changes in Income Inequality: Looking Beyond the Boundaries of the Firm. Jesper B. Sorensen, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Although economic inequality has been rising for almost three decades, this trend has scarcely been noticed in our leading journals. This panel brings together new theoretical and empirical developments in the sociology of economic inequality aimed at renewing sociological attention to this long-standing concern of the discipline. 290. Thematic Session. Globalization and Inequality Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington A Organizer and Presider: Jill Quadagno, Florida State University America’s Role in the Globalization Process: Creativity or Conformity? George Ritzer, University of Maryland Micro-structures of Globalization. Saskia Sassen, University of Chicago Globalization and Inequality: The “Great Reversal” and Its Implications. Frank J. Lechner, Emory University Discussant: Harry F. Dahms, University of Tennessee, Knoxville 291. Thematic Session. Job Insecurity and Changing Employment Relations Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington B Organizer and Presider: Arne L. Kalleberg, University of North Carolina Panelists: Louis Uchitelle, The New York Times Peter Cappelli, University of Pennsylvania Vicki Smith, University of California, Davis 292. Thematic Session. The New Second Generation in New York and Los Angeles: Comparative Theory, Research, and Implications for Immigrant Incorporation Philadelphia Marriott, Liberty Salon C Organizer and Presider: Rubén G. Rumbaut, University of California, Irvine The Second Generation in Metropolitan New York. Mary C. Waters, Harvard University; Jennifer A. Holdaway, Social Science Research Council; Philip Kasinitz and John Mollenkopf, Graduate Center, City University of New York Immigration and Intergenerational Mobility in Metropolitan Los Angeles. Frank D. Bean, Jennifer Lee, and Susan K. Brown, University of California, Irvine; Min Zhou, University of California, Los Angeles As it did 100 years ago, sociology is again grappling with how an era of mass migration is reshaping American cities. These two major studies examine comparatively the complex incorporation of young adult children of immigrants in the nation’s largest and most diverse urban centers: New York and Los Angeles. Sunday, August 14, 2:30 p.m. 293. Thematic Session. When Social Policy Meets Penal Policy: The Punitive Turn in the Management of Poverty, Historical and International Perspectives Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon G Organizers: Loic J.D. Wacquant, University of California, Berkeley; William Julius Wilson, Harvard University Presider: William Julius Wilson, Harvard University Social Insecurity, Racial Division, and the Penalization of Poverty in the US and Western Europe, 1975-2005. Loic J.D. Wacquant, University of California, Berkeley Post-rehabilitative Parole in the Age of Workfare. Mona P. Lynch, University of California, Santa Cruz The Rise of “Workfare States” and Discourses on Crime in US, Canada, and Australia. Jamie A. Peck, University of Wisconsin, Madison Race, Poverty and the Punitive Turn in US Child Welfare Today and Tomorrow. Dorothy Roberts, Putting the US case in historical and comparative perspective, this panel will address the growing structural, functional, and cultural convergence between social and penal policies in the US and Western Europe. These policies have led to the creation of increasingly restrictive, paternalistic, and punitive programs designed to manage poor populations and territories. This session will spotlight the role of economic transformation, racial division, and ideological shifts in this convergence. It will help identify common empirical issues and build new analytic bridges between research on penal trends and institutions and scholarship on welfare and poverty as they impact the metropolis. Finally, this session will show that sociology can explain this ominous convergence and can address its policy implications to help prevent the concentration of its negative effects on the truly disadvantaged. 294. Centennial Session. Assessing the Feminist Revolution: Gender Transformations in Sociology Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon D Organizer and Presider: Myra Marx Feree, University of Wisconsin, Madison The Feminization of Academic Sociology: Transformation and Opportunities. Patricia A. Roos, Rutgers University Life Course Changes and Qualitative Change in the Profession. Barrie Thorne, University of California, Berkeley Reform, Not Revolution: Gender, Race, Ethnicity, and the Plodding Transformation of Sociology. Joya Misra, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Theorizing the Practice: Gender, Women, and Publishing. Shamus Rahman Khan and Shauna A. Morimoto, University of Wisconsin, Madison Discussant: Myra Marx Ferree, University of Wisconsin, Madison 129 Starting symbolically with sit-ins and resolutions to ASA Council, feminist sociologists have been challenging and transforming the discipline of sociology for the past thirty-five years. Organizationally, demographically and theoretically, sociology has changed considerably in this period. Looking at the goals and aspirations feminists had then and the situation of sociology today, we ask just how profound or superficial this change has been and what the needs and potential are for additional transformations. 295. Centennial Session. The Significance of Sociology for the American Public: 1880-2005 (co-sponsored by the ASA Section on the History of Sociology) Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth C Organizers and Presiders: Patricia Madoo Lengermann, The George Washington University; Gillian Niebrugge, American University First Embrace: The Citizen Sociologist 1880-1905. Patricia Madoo Lengermann, The George Washington University; Gillian Niebrugge, American University Continuing the Social Critic Tradition in Sociology: African American Sociological Contributions to the Brown Decision and the Civil Rights Movement. Donald Cunnigen, University of Rhode Island The Ivory Tower versus the Public Square in the Long Decade: Sociologists and Social Movements in the 1960s. John P. Drysdale, University of Iowa ASA’s Response to the Building Public Mood: Second Wave Feminism, the Women’s Caucus, and SWS. Kathleen O. Slobin, North Dakota State University 296. Special Session. (Mis)Interpreting the Significance of Race: Conceptual and Methodological Challenges for Studies of Race and Racial Inequality Philadelphia Marriott, Room 303 Organizerand Presider: Amanda Evelyn Lewis, University of Illinois at Chicago Panelists: Gianpaolo Baiocchi, University of Massachusetts, Amherst William Darity, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Carla O’Connor, University of Michigan Kerry Ann Rockquemore, Boston College Tukufu Zuberi, University of Pennsylvania Discussant: Charles A. Gallagher, Georgia State University In this panel discussion presenters will grapple with our failure to attend to race with greater conceptual and methodological precision and the ways in which these limitations cloud our ability to interpret with greater precision, when and how race is implicated in a range of social outcomes. 130 Sunday, August 14, 2:30 p.m. 297. Author Meets Critics Session. Remaking the American Mainstream: Assimilation and Contemporary Immigration (Harvard University Press, 2003) by Richard Alba and Victor Nee Philadelphia Marriott, Liberty Salon A Organizer and Presider: Nancy Foner, Hunter College, City University of New York Critics: Alejandro Portes, Princeton University Joel Perlmann, Bard College John Lie, University of California, Berkeley Authors: Richard D. Alba, University at Albany, State University of New York Victor Nee, Cornell University 298. Career Workshop. Minority Experiences in Academia Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Anthony Organizer: Deanna Chang, Indiana University of Pennsylvania Leaders: Deanna Chang, Indiana University of Pennsylvania Angie K. Beeman, University of Connecticut 299. Professional Workshop. Doing Sociological Research Abroad Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon L Organizer: Anjana Narayan, University of Connecticut Panelists: Mary Johnson Osirim, Bryn Mawr College Carolle Charles, Baruch College, City University of New York Kathrin Zippel, Northeastern University Bandana Purkayastha, University of Connecticut This workshop will focus on the experiences of the various panel members with the objective of acquainting potential students and professionals who plan to sociological research abroad with what they may confront while doing research in very different contexts. The issues will range from how particular features of a new cultural context may affect theories based mostly on research conducted in the United States and insider-outsider dilemmas to practical issues relating to language, translations, locating sources, research equipment, training, research permits, archives, etc. 300. Professional Workshop. Serving as an Expert Witness in Courts Philadelphia Marriott, Room 411 Organizers and Co-Leaders: Steve Kroll-Smith, University of North Carolina, Greensboro; Pamela Jenkins, University of New Orleans 301. Research Workshop. Panel Study of Income Dynamics: An Introduction to Its Potential and Use Philadelphia Marriott, Room 408 Organizer and Leader: Frank Stafford, University of Michigan 302. Teaching Workshop. Enhancing Quantitative Literacy in Lower Division Sociology Courses Philadelphia Marriott, Room 409 Organizer: Susan Lynn Caulfield, Western Michigan University Panelists: Susan Lynn Caulfield, Western Michigan University Dana M. Greene, Appalachian State University Wes Hill, University of Mississippi Garry Lee Rolison, California State University, San Marcos Rachel Bridges Whaley, Western Michigan University This workshop will focus on techniques for integrating data analysis and, in general, enhancing quantitative literacy throughout the early courses of Sociology curricula. There will be a brief overview of the ASA’s Intergrating Data Analysis Project, as well as the presentation of multiple examples of how such intergration can be approached. Presenters from around the country will discuss their institution’s approach to this important issue, providing examples of both class modules and infrastructure guidelines. The workshop is designed as a briefing session, where presenters provide insights, resources and exemplary models or programs. The majority of the time will be spent in conversation with workshop attendees on these very important issues 303. Teaching Workshop. Innovative Ideas for Teaching Introductory Sociology Philadelphia Marriott, Room 412 Organizer and Leader: Tracy L. Dietz, University of Central Florida Co-Leader: Joan M. Morris, University of Central Florida This workshop will introduce participants to innovative strategies for engaging students enrolled in introduction to sociology courses. Panelists will discuss methods for using the internet as a teaching tool in a totally web-based environment, using the internet as a teaching tool to enhance traditional lecture format courses, and as a strategy to get students in large enrollment introduction to sociology courses involved in the science of sociology via the Web and online data analysis strategies. Panelists will also discuss projects that enable students to participate in original research. The goal of these strategies is to help students to understand the theoretical and empirical nature of sociology and their relationship to substantive areas of sociology in spite of different modes of instruction and class-size. 304. Teaching Workshop. Teaching Racial and Ethnic Relations Philadelphia Marriott, Room 410 Organizer and Presider: Eduardo Bonilla-Silva, Duke University Panelists: Jennifer Hamer, University of Illinois Sunday, August 14, 2:30 p.m. Sharmila Ruddrapa, University of Texas 305. Informational Poster Session. Graduate Programs in Sociology Philadelphia Marriott, Franklin Hall Organizer: Victoria Hougham, American Sociological Association Graduate programs will display information describing their programs, special emphases, financial aid and admissions criteria, and opportunities to work with faculty researchers and instructors. Department representatives will be on hand to answer questions from undergraduate students and their advisors, MA students looking to pursue a PhD, and other interested parties. Some departments will bring information and admission packets to distribute to attendees. Participating departments and their poster numbers are: University of Arizona (15) Arizona State University (38) Baylor University (22) Bowling Green State University (34) Brown University (37) University of California, Irvine (16) University of California, Santa Cruz (31) University of Central Florida (13) University of Cincinnati (6) Clemson University (12) University of Colorado-Boulder (29) University of Connecticut (27) Duke University (10) Fordham University (33) University of Hawaii (36) Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (7) Johns Hopkins University (24) Kent State University (35) Loyola University Chicago (18) University of Maryland-College Park (14) University of Maryland, Consortium on Race, Gender, and Ethnicity (40) Michigan State University (9) University of Minnesota, Twin Cities (30) University of Nebraska-Lincoln (28) University of Nevada, Reno (32) University of New Hampshire (19) University of North Carolina, Charlotte (4) North Carolina State University (3) Northern Arizona University (2) University of Notre Dame (39) University of North Florida (17) Ohio State University, Department of Sociology (20) University of Pennsylvania (26) Pennsylvania State University (21) Queens College, City University of New York (25) San Diego State University (5) Temple University (8) 131 Texas Woman’s University (1) Utah State University (11) Wayne State University (23) 306. Regular Session. Disability and Social Life: Session II Philadelphia Marriott, Room 305 Organizer and Presider: Steven P. Dandaneau, University of Dayton Peceptions of Disability and the Influence of Inequality on Workplace Accommodations. Kim Shuey and Julie McMullin, University of Western Ontario The Second Revolution: Cuba’s Reconfiguration of Disability. Debra Ann Tupe, Temple University Siblingship, Co-Residence and Adult Disability: An Exploratory Family Analysis. Rebecca Gasior Altman and Maryhelen D’Ottavi, Brown University 307. Regular Session. Fertility and Reproduction Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Congress B Organizer and Presider: Assata Zerai, Syracuse University Exploring a Gender and Development (GAD) Model of Women’s Reproductive Health. Guang-zhen Wang, University of Texas - Pan American Reproductive Decision-making and Women’s Health. Hilary Thomas, University of Surrey, UK The Meaning of Hiving: Ova Donation and Altruism. Anna Curtis, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Patriarchy and Men’s Fertility Intention and Behavior in Developing Countries. Tom Omondi Owuor, Pennsylvania State University Discussant: Assata Zerai, Syracuse University 308. Regular Session. From Political Culture to the Culture of Politics: the Meaning and Practice of Contemporary Politics Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon I Organizer and Presider: Howard A. Kimeldorf, University of Michigan The Life of Class Ideologies: Salient Justifications in Presidential Elections 1952-2000. Solon J. Simmons, University of Wisconsin, Madison The Triumph of Victims: Symbols and Substance in the Culture Wars. Amy E. Ansell, Bard College Defining Black Conservatism: Moving Beyond Ideology and the Status Quo. Ellington T. Graves, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University The Multifaceted Nature of Civic Engagement: Forms of Political Activity in Comparative Perspective. Marion Fourcade-Gourinchas, University of California, Berkeley; 132 Sunday, August 14, 2:30 p.m. Session 308, continued Evan Schofer, University of Minnesota Discussant: Steven G. Brint, University of California, Riverside 309. Regular Session. GLBT Identities, Practices, and Politics Philadelphia Marriott, Room 407 Organizer: Abby L. Ferber, University of Colorado Presider: Elisabeth A. Sheff, Georgia State University (Re)Learning Sexualities and Bodies: Exploring Sex, Self, and Gender/Sex Transitions. Braeden L. Sullivan, Santa Clara University; Rebecca F. Plante, Ithaca College “We’re All Genderqueer Performers”: Drag Performance and (Trans)Gender Identity. Eve Ilana Shapiro, University of California, Santa Barbara STR8 Dude Seeks Same: Beyond “Identity vs. Practice” in the Sociology of Sexualities. Jane Ward, University of California, Riverside; Kristen Tribby, Chapman University Discussant: Tracy Wentling, University of Colorado at Colorado Springs Each of these papers in some way explores the complex relationships among identities of sex, gender, and sexual orientation as they are practiced and performanced. 310. Regular Session. Health and Well Being I: Gender, Employment and Marital Status Philadelphia Marriott, Room 404 Organizer and Presider: Richard M. Levinson, Emory University Job Loss and Health among U.S. Men and Women. Sarah Burgard, University of Michigan; Jennie E. Brand, University of Michigan Does TIme Moderate the Association between Marital Status and Self-Reported Health? Emily Durden, University of Texas at Austin The Changing Health Gap: Cohort Differences in the Health Effects of Women’s Labor Force Behavior. Eliza K. Pavalko, Fang Gong, and J. Scott Long, Indiana University Psychological Distress and the Health Crisis in Belarus, Kazakhstan, Russia, and Ukraine. William C. Cockerham and Brian Philip Hinote, University of AlabamaBirmington; Pamela Abbott, Glasgow Caledonian University Discussant: George W. Dowdall, St. Joseph’s University Four papers investigate the impact of employment, unemployment, a declining economy and marital status on population health and the interaction of these effects with gender. 311. Regular Session. Immigration and Gender Philadelphia Marriott, Independence Salon II Organizer and Presider: Seungsook Moon, Vassar College Getting from There to Here: Immigrant Families, Gender and Work. Margaret May Chin, Hunter College, City University of New York Inmigration, Acculturation, and Gender Identities on the U.S.Mexico Border. Pablo Vila, Temple University Managing International Separation: Gender and Parenting in Mexican Transnational Families. Joanna Dreby, Graduate Center, City University of New York The Construction of Gender and Racial Division of Labor: State Ideology and Violence. Li-Fang Liang, Syracuse University Discussant: Hyun Sook Kim, Wheaton College 312. Regular Session. Nations and Nationalisms in Asia Philadelphia Marriott, Independence Salon III Organizer and Presider: Joane Nagel, University of Kansas How to Enjoy the Olympic Games before It Starts?: Contemporary Chinese Nationalist Discourse and Beijing Olympic Games. Heng Su, Beihang University and Curtin University of Technology Nation, State, and (Ex)-Military: Chinese Nationalism in Taiwan from the 1950s to the 1970s. Yu-Wen Fan, New School University Regionalism and Ethnic Nationalism during the Democratization in South Korea. Jong-Il Park, University of California, Los Angeles State (In)Action in Nation-Building: The Case of Singapore. Janine Chi, Muhlenberg College 313. Regular Session. Oppositional Culture: Dynamics Surrounding Race in Schools Philadelphia Marriott, Room 307 Organizer: Annette Lareau, University of Maryland, College Park; Kim Goyette, Temple University Presider: Deirdre Royster, College of William and Mary Academic Success and Popularity among Black Adolescents: Do They Face the Burden of . Douglas B. Downey, James Moody, and Donna F. Bobbitt-Zeher, The Ohio State University Is the Effect of Oppositional Culture on Academic Achievement Overestimated? Angel Luis Harris and Keith Robinson, University of Michigan Staying “Good” Kids and Becoming “Flunkies”: Patterns of Academic Engagement in the Transition from Elementary to Middle School among Mexican-origin Students. Erendira Rueda, University of California, Berkeley Sunday, August 14, 2:30 p.m. School As An Educational Deterrent. Pedro Mateu-Gelabert, National Development and Research Institutes, Inc.; Howard Lune, William Paterson University Discussant: Amy Stuart Wells, Columbia University 314. Regular Session. Post-Socialist Politics Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington C Organizer: Nancy A. Naples, University of Connecticut Presider: Alexandra Hrycak, Reed College Theoretical and Historical Dimensions of the Concept of Legitimacy: Lessons from Socialist and Post-Socialist Societies. Monica Ciobanu, New School University Generational Closure and Political Change in Post-Revolutionary Eastern Europe. June Edmunds, University of Cambridge Politicised University: Lessons from the “Orange Revolution” in Ukraine. Ararat L. Osipian, Vanderbilt University State Power, Elite Relations and the Politics of Privatization in Chinese Rural Industry. Jianjun Zhang, Peking University Social Change Potential of Rightful Resistance. Jun Jin, University of Minnesota 315. Regular Session. Public Opinion Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth A1 Organizer and Presider: Tom W. Smith, NORC A Multilevel Analysis of American Attitudes Towards Homosexuality. Seth A. Ovadia, Towson University; Laura M. Moore, Hood College Public Opinion and the “Hispanic Challenge.” James Kluegel and Jennifer M. Ortman, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign Public Opinion on Income Inequality and Redistribution: A Review and Agenda. Martha Crum, MC&A, Inc. Religion and Reproductive Genetics. John H. Evans, University of California, San Diego; Kathy Hudson, Johns Hopkins University 316. Regular Session. Social Networks I Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Congress C Organizer and Presider: Douglas Heckathorn, Cornell University Untangling the Roots of Tolerance: How Networks, Voluntary Associations, and Personal Attributes Shape Attitudes toward Ethnic Minorities and Immigrants. Rochelle R. Coté and Bonnie H. Erickson, University of Toronto Does Network Structure Affect the Size of the Network Effect? The Role of Density in the Network Autocorrelation Model. Mark Mizruchi and Eric Neuman, University of Michigan; Christopher G. Marquis, Harvard Business School 133 Social Networks and Organizational Learning during a Crisis: A Simulated Attack on the Internet Infrastructure. Eleanor T. Lewis, University of Tennessee, Memphis; Denise L. Anthony, Dartmouth College Radio Communication Networks in the World Trade Center Disaster. Carter T. Butts and Miruna G. Petrescu-Prahova, University of California Irvine Discussant: Phillip Bonacich, University of California, Los Angeles 317. Regular Session. Sociology of Science II Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Congress A Organizer: Joan H. Fujimura, University of Wisconsin Presider: Sydney A. Halpern, University of Illinois at Chicago Technologies of Translation: Genetically Modified Mice, Relational Databases, and the Molecularization of Toxicology. Sara N. Shostak, Columbia University Cell Sociology: Fetal Cells from Instruments to Actors. Aryn Elizabeth Martin, Cornell University Racialized Bio-Medicine, Generated Difference: The Possibility of Racial Differentials in the Efficacy of AIDSVAX. Kevin M. Moseby, University of California, San Diego The Expression of Biological Concepts of Race. Hannah Brueckner, Ann J. Morning, and Alondra Nelson, Yale University Discussant: Joan H. Fujimura, University of Wisconsin 318. Regular Session. The Body Sociological: Connecting Biophysical and Social Processes Philadelphia Marriott, Room 304 Organizer and Presider: Jeremy Freese, University of Wisconsin, Madison Biological Constraints on Gender? Feminists Wrestle with Testosterone. Barbara Jane Risman, North Carolina State University; Shannon N. Davis, Carolina Population Center; Catherine Zimmer, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Unified Stratification Theory: Structure, Genome and Status across Human Societies. Daniel Adkins and Guang Guo, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Integrating Biological and Social Data in the Study of Health: Benefits and Challenges. Jenna W. Mahay, Erin S. York, and Stacy Lindau, University of Chicago Racial Disparities and Multiple Births. Seung-Eun Song and W. Parker Frisbie, The University of Texas at Austin 319. Regular Session. Work-Family Conflict and Inequality Philadelphia Marriott, Room 306 Organizer: Miliann Kang, University of Massachusetts, Amherst 134 Sunday, August 14, 2:30 p.m. Session 319, continued Presider: Patricia L. Donze, University of California, Los Angeles A Fair Bargain? Breadwinning Arrangements, Interpersonal Comparisons, and the Risk of Divorce. Elizabeth Litzler and Julie Brines, Universitiy of Washington Are Working Parents Today Feeling More Conflict?: WorkFamily Conflict among American Parents, 1977 and 1997. Kei Nomaguchi, Northern Illinois University Race, Gender, and the Marriage Wage Premium: Evidence from the Houston Area Survey. Anne E. Lincoln, Rice University Gendered Processes of Work and Family Intersections: Marital Satisfaction among Dual-Earner Couples. Gary Kiger, Daphne Pedersen Stevens, and Krista Lynn Minnotte, Utah State University 320. Section on Collective Behavior and Social Movements Paper Session. Coalitions in Social Movements Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon J Organizer and Presider: Suzanne Staggenborg, McGill Universitya The Structural Bases of Movement Coalitions: Multiple Memberships in the 15 February 2003 Antiwar Demonstrations. Mario Diani, University of Trento Coalition Formation within Transnational Nongovernmental Networks; Can Managed Sublimation Forge Transnational Solidarity? Pauline P. Cullen, Dickinson College Coalition Transformation and the Preservation of Legitimacy in the Mobilization for Global Justice. Patrick F. Gillham, University of Alaska; Bob Edwards, East Carolina University Constructing a Frame Pyramid in a Cross-Movement Coalition: New Jersey’s Labor-Environmental Alliance. Brian Mayer and Phil Brown, Brown University Women’s Movement Organizations and Coalitions Inside the Beltway. Cynthia Deitch, George Washington University 321. Section on Economic Sociology Paper Session. Macro Processes and Transnational Trends Philadelphia Marriott, Room 403 Organizer and Presider: Greta R. Krippner, University of California, Los Angeles State-Rebuilding: The Market-Building of the Chinese Tobacco Industry in the Post-Communist Era. Junmin Wang, New York University Entrepreneurs, Economic Change and Democracy: StateBusiness relations in Turkey from 1971 to 2002. Devrim Adam Yavuz, McGill University Global Capitalism and Business Groups in Developmental State: Financial Behavior of Chabol in South Korea. Soyon Kim, Stony Brook University, State University of New York “Too Big to Fail,” Too Big to Deny: Walmart and the Extension of Informal State Doctrine. Sandra Bender Fromson and Davita Silfen Glasberg, University of Connecticut Discussant: Sean O’Riain, National University of Ireland 322. Section on Medical Sociology Paper Session. Mental Health Dimensions of Physical Illness (co-sponsored with the Section on Sociology of Mental Health) Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon H Organizer and Presider: Eric R. Wright, Indiana University Purdue University Indianapolis The Impact of Industrial Activity on Psychological Distress in the Detroit Metropolitan Area. Jarron M. Saint Onge, Liam Downey, and Jason Boardman, University of Colorado at Boulder The Ongoing Adjustment of Cancer Survivors: Social Factors Shaping Psychological Well-Being Following Cancer Treatment. Karen A. Kaiser, Indiana University Depression and HIV Risk Behavior Practices among “At Risk” Women. Hugh Klein, Emory University; Claire E. Sterk, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University; Kirk W. Elifson, Georgia State University Mental Health Consequences of HIV/AIDS: Effects on Substance Abuse and Treatment Adherence. Teresa L. Scheid, University of North Carolina, Charlotte Patterns and Consequences of HIV-Related Stigma. Elizabeth Needham Waddell, New York Ctiy Department of Health and Mental Hygiene and Columbia University; David M. Abramson 323. Section on Aging and the Life Course Paper Session. Religion and Aging Through the Life Course Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon B Organizer and Presider: Ellen Idler, Rutgers University Religious Identity Development during the Transition to Adulthood. Penny A. Edgell and Ann Meier, University of Minnesota Aging and Religiosity: A Multilevel Modeling Approach. Anna Marie Campbell, University of Michigan; Marc A. Musick, University of Texas at Austin; David R. Williams, University of Michigan For God or Family? Age and Family Life Course Effects on Church Attendance in Middle and Older Age. Nehal A. Patel, Northwestern University; Gerald Marwell, New York University The Sociology of Aging and the Sociology of Religion. Ellen Idler, Rutgers University; Allan V. Horwitz, Rutgers Sunday, August 14, 2:30 p.m. University Discussant: Jessica A. Kelley-Moore, University of Maryland, Baltimore County This session will address the dual issues of the role of religion in the life course of individuals, and the aging of populations in religious institutions. 324. Section on Labor and Labor Movements Paper Session. The Internal Politics of Unions Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Grand Salon I Organizer and Presider: Jonathan Cutler, Wesleyan University Future of American Labor. Stanley B. Aronowitz, Graduate Center, City University of New York The Importance of Union Factions: Lessons from the CIO. Judith Stepan-Norris, University of California, Irvine Rebuilding the House of Labor: Organizational Structure, Local Unions and Regional Organizing. Stuart Eimer, Widener University “You Help Us and We Help You”: Organizational Reform and Reciprocity in a Union Local. Laura Ariovich, Northwestern University 325. Section on Teaching and Learning in Sociology Paper Session. Current Projects in the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Grand Salon II Organizer and Presider: Susan Smith-Cunnien, University of St. Thomas Assessment of a Required Skills Course in a Sociology Curriculum. Jeffrey Chin, Le Moyne College Introductory Sociology: What Do You Want Your Students to Learn? Nancy A. Greenwood, Indiana University, Kokomo Student Learning in Introduction to Sociology: Impact of Discussion Group on Development of Sociological Imagination. Melody L. Boyd, Temple University Teaching Introductory Sociology with a Dr. Seuss Anthology; However, an Intergenerational Transmission Is Our Bigger Mission. Russell P.D. Burton, Washburn University The Critical Stance: A Model for Teaching Independence of Thought. Michael J. Coyle and Anne Seiler, Arizona State University 326. Section on Methodology Paper Session. Methodology 2 Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Tubman Organizer: Ted Mouw, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Statistical Inference and Patterns of Inequality in the Global North. Timothy P. Moran, Stony Brook University, State 135 University of New York The Effects of the Revised Race Categories on Race Distributions in the Current Population Survey: 2002 to 2003. Jesse McKinnon, Stella Ogunwole, Terrance Reeves, Rosalyn Green, and Michelle McDonald, US Census Bureau Problems with Social Research Methodology: Analytical Appraisal of Teaching Texts. Randa I. Nasser, Birzeit University Being From There Helps: The Feasibility of Field Research in Rural and Working Class Settings. Carol D. Miller, University of Wisconsin, La Crosse Ethnographic Discovery: The Research Experience of a Novice Ethnographer. Ramon Hinojosa, University of Florida Social Mechanisms for the study of collective action. Delia Baldassarri, Columbia University and University of Trento Discussant: Ted Mouw, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill 327. Section on Children and Youth Refereed Roundtables and Business Meeting Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth B 2:30-3:30pm, Roundtables: Organizer: Monica Kirkpatrick Johnson, Washington State University 1. Peer Relations Presider: William A. Corsaro, Indiana University The Effect of Being Queer on Adolescent Social Isolation. Anne L. Jolliff, The Ohio State University Sport, Peers and Substance Use. Thorolfur Thorlindsson, University of Iceland; Jon Gunnar Bernburg, University of Iceland Why Are Women Catty? An Analysis of Teenage Status Processes. Murray Milner, University of Virginia 2. Moving Toward Adulthood Presider: Kimberly A. Mahaffy, Millersville University The Influence of Employment and Marital Status on Young Adult/Parent Coresidence from 1960-2000. Melinda Jo Messineo, Ball State University Uncertain Adulthood: What Becoming an Adult Means for Urban Non-college Youth. Janel E. Benson and Kathryn J. Edin, University of Pennsylvania Occupational Decision-Making during Adolescence. Ann M. Beutel, University of Oklahoma The Attainment of Economic Independence during the Transition to Adulthood: Familial and Psychological Precursors. Jeylan T. Mortimer and Jennifer C. Lee, University of Minnesota 3. Paid and Volunteer Work in Adolescence Presider: to be announced Adolescent Employment in Agriculture in the U.S.: Does It 136 Sunday, August 14, 2:30 p.m. Session 327, continued Impair Students’ Academic Achievement? Riho Sakurai, The Pennsylvania State University Adolescent Work Intensity and Substance Use: A “Fuzzy” Test of Pseudomaturity Theory. Kyle Clayton Longest, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Crossing Class Lines? Adolescents’ Experiences of Volunteer Work. Sandi Kawecka Nenga, Southwestern University 4. Influences of Parental Marital and Employment Status Presider: Monica A. Longmore, Bowling Green State University Working Single Mothers and Children’s Literacy Achievement: A Study of 18 Countries. Gillian M. HampdenThompson and Jamie S. Johnston, American Institutes for Research Parental Reports of Adolescent Well-being: Does Marital Status Matter? Marion C. Willetts and Nick G. Maroules, Illinios State University “I Think It’s Healthy That My Mom Has a Job”: Early Adolescent Children’s Views Their Mothers’ Employment. Sarah B. Kaplan, University of Pennsylvania Ethnic Differences in the Effects of Parent-Adolescent Support on Adolescent Problem Behavior in Single Mother Families. En-Ling Pan, Academia Sinica; Michael P. Farrell, University at Buffalo, State University of New York 5. Schooling Presider: Irenee R. Beattie, Washington State University Entry into Kindergarten: A Test of Reference Group Theory. Lisa N. Hickman, The Ohio State University Contextual Explanations of School Choice. Douglas Lee Lauen, University of Chicago The Effects of Changes in Self Esteem Across the Transition to High School. Christopher C. Weiss and Alexandra K. Murphy, Columbia University Future Expectations, Academic Achievement, and Unprotected First Sex among Adolescent Girls. Irenee R. Beattie, Washington State University 6. Potpourri Presider: Stefanie Bailey Mollborn, Stanford University Travel Patterns of Children in the U.S. Jonaki Bose and Lee Giesbrecht, Bureau of Transportation Statistics From “Social Science in” to “Social Science of” Summer Youth Camps: A Review of the Organized Camping Literature. Russell E. Ward, Francis Marion University Longitudinal Surveys of Children and Youth: Perspectives from outside the USA. Charles L. Jones, University of Toronto at Mississauga; Michael Don Haan, University of Toronto 7. Overweight and Obesity Presider: Kathleen Mullan Harris, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Adolescent Girls’ Body Weight: Exploring the Role of School Contexts in Perception and Weight Control. Anna Strassmann Mueller, Jennifer Pearson, and Chandra Muller, University of Texas; Kenneth A. Frank, Michigan State University Overweight and Obesity in Young Women: The Role of Early Motherhood. Karen Guzzo, University of Pennsylvania The Influence of Family Environment on Adolescent Risk for Obesity in Adulthood. Ashley Fenzl Crossman, Arizona State University 8. Influences of Parenting Presider: Hayley A. Hamilton, University of Toronto Direct and Indirect Pathways in the Link between Parental Constructive Behavior and Adolescent Affiliation with Achievement-Oriented Peers. Zeng-Yin Chen, California State University, San Bernardino; Sanford M. Dornbusch, Stanford University; Ruth Xiaoru Liu, San Diego State University The Effect of Parental Control and Parental Care on Children’s Mental Health: Does Self-Esteem Matter? Shirin Montazer, University of Toronto Race and Age Variations in the Autonomy of Immigrant Youth. Hayley A. Hamilton, University of Toronto The Impact of Delayed Parenting on Child Outcomes: Linear Relationship between Maternal Age and Externalizing Problems. Patricia R. Hoffman, New Mexico State University 9. Violence Presider: Richard L. Dukes, University of Colorado “You Can Never Control Violence; I Mean, Some Things Just Happen”: Youth Talk about Violence in Their Everyday Lives. Linda M. Waldron, Christopher Newport University Bullying during Adolescence: Correlates, Predictors, and Outcomes. Richard L. Dukes, University of Colorado; Judith Stein, University of California, Los Angeles Not Just Pushing and Shoving: Bullying among AfricanAmerican Adolescents. Kevin M. Fitzpatrick and Akilah Dulin, University of Alabama at Birmingham; Bettina Franciska Piko, University of Szeged 3:30-4:10pm, Business Meeting Sunday, August 14, 2:30 p.m. 328. Section on Crime, Law and Deviance Invited Session. Is Multi-Disciplinarity Necessary in the Study of Crime, Law and Deviance? Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Adams Organizer: Charles R. Tittle, North Carolina State University Causal Inference and Social Inquiry: Disciplinary Moves in the Study of Crime. Robert J. Sampson, Harvard University The Bio-Social Challenge. Lee Ellis, Minot State University Economic Perspectives on Violent Crime. Phillip Cook, Duke University Psychological Views of Crime, Law, and Deviance: A Challenge to Sociology. D. Wayne Osgood, Pennsylvania State University Discussant: Charles R. Tittle, North Carolina State University 329. Section on Marxist Sociology Roundtables and Business Meeting Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Junipers 2:30-3:30pm, Roundtables: Organizer: Paul B. Paolucci, Eastern Kentucky University 1. Public Sociology: Marxist and Non-Marxist Views A Critique of the Public Sociology Program. Paul B. Paolucci, Eastern Kentucky University Activism and the University Setting. Joanna Hadjicostandi, University of Texas of the Permian Basin Why Public Sociology Is Neither. Mathieu Deflem, University of South Carolina Discussant: Stephanie McSpirit, Eastern Kentucky University 2. Institutions, Spectacle, and Commodity Culture Presider: Matthew Irvin, North Carolina State University Howard Stern Show Carnival and Political Transformation. Karen Bettez Halnon and Sharon Gerczyk, Pennsylvania State University Gangsta Rap: Cultural Capital, Community Cohesion and Political Resistance—Meaning Making in Music Production. Darby E. Southgate, The Ohio State University Wedding Planners and the Commodity Frontier. Kristin Blakely, Loyola University Chicago Reflecting Cultural Values. Purna C. Mohanty, Paine College 3. New Perspectives for Marxist Theory Bringing “Multitudes” Back In: Rethinking the Persistence of the Subject in Sociology. Todd Emerson Bowers, University at Albany, State University of New York No Marxists in China? Stuart L. Shafer, Johnson County Community College Hegemony and Political Dominance in Singapore. Lisa Bee Fong Lim, National University of Singapore 137 Discussant: Jacqueline A. Carrigan, California State University, Sacramento 4. Inequalities of Race, Gender, Class and the Household Unit Presider: Jennifer Yankton Lehmann, University of Nebraska Adolescent Alcohol Use: The Impact of Parental Attitudes and Behaviors. Frieda Fowler, Southern Illinois University Carbondale The Social and Cultural Forces Impacting the Experience of Mothering. Jean-Anne Sutherland, University of Akron Racial Disparities in Wealth and Marital Satisfaction. Joe Michael, University of Cincinnati Discussant: Maya Becker, Johann Wolfgang GoetheUniversity, Frankfurt 5. Labor Theory and Process The “Walmartization” of America: The Impact of Walmart on Labor Practices and Urban Environment. Lloyd Klein, Bemidji State University; Steven Lang, LaGuardia Community College, City University of New York; Donal Malone, Saint Peter’s College Alienation and Propensity: Toward Labor Strikes. Micah Holland, University of Cincinnati Outsourcing: Who Benefits? Purna C. Mohanty, Paine College Discussant: Matt G. Vidal, University of Wisconsin, Madison 6. Violence and Right Radicalism at the Global and National Levels Presider: Daniel Egan, University of Massachusetts, Lowell Evolution of Fascism: Class Perspectives versus Psychological Perspectives. Alan Jay Spector, Purdue University Calumet Competing Visions of Loyalism in Post-industrial Belfast, Northern Ireland. Carolyn Gallaher, American University Legitimate Authority vs. Violence: Attitudes of Audiences in the Caucasus and the USA. Jeffrey A. Halley, The University of Texas San Antonio Discussant: Thomas J. Keil, Arizona State University West campus 3:30-4:10pm, Business Meeting 330. Section on Social Psychology Invited Session. Across the Social Psychological Spectrum: New Theoretical Developments Philadelphia Marriott, Independence Salon I Organizers: Michael G. Flaherty, Eckerd College; Linda D. Molm, University of Arizona Presider: Michael G. Flaherty, Eckerd College Where the Action Is Again: Tiny Publics and Their Cultures. Gary Alan Fine, Northwestern University; Brooke Harrington, Brown University 138 Sunday, August 14, 2:30 p.m. Session 330, continued Language and Social Interaction. John Heritage, University of California, Los Angeles Identity, Action, and Emotion in 21st Century Theory and Research. Lynn Smith-Lovin, Duke University Affect in Social Exchange. Edward J. Lawler, Cornell University 331. Section on Sociology of Culture Roundtables in the Sociology of Culture Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon E Organizer: Ronald N. Jacobs, University at Albany, State University of New York 1. Re-envisioning Civic Life: Normative and Critical Lessons from the Blackwell Companion to the Sociology of Culture Presiders: Mark D. Jacobs and Nancy Weiss Hanrahan, George Mason University Discussants: Margaret Archer, University of Warwick; Albert J. Bergesen, University of Arizona; Daniel Thomas Cook, University of Illinois; Michele Dillon, University of New Hampshire; Jeffrey Goldfarb, New School University; David Halle, University of California, Los Angeles; Ronald N. Jacobs, University at Albany, State University of New York; Karin D. Knorr Cetina, University of Konstanz; Magali Sarfatti-Larson, Temple University; Paul R. Lichterman, University of Southern California; Andrea Press, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign; Barry Schwartz, University of Georgia; Susan S. Silbey, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Robin E. Wagner-Pacifici, Swarthmore College; L. Frank Weyher, Kansas State University; Vera L. Zolberg, New School University 2. Production of Culture Presider: Stephen F. Ostertag, University of Connecticut “We’re Here Because of You”: Collective Identity, Programming, and Reformulating Hegemony through Public Television Productions. Stephen F. Ostertag, University of Connecticut Film Festivals and Awards as a Marketing Tool for Film Exploitation. Dorotheee Verdaasdonk, Positions of Success: Networks of the Pop Superstars. Steph A. Karpinski, University of Wisconsin 3. Meaning and Measurement Presider: Sheri Klein, American University A Sociological Critique of Memetics. Kyle C. Derr, Temple University Measuring Cultural Values in National Development. Grant Blank, American University; Judith D. Coats-Crowson, Washington, DC Video Game Ratings Accuracy: Evaluating the Entertainment Software Review Board (ESRB) Video-Game Rating System. Sheri Klein, American University 4. Culture and Gender Presider: Laura M. Carpenter, Vanderbilt University Anorexia as a Lifestyle: Agency through Pro-Anorexia Websites. Abigail Snyder Richardson and Elizabeth Regan Cherry, University of Georgia Fashion and the Culture of Consumption: Perceptions of Fashion Trends among College Students. Julie A. Milewski, University at Buffalo, State University of New York My Body Hates Me! The Balancing Act between Self and the Body. Amanda M. Czerniawski, Columbia University Virginity Loss in Reel/Real Life: Using Popular Movies to Navigate Sexual Initiation. Laura M. Carpenter, Vanderbilt University 5. Culture and National Identity Presider: Jerry L. Lembcke, Holy Cross College Broadcasting Mourning and the Public Discourse on National Identity: Communitas, Media and Drama in an Italian Funeral Ceremony. Andrea Cossu, University of Trent Central American Pentecostalism as Symbolic Apoliticism: Religion, War, and Discursive Fields. Sarah Michelle Stohlman, University of Southern California Instructing the Nation? Textbooks, Teachers, and National Identity Construction in Argentina, Mexico, and Peru. Matthias vom Hau, Brown University Jane Fonda and the Gendering of America’s “Great Betrayal” Narrative. Jerry L. Lembcke, Holy Cross College 6. Cultural Capital, Habitus, and Social Reproduction Presider: Don P. Levy, University of Connecticut Cultural Capital, Habitus and Sense of Belonging: The Impact of Ascribed and Achieved Status. Michael Wise, Appalachian State University; Catherine T. Harris and Velma Watts, Wake Forest University Fantasy Sports and Fanship Habitus: Understanding the Process of Sport Consumption. Don P. Levy, University of Connecticut The ‘Boundary Turn’ in Cultural Sociology: Cultural Capital, Symbolic Boundaries, and the Perpetuation of Social Inequality. Tori L. Barnes-Brus, University of Kansas Sport and Class Cultures: Comparing Lamont’s and Bordieu’s Theories of Class Status Distinctions in Sports. Carl W. Stempel, California State University, Hayward Sunday, August 14, 2:30 p.m. 7. Cultural Difference and Cultural Incorporation Presider: Daine Cheyenne Harvey, Rutgers University Cultural Shock Is Not a Shark: Foreign Students Cope with Unfamiliar Culture. Chieh-Wen Liu, Rutgers University Transnational Homework: Family, Research, and the Complications of Field Research at Home. Anna B. Sandoval, University of California The Production of Place: Racializing Space for the Virtual Tourist. Daine Cheyenne Harvey, Rutgers University 8. Economic Cultures Presider: Severyn T. Bruyn, Boston College Cultural Studies and the Economy. Severyn T. Bruyn, Boston College Defining the Work Ethic. Isaac Heacock, Indiana University Value and Money in Simmelian Formulation. Jung Mee Park, University of Pennsylvania 9. Popular Culture Presider: Evan Cooper, Ithaca College I’m a Little Scared of Elaine: Representations of Jewish Women on Seinfeld and Curb Your Enthusiasm. Evan Cooper, Ithaca College Placing Reality TV in the Cultural Spectrum: Making a Case for Studying the World of Reality Television. Janie Filoteo, Texas A&M University The Postmodern Drive: The Case of NASCAR. Edward G. Armstrong, Murray State University Punk Rock Revisited: David Riesman’s Inner Directed? Marcus Aldredge, Texas A&M University 10. Sociology of Art and Music Presider: Dustin Mark Kidd, Temple University The Transformative Role of Arts Controversies. Dustin Mark Kidd, Temple University Wings of the Soul: The Semiotic Interactionism of Vinyl Club DJ’s. J. I. Hans Bakker and Thoreau R. A. Bakker, University of Guelph “It’s Just a Phase”…Unless It’s Not: Investigating Long Term Musicultural Affiliation. Angel M. Butts, Rutgers University 11. Culture and Cognition Network Presider: Janet M. Ruane, What’s the Worst That Could Happen? Karen A. Cerulo, Rutgers University The Sociocognitive Foundations of Multiple Role Enactment. Karen Danna-Lynch, Rutgers University Cultural Sociology, Body and Soul. Gabriel Ignatow, BarIlan University, Israel, and Koç University, Turkey 12. Culture and Religion Network Presider: Rhys H. Williams, University of Cincinnati When “Culture” Is the Explanation: Analysts’ versus Respondents’ Constructions of Culture. Rhys H. 139 Williams, University of Cincinnati Scientific Studies of Intercessory Prayer: Religious, Scientific, and Popular Responses. Wendy Cadge, Harvard University; Nicholas A. Christakis, Harvard Medical School Learning and Unlearning Culture through Exiting a Religious Community. Lynn Davidman, Brown University 13. Symbolic Boundaries Network Presider: Bethany Bryson, University of Virginia 14. Visual Sociology Network Presider: Richard Williams, Interactive Gallery Display As Stimulus to Social Issues Discussion. Sharon Squires, California State University, Dominguez Hills Developing Images: Children, Photography, and Fundraising in Global. Gregory C. Stanczak, Williams College Understanding (social) Responses to the Process of Soil Decontamination: Visualising Environmental Turbulence. Frederic Vandermoere, University of Ghent 15. Space and Place Network Presider: William G. Holt, University of Connecticut Revisiting the Growth Machine: The Urban Fortunes of Manhattan’s Westside Stadium. David Halle, University of California, Los Angeles; William G. Holt, University of Connecticut A Theory of Relevance for a Democratic Architecture. Jonathan Phillips, Columbia University 16. Culture and Religion The Concept of Religion. Roberto Cipriani and Federico D’Agostino, University of Rome III 17. Sociology of Art Presider: Kim M. Babon, University of Chicago The Case of Controversy in Non-Controversial Art: How Controversy Frames Quiet Reception. Kim M. Babon, University of Chicago The Meaning of Style: Postmodernism, Dymystification and Dissonance in Post-Tiananmen Chinese Avant-Garde Art. Chi Zhang, Yale University The Sociology of Art at the Turn of the Century: The revival of Critical Theory. Karen Coleman, New School University 18. Sociology of Literature Presider: Ailsa K. Craig, New York University Avant Garde: Reviewing of New Bookreleases. H. J. Verdaasdonk, Tilburg University Domination and Power in Literature: A Reflection Based on Contemporary French Poetry. Dubois Sébastien, Rouen Management School Illusio, Academia, and Fields of Poetry Production: Toronto 140 Sunday, August 14, 2:30 p.m. Session 331, continued 3:30 pm Meetings and New York. Ailsa K. Craig, New York University 19. Attitudes, Opinions, and the Meanings of Social Life Presider: Stephen B. Vaisey, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill College, Culture, and Class: The Declining Symbolic Value of Higher Education. Stephen B. Vaisey, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Public Fear as a Determinant of Drug Policy. Katherine Kramer, University of Iowa Work, Money, and Leisure: Understanding the Economic Life of American Teens during the First Year after High School. Timothy T. Clydesdale, The College of New Jersey 20. Sociology of Cultural Innovation and Creativity Presider: George J.A. Murray, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Paradoxes of Political Architecture: What’s Critical about the “Critical Reconstruction” of Berlin? George J.A. Murray, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill What Is Sociological about the Creation of Cultural Objects? Culinary Creation: Traditions, Innovations, Institutions. Vanina Leschziner, Rutgers University 21. Culture and Action in Organizational Contexts Presider: Karen Danna-Lynch, Rutgers University From Cultural Scripts to Sociocognitive Performances: Managing Multiple Roles in a Multitasking World. Karen Danna-Lynch, Rutgers University In Defense of Culture: Yuri Lotman and the Politics of Culture and Education in the Late Soviet Union. Maxim Waldstein, University of Pennsylvania Where Culture, Structure, and the Individual Meet: A Social Movement Organization in Action. Charity Elizabeth Crabtree, Emory University 22. Culture and Conflict Presider: Claudio Ezequiel Benzecry, New York University Beauty at the gallery. Operatic knowledge and audience as community. Claudio Ezequiel Benzecry, New York University Knowledge and Empowerment: Struggles within Dominant and Subordinate Cultural Frameworks. Siobhan Brooks King, New School University Revered Traditions and Racist Traditions: Contested Meanings of the University of Illinois’ Chief Illiniwek. Kate W. Kindleberger, Northwestern University Section on Children and Youth Business Meeting (to 4:10pm) — Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth B Section on Marxist Sociology Business Meeting (to 4:10pm) — Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Junipers 141 Sunday, August 14, 4:30 p.m. 4:30 pm Plenary 332. Plenary Session. ASA Awards Ceremony and Presidential Address Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Millennium Hall Presider: Caroline Hodges Persell, ASA Vice President, New York University Moment of Remembrance Centennial Recognition Award Ceremony Presider: Esther Ngan-ling Chow, American University 2005 Dissertation Award Recipients: Ann Morning, New York University, for “The Nature of Race: Teaching and Learning about Human Difference”;and Amélie Quesnell-Vallée, McGill University, for “Pathways from Status Attainment to Adult Health: The Contribution of Health Insurance to Socioeconomic Inequities in Health in the U.S.” 2005 Jessie Bernard Award Recipient: Evelyn Nakano Glenn, University of California, Berkeley 2005 Award for Excellence in the Reporting on Social Issues Recipient: to be announced 2005 Award for Public Understanding of Sociology Recipient: Pepper Schwartz, University of Washington 2005 Distinguished Career Award for the Practice of Sociology Recipient: William Kornblum, Graduate Center, City University of New York 2005 Distinguished Contributions to Teaching Award Recipient: Caroline Hodges Persell, New York University 2005 Distinguished Scholarly Publication Award Recipient: Beverly J. Silver, Johns Hopkins University, for Forces of Labor: Workers’ Movements and Globalization Since 1870 (Cambridge University Press, 2003) 2005 Career of Distinguished Scholarship Award Recipient: Charles Tilly, Columbia University Presidential Address Introduction. Caroline Hodges Persell, New York University Presidential Address. Comparative Perspectives and Competing Explanations: Sociology and Its Challengers: Old Wine in New Bottles—New Wine in Old Bottles. Troy Duster, New York University 6:30 pm Honorary Reception & Centennial Celebration Honorary Reception and Centennial Celebration (to 8:00pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon E-F All meeting attendees are invited to attend the Honorary Reception and Centennial Celebration to express appreciation and congratulations to President Duster and the major ASA award recipients as well as best wishes to the sociological world on the occasion of the ASA Centennial. Co-sponsors of this special reception are: Binghamton University - Department of Sociology Bryn Mawr College – Department of Sociology University of California, Berkeley - Department of Ethnic Studies University of California, Berkeley - Department of Gender and Women’s Studies City University of New York Graduate Center - Sociology Department Columbia University - Department of Sociology University of Delaware - Department of Sociology & Criminal Justice Harvard University - Department of Sociology Johns Hopkins University - Department of Sociology LaSalle University - Sociology, Social Work, and Criminal Justice Philadelphia University - School of Liberal Arts Princeton University - Department of Sociology Rider University - Department of Sociology Rutgers University, Camden - Department of Sociology, Anthropology & Criminal Justice St. Joseph’s University - Sociology Department Swarthmore College - Department of Sociology & Anthropology Temple University - Department of Sociology Ursinus College - Department of Sociology & Anthropology Villanova University - Department of Sociology University of Washington - Department of Sociology Yale University - Department of Sociology 142 7:30 pm Sunday, August 14, 7:30 p.m. Receptions Section on Alcohol, Drugs, and Tobacco Reception (cosponsored by SSSP Division on Drinking and Drugs) (to 9:30pm) — Pizzicato, 248 Market Street 7:30 pm Other Groups Sociological Research Association reception and dinner (to 10:30pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Liberty Salon C 8:00 pm Receptions Joint Section Reception (Labor and Labor Movements, Marxist Sociology, and Race, Gender, and Class) (to 10:00pm) — Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth D 8:00 pm Other Groups Astrosociology Forum (Jim Pass) (to 10:00pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Room 305 Christian Sociological Society (Thomas C. Hood) (to 10:00pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Room 310 ISA Research Committee 39 on Disasters session on “Crises, Disasters, and Other Threats” (Havidan Rodriguez) (to 10:00pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Room 303 International Visual Sociology Association (Judith Friedman) (to 10:00pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Independence Salon I Japan Sociologists Network (Patricia G. Steinhoff) (to 10:00pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Room 307 Sociological Imagination Group meeting on “The Web or Part/ Whole Approach to Education, Part II “ (Bernard Phillips) (to 10:00pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Room 404 Sociologists Interested in the Intersections between Social Action and Public Sociology (Amitai Etzioni) (to 10:00pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Room 304 University of Pennsylvania Department of Sociology Reception (to 10:00pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Room 401-402 University of Wisconsin, Madison Department of Sociology Reception (to 10:00pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Liberty Salon B 9:30 pm Receptions Just Desserts, a Teaching Enhancement Fund Benefit (to 11:00pm; ticket required for admission) — Philadelphia Marriott, ASA Suite 143 Monday, August 15 Monday, August 15 The length of each daytime session/meeting activity is one hour and forty minutes, unless noted otherwise. The usual turnover schedule is as follows: 8:30 am – 10:10 am 10:30 am – 12:10 pm 12:30 pm – 2:10 pm 2:30 pm – 4:10 pm 4:30 pm – 6:10 pm Session presiders and committee chairs are requested to see that sessions and meetings end on time to avoid conflicts with subsequent activities scheduled into the same room and to allow participants time to transit between facilities. 7:00 am Meetings Section on Science, Knowledge, and Technology Council Meeting (to 8:15am) — Philadelphia Marriott, Room 309 Section on Sociology of Religion Council Meeting (to 8:15am) — Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Room 101 8:00 am Meetings Directors of Graduate Studies Conference (to 12:10pm; ticket required for admission) — Philadelphia Marriott, Room 414 8:30 am Meetings 2006 Program Committee (to 11:30am) — Philadelphia Marriott, Conference Suite I Journal of Health and Social Behavior Editorial Board (to 10:10am) — Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon D Orientation for New Section Officers (to 10:10am) — Philadelphia Marriott, Room 401-402 Rose Series in Sociology Editorial Board (to 10:10am) — Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Parlor 1 Sociological Theory Editorial Board (to 10:10am) — Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Jefferson Sociology of Education Editorial Board (to 10:10am) — Philadelphia Marriott, Room 308 Section on Community and Urban Sociology Council Meeting (to 9:30am) — Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon C 8:30 am Sessions 333. Thematic Session. Competing Perspective on Comparative Explanations: Area Studies vs. Comparative Sociology Philadelphia Marriott, Room 303 Organizers and Presiders: Julian Dierkes, University of British Columbia; Marion Fourcade-Gourinchas, University of California, Berkeley Transnationalizing Sociology: Understanding the New Latin American Immigrants and Their Impact Across Borders. Susan Eckstein, Boston University Japan and the Comparative Analysis of Welfare States. Aya Ezawa, Swarthmore College The Sociological Imagination and Africa: Why Research on Africa Needs Sociology, and Vice Versa. Ronald Kassimir, Social Science Research Council Discipline and Public: Area Studies and Comparative Sociology. Michael D. Kennedy, University of Michigan This session brings together sociologists who are primarily identified with a specific geographic area with others who are identified as comparative sociologists. Participants will evaluate the contributions of area specialists vs. comparativists, and to reflect specifically on the relationship between area studies and comparative sociology in their own work. 334. Thematic Session. Has Racism Been Reorganized? Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth A2 Organizer: David Wellman, University of California, Santa Cruz Presider: Andrew L. Barlow, Diablo Valley College Panelists: Eduardo Bonilla-Silva, Duke University Patricia Hill Collins, University of Cincinnati Michael Omi, University of California 144 Monday, August 15, 8:30 a.m. 335. Thematic Session. Data Proof: The Immunity of US Drug Policy to Sociological Work—Implications for Civil Liberties and Social Justice Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon H Organizer and Presider: Sheigla B. Murphy, Institute for Scientific Analysis The Prohibition Century: From U.S. Alcohol Prohibition to Global Drug Prohibition. Harry Gene Levine, Queens College, City University of New York The Paradigm Shift to Harm Reduction in Europe. Craig Reinarman, University of California, Santa Curz Drug Prohibition as an Exception to the Bill of Rights and as an Engine for the Resurrection of Jim Crow Justice. Ira Glasser, Former Executive Director of the American Civil Liberties Union Discussant: Sheigla B. Murphy, Institute for Scientific Analysis For 100 years American sociologists have used historical analyses, surveys, ethnographies, and various theoretical perspectives to understand drug use, users, cultures, movements, and political responses. Nonetheless, sociological influence on the development of U.S. drug policy has been minimal. Other nations have sometimes based policies on sociological research, but U.S. drug policy has usually remained “data proof.” 336. Centennial Session. Curricula of the Future: What Should Students of Sociology Be Learning? Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington B Organizers: Stephen F. Steele, Anne Arundel Community College; Caroline Hodges Persell, New York University Presider: Caroline Hodges Persell, New York University Panelists: Theodore Wagenaar, Miami University of Ohio Stephen F. Steele, Anne Arundel Community College Jeanne Ballantine, Wrghie State University Earl Babbie, Chapman College What better time than the Centennial to reflect on what is currently being taught in sociology classes and what the curriculum of the future could or should be? Panelists will reflect on what should change in the content or processes of teaching sociology to ensure that students learn what they need for the new century. 337. Special Session. Assessing “Faith-Based” Initiatives Organizationally, Politically, and Constitutionally (cosponsored by the Association for the Sociology of Religion) Radisson Warwick Hotel, Warwick Room Organizer: N. J. Demerath, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Presider: Mark Chaves, University of Arizona The Hidden Merits of the Faith-Based Initiatives: Who Will Care for the Poor and Indigent? Ram A. Cnaan, University of Pennsylvania The Limits of Christ-like Care: An Ethnography of an Evangelical Response to Welfare Reform. Paul R. Lichterman, University of Southern California Followers and Founders: State Implementation of Faith-Based Initiatives. Rebecca Sager, University of Arizona The Faith-Based Initiatives and Constitutional Law. Ira Lupu, George Washington University; Robert C. Tuttle, Wilkes University Discussant: Arthur E. Farnsley III, Indiana University-Purdue University, Indianapolis 338. Special Session. Social Construction of Intelligence: Towards a Sociology of the Institutionalization of Human Cognition Philadelphia Marriott, Liberty Salon C Organizer and Presider: David P. Baker, Pennsylvania State University The Moral Career of Intelligence. John G. Richardson and Karen Bradley, Western Washington University Constructing Student Cognitive Dis/ability: Special Education Institutions in the United States and Germany. Justin J.W. Powell, Max Planck Institute Human Development Status Competition and the Social Construction of Parenting Cognitive Development, 1991-2000. Maryellen Schaub, Pennsylvania State University The Affinity of Institutions and Cognition: The Social Construction of Rising Fluid IQ. David P. Baker, Pennsylvania State University; Steve Thorne, Clancy Blair, and David Gamson, Pennsylvania State University Discussant: John W. Meyer, Stanford University 339. Special Session. Vulnerability, Vulnerabilities, and Human Rights (co-sponsored by Sociologists without Borders) Philadelphia Marriott, Room 410 Organizer: Hernan Vera, University of Florida Presider: Ana S.Q. Liberato, University of Florida Vulnerabilty and Human Rights: A Dialectical Relation. Jorge Bustamante, University of Notre Dame Consumerism as Vulnerability. Steven Lawrence Arxer, University of Florida Clientelism, Paternalsim, Populism, and Vulnerability. Carlos de la Torre, FLACSO, Ecuador Vulnerability: The Promise of a Concept. Alfonso Arrau, Universidad Internacional SEK Discussant: Ana S.Q. Liberato, University of Florida Monday, August 15, 8:30 a.m. 340. Methodological Seminar. Qualitative Analysis and Qualitative Software: Strategies for Integration (to 11:30 a.m.)—SOLD OUT Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon L Ticket required for admission Leaders: Raymond C. Maietta, ResearchTalk, Inc. Sharlene J. Hesse-Biber, Boston College This session is based on two important premises: (1) the use of qualitative software does not have to threaten the methodological integrity of qualitative researchers’ work (2) qualitative software accommodates a wide range of data analysis techniques. Highlighting both innovative and classic features of ATLAS.ti, ETHNOGRAPH, HyperRESEARCH, MAXqda, and NVIVO we demonstrate how off-screen manual methods used to analyze qualitative data can be employed and enhanced with qualitative software. Areas of focus include: Variety of data formats: Options for analysis of text, audio, video and images Episode Profiles: Summaries and representations of data collection episodes Memo writing as stand alone analytical method. Codebook and theme evolution: The process of creating codes and themes and finding patterns in your data. Strategies for data review and presentation This session will be run seminar-style; there will be NO hands-on computer work. Presenters will encourage active participation throughout the session. This seminar will run for 3 hours, with one short break. 341. Professional Workshop. Preparing Your Credentials for a Teaching-Oriented Position (for advanced graduate students) Philadelphia Marriott, Room 408 Organizer and Presider: Laura M. Moore, Hood College Panelists: Jeffrey Chin, Le Moyne College Edward L. Kain, Southwestern University Laura Kramer, Montclair State University Susan A. Farrell, Kingsborough Community College, City University of New York In a competitive job market like academia, a thoughtfully prepared “presentation of self” is essential. This workshop will provide individuals a thorough overview of the credentials and characteristics search committees at teaching-oriented institutions often value. Topics include: shifting teaching and research expectations across institution-types, formulating credentials during graduate school, tailoring job application materials, preparing for a positive interview experience, and locating teaching-oriented job postings. 342. Professional Workshop. Preparing for Promotion and Tenure Philadelphia Marriott, Room 412 Organizer: Lisa G. Frohmann, University of Illinois at Chicago Panelists: BarBara M. Scott, Northeastern Illinois University Ramiro Martinez, Florida International University Lisa G. Frohmann, University of Illinois at Chicago 145 343. Workshop cancelled 344. Teaching Workshop. Teaching Marxism Philadelphia Marriott, Room 409 Organizer and Presider: Lauren Langman, Loyola University Chicago Panelists: Kevin B. Anderson, Purdue University Edna Bonacich, University of California, Riverside Joe Feagin, Texas A&M University John B. Foster, University of Oregon Erik Olin Wright, University of Wisconsin Marxism, as a critique of capitalist political economy and it contradictions, was rooted in the class system of the 19th C. The material foundations of capitalist domination rested on as a market economy where wealth was based on the ownership private property or sale of wage labor that in turn led to the alienation and exploitation of the working class. Since its early formulations, Marxism has been greatly refined and developed and now offers a crucial perspective for the sociological understanding of a broad range of social phenomenon. This session is oriented to the larger sociological community concerned with teaching the leading edges of research and theory. A number of well known, Marxist scholars woll share their expertise along a broad range of contemporary issues to show the continued importance of the Marxist tradition to sociology in general. Salient topics will include the contemporary class, race and gender systems that are now located in a globalized context, the impact of capitalism on the environment, and the diversity of Marxist theories-especially the more humanist and critical theories. 345. Teaching Workshop. Teaching the Sociology of Work and Occupations Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon K Organizer and Leader: Carol J. Auster, Franklin and Marshall College This workshop is intended to serve the interests of colleagues teaching undergraduate or graduate courses in Work and Occupations who wish to teach a new course, revise an existing course, or find new ways of introducing particular concepts and ideas. The purpose is to provide options and facilitate discussion of a number of topics. These will include setting goals for the course; choosing among the wide variety of available topics, issues, and themes; deciding on possible ways of organizing the course; selecting reading (e.g. texts, readers, monographs, fiction and poetry); developing assignments and discussion topics; and using technology. 346. Open Refereed Roundtables II Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon E Organizer: Jennifer C. Lena and Richard A. Peterson, Vanderbilt University 1. Work and Organizations Presider: Alexandra Marin, Harvard University Explaining the Political Leverage of Workers and Employers. Marc Dixon, Ohio State University 146 Monday, August 15, 8:30 a.m. Session 346, continued Middle-Size Hospitals Decrease in Korea 1980-2002. Sang Gon Nam, Korea Institution for Health and Social Affair Organizational Sectors and Institutionalization of Job Training Programs. Song Yang, University of Arkansas Trends and Consequences of Post-Soviet Tourism: An Analysis of Two Central Asian Cases. Joseph Boots Allen, University of Texas 2. Sex Presider: Kathleen Bogle, Saint Joseph’s University Explaining Extramarital Sex: Evidence from Urban China. Xiaotian Zhang, William Parish, and Edward O. Laumann, University of Chicago Predictors of Rape Myth Acceptance: An Examination of Sexual Permissiveness, Religiosity, and Gender. Alexandra Olympia Hendley, Southwestern University The Importance of Bachelor and Bachelorette Parties in Maintaining Friendship Bonds. Melissa Pittaoulis, Temple University The Shift from Dating to Hooking Up: What Scholars Have Missed. Kathleen Bogle, Saint Joseph’s University Secularization and Partner Selection: The Case of Singles and Internet Dating. Kathryn A. Sweeney and Anne Louise Borden, Emory University 3. Families Presider: Matthew N. Weinshenker, University of Chicago Father Presence in Rural South Africa: Incorporating Social Connection and Life Course Experience. Nicholas W. Townsend, Brown University; Sangeetha Madhavan, Harvard University; Anita I. Garey, University of Connecticut Quality Time? How Families Negotiate Family Time. Karrie Ann Snyder, University of Chicago The Case for Staying Home: Myth or Reality. Elizabeth Rodriguez, Texas Woman’s University; Philip Q. Yang, Texas Woman’s University 4. Community Presider: Joan Maya Mazelis, University of Pennsylvania The Legislation of Smut: Obscenity Law and Local Community Standards. Brooke Leigh Miller, Ohio State University Building Relationships and Creating Community: Understanding the Role of Social Capital in the Nation’s First Vietnamese American Community Center. Soo Hong, Harvard University Community Connectedness and a Social Profile Related to High-Risk Activism for Social Change: A Study of American Men in 1969. Elizabeth Grossman, The University of Akron “Bowling Alone” in San Antonio, Texas: Trust and Social Networks as Social Capital. Arturo Vega, Juanita M. Firestone, and Richard J. Harris, University of Texas, San Antonio 5. Health and Age Presider: Mary Ann Davis, Texas A&M University Temporal Patterns of Work Status and Mental Health Divergence across the Life Course. Jinyoung Kim, University of Texas at Austin Educational Differences in Age-Related Patterns of Disease: Reconsidering Cumulative Disadvantage and Age-asLeveler. Matthew E. Dupre, Duke University Race, Ethnicity, and Health: How Do Class, Family Structure, and Healthcare Factors Contribute to the Link in American Children? Ming Wen, University of Utah A Comparison of Deaths from Alzheimer’s Disease in the Elderly between South Korea and the United States. Mary Ann Davis, Texas A&M University 6. Nations and Democracy Presider: Jonathan Eastwood, Harvard University Achieving Internal and External Mobilizations: Realignment of Social Movement Actors and the Construction of New Protagonist. Akemi Nakamura, University of Hawaii at Manoa How Nations Happen: A Relational Approach to Nationalism and Western Integration. Nicole Hala, Columbia University Popular Support and Democracy in Korea:Understanding the Contributions of Internet Media upon Democratization. Young-hwa Kim, Korea University; Jae Hyun Park, Korea University Nationalism and the Press in 19th Century Latin America: A Consideration of the Gazeta de Caracas. Jonathan Eastwood, Harvard University 7. Contingent Labor and Outsourcing Presider: Michael Allan Cagley, Vanderbilt University A Techno-Industrial District in the Making ? The Brokering, Outsourcing, and Clustering Activities of the European Core Firm Océ in the Eindhoven-Venlo Mechatronics Region. Willem Hulsink, Erasmus University Labor Market Structure and the Intensity of Contingent Employment in U.S. jobs: 1995-2001. Kirak Ryu, University of Illinois at Chicago Transaction costs, social institutions, and interfirm relationships: Explaining variations in contract duration. Xueguang Zhou, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology 8. The Discipline of Sociology Presider: Richard WJ Randell, University of Fribourg Monday, August 15, 8:30 a.m. The Use of Vignettes in Social Science Research: A Web Survey Application Focusing on African American Women’s Perceptions of Race and Gender Discrimination in Science. Sandra L. Hanson, Catholic University of America Using a Novel to Teach about the Ethics of Research. Diane Bjorklund, Illinois State University Where the Action Is: Modernity, Postmodernity, Floating Crap Games and the Declining Significance of Sociology. Richard WJ Randell, University of Fribourg 9. Identity, Discourse, and Civil Society Presider: Michael Anthony Haedicke, University of California, San Diego Ideas and Politics: Towards a Second Generation. Jal D. Mehta, Harvard University Labor, Land and Nativist Ideologies in Early California. Michael Anthony Haedicke, University of California, San Diego 10. Animals Presider: Angela Cora Garcia, University of Cincinnati Guns, Explosives, and Puppy Dog Tails: Animal Cruelty and Anti-Social Behavioral Patterns among American Boys. Suzanne Renee Goodney-Lea, Gallaudet University Thoroughbred Factory Farming, the Production of “Unwanted Horses,” and the Horse Slaughter Debate: An Animal Welfare Perspective. Judith Ann Warner, Texas A&M International University Virtual Animal Shelters vs. the Dog Pound: How the Internet Is Transforming Pet Adoption. Angela Cora Garcia, University of Cincinnati 11. Organizations Presider: Michael S. Evans, University of California, San Diego Forest Certification and Institutional Governance: An Empirical Study. Christine A. Overdevest and Mark Rickenbach, University of Wisconsin The Costs of Foreignness in an Emerging Market: Profitability among Hungary’s Commercial Banks. Eric C. Kaldor, College at Brockport, State University of New York Embedded Robust Structure: A Scale-Free Network in a Large-Scale Industrial District. Tsutomu (Tom) Nakano, Kwansei Gakuin University, Japan and Columbia University 12. Health and Race Presider: Kerry Dohm, University at Albany, State University of New York Racial Differences in Attitudes toward Euthanasia. Jason Adam Wasserman, Jeffrey Michael Clair, and Ferris J. Ritchey, University of Alabama-Birmingham 147 AIDS Mortality and Race: A Five City Comparison. Kerry Dohm, University at Albany, State University of New York 13. Symbolic Manipulation Presider: Jeffrey London, Graduate Center, City University of New York Mediated Immediacy: The Lifestyle Print Culture of the 1970’s. Sam Binkley, Emerson College Objects of Devotion and Debate: Authenticity, Identity, and Collective Memory. Michael Ian Borer, Dartmouth College The Cultural Pragmatics of Marketing Ethnicity. Katheryn A. Dietrich, Texas A&M University 14. Gender Roles Presider: Rachelle Jeneane Brunn, University of Pennsylvania The Emergence of Scientifically Objectified Idealized Others in U.S. Boy Scout Handbooks, 1910-1948. Joel A. Purkiss, University of Michigan Turning American: Gender role negotiation of recent Vietnamese immigrant students. Tom T. Stritikus and Diem Nguyen, University of Washington 15. Immigration and Migration Presider: Ernesto Castaneda, Columbia University Globalization, Migration and Poverty: The Case of Bangladesh. Rahman Md Mizanur, National University of Singapore The Commodification of Migrant Labor and the Politics of Resistance of Filipino Domestic Workers in Hong Kong. Ligaya Lindio-McGovern, Indiana University, Kokomo The Racial Dimensions of Immigration Raids in the Inland Valley of California: The Reasons and the Responses. Jose Zapata Calderon, Pitzer College Prospects and Impasse of Multicultural Citizenship in Globalization Era: The Case of Immigrants Movement in Taiwan. Hsiao Chuan Hsia, 16. Power, Nation, and Identity Presider: Helen B. Marrow, Harvard University Cultural Encounters in the Social Sciences: Western Refugee Scholars in Turkey. Murat Ergin, University at Buffalo, State University of New York Paradoxical Empowerment: The Intersecting Effects of Globalization on Rural Kenyan Women’s Autonomy. Mia Lara Nathanson, Cultural Nationalism and Gender in Salwa Bakr’s “Zeenat fii Jinazat al-Ra’is.” Dana M. Greene, Appalachian State University 17. Culture Potpourri Presider: Steve S. Lee, Vanderbilt University Actors and the Environment: A New Model of Cultural 148 Monday, August 15, 8:30 a.m. Session 346, continued Change. Jay Gabler, Harvard University The Embodiment of Sound and Cohesion in Music. Jennifer A. Winther, University of California, Los Angeles Just Say No: Exploring the Norms of Cell Phone Use in Public. Floy O. Scott, Jaysen Ferestad, and June Ellestad, University of Montana Sounds Like Sociology: A Treatise on the Social Implications of Sound. Nicholas James Rowland, Indiana University; Paul Y. Kim, Indiana University, Bloomington 347. Graduate Student Roundtables Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth B Organizer: Mosi Adesina Ifatunji, University of Illinois at Chicago 1. Sociology of Education Presider: Kathrin A. Parks, Texas A&M University A Formula for Low Achievement: Using Multi-level Models to Understand Variance in Mathematics Achievement. Kathrin A. Parks, Texas A&M University Music and Mathematics, Rhythm and Reading: How Does Music Matter and for Whom? Darby E. Southgate and Vincent J. Roscigno, Ohio State University Perceptions of an Educational Gap: West Indians and African Americans in the United States. Tamara Mose Brown, The Graduate Center, City University of New York The Impact of Economic Growth on the Short-term Returns to Education in Russia, 1996-2002. Alexey Makarevich, Stanford University A Latent Means Analysis of Motive to Avoid Failure between College Students from Low and High Income Backgrounds. Hollie Anne Young and Sara Finney, James Madison University 2. Theory and Methods in Social Science Presider: John Edward Balzarini, Temple University Progress in Media Theory and Mass Communication Studies. John Edward Balzarini, Temple University Stratification and Knowledge Production: Non-Meritocratic Factors in Publication in Elite Sociological Journals. Ryan A. Light, Ohio State University Ideology, Ideas, and Social Welfare Policy Development: The Case of the Russell Sage Foundation and the Uniform Small Loan Law. Angela Elisabeth Anderson, Northwestern University Preparing for and Facing ‘The Unthinkable’: The Mass Media as an Emergency Management Tool. Jenniffer M. Santos, University of Delaware The Seduction of the Unicorn: Consumption and the Postmodern “Self.” Ryan Ashley Caldwell, Texas A&M University Research Methods in Cultural Sociology: A Statement of Some Particular Problems. Robert Isenberg, Indiana University of Pennsylvania 3. Immigration and Comparative Perspectives Presider: Lisa-Marie Wright, University of Kansas The Ties that Bind: Assimilation and Trans-National Relations among Asian-Indian Immigrants in the U.S. Lisa-Marie Wright, University of Kansas Mexican U.S. Professionals: Not an Oxymoronic concept but a New Reality. Edelmira Reynoso, University at Albany, State University of New York Nativity and Fertility in the U.S.: The Mexican Case. Maria Isabel Ayala, Texas A&M University The Formation and Development of National Tripartism in South Korea: Decoupling Policy and Practice. Shoonchul Shin, Korea University Alien Torts Claim Act: A New Attempt to Hold Violators of Human Rights Accountable in a Global Era. Carrie L. Wendel-Hummell, University of Kansas In their own words: Changes to the lives of wives of migrants in Amistades, Mexico. Erin Randle Hamilton, The University of Texas at Austin 4. Race, Ethnicity, and Policy Presider: David Dietrich, Texas A&M University Attitudes Concerning Race and Ethnic Paternalism. David Dietrich, Texas A&M University Racial Attitudes and the Structural Determinants of White Americans’ Support for Crime Policy. Amanda J. Abraham, Louisiana State University Diversity Training Impact Study. Sharon Maureen Collins and Yu-Li Hsieh, University of Illinois at Chicago Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Beliefs on Poverty Related issues: Cross national Comparison. Anat Yom-Tov, University of Wisconsin Race, Education and Sense of Control: Are They Interacted? Hui Liu, University of Texas at Austin 5. Youth, Aging, and Life Course Presider: Qiang Xu, Bowling Green State University Parental Appraisal, Peer Disapproval and Delinquency— from the Life Course Perspective. Qiang Xu, Bowling Green State University Stage Mothers and Overly-Ambitious Parents: How Parents Parent in an Age of Adultification. Hilary Levey, Princeton University Poverty and Mental Health through the Mid-Adult Life Course. Jennifer Lee Moren-Cross, Duke University The Impact of Academic and Nonacademic Non-Parental Monday, August 15, 8:30 a.m. Contact on the Self-Esteem of Girls and Boys. Laura Ann Auf der Heide, University of Arizona The Incidence of Death among Clergy as Compared to the Professional Population. Chris Lewinski, Texas A&M University 6. Deviance and Social Control Presider: Mark W. McKerrow, Cornell University Cigarettes as Signals: A Proposal for Anti-Smoking Messages. Mark W. McKerrow, Cornell University Social Control Theory and Adolescent Delinquency. Angie Lynn Andriot, Ball State University Rolling through Switzerland: A Look at Perceptions of Ecstasy Use Amongst the Youth of Switzerland. Susan M. Hannum, University of Maryland, Baltimore County Social Control, Hegemony, and Resistance in Singapore. Lisa Bee Fong Lim, National University of Singapore 7. Complex Organizations Presider: Weilei (Stone) Shi, University of Pittsburgh A Multilevel Approach to New Ventures’ Dynamic Social Capital. Weilei (Stone) Shi, University of Pittsburgh Promotion Inequality in U.S. Organizations: Empirical Evidence from the 1991 National Organizations Survey. J. David Zarifa, McMaster University Starbucks: The Third Place. Lori Chalk, George Mason University The Corporate Cult: How Corporations Gain Commitment at the Expense of American Families. Elizabeth Jefferis Terrien, University of Chicago 8. Social Movements and NGOs Presider: HeeJung Hwang, Korea Rail Network Authority Contingent Political Impacts of Peace Movements in the US. HeeJung Hwang, Culture, Ideology, and the Political Protest Activism of U.S. Women. Cheryl A. Sowash, Ohio State University What Constitutes a “True Convert”? Issues of Re-Socialization for Religious Converts. Samuel E. Richardson, University of Connecticut 9. Sexuality, Gender, and Identity Presider: Carly M. Chillmon, University of California, Santa Barbara Sexological Discourse and the Making of the Homosexual: An Analysis of Masculinity, Identity and Relationships. Carly M. Chillmon, University of California, Santa Barbara Development and Maintenance of a Deviant Sexual Identity: A Review of the Literature. Julie Ann Glaz, the College of New Jersey What Society Expects When You’re Expecting. Michelle Kelly, Kent State University Renegotiating Gender and Sexual Identity in Total Institutions: Implications for Transsexuals within U.S. 149 Prisons. Tina Norris, Kent State University 10. Gender, Behavior and Relationships Presider: Mary Ellen Gane, Temple University Gender Differences in Online Dating: An Investigation of Vulnerability and Deception. Mary Ellen Gane, Temple University The Gendered Terrain of Household Responsibilities: The Role of Child Domestic Servants in Ghana. C. Nana Derby, Florida International University HIV Vulnerability and Prevention among Same Race and Interracial Couples in a Brazilian Shantytown. Junia Valeria Quiroga da Cunha and Frederico Melo, Federal University of Minas Gerais, Brazil The Prosocial Behavior on the Net: An Empirical Analysis in Online Game Communities. Chenjung Chang, Zhongli, Taiwan Trust in Virtual Community with a Stranger. Shu Pei Chun, Taiwan 348. Regular Session. Applications of evolutionary theory to social behavior Philadelphia Marriott, Room 305 Organizer and Presider: Jeremy Freese, University of Wisconsin Why Sociology and Biology Should Be More Than Just Friends: Evolutionary Theory as a Central Paradigm for Sociology. Rosemary L. Hopcroft, University of North Carolina, Charlotte The Social Exchange Heuristic: Managing Errors in Social Exchange. Toshio Yamagishi and Shigeru Terai, Hokkaido University; Toko Kiyonari, McMaster University; Nobuhiro Mifune, Hokkaido University; Satoshi Kanazawa, London School of Economics and Political Science Family, Kinship and the Origins of the Incest Taboo. Alexandra Maryanski, University of California, Riverside The Evolution of Emotions and their Role as an Exaptive Social Force. J. Scott Lewis, Bowling Green State University 349. Regular Session. Community Organizing and Civic Engagement Philadelphia Marriott, Room 404 Organizer: Nancy A. Naples, University of Connecticut Presider: Susan J. Stall, Northeastern Illinois University Reconceptualizing the Notion of Civic Engagement. Dana R. Fisher, Paul-Brian McInerney, and Kevin T. Petersen, Columbia University Feminist Critique of the Notion of Civil Society. Sibel Cekic, University of Illinois But Is It “For Real”? State Control and Citizen Empowerment 150 Monday, August 15, 8:30 a.m. Session 349, continued in the British Columbia Citizens Assembly on Electoral Reform. Amy Lang, University of Wisconsin, Madison Community Organizing in Britain: The Political Engagement of Faith-based Social Capital. Mark R. Warren, Harvard University Problem Definition and the Development of Educational Policy: Chicago School Reform, 1985-88. Kristin Geraty, Indiana University 350. Regular Session. Consumption, Morality, and Politics Philadelphia Marriott, Room 310 Organizer: Daniel Thomas Cook, University of Illinois Presider: Amy L. Best, George Mason University Moralistic Consumption: Framing Fair Trade. Keith Richard Brown, University of Pennsylvania Faith Based Networks and the Central American Coffee Business. Amy Michelle Reynolds, Princeton University Politics and Products: The Commercial Underpinnings of the Natural Foods Movement. Laura J. Miller, Brandeis University The “Authenticities” of Ethnic and Tourist Arts: Meanings and Money in Village Handicraft Workshops and Small-sized Factories. Frederick F. Wherry, University of Pennsylvania Shopping for Sustainability: Green Consumption as a Means for Social Change. Wendy Wiedenhoft, John Carroll University Presenters address how consumption is implicated in moral and political discourses and practices through detailed empirical research. 351. Regular Session. Current Controversies: Gender, Math, and Science Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Congress A Organizer: Annette Lareau, University of Maryland, College Park; Kim Goyette, Temple University Presider: Emily Carroll Hannum, University of Pennsylvania The Path through Math: Course-taking and Performance at the Intersection of Gender and Race/Ethnicity. Catherine Riegle-Crumb, The University of Texas at Austin Debunking Education’s Golden Mean: A Logistic Approach to Gender Differences in International Mathematics. Andrew Penner, University of California, Berkeley Desegregation Stalled: The Changing Sex Composition of College Majors, 1971-1998. Paula England, Stanford University; Su Li, Northwestern University Major Differences: Gender and Curricular Choice at an Elite American University. Ann L. Mullen, University of Toronto, Scarborough Discussant: Erin Leahey, University of Arizona 352. Regular Session. Environmental Movements Philadelphia Marriott, Room 407 Organizer and Presider: Marieke M. Van Willigen, East Carolina University Citizen Responses to Environmental Problems: An Analysis of Taiwan People’s Participation Potential for Environmental Movements. Hsin-Huang M. Hsiao, Academia Sinica, Taiwan; Gang-Hua Fan, University of Texas at Austin Environmental Groups, Relational Ties, and the Mechanisms of Tactical Information Exchange. Fletcher Winston, Mercer University Changing Political Economic Opportunity Structures: Environmental Movements in the Global Agrifood System. Jason Konefal, Michigan State University The Making of a Moratorium: Cultural Context and the Battle over the Arbuckle-Simpson Aquifer. Beth Schaefer Caniglia, Kris Smith, and Mark Vermillion, Oklahoma State University Discussant: Bob Edwards, East Carolina University 353. Regular Session. Health Care and Care Delivery: Professional and Organizational Processes Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Grand Salon II Organizer: Carol A. Caronna, Towson University Presider: Martin Ruef, Princeton University The Orientation of Professionals in Health Care Organizations in France, Canada, and the U.S.: Clients, Communities and Bureaucracies. Ivy Bourgeault, McMaster University; Ivan Sainsaulieu, LISE; Kristine A. Hirschkorn, McMaster University Nursing Down the Line in England: A Professional Project? Jonathan Peter Gabe, Royal Holloway, University of London; Raffaella Valsecchi, University of Greenwich, London, UK; Mary Ann Elston and Chris Smith, Royal Holloway, University of London; Frank Mueller, St. Andrews University, Fife, Scotland The Adoption of Psychiatric Medications: The Public-Private Distinction, Organizational Compatibility, and the Environment. Hannah K. Knudsen, Lori J. Ducharme, and Paul M. Roman, Universitiy of Georgia Examining the Importance of Organizational Structure on Voluntary Medical Error Reporting Over Time. James G. Anderson, Rangaraj Ramanujam, and Devon J. Hensel, Purdue University Discussant: Carol A. Caronna, Towson University This session will examine the impact of health care delivery structures on professionals and their services in the U.S., France, Canada, and England. Topics include professionalization; professional autonomy in bureaucracies; adoption of innovations by health care organizations; and management of medical errors. Monday, August 15, 8:30 a.m. 354. Regular Session. Leadership, Participation, and Repression in Social Movements Philadelphia Marriott, Room 307 Organizer: Kenneth T. Andrews, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Presider: Nancy E. Whittier, Smith College Differential Impact of Repression on Social Movements: Emergence and Evolution of Christian Organizations and Liberation Theology in South Korea 1972-1979. Paul Chang and Byung-Soo Kim, Stanford University Leadership, Authority, and Resistance in the Ghettos of Warsaw and Vilna. Rachel L. Einwohner, Purdue University The Gendered Consequences of Guerrilla Participation in El Salvador. Jocelyn S. Viterna, Andrea Marie Wilbon and Ramaah Sadasivam, Tulane University Who Joined the Sit-ins and Why: Southern Black Students in the Early 1960s. Michael Biggs, University of Ilinois at Urbana-Champaign Discussant: Nancy E. Whittier, Smith College 355. Regular Session. News Media and the Framing of “Social Problems” Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth C Organizer and Presider: Paul D. Lopes, Colgate University Fat Panic! The “Obesity Epidemic” as Moral Panic. Abigail C. Saguy and Rene Almeling, University of California, Los Angeles New York Times and Los Angeles Times Coverage of Immigration Prior to and After September 11th. Tiffany Linton Page, University of California, Berkeley Shifts in the Quantity of U.S. Media and Scholarly Attention to Single-Parent Families, 1900-1998. Margaret L. Usdansky, Syracuse University Moving Beyond the Mainstream: Re-Conceptualizing Mass Media in Sociological Research. Deana Rohlinger, Florida State University Discussant: Paul D. Lopes, Colgate University 356. Regular Session. Queers and the State Philadelphia Marriott, Independence Salon III Organizers: William Edward Wagner, California State University, Bakersfield; Natalie D. A. Bennett, DePaul University Presider: Natalie D. A. Bennett, DePaul University An Appraisal of the 2000 U. S. Census Data on Same-sex Unmarried Partners. D’Lane Rebecca Compton and Dudley L. Poston, Texas A&M University Political Economy and the Debate over Same-Sex Marriage, or “It’s Not Really about Sex...” Melissa Sheridan EmbserHerbert, Hamline University Some Queers are Safer Than Others: Correlates of Hate Crime 151 Victimization of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender People in Britain. M. Somjen Frazer, Nuffield College, Oxford University De-Politicization vs. Pro-Radical Sexual Values: Organizational Strategies in the Contemporary Chinese Gay Movement. Wei Wei, Loyola University Chicago 357. Regular Session. Racism and Anti-Racism: What It Takes to Cultivate and Propagate White Antiracism Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon I Organizer and Presider: Pamela G. Perry, University of California, Santa Cruz Cultivating Antiracism among Whites: The Rise of InterestConvergence as a Master Frame in the World of Progressive Race Workshops. Rachel E. Luft, University of New Orleans A Peculiar Eclipsing: Transcendence and Exceptionalism in Whites’ Accounts of Racial Border Crossings. Jill McCorkel and Jason Rodriquez, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Everyday Defection, Everyday Treason: What Whites Can Do to Combat Racism. Mark George, Georgia State University Whites’ Journeys in Ideology Reconstruction: Developing and Maintaining an Antiracist Identity. Kristen Maria Lavelle and Danielle Dirks, University of Florida Discussant: Eileen O’Brien, University of Richmond 358. Regular Session. Religious Participation and Contemporary Connections in the U.S. Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Grand Salon III-IV Organizer and Presider: Deidre Hill-Butler, Union College Connected Development: Recruiting New Congregants through Organizational Connectivity. Jimi Adams, Ohio State University Low Income Women: Church Participation and Personal Religiosity. Susan Crawford Sullivan, College of the Holy Cross The Democratization of Religion in the Context of the AIDS Pandemic: An African-American AIDS Ministry. Pamela Leong, University of Southern California The Charismatic Difference: Protestant Charismatics in America’s Religious Ecology. Jerry Park, Baylor University; Chris David Bader, University of Washington 359. Regular Session. Session on Gender and Development: Economic Restructuring, Gendered Labor, and Empowerment. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 306 Organizer and Presider: Ada Cheng, DePaul University A Survival Strategy during Economic Crisis and Adaptation to Restructuring: Mexican Women’s Labor Force Participation 152 Monday, August 15, 8:30 a.m. Session 359, continued between 1970 and 2000. Elizabeth Fussell, Tulane University From Soviet Factory to post-Soviet Micro-enterprise: Gender, Class, and Work Reorganization after the Demise of Tiko Garment Factory in Komsomolsk, Ukraine. Leontina M. Hormel, Worcester State College Bringing Beauty to China’s Countryside: Gendered Labor Value and Postsocialist Rural Development. Eileen M. Otis, Stony Brook University, State University of New York Claiming Empowerment at Home: Outcomes of Export-led Development for Working Women. Gay Young, American University “Outsiders” and Identity Reconstruction in the Sex Workers’ Movement in Bagladesh. Reshmi Chowdhury and Robert D. Benford, Southern Illinois University Carbondale Discussant: Ada Cheng, DePaul University 360. Regular Session. Social Capital: International Perspectives Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth D Organizer: Roberto M. Fernandez, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Beyond Shelter: Social Capital and Housing Mobility among Internal Migrants in Thailand. Kim M. Korinek, University of Utah; Barbara Entwisle, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill; Katherine Faust, University of California, Irvine Macro Constraints on Individual Social Capital—Socioeconomic Development, Geographic Mobility, and Accessible Network Resources. Shanhui Wu, Duke University Social Capital in China: An Experimental Approach. Bradley J. Koch, University of Arizona When Is Social Capital Not Social Capital? Limits to Political and Economic Approaches. Sarah Busse Spencer, University of Pittsburgh 361. Regular Session. Social Contexts of Child and Adolescent Well-Being Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon J Organizer and Presider: Ann Meier, University of Minnesota Cross-Sectional and Longitudinal Measurements of Neighborhood Experience and Their Effects on Children. Margot I. Jackson and Robert Mare, University of California, Los Angeles Community Contributions to Scholastic Success. Lori Kowaleski-Jones, University of Utah Adolescent Sexual Orientation and Academic Success: The Impact of Depression and Attitudes Toward School. Jennifer Pearson and Chandra Muller, The University of Texas at Austin Making the Best of a Bad Situation: Resources’ Protective Effect on Teenage Parents’ Educational Careers. Stefanie Bailey Mollborn, Stanford University Discussant: Molly A. Martin, Pennsylvania State University 362. Regular Session. Social Life and Cyberspace Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Congress C Organizer: A. Aneesh, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee Presider: Barbara L. Ley, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee Where the Counterculture Met the New Economy: Revisiting the WELL and the Origins of Virtual Community. Fred Turner, Stanford University Infrastructure, Interaction, Information; An Analytical Bridge between Information Technology and Social Action. Zack Kertcher, University of Chicago Explaining the Differential Quality of Online and Off Line Relationships: The Role of Multiplexity and Duration. Gustavo S. Mesch, University of Haifa Internet Use and Social Capital. Shanyang Zhao, Temple University Discussant: A. Aneesh, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee As the Internet seeps into the everyday social life, it reconfigures the meaning of both the virtual community and offline social life. This session is devoted to understanding the intersection of online and offline relationships, how they affect or fail to affect each other. 363. Regular Session. Social Policy Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Congress B Organizer: Augusto Diana, US Department of Health and Human Services Presider: Diana Augusto, Center for Substance Abuse, US Department of Health and Human Services Clean Needles Save Lives: The Evolution of a Stealth Social Policy, 1985-2000. Susan M. Chambre, Baruch College, City University of New York Social Policy in Transition: From Socialism to Capitalism in Central and Eastern Europe. Kaan Agartan, State University of New York, Binghamton Writing and Re-writing the Gendered Script: A Historiography of Social Policy in Taiwan (1950-present). Ping-Chun Hsiung, 364. Regular Session. Social Stratification and Mobility: Gender, Ethnicity, Education and Culture Philadelphia Marriott, Independence Salon I Organizer: Gunn Elisabeth Birkelund, University of Oslo Inequality and Intergenerational Mobility: Change Across Cohorts. Emily Beller and Michael Hout, University of Monday, August 15, 8:30 a.m. California, Berkeley The Military in Intergenerational Status Attainment: Race, Gender and the All-Volunteer Force. Amy Kate Bailey, University of Washington Ethnicity and Inequality in China. Christopher B. Sullivan, University of California at Berkeley Stability and Change in U.S. Track Mobility: An Analysis of Four Cohorts. Samuel R. Lucas, University of California, Berkeley; Mark A. Berends, Vanderbilt University Social Stratification and Cultural Consumption. Tak Wing Chan and John H Goldthorpe, University of Oxford 365. Regular Session. Spaces, Places, and Meanings Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington A Organizer: Elizabeth Long, Rice University The Politics of Urbanism: Pursuing a New Urban Ideal in a Post-suburban World.” David K. Brain, New College of Florida Comparing Cultural Classification Systems: Cross-national Differences in the International Orientation of American, Dutch, French, and German Arts Journalism 1955-2005. Susanne Janssen, Giselinde M. Kuipers, and Marc Verboord, Erasmus University, Rotterdam The Big Significance of Small Practices: Crosswords in Today’s Moscow. Olga Shevchenko, Williams College On Fact-totems and Rankings: Elements of the Symbolic Life of Economic Indicators. Martin De Santos, Yale University 366. Regular Session. World System Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington C Organizer: Alvin Y. So, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology Presider: Ho-Fung Hung, University of Indiana, Bloomington Material Globalization and the Costs of Peripheralization: How Peripheries Subsidize Core Economic Ascent. Paul S. Ciccantell, Western Michigan University; Stephen Geoffrey Bunker, University of Wisconsin, Madison Displacing Hegemony: Asia in the Decline of US Power. Ravi A. Palat, State University of New York, Binghamton Is Shanghai a Global City? Wai Kit Choi and David A. Smith, University of California, Irvine Discussant: Ho-Fung Hung, University of Indiana, Bloomington 367. Section on Sociology of Culture Paper Session. Culture and Pragmatics: Empirical Studies of Social Performance Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon B Organizer and Presider: Robin E. Wagner-Pacifici, Swarthmore College 153 Property and Practices: National and Spatial Reform in 19th Century Mexico. Cristina Cielo, University of California Berkeley Constructing a Street Logic: The Transition of Neighborhood Space and Place and Its Unintended Consequences. Andrew Deener, University of California, Los Angeles Exploring Sociology of the Disabled Body: Bridging the Gap between Sociology of the Body and Disability Studies. Yoshihiko Goto, Kobe University Walking Tours as Narrative: Recovering the Spatial and Experiential Dynamics in Theories of Culture. Jonathan R. Wynn, Graduate Center, City University of New York Shootings, Beheadings, and Other Grisly Deaths in the War on Terror. Barbie Zelizer, University of Pennsylvania Discussant: Robin E. Wagner-Pacifici, Swarthmore College 368. Section on Sociology of Population Paper Session. International Migration, Family, and Fertility Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Tubman Organizer and Presider: Katharine M. Donato, Rice University Acculturation at the Couple Level: Cultural Factors and Modern Contraceptive Use among Mexican Immigrant Couples in Houston, Texas, and San Diego, California. Caroline L. Faulkner, University of Wisconsin, Madison Cohabit or Marry: Union Formation Patterns among Young Adults of Different Immigrant Generations. Ping Chen, Kathleen Mullan Harris, and Guang Guo, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Immigrant Family Transitions in Public Assistance after Welfare Reform: A Tale of Two Economies. Deborah R. Graefe and Gordon F. De Jong, Pennsylvania State University No more than one child! Fertility decline in Eastern Europe. A case study. Cristina Bradatan, University of Central Florida Discussant: Nolan J. Malone, Kamehameha Schools 369. Section on Latino/a Sociology Paper Session. Latino/a Communities: New Regions and New Neighborhoods Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth A1 Organizer and Presider: Miguel A. Carranza, University of Nebraska-Lincoln Identity Dance: Negotiating Membership and the Contours of a Transnational Community. Alejandro R. Cervantes-Carson and Tracy B. Citeroni, University of Mary Washington Immigrant Settlements in Emerging Areas: Mexicans in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. T. Elizabeth Durden, Bucknell University One Step Forward, Two Steps Back: Gendered Experiences of Work and Family Life for New Hispanic Immigrants to Central Virginia. Patricia Goerman, U.S. Census Bureau 154 Monday, August 15, 8:30 a.m. Session 369, continued Discussant: Thomas W. Sanchez, University of Nebraska at Omaha 370. Section on Sociology of Law Paper Session. Law and Representation of Interests: Possibilities and Problems Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Grand Salon I Organizer and Presider: Jerry L. Van Hoy, University of Toledo Legal Environments and the Constitution of Clients: How Lawyers Screen Cases and Clients. Mary Nell Trautner, University of Arizona Effects of Representation in Civil Matters. Rebecca L. Sandefur, Stanford University Law and Independence: Children’s Ombudspersons from a Comparative Perspective. Robin Shura Patterson, Brian Gran, and Lynn M. Gannon, Case Western Reserve University Human Rights in an Era of Globalization: The Alien Tort Claims Act and Unocal-Burma Case. Cheryl Ann Holzmeyer, University of California, Berkeley Discussant: Jerry L. Van Hoy, University of Toledo 371. Section on Organizations, Occupations, and Work Paper Session. Organizations and Environments Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon G Organizer and Presider: Emilio J. Castilla, Massachusetts Institute of Technology The News that Fits to Print: Environmental Uncertainty and Priorities at the New York Times. David R. Gibson, University of Pennsylvania Hellfire and Brimstone: Religious Politics in the Rise of American Magazines. Heather A. Haveman and Columbia University Who does good by doing well? Institutional change and the commercialization of University science. Jason D. OwenSmith, University of Michigan Institutional Geography and the Emergence of New Economic Sectors: Antecedants of Entrepreneurial Activity in the Emerging Wind Power Industry. Wesley D. Sine and Brandon Lee, Cornell University Agency in Diffusion: Activism, Imitation and the Adoption of Domestic Partner Benefits among the Fortune 500. Forrest S. Briscoe, Pennsylvania State University; Sean Safford, London School of Economics Discussant: Mauro F. Guillen, University of Pennsylvania 372. Section on Sociology of the Family Paper Session. Race, Class and Families Philadelphia Marriott, Liberty Salon B Organizer and Presider: Laura Ann Sanchez, Bowling Green State University Inequality in Children’s Enrichment Activities: Cultural Logics of Childrearing or Neighborhood and Work/Family Contstraints? Christopher Wimer, Harvard University Nonresident Father Involvement, Socioeconomic Status, and Adolescent Weight. Chadwick L. Menning, Ball State University; Susan D. Stewart, Iowa State University The Digital Divide among Children: Closing or Widening at the Turn of the Decade? Hiromi Ono, Frank Stafford, and F. Thomas Juster, University of Michigan Within-Family Differences in Mothers’ Support to Adult Children: Exploring Patterns among African-American and White Families. J. Jill Suitor, Purdue University; Karl Pillemer, Cornell University; Jori Alyssa Sechrist, Purdue University Discussant: Debarun Majumdar, Texas State University, San Marcos 373. Section on Sociology of Mental Health Paper Session. The Causes and Construction of Mental Health and Illness Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon A Organizer and Presider: Robert J. Johnson, University of Miami Bad Kid, Bad Parents, Bad Genes, or All of the above? Understanding How Adults Define Children’s Mental Health Problems. Danielle L. Fettes and Jane D. McLeod, Indiana University Children’s Behavior and Evaluation for Mental Health Problems: Social Statuses and Social Construction Processes. Melissa Milkie, University of Maryland Is Self-identifying as Gay or Bisexual Associated with Better Mental Health during Young Adulthood? Elbert P. Almazan and Jason Aaron Rosow, Indiana University, Bloomington The Drug Wars: The Turf Dispute between Clinical Psychology and Psychiatry. Margaret Anna Kerr, University of Pittsburgh Towards a Political Economy for Dysphoric Times: The End of Meaning Making in the Production and Consumption of Depression. Seth A. Adler, University of California, Santa Cruz These issues are addressed from a variety of perspectives including social problems, social construction, political economy, child and adolescent development and identity, and the sociology of mental health professions. Monday, August 15, 8:30 a.m. 374. Section on History of Sociology Paper Session. The History of American Sociology: Disciplinary Currents and Crosscurrents, I Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Anthony Organizer and Presider: Betsy Lucal, Indiana University South Bend 95 Years of Teaching High School Sociology. Michael DeCesare, California State University, Northridge SSA: Beginning or End of the Differentiation Process between Chicago Sociology and Social Work? Cathy Coghlan, Texas Christian University With Friends Like These...: Jane Addams, Liberal Pragmatists, and the Wartime Social Context. Madeleine R. Cousineau, Mount Ida College The Long-Lost Mother of Contemporary Ethnography: Annie Marion MacLean and the Legacy of a Method. Tim Hallett and Gregory Thomas Jeffers, Indiana University 375. Section on Social Psychology Paper Session. Across the Social Psychological Spectrum: New Developments in Ethical Concerns Philadelphia Marriott, Room 403 Organizers: Karen A. Hegtvedt, Emory University; Anna Johansson, Harvard University Into the Dark Heart of Ethnography: Sex, Intimacy, and Exploitation in the Field. Katherine Irwin, University of Hawaii-Manoa Even the Rats are White: Power and Privilege in Experimental Methodology. Carla D’Ann Goar, Northern Illinois University Use of Deception in Research: A View Across Disciplines. Anna Johansson, Harvard University; Jane Sell, Texas A&M University Some Positive Aspects of Informed Consent. Joseph A. Kotarba, University of Houston Regulating Social and Behavioral Science Research: Questions of Justice and Legitimacy. Karen A. Hegtvedt, Emory University 376. Section on Sex and Gender Paper Session. Gender and Sexuality in the U.S. Global Military Empire Philadelphia Marriott, Room 304 Organizer and Presider: Seungsook Moon, Vassar College Overdoing Gender. Robert B. Willer, Cornell University The Cowboy of the World: Gendering Discourse in Iraq War Debate. Wendy M. Christensen, University of Wisconsin, Madison “As Our Muscles Get Softer, Our Missile Race Becomes Harder”: Citizenship and the “Muscle Gap.” Jeffrey D. 155 Montez de Oca, University of Southern California To Father or to Fight?: Modern Citizenship, the Draft, and State Management of Dependencies. Dorith Geva, New York University 377. Section on Political Sociology Paper Session. RightWing Resurgence in the Era of Globalization Philadelphia Marriott, Room 411 Organizer: Sarah Louise Babb, Boston College Presider: James M. Jasper, New York, NY Cyberspace Culture and the Endurance of U.S. White Power Activism. Peter Simi, University of Nebraska-Omaha; Robert Futrell, University of Nevada-Las Vegas Globalization, Europeanization and Right Wing Politics in Transnational Europe. Mabel Berezin, Cornell University Working Class Republicans in the Era of Globalization: Does Class Still Count? Monica Prasad, Northwestern University; Andrew J. Perrin, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill; Kieran Bezila, Kate W. Kindleberger, and Steven Greg Hoffman, Northwestern University; Kimberly R. Manturuk and Ashleigh Powers, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill; The Rise of Respectable Right in Contemporary Russia. Yakov Shchukin, University of Minnesota Papers provides perspectives on various right-wing movements around the world in an era of heightened global integration. 378. Section on Crime, Law and Deviance Invited Session. 100 Years of Sociological Criminology Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Adams Organizer: James F. Short, Washington State University Bringing in Gender and Race: Moving Toward Inclusiveness in Criminiology. Karen Heimer and Maria Beatriz Velez, University of Iowa Legal, Extra-Legal and Illegal Responses to Crime and Deviance: A Century of Sociology. Lawrence W. Sherman, University of Pennsylvania The Behavior of Distributional Studies of Misbehavior Across Space and Time: A Review of Past, Current and Future Directions. Graham C. Ousey, University of Delaware Discussant: James F. Short, Washington State University 379. Section on Mathematical Sociology Invited Panel and Business Meeting Philadelphia Marriott, Independence Salon II 8:30-9:30 a.m. panel on Mathematical Sociology Today: Current State and Prospects: Organizer: Kenneth C. Land, Duke University Presider: Thomas J. Fararo, University of Pittsburgh 156 Monday, August 15, 8:30 a.m. Session 379, continued Mathematical Sociology and the Spinozan Problem of Order. Ronald L. Breiger, University of Arizona Tractable Models for Complex Social Systems: A Generalized Location. Carter T. Butts, University of California, Irvine Constructive Realism and the Theory of Models: The Fundamental Unity of Quantitative and Qualitative Sociology. Kenneth C. Land, Duke University Discussants: Thomas J. Fararo, University of Pittsburgh; John Skvoretz, University of South Florida 9:30-10:10 a.m., Business Meeting 380. Section on Science, Knowledge, and Technology Author Meets Critics Session. Whole World on Fire: Organizations, Knowledge, and Nuclear Weapons Devastation (2004) by Lynn Eden Philadelphia Marriott, Liberty Salon A Organizer: Joan H. Fujimura, University of Wisconsin Presider: Michael Lynch, Cornell University Critics: Thomas Hughes, University of Pennsylvania Renee R. Anspach, University of Michigan Hugh Gusterson, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Author: Lynn Eden, Stanford University Whole World on Fire focuses on a technical riddle wrapped in an organizational mystery: How and why, for more than half a century, did the U.S. government fail to predict nuclear fire damage as it drew up plans to fight strategic nuclear war? 8:30 am Other Groups Association for Applied and Clinical Sociology (AACS) Board Meeting (to 12:10pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Conference Suite II 9:00 am Sessions 381. Informational Poster Session. Research Funding Opportunities and Data Resources (to 12:00 noon) Philadelphia Marriott, Franklin Hall Organizers: Roberta M. Spalter-Roth and Mercedes Rubio, American Sociological Association This poster/exhibit session provides a unique occasion to meet representatives of major research funding institutions and principal investigators, researchers, and managers of large-scale datasets that are publicly available for use. Each display by a funding institution provides a visual overview of research funding and the application process, materials for distribution, and time for direct individual discussion. Data resource representatives are available to talk about the featured datasets, their analytic potential, and issues relating to access and use, including state-ofthe-art Internet services to access datasets. This is an opportunity for meeting attendees to learn about these datasets and their potential for research and teaching. All meeting participants, including students, are encouraged to attend. 1. The Wisconsin Longitudinal Study, Center for Demography of Health and Aging, University of Wisconsin, Madison. Taissa S. Hauser and Robert M. Hauser 2. The National Health Interview Survey, Division of Health Interview Statistics, National Center for Health Statistics, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. James M. Dahlhamer 3. Indicators of Distributive Social Justice, American Social Indicators. Emanuel Smikun 4. Division of Science Resources Statistics, National Science Foundation. Robert K. Bell 5. Electronic and Special Media Records Services Division, National Archives and Records Administration. Nancy Melley 6. Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Indu Ahluwalia and Michele Sussman Walsh 7. The 2002 National Survey of Family Growth, National Center for Health Statistics, CDC. William D. Mosher 8. The National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health (Add Health), Carolina Population Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Sally Middleton 9. American Religion Data Archive, The Pennsylvania State University, Department of Sociology. Gail Johnston Ulmer and Christopher P. Scheitle 10. Program for International Student Assessment (PISA), Progress in International Reading Literacy Study (PIRLS), Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study, American Institutes for Research, NCES. Gillian M. Hampden-Thompson 11. SIMI (Site for Instructional Materials and Information), Inter-University Consortium for Political and Social Research, Institute for Social Research, University of Michigan. Amy M. Pienta and Dieter Burrell 12. General Social Survey, National Opinion Research Center, University of Chicago. Tom W. Smith 13. Children and Young Adults of the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth/79 Cohort, Center for Human Resource Research, Ohio State University. Paula Baker 14. National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health. Meryl Sufian 15. Mexican Migration Project / Latin American Migration Project, Office of Population Research, Princeton University. Chiara Capoferro 157 Monday, August 15, 9:00 a.m. 16. Joint Canada United States Survey of Health (JCUSH), National Center for Health Statistics, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Catherine M. Simile 17. American Community Survey (ACS), and Current Population Survey (CPS), US Census Bureau. Scott Boggess and Joe Costanzo 18. Survey of Income and Program Participation (SIPP), and Population Estimates and Projections (PEP), US Census Bureau. Carole Popoff and Katherine Condon 19. Reproductive Statistics Branch: Natality Data, National Center for Health Statistics, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Stephanie Ventura 20. Behavioral and Social Sciences Working Group, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Deborah Holtzman 21. The Panel Study of Income Dynamics, University of Michigan, Institute for Social Research. Kate McGonagle 22. The Child Development Supplement to the Panel Study of Income Dynamics, University of Michigan, Institute for Social Research. Tina Mainieri 23. Office of Behavioral and Social Sciences Research (OBSSR), National Institutes of Health. Ronald P. Abeles 24. National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, National Institutes of Health. Rebecca L. Clark and Lynne M. Casper 25. Schools and Staffing Survey (SASS), Teacher Follow-up Survey (TFS), American Institutes for Research, National Center for Education Statistics (NCES). Deanna M. Lyter and Beth Morton 26. National Institute of Justice (NIJ). Thomas E. Feucht 27. Using the ESRC Question Bank: An Online Resource Developed for the Social Survey Research Community, University of Surrey, UK. Julie Lamb 28. Public Data Queries, Inc. Albert F. Anderson 29. National Science Foundation, Sociology Programs. Patricia E. White and Beth Rubin 30. United States Institute of Peace. John Crist 31. Research and Fellowship Support for Sociologists, and the Minority Fellowship Program, American Sociological Association. Roberta Spalter-Roth, Mercedes Rubio, William Erskine, and Felicia Evans 9:30 am Meetings Section on Community and Urban Sociology Business Meeting (to 10:10am) — Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon C Section on Mathematical Sociology Business Meeting (to 10:10am) — Philadelphia Marriott, Independence Salon II 10:00 am Tour Tour 8: Philadelphia Murals (to 12:00pm; ticket required for admission) — Philadelphia Marriott, Lobby (at 12th Street) 10:30 am Meetings Award Chairs with Committee on Awards (to 12:10pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Room 302 Committee on the Status of Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and Transgendered Persons in Sociology (to 12:10pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Room 309 Section on Ethnomethodology and Conversation Analysis Council Meeting (to 11:30am) — Philadelphia Marriott, Room 403 Section on Sex and Gender Business Meeting (to 12:10pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon A Section on Sociology of Population Council Meeting (to 11:30am) — Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Tubman 10:30 am Sessions 382. Thematic Session. Governance of Knowledge Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington A Organizer and Presider: Nico Stehr, Zeppelin University Governing Knowledge: From Bacon to Merton. Stephen Turner, University of South Florida Is Knowledge Well-governed? How Would We Know? Steve W. Fuller, Are the Clones Governable? Biotechnology and the Private Sector in the New Age. Everett I. Mendelsohn, Harvard University 383. Centennial Session. 100 Years of Self and Identity Research Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon J Organizer and Presider: Timothy J. Owens, Purdue University Panelists: James Côté, University of Western Ontario Viktor Gecas, Purdue University Sheldon Stryker, Indiana University Peggy Thoits, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill For over 100 years, social psychologists have been vigorously investigating the origins and dimensions of self and identity as well as 158 Monday, August 15, 10:30 a.m. Session 383, continued their separate and joint influences on individual and societal functioning and well-being. The panel will take the “long view” of self and identity research by linking classic and contemporary concerns in self and identity scholarship in social psychology with emerging ideas and directions for future research. 384. Centennial Session. Envisioning Public Sociology in the 21st Century Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon H Organizer and Presider: Barbara Jane Risman, North Carolina State University Public Sociology: Aristocratic or Populist? Monte Bute, Metropolitan State University Sociology for the Masses? Competing Visions for Contexts Magazine. Jeff Goodwin, New York University Public Sociology in an Era of Corporate Global Militarization and Reality TV. Stephen Pfohl, Boston College Out of the Closet: Valuing and Rewarding Public Sociology. Pepper J. Schwartz, University of Washington Discussant: Michael Burawoy, University of California, Berkeley Each panelist will address the possibilities for public sociology in the 21st Century. The presentations may assess contemporary realities but will focus primarily on visions, pragmatic and utopian, for the future. How might public sociology be established as a legitimate and necessary part of our professional repertoire? What strategies are likely to be effective and useful? How should we, as a discipline, shape our future? 385. Special Session. The Myopia of American Sociology: Insights from East Asia Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Adams Organizers: Jeffrey Broadbent, University of Minnesota; Koichi Hasegawa, Tohoku University Presider: Jeffrey Broadbent, University of Minnesota On the Limits of US Social Movement Theory for Explaining the Japanese Case. Koichi Hasegawa, Tohoku University On the Limits of US Feminist and Sociology of Science Theories in the Korean Context. Jeong-Ro Yoon, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology On the Limits of US Political Sociology concepts for Understanding Taiwan Social Change. Hsin-Huang M. Hsiao, Academia Sinica Using the US Theories and Methods of Social Stratification to Study China: Benefits and Difficulties. Jin Wang, Wuhan University This session will examine how sociological concepts, categories and theories common in US sociology (etic) are “culture bound,” failing to adequately grasp and apply to the social realities of other cultures (emic), in this case East Asian societies. In this way, we hope to help expand the pluralism of sociology. 386. Author Meets Critics Session. For the Common Good? American Civic Life and the Golden Age of Fraternity (Oxford University Press, 2003) by Jason Kaufman Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington B Organizer: John Skrentny, University of California, San Diego Presider: Michael P. Young, The University of Texas at Austin Critics: Michael Hechter, University of Washington Charles Tilly, Columbia University Debra Minkoff, Barnard College Miller McPherson, Duke University Author: Jason Kaufman, Harvard University 387. Author Meets Critics Session. Interaction Ritual Chains (Princeton University Press, 2004) by Randall Collins (co-sponsored by the Association for the Sociology of Religion) Philadelphia Marriott, Liberty Salon C Organizers: David E. Boyns, California State University, Northridge; N. J. Demerath, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Presider: David E. Boyns, California State University, Northridge Critics: Neil L. Gross, Harvard University Erika M. Summers-Effler, University of Notre Dame James Arthur Beckford, University of Warwick Lynn Smith-Lovin, Duke University Author: Randall Collins, University of Pennsylvania 388. Regional Spotlight Session. The Constitution as Museum: Capturing America’s Constitutional History for Public Exhibit The Constitution Center, Kirby Auditorium, 525 Arch Street Organizer and Presider: Kim Lane Scheppele, University of Pennsylvania Panelists: Joachim J. Savelsberg, University of Minnesota Robin E. Wagner-Pacifici, Swarthmore College Steven Frank, National Constitution Center Philadelphia was the home to the Constitutional Convention of 1787, where the US Constitution was written. To reflect on the ways the Constitution has assisted in the construction of America, the National Constitution Center (NCC) opened its doors in July 2003 to provide a portrayal of America’s constitutional engagement. This session brings together some of the founding members of the NCC together with ASA members who work in sociology of law and sociology of culture to ask: How does a museum present the Constitution to a general public? What do museums emphasize and what do they hide? How can the history and legacy of the American Constitution be presented to a general public? And what can sociologists add to the conversation about the way that history lives in museums? Monday, August 15, 10:30 a.m. The session will be held at the National Constitution Center (NCC) itself, in the Kirby Auditorium. The NCC is very close to the Convention Center. The Convention Center is between 11th and 13th Street on Arch Street, and the National Constitution Center is between 5th and 6th Street on Arch Street. To get to the NCC, walk straight down Arch Street for six short blocks. The Kirby Auditorium is on the second floor. After the session, attendees might want to tour either the museum itself with its special exhibit on “Lincoln, the Constitution and the Civil War” (admission $9) or the Independence Hall/Liberty Bell complex (admission free with timed ticket). 389. Methodological Seminar. Fuzzy Sets and Case-Oriented Research Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon K Ticket required for admission Leader: Charles C. Ragin, University of Arizona 159 private and public institutions, will discuss activities which will improve graduate students’ job prospects at institutions that prioritize teaching. 391. Professional Workshop. Writing a Successful Grant Proposal Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth A2 Organizer and Leader: Patricia E. White, National Science Foundation 392. Research Workshop. ASA and Regional Association Annual Program Database Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Room 104 Organizer and Leader: Kenneth Nyberg, California State University, Bakersfield Fuzzy sets are used to scale degree of membership in sets, using values in the interval from 0 to 1 (ranging from full nonmembership to full membership). Fuzzy set analysis is gaining popularity in the social sciences today because of the close connections it enables between verbal theory, substantive knowledge (especially in the calibration of set membership), and data analysis, using basic set theoretic principles. This workshop focuses on the use of fuzzy sets in case-oriented research, where the investigator has a degree of familiarity with the cases included in the investigation and seeks to understand cases configurationally—as specific combinations of aspects or elements. Using fuzzy-set methods, case outcomes can be examined in ways that allow for causal complexity, where different combinations of causally relevant conditions combine to generate the outcome in question. Also, with fuzzy-set methods it is a possible to evaluate arguments that causal conditions are necessary or sufficient. Examinations of this type are outside the scope of conventional analytic methods. Participants are expected to have general familiarity with both qualitative and quantitative methods. Some prior exposure to set theory (Boolean algebra) or qualitative comparative analysis (QCA) is recommended. 393. Teaching Workshop. Promoting Civic Engagement in the College Classroom Philadelphia Marriott, Room 404 Organizer and Leader: Melissa Jill Bonstead-Bruns, University of Wisconsin -Eau Claire 390. Career Workshop. Negotiating the Job Market Philadelphia Marriott, Room 408 Organizer: Jay R. Howard, Indiana University-Purdue University Columbus Panelists: Susan M. Alexander, St. Mary’s College Jay R. Howard, Indiana Univ/Purdue University Columbus Bruce Keith, United States Military Academy Keith Alan Roberts, Hanover College Leslie T.C. Wang, University of Toledo This workshop is designed for individuals who would like to include disability studies or disability-related topics in their sociology courses, as well as for those interested in teaching a course on the sociology of disability. The content and relevance of disability studies for sociology will be discussed. Suggestions for lectures, syllabi, class exercises, and assignments will be presented. Handout also will provided. Looking for a faculty position at an institution where teaching is valued? This workshop is designed to help you learn (1) how to get noticed by making your application materials stand out; (2) the do’s and don’ts of interviews with faculty, administrators, and students; (3) how to make effective presentations for audiences that could include faculty members from other disciplines, students, and administrators; and (4) what to expect after the interview. Presenters, who come from a range of Participants in this workshop will have an opportunity to discuss the challenges and rewards of promoting civic engagement in the college classroom. Participants will also receive specific suggestions for techniques and activities designed to foster civic engagement that are adaptable to both introductory and upper level undergraduate courses 394. Teaching Workshop. Teaching Sociology and Disability Studies Philadelphia Marriott, Room 410 Organizer: Diane E. Taub, Indiana University-Purdue University Leaders: Diane E. Taub, Indiana University-Purdue University Lynn Schlesinger, Plattsburgh State University of New York 395. Teaching Workshop. Teaching Sociology of Education Philadelphia Marriott, Room 409 Organizers and Leaders: Jeanne H. Ballantine, Wright State University; Caroline Hodges Persell, New York University Participants in this workshop will discuss survey findings on content covered by sociologists of education, the variety of courses taught, materials used, videos, web resources, ideas for data analysis by classes, and in and out-of-class projects. Participants will go through a course design process and will receive handouts on various topics related to teaching sociology of education. 160 Monday, August 15, 10:30 a.m. 396. Teaching Workshop. Teaching Tips and Assignments for Health and Medical Topics (co-sponsored by the Section on Medical Sociology) Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Grand Salon III and IV Organizer: Anne Figert, Loyola University Chicago Leaders: Anne Figert, Loyola University Chicago Deborah A. Sullivan, Arizona State University Eric R. Wright, Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis This hands-on workshop helps instructors explore new ideas, films and assignments incorporationg health and medical topics into general sociology courses and for medical sociology courses. Handouts willbe given and participation is encouraged. 396D. Informal Discussion Roundtables II Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon E Organizer: Ralph B. McNeal, Jr., University of Connecticut 1. What’s Missing in Theories and Research on Childhood and Adolescence? Research and Teaching Challenges. Karen Sternheimer and Elaine Kaplan, University of Southern California 2. Finding an Edge: The Development of Urban Waterfront Parks in the 21st Century. Marcia Steinberg, The College of New Jersey 3. Interactions of Religion and Sexuality: Theories and Methods. Melissa M. Wilcox, Whitman College 4. Responding to Racism on Campus. Linda Burns, Carlow College 5. Developing a Sociology of Film. Robert Bulman, St. Mary’s College of California 6. Outsourcing of American Jobs: Are There Alternatives? Karen McCue, University of New Mexico 7. Sex Ratios and Sexual Partners: The Implications for HIV/ AIDS among Black Women. Hayward Horton, University at Albany, State University of New York 8. Measuring Internet Use in the “Real World.” Jeffrey Boase, University of Toronto 9. 9/11, Terrorism, Distress, and Drinking: Future Research Directions. Judith Richman, University of Illinois at Chicago 10. Navigating the Social System: Enhancing Interpersonal Skills in Elementary School-aged Children. Susan St. John, Corning Community College, State University of New York 11. Teaching about Violence Against Women. Lynda Holmstrom, Boston College 12. Emergent Disciplines: Ethnic Studies. In Paik, Cornell University 397. Student Session. Ethnography and Everyday Lifeworlds Philadelphia Marriott, Room 303 Organizer: Laura M. Tach, Harvard University Presider: Kristin Blakely, Loyola University Chicago Between Revolution and Everyday Life: A Personal Narrative Study of the Land Reform in Rural China. Jiangsui He, University of California, San Diego Dismantling Mantelpieces: framing material culture and visual data. Rachel Hurdley, Cardiff University Raising Zeb’s Black Baby. David Allen Bergeron, East Carolina University; Gavin Vincent, East Carolina University The Existential Sensibility of C. Wright Mills. Keith T. Kerr, Texas A&M University Symbolic Radicalism: Tactics and Ideology in the Prison Abolition Movement. Damon W. Mayrl, University of California, Berkeley The papers featured in this session represent the diverse range of people, places, and social phenomena that ethnographers study. From villagers living through land reform in China to African-Americans living in poverty in the southern United States; from the meanings embodied in mantelpieces in Cardiff, Wales to the new meanings created in the prison abolition movement in Oakland, CA. These papers highlight the voices and experiences of social actors and the insights that can be obtained into their everyday lifeworlds through ethnographic fieldwork. 398. Regular Session. (Bio)Medicalization and Iatrogenesis Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth A1 Organizer and Presider: Adele E. Clarke, University of California, San Francisco Health Care without Harm: An Alternative Framing of Iatrogenesis. Rebecca Gasior Altman, Brown University Risk Scares, Demedicalization, and the Utilization of Hormone Replacement Therapy. Cheryl Diana Stults, Brandeis University What do Breast Cancer and Infertility have in Common? Women’s Responses to Medicalization across Two Research Studies. Gayle A. Sulik, Vassar College; Astrid Eich-Krohm, University at Albany, State University of New York Managing Memory: Biomedicalization and the Process of Becoming an Alzheimer’s Patient. Renee Lynn Beard and Patrick J. Fox, University of California, San Francisco “Who” Says Obesity Is an Epidemic? How Excess Weight Became an American Health Crisis. Hanna GrolProkopczyk, University of Wisconsin, Madison Monday, August 15, 10:30 a.m. 399. Regular Session. Applied/Clinical Sociological Research Philadelphia Marriott, Room 412 Organizer and Presider: James G. Hougland, University of Kentucky Narrative As Vital Methodology in Clinical Sociology. C. Margaret Hall, Georgetown University Program Evaluation in Community Context: Competing Perspectives on the Meaning of Success. Helen Rosenberg, Anne Statham, and Xun Wang, University of Wisconsin, Parkside Student Self Perception of Interest and Ability in Science. Molly A. McGarrigle Stuhlsatz and Theodore A. Lamb, Biological Sciences Curriculum Study The Marginalization of Application in US Sociology. Jay A. Weinstein, Eastern Michigan University Discussant: James Sherohman, St Cloud State University Papers in this session provide a combination of research findings from applied and clinical research, reflections on useful methodological strategies, and historically informed analysis of the status of application in sociology 400. Regular Session. Care Work Philadelphia Marriott, Independence Salon I Organizer and Presider: Stacey Oliker, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee Division of Parent Care between Spouses: Variations by Kin Relationship. Maximiliane E. Szinovacz, Eastern Virginia Medical School; Adam Davey, Polisher Research Institute Dual-Earner Couples’ Adult Caregiving, Benefit Use, and Psychological Well-Being. Noelle A. Chesley and Phyllis Moen, University of Minnesota Ethnic Logics and Childcare Hiring Decisions. Cameron Macdonald, University of Wisconsin, Madison Gendered Living Arrangements among Children with Disabilities: Evidence from the 2000 Census. Philip N. Cohen, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill; Miruna G. Petrescu-Prahova, University of California, Irvine Discussant: Stacey Oliker, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee 401. Regular Session. Collective Action and the State: from Local Community to World Society Philadelphia Marriott, Room 307 Organizer: Michael Biggs, University of Ilinois at UrbanaChampaign Presider: Dingxin Zhao, University of Chicago Accounting for Police Behavior at Disorderly Gatherings in Campus Communities, 1985-2002. John D. McCarthy, Pennsylvania State University; Andrew W. Martin, The Ohio 161 State University; Clark McPhail, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Black Social Movements in Brazil: The State, Political Identity and Visions for the Future. Joyce M. Bell, University of Minnesoa Stable Structures and Puerto Rican Mobilization in the QuasiColonial State. Vince Montes, Millbrae, CA The Dynamics of Empowering Local Activism through Transnational Mobilization in Korea: Environment and Human Rights Movements in Comparative Perspective. Sukki Kong, Harvard University; Hyun-Chin Lim, Seoul National University Discussant: Dingxin Zhao, University of Chicago 402. Regular Session. Global Environmental Policy and Attitudes Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington C Organizer and Presider: Marieke M. Van Willigen, East Carolina University Urban and Industrial Environmental Reform in Southeast Asia: A Comparative Analysis. Arthur Mol, Wageningen University; David A. Sonnenfeld, Washington State University Influences on Environmental Concern: Are there Similarities Across Countries? Sandra T. Marquart-Pyatt, Utah State University Governing Beyond the State: Fostering Environmentally Friendly Markets and Fighting Corruption. Maria S. Tysiachniouk, Center for Independent Social Research; Johnathan Reisman, intern Public Perception of Environmental Issues in a Developing Setting. Michael J. White, Brown University; Lori M. Hunter, University of Colorado, Boulder 403. Regular Session. Health Care and Care Delivery: Inequalities and Access to Care Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Grand Salon II Organizer: Carol A. Caronna, Towson University Presider: Brian Karl Finch, San Diego State University Social Location and Self-Presentation at Doctor Visits. Jennifer Malat, University of Cincinnati; Michelle Van Ryn, University of Minnesota Culture and Perceptions of Health Status among American Indian Older Adults and Their Providers. Eva Marie Garroutte and Natalia Sarkisian, Boston College; Lester Arguellos, University of Illinois at Chicago; Jack Goldberg and Dedra Buchwald, University of Washington The Incorporation of Hispanic Children into the US Health System Considering the Roles of Nativity, Duration and Citizenship. T. Elizabeth Durden, Bucknell University 162 Monday, August 15, 10:30 a.m. Session 403, continued Pregnant and Poor in the Land of the Rich. Candyce Berger and Linda E. Francis, Stony Brook University, State University of New York Discussant: Felicia B. LeClere, University of Notre Dame This session will highlight a variety of issues people in disadvantaged positions in American society, including racial/ethnic minorites and the poor, face when attempting to access quality health care. 404. Regular Session. Health and Well Being II: Culture, Inequality and Identity Philadelphia Marriott, Independence Salon II Organizer and Presider: Richard M. Levinson, Emory U niversity Social Inequalities and Metabolic Disorders. Duane Francis Alwin and Linda A. Wray, Pennsylvania State University Neighborhood Residential Segregation and Health: Differential Effects among Puerto Ricans and Mexican Americans?” Min-Ah Lee and Kenneth F. Ferraro, Purdue University Explaining the Latino Asthma Advantage: The Role of Neighborhood Social Context. Kathleen Anne Cagney, University of Chicago; Christopher R. Browning, Ohio State University; Danielle Marie Wallace, University of Chicago Maternal Social Capital and Child Health. Jenna Nobles and Elizabeth Frankenberg, University of California, Los Angeles Self and Health: Factors Influencing Self-Esteem and Functional Health. Donald C. Reitzes, Georgia State University Five papers report investigations of the relationship of population health status to social class, inequality, ethnic identification, self esteem and maternal social capital. 405. Regular Session. Marxism and Critical Theory Philadelphia Marriott, Room 407 Organizer and Presider: Val Burris, University of Oregon Alvin Gouldner: Critical Theorist. Nazneen Michelle Kane, University of Maryland Tautology, Teleology, and Dialectics. Paul B. Paolucci, Eastern Kentucky University Reaching Toward a Dialogic Engagement of Marxist Theory and Ethnomethodology: Some Points of Compatibility. Thomas Michael Conroy, The Ghost of Revolution: Lefebvre and Modernity. David J. Madden, Columbia University 406. Regular Session. Masculinities Philadelphia Marriott, Room 304 Organizer and Presider: Alford A. Young, University of Michigan A Different Kind of Provider: The Negotiation of Masculinity and Primary Caregiving for At-Home Fathers. Erin K. Anderson, Washington College Mentoring Masculinities: Race and Class in the (Re-)Construction of Gender in the US and Britain. Michael Kimmel and Amy Elizabeth Traver, Stony Brook University, State University of New York The Dominance of Hybrids: Masculinities and Coaching Styles in Boys’ Baseball. Sherri L. Grasmuck, Temple University “The Girl Hunt”: Urban Nightlife and the Performance of Masculinity as Collective Activity. David Grazian, University of Pennsylvania Discussant: Alford A. Young, University of Michigan 407. Regular Session. Media, Public Opinion, and the Consequences of Social Movements Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth C Organizer: Kenneth T. Andrews, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Presider: Ziad W. Munson, Lehigh University America’s Most Publicized Social Movement Organizations: A New Approach to Social Movements. Edwin Amenta, Neal Caren, and Sheera Joy Olasky, New York University Examining Public Opinion about Social Movements: The Social Bases of Progressive Social Movement Ideology. Aaron McCright, Michigan State University; Riley Dunlap, University of Central Florida Media Advocacy and the Economy of Attention: Testing the Efficacy of Amnesty International’s Press Strategy, 19862000. Howard Ramos, Dalhousie University; James Ron, McGill University Signals and Spillover: Brown v. Board of Education and Other Social Movements. David S. Meyer and Steven Allen Boutcher, University of California, Irvine Discussant: Ziad W. Munson, Lehigh University 408. Regular Session. Occupational Differences in WorkFamily Arrangements Philadelphia Marriott, Room 306 Organizer: Miliann Kang, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Presider: Michael B. Aguilera, University of Oregon The Effects of Marital Status and Spousal Employment on Physician Salaries: The (House)Spouse Bonus. Susan W. Hinze, Case Western Reserve University; Michael Schaefer, Medstat; Eleanor Stoller, Case Western Reserve University Family and Work: Immigrant Self-Employment among Latin American and Asian Immigrants in the U. S. in 1990. Silvia Pedraza, University of Michigan; Salvador Rivas, University of Wisconsin Monday, August 15, 10:30 a.m. Assessing Causality behind Black-White Family Formation Difference: A Look at the Pentagon’s Data. Jennifer Hickes Lundquist, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Work-Family Organizational Discourse and the Doing of Gender in the Israeli Hi-Tech Culture. Michal Frenkel, The Hebrew University 409. Regular Session. Race and Inequality: Looking at Schools Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Congress A Organizer: Annette Lareau, University of Maryland, College Park; Kim Goyette, Temple University Presider: Douglas B. Downey, Ohio State University Whither the Virtuous Cycle? Past and Future Trends in BlackWhite Inequality in Educational Attainment. Daniel A. Long, Sean Kelly, and Adam Gamoran, University of Wisconsin, Madison Teacher Grading Practices within School Social Contexts: Do They Disadvantage Low-Income and Minority Students? George Farkas, Pennsylvania State University; Lindsey Nicole Wilkinson and Chandra Muller, The University of Texas at Austin; Kathryn S. Schiller, University at Albany, State University of New York; Kenneth A. Frank, Michigan State University The Limits of Social Capital Explanations: The Ethnically Specific Determinants of AP Placement. Tomeka M. Davis and Regina E. Werum, Emory University Structural Foundations of the Enduring Race Gap in High School English Track Placement. John Allen Barnshaw and Stephanie Southworth, University of North Carolina at Charlotte; Suzanne Taylor Sutphin, University of South Carolina, Columbia; Sean Langley and Roslyn A. Mickelson, University of North Carolina at Charlotte Discussant: Christopher B. Swanson, The Urban Institute 410. Regular Session. Racism and Anti-Racism: Abiding Practices of Racial Formation and Subordination Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon I Organizer and Presider: Pamela G. Perry, University of California, Santa Cruz The College Campus as Defended Neighborhood: Explaining Variation in Ethnic/Racial Hate Crimes on Campus. Nella Van Dyke, Washington State University; Griff M. Tester, The Ohio State University Perceptions of Racism and Consolidation of Identity among Mexican Americans. Jessica M. Vasquez, University of Calfiornia, Berkeley Beyond Journalistic Jingoism: Journalism’s ‘Racial Projects’ Reposition Race as Central Organizing Principle in Daily Life. Emily Drew, Willamette College 163 The Gift that Keeps on Taking: Identification White Gifted and Talented Students. C Elaine Dunbar, St. Paul, MN Discussant: Tyrone A. Forman, University of Illinois at Chicago 411. Regular Session. Rational Choice: Progress in Empirical Research—Developing and Testing Theories Philadelphia Marriott, Independence Salon III Organizer: Nobuyuki Takahashi, Hokkaido University Presider: S. S. Levine, University of Pennsylvania Considering the Fear Factor. Ko Kuwabara, Cornell University Rise and Fall of Cooperation: A Social Dilemma Experiment with Intergroup Mobility. Jun Kobayashi, Seikei University; Yuhsuke Koyama, Tokyo Institute of Technology; Hideki Fujiyama, Dokkyo University; Hirokuni Ooura, Teikyo University A Model of Race Discrimination Based Upon Wealth Inequality: A Rational-Choice Agent-Based Approach. Douglas Savitskey and Jennifer J. Todd, Cornell University Conflict and Mixed Relation Networks. Theory and Its Test. Kinga Anna Wysienska and Joanna Heidtman, Jagiellonian University Discussant: Joseph M. Whitmeyer, University of North Carolina, Charlotte This session focuses on rigorous theory development by either mathematical modelling or experiment. 412. Regular Session. Social Capital in the Labor Market Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth D Organizer: Roberto M. Fernandez, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Presider: Maria-Isabel Fernandez-Mateo, London Business School Crossing the Structural Barriers: Network Diversity and Its Returns from the Labor Market. Joonmo Son, Duke University Getting a Bonus: The Effects of Performance, Demography, and Networks on Pay among Commercial Bankers. Mark Mizruchi, University of Michigan; Linda Brewster Stearns, Southern Methodist University; Anne Fleischer, University of Michigan Getting the Word Out: The Role of Tie Strength and Labour Market Characteristics in the Transfer of Job Information. Alexandra Marin, Harvard University Hiring on the Internet: Do Social Networks Matter? Valery Yakubovich and Daniela Lup, University of Chicago Turbulent Networks: Social Capital, Employer Hiring Preferences and Labor Market Outcomes. Christine Fountain, University of Washington; Katherine Stovel, University of Washington 164 Monday, August 15, 10:30 a.m. 413. Regular Session. Sociology of Time Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Congress C Organizer and Presider: Jeremy E. Reynolds, University of Georgia Marriage, Work, and Gender Equality in the Medical Profession. Ann K. Boulis and Jerry A. Jacobs, University of Pennsylvania Days of the Week: Distribution of Parental Childcare Time. Wei-Jun Jean Yeung, New York University; frank stafford, University of Michigan Gender Differences in Taking Vacation Time. David J. Maume, University of Cincinnati 414. Regular Session. Sociology of Travel and Tourism Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Congress B Organizer and Presider: James J. Dowd, University of Georgia Competing Cultural Capitals in a Capital of Culture: New Tourist Landscapes as Unequal Developments. Ryan Centner, University of California, Berkeley; Luis Baer, Universidad de Buenos Aires Theorizing Urban Spectacles: Festivals, Tourism, and the Transformation of Urban Space. Kevin Fox Gotham, Tulane University; Adele Benoit, St. Steven’s School Unionization and the Mexican Immigrant Population: The Case of Las Vegas. Daniel J. Zendejas, University of Houston Impact of Tourism Development on Cultural Heritage Preservation in Hoi An, Vietnam. Dzung Thi Kieu Vu, Vietnam National University Travel is an experience common to people throughout the world. Whether for work, adventure, pleasure, survival, or personal growth and self-realization, travel away from home and contact with people and cultures different from one’s own have come to characterize life in the contemporary age. The papers in this session will examine the sociological aspects of travel and tourism, analyzing the motives for travel and its effects on both the traveler and those with whom travelers interact during their journeys. 415. Regular Session. Teaching Sociology Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Grand Salon I Organizer: Vaneeta-marie D’Andrea, Central Saint Martins College, University of the Arts London Presider: Theodore C. Wagenaar, Miami University Can Studying for a Test be “Fun”? Student-Designed Exam Preparation Strategies in an Introductory Social Problems Course. Amy L. Karnehm Willis, North Carolina Wesleyan College The Forbidden Chapter: Representations of Sexuality in Introductory Sociology Textbooks. Alicia E. Suarez and Alexandra Berkowitz, Indiana University What’s a Sociologist Like You Doing in a Course Like This? Reflections on Teaching a Trans-institutional Course for Professional Students. Joanne C. Sandberg, Vanderbilt University Faculty Development Benefits of Teaching in a First-Year Learning Community. Cheryl Albers, Buffalo State College 416. Regular Session. The Arab World, the Arab Diaspora, and Arab-Americans: Alternative Views and Explanations from a Comparative Perspective Philadelphia Marriott, Room 305 Organizer and Presider: Kenneth K. Ayouby, Dearborn Public Schools Discrimination and the American Dream: The Case of Middle Eastern Americans. Karyn D. McKinney and Amir B. Marvasti, Pennsylvania State University, Altoona The Creation of “Arab American”: Political Activism and Ethnic (Dis)Unity. Gary C. David, Bentley College Overview of the Development of Arab American Subaltern Identity. Rosina Hassoun, Michigan State University Responsibility for the Other as Self interest: The Politics of Recognition and Misrecognition. Rifaat Abdulrida Dika, Columbia University Discussant: Louise Cainkar, Univerisity of Illinois, Chicago In keeping with the Annual Meeting’s theme of “Comparative Perspective, Competing Explanations”, the session spotlights less commonly addressed issues, regions, and groups in sociology. The focus will be on the Arab world and Arab communities in North America. Comparative conceptualizations and frameworks in context are employed to study myriad issues relating to Arabs and Arab Americans, which will be highlighted in this session. 417. Regular Session. Transforming Struggles over Sex, Race and Gender Philadelphia Marriott, Room 310 Organizer: Barbara Ellen Smith, Center for Research on Women Presider: Cynthia Fabrizio Pelak, University of Memphis Alternative Visions to Ending Domestic Violence: Using a Race, Class, Gender, Sexuality Perspective. Natalie J. Sokoloff, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, City University of New York Our Silence Will Not Protect Us: Black Women’s Experiences Mobilizing to Confront Sexual and Domestic Violence. Janelle Lynn White, University of New Orleans Rethinking Racial Attitudes Research: The Role of Gendered Racial Antipathy in Affirmative Action Opinions. Amy C. Steinbugler and Julie E. Press, Temple University; Janice Johnson, University of Michigan Monday, August 15, 10:30 a.m. 165 Categories, Communities, and HIV Risk: Questioning Methods of the Young Men’s Survey. Ananya Mukherjea, Graduate Center, City University of New York; Salvador Vidal-Ortiz, American University Discussant: Cynthia Fabrizio Pelak, University of Memphis Savelsberg, Lara L. Cleveland, and Sarah M. Flood, University of Minnesota Caught in Ethical and Scientific Crosscurrents: Competing Explanations of the Wichita Jury Study. Harry Perlstadt, Michigan State University 418. Section on Sociology of Culture Paper Session. Culture and Pragmatics: Theoretical Debates about Social Performance Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon B Organizer: Mustafa Emirbayer, University of Wisconsin, Madison Presider: Ann Mische, Rutgers University Acting Out Social Institutions: Routine, Planned, and Improvisational Elements of Organizational Action. Henri Schildt, Helsinki University of Technology Partisan Performance: Stylistic Enactment and Suppression in Contentious Publics. Ann Mische, Rutgers University Social Dramas, Shipwrecks, and Cockfights: Three Types of Social Performance. Isaac A. Reed, Yale University Discussant: Ivan Ermakoff, University of Wisconsin, Madison 421. Section on Sociology of Mental Health Paper Session. The Intersection of the Sociologies of Mental Health and Emotion Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon C Organizer and Presider: Robin W. Simon, Florida State University Intentional and Unintentional Emotional Boundaries. Bill Magee, University of Toronto Anger and the Stress Process. Leonard I. Pearlin, University of Maryland; Scott Schieman, University of Toronto; Rachel Eccles, University of Toronto Gender Differences in Dimensions of Anger and Their Implications for Distressing Emotions. Robin W. Simon, Florida State University; Kathryn J. Lively, Dartmouth College The Management of Sadness in Interpersonal Relationships. Sarah Dugan Goodrum, Centre College Discussant: Debra Umberson, The University of Texas at Austin 419. Section on Organizations, Occupations, and Work Paper Session. Inequality and Work Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon G Organizer and Presider: Christine L. Williams, University of Texas at Austin Gender, Race, and Meritocracy in Organizational Careers. Emilio J. Castilla, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Getting a Job: Is There a Motherhood Penalty? Shelley J. Correll and Stephen W. Benard, Cornell University Is the Customer Always Right? Class, Service, and the Production of Distinction in Chinese Department Stores. Amy Hanser, University of California, Berkeley Organizing Equal Employment Opportunity: The Effect of EEO Enforcement on Sex and Race Segregation in the Workplace. Elizabeth Hirsh, University of Washington 420. Section on History of Sociology Paper Session. The History of American Sociology: Disciplinary Currents and Crosscurrents, II Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Anthony Organizers: Betsy Lucal, Indiana University South Bend; Lawrence T. Nichols, West Virginia University Presider: Jan Marie Fritz, University of Cincinnati A Century of Sociological Computing: Some Hightlights. David D. McFarland, University of California, Los Angeles Sociology Fizzling out at the Edges? Structural Weakness, State Action, and the Crime Research Case. Joachim J. 422. Section on Political Sociology Paper Session. Cultural and Structural Processes of Civil Society Philadelphia Marriott, Room 411 Organizer: Ming-Cheng M. Lo, University of California, Davis Presider: Ronald N. Jacobs, University at Albany, State University of New York The Structural Sources of Associational Life: A Cross-National Analysis. Evan Schofer and Wesley Longhofer, University of Minnesota Patterns of Associational Revolution in Italy and Spain. Dylan John Riley, University of Calfornia, Berkeley Microradio to the Rescue? Alternative Public Spheres and the Revival of Civil Society. J. Zach Schiller, University of California, Davis Constitutional Conventions: Organizing Potawatomi Civic Engagement. Christopher Wetzel, University of California, Berkeley Voices and Visions of Lower Manhattan: Protocols of Participation in Post-9/11 Public Hearings. Victor Pablo Corona, Columbia University 166 Monday, August 15, 10:30 a.m. 423. Section on Community and Urban Sociology Roundtables Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon F Organizer: Emily V. Rosenbaum, Fordham University 1. Planning and Design Issues Presider: Lily M. Hoffman, City College, City University of New York A Case Study in Planned Growth in the Context of Smart Growth and New Urbanism. Charles Cappell, Northern Illinois University World Cities and Global Architectural Firms: A Network Approach. Xuefei Ren, University of Chicago Educating Architects and the Implications for Buildings, Cities, and Civic Engagement. Carla Corroto, University of Wisconsin, Whitewater Casino Impacts and Externalities in Illinois and Northwestern Indiana Communities. Eric J. Petersen, RAND Europe; Kim Hunt, KLH Consulting 2. Downtown Redevelopment Presider: Caroline W. Lee, University of California, San Diego The Uneven Geography of Downtown Redevelopment: Sources, Processes, and Consequences of Sports Stadium Building. Timothy William Collins, Arizona State University Lessons Learned for Rebuilding Lower Manhattan: W.E.B. Du Bois and the Chicago School Pragmatists. David W. Woods, Fordham University Where the Action Is: How Physical Structure Affects the Use of Small Public Spaces. Colin Jerolmack, Graduate Center, City University of New York “Easton: A 21st Century (R)evolution in Urbanism.” J. Michael Ryan, University of Maryland, College Park 3. Affluent Neighborhoods and Segregation Presider: Ray Hutchison, University of Wisconsin, Green Bay Suburban Growth and the Spatial Segregation of the Affluent in the United States, 1980-2000. Rachel E. Dwyer, The Ohio State University Behind the Golden Door: Affluent Neighborhoods in Major Metropolitan Areas, 1990-2000. Matthew C. Marlay, Pennsylvania State University 4. Social Networks and Poverty Presider: Jennifer A. Stoloff, US Department of Housing and Urban Development Search Mismatch: An Exploratory Analysis of Job Search Strategies among Low-Income Black Women. Kristin Elizabeth Turney, University of Pennsylvania Friends, Jobs, and Moving to Opportunity. Susan E. Clampet-Lundquist, Princeton University; Rebecca Joyce Kissane, Lafayette College Urban Poverty, Household Strategies and Coping with Urban Life in Dhaka City, Bangladesh. Shahadat Hossain, The University of New South Wales 5. Space, Networks, and Behavior Presider: Krista Jenkins, University of Pennsylvania Living in a Bubble: Social Control and Protection of Suburban Teenagers through Spatial Organization. Yuki Kato, University of California, Irvine Cutting Known Social Capital: The Key to Success for ExInmates. Jodie Marie Dewey, Concordia University Sex and the Unspoken in Male Street Prostitution. Kerwin Kaye, New York University 6. Migration, Mobility, and Areal Impacts Presider: Elena Vesselinov, University of South Carolina Segregation and Residential Mobility in a Southern City, 1900-1930. Regina M. Bures, University of Florida Prosperity, Immigration and Neighborhood Change in Silicon Valley, 1990-2000. Vern Baxter, University of New Orleans Explaining Churn: Mass Society, Social Capital, and Community Turbulence. Delores A. Forbes-Edelen, University of Central Florida 7. Neighborhood Diversity and Discrimination Presider: Jeffrey M. Timberlake, University of Cincinnati The New Patterns of Neighborhood Diversity and Racial Segregation in the American Metropolis. Juan Onésimo Sandoval, Northwestern University Cybersegregation: Is Neil Kelly a More Desirable Tenant than Tyrone Jackson or Jorge Rodriguez? Samantha Friedman, Northeastern University; Gregory D. Squires, George Washington University 8. Urban Collective Resistence Presider: Leslie Martin, Boise State University Social Capital and Ordinary Social Movement in Urban China. Shi Fayong, National University of Singapore We’re Here and We’re Not Leaving: the Role of CulturalRelevant Framing in Anti-Gentrification Movements. June L. Gin, University of Michigan 9. Gentrification and Neighborhood Development Presider: Lance Freeman, Columbia University Gentrification and Community. Daniel Monroe Sullivan, Portland State University Making sense and marking ground: Black and White police officers as spatial entrepreneurs. David Charles Schalliol, University of Chicago 10. Visions of the Larger Community Presider: Suzanne B. Maurer, Kutztown University Rural Mountain Natives and In-Migrants and the “Cultural Divide.” Kathleen M. Brennan and Christopher Cooper, Western Carolina University Monday, August 15, 10:30 a.m. Of Place and Purpose: Competing Visions of Community in the Nonprofit Sector. Emily A. Barman, Boston University 11. Globalization and World Cities Presider: Heather A. Hofmeister, Otto-Friedrich-Universitaet Bamberg From Deindustrialization to Global Economic Integration: How Rust Belt Cities Adapt to the New Economy. George Hobor, University of Arizona World Cities and National Urban System in China. Xiulian Ma, University of Utah The Impact of Globaliztion on Local Communities. Robyn Bateman Driskell and Larry Lyon, Baylor University 12. Community Case Studies Presider: Maggie Kusenbach, University of South Florida “Helping the Homeless for Better or Worse: Political Implications of Social Services.” John C. Kilburn, Texas A&M International University Is Privatization in Welfare Provision Really That New? A Case Study of Homeless and Relief Services in New York City: 1920s and 1990s. Deirdre A. Oakley, Northern Illinois University Volunteer Government. Albert Hunter, Northwestern University Coordinating Action and Reproducing Segregation in a Heterogeneous Neighborhood. Jolyon S. Wurr, University of Chicago 13. Place Identity and Neighborhood Perceptions Presider: Richard D. Lloyd, Vanderbilt University Bridging the Divide: Modeling the Material and Ideational Elements of Place. Christopher D. Campbell, University of Washington Changes in Neighborhood Prestige Perception among TelAviv-Jaffa Residents. Yona none Ginsberg and Tzpi Hornik, Bar-Ilan University, Israel Food and Nostalgia in Singapore Night Markets. Lisa Bee Fong Lim, National University of Singapore 424. Section on Comparative Historical Sociology Authors Meet Critics Session. Remaking Modernity: Politics, History and Sociology (Duke University Press, 2004) Philadelphia Marriott, Liberty Salon B Organizer and Presider: Richard Lachmann, University at Albany, State University of New York Panelists: Andrew Abbott, University of Chicago Mounira Maya Charrad, The University of Texas at Austin James Mahoney, Brown University Jack A. Goldstone, George Mason University Discussants: Julia P. Adams, Yale University Elisabeth S. Clemens, University of Chicago Ann Shola Orloff, Northwestern University 167 425. Section on Latino/a Sociology Refereed Roundtables and Business Meeting Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth B 10:30-11:30am, Roundtables: Organizers: Maria Cristina Morales, University of Nevada Las Vegas; Cristina Morales, University of Nevada-Las Vegas 1. Acculturation and Integration Cultural and Acculturation Differences in the Self Esteem of Latino Youth. Mark F. Schmitz, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey The Effects of Immigration on Religion among Three Generations of Dominican and Puerto Rican Women. Stefan Bosworth, Hostos Community College; Rosie Soy, Hudson County Community College Rurality, Acculturation and Adolescent Physical Illness: Are Children of the Growing Rural Latino Population at Excess Health Risk? K.A.S. Wickrama, Iowa State University 2. Ethnic Identity I What Race Am I? Change in Racial Choice among Hispanic Adolescents. Elizabeth Vaquera and Jamie Mihoko Doyle, University of Pennsylvania Looking Backward and Forward: Mexican-American Ethnic Identity in the United States. David Joseph Piacenti, Western Michigan University 3. Ethnic Identity II Narrative Identities and Processes of Identification among Mexican Protestants on the U.S.-Mexico Border. Pablo Vila, Temple University The Puerto Rican Parade and How Much It Tells Us about the Community. Raul Diaz, Illinois Department of Public Health Time, Culture and Identity in Cross Cultural Latin Societies. Carlos Rabasso, Rouen Graduate School of Management; Javier Rabasso, Rouen Graduate School of Management 4. Gender and Sexuality I Body Image and Latinas: A Comparative Study. Mercedes Rubio, American Sociological Association; Nieves Rubio, Kern County Department of Mental Health; Colwick Mervyn Wilson, Loma Linda University Common Ground: Poetry’s Implications for a United Latina Feminist Identity. Colleen Cain, University of Florida Latina Adolescent Sexual Subjectivity and Safe Sex. Lorena Garcia, University of California, Santa Barbara Mujeres de Carácter: The Strong Women of Cuba. Bronwen Lichtenstein, Bridget Abboud, Stanley Brodsky, and Amy Oakes, University of Alabama 5. Gender and Sexuality II Activo/Pasivo and Gay Mexican Male Homosexualities: A 168 Monday, August 15, 10:30 a.m. Session 425, continued Social Class Analysis. James Paul Thing, University of Southern California Perceptions of Masculinity and Machimso: An examination of Latino Day Laborers and Mexican American Middle Class Men. Juan Manuel Pitones, University of California, Riverside 6. Immigration and Migration Why Move? Do We Move? An Analysis of Migration Patterns for Mexican, Puerto Ricans, and Cubans. Gabriel Aquino, Skidmore College “Brown Flight”: Secondary Settlement among Mexican Immigrants. Carlos Garcia, Western Illinois University 7. Pioneers Joan Moore: Adaptation and Enhancement of the Chicago School Tradition. Avelardo Valdez, University of Houston Latina/o Sociology Pioneers: Joan Moore and the Underclass Debate. William Velez, University of Wisconsin, Madison Un Pionero en Chicano Studies: Ernesto Galarza, the Bracero Program, and Organizing Farm Workers in California. Roberto M. De Anda, Portland State University 8. Policy Implications Mandates without Means: Welfare Reform and Household Survival in the Rio Grande Valley of Texas. Mark Harry Harvey, University of Wisconsin, Madison Critical Mass and the Latino Vote. Mindy S. Romero, University of California, Davis Samuel Huntington: From a “Clash of Civilizations” to “Internal Colonialism.” Jorge A. Capetillo, University of Massachusetts Security and Racialization: A Case Study of the US-Mexico Border Region after 9/11. Cassie Alison Newby, New Mexico State University 9. Potpourri A Multilevel Study of Living Arrangements among Native and Foreign-Born Latino Couples. Jacqueline Olvera, Connecticut College Significance of Space, Race and Class among 3rd+ Generation Mexican Americans in Los Angeles. Cynthia Duarte, Columbia University The Social Organization of a Drug Robbery: An Ethnographic Account. Randol Contreras, Graduate Center of the City University of New York 10. Social Economic Mobility Puerto Ricans in the Northeast: Explanations for Their Decline in Socioeconomic Status. Gilbert Marzan, Bronx Community College Trends in Hispanic-white Achievement Differences. Spyros Konstantopoulos, Northwestern University; Larry Hedges, University of Chicago A Comparison of High School Dropout Patterns among Select Latino Youth in the New York Metropolitan Area, 2000. Ronald J. Flores, St. Lawrence University English Non-fluency and Income Penalty for Hispanic Workers. Song Yang, University of Arkansas 11. Potpourri II Segmented and Socioeconomic Assimilation among Mexicans in the Southwest. Zulema Valdez, Texas A&M University 11:30am-12:10pm, Business Meeting 426. Section on Science, Knowledge and Technology Invited Session. Science, Ingenuity, and Social Order: Research as a Commercial and Administrative Engine Philadelphia Marriott, Liberty Salon A Organizer and Presider: Michael Lynch, Cornell University Modern Engineering Culture and the Co-Production of Science and Governance. Patrick Eamonn Carroll, University of California Davis Administrative Science: The Management of Objectivity and the Objectivity of Management. Michael Lynch, Cornell University Instrumental Communitities and the Commercialization of Knowledge. Cyrus Cawas Maneck Mody, Cornell University Discussant: Kelly Moore, Brooklyn College 427. Section on Economic Sociology Paper Session. The Organization of Markets Philadelphia Marriott, Room 401-402 Organizer: Timothy J. Dowd, Emory University Presider: Matthew E. Archibald, Emory University Do Firms and Markets Look Different? Repeat Collaboration in the Feature Film Industry, 1935-1995. Ezra W. Zuckerman, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Chinese Film Industry in the Reform Era: Emergence, Structure, and Transformation of the Field of Cultural Production Since 1978. Seio Nakajima, University of California, Berkeley Disputes into Identities: Analyzing the Discursive Competition of Market Actors. Sophie Muetzel, Humboldt Universitiy of Berlin Spatial Effects in the Market for Youth Services. Joseph Galaskiewicz, University of Arizona; Olga V. Mayorova, Paola Molina, Joy Inouye, and Sarah Lauro, University of Arizona The Social Construction of Free Trade: The European Union, 169 Monday, August 15, 10:30 a.m. NAFTA, and Mercosur. Francesco Giovanni Duina, Bates College 11:30 am Meetings Section on Ethnomethodology and Conversation Analysis Business Meeting (to 12:10pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Room 403 Section on History of Sociology Business Meeting (to 12:10pm) — Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Anthony Section on Latina/o Sociology Business Meeting (to 12:10pm) — Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth B Section on Sociology of Population Business Meeting (to 12:10pm) — Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Tubman 12:30 pm Plenary 428. Plenary Session. The Shifting Political Terrain Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Millennium Hall Organizer and Presider: Troy Duster, New York University Speaker: Kevin Phillips, Author, Wealth and Democracy Panel: Patricia Hill Collins, University of Cincinnati Arlie Hochschild, University of California, Berkeley Continuing the theme that the country is experiencing notable seismic shifts in the political sphere, Kevin Phillips will add his current thinking to this topic. From The Southern Strategy to American Dynasty, Phillips has been one of the more astute and provocative analysts of the last four decades, and always provides a wide socio-historical overview. Patricia Hill Collins and Arlie Hochschild will contribute to this session by adding some of their own sociological commentary, placing the discussion in situated socio-historical contexts. 2:30 pm Meetings 2007 Program Committee (to 4:10pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Room 302 Committee on Awards (to 4:10pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Room 308 Honors Program Briefing on Career Options (to 4:10pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Room 310 Section Officers with the Committee on Sections (to 4:10pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon L Spivack Program in Applied Social Research Advisory Panel (to 4:10pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Conference Suite II 2:30 pm Sessions 429. Thematic Session. Explaining Racial Variations in Educational Achievement Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington A Organizer and Presider: Caroline Hodges Persell, New York University Everyday Race-Making in Schools. Amanda Evelyn Lewis, University of Illinois at Chicago This Is the House that Jim Crow Built: Placement and Course-Taking Patterns among Black and White Students. Karolyn Tyson, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Stereotypes and the Fragility of Competence, Motivation, and Self-Concept. Joshua Aronson, New York University Race, Educational Achievement, and the Importance of Place. Vincent J. Roscigno, Ohio State University This panel brings together some of the people doing important quantitative and qualitative research on racial variations in educational achievement, to see how insights from various perspectives might be combined into a more inclusive sociological model to explain the racial variation in educational achievement. 170 Monday, August 15, 2:30 p.m. 430. Thematic Session. From Old Empire to New? Sociological Aspects of the Euro-American Rift Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon I Organizer and Presider: John C. Torpey, University of British Columbia The Euro-American Rift as Cultural Estrangement. Thomas Cushman, Wellesley College Old Europe, New Europe, Core Europe: Introspection in the Mirror of Transatlantic Relations. Daniel Levy, Stony Brook University, State University of New York Tocqueville Rides Again: the Question of American Exceptionalism Revisited. John C. Torpey, University of British Columbia Discussant: Miguel Centeno, Princeton University This session will examine the growing tension in recent years between the US and (especially western) European publics since the end of the cold war, and particularly since the Iraq war. Participants will consider the extent to which recent tensions are the product of contemporary policies or are more deeply rooted in peculiarities of the American scene relative to its reference group societies. We will also explore the question of whether the contemporary United States can usefully be regarded as an “empire,” and exactly what that may mean. 431. Thematic Session. Media Cultures I Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth C Organizer and Presider: Ronald A. Lembo, Amherst College Panelists: Thomas G. Streeter, University of Vermont Herman S. Gray, University of California, Santa Cruz Andrea Press, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign David W. Livingstone, University of Toronto Discussant: Ronald A. Lembo, Amherst College This session will focus on three aspects of media cultures that have informed scholarship over the years and examine them in the contemporary era of increasingly global, corporate media: (1) inter-related structural changes-in ownership, markets, technology, law, and policy— that shape both the form and content of media output and everyday use; (2) normalizing functions of media institutions that enable and constrain certain kinds of communication and produce particular patterns of representation; (3) meaningful practices that emerge from everyday media use. 432. Centennial Session. The Impact of Large Data Resources on Sociology Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington B Organizer: Tom W. Smith, NORC Presider: Peter V. Marsden, Harvard University The Symbiosis of the GSS and Sociology. Tom W. Smith, NORC PSID: New Directions as an Infrastructural Resource for Research and Teaching. Ngina Chiteji, Skidmore College; Frank Stafford, University of Michigan; Jean Yeung, New York University Household Surveys from the Bureau of Labor Statistics: THeir Role in Sociological Research. Steve Henderson, Diane Herz, Polly A. Phipps, US Bureau of Labor Statistics The American Community Survey: New Data for Tracking Trends. Robert Kominski, US Bureau of the Census 433. Author Meets Critics Session. The Time Divide: Work, Family, Gender Inequality (Harvard University Press, 2004) by Jerry A. Jacobs and Kathleen Gerson Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon A Organizers: Jacquelyn Litt, University of Missouri, Columbia; Pamela Stone, Hunter College, City University of New York Presider: Pamela Stone, Hunter College, City University of New York Critics: Jennifer L. Glass, University of Iowa Sharon Hays, University of Virginia Eviatar Zerubavel, Rutgers University Authors: Jerry A. Jacobs, University of Pennsylvania Kathleen Gerson, New York University 434. Regional Spotlight Session. CommunityBased Research in Philadelphia Philadelphia Marriott, Room 304 Organizer and Presider: Douglas V. Porpora, Drexel University The Philadelphia Open Borders Project. Manuel Portillo, Open Borders Project; Magali Sarfatti-Larson, Temple University Community Needs Assessment with Episcopal Community Services. Lori Medica, Episcopal Community Services; Wesley Shumar, Drexel University The Philadelphia Higher Education Network for Neighborhood Development. Hillary Aisenstein, Philadelphia Higher Education Network Monday, August 15, 2:30 p.m. 435. Academic Workshop. Sociology and General Education: Can We Do Better? Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon K Organizer: Diane Pike, Augsburg College Leaders: Diane Pike, Augsburg College Robert K. Shelly, Ohio University Few educational decisions garner as much attention, commitment and heartache as general education. In this participatory workshop, we examine some of the major issues involved in general education: organizational type and size, common core curricula versus menu/ cafeteria, and institutional processes understood from organizational theory perspectives. Of particular focus is the role of sociology within the curriculum—specific niches and models of engagement to advance the discipline. Presentation, large and small group discussion/activities, and handouts are included. 436. Career Workshop. Career Paths Outside the Academy (co-sponsored by the ASA Section on Sociological Practice) Philadelphia Marriott, Room 414 Organizer: Leora Lawton, TechSociety Research Presider: Estelle Disch, University of Massachusetts Boston Panelists: Cristina Bodinger de Uriarte, California State University, Los Angeles Alice Kroliczak, Health Resources and Services Admin Mathew E. Sloan, Mathematica Policy Research Margaret M. Mueller, Leo J. Shapiro & Associates The Workshop on Career Paths Outside the Academy will feature panelists who will discuss: 1) their insights on what knowledge, skills and abilities a sociologist needs which they may not have been exposed to in their sociological education; 2) how attendees could acquire those knowledge, skills, and abilities; 3) what (from their experience) nonacademic career paths would look like. The panelists will provide attendees with a set of resources and/or references. After the workshop, attendees should have a better feel for what they need to do to enhance their non-academic employment potential and performance. 437. Professional Workshop. Fundamentals of Program Evaluation Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Anthony Organizer and Leader: Stephen F. Steele, Anne Arundel Community College 438. Professional Workshop. Teaching as a Calling: Developing Effective Ways of Teaching Philadelphia Marriott, Room 412 Organizer: Susan D. Rose, Dickinson College Panelists: Charles A. Gallagher, Georgia State University Samuel Martell Richards, Pennsylvania State University Susan D. Rose, Dickinson College This workshop will open up a discussion of Effective Ways of 171 Teaching, how to engage students in integrative and community-based learning, and offer strategies for engaging students in the exploration and examination of sensitive issues such as race, class, and gender. Samples of syllabi, assignments, and video documentaries will be used to ground the discussion. Faculty guiding the workshop come from large universities (Penn State and Georgia State) and a small, highly selective liberal arts college (Dickinson). Audience participation will be encouraged. Participants are invited to bring syllabi of their own to share with others. 439. Research Workshop. NCOVR Web-Based Data Resources: Introduction to Data Cubes Philadelphia Marriott, Room 408 Organizers and Leaders: Jacqueline Cohen and Pat Edgar, Carnegie Mellon University The Data Center of the National Consortium on Violence Research (NCOVR) provides web access to a number of data collections relating to violent offending and victimization. Available data include: UCR police offense and arres data, SHR homicide reports, NIBRS incident-based data, NCVS victimization data, and Census data for 1980, 1990 and 2000. Two web-based tools provide access to data. Oracle’s Discoverer adhoc query tool allows users to customize extract files. Cognos Powerplay provides flexible access to structured data “cubes.” Users can aggregate or disaggregate data and focus on particular areas of interest with only an internet connection and standard web browser. The workshop will introduce potenial users to available data cubes and provide instruction on how to use the web-based query tools with illustrations from the various data collections. 440. Teaching Workshop. Incorporating Problem-Based Learning Into the Classroom Philadelphia Marriott, Room 409 Organizers and Leaders: Jamie Mullaney, Goucher College; Janet Hinson Shope, Goucher College Problem-Based Learning (PBL) is a pedagogical approach that uses alternatives to traditional methods of teaching in order to help students learn to think critically and analytically. In contrast to traditional, lecture-based, instructor-guided methods, PBL asks students to be responsible for various stages of their own learning. By examining a realworld problem, students identify for themselves what issues are important, how various perspectives/ disciplines deal with such issues, and potential solutions to the problem. For this workshop, we will discuss how to design PBL problems. In addition to providing PBL examples from our own courses, we will address how to tailor PBLs for a variety of course levels and topics. We will discuss our experience using PBLs in the classroom, student responses to the method, as well as the problems faced (e.g., how to assess progress, issues of group work). 441. Teaching Workshop. Integrating Queer Studies in the Sociology Curriculum Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Tubman Organizers: Erin Calhoun Davis, Antioch College; Karin E. Peterson, University of North Carolina at Asheville 172 Monday, August 15, 2:30 p.m. Session 441, continued Panel: Keith Bramlett, University of North Carolina, Asheville Erin Calhoun Davis, Antioch College Karin E. Peterson, University of North Carolina at Asheville Heather Laine Talley, Vanderbilt University Queer studies as an interdisciplinary perspective presents sociologists with new approaches to thinking about constructionism, identity, difference and Inequality, social control, and politics. This workshop explores the extent to which queer studies can both challenge and enhance sociological insights, particularly within the undergraduate curriculum. It is especially designed for those interested in beginning to integrate queer scholarship into course content. While queer theories and perspectives are (sometimes) addressed in sexuality of heteronormativity, social regulation, diverse identities and experiences, and changing cultural meanings and politics can enrich the study of sociology in a broader range of courses. This is an interactive workshop. After workshop leaders and participants share their own attempts to integrate the insights and approaches of queer scholarship into their courses, the group will reflect on the benefits, the challenges, and the negotiation of integration. Some issues to be addressed include: the implications of understanding the interconnections of sexuality, gender, race, class, and disability; rethinking the body of sociological knowledge; course development; pedagogical considerations; dealing with unprepared and/or resistant students; and the implications of asking students to think against the grain. 442. Teaching Workshop. Teaching Criminology (cosponsored by the Section on Crime, Law, and Deviance) Philadelphia Marriott, Room 413 Organizer: Scott Allen Desmond, Purdue University Leaders: Scott Allen Desmond, Purdue University J. William Spencer, Purdue University The workshop will cover many different aspects of teaching criminiology. Topics that will be covered in the workshop include different approaches to structuring and organizing a criminology course, suggestions for textbooks and supplemental reading materials, classroom exercises, writing assignments, and eucational and feature films that can be used in criminology courses. Although the workshop will be most beneficial to novice instructors who are teaching the course for the first time, those who have previously taught criminology should also find the workshop useful for improving their courses. 443. Teaching Workshop. Teaching about the Holocaust, Genocide, and Human Rights Philadelphia Marriott, Room 410 Organizer: Peter J. Stein, William Paterson University Panelists: William I. Brustein, University of Pittsburgh Rachel L. Einwohner, Purdue University Anthony Oberschall, University of North Carolina Suzanne Vromen, Bard College Valerie Sperling, Clark University 444. Informational Poster Session. Graduate Programs in Sociology II Philadelphia Marriott, Franklin Hall Organizer: Victoria Kelly Hougham, American Sociological Association Second chance! Graduate programs will display information describing their programs, special emphases, financial aid and admissions criteria, and opportunities to work with faculty researchers and instructors. Department representatives will be on hand to answer questions from undergraduate students and their advisors, MA students looking to pursue a PhD, and other interested parties. Some departments will bring information and admission packets to distribute to attendees. Participating departments and their poster numbers are: University of Arizona (15) Arizona State University (38) Baylor University (22) Bowling Green State University (34) Brown University (37) University of California, Irvine (16) University of California, Santa Cruz (31) University of Central Florida (13) University of Cincinnati (6) Clemson University (12) University of Colorado-Boulder (29) University of Connecticut (27) Duke University (10) Fordham University (33) University of Hawaii (36) Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (7) Johns Hopkins University (24) Kent State University (35) Loyola University Chicago (18) University of Maryland-College Park (14) University of Maryland, Consortium on Race, Gender, and Ethnicity (40) Michigan State University (9) University of Minnesota, Twin Cities (30) University of Nebraska-Lincoln (28) University of Nevada, Reno (32) University of New Hampshire (19) University of North Carolina, Charlotte (4) North Carolina State University (3) Northern Arizona University (2) University of Notre Dame (39) University of North Florida (17) Ohio State University, Department of Sociology (20) University of Pennsylvania (26) Pennsylvania State University (21) Queens College, City University of New York (25) San Diego State University (5) Monday, August 15, 2:30 p.m. Temple University (8) Texas Woman’s University (1) Utah State University (11) Wayne State University (23) 445. Research Poster Session. Communicating Sociology Philadelphia Marriott, Franklin Hall Organizer: Jeffrey Chin, Le Moyne College 9. Alcohol Use and Place of Birth: A Study of the US Immigrant Population. Magdalena Szaflarski, University of Cincinnati; Lisa A. Cubbins, Battelle Seattle Research Center 10. Alcohol Use and Students’ Residence Distance from School at a Largely Commuter-based School. Brian W. Ward, University of Maryland, Baltimore County 11. Historical Ethnography and the Problem of Bias. John Holian, Cuyahoga Community College 12. Developing an Open Source Sociology “Wiki.” Alexander Brian Goldman, University of Florida 13. The Rising Significance of a Visual Sociology: A Critical Examination of Criminal Justice/Social Justice. Susan R. Takata, University of Wisconsin, Parkside; Jeanne Curran, CSU-Dominguez Hills 14. Drawing Spinal Cord Injury: The Intersection of Visual and Narrative Methodologies. Katherine Lee Cross-Dunn, Wayne State University; Allison Kabel, Wayne State University; Cathy Lysack, Wayne State University 15. Learning to Live with OCD. Dana Fennell, University of Florida; Ana Liberato Pomeroy, University of Florida 16. Latinos and Disaster Mitigation. Anthony A. Peguero, University of Miami 17. Is the Example Effect Shaping America’s Ancestries: Taking a Look at the Ancestry Question Then and Now. Patricia de la Cruz, U.S. Census Bureau 18. The Impact of Attitudes, Social Context, and Sociodemographic Characteristics on Teenage Fatherhood. Meredith J. Porter, Bowling Green State University 19. Making the Transition from Cohabitation: Competing Risks of Marriage and Separation. Matthew E. Loyd, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill 20. Marriage Secrets Revealed: 1267 Adults Provide Propitious Perspectives to Living Happily Ever After. Elizabeth A. Duffy, private researcher 21. Familial Interdependence, Pregnancy, and Condom Use in Latino and Anglo Women. Roque Mendez, Texas State University; Debarun Majumdar, Texas State University, San Marcos 173 22. Differences in Relative Commute Time between Heterosexual and Homosexual Couples. Danielle G. MacCartney, University of California, Irvine 23. What Else Matters? Moderators of the Link between Education and Participation in Voluntary Associations. Ann K. Pikus, University of Wisconsin, Madison; Carol Ryff, University of Wisconsin, Madison; Gary D. Sandefur, University of Wisconsin, Madison 445D. Informal Discussion Roundtables III Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon F Organizer: Ralph B. McNeal, Jr., University of Connecticut 1. The Raping of Uprooted Women and Girls in War-torn States. Kathryn Farr, Portland State University 2. Youth, Labor Market Participation, and Working Class. Nogman Kilicalp, Middle East Technical University 3. Be It Therefore Resolved: Professional Organizations and the Role of Advocate. Melissa S. Embser-Herbert, Hamline University 4. The Browning of America, or the Expansion of Whiteness and the Black/Nonblack Divide? Eileen O’Brien, University of Richmond 5. Tourism and Economic Health in Rural Communities. Alexander Thomas, State University of New York College at Oneonta; Polly Smith, Utica College 6. Expanding Research on Imprisoned Women. Katherine Kramer and Ana Campos, University of Iowa 7. Reform of the Liberal Arts Curriculum. Leslie Killgore, College of the Holy Cross 8. The Down Low: Critical Intersections in Risk among the Men Who Have Sex with Men (MSM) Community. John Barnshaw, University of North Carolina, Charlotte 9. Differences between Chicano and Mexican Internal Migration Patterns. Gabriel Aquino, Skidmore College 10. Teaching Criminology and/or Sociology of Deviance. Christine Plumeri, Monroe Community College 11. The Relationship between Incidence of Diabetes and Lifestyle: A Sociological Perspective. Xuanping Zhang, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 12. Gender Differences in the Process of Ethnic Identity Construction among Second-generation Chinese American Youth. Baozhen Luo, Georgia State University 13. Cancelled. 14. Legal Consciousness and Social Change. Nehal Patel, Northwestern University 15. Teaching and Researching International Comparative Sociology and Public Policy. Heather Hofmeister, Otto- 174 Monday, August 15, 2:30 p.m. Session 445D, continued Friedrich University, Bamberg; Noelle Chesley, University of Minnesota 446. Student Session. Preserving Mental Health While Responding to Adversity: Lifecourse, Identity, and Resilience Philadelphia Marriott, Room 303 Organizer: Tony N. Brown, Vanderbilt University Presider: Portia Lynne Cole, Morgan State University Unlocking the Relationship between Childhood Maltreatment and Adult Health Care Utilization. Shalon MauRene Irving, Purdue University A Life at Risk: Black Women Surviving Cancer. Lashaune Patrice Johnson, University of California Remembering Racism: A Cohort Analysis of Perceived Discrimination. Anthony Ryan Hatch, University of Maryland, College Park To Be a Man: An Investigation of Masculinity Ideology and Men\’s Family Roles among and within African-American, Anglo-American, and Mexican-American Families. Rashawn Jabar Ray, Indiana University, Bloomington Discussant: Samuel Noh, University of Toronto 447. Regular Session. Adolescent Peer and Romantic Relationships Philadelphia Marriott, Independence Salon I Organizer and Presider: Ann Meier, University of Minnesota Do You Like Me as Much as I Like You? Friendship Reciprocity among Adolescents. Elizabeth Vaquera, University of Pennsylvania; Grace Kao, Exploring the Dimensions of Adolescent Popularity. Casey A. Borch, University of Connecticut; C. Dudley Girard, Shippensburg University; Antonius Cillessen, University of Connecticut Of “Bad Girls” and “Band Geeks”: The Criteria of High School Peer Status. Derek Allen Kreager, University of Washington Scripting Romance in Adolescence: Preferences and Predictors in the Sequencing of Ideal Dating Relationships. Anthony Paik and Vernon Anthony Woodley, University of Iowa Discussant: Kara Joyner, Cornell University 448. Regular Session. Classic and Emergent Topics in Medical Sociology Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Congress B Organizer and Presider: Adele E. Clarke, University of California, San Francisco Medical Research for Hire: Gender and the Privatization of Clinical Trials. Jill A. Fisher, Arizona State University General Racial Attitudes and Attitudes toward Doctor Race. Jennifer Malat, University of Cincinnati; David Purcell, University of Cincinnati; Michelle Van Ryn, University of Minnesota A Content Analysis of Social Science and Medicine. Jeffrey Michael Clair, Cullen Clark, Brian Philip Hinote, Caroline O. Robinson, and Jason Adam Wasserman, University of Alabama at Birmingham Difficult, Dysfunctional, and Drug-Dependent: The Roles of Structure and Agency in Physician Perceptions of Indigent Patients. Heidi Chirayath, Bates College 449. Regular Session. Comparative Sociology Philadelphia Marriott, Room 407 Organizer and Presider: Neil Brenner, New York University Cities as the New Spaces for Citizenship Claims: Movements for Urban Democracy in Brazil, Mexico, and South Africa in the 1990s. Gianpaolo Baiocchi and Sofia Checa, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Comparative Efforts: Taking the Mediterranean as a Context. Natalia Ribas-Mateos, Marseille, France Comparisons, Conceptual Transferences and the Globalization of Exclusion through Housing. Judit Bodnar, Central European University Trust in Institutions of Democracy during Transition to Democracy: The Cases of South Africa and Hungary. Yunus Kaya, Duke University Discussant: Julian Go, Boston University 450. Regular Session. Cross-National Perspectives on WorkFamily Policies and Effects Philadelphia Marriott, Room 306 Organizer: Miliann Kang, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Presider: Jeremy E. Reynolds, University of Georgia Employment, Wages, and Poverty: Reconciliation Policies and Gender Equity. Joya Misra and Michelle J. Budig, University of Massachusetts; Stephanie Moller, University of North Carolina at Charlotte The Role of Family for Wages and Careers: Lessons from the Family-Friendly Corner of the World. Trond Petersen and Andrew Penner, University of California, Berkeley; Geir Hogsnes, University of Oslo Economic Crisis and Family Distress in Turkey. Isik Aytac, Bogazici University; Bruce Rankin, Koc University Still Specialized? Cross-national Trends in the Division of Household Labor, 1965-1998. Jennifer L. Hook, University of Washington Monday, August 15, 2:30 p.m. 451. Regular Session. Education through the Life Course Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Congress A Organizer: Annette Lareau, University of Maryland, College Park; Kim Goyette, Temple University Presider: Regina Deil-Amen, Pennsylvania State University Framing the Future: The Development and Meaning of Educational Expectations among Urban Youth. Karl Alexander, Johns Hopkins University; Robert Bozick, RTI International; Doris R. Entwisle, Johns Hopkins University; Susan L. Dauber, Spencer Foundation; Kerri A. Kerr, RAND What Gets Left Behind: Effects of Middle School Relationships and the Transition to High School on 9th Grade Achievement. Amy Gill Langenkamp, The University of Texas at Austin High School Exit Examinations and Post-Secondary Labor Market Outcomes. John Robert Warren, University of Minnesota; Eric S. Grodsky, University of California; Jennifer C. Lee, University of Minnesota Different Paths, Different Destinations: A Life Course Perspective on Educational Transitions. Carolina Milesi, University of Wisconsin, Madison Discussant: Kimberly Ann Goyette, Temple University 452. Regular Session. Environmental Inequality Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon J Organizer and Presider: Marieke M. Van Willigen, East Carolina University Transnational Alliances and Global Politics: New Geographies of Urban Environmental Justice Struggles. David Pellow, University of California, San Diego Measuring Residential Proximity to Environmental Hazards: A New Approach. Liam Downey, University of Colorado Emissions of Common Anthropogenic Pollutants: A Quantitative, Cross-National Analysis. John M. Shandra, Stony Brook University, State University of New York; Bruce London, Clark University The Spread of Environmental Justice into Transportation Planning: A Chicago Case Study. Eric J. Petersen, RAND Europe Discussant: Marieke M. Van Willigen, East Carolina University 453. Regular Session. Health Policy Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Grand Salon II Organizer and Presider: Mary Ruggie, Harvard University State Political Beliefs and Economic Resources in Setting State Medicaid Hospital Reimbursement Policy. Mylinda Rochelle Willsey, Columbia University 175 Black and White Differences in Infant Mortality Risk: Focusing on the Impact of the States’ Income Inequalities and Medicaid Eligibility. Seung-Eun Song, University of Texas at Austin The Spread of Infectious Diseases and Effectiveness of Infection Control Practices in Child Care Settings. Rachel A. Gordon and Robert Kaestner, University of Illinois at Chicago; Sanders Korenman, Baruch College, City University of New York Considerations of Scale in Health Policy Studies: AIDS PolicyMaking in the United States and the United Kingdom. Tasleem Juana Padamsee, University of Michigan 454. Regular Session. Risk in Modern Society: Problems of Trust, Rationality, and Stratification Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington C Organizer: Lee Clarke, Rutgers University Presider: Audrey E. Devine-Eller, Rutgers University The Impact of Socio-Cultural Factors on Attitudes Toward Genetically Modified Food: Comparing Germany and the USA. John T. Lang, Rutgers University; Magdalena Sawicka and Hans Peter Peters, Research Centre Jülich Risk Balanced by Trust: Parental Perception of Vaccine Risks. Laura Senier, Brown University Atoms for Peace, Atoms for War: Probing the Paradoxes of Modernity. Margarita V. Alario, University of Wisconsin, Whitewater; William R. Freudenburg, University of California, Santa Barbara Structured Destruction: Social Stratification of Suffering in Disaster. Lee Clarke, Rutgers University Authors in this session are addressing questions that are central to theory and public policy. Why do people worry about some things rather than others? How should we think about how likely people are to suffer in disaster? In what ways is technology a double-edged sword? A lively discussion will likely follow the presentations. 455. Regular Session. Schooling and Work: The Children of Immigrants. Philadelphia Marriott, Liberty Salon C Organizer and Presider: Jimy M. Sanders, University of South Carolina Performance Gaps in Reading Literacy between Native and Immigrant Children: A Comparison of 14 Countries. Hyunjoon Park, University of Wisconsin, Madison Assimilation from What? The Origins of Immigrants and Mobility Patterns of the New Second Generation. Cynthia Feliciano, University of California, Irvine Persistence in School among California’s Immigrant Youth: The Impact of Generation Status. Deborah L. Garvey, Santa Clara University 176 Monday, August 15, 2:30 p.m. Session 455, continued Multiple-Logics of Labor Market Incorporation: Second Generation and Other Young New Yorkers in the Labor Market. Aviva Zeltzer-Zubida, Brooklyn College, City University of New York Discussant: Carl L. Bankston, Tulane University 456. Regular Session. Social Networks II Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon H Organizer: Douglas Heckathorn, Cornell University Presider: Denise L. Anthony, Dartmouth College Policy Diffusion under Uncertainty: Freedom-of-Access-toInformation Law among OECD countries. Fen Lin, University of Chicago; Tun Lin, University of Cambridge Dynamics of Networks If Everyone Strives for Structural Holes. Vincent W. Buskens, University of Utrecht, The Netherlands; Arnout van de Rijt, Cornell University Mapping Blauspace: The Use of Log-Multiplicative Models to Measure the Strength of Homophily. Matthew E. Brashears, University of Arizona The Cascading Benefits of Clusters: How Network Density Affects Tie Strength. S. S. Levine and Robert Kurzban, University of Pennsylvania A Structural Analysis of “Tipping Point”: The Effect of Social Structure on Cultural Dissemination. Min-Dong Lee and David Lifson, Cornell University 457. Regular Session. Social Theory Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon B Organizer and Presider: Kenneth H. Tucker, Mount Holyoke College Changing Perspectives on Individualism: Strong Selves and Personal Narratives. Robert Wuthnow, Princeton University The Discipline of Rankings: Accountability and the Transformation of Authority. Wendy Nelson Espeland and Michael Sauder, Northwestern University The Unhappy Marriage of Tocqueville and Social Capital: Scenes from Local Volunteering. Paul R. Lichterman, University of Southern California Towards a Pragmatist-inspired Proposal for Philosophy of Social Science. Patrick Baert, Cambridge University Discussant: Gianfranco Poggi, European University Institute 458. Regular Session. Sociology of Food Philadelphia Marriott, Independence Salon III Organizer and Presider: John M. Talbot, University of the West Indies Work and Family Meals: The Effect of Work Conditions on Family Meal Rituals. William Alex McIntosh, Cruz Torres, Karen Kubena, Jenna Anding, Rudy Nayga, and George Davis, Texas A&M University Doing Vegetarianism: Counter-Hegemonic Discourses and Pathways to Meat Avoidance. Samantha Kwan and Rachael Serena Neal, University of Arizona Memorias de México: Food and Food Memories in the Transmission of Mexicanidad. Tamara Casso, University of Texas at San Antonio How Food Consumes “the Child” in the Corporate Landscape of Fun: Commerce, Agency and Culture. Daniel Thomas Cook, University of Illinois 459. Regular Session. Sociology of Sexuality Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Adams Organizer and Presider: Betsy Lucal, Indiana University, South Bend Redefining and Measuring Sexual Revolution, with an Example from the USA, 1880-2000. Nathanael Lauster, University of Minnesota “Structures of Desire: Toward an Analysis of Modern Erotic Worlds.” Adam I. Green, York University Sexual Agency and Gender Subjectivity: Integrating Psychoanalytic and Interactionist Perspectives. Heather Powers Albanesi, University of Colorado at Colorado Springs Ties of Dependence: AIDS and Transactional Sex in Rural Malawi. Ann Swidler, University of California, Berkeley; Susan Cotts Watkins, University of Pennsylvania 460. Regular Session. Space and Place: Comparative Perspectives Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Congress C Organizer and Presider: Nancy Kleniewski, Bridgewater State College Gated Communities: The New Frontier of Urban Inequality in Metropolitan U.S.? Elena Vesselinov, University of South Carolina Slugs and Body Snatchers: Institutionalization, Strangers and Sociability. Jonathon E. Mote and Yuko Kurashina, University of Maryland Redevelopment a La Mexicana: Re-Making Mexican Public Space. Marcos F. Lopez, University of California, Santa Cruz The Global Division of Labour in Services: the Growth of the Call and Customer Contact Centre Industry in Singapore. Jennifer Jarman, National University of Singapore Discussant: Gregory D. Squires, George Washington University Monday, August 15, 2:30 p.m. 461. Regular Session. Strategy, Organizations, and Social Movements Philadelphia Marriott, Room 307 Organizer: Kenneth T. Andrews, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Presider: Elizabeth A. Armstrong, Indiana University Central Dilemmas for the Survival and Growth of Social Movement Organizations. Elizabeth Borland, The College of New Jersey Mobilization Routines in Environmental Movement Organizations: Matching Solutions to Problems. JoAnn Carmin, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Deborah B. Balser, University of Missouri, St. Louis Political Opportunity and Social Movement Emergence in the Creation of Alternative Health and Human Services. Matthew E. Archibald, Emory University The Organizational Development of the U.S. Environment Movement. Robert Brulle, Drexel University; Jason Thomas Carmichael, Ohio State University; Liesel Hall Turner, Drexel University; J. Craig Jenkins, Ohio State University Discussant: Elizabeth A. Armstrong, Indiana University 462. Regular Session. Studying Cultural Processes and Change Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth A2 Organizer: Elizabeth Long, Rice University The Return of the Spectacle? The Modern Execution Event in the United States. Annulla U.M. Linders and Stephan F. Groschwitz, University of Cincinnati From “Missing Girls” to America’s Sweethearts: White American Parental Ideologies and the Construction of Cultural Identity in Adopted Chinese Daughters. Leslie K. Wang, University of California, Berkeley Resistance and Transcendence in the Career of the Venice Beach Artist. Andrew Deener, University of California, Los Angeles Becoming through Dance. Helene M. Lawson, University of Pittsburgh-Bradford 463. Regular Session. Symbolic Interaction Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Grand Salon III-IV Organizer and Presider: Peter M. Hall, How to Be a Good Old Punk: Synthesizing Adult Identity in a Local Music Scene. Joanna R. Davis, University of California Symbolic Interaction in Public Political Discourse: Initial Construction of the War on Terror Symbolic World. Gordon C. Chang, and Hugh Mehan, University of California, San Diego 177 The Dynamic Past: History, Symbolic Interactionism, and the Study of Social Organization. Patrick J.W. McGinty, University of Missouri, Columbia Discussant: D. Angus Vail, Willamette University 464. Regular Session. The Arab World, the Arab Diaspora, and Arab-Americans: Perspectives on Identity Philadelphia Marriott, Room 305 Organizer and Presider: Kenneth K. Ayouby, Dearborn Public Schools Lebanese Diasporic Identities: Ethnic, Transnational, and Cosmopolitan. Dalia Abdel-Hady, Southern Methodist University Second Generation Arab Canadian Women: Issues of Acculturation and Identity in the Greater Toronto Area. Madona Mokbel, York University Second-Generation Palestinians living in the United States: Young Women Asserting Themselves. Randa Bassem Serhan, Columbia University Resources and Well-Being among Arab-American Elders. Kristine J. Ajrouch, Eastern Michigan University Discussant: Louise Cainkar, Univerisity of Illinois, Chicago 465. Regular Session. Topics in Mathematical Sociology Philadelphia Marriott, Liberty Salon A Organizer: Adrian C. Hayes, Australian National University Measuring Uneven Distribution: Conceptual and Practical Considerations for Segregation Studies. Mark A. Fossett, Texas A&M University Reformulating a Link between Social Influence Network Theory and Status Characteristics Theory. James Fisher Hollander, Texas Instruments Not the First Digit! Using Benford’s Law to Detect Fraudulent Data. Andreas Diekmann, ETH Zurich Mathematical Sociology Applied to Rural Economic Development Policy. John Angle, Economic Research Service, US Dept. of Agriculture 466. Section on Mathematical Sociology Paper Session. Hierarchy, Network, and Influence Philadelphia Marriott, Independence Salon II Organizer and Presider: John Skvoretz, University of South Florida A Wealth and Status-Based Model of Residential Choice. Stephen W. Benard, Cornell University Attachment hierarchies in networks. Joseph M. Whitmeyer, University of North Carolina, Charlotte; Rafael P.M. Wittek, University of Groningen Interdependent Sampling and Social Contagion. Jerker Denrell and Gael Le Mens, Stanford University The Parable of the Hare and the Tortoise: Network Structure of 178 Monday, August 15, 2:30 p.m. Session 466, continued Exploration and Exploitation. David Lazer and Allan Friedman, Harvard University 467. Section on Sociology of Law Paper Session. Legal Dynamics in the Economy/Economic Dynamics in the Law (co-sponsored with the Section on Economic Sociology) Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Grand Salon I Organizer and Presider: Mark C. Suchman, University of Wisconsin, Madison Origins of the Asymmetric Society: The Socio-Legal Construction of States and Markets in the United States and Canada. Jason Kaufman, Harvard University Rethinking the Employment Rights Revolution. John Sutton and Michael D. Bourgeois, University of California, Santa Barbara Taming the Market for Medical Information: “Sharing Is (S)Caring” on the Digital Frontier. Mark C. Suchman, Matthew David Dimick, and Karen S. Schaepe, University of Wisconsin, Madison The Legal Foundations of the U.S. Organic Food Market. Brandon Lee and Michael D. Lounsbury, Cornell University 468. Section on Racial and Ethnic Minorities Paper Session. Millennial Dialogues along the Racial Divide Philadelphia Marriott, Room 404 Organizer and Presider: Rodney D. Coates, Miami University A Bottom-up Southern Strategy for Power in the 21st Century: Freedom Is through the South. Walda Katz-Fishman, Howard University; Jerome Scott, Project South; Ralph C. Gomes, Howard University Brown Picket Fences: The Middle-Class Mexican Culture of Mobility. Jody Anne Agius and Jennifer Lee, University of California, Irvine Dialogues across the Racial Gulf. Rodney D. Coates, Miami University Race-ing and (E)race-ing the Child: Interracial Families Negotiate Racial Identification for their Multiracial Children. David L. Brunsma, University of Missouri, Columbia Racial Profiling, the War on Terror, and Democracy: Changing Trends and Perspectives. Abu Bakarr Bah, Northern Illinois University Second-Generation Laotians’ Political Imagination and the Prospects for Challenging Structures of Racial Difference. Bindi Shah, University College London What They Tell the Media: The Construction of Muslim American Identity in Newspaper Articles. Michelle D. Byng, Temple University 469. Section on Latino/a Sociology Paper Session. The Latino/a Experience in the U.S. Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth A1 Organizer and Presider: Edward Murguia, Texas A&M University The Youth Control Complex: Experiences of Criminalization among Chicano and African American Youth. Victor M. Rios, University of San Francisco Criminal Homicide among Mexican American Street Gang Members. Avelardo Valdez, The University of Houston Being Brown, Voting Red, Dreaming White: The Republican Lure of Racial Inclusion. Carleen R. Basler, Amherst College Generational Status and Mexican American Political-Participation: The Benefits and Limitations of Assimilation. Wayne Santoro and Gary Segura, University of Iowa The Cost of Being a Mexican Immigrant and Being a Mexican Non-Citizen: Some Empirical Evidence from Interaction Tests. Isao Takei and Rogelio Saenz, Texas A&M University Discussant: Edward E. Telles, University of California, Los Angeles 470. Section on Political Sociology Paper Session. Moving Beyond the Public-Private Dichotomy for Law and Social Policy? Philadelphia Marriott, Room 411 Organizer and Presider: Brian Gran, Case Western Reserve University A New Agenda for State-Society Relations or Politics as Usual? The Portuguese Experience with the Open Method of Coordination. Jesse Jerome Norris, University of Wisconsin, Madison Personal Privacy, Government Secrecy and the Rule of Law. Gerald M. Turkel, University of Delaware Policing Buildings, Streets, Stoops, and Bodies. Mary E. Pattillo, Northwestern University Shifting in Passage: Migrants, Marital Conflict, and the State. Elizabeth Heger Boyle, University of Minnesota Against the State, With the State, Within the State: The Risks of Being an NGO in a Context of Health Reform in Santiago and Montevideo. Javier Pereira Bruno, University of Texas at Austin Discussants: Mark Schlesinger, Yale University School of Medicine Robin Stryker, University of Minnesota How does “law” draw the line drawn between public and private social-policy responsibilities? Do socio-political actors use law to shift Monday, August 15, 2:30 p.m. responsibilities onto public or private institutions? This session presents five important papers that contend with issues of law and social policy for the public-private dichotomy. 471. Section on Ethnomethodology and Conversational Analysis Paper Session. Recent Research in Ethnmethodology and Conversation Analysis Philadelphia Marriott, Room 403 Organizer: Douglas W. Maynard, University of Wisconsin Presider: Candace West, University of California, Santa Cruz Indexing Stance: Reported Speech as an Interactional Evidential. Rebecca Jane Clift, University of Essex Conversation Analysis and the Duhem-Quine Thesis: The Case of Mobile Call Openings. Ilkka A.T. Arminen, University of Tampere Strategies of Adult Gossip. Tim Hallett, Indiana University; Brent D. Harger, Central Michigan University; Donna J. Eder, Indiana University Interaction and Collaborative Work in a Medical Emergency Dispatch Centre. Giolo Fele, University of Trento, Italy Discussant: Jack Whalen, Palo Alto Research Center 472. Section on Community and Urban Sociology Invited Session. 100 Years of U.S. Urban Sociology: What Difference Did It Make and How Can It Matter for the Future? Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon C Organizer: Harvey L. Molotch, New York University Presider: Mary E. Pattillo, Northwestern University Panelists: Martin Bulmer, University of Surrey Patricia Fernandez-Kelly, Princeton University Herbert J. Gans, Columbia University Harvey L. Molotch, New York University What has been the impact of US urban and community studies on the discipline as well as on urban policy in the US and abroad? What lessons can be applied to our future work given past omissions and commissions and the changing global context of urban life? 473. Section on Comparative and Historical Sociology Invited Session. Political Violence and Terrorism: Comparative Perspectives Philadelphia Marriott, Liberty Salon B Organizer and Presider: Jeff Goodwin, New York University Terrorism and Guerrilla War in Iraq. Michael Schwartz, Stony Brook University, State University of New York World-Systemic Limits on Revolution: The Case of Chechnya. Georgi M. Derluguian, Northwestern University Sexual Violence during War. Elisabeth Jean Wood, Yale University Dying without Killing: Protest by Self-Immolation. Michael 179 Biggs, University of Ilinois at Urbana-Champaign Discussant: Jeff Goodwin, New York University 474. Section on Economic Sociology Invited Session. Economic Sociology in the Next Decade and Beyond Philadelphia Marriott, Room 401-402 Organizer: Thomas D. Beamish, University of California, Davis Presider: Nicole Woolsey Biggart, University of California Davis Panelists: Richard Swedberg, Cornell University Viviana A. Zelizer, Princeton University Thomas D. Beamish, University of California, Davis Marion Fourcade-Gourinchas, University of California, Berkeley Ruth V. Aguilera, University of Illinois 475. Section on Science, Knowledge, and Technology (SKAT) Roundtables and Business Meeting Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon D 2:30-3:30pm, Roundtables: Organizer: Mary C. Ingram, University of California, Santa Barbara 1. Technologies and Users Employee Resistance to Enterprise Resource Planning Technologies. Deborah Vaughan, University of Washington Student Performance Enhancement in the Pharmaceutical Era: Exploring the Recreational Use of Ritalin/ Adderall. Meika E. Loe, Colgate University Cultures of Medicine: Perceptions of Magnetic Resonance Imaging Technology in Japan and the United States. Kelly A. Joyce, College of William & Mary 2. Knowledge Production Property, Presence, and Practice: Preliminary Research on IT and Instruction in Higher Education Settings. Jennifer L. Croissant, University of Arizona Technology Transfer of Chinese Universities: Forms and Implications. Wei Hong, University of Illinois at Chicago The Epistemology of Esoteric Knowledge. Martin Laubach, Marshall University Science, Media, and Fiction: Tracking Knowledge Production. Mary C. Ingram, University of California, Santa Barbara 3. Qualitative Research of Science Organizations Weather Forecasting in the IFPS Era; Paradigm Shifts, Carpet Bombings and Knobology. Phaedra Daipha, University of Chicago “Night of the Living Geek”: Gender, Technology, and Work in an Activist Setting. Christina Dunbar-Hester, 180 Monday, August 15, 2:30 p.m. Session 475, continued Cornell University An Ethnography of the Socio-Cultural Construction of the Kabbalah as Science, Mysticism, Philosophy, and/or Another System of Wisdom. J. Barry Gurdin, To Love and to Work: An Agency for Change; Michael Laitman, World Kabbalh Institute Contested Environmental Hazards in Corporate Policymaking and Public Disputes. Elaine Alma Draper, California State University, Los Angeles 4. Organizations Engineering the Iron Cage: Technology in Organizations Even Museums. Nicholas James Rowland and Fabio Rojas, Indiana University Social Organization of Work in Biomedical Research Labs: Socio-Historical Dynamics and the Influence of Research Funding. Annalisa Salonius, McGill University The Moral Order of Cyberspace. John Ellington Godard, Global and Local Determinants of Entrepreneurial Growth in India: Evidence from the Biotechnology Industry, 1980-present. Deepa Sarah George, Duke University 5. Science and Its Disciplines Academic Productivity, Coordinated Problem and Cultural Conflict in the scientific Collaboration Community. Chin-Chang Ho, Shu-Fen Tseng, and Hsin-i Huang, Yuan-Ze University Invitation to Astrosociology: Why the Sociologist-Space Enthusiast Should Consider It. Jim Pass, Long Beach City College and Astrosociology.com Social Networks, Social Capital and Success on R&D Projects. Polly Stephanova Rizova, Boston University Solar Sociology: A Research Agenda for the Renewable Energy Transition. Richard N. Hutchinson, Louisiana Tech University 6. Science and Its Disciplines II University Agricultural Biotechnology Research in the Context of Academic Capitalism. Dina Biscotti and William B. Lacy, University of California, Davis; Leland L. Glenna, Washington State University; Rick Welsh, Clarkson University Industry Collaboration and the Discipline of Academic Science: The Case of Arabidopsis Research, 19742003. James A. Evans, University of Chicago From Resources into Scientific Results: Comparative Analysis of Resource-related Results in Seven Disciplines. Osmo Kivinen, Juha Hedman, and Paivi Kaipainen, University of Turku 7. Science and Knowledge Production II Households Real and Conceptual: Population Enumeration in Japan since 1870. Jennifer A. Winther, University of California, Los Angeles Forbidden Knowledge: Mechanisms of Social Control in Science. Joanna Kempner, The University of Michigan; Jon Merz, University of Pennsylvania; Clifford Perlis, Brown University Medical School The Social Construction of GM Safety Scientists’ Research: Narratives and Boundaries. Peter T. Robbins, The Open University 3:30-4:10pm, Business Meeting 476. Section on Sex and Gender Invited Session. The Missing Feminist Revolution in Sociology Twenty Years Later: Looking Back, Looking Ahead Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon G Organizer and Presider: Amy S. Wharton, Washington State University Panelists: Judith Lorber, City University of New York Graduate School Raka Ray, University of California, Berkeley Christine L. Williams, University of Texas at Austin Denise A. Segura, University of California, Santa Barbara Leila J. Rupp, University of California, Santa Barbara Discussants: Judith Stacey, New York University Barrie Thorne, University of California 477. Section on Sociology of Mental Health Roundtables and Business Meeting Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon E 2:30-3:30pm, Roundtables: Organizer: Julie McLaughlin, University of North Carolina, Charlotte 1. Stress Exposure and Well-Being Presider: Shelia R. Cotten, University of Alabama at Birmingham Stratification Stress: Contextualizing Status Variations in Stress Vulnerability for Mental Health. Gniesha Y. Dinwiddie, University of Pennsylvania Descriptions and Experiences of Suffering among Older Women. Shelia R. Cotten, University of Alabama at Birmingham; Kate de Medeiros, Kimberly DeMichele, and Robert Rubinstein, University of Maryland, Baltimore County; Helen K. Black, Thomas Jefferson University 2. A Life Course Perspective on Mental Health Presider: Anastasia S. Vogt Yuan, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Pathways from Social Integration to Mental Health. Stephani Hatch, Columbia University; Michael Wadsworth, University College London Monday, August 15, 2:30 p.m. Theoretical Models for the Accumulation of Stressor Exposure across Life. Elaine Wethington, Cornell University Racial Differences in Substance Abuse Across the Life Course. Anastasia S. Vogt Yuan, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University 3. Body Image and Mental Health Presider: Ellen M. Granberg, University of Georgia Eating attitudes and their correlates among Canadian women concerned about their weight. Jungwee Park and Marie Beaudet, Statistics Canada Ethnic Identification as a Moderator of the Relationship between Body Image and Depressed Mood. Ellen M. Granberg and Ronald L. Simons, University of Georgia 4. Social Roles and Mental Health Presider: Joongbaeck Kim, University of Texas at Austin “Doing Things I Didn’t Feel”: Mothering While Depressed. Heather L. Kane, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Perceptions of Volunteering Efficacy and Their Effects on Mental Health. Joongbaeck Kim and Marc A. Musick, University of Texas at Austin SM Roles and Mental Health: Results from a Survey of SM Practitioners. Robert V. Bienvenu, Uniformed Services University; H. Jack McGeorge, Public Safety Group; Trevor Jacques, Videlicet.com 5. Migration and Mental Health Presider: Juan Xi, University of Alabama at Birmingham Project-induced Involuntary Migration as a Stressor. SeanShong Hwang, Juan Xi, and Sunny Xiaofei Qiao, University of Alabama at Birmingham Strangers in a Familiar Land: The Psychological Consequences of Internal Migration in a Developing Country. Amod N. Pyakuryal and Mark Tausig, University of Akron; Janardan Subedi, Miami University; Sree Subedi, Miami University, Hamilton 6. Marital Transitions and Mental Health Presider: Tetyana Pudrovska, University of Wisconsin, Madison Coping Strategies of Bereaved Spouses at Late-Midlife: Implications for Men’s and Women’s Mental Health. Tetyana Pudrovska, University of Wisconsin, Madison; Deborah Carr, Rutgers University Education Effects as a Moderating Factor on Union Transition and Depression. Hyeyoung Woo, University of Texas at Austin 7. Evaluation of Mental Illness Presider: Devan M. Starks, University of Nebraska, Lincoln Exploring an Affective Meanings Measure of Stigma Beliefs. Amy Kroska and Sarah Harkness, Kent State University 181 Relational Distance and the Acceptance of Mental Health Evaluations: A Social Influence Approach to Labeling Theory. Will Kalkhoff and Kristina Alabakovska, Kent State University; Jessica Burke, Bowling Green State University 8. Depression in Adolescence Presider: Diane M. Gifford, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Pathways to Depressed Mood in Adolescence through the Self-Concept and Social Support: Difference by Gender. Christina Dawn Falci, University of Minnesota The Relative Importance of Stressful Life Events Versus Chronic Stress in Predicting Adolescent Depression. Diane M. Gifford, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill 9. Delivering Mental Health Care Presider: Patrick J. Moynihan, Fordham University Empowering Depressed Women: Changes in “Individual” and “Social” Feelings in Guided Self-Help Groups. Irmeli I. Laitinen, Elizabeth Mary Ettorre, and Carol Sutton, University of Plymouth The Experiences of Project Liberty Crisis Counselors in the Bronx. Patrick J. Moynihan, Fordham University; Jeffrey Levine, Bronx-Lebanon Hospital; Orlando Rodriguez, Fordham University 3:30-4:10pm, Business Meeting 478. Section on Sociology of Population Roundtables Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth B Organizer: Andrew S. London, Syracuse University 1. Fertility Intentions Presider: Elizabeth C. Cooksey, Ohio State University Life Course Dynamics of Unintended and Mistimed Pregnancies among American Women. Phillip Morgan, Duke University; Amelie Quesnel-Vallee, McGill University Do Fertility Expectations Matter? Predicting Childlessness. Vanessa R. Wight, University of Maryland, College Park Planned Parenthood? An Exploration of Cohabitors’ Childbearing Intentions. Sarah Marie Favinger and Sharon L. Sassler, The Ohio State University 2. Sex Bias in Health Moving Beyond the Mother-Child Dyad: Does Women’s Education at the Community-Level Reduce Gender Bias in Child Health in Rural India. Sangeeta Parashar, University of Maryland, College Park Adolescent Health and Sex-Bias in Nutrition in Bangladesh. Erin M. Trapp and Jane Menken, University of Colorado at Boulder 182 Monday, August 15, 2:30 p.m. Session 478, continued 3. Family Demography Presider: Daniel T. Lichter, Ohio State University The Family Concept: Are We Measuring It Correctly? Charles B. Nam and Kathryn Harker Tillman, Florida State University An Historical Perspective of Stepparenting in the United States: Exploring Changes in the American Family Using an Age-Period-Cohort Model. Carrie E. Spearin and Berna Miller Torr, Brown University Attitudes toward Overpopulation and Their Influence on Fertility Preferences. Colter M. Mitchell, University of Michigan 4. Migration and Immigrant Communities Presider: Janet M. Wilmoth, Syracuse University Migration, Return Migration, and Housing Condition in South Community in China. Zai Liang and Shitau Miura, University at Albany, State University of New York A Multilevel Analysis of the Role of Immigrant Communities in Growing up American. Reanne Frank, Ohio State University and Harvard University 5. Health Promotion Presider: Isaac W. Eberstein, Florida State University What Do People Know about Child Illnesses in Coastal Ghana? A Qualitative Study of “Health Knowledge.” Catherine N. Stiff, Brown University Reproductive and Sexual Health Information Channels: Insights on Reliance and Accuracy from Armenia. Cynthia J. Buckley, The University of Texas at Austin Deterrents, Motivators and Strategies to Avoid the AIDS Epidemic in Rural Malawi. Michelle J. Poulin, Boston University 6. Child and Adolescent Health Presider: Christine L. Himes, Syracuse University A Cross-National Examination of Social and Economic Factors Relating to Child Mortality. John J. Bell, Boston College Depressed Mood and Adolescent Drinking: Modeling Gendered Reciprocal Effects. Timothy J. Owens, Purdue University 7. Attitudinal Influences on Fertility Ideal Family Size and Women’s Values and Beliefs in Bangladesh, Pakistan, and Turkey. Hani A. Guend, Institut National de la Recherche Scientifique Son Preference and Fertility in China (1997) and South Korea (2000). Hosik Min, Texas A&M University 8. Natural, Social, and Built Environments and Well-Being Fishing Communities in Coastal Bangladesh: An Overview of Sustainable Livelihoods. Iftekhar Uddin Chowdhury, University of Chittagong, Bangladesh. Residential Segregation and the Spatial Distribution of Socioeconomic Well-Being in Southern New Hampshire, 1990-2000. Chris R. Colocousis, University of New Hampshire Applying Geographic Information Systems to Analyze the Infrastructure of Mass Rapid Transit System: A Case of the Metropolis Tao-yuan in Taiwan. Ming-Chang Chan, Yuan-Ze University 9. HIV/AIDS in Africa Sociological Consequences of HIV/AIDS in East Africa. Teresa G. Labov, University of Pennsylvania “Gogos” Giving: Female Pensioners Relationships with Their Households in the HIV/AIDS Era. Enid J. Schatz, University of Colorado, Boulder Validity of Self-Reports of HIV and Sexually Transmitted Infections in Rural Malawi. Simona Bignami, Harvard University; Philip Anglewiczs, University of Pennsylvania 2:30 pm Other Groups Commission on Applied and Clinical Sociology (CACS) (to 6:10pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Room 309 National Academy of Science Fellows (Stanley Lieberson) (to 4:10pm) — Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Jefferson 3:30 pm Meetings Section on Science, Knowledge, and Technology Business Meeting (to 4:10pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon D Section on Sociology of Mental Health Business Meeting (to 4:10pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon E 4:30 pm Meetings Committee on Sections (to 6:10pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Room 302 Department Resources Group Training: Effective Program Reviews (to 6:10pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Room 307 Section on Environment and Technology Council Meeting (to 6:10pm) — Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Room 101 Student Forum Advisory Board (to 6:10pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Room 308 Task Force on the Institutionalization of Public Sociology (to 6:10pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Conference Suite III Monday, August 15, 4:30 p.m. 4:30 pm Sessions 479. Thematic Session. Competing Explanations for U.S. Global Expansionism Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon H Organizer and Presider: Clarence Y.H. Lo, University of Missouri at Columbia The New (?) American Empire: Old Hat or Conspiracy? Janet Lippman Abu-Lughod, New School University (Emerita) Globalization and Empire: Continuities and Discontinuities. Giovanni Arrighi, Johns Hopkins University The War at Home. Frances Fox Piven, City University of New York What have been the economic roots of United States global expansionism? Presenters will examine the extent to which the current war in Iraq is consistent with past modes and episodes of U.S. expansion. Different theories and explanations of the war in Iraq have varying implications for the strategies of peace and other progressive movements. 480. Thematic Session. Contesting Global Gender Issues in a Changing World Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Anthony Organizer: Esther Ngan-ling Chow, American University Presider: Margaret Abraham, Hofstra University Paradox of Citizenship, Human Security, and the Role of Civil Society. Esther Ngan-ling Chow, American University Women’s Global Movement and the Anti-Globalization Movement: Definitions and Relationships. Angela Miles, University of Toronto Middle East Feminism: The Challenges of Islamism, Imperialism, and Authoritarian States. Valentine M. Moghadam, Illinois State University and UNESCO Feminists Doing Masculinity Studies: Reflections on Theory and Practice. Rhoda Elizabeth Reddock, University of the West Indies The thematic session critically examines the contested and provocative nature of major global gender phenomena to enhance our sociological understanding beyond the U.S. exclusive perspective. The presentations underscore both the importance of studying global-local linkages in specific gender aspects as well as the interlocking relationships with other race/ethnicity, class, nationality and social institutions. 183 481. Thematic Session. Media Cultures II Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth C Organizer and Presider: Ronald A. Lembo, Amherst College Panelists: Wendy Chun, Brown University Arvind Rajagopal, New York University Allen Feldman, New York University Discussant: Margaret Cerullo, Hampshire College This panel explores the idea of technological mediation as it occurs amidst economic and socio-cultural processes. It does so by considering challenges to the west made possible by the spread of media. In an earlier generation, print was crucial in these challenges, with educated intelligentsia resisting liberal colonial rule, and seeking national independence. Today, challenges to the west go beyond the substance of earlier battles to address liberalism itself. The character of these new challenges has often not been accurately understood. If sociology as a discipline emerged to address the problem of order in liberal, western societies, then antiliberal phenomena outside the west are doubly disadvantaged when it comes to our understanding of them. By focusing on mechanisms and practices of mediation sociologists can illuminate both the character of these new socio-political challenges as well as highlight sociological assumptions and principles requiring revision in the contemporary context. 482. Centennial Session. Sociology Faces the Holocaust and Genocide Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington B Organizer and Presider: Suzanne Vromen, Bard College The Holocaust Confronts Sociology: Past, Present and Future. Judith Gerson, Rutgers University; Diane L. Wolf, University of California, Davis American Sociology and the Holocaust: A Retrospective Analysis. Burton P. Halpert, University of Missouri-Kansas City The Lessons of the Holocaust.... for Sociology. Lenore J. Weitzman, George Mason University Avoiding the 3M Trap: Mystification, Myth and Metaphor—in Studying the Holocaust and Genocide. Helen Fein, Institute for the Study of Genocide Discussant: Kai Erikson, Yale University Reflections on how our discipline has engaged with the major tragedies of the past century. The panelists will address how sociologists have dealt with the Holocaust both at the time it happened and in its aftermath, the overall dearth of sociological research on that subject, the lessons to draw from it, and the need to consider the Holocaust in the context of Genocide. 184 Monday, August 15, 4:30 p.m. 483. Special Session. How Radical Sociology Changed the Discipline and the ASA Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth D Organizer and Presider: Rhonda F. Levine, Colgate University Sociology for What? What Were We Thinking in 1968? Richard Flacks, University of California, Santa Barbara Radical Sociology and the Labor Movement: What Each Offers the Other. Edna Bonacich, University of California, Riverside From Race, Class and Gender to Intersectionality: Maintaining a Radical Critique. Bonnie Thornton Dill, University of Maryland From Stratification to Class Analysis (and back again?). Erik Olin Wright, University of Wisconsin 484. Special Session. Sex, Drugs, and Plan B: Political Assaults on Public Health Science (co-sponsored by the Integrity of Science Working Group) Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington A Organizer and Presider: Judith D. Auerbach, American Foundation for AIDS Rsch Panelists: Michael Halpern, Union of Concerned Scientists Heather Boonstra, The Alan Guttmacher Institute Kirsten Moore, Reproductive Health Technologies Project Peter S. Bearman, Columbia University Samuel R. Friedman, National Development and Research Institute Over the past several years, a number of reports have shed light on a troubling pattern with regard to the misuse of scientific data and scientific processes in policy formulation. In the area of public health, abuse of science has affected sex education programs, breast cancer research, Plan B emergency contraception, and HIV/AIDS prevention, to name a few areas. Join scientists and leaders from public interest organizations as they discuss details of this assault on science and its effects on environment, women’s health, public health, civil liberties and the public interest. 485. Special Session. Targeting, Race/Ethnicity, and Censuses: Past and Future (co-sponsored by the Section on Sociological Practice and the Section on Racial and Ethnic Minorities) Philadelphia Marriott, Room 303 Organizer and Presider: Kathryn L. Goldman Schuyler, Alliant International University Population Data, Racial/Ethnic Targeting, Human Rights, and Ethics. William Seltzer, Fordham University Australian Aborigines and Australian Censuses: The Reckoning of Section 127 of the Commonwealth Constitution. Ellen Percy Kraly, Colgate University Race/Ethnicity, Latinos and the U.S. Census. Clara Rodriguez, Fordham University Insights from Historical Analysis. Margo J. Anderson, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee Governments have used census race and ethnicity data to target vulnerable population subgroups for human rights violations in the United States and elsewhere. The session will review this history, the complicity of social scientists in these events, and possible safeguards against such misuses, including the ASA’s Code of Ethics. 486. Academic Workshop. Teaching Honors Sociology (a college-level course) in High School (co-sponsored by the ASA Task Force on the AP Course in Sociology) Philadelphia Marriott, Room 407 Organizer and Leader: Kathleen Piker-King, Mount Union College This workshop is designed for teachers of standard or honors sociology courses in high school. It will focus on effective teaching strategies and some of the key understandings students should gain as a result of studying sociology. The emphasis will be on active forms of learning-simulations, exercises, and research activities. Useful films and websites will also be described. Participants in the workshop will be provided with examples of exercises they can use in teaching sociology in high school or college courses, with information about web-based teaching and learning resources, and with an awareness of how to access social science data that are publicly available. 487. Career Workshop. Careers for Sociologists in the Justice System Philadelphia Marriott, Room 414 Organizer: Henry H. Brownstein, NORC at The University of Chicago Panelists: Henry H. Brownstein, NORC at The University of Chicago Martin D. Schwartz, Ohio University Karen E. Walker, Public/Private Ventures In the field of Criminal Justice, opportunities are available to sociologists and students of sociology in academia, government, and in a variety of areas of policy and practice. Sociologists fill the ranks of university departments of criminology and criminal justice. They work in government research and policy bureaus and offices. They serve in leadership positions in criminal justice and law enforcement agencies. At this workshop presenters will talk about the opportunities available in these settings to sociologists, and what it takes to be competitive for these positions. The workshop presenters have taught at universities, directed undergraduate and graduate programs, worked in federal and state justice agencies, and for private research organizations. After the presentations, questions by participants will be addressed. The workshop will conclude with a discussion of the kinds of positions available with various academic degrees in sociology. Monday, August 15, 4:30 p.m. 488. Professional Workshop. Developing Your Leadership Skills Philadelphia Marriott, Room 409 Organizer and Leader: Susan Boser, Indiana University of Pennsylvania 489. Professional Workshop. Scientific Foundations of Qualitative Research Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon J Organizers and Presiders: Joane Nagel, University of Kansas; Charles C. Ragin, University of Arizona; Patricia E. White, National Science Foundation Panelists: Elijah Anderson, University of Pennsylvania Kathleen M. Blee, University of Pittsburgh Linda Burton, Pennsylvania State University Michele Lamont, Harvard University Katherine Shelley Newman, Princeton University Sudhir A. Venkatesh, Columbia University The panelists will share their views and experiences in designing qualitative research proposals for funding from foundations and funding agencies. They will discuss their approach to qualitative research, standards for evaluating qualitative proposals, and strategies for successfully funding qualitative projects. Workshop organizers and presenters participated in the 2003 National Science Foundation Workshop on the Scientific Foundations of Qualitative Research. The NSF workshop report, “The Scientific Foundations of Qualitative Research,” is available at: http://www.nsf.gov/pubs/2004/nsf04219/nsf04219.pdf and from the NSF Sociology Program. 490. Research Workshop. “Surfing the Net”: How to Do So Efficiently and Effectively for Research Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon K Organizer and Leader: Russell K. Schutt, University of Massachusetts, Boston 491. Teaching Workshop. Including the Sociology of the Future in the Undergraduate Curriculum Philadelphia Marriott, Room 413 Organizer: Peter Bishop, University of Houston, Clear Lake Leaders: Peter Bishop, University of Houston, Clear Lake Arthur B. Shostak, Drexel University (emeritus) Stephen F. Steele, Anne Arundel Community College Jeanne H. Ballantine, Wright State University This session is intended to invite sociology teachers to promote the study of social change in their courses and to explicitly consider forces acting today that are shaping a different future. Sociologists can use the concepts and techniques of futures studies in the introductory course, in social problems (as they change over time), in the theory course (a theory 185 of change as well as of structure), the research methods course (forcasting), statistics (trend extrapolation, systems modeling) and any topical course because all those phenomena are also changing even as they are being taught. The teaching workshop will review a simple, common-sense approach to considering the future, review the tools and techniques that futurusts use to describe and influence change, and share resources that teachers can use to include the future in their courses. The course leaders will also prepare a reference guide containing resources for teachers to take away with them. 492. Teaching Workshop. Teaching Social Research Across the Undergraduate Curriculum (co-sponsored by ASA’s Integrating Data Analysis Project) Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon L Organizer: Stephen A. Sweet, Ithaca College Panelists: Katherine R. Rowell, Sinclair Community College Diane Pike, Augsburg College 493. Teaching Workshop. Using Active Learning Exercises to Teach Sociology Philadelphia Marriott, Room 408 Organizer and Leader: Sara C. Hare, Indiana University, Southeast Using active learning exercises changes the dynamics in the classroom and alters the quantity of material that can be covered. Experiences with this will be discussed as well as the strengths and limitations of active learning exercises. Participants will receive examples of active learning exercises that are applicable to a variety of sociology classes, as well as some tips for converting lecture material into active learning exercises. 494. Regular Session. Alternative Medicine: New Movements in Health Practice/Knowledge Philadelphia Marriott, Room 304 Organizer and Presider: Warren Fincher, Augustana College Acupuncture Use in the United States: Racial and Ethnic Trends. Elaine de Castro McFarland, University of Colorado Does Latinos’ Use of Alternative Medicine Cause NonCompliance in Childhood Asthma? Betina Freidin, Brandeis University; Stefan Timmermans, Harvard University The Movement for CAM Cancer Therapies: Object Conflicts in the Integration Process. David J. Hess, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Complementary Alternative Medicine, Palliative Care, and the Hospice Alternative: Medicine’s Reclamation of Death? Elizabeth Gill, Randolph-Macon College This session presents various sociological inquiries into alternative medicine, examining both empirical trends in and theoretical approaches to the consumption/production of alternative medicine. 186 Monday, August 15, 4:30 p.m. 495. Regular Session. Consumption, Culture, Taste, and Markets Philadelphia Marriott, Room 310 Organizer: Daniel Thomas Cook, University of Illinois Presider: Sam Binkley, Emerson College The Instability of Omnivorous Cultural Taste Over Time. Gabriel Hyman Rossman, Princeton University; Richard A. Peterson, Vanderbilt University The Omnivore Thesis Revisited: Voracious Cultural Consumers. Tally Katz-Gerro, University of Haifa; Oriel Sullivan, Ben-Gurion University Culinary Deserts, Gastronomic Oases: A Classification of U.S. Cities. Zachary Neal, University of Illinois at Chicago Tea Leaves or Tracking? Anticipating the audience for popular cinema. Lakshmi Srinivas, Wellesley College “Country Roads” to Internationalization: Sociological Models for Understanding American Popular Music in China. Heidi Netz and Grant Blank, American University Presenters discuss a myriad of ways of how taste is adjudicated between markets and culture when consumption is the focus. Authors address the tensions between structural and agentive factors. 496. Regular Session. Critical Race Theory Philadelphia Marriott, Independence Salon I Organizer and Presider: Michael Omi, University of California, Berkeley What Harm Is Hate Speech? A Critical Race Theory Response. Anthony J. Cortese, Southern Methodist University Racial Profiling and the Pretextual Traffic Stop: A Critical Look at the U.S. Supreme Court’s Whren Decision. Karen S. Glover, Texas A&M University Shifting from Individual Characteristics to Markers of Differences: Race and Ethnicity as Variables in Health Research. P Rafael Rafael Hernandez-Arias, DePaul University Discussant: Gabriela Sandoval, University of California, Santa Cruz 497. Regular Session. Family and Kinship Philadelphia Marriott, Room 404 Organizer and Presider: Feinian Chen, North Carolina State University Housework and Household Decision-Making in Urban China: 1991 and 2000. Xiaoling Shu, ; Yifei Zhu, University of California, Davis; Zhanxin Zhang, Chinese Academy of Social Science All in the Family: The Impact of Caring for Grandchildren on Grandparents’ Health. Mary Elizabeth Hughes, Duke University; Linda J. Waite, University of Chicago; Tracey Anne LaPierre, Duke University; Ye Luo, University of Chicago Family Structure Role Models and the Context of Nonmarital Childbearing. Kathleen Mullan Harris and Mariah M. Cheng, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Friend, Neighbor, Lender, and Career Counselor: Revisiting Kin Multiplexity and the Bott Hypothesis. Judith Treas, University of California, Irvine Discussant: Susan E. Short, Brown University 498. Regular Session. Historical Sociology Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington C Organizer: George Steinmetz, University of Michigan Presider: Monica Prasad, Northwestern University A Logic of Comparison for Studying Non-Western Institutions: A Relational Analysis on the Origin of Prisons in Japan. Eiko Ikegami, New School University Faction into Party: Elite Networks and Constitutionalism in Late Eighteenth Century Poland. Paul D. McLean, Rutgers University From Resistance to Collaboration: Colonial Relationship and Nationalism in Colonial Korea. Ou-Byung Chae, University of Michigan Monks, Lawyers, and All the King’s Men: The Emergence of Bureaucratic Careers in the Medieval Church. Ryon Lancaster, University of Chicago Nation-States Confront the Global: Discourses of Indigenous Rights in Fiji and Tanzania. Erik W. Larson, Macalester College; Ronald R. Aminzade, University of Minnesota This is a session on historical sociology covering diverse periods, places, and methods. 499. Regular Session. Looking Inside Schools: The Role of Teachers Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Congress A Organizer: Annette Lareau, University of Maryland, College Park; Kim Goyette, Temple University Presider: Linda Renzulli, University of Georgia Have We Put an End to Social Promotion? Robert M. Hauser and Carl Frederick, University of Wisconsin, Madison Control in the Classroom and Influence on School Policies: Types of Teacher Autonomy and Teacher Attrition. Judson G. Everitt, Indiana University The Social Structure of Coursetaking in Schools and Its Influence on Adolescents. Kenneth A. Frank, Michigan State University; Chandra Muller, University of Texas at Austin; Kathryn S. Schiller, University at Albany, State University of New York Whose Perceptions Matter? Exploring the Discrepancy between Teachers’ and Parents’ Reports of Parental Involvement. Julie A. Swando, Indiana University Discussant: Laura F. LoGerfo, The Urban Institute Monday, August 15, 4:30 p.m. 500. Regular Session. Protest, Activism, and Social Movements Philadelphia Marriott, Room 305 Organizer: Kenneth T. Andrews, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Presider: Debra Minkoff, Barnard College A Movement Society Evaluated: Collective Protest in the United States. Sarah A. Soule, University of Arizona; Jennifer Earl, University of California, Santa Barbara Protesting the Republican National Convention: Political Organizations and the Expression of Policy-Specific Grievances. Fabio Rojas, Indiana University; Michael T. Heaney, Yale University Social Movement Organizational Dynamics and Protest Activity: Unions and Strikes, 1990-2001. Andrew W. Martin, The Ohio State University Before Rights Claims: Moral Entrepreneurship and the Origins of Activism for Gay and Lesbian Youth in the U.S. Judith Karyn Taylor, University of Toronto Discussant: Debra Minkoff, Barnard College 501. Regular Session. Recent Ethnography Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Grand Salon II Organizer: Carole E. Joffe, University of California, Davis Presider: Jennifer A. Reich, University of Denver Superior Mothering: Parents’ Motives for Homeschooling. Jennifer Lois, Western Washington University Embodied Knowledge: Meaning and the Struggle Towards Proficiency in Glassblowing. Erin O’Connor, New School University On the Record: Conceptualizing Case Records as Documents/ Artifacts/Practices in Fieldwork. Renee A. Monson, Hobart and William Smith Colleges Governmentality and the Politics of Everyday Life in the Kensington Recovery House Movement. Robert P. Fairbanks, University of Chicago Discussant: Jennifer A. Reich, University of Denver 502. Regular Session. Sociology of Sports Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Congress C Organizer and Presider: Daniel F. Chambliss, Hamilton College A Theory of Player Violence in Sports. Randall Collins, University of Pennsylvania Women in Full-Contact Sports: The Case of Female Football Players. Josh Packard, Vanderbilt University African American Male High School Basketball Players’ Contextualized Perceptions of Race and Athletic Ability. Reuben A. Buford May, Texas A&M University 187 Class, Gender, and Age Dynamics of Sport as Cultural Capital. Carl W. Stempel, California State University, Hayward Discussant: Dan J. Ryan, Mills College 503. Regular Session. Sociology of Technology: Dynamics of Design and Use Philadelphia Marriott, Room 306 Organizer: Nina Wakeford, University of Surrey Presider: Andrea Hoplight Tapia, Pennsylvania State University Attention Management in a World of Pervasive ICTs: Privacy, Power, and Personal Systems for Handling Others’ Demands. Christena Nippert-Eng, Illinois Institute of Technology; Jay Melican, Microsoft; Rachel Hinman, Jump Associates; Ryan Pikkel, Illinois Institute of Technology Design and Culture: The Symbolic Shaping of Apple Computers. Hugh Mackay, The Open University What’s Space Got to Do with It? Information Technology, Physician Autonomy and Space. Ari B. Goelman, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Discussant: Andrea Hoplight Tapia, Pennsylvania State University 504. Regular Session. Sociology of the Body Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Congress B Organizer and Presider: Susan Bell, Bowdoin College Intelligent Bodies: A Phenomenological Exploration of Embodied Subjectivity within the Human-Horse Communication Process. Keri Jacqueline Brandt, University of ColoradoBoulder “It Looks so natural”: Bodily Labor and Learning to Dance the Lindy Hop. Black Hawk Hancock, DePaul University Treating Risky Bodies with Pharmaceuticals. Jennifer Ruth Fosket, McGill University; Laura A. Mamo, University of Maryland Discussant: Victoria L. Pitts, City University of New York 505. Regular Session. Structures of Knowledge Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Adams Organizer and Presider: Neil L. Gross, Harvard University The Social Organization of Denial. Eviatar Zerubavel, Rutgers University Thinking with Socio-Mental Filters: Exploring the Social Structuring of Attention and Significance. Thomas E. DeGloma and Asia May Friedman, Rutgers University Soviet Culturology’s Adventures in the West: A Study on International Intellectual Reputations. Maxim Waldstein, University of Illinois “The Menace of the Feebleminded”: Defective Delinquents at the Boundary of Science and Law. Saran Ghatak, New York University 188 Monday, August 15, 4:30 p.m. Session 505, continued Oppositional Intellectualism as Reflection, not Rejection, of Power: Wits Sociology, 1975-1989. Shireen Ally, University of the Witwatersrand The Structures of Denial. Eviatar Zerubavel, Rutgers University Discussant: Neil G. McLaughlin, McMaster University, Canada current and historical racialized patterns in education. What are the implications for the future of public education (primary, secondary and post-secondary)? How is democracy expressed as a guiding principle in current educational systems? What conclusions might we draw as sociologists concerned with racial equity and justice in education both today and tomorrow? 506. Regular Session. Thinking through Culture Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Grand Salon I Organizer: Elizabeth Long, Rice University Some Remarks about Cultural Things: Legitimacy Theory and French Theatre. Jean-Louis Fabiani, Ecole des Hautes études en Sciences Sociales, Paris Culture as an Autopoietic System. Douglas J. Goodman, University of Puget Sound Auteur Discourse and the Cultural Consecration of American Films. Alexander Hicks and Velina P. Petrova, Emory University Culture Failure: Replicating Systems of Exclusion in a Schismatic Organization. Japonica Brown-Saracino and Amin Ghaziani, Northwestern University Discussant: Douglas J. Goodman, University of Puget Sound 508. Section on Organizations, Occupations, and Work Paper Session. Labor Markets, Opportunity, and Social Closure Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon B Organizer: Vincent J. Roscigno, Ohio State University Presider: Claudia Buchmann, Ohio State University Managing Privilege: The Stable Advantage of White Males in U.S. Private Sector Employment, 1966-2000. Kevin M. Stainback, Tiffany L. Taylor, and Donald TomaskovicDevey, North Carolina State University Hoarding Opportunities: What’s Fair in Life? Nancy DiTomaso, Rutgers University Discrimination in Low-Wage Labor Markets: Results from an Experimental Audit Study in New York City. Devah Pager and Bruce Western, Princeton University Preserving the Hierarchy: Social Closure and the Process of Discrimination. Lisette M. Garcia, Ohio State University Discussant: George Wilson, University of Miami 507. Section on Racial and Ethnic Minorities Paper Session. Education and Democracy: The Salience of Race, Class and Ethnicity in the 21st Century Philadelphia Marriott, Room 401-402 Organizer and Presider: Melanie E. L. Bush, Adelphi University “It’s not until you walk a few years in my shoes you understand”: The Intersection between Race and Individualism on College Campuses. Ingrid Elizabeth Castro, State University of New York Potsdam Pathologizing the Poor: The Hidden Curriculum of A Framework for Understanding Poverty. Nana Osei-Kofi, Iowa State University Revising Racial Inequality: Racial Stratification in a Multiracial Context. Mary Elizabeth Campbell, University of Iowa The Effect of Splinter School Districts on Metropolitan Segregation. Erica Frankenberg, Harvard University Race and College for All. Tania G. Levey and David E. Lavin, Graduate Center, City University of New York Discussant: Janelle T. Scott, New York University 509. Section on Sociology of the Family Paper Session. Public Policy and Families Philadelphia Marriott, Liberty Salon A Organizer and Presider: Daniel T. Lichter, Ohio State University Do Institutions Matter? Did the Introduction of No-Fault Unilateral Divorce Raise Parental Divorce Rates in Australia? Mariah Debra Evans and Jonathan Kelley, University of Melbourne Household Self-Sufficiency in the Lif Course of Former Teenage Mothers. Gabriele Plickert and Ann Marie Sorenson, University of Toronto Public Policy and the Economic Well Being of Children in Single-Parent Homes. Gillian M. Hampden-Thompson, American Institutes for Research Welfare Trap or Spatial Trap? The Long Term Effect of Housing Assistance on Economic Self-Sufficiency and Wealth Attainment of Offspring among Low-Income Families. Yumiko Aratani, Columbia University Discussant: Kristen S. Harknett, University of Pennsylvania Issues of school segregation, enrollment, and attainment are examined in this session through the perspectives of different groups’ experiences with a particular analysis of the discourses used to explain Monday, August 15, 4:30 p.m. 510. Section on Sociology of Religion Paper Session. Sociology of Religion II Philadelphia Marriott, Liberty Salon B Organizer: Darren E. Sherkat, Southern Illinois University Presider: Lisa D. Pearce, University of North Carolina Gender and Religion in the United States, 1970 and 1995. Marie Cornwall and Catherine Meyers, Brigham Young University The Impact of Childhood Religious Conservatism on Men’s Work and Family Involvement. Nicole H. Wolensky and Jennifer L. Glass, University of Iowa Why Biology Is Not (Religious) Destiny: A Second Look at Gender Differences in Religiosity. Omar A. Lizardo and Jessica L. Collett, University of Arizona Risky Business: Assessing Risk Preference Explanations for Gender Differences in Religiosity. Jeffrey C. Kroll and Louise Marie Roth, University of Arizona 511. Section on Sociology of Mental Health Paper Session. The Consequences and Costs of Mental Illness Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon G Organizers: Robert J. Johnson, University of Miami; Donna D. McAlpine, University of Minnesota Presider: Donna D. McAlpine, University of Minnesota Correlates of Unmet Mental Health Care Needs, and Social Support, Health Status, and Health Behavior. Jungwee Park, Statistics Canada; Connie Nelson, Lakehead University The Columbine Effect? Stigma and Public Evaluations of Child vs. Adult Depression. Brea Louise Perry, Indiana University The Organizational Response to the Community Re-entry of Ex-inmates with Psychiatric Disabilities. Stephanie W. Hartwell, University of Mass-Boston The Construction of Fear: Modeling American’s Preferences for Social Distance from Children and Adolescents with Mental Health Problems. Jack K. Martin, Jane D. McLeod, and Sigrun Olafsdottir, Indiana University Discussant: Teresa L. Scheid, University of North Carolina, Charlotte 512. Section on Science, Knowledge, and Technology (SKAT) Paper Session. New Directions in Science, Technology and Globalization Philadelphia Marriott, Room 412 Organizer and Presider: Gili S. Drori, Stanford University Globalized Science Ethos, Localized Ethics Training: Policies for Life Scientists in US, Italy, and UK. Laurel SmithDoerr, Boston University Public Attitudes on Genetic Engineering, Australia 1994-2002. 189 Jonathan Kelley, University of Melbourne Social Organization of Work in Biomedical Research Labs in Canada: How Research Funding Matters. Annalisa Salonius, McGill University Why Open Source Software Developers Contribute Knowledge: For Commitment or for Rewards? Hsin-i Huang, Yuan-Ze University; Yu-Li Hsieh, University of Illinois at Chicago 513. Section on Sociology of Population Paper Session. Social Environments and Demographic Processes Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Tubman Organizer and Presider: Barrett Lee, Pennsylvania State University The Role of Institutional Context in European Regional Fertility Profiles. Daniel Adkins, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Childlessness, Only Children, and the Second Demographic Transition in Japan. Kimiko Tanaka and Nan E. Johnson, Michigan State University Household Finance, Women’s Age at First Birth, and Mental Health in Britain. Tim Futing Liao, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Inter-Cohort Trends in Age-Specific Health Inequalities: A Test of the Theory of “Fundamental Causes.” John Robert Warren and Elaine M. Hernandez, University of Minnesota Change in Racial and Ethnic Residential Inequality in American Cities, 1970 to 2000. Jeffrey M. Timberlake, University of Cincinnati; John Iceland, University of Maryland 514. Section on Community and Urban Sociology Paper Session. Place and Health Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon C Organizer: Mark E. La Gory, University of Alabama at Birmingham Presider: Kevin M. Fitzpatrick, University of Alabama at Birmingham Neighborhood Distress Factors and Health: The Case of Asthma. Kent Schwirian, Patricia Schwirian, and Lisa Nicholson, The Ohio State University Neighborhood Ecology and Drug Dependence Mortality. Lance E. Hannon, Villanova University Neighborhood Social Capital as a Health Determinant: An Empirical Test of a Bourdieu-based Framework and Model. Richard M. Carpiano, University of Wisconsin at Madison; Bruce G. Link, Columbia University Activities and Settings of Leisure as Sources of Inactivity: Growing Disparities since 1965. Brent Berry, University of Toronto Discussant: Jeralynn Sittig Cossman, Mississippi State University 190 Monday, August 15, 4:30 p.m. 515. Section on Ethnomethodology and Conversation Analysis Invited Session. From Sociology to Ethnomethodology to Conversation Analysis Philadelphia Marriott, Room 403 Organizer: Douglas W. Maynard, University of Wisconsin Presider: Douglas W. Maynard, University of Wisconsin Talking Jobs and Job Talk. Jack Whalen, Palo Alto Research Center Doing Gender and Other Things. Candace West, University of California, Santa Cruz Practices of Mind and the Emergence of Sociality in the Interaction of Very Young Children. Mardi Kidwell, University of New Hampshire Analyzing Calls for Help: Practices and Presuppositions. Geoffrey Troy Raymond, University of California, Santa Barbara Forty Years of Scholarship and the Development of the Discipline. John Heritage, University of California, Los Angeles Discussant: Don Howard Zimmerman, University of California, Santa Barbara This session will visit work in relation to the emergence of ethnomethodology and conversation analysis over the past 40 years as represented in the work of Don Zimmerman. To visit Zimmerman’s work over the decades is to follow a path from studies of rules and decisionmaking in a welfare agency, to ethnomethodological theory, to studies of interruptions and topic organization in conversation, to ideas about the “doing” of gender, to 911 emergency calls, and more recently of young children and their interactions. In this work, it is possible to trace the way that sociology, at least in the domain of interaction and local order, has a strain going from traditional field work and ethnomethodological studies of organizations to conversation analytic concern with generic forms of talk to research on the micro-orders in specialized settings involving matters of police work and children’s day care. 516. Section on Political Sociology Refereed Roundtables and Business Meeting Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon D 4:30-5:30pm, Roundtables: Organizer: Solon J. Simmons, University of Wisconsin, Madison 1. Back and Forth: Party, Opinion and Structure Presider: Casey A. Borch, University of Connecticut Bringing the Party Back In: Theorizing the Effects of Political Exile after Return. Daniel M. Schensul, Brown University Does Voting Benefit the Voter? Effects of Political Behavior on Social Structural Position in a New Democracy, 1988-2003. Joshua Dubrow, Ohio State University Expansion of Voting Rights for Women in the United States: Gender and Social Movement Activism within Institutional Contexts. Kendra S. Schiffman, North- western University Unequal Influence? The Effect of Public Opinion on Policy in the U.S. States. Casey A. Borch and David Weakliem, University of Connecticut 2. Inside the Power Elite Presider: Yesim Bayar, McGill University Insurgent Tactics and Institutional Actors: Explaining the Growth of Grassroots Lobbying. Edward T. Walker, Pennsylvania State University PACkaged Policymaking: How PAC Contributions Affect Roll Call Voting in the U.S. Congress. Clayton D. Peoples, Ohio State University The Multiple Dimensions of the Corporate Elite’s “Small World” from 1962 to 1995. Roy C. Barnes, University of Michigan-Flint The Republican Elite and National Identity Construction in Turkey, 1920-1938. Yesim Bayar, McGill University 3. Intranational and Intercultural Politics Presider: Xavier Coller, Universidad de Barcelona Failed Nationalisms in Multinational Countries. The Case of Valencia in Spain. Xavier Coller, Universidad de Barcelona Forbidden Rights, Forbidden Identities: The Scarved Women in the Human Rights Debate. Aysegul Kozak, University of Minnesota Public Policy, National Culture, and “Auto-Critique”: The French Campaign for Improved Road Safety. Diane Barthel-Bouchier and Paul Bugyi, Stony Brook University, State University of New York Votes, Violence, and Advocates: The Determinants of Regional Movements’ Policy Outcomes. Julie Biskner, Springfield, IL 4. Trust, Lobbying and Corruption Presider: John Scott, Cornell University Corruption and Inequality as Correlates of Social Trust: Proposing Fairness Explanation. Jong-sung You, Harvard University Corruption, State Strength, and Democracy: A Crossnational Structural Analysis. Ce Shen and John B. Williamson, Boston College Lobbying: A Sociological Perspective. John Scott, Cornell University Party Mobilization and Working Class Voting Turnout, 1972-2000. J. Craig Jenkins and Jeremy S. Forbis, Ohio State University; Brian Martin, Ohio Dept. of Corrections 5. Violence, Authority and Police Power Presider: Stacy K. McGoldrick, Miami University of Ohio Breaking Domestic Silence in a Changing Public Sphere: Private-Life Violence in Contemporary Poland. Susan Pearce, University of Maryland Monday, August 15, 4:30 p.m. Police Reforms and the War on Terror: Consequences of a National Vision of Policing. Stacy K. McGoldrick, Miami University of Ohio The Dynamics of Contention in an Authoritarian Context: The Case of Sun Zhigang. Jennifer M. Choo, University of California, Berkeley 6. Movement, History and Democracy Presider: Dana R. Fisher, Columbia University “America and Europe as Models for Islamic Democracy.” Jerome Braun, Chicago, IL Between Networks, Organizations, and Subcultures: The Role of Scenes in Social Movements and Civil Society. Sebastian Haunss, University of Hamburg; Darcy K. Leach, University of Michigan Social Movement Impacts on Political Democratization: Analyzing Causality between Social Movements and Political Changes. Doowon Suh, Korea University Two Types of Movement Powers: Labor and Environmental Movements in Taiwan and Korea, 1970-1987. Hwa-Jen Liu, University of California, Berkeley 7. States and Civil Societies Presider: Ben Marcus, James Madison University Brazil’s Response to AIDS: Enveloped Society, Embedded State, Mobilized Civil Sphere. Jennifer Rene Darrah, Brown University Contracting the Public Sphere: Philadelphia School Reform and a New Model for Civic Engagement. Maia B. Cucchiara, University of Pennsylvania; Eva Gold, Elaine Simon, Morgan Riffer, and Gretchen Suess, Research for Action How Much Democracy Is Not Enough?: Comparing Governance and Participation in Public-Private Partnership Regimes. Caroline W. Lee, University of California, San Diego Dancing with Hands Cuffed: Media Commercialization and Political Development in China. Fen Lin, University of Chicago Participation Doesn’t Flow Uphill: Community Organizations in a Poor Municipality of Santiago, Chile. Ben Marcus, James Madison University 8. States and NGOs in a Global Society Presider: Ramon Borges-Mendez, University of Massachusetts, Boston Global Society Embeddedness and Democracy as Pathways to the (Social) Developmental State: A Cross-National Study. Wade T. Roberts, Colorado College Going Global: Convergence or Divergence? Reconsidering State and Non Governmental Organizations. Debarashmi Mitra, University of Connecticut Sustainable Development and Participatory Practices in Community Forestry: The Case of FUNDECOR in 191 Costa Rica. Ramon Borges-Mendez, University of Massachusetts, Boston 9. New Applications of Content Analysis Presider: Tawnya Adkins Covert, Western Illinois University Post-Socialist Patronage: Expressions of Loyalty and Resistance. Andrew D. Buck, The University of Reading The Heritage Foundation: A narrative analysis of the rhetoric of the “No Excuses Campaign” in Public Education. Lauren McDonald, Graduate Center, City University of New York Toward Measuring Media Bias: A Content Analysis of the National Review and the Progressive, 1975-2000. Tawnya Adkins Covert, Western Illinois University; Philo C. Wasburn, Purdue University 5:30-6:10pm, Business Meeting 517. Section on Sex and Gender Refereed Roundtables Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon E Organizer: Tori C. Byington, Judy Hennessy, and Michelle Robertson, Washington State University 1. Gender and Place Presider: Elizabeth McTaggart Esterchild, University of North Texas Gender, Land Use and the Sustainability of a Contemporary Ranching Community. Elizabeth McTaggart Esterchild, University of North Texas; Leslie StanleyStevens, Tarleton State University The Global Connection: Public Sociology and Feminist thought and Practice in Transitioning Societies. Ingrid Sandole-Staroste, Burke, VA Gender Inequality in Malawi and the Ritualization of Duty. Carol A. Minton, California Baptist University; J. David Knottnerus, Oklahoma State University Masculinity in Crisis: A Case Study of the Okanagan Mountain Park Fire. Shelley Louise Pacholok, Ohio State University Catfish and Cotton in the Mississippi Delta: Race, Class, and Gender in the Field. Kirsten A. Dellinger, University of Mississippi 2. Gender and Identity Presider: Diana Kendall, Baylor University Inhabiting Difference: Secularism, Masculine Islam and “Feminist Vein” in Young Islamists Woman’s Identity Formation. Gul Ozyegin, The College of William & Mary Queen or Pawn? Society Debutantes and Upper-Class Identity. Diana Kendall, Baylor University The Reconstruction of Collective Identity in the Emergence of U.S. White Women’s Liberation. Benita Roth, 192 Monday, August 15, 4:30 p.m. Session 517, continued Binghamton University Performing Identities in the Classroom:Teaching Jewish Women’s Studies. Kathie Friedman and Karen Rosenberg, University of Washington 3. Gender and Occupations Presider: Anastasia H. Prokos, University of Nevada-Las Vegas The Effect of Non-standard Employment Arrangements on the Earnings Gap for Women and Men Scientists and Engineers. Anastasia H. Prokos, University of NevadaLas Vegas; Irene Padavic and S. Ashley Schmidt, Florida State University Has the Chilly Climate Warmed? Perceptions about Unequal Treatment of Men and Women at the University of Texas at San Antonio. Krysti Meyer and Juanita M. Firestone, University of Texas, San Antonio Have We Really Made It? An Evaluation of Gender Stratification in Earnings among Community Influentials. Alexis Yamokoski and Sara F. Bradley, The Ohio State University Occupational Aspirations, Gender Segregation, and the Gender Gap in Wages. Hannah Brueckner and Silke Aisenbrey, Yale University 4. Gender and Sexuality Presider: Emily Fitzgibbons Shafer, Stanford University Good Guy on Campus: Gender, Peer Groups, and Sexuality among College Men. Brian Nicholas Sweeney, Indiana University Gender and Empathy in the Context of Heterosexual Romantic Relationships. Emily Fitzgibbons Shafer, Stanford University Analysis of Gendered and Sexual Imagery in Sexual Health Advertisements. Tara Hardinge, University of California, Irvine “Kicking Ass and Looking Good”: Reinforcing Sexism through Women’s Rugby. Matthew B. Ezzell, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill 5. Gender Discrimination Presider: Judith Rosenstein, Cornell How Hollywood Characterizes Gender: A Content Analysis of Professional Actor’s Casting Notices for Film and Television (1975-2000). Nancy Wang Yuen, University of California, Los Angeles Traditional Attitudes, Threat, and Sexism: Bridging the Gap between Theories of Sexism and Racism. Judith Rosenstein, Cornell The Status of Women in Southwest Pennsylvania. Patricia M. Ulbrich, Pittsburgh, PA Instituionalized Gender Discrimination in Teachers’ Pay: The Double Salary Scale, 1900-1950. Jo Anne Preston, Brandeis University L Is for Lesbian Math: Understanding the Choices behind Girls’ Enrollment in Single-Sex and Coeducational Math classes. Jodi H. Cohen, Bridgewater State College 6. Gender in Families Presider: Gretchen R. Webber, The University of Texas at Austin Mothers and Part-time Work. Gretchen R. Webber, The University of Texas at Austin Gender Differences in the Adult Status Attainment of Hispanics: Understanding Bilingualism in the Familial Context. Sampson Lee Blair, University at Buffalo, State University of New York; José A. Cobas, Arizona State University A Different Type of Gender Gap: How Women and Men Experience Poverty. Eva Fodor, Central European University Gendered Work and Women’s Domestic Investment: A Second Look at the “Stalled Revolution.” Carrie Lynne Alexandrowicz, Brown University 7. Gender in Research Presider: Joey Sprague, University of Kansas Feminist Methodology: Stereotypes and Standpoints. Joey Sprague, University of Kansas The “Lady Scientist:” Gender and Power in the Research Relationship. Martha Anderson Easton, University of Minnesota Discourses of Empowerment: Female Martial Artists on the Martial Arts. Jason Johnston Stickney, University at Buffalo, State University of New York Gendering Economic Man: A Feminist Critique of Embeddedness. Shelley L. Koch, University of Kansas 8. Gender, Sexuality, and Social Change Presider: James Dean Steger, Texas A&M University Dealing with Difference: Connections between Sexual Orientation Attitudes, Actions, and Policies. Andrew Ruffner and Jeffrey M. Timberlake, University of Cincinnati Changes in Attitudes of Gender Role Ideologies of Women in the United States: 1972-1998: A Multivariate Analysis. James Dean Steger, Texas A&M University; Juanita M. Firestone, University of Texas, San Antonio 9. Gender: Violence Presider: Nikki Paratore Galibois, Sagamore Beach, MA The Body in Domestic Violence: A Corporeal Feminist Analysis of Domestic Violence. Nikki Paratore Galibois, Sagamore Beach, MA An Overview of Domestic Violence Against Women in Rural Egypt. Abeer Ibrahim, University of Colorado, 193 Monday, August 15, 4:30 p.m. Colorado Springs Hooking Up and Party Rape: The Social Organization of Gender and Sexuality at a Large Research University. Elizabeth A. Armstrong, Laura Theresa Hamilton, and Brian Nicholas Sweeney, Indiana University The Incarceration and Liberation of Battered Women Who Kill: A Review of the Literature. Rachel Zimmer Schneider, University of Akron 10. Gendering the Body Presider: Carissa M. Froyum, North Carolina State University Challenges of Integrating Biological and Social Analyses of the Body: Menopause as a Case. Julie A. Winterich, Dickinson College Pathways to Women’s Appearance Satisfaction: A Combinatory Explanation. Rachael Serena Neal and Samantha Kwan, University of Arizona The Gendered Body as Resource: Practices of Masculinity and Femininity in an Inner City. Carissa M. Froyum, North Carolina State University Masculinity and the Transformation of Collegiate Cheerleading. Kathleen P. Stanley, Michelle Inderbitzin, and Dwaine Plaza, Oregon State University 11. Global Gender Presider: Sylvie Fogiel Bijaoui, Beit-Berl Academic College, Israel Women in the Kibbutz in Israel: The Mixed Blessing of Neo-Liberalism. Sylvie Fogiel Bijaoui, New School of Journalism, Tel Aviv Living History: The Continuing Effects of Colonialism on Women’s Parliamentary Representation. Melanie Marie Hughes, The Ohio State University Structural Inequality, Dependency, and Gender Attitudes: A Cross-national Analysis. Robert Michael Kunovich, The University of Texas at Arlington; Sheri Locklear Kunovich, Southern Methodist University 12. Social Construction of Gender Presider: Julie Pelton, Pennsylvania State University Gender as a Structure: Seeing Gender in Ideological Structures. Julie Pelton, Pennsylvania State University Gender as a Sex Toy: Female Masculinity in a Sadomasochistic Context. Emily Cook, University of San Francisco Gender and the Legal Construction of Consent: Narratives of Compulsory Prostitution in New York City, 19081915. Brian Donovan, University of Kansas Gendered Jurisdictional Disputes: The Changing Sex Composition of Ob/Gyn and the Reemergence of Midwifery. Courtney Bangert Jackson, University of Southern Maine 518. Section on Sociology of Law Roundtables and Business Meeting Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Junipers 4:30-5:30pm, Roundtables: Organizer: Elizabeth A. Hoffmann, Purdue University 1. Comparative Perspectives on Law Local Democratic Governance, Environmental Justice and Women’s Rights to Land in Africa. David E. Tabachnick, Muskingum College The Embeddedness of Criminal Justice Systems: Germany and France, 1970-2001. Pamela Irving Jackson, Rhode Island College Legal Change and Gender Inequality: Changes in Muslim Family Law in India. Narendra Subramanian, McGill University 2. Legal Discourse From Command-and-Control to Corporate Self-Regulation: How Legal Discourse and Practice Shape Regulatory Governance. Jodi Short, University of California, Berkeley Stance-shifting: Its application to Depositions by Lay Witnesses. Boyd Davis, University of North Carolina, Charlotte; Peyton R. Mason, Linguistic Insights, Inc. 3. The Relevance of Race in American Law The “Unproductive Tensions:” Using Injuries of Race in Child Abuse and Homicide Trials. Liena Gurevich, Hofstra University Minority Threat and Police Strength from 1980-2000: A Fixed-Effects Analysis of Large U.S. Cities. Stephanie Kent and David Jacobs, The Ohio State University 4. The Diffusion of Law Legal Ambiguity, Legal Explicitness and Erosion of SexSegregated Help Wanted Ads 1965-75. Nicholas A. Pedriana and Amanda J. Abraham, Louisiana State University Explaining Non-Compliance with the Family and Medical Leave Act. Erin Kelly, University of Minnesota 5. Theoretical Issues in the Sociology of Law Vanished Vediators: On the Residual Status of Judges in Max Weber’s Theory of Legal Rationalization. IsherPaul Sahni, McGill Unversity Law, Morality, and Emotional Intelligence. Dmitri Shalin, University of Nevada, Las Vegas 5:30-6:10pm, Business Meeting 4:30 pm Other Groups Association for Applied and Clinical Sociology (AACS) (to 8:00pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Conference Suite II 194 5:30 pm Monday, August 15, 5:30 p.m. Meetings Section on Political Sociology Business Meeting (to 6:10pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon D Section on Sociology of Law Business Meeting (to 6:10pm) — Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott, Junipers 6:30 pm Meetings 2005 Program Committee (to 7:30pm) — Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Presidential Suite National Council of State Sociological Associations (to 8:00pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Conference Suite I Sociological Imagination Group meeting on “The Web or Part/ Whole Approach to Education, Part III” (Bernard Phillips) (to 8:00pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Room 306 Sociologists without Borders panel on “The UN Transforming: Social Scientists’ Role” (Judith Blau) (to 8:00pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Room 303 Sociologists’ Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Caucus business meeting (Diane Illig) (to 8:00pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Room 304 7:00 pm 6:30 pm Receptions Joint Section Reception (Comparative and Historical Sociology, Rationality and Society, and Sociology of Religion) (to 8:10pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Liberty Salon C Section on Environment and Technology Reception (to 8:00pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Room 410 Section on History of Sociology Reception and Award Ceremony (to 8:00pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon A Section on Peace, War, and Social Conflict Reception (to 8:00 pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Independence Salon III Section on Racial and Ethnic Minorities Reception (to 8:00pm) — Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Commonwealth B Section on Sex and Gender Reception (to 8:00pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon E Section on Sociology of Mental Health Reception (to 8:00pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon G Section on Sociology of the Family and Section on Sociology of Population Joint Reception (to 8:00pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Liberty Salon A Sociological Practice Reception (co-sponsored by the ASA Section on Sociological Practice and the Association for Applied and Clinical Sociology) (to 8:10pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Independence Salon II Student Reception (to 7:30pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon F 6:30 pm Other Groups Consumers, Commodities, and Consumption Special Interest Group (Dan Cook) (to 8:00pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Room 310 Integrity of Science Working Group Reception (to 8:00pm) — Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington A Receptions Section on Latina/o Sociology Reception (to 10:00pm) — El Azteca Restaurant 7:45 pm Meetings Department Resources Group Training Session (to 9:00pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Room 307 9:30 pm Receptions Minority Fellowship Program (MFP) Benefit Reception (to 11:00 pm, ticket required for admission) — Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon I 195 Tuesday, August 16 Tuesday, August 16 The length of each daytime session/meeting activity is one hour and forty minutes, unless noted otherwise. The usual turnover schedule is as follows: 8:30 am – 10:10 am 10:30 am – 12:10 pm 12:30 pm – 2:10 pm 2:30 pm – 4:10 pm Session presiders and committee chairs are requested to see that sessions and meetings end on time to avoid conflicts with subsequent activities scheduled into the same room and to allow participants time to transit between facilities. 7:00 am Business Meeting 519. ASA Business Meeting Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon E Presider: Troy Duster, ASA President, New York University All meeting attendees are invited to join ASA officers and Council members for continental breakfast discussion of important issues facing the discipline and profession. Members may also present resolutions for vote and transmission to ASA Council, the governing board of the Association. Those resolutions and background materials on the issue should be submitted to the ASA Office in Room 502 at the Philadelphia Marriott before 3:00 p.m. on Monday, August 15. A Business Meeting agenda outline was included in every registrant’s program packet. 8:00 am Other Groups Association of Applied and Clinical Sociology (to 6:00pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Rooms 306-307 8:30 am Meetings 2004-05 ASA Council Members-at-Large (to 11:15am) — Philadelphia Marriott, Conference Suite III Department Resources Group Advisory Board and Business Meeting (to 10:10am) — Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon I Honors Program Wrapup (to 10:10am) — Philadelphia Marriott, Room 413 Section on Racial and Ethnic Minorities Council Meeting (to 9:30am) — Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon C Section on Sociological Practice Council Meeting (to 9:30am) — Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon J State, Regional, and Aligned Sociological Association Officers (to 10:10am) — Philadelphia Marriott, Conference Suite II 8:30 am Sessions 520. Thematic Session. Impoverished, Dead, or Morally Corrupt: Should There Be a Sociology of Deviance? Philadelphia Marriott, Room 305 Organizer: Mark Konty, Auburn University Presider: Thomas C. Calhoun, Southern Illinois University The Deviance Society. Patricia A. Adler, University of Colorado; Peter Adler, University of Denver Greatly Exaggerated? The Reports of Deviance’s Death. Joel Best, University of Delaware Contextualizing Deviance within Social Change and Social Stability. Nachman Ben-Yehuda, Hebrew University Is Deviance Still Relevant to Sociology? Erich Goode, University of Maryland The sociological study of deviance has had a constant presence throughout the hundred-year history of the ASA. In the last 30 years, however, that presence has been heavily criticized. The first criticisms leveled at deviance studies argued that the study of deviance reified the power relationships that define deviance in the first place. This was followed by a claim that the field was “dead”, it’s objects of study properly examined by other substantive areas. Recently a broadside was fired from the opposite direction and the sociology of deviance was accused of contributing to the moral decline of American society by questioning the validity of moral claims, in effect rendering all moral claims obsolete. This panel addresses these issues and looks to the past of the sociology of deviance to find the future of the sociology of deviance. 196 Tuesday, August 16, 8:30 a.m. 521. Thematic Session. Mental Health, Social Mirror: Reflections on the Changing Role of Sociology in Mental Health Research Philadelphia Marriott, Room 410 Organizer: Jane D. McLeod, Indiana University Presiders: Jane D. McLeod, Indiana University; William R. Avison, University of Western Ontario Social Change and the Production of Knowledge about Mental Illness and Its Treatment. Leonard I. Pearlin, University of Maryland The Changing Role(s) of Sociology (and Psychology) in the NIMH Intramural Research Program. Carmi Schooler, National Institute of Mental Health Cyclical or Permanent? The Diminshing Presence of the Social Sciences in NIH. David T. Takeuchi, University of Washington Mental Health and the Mainstream: Past, Present and Prognostications? Bernice A. Pescosolido, Indiana University These presentations consider the evolving relationship between mental health research and the sociological enterprise. Topics include the rising and declining significance of sociology within the NIMH; the potential of sociology to provide insights into the experience of mental illness; and the contributions of research on mental health to general theoretical and empirical debates within sociology. 522. Centennial Session. Landmarks in Sociology (co-sponsored by the ASA Section on History Sociology) Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon G Organizer and Presider: Edward A. Tiryakian, Duke University The Other Weber Classic. Gillian Niebrugge, American University; Patricia Madoo Lengermann, The George Washington University Parsons at Pennsylvania. Renee C. Fox and Harold J. Bershady, University of Pennsylvania Why Read Schumpeter? Richard Swedberg, Cornell University Sorokin and Mills: Marginals at Elite Universities. Edward A. Tiryakian, Duke University Discussant: Victor Meyer Lidz, Drexel University College of Medicine 523. Special Session. Rose Series in Sociology Philadelphia Marriott, Room 409 Organizer and Presiders: Douglas L. Anderton, Dan Clawson, Naomi Gerstel, Joya Misra, Randall G. Stokes, and Robert Zussman, University of Massachusetts and Editors, Rose Series in Sociology Good Jobs, Bad Jobs. Arne L. Kalleberg, University of North Carolina Egalitarian Capitalism. Lane Kenworthy, University of Arizona Citizens, Markets and Transnational Labor Activism. Gay W. Seidman, University of Wisconsin, Madison All participants are ASA Rose monograph series’ authors and will speak about their books, with special emphasis on the unifying theme of work in a global economy. 524. Author Meets Critics Session. Freedom Is an Endless Meeting: Democracy in American Social Movements (University of Chicago Press, 2004) by Francesca Polletta Philadelphia Marriott, Room 303 Organizer and Presider: Jeff Goodwin, New York University Critics: Rhys H. Williams, University of Cincinnati Jackie Smith, University of Notre Dame Richard Flacks, University of California, Santa Barbara Gary Alan Fine, Northwestern University Author: Francesca Polletta, Columbia University 525. Professional Workshop. Getting Your Book or Journal Article Published Philadelphia Marriott, Room 412 Organizer and Leader: Phyllis Moen, University of Minnesota 526. Professional Workshop. MFP Proposal Writing Workshop Philadelphia Marriott, Room 310 Organizer: Mercedes Rubio, American Sociological Association Panelists: Kim Sydnor, Morgan State University Ronica N. Rooks, Kent State University Roberta M. Spalter-Roth, American Sociological Association Elbert P. Almazan, Indiana University, Bloomington Rogelio Saenz, Texas A&M University Mary Murphree, National Medical Fellowships The MFP Proposal Writing Workshop is designed to expose students to sociologist and other professionals who have been experience with reviewing, writing and getting grants funded. The panelists will provide the audience members with proposal writing tips; how to make proposal competitive; consideration when choosing a funding mechanism; program announcements; and experiences as applicants, review, and successful competitors. 527. Teaching Workshop. Teaching about Families Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon K Organizer and Presider: Susan J. Ferguson, Grinnell College Tuesday, August 16, 8:30 a.m. Panelists: Susan J. Ferguson, Grinnell College Janet Zollinger Giele, Brandeis University Elizabeth Grauerholz, Purdue University Daniel T. Lichter, Ohio State University This workshop is hosted by several sociologists who teach about families from distinctive perspectives. Each co-presenter will briefly share their insights on how to organize and teach courses on the family. Specifically, each co-presenter will provide detailed information on how they structured their family course(s) and will share suggestions for texts, assignments, and videos. In addition, co-presenters will comment on some of the instructional challenges they have faced in teaching family courses over the years. Time will be allowed for discussion, both during and after the presentations, so that there is full opportunity for shariing ideas and approaches 528. Teaching Workshop. Undergraduate Student Research: Lessons from IDA (co-sponsored by ASA’s Integrating Data Analysis Project) Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon L Organizer: Jill Bouma, Berea College Panel: Jill Bouma, Berea College Peter Meiksins, Cleveland State University Katherine R. Rowell, Sinclair Community College Ana-Maria Wahl, Wake Forest University Setting data analysis in the context of student research for all levels of higher education, this workshop will provide practical examples and advice for teaching data analysis in undergraduate sociology courses. Drawing on lessons from the IDA project (Integrating Data Analysis), faculty from different institutional settings (community college, liberal arts college, and public and private research universities) will share examples from specific modules they have developed that walk students through the fundamentals of data analysis. 529. Regular Session. Can Current National and State Level Education Policies Improve Equality? Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington C Organizer and Presider: Susan D. Wiley, Institutes for Statistical Research Comprehensive School Reform and Reading Growth Curves in Kentucky Middle Schools. Melissa J. Evans-Andris and Wayne M. Usui, University of Louisville The Political Economy of School Curricula: Inequalities in the Distribution of AP Courses in California. Joshua Theodore Klugman, Indiana University Do GED Holders Go to College? Differential Postsecondary Participation among GED and Diploma Holders by Race and Family Background. Michal Kurlaender, Harvard University Does Exposure to Whites Help Blacks in the Long Run? LaborMarket Consequences of High School Racial Composition. Adam Gamoran, Ana Cristina Murta Collares, and Sarah 197 E. Barfels, University of Wisconsin, Madison Linkage between Incentive Structure and School Effort:A Comparative Study between Japan and Singapore. Choon Kiat Sim and Takehiko Kariya, University of Tokyo Discussant: Kenneth A. Frank, Michigan State University Research has shown us again and again that macro level education policies are loosely coupled to the education system. It has not been often that federal or state level policies have led to real change being implemented at the local level or for particular groups of students. This session brings together the results of rigorous empirical research on the actual effects of current federal and state policies aimed at improving equality of educational opportunity. The discussant, Kenneth Frank, will apply his extensive knowledge of rigorous research methods and sociology to the findings. 530. Regular Session. Sociology of Money, Credit, and Banking Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington A Organizer and Presider: Barry Cohen, Northwestern University The Making of U.S. Monetary Policy: Fine-tuning, Neoliberal Style. Greta R. Krippner, University of California, Los Angeles The Interplay between Coercive and Expert Isomorphism: The “Declaration of Independence” of the Israeli Central Bank. Daniel Maman, Ben Gurion University of the Negev; Zeev Rosenhek, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem Society and Consumer Credit in Transition Economies. Akos Rona-Tas, University of California, San Diego The Emergence of Credit Bureaus in Russia’s Consumer Credit Market: An Evolutionary Perspective. Alya Guseva, Boston University “To Lend, or Not to Lend: That Is the Question”: A Study of Chinese Commercial Banks’ Decision Making on Loans. Ningxi Zhang, Cornell University 531. Regular Session. Sociology of Popular Culture: Symbolic Boundaries and Cultural Valuation Philadelphia Marriott, Room 403 Organizer and Presider: Denise D. Bielby, University of California, Santa Barbara Comparing Cultural Hierarchies: Classifications of High and Popular Culture in American, Dutch, French, and German Newspapers, 1955-2005. Susanne Janssen, Giselinde M. Kuipers, and Marc Verboord, Erasmus University, Rotterdam Not Just a Performance: Cheerleading and the Politics of Sport. Laura Anne Grindstaff, University of California, Davis Symbolic Boundaries in Cultural Fields: Gatekeeping and Moral Exclusion in the Hollywood Script Market. Stephen S. Zafirau, University of Southern California 198 Tuesday, August 16, 8:30 a.m. Session 531, continued Reexamining Diversity in Music: The Effects of an Open System of Musical Production on New Forms of Music. Todd M. Callais, Ohio State University Discussant: Molly Moloney, University of California, Santa Barbara 532. Section on Environment and Technology Paper Session. Environment in a Global Context: Insights from CrossNational Research Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon H Organizer: Stella M. Capek, Hendrix College Presider: Maurie J. Cohen, New Jersey Institute of Technology Global Warming and the Neglected Greenhouse Gas: A CrossNational Study of the Social Causes of Methane Emissions Intensity, 1995. Andrew K. Jorgenson, Washington State University Foundation Funding for the Global Environment: Green Altruism or Green Imperialism? Tammy Lewis, Muhlenberg College Nature Protection and Civil Society in Comparative Perspective. C.S.A. (Kris) van Koppen, Wageningen University; William T. Markham, University of North Carolina, Greensboro When Tropical Forests Shrink: The Significance of Declining Forest Size for Biodiversity Conservation Policies. Thomas K. Rudel, Rutgers University 533. Section on Sociology of the Family Paper Session. Instability in Cohabiting Families Philadelphia Marriott, Room 302 Organizer: Susan L. Brown, Bowling Green State University Family Instability in Cohabiting Parent Families: A Qualitative Perspective. Wendy Diane Manning, Julie Downing, and Gayra Ostgaard, Bowling Green State University; Pamela J. Smock, University of Michigan How and Why Do Cohabiting Couples with Children Breakup? Joanna M. Reed, Northwestern University The Relationship Stability of Partners with a Shared Gender Ideology. Bryndl E. Hohmann-Marriott, Arizona State University Discussant: Kelly Raley, The University of Texas at Austin 534. Section on Alcohol, Drugs, Tobacco Paper Session. New Constructions of Drug Problems and Users. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 404 Organizer: Tammy L. Anderson, University of Delaware Presider: Lana D. Harrison, University of Delaware Social Constructions of Dependency by Blunts Smokers: Ethnographic Reports. Stephen J. Sifaneck, Bruce Johnson, Ellen Benoit, and Eloise Dunlap, National Development and Research Institutes Up in Smoke: The Disappearance of Marijuana Decriminalization, 1975-1979. Adam D. Jacobs, University of Wisconsin, Madison Alcohol Diagnoses in the Medical Context: Using Chart Review and Diagnostic Databases. Carol Conell, Kaiser Permanente; Carla A. Green, Oregon Health & Science University; Ella Lyons, Clinical Research Unit, Kaiser Permanente of Color; Agatha Hinman, Division of Research, Kaiser Permanente Northern C; Constance Weisner, Department of Psychiatry, University of California; Michael Polen, Center for Health Research, Kaiser Permanente Nort; Jennifer Ellis, Clinical Research Unit, Kaiser Permanente of Color The Public Health Cycle. The Evin Law and the Total Consumption Model in French Alcohol Policy. Pekka Juhani Sulkunen, University of Helsinki 535. Section on Organizations, Occupations, and Work Paper Session. Professions and Organizations Philadelphia Marriott, Room 411 Organizer and Presider: Virag Molnar, University of Reading Educators or Postmoderns: Using the West in the Struggles of a Post-Socialist Advertising Profession. Zsuzsanna Vargha, Columbia University Institutional Boundaries and Interorganizational Collaboration in the Field of Agricultural Biotechnology. William B. Lacy and Dina Biscotti, University of California, Davis; Leland L. Glenna, Washington State University The Relations between Professions, Organizations and Their Clientele: A Comparative Conceptual Framework. Ivy Bourgeault and Kristine A. Hirschkorn, McMaster University; Ivan Sainsaulieu, LISE Discussant: Martin Ruef, Princeton University 536. Section on Sex and Gender Paper Session. Gender Inequality Philadelphia Marriott, Room 304 Organizer and Presider: Louise Marie Roth, University of Arizona Gender Earnings Inequality in Families: Examining the Persistence of Wives’ Income Advantage. Sarah E. Winslow, University of Pennsylvania The End of the Gender Revolution: Married Mothers’ Labor Force Participation, 1963-2001. David A. Cotter, Union College; Joan M. Hermsen, University of Missouri; Reeve Vanneman, University of Maryland Women’s Economic Empowerment as the “Magic Potion” of Tuesday, August 16, 8:30 a.m. Development? Rae Lesser Blumberg, University of Virginia The Gendered Face of Terrorsim. Abby L. Ferber, University of Colorado; Michael Kimmel, Stony Brook University, State University of New York Legal Change and Gender Inequality: Changes in Muslim Law in India. Narendra Subramanian, McGill University The papers in this session focus on two broad themes of gender inequality. Two papers examine gender inequality in work and families, focusing on changes in women’s inequality in marriage and motherhood. Two others examine the gendered nature in transnational processes: development and terrorism. Movement toward greater equality and its limits are a broad theme of all four papers. 537. Section on Sociology of Religion Paper Session. Sociology of Religion I Philadelphia Marriott, Room 408 Organizer and Presider: Darren E. Sherkat, Southern Illinois University Are Religiously Informed Gender Role Attitudes Related to Support for Homosexuals’ Civil Liberties? Kristin Marie Kenneavy, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Church Attendance, Religious Affiliation, and Extramarital Sex. Kurt Gore and Sara Yeatman, University of Texas at Austin Drawing the Line: Views of Atheists and Moral Boundaries in America. Penny A. Edgell, University of Minnesota; Joseph H. Gerteis and Douglas R. Hartmann, University of Minnesota Group Position, Collective Threat, and Anti-Semitism in the U.S. Ryan D. King and Melissa F. Weiner, University of Minnesota 538. Section on Peace, War, and Social Conflict Roundtables Philadelphia Marriott, Room 401-402 Organizer: Josh R. Klein, Borough of Manhattan Community College, City University of New York 1. Theory and Culture Catagorical Assaults: Intergroup Conflict and the Manipulation of Cultural Status Beliefs. Brian H. Colwell, Stanford University A Two-dimensional Theory of Nonviolence. Daniel P. Ritter, University of Texas at Austin 2. Culture, Conflict and Institutions Against Scapegoating: A Sociological Critique of Rene Girard. Keith Doubt, Wittenberg University From the Hague to Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo: A Cultural Analysis of International Law Pertaining to Crimes of War. Stjepan G. Mestrovic, Texas A&M University 199 3. Culture, Environment and War Rhetorically Associating Democracy and War: The Iraq Case. Josh R. Klein, Borough of Manhattan Community College, City University of New York “Terrorism Experts Say...”: Experts on Terrorism in the New York Times, 1973-2001. Lisa Stampnitzky, University of California, Berkeley Landmines: An Environmental Health Crisis. Sara E. Smits, Syracuse University 4. Empire and Conflict Institutionalized Violence and Imperialist Culture: AntiImperialism and the Philippine American War. Erin Leigh Murphy, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign Oil Interests and the US Invasion of Iraq. Hassan Elnajjar, Dalton State College Whither Nicaragua? Neoliberalism, Revolution and Empire. Chris Agee, Graduate Center, City University of New York 5. Religion and War A Comparison between Algeria and Turkey: Muslimism versus Islamism. Neslihan Kevser Cevik, Arizona state University Migration and Conflict: Muslims and Catholics in the Ivory Coast. Justin M. Buszin, Brown University War on Terror, Law and Religion: A Comparative Study of Muslim Immigrant Communities in Europe and America. Gulseren Kozak-Isik, University of Minnesota 6. The Domestic and Civilian Impacts of the Military and War Making a Base into a Home: A Qualitative Study of Base and Local-Area Conditions Most Important to Military Families. David E. Rohall, Western Illinois University The Long-Term Effects of War on Rural Cambodian Widows. Susan Hagood Lee, Boston University Surveillance in a Domestic War Zone. Robert Hollenbaugh, University of Sounthern California 539. Section on Political Sociology Invited Session. Challenging the Right’s Hegemony: The Politics of Framing and Reframing Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon D Organizer: Fred Block, University of California, Davis Presider: Magali Sarfatti-Larson, Temple University The Strength of Weekly Ties: Institutional and Ideological Cohesion in the Conservative Movement. Thomas Matthew Medvetz, University of California, Berkley Reframing Reproductive Rights. Carole E. Joffe, University of California, Davis Framing a Defense of the Welfare State. Frances Fox Piven, City University of New York 200 Tuesday, August 16, 8:30 a.m. Session 539, continued Wedging Wars: Dividing Conservatives, Unifying Progressives. Fred Block, University of California, Davi Discussant: Magali Sarfatti-Larson, Temple University 540. Section on Rationality and Society Invited Session. Rational Choice Theory’s Contributions to Sociology: An Assessment Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington B Organizer and Presider: William I. Brustein, University of Pittsburgh Panelists: Mary C. Brinton, Harvard University Siegwart Lindenberg, University of Groningen Michael Hechter, University of Washington Discussant: Jack A. Goldstone 541. Section on Sociology of Sexualities Roundtables Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon F Organizer: Sharon Preves, Hamline University; Eve Shapiro, University of California, Santa Barbara; and Kristen Schilt, University of California, Los Angeles 1. Negotiating Risk Behaviors and Relationships with Sexually Transmitted Infections Presider: Sharon Preves, Hamline University Men’s Extramarital Sexual Relations in Africa: The Case of Zambia. Yanyi K. Djamba, Southeastern Louisiana University; Sitawa R. Kimuna, East Carolina University Redefining Risk Behaviours among Gay Men: What Has Changed? Joseph Brian O’Shea, Concordia University Partner Notification Methods for African-American Men Being Treated for Trichomoniasis. Bronwen Lichtenstein and Jane Schewbke, University of Alabama-Birmingham 2. Doing Gender, Doing Sexuality Presider: Kristen Rose Schilt, University of California, Los Angeles Bisexuality as a Category in Social Research: Lessons from Women’s Gendered Narratives. C. Lynn Carr, Seton Hall University Gendered Comfort Zones: Lesbians Construct the Spaces Between. Ruth A. Chananie, Southern Illinois University Super Studs and Girlie Men: Spectrums of Polyamorous Masculinities. Elisabeth A. Sheff, Georgia State University 3. Identity Negotiation Presider: Eve Ilana Shapiro, University of California, Santa Barbara Ally Storying: How Parents of LGBT Children Story Themselves as Allies to LGBTs. K. L. Broad, University of Florida Being Gay and Jewish: Negotiating Intersections of Ethnic and Sexual Identities. Randal F. Schnoor, York University Best of Two Worlds: An Exploration of Identity Issues among Gay Fathers. Alison S. Better, Brandeis University 4. Queer Politics and Social Discourse Presider: Tina Fetner, McMaster University Changing Attitudes toward Homosexuality in the United States and Canada. Tina Fetner and Robert Andersen, McMaster University Close Encounters of the Not-So Queer Kind: The Contradictory Contours of the Contemporary GLBTQ Political Landscape. Heather Laine Talley, Vanderbilt University Gender, Sexuality and the Politics of Visibility. CelineMarie Pascale, American University 5. Body and Sexual Practices Presider: Elroi L. Waszkiewicz, Georgia State University Something’s Gotta Give: Hollywood, Female Sexuality and the :”Older Bird” Chick Flick. Margaret J. Tally, Empire State College Maybe I Should Have Asked: Sexual Scripting and STD Avoidance. Linda P. Rouse and Kenneth Trevino, The University of Texas at Arlington Dialogues across Difference: Mainline Protestant Clergy Facilitate Local Conversation about Homosexuality. Wendy Cadge, Harvard University; Christopher James Wildeman, Princeton University 542. Section on Comparative and Historical Sociology Paper Session. The Framers and the Construction of the PostIndependence Order in the United States Philadelphia Marriott, Room 407 Organizer and Presider: John A. Noakes, University of Pennsylvania The Dialectics of Radical Republicanism: Rediscovering the Framers Vision of Democracy. Victoria L. Johnson, University of Missouri-Columbia Whiskey Rebels and Medical Power. Kimberly Barton, GeorgAugust University The Spirit of Inequality: A Critical Analysis of Weber’s Protestant Ethic and Spirit of Capitalist. Ana Lilia Campos, University of Iowa Discussant: John A. Noakes, University of Pennsylvania 201 Tuesday, August 16, 9:30 a.m. 9:30 am Meetings Section on Racial and Ethnic Minorities Business Meeting (to 10:10am) — Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon C Section on Sociological Practice Business Meeting (to 10:10am) — Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon J 10:00 am Tour Tour 9: The Seventh Ward—SOLD OUT (to 12:00pm; ticket required for admission) — Philadelphia Marriott, Lobby (at 12th Street) 10:30 am Meetings High School Outreach State Representatives (to 12:10pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Room 308 Honors Program Advisory Panel (to 12:10pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Room 309 Orientation for New ASA Council Members (2005-06) (to 12:10pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, ASA Suite Section on Peace, War, and Social Conflict Council Meeting (to 11:30am) — Philadelphia Marriott, Room 304 Section on Rationality and Society Council Meeting (to 11:30am) — Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington B Section on Sociology of Sexualities Council Meeting (to 11:30am) — Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon J 10:30 am Sessions 543. Thematic Session. Race and Ethnicity: Complex and Competing Frames of Population Variation Philadelphia Marriott, Room 305 Organizer and Presider: Joan H. Fujimura, University of Wisconsin Selective Skepticism in the Interpretation of Observational Data on Racial Disparity. Jay Kaufman, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill The Bio-logistical Construction of Race: Markering Difference for American “Minority” Health Markets. Duana Fullwiley, Harvard University The Three Great, Or at Least Pretty Good, Races. Jonathan Marks, University of North Carolina, Charlotte Discussant: Troy Duster, New York University This session presents analyses of competing perspetives on race and ethnicity. Recent studies by physical anthropologists and genetic linkage analysts have argued that there is new genetic evidence for arguing that race is a set of biological categories. Much of this research examines “racial” variation in predisposition towards particular diseases. Interestingly, most population geneticists argue against this claim. This session will bring together scholars who contest this claim on the basis of epidemiological evidence, population genetic evidence, and ethnographic study of the laboratories producing this claim. 544. Centennial Session. W.E.B. Dubois and Philadelphia: The Philadelphia Negro and Beyond (co-sponsored by the ASA Section on History Sociology) Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon G Organizer: Donald Cunnigen, University of Rhode Island The Subversive Text of DuBois’ Sociological Writings. Cheryl Townsend Gilkes, Colby College Africa Matters: DuBois’ Contributions to the Sociological Imagination. Tukufu Zuberi, University of Pennsylvania The Philadelphia Negro Revisited: Problems and Prospects. Elijah Anderson, University of Pennsylvania The Philadelphia Negro, the Early Works, and the Question of Method. Charles Lemert, Wesleyan University Discussant: Alford A. Young, University of Michigan The session will examine the contributions of W. E. B. DuBois to the discipline of sociology. It will highlight his work The Philadelphia Negro as well as other areas of scholarship which explored critical issues of race and modernity. 202 Tuesday, August 16, 10:30 a.m. 545. Special Session. Russian Sociology Philadelphia Marriott, Room 409 Organizer and Presider: Marshall Botkin, Frederick Community College 546. Special Session. The Rise or Decline of American Jews? Comparative Perspectives and Competing Explanations (co-sponsored by the Association for the Social Scientific Study of Jewry and the North American Jewish Data Bank) Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington A Organizer and Presiders: Arnold Dashefsky, University of Connecticut; Harriet Hartman, Rowan University “Make Me a Palette on the Floor”: A Search for Strategies of Institutional Adaptation to Changes in the Jewish Community. Vivian Z. Klaff, University of Delaware The Long Range Impact of Intermarriage on Jewish Communal Life. Bruce A. Phillips, Hebrew Union College Surveys, Narratives, and Identity Research. Debra Kaufman, Northeastern University Discussant: Harriet Hartman, Rowan University 547. Author Meets Critics Session. The Minority Rights Revolution (Belknap Press, 2002) by John D. Skrentny Philadelphia Marriott, Room 303 Organizer: Francesca Polletta, Columbia University Presider: Catherine Y. Lee, University of Michigan Critics: Richard D. Alba, University at Albany, State University of New York Jeff Manza, Northwestern University Holly J. McCammon, Vanderbilt University Author: John Skrentny, University of California, San Diego 548. Regional Spotlight Session. Social Capital in the Private City: Exploring Community in Philadelphia Philadelphia Marriott, Room 404 Organizer: Richardson Dilworth, Drexel University Presider: Jason Kaufman, Harvard University Cultural Planning and Regime Construction: How Philadelphia’s Elite Networks Established the City’s Political Culture. Jerome I. Hodos, Franklin & Marshall College Community Advocacy and Volunteerism in Wissahickon Park, 1895-2005. David R. Contosta, Chestnut Hill College; Carol L. Franklin, University of Pennsylvania Rootedness, Isolation, and Social Capital in an Inner-City White Neighborhood. Patricia Stern Smallacombe, University of Pennsylvania Discussant: Richardson Dilworth, Drexel University 549. Methodological Seminar. Structuring Discovery: A Model and Method for Multisite Team Ethnography Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon L Ticket required for admission Leaders: Linda Burton, Pennsylvania State University Stephen Matthews, Pennsylvania State University Debra Skinner, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill This seminar is intended for social scientists interested in conducting large longitudinal multi-site team ethnographies as part of program projects or multi-method studies which include observational and survey components. Using “structured discovery,” the framework we developed to successfully conduct two large longitudinal ethnographic studies of families and poverty in urban and rural settings (Welfare, Children, and Families: A Three-City Study www.jhu.edu/~welfare and The Family Life Project), we provide concrete examples of the highly effective systems of communication, data transfer, management, and analysis we used to orchestrate the activities of multisite ethnographic teams comprising over 215 members and produce high quality, reliable and valid ethnographic data. We also introduce a novel methodological strategy-Geoethnography. We developed Geoethnography to integrate ethnographic methods and data on families and communities with Geographic Information Systems (GIS) technology to inform our understanding of families’ use of time and space. 550. Professional Workshop. Launching an Academic Career in an Uncertain Economy: Advice from the Experts Philadelphia Marriott, Room 410 Organizer: Barrett Lee, Pennsylvania State University Leaders: Christine L. Himes, Syracuse University Barrett Lee, Pennsylvania State University Peter M. Nardi, Pitzer College Rogelio Saenz, Texas A&M University This workshop will cover job search strategies for new Ph.D.s starting academic careers. The leaders will highlight the differences between public and private, teaching and research, and small and large institutions. Strategies for being more competitive in the job market will be shared including; writing effective cover letters and vitas, interviewing techniques, preparing job talks, and alternate career paths. 551. Teaching Workshop. Sequencing Writing Across the Sociology Major: What to do about the Soft Middle? Philadelphia Marriott, Room 412 Organizer: Sherri L. Grasmuck, Temple University Leaders: Sherri L. Grasmuck, Temple University Eli Goldblatt, Temple University We will lead an interactive session that explores how the teaching of writing might be coordinated across the major and integrated with the Tuesday, August 16, 10:30 a.m. teaching reaearch skills. Drawing on the results of an in-depth look at writing assignments across a collection of social science and humanities departments, we will explore strategies for how toexamin the development of writing across the major and how to improve its coordination. Sharing lessons painfully learned about “the soft middle” of many majors, we will offer some ideas, and hear others, about what we have found to be the best starting point for beginning a collective rethinking of writing instruction as a coordinated process across the major rather than only in the context of individual courses. 552. Teaching Workshop. The Place of Theory in Applied Sociology Philadelphia Marriott, Room 411 Organizers: Jay A. Weinstein, Eastern Michigan University; Marvin S. Finkelstein, Southern Illinios University Edwardsville Presider: Marvin S. Finkelstein, Southern Illinios University Edwardsville Panelists: Kristine J. Ajrouch, Eastern Michigan University Michael J. Capece, Valdosta State University Robert A. Dentler, University of Massachusetts, Boston Judith K. Little, Humboldt State University Jammie Price, Appalachian State University Stephen F. Steele, Anne Arundel Community College Participants will discuss two related sets of issues: (1) the challenges and prospects associated with integrating theoretical perspectives into courses on applied sociology and (2) the role of applicationfocused material in courses on sociological theory. Undergraduate and graduate-level curricula will be considered. Our premise is that theory is one of the applied sociologist’s most potent tools for problem solving and that its use distinguishes sociological practitioners from other professionals who do similar work. That is, theory and practice are complementary components of the work of sociologists. Yet, despite this close logical — and historical — connection, many of our students (and some of their instructors) continue to view theorizing and application as mutually exclusive activities. 553. Teaching Workshop. Using Popular Music to Frame Sociological Concepts Philadelphia Marriott, Room 302 Organizer: Benjamin D. Albers, Duke University Leaders: Benjamin D. Albers, Duke University Rebecca Bach, Duke University One of the principle challenges in teaching sociology is conveying the scope of the sociological imagination. Students often have difficulty moving beyond their lived experiences to perceive broader social forces. In this workshop we will explore how popular music can be employed to help students acquire the perspectives needed to engage in sociological inquiry. Additionally we will address the use of popular music in humanizing instructors, providing common reference points that can overcome differences in students’ cultural literacy, and expanding students’ understanding of the range of phenomena open to sociological examination. 203 554. Teaching Workshop. What’s New with Student CHIP: An Update for Experienced Users and an Introduction for Newbies (co-sponsored by ASA’s Integrated Data Analysis Project) Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon K Organizer: Gregg Lee Carter, Bryant University Leaders: Gregg Lee Carter, Bryant University William H. Frey, University of Michigan Susanne Morgan, Ithaca College Susanne Mrogan will present Student Chip-based modules that are illustrative of the approach taught in the SS-DAN workshops, as well as an assessment by instructors of how well they work. Gregg Carter will demonstrate the latest version of Student Chip, with data analysis examples taken from the 4th edition of his Doing Sociology with Student Chip: Data Happy! (Allyn & Bacon, 2004). William Frey’s presentation will focus on new developments with the SSDAN Network and on how CHIP users can access Census/CPS data over the Internet. Ample time will be allowed for other session attendees to discuss their uses of CHIP and other software — such as MicroCase and SPSS — as teaching tools, especially in their substantive (nonresearch methods) courses. 555. Regular Session. Colleges and Their Consequences Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington C Organizer: Annette Lareau, University of Maryland, College Park; Kim Goyette, Temple University Presider: Elizabeth Stearns, University of North Florida Educational Institutions and Organizational Environments: Student Outcomes in Context. Josipa Roksa, New York University Educational Outcomes of Job Contacts and Placement Services for Students at Public and Proprietary Two-Year Colleges. Ann E. Person, Northwestern University; James E. Rosenbaum, Do Traditional Models of College Dropout Apply to NonTraditional Students at Non-Traditional Colleges? Regina Deil-Amen, Pennsylvania State University Higher Education Attainment, Earnings, and the Role of College Major. Gregory C. Wolniak, Tricia Seifert, Eric Jon Reed, and Ernest Pascarella, University of Iowa Discussant: David B. Bills, University of Iowa 556. Regular Session. Theoretical Considerations in the Sociology of Consumption Philadelphia Marriott, Room 407 Organizer and Presider: Daniel Thomas Cook, University of Illinois The “Consumer” Mistake: Genesis and Impact of a Key Conceptual Error. Michael Dawson, Portland State University Global Consumption: McDonaldization or Multicultural 204 Tuesday, August 16, 10:30 a.m. Session 556, continued Hybridization? Janet A. Lorenzen, Rutgers University “The Settings of Consumption: Cathedrals, Landscapes, and Communities.” J. Michael Ryan, University of Maryland, College Park Therapeutic Marketing and the Pathological Contradictions of Consumer Culture. Joseph D. Rumbo, James Madison University Discussant: Chris Rojek, Sage Publications Papers engage with key theoretical debates and concerns regarding what consumption is, how it is to be conceptualized, it consequences and the implications of various conceptualizations. 557. Section on Environment and Technology Paper Session. New Directions in Theory and Method Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon H Organizer: Stella M. Capek, Hendrix College Presider: Margarita V. Alario, University of Wisconsin, Whitewater Environmentalism and Postmaterialism: A Dead End? Steven R. Brechin, Syracuse University; Paul Mohai and Solange Simoes, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor The Development and Cross-National Validation of a Comprehensive Model of Environmental Concern: A USA-Canadian Comparison. Chenyang Xiao, Albright College; Riley Dunlap, University of Central Florida Understanding Vulnerability to Disasters: A Cross-National Analysis of 4,000 Climate-Related Disasters. Bradley Parks and J. Timmons Roberts, College of William & Mary Proportionality and Disproportionality in Environmental Impacts: A Call for Systematic Research. William R. Freudenburg, University of California, Santa Barbara 558. Section on Racial and Ethnic Minorities Paper Session. Racial Ideology, Racial Discourse, and the Reproduction of Racism Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon D Organizer and Presider: Ashley Woody Doane, University of Hartford Colorblind Racial Ideology, Affirmative Action, and Racially Conservative Organizations. Kimberly L. Ebert, University of California, Davis Discourses, Racial Regimes of Representation, and the Reproduction of Racism. Jennifer Eichstedt, Humboldt State University The “Problem of the Children:” White and Black Families’ Opposition to Becoming Multiracial. Erica Chito Childs, Eastern Connecticut State University ¿Mexican Suicide Bombers? The Effects of 9/11 on the Anti- Immigrant Movement. Carina A. Bandhauer, Western Connecticut State University Discussant: Ashley Woody Doane, University of Hartford 559. Section on Sociology of Religion Paper Session. Sociology of Religion III Philadelphia Marriott, Room 408 Organizer: Darren E. Sherkat, Southern Illinois University Presider: John P. Bartkowski, Mississippi State University Reproducing Inequality? Female Education in Christian and Muslim Arab American Families. Jen’nan Ghazal Read and Sharon Suzanne Oselin, University of California, Irvine Fathers’ Involvement and the Role of Religion: Evidence from the Fragile Families and Child Well Being Study. Shawna Leigh Anderson, University of Arizona Can Religion Encourage Homicide?: Religious Cosmologies and the Structure of Lethal Violence. Gary F. Jensen, Vanderbilt University Religious Giving, Group Identification, and the Boundedness of Rationality. John P. Hoffmann, Catherine Meyers, and Bruce Lott, Brigham Young University 560. Section on Sex and Gender Paper Session. Gendered Institutions/Organizations Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon C Organizer: Dana M. Britton, Kansas State University Presider: Sharon R. Bird, Iowa State University Building Capital through Communities at the Margins: Young Women of Color in Science. Maria Ong, Harvard University and TERC Gendered Political Institutions: The Case of Local Government in England. Abigail L. Halcli, Oxford Brookes University; Elaine Welsh, University of Warwick Reconceptualizing the Glass Ceiling as an Organizational Characteristic. Elizabeth H. Gorman, University of Virginia; Julie A. Kmec, Washington State University “Cause that’s what girls do”: The Making of a Women’s Gym. Maxine Craig, California State University, East Bay; Rita Liberti, California State University, Hayward Discussant: Patricia Yancey Martin, Florida State University 561. Section on Sociological Practice Paper Session. The Future of Sociological Practice: Conceptualization and Measurement Issues Philadelphia Marriott, Room 310 Organizer and Presider: Eleanor J. Lyon, University of Connecticut Changing Measures, Changing Perspectives: How the SelfSufficiency Standard Yields New Understandings of the Tuesday, August 16, 10:30 a.m. Nature of Poverty. Diana M. Pearce, University of Washington The Problem of Measuring SES on Educational Assessments. Stacey S. Merola, American Institutes for Research The Contribution of Sociology to Forced Migration Research. Holly Reed, Brown University “The Sociologist”: A Dramatized Exploration of Feminist Roles and Research Methods. Nicole Kempskie, New York University 562. Section on Alcohol, Drugs, and Tobacco Refereed Roundtables and Business Meeting Philadelphia Marriott, Room 401-402 10:30-11:30am, Roundtables: Organizer: Tammy L. Anderson, Dept of Soc and Crim. Justice 1. Substance Abuse Theory and the Diversity Question Adolescent Drug Use: Family Structure and Parenting Behavior. Clifford L. Broman, Michigan State University; Carol Freedman-Doan, Eastern Michigan University Early Onset Alcohol Use among American Indian Adolescents: An Examination of Caretaker Influence. Melissa Lynn Walls, Danny R. Hoyt, and Les B. Whitbeck, University of Nebraska, Lincoln Neighborhood Effects on the Efficacy of a Youth Substance Prevention Program. Scott Thomas Yabiku, Stephen S. Kulis, Flavio Marsiglia, Benjamin Allan Lewin, Tanya A. Nieri, and Syed Hussaini, Arizona State University 2. Social Control and Policy/Programs Disciplinary Careers of Drug-Impaired Physicians. Matthew C. Holtman, National Board of Medical Examiners The Impact of Program and Student Characteristics on the Efficacy of Brief Substance Use Interventions for College Students. Katarzyna Celinska, Thomas Morgan, Helene Raskin White, and Erich Labouvie, Rutgers University The Role of Spirituality on Alcohol Cessation among Native Americans. Rosalie A. Torres Stone, University of Nebraska, Lincoln; Debbie Martinez, University of Nebraska, Lincoln; Xiaojin Chen, Tulane University 3. Social Control and Prevention Programs Further Exploration of Control Attitudes toward Drug Use. Stelios Stylianou, Intercollege, Cyprus Linguistic Acculturation of Mexican Heritage Youth and Effective Substance Use Prevention. Stephen S. Kulis, Arizona State University Prevention as Intervention: The Success of a Universal Prevention Program among Early Adolescent Substance Users. Tanya A. Nieri, Layne Stromwall, and Scott Thomas Yabiku, Arizona State University 205 4. Understanding Drug Markets Electronic Communications and the Dynamics of the Streetlevel Drug Markets in the United States. Zhiwei Zhang, University of Chicago; Dean Robert Gerstein, NORC/ University of Chicago Issues in Working with a Multi-Year ADAM/DUF Database. Andrew Golub, Hilary James Liberty, and Bruce D. Johnson, National Development and Research Institutes, Inc. Youthful Drug Markets or Where Do Kids Get their Drugs? Explorations from the DAVI Study. Lana D. Harrison, University of Delaware; Patricia G. Erickson, Addiction Research Foundation; Dirk Korf, University of Amsterdam 5. Substance Abuse Policy Issues and Women Facilitating the Adoption and Adaptation of Intimate Partner Violence Services into Substance Abuse Treatment Programs: Lessons Learned. Barbara Lynn Kail, Fordham University Motherhood and HIV Risk among Women Who Use Heroin. Dale D. Chitwood, Dixie Jasun Koo, and Jesus Sanchez, University of Miami Substance Abuse and Mental Health: A Comparison of Women in Drug Court and Women on Probation. Michele Staton Tindall, Carrie B. Oser, Jamieson Duvall, and Carl Leukefeld, University of Kentucky 6. Innovative Quantitative Analyses Music and Drugs: A Fixed Effects Analysis of Cultural Preferences and Substance Use in U.S. Radio Markets. Christopher Uggen, and Michael Christopher Vuolo, University of Minnesota Populars, Jocks, Headbangers, and Averages: Peer Crowd Identities and Adolescent Substance Use. Kathleen E. Miller, Joseph Hoffman, Grace M. Barnes, and Michael P. Farrell, University at Buffalo, State University of New York; Merrill Melnick, College at Brockport, State University of New York; Don Sabo, D’Youville College The Role of Credentialing in the Emergence of employee Assistance as a Workplace Jurisdiction. Sylvester O. Osagie, The Pennsylvania State University 7. Miscellaneous Issues Cigars-for-Blunts: Marketing of Flavored Tobacco Products to Youth and Minorities. Sifaneck Stephen, National Development and Research Institutes, Inc. Who Becomes Alcoholic versus Drug Dependent? Exploring Social Answers among Diverse Young Adults. Donald A. Lloyd, Florida State University “I Don’t Beg. I Don’t Steal:” Drug Users’ Front-Stage Self- 206 Tuesday, August 16, 10:30 a.m. Session 562, continued Perceptions. Rene D. Drumm, Southern Adventist University; Duane C. McBride, Andrews University 11:30am-12:10pm, Business Meeting 563. Section on Organizations, Occupations, and Work Roundtables Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon F Organizer: Peter Mendel, 1. Stratification and Mobility in Labor Markets Presider: Xi Chen, Texas A&M University Generational Stratification and Labor Market Cohorts. Harold J. Toro, University of California, Berkeley Post-Industrial City and Bifurcation of Labor: The Case of New York City Restaurant Industry. Isil CelimliInaltong, Columbia University The Effect of Informal Social Relationships on Intergenerational Occupational Mobility. Youngjoo Cha, Cornell University Replication of Status Attainment Model. Xi Chen, Texas A&M University 2. Collective Action in the Workplace Presider: Arthur B. Shostak, Drexel University (emeritus) The Effect of Organizational Size on Democratic Governance as Represented by Participatory Democracy. Mark L. Seth, Schenectady County Community College Employee Attitudes and the Democratic Workplace: ESOPs. Karen E.B. McCue, University of New Mexico The “Toughest Beat”: California Correctional Peace Officers Association and Politically Realistic Unionism. Joshua Aaron Page, University of California, Berkeley On the State of CyberUnionism: An American Progress Report. Arthur B. Shostak, Drexel University (emeritus) 3. Transitional Economies I: Business Organization Presider: Carolyn L. Hsu, Colgate University Culture, Rationality. and the Generation of Economic Cooperation in East Asia. Sun-ki Chai, University of Hawaii Cadres, Getihu, and Good Businesspeople: The Social Construction of Entrepreneurs in Early Post-socialist China. Carolyn L. Hsu, Colgate University Forces, Constraints, and Professionalization of Chinese Family Business: A Theoretical Model. Jianjun Zhang, Peking University 4. Transitional Economies II: Worker Welfare and Consequences Presider: Yang Cao, University of North Carolina at Charlotte Workplace and Life Chances: Organization-Based Social Stratification Under a State Socialist Regime. Xiaogang Wu, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology Rapid Changes in Labor Market Segmentation and the Risk of Unemployment: An Analysis of Polish Panel Data, 1988-2003. Irina Tomescu, Ohio State University Firm Welfare Spending during China’s Economic Transition: Strategic Choices and Institutional Mechanisms. Jin Lu, Ohio State University The Political Economy of Corporate Downsizing: State and Firm Behavior in Contemporary China. Yang Cao, University of North Carolina at Charlotte 5. Dual and Segmented Labor Markets Presider: Andrew Stephen Fullerton, University of Connecticut Labor Dispatching and the Transformation of the Employment Relationship in Taiwan. Jyh-Jer Roger Ko, National Taiwan University Beyond Segmentation: Occupations and the Contingent/ Non-Contingent Wage Gap. Andrew Stephen Fullerton, University of Connecticut 6. Globalization Effects on Work and Workers Presider: Nilanjan Raghunath, National University of Singapore Pathways to Informal Work in Costa Rica. Susan E. Mannon, Utah State University The IT Firm’s Reputation: The Creation of Knowledge Workers in India Beyond the Rationality of “Cheap Labor.” Nilanjan Raghunath, National University of Singapore The Structural Expansion of Reductions in Hours of Work in OECD Countries. Young Sun Kim, Korea University 7. The Workplace Experience and Employee Commitment Presider: Martin Laubach, Marshall University Consent and the Subjective Experience of the Workplace. Martin Laubach, Marshall University; Michael E. Wallace, University of Connecticut Alienation and New Work Practices: Reconstructing a Classical Concept. Amanda K. Damarin, Georgia Institute of Technology The Relational Cohesion Model of Organizational Commitment. Jeongkoo Yoon, Ajou University 8. Expert Authority, Power, and Forms of Capital Presider: William Ocasio, Northwestern University Organizational vs. Personal Social Capital in Scientists’ Performance: A Multilevel Network Study of Elite Cancer Researchers. Emmanuel Lazega, University of Lille, France; Lise Mounier, Lasmas-CNRS, Paris; Marie-Thérèse Jourda, Cepel-CNRS Beyond Dependence: A Political Capital Perspective on Power in Organizations. William Ocasio and Jo-Ellen Tuesday, August 16, 10:30 a.m. Pozner, Northwestern University Bounded Rationality Revisited: The Moral Hazards of Expert Control. Kathleen Fernicola, University of Chicago 9. Social Capital in Work and Voluntary Settings Presider: Mary J. Fischer, University of Connecticut Buried Treasure: The Pursuit of Social Capital in American Life. Brian Jones, Villanova University A Full House at the United Nations? Community Involvement and Cultural Diversity in Minnesota’s Twin Cities. Perry Chang, Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) Research Services Networks to the Future: How College Students Find Summer Jobs. Mary J. Fischer, University of Connecticut 10. Sexual Harassment and Coercion in Work Presider: Denise Benoit Scott, State University of New York at Geneseo Age, Gender, and Sekuhara in Japan and the United States. Chika Shinohara, University of Minnesota Sexual Harassment. Ganga Vijayasiri, University of Illinois at Chicago Work and Non-Work: A Critical Examination of Unpaid Work in the Global Economy. Ann Doris Duffy, Brock University; Norene Pupo, York University 11. Organizational Innovators and Role Models: The Good and the Bad Presider: Deborah Vaughan, University of Washington Reconciling Altruism and Pragmatism: Social Entrepreneurship and the Production of New Organizational Forms. Paul-Brian McInerney, Columbia University History, Agency, and Evangelicalism: How Theology Provokes Innovation in a Los Angeles Church. Gerardo Marti, Davidson College Controlling the Evolution of Corruption: Emulation, Sanction and Prestige. Deborah Vaughan, Eric Gleave, and Howard T. Welser, University of Washington 12. Gender/Racial Labor Stratification and Segregation Presider: Sangeeta Parashar, University of Maryland, College Park Why Do People Change Jobs? Employment Mobility and Gender Stratification in Urban China. Yang Cao, University of North Carolina at Charlotte; Chiung-Yin Hu, Louisiana State University Determinants of Women’s Labor Force Participation and Occupational Sex Segregation in Post-Apartheid South Africa. Sangeeta Parashar, University of Maryland, College Park Preferences and Processes: Combining Threat and Queuing Theories of Labor Market Outcomes. Sabino Kornrich, University of Washington 207 13. Gender and Work Presider: Joy E. Pixley, University of California, Irvine Postindustrial Trends in the Mother and Father Gaps in Income, 1980-2000. Tor Wynn, Wichita State University; Sarah Beth Estes, University of Cincinnati Comparing Male and Female MBA Students: Similar Positions, Different Futures. Joy E. Pixley, University of California, Irvine Dilemmas of Diversity Research: New Theories and Directions on the Performance of Diverse Work Teams. Darina Elena Lepadatu, University of Kentucky 14. Social and Cultural Adjustments of Displaced Workers Presider: Gregory Wayne Walker, Lock Haven University of Pennsylvania A Budget Crunch for Schools and Difficult Times for Teachers: Reductions-in-force and Realignments. Kenneth Root, Ken Root & Associates; Steven Root, The Block Institute Pride and Humility: The Working Class Flipside of the Crisis of Managerial Authority. Gregory Wayne Walker, Lock Haven University of Pennsylvania Identity and the Maintenance of a Collective Orientation amongst Redundant Steel Workers in the UK. Robert MacKenzie, Mark Stuart, Chris Forde, and Ian Greenwood, University of Leeds; Rob Perrett, University of Bradford; Jean Gardiner, University of Leeds 15. Unemployment and Temporary Work Presider: David Gary Van Arsdale, State University of New York Tompkins Cortland Organizational Necessity Vs. Personal Loss: A Model for Coping with Downsizing. Ariel A. Karrie, Emek Yizreel College, Haifa University The Work of Unemployment: New Economy Job Search Practices and Self-help Discourses. Ofer Sharone, University of California, Berkeley Waiting for Work: An Ethnography of Temporary Help Workers from a Deindustrialized City. David Gary Van Arsdale, State University of New York Tompkins Cortland 16. Status, Risk-taking, and Conformity Presider: Forrest S. Briscoe, Pennsylvania State University Status Security and Career Conformity: Theory and Evidence from a Medical Organization. Forrest S. Briscoe, Pennsylvania State University Emerging Status and the Effects of Reference on Strategic Risk-Taking. Jeong-han Kang and Wonjae Lee, University of Chicago Information Technology Skills as Cultural Capital in a Segmented Labor Market. Zeynep Tufekci, University of Maryland 208 Tuesday, August 16, 10:30 a.m. Session 563, continued 17. Networks, Jobs, and Gender Presider: Gail Marie McGuire, Indiana University, South Bend Social Support in Workers’ Networks: The Racial and Gendered Aspects of Care Work. Gail Marie McGuire, Indiana University, South Bend Occupational Conditions, Socializing at Work, and Informal Social Support: Different Dynamics for Men and Women. Shira Offer, and Barbara Schneider, University of Chicago Gender Differences in Employed Job Search among Regular Full-time Workers. Chigon Kim, Wright State University 18. Professional and Institutional Construction of Organizational Sectors Presider: Richard N. Pitt, Vanderbilt University Building Bodies, Building Respectability: The Professionalization or Personal Trainers. Amelia M. George, University of California Santa Barbara “Late” Capital: The Fiduciary Negotiations of Finality. George Sanders, Vanderbilt University The Organization of the U.S. Postsecondary Education Market. Martin D. Hughes, University of Arizona; Richard N. Pitt, Vanderbilt University 19. Industry Dynamics and Organizational/Labor Outcomes Presider: Elsie Lucia Echeverri-Carroll, University of Texas at Austin High-Technology Agglomerations and Wage Inequalities. Elsie Lucia Echeverri-Carroll and Sofia Ayala, University of Texas at Austin Investigating the Spatial Patterning of Workplace Racial/ Ethnic Segregation Using EEO-1 Reports. Matt L. Huffman and Wendy Marie Paulson, University of California, Irvine Systematic Inefficiencies: Productive Organization, Aspirations, and Accumulation. Matt G. Vidal, University of Wisconsin 20. Identity and Work Presider: Jillian L. Powers, Duke University Identity Management, Interaction and Self-Verification among Rural Exotic Dancers. Jillian L. Powers, Duke University The Blue-Collar Conundrum: Rethinking Gender Identity. Paul E. Calarco, University at Albany, State University of New York Toward Being a Female Engineer: Women’s Experience in a Male-Dominated Field. Hye-Jin Park Chu, Texas A&M University 21. Organizational Emergence and Evolutionary Processes Presider: Nina Bandelj, University of California, Irvine In the Name of Pasteur: Organizations in the French Vaccine Industry. Tzung-wen Chen, CSO-IEP de Paris and CNRS Networks as Structural and Cultural Features of Organizations: The Case of Private Business Schools in Postsocialist Europe. Nina Bandelj, University of California, Irvine; Danica Purg, IEDC-Bled School of Management, Slovenia Firm Creation and the Measurement of Operating Organizations. Phillip H. Kim, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill 22. Self-employment: Opportunity and Stratification Presider: Zulema Valdez, Texas A&M University Segmented Assimilation and Self-Employment. Zulema Valdez, Texas A&M University Gender Differences in Survival of Self-employment in Taiwan and Korea. Fengbin Chang, University of Chicago Labor-Market Opportunities and Transitions to SelfEmployment. Marlis C. Buchmann, University of Zurich and Swiss Federal Institute of Technology; Irene Susanna Kriesi, University of Zurich; Stefan Sacchi, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology 564. Section on Sociology of the Family Roundtables Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon E Organizer: Susan D. Stewart, Iowa State University 1. Family Structure and Child Well-Being Presider: Pamela J. Smock, University of Michigan Single-Parent Family Structure, Child Development, and Child’s Well-being. Ming Wen, University of Utah Family Structure and Substance Use Problems in Adolescence and Early Adulthood. Anne E. Barrett and R. Jay Turner, Florida State University Beyond Single Parents: Diverse Family Structures and Early School Performance. Jeanne Blackburn, Bryndl E. Hohmann-Marriott, and Jennifer Elyse Glick, Arizona State University Economic Diversity among Single Mothers since 1980. Matthew R. McKeever, Mount Holyoke College; Nicholas H. Wolfinger, University of Utah Like Mother, Like Daughter? The Intergenerational Transmission of Union Formation Patterns. Leanna M. Mellott, Zhenchao Qian, and Daniel T. Lichter, Ohio State University 2. Kin Obligations Presider: Naomi Gerstel, University of Massachusetts Kin Norms for Predicting Kin Giving Financial Help in Tuesday, August 16, 10:30 a.m. Urban Families. Victoria Vasquez, Northwestern University Components of Change in Social Support Exchange Patterns Surrounding the Transition to Parenthood. Carolyn A. Liebler, University of Minnesota Do You Do Unto Others as You Would Have Them Do Unto You? Laura M. Holian, Paul W. Kingston, and Steven L. Nock, University of Virginia Gender and Intergenerational Coresidence in Egypt and Tunisia. Kathryn M. Yount, Emory University 3. Fathers in Families Presider: Wendy Diane Manning, Bowling Green State University Fathers’ Risk Behaviors in Fragile Families: Implications for “Healthy Marriages.” Maureen Waller and Raymond R. Swisher, Cornell University Nonresident Father Involvement and Adolescent WellBeing. Daniel N. Hawkin, Valarie King, Paul R. Amato, Pennsylvania State University Fatherhood, Couple Commitment and Relationships with Co-Residential Children in the United States. Carrie E. Spearin, Brown University Family Complexity and Social Support: How Multipartnered Fertility Affects Mothers’ Support from Their Social Networks. Kristen S. Harknett, University of Pennsylvania; Jean Tansey Knab, Princeton University Father Involvement in New Family Type-Fragile Family. Chieh-Wen Liu, Rutgers University 4. Mothers in Families Presider: Susan D. Stewart, Iowa State University How Race and Class Mitigate the Negative Effects of Motherhood on Women’s Employment. Rebecca Glauber, New York University Maternal Employment and Parent-Child Relationships: What Do American Adults Say about Their Childhood Experience? Melissa A. Milkie, University of Maryland Babies in bed: To Sleep or Not to Sleep (with your baby). Jean Halley, Wagner College “Mommy Memoirs”: Gender and Motherhood in Popular Literature. Ivana Brown, Rutgers University Images of Childhood in Contemporary Childrearing. Elizabeth Ann Murphy, University of Nottingham 5. Race, Ethnicity, and Adolescent/Young Adult Outcomes Presider: Elizabeth C. Cooksey, Ohio State University Mattering to the Family and Violence within the Family by Adolescents. Gregory Clark Elliott, Brown University; Susan M. Cunningham, Holy Cross College; Melissa Colangelo, Brown University; Richard J. Gelles, University of Pennsylvania Family Rituals and Social Risk Factors for Young Adult 209 African Americans. Joanne E. Roberts, HardinSimmons University; Rudy Ray Seward, University of North Texas Sexuality through Adolescent Lens: Does Perception Matter? Vernon Anthony Woodley, University of Iowa Structural Principles behind Intergenerational Network Closure between Adolescents and Their Parents. Yangchih Fu, Academia Sinica Orchestrating and Perpetuating a Power Paradox: The Couples and Communities of Domestic Discipline Relationships. Melissa Travis, Georgia State University 6. Child Care Policy Presider: Daniel T. Lichter, Ohio State University Low-Income Mothers and Day Care Hopping. Patricia Drentea, Mercy W. Mwaria, and Juan Xi, University of Alabama-Birmingham Inequality and Child Care Policy: A Postmodern Theory of Moral Panics. Susan Chimonas, University of Michigan “Lessons from the Office: The Organizational Implementation of Work-Family Policies.” Melanie A. Hulbert, George Fox University Negotiating the Demands of Postsecondary Education and Parenthood. Laura West Steck, University of Connecticut 7. Housework Presider: Theodore N. Greenstein, N.C. State University Housework, Income, and Nation: A Comparative Investigation of the Effects of Women’s and Men’s Incomes on Housework Hours. Sanjiv Gupta, University of Massachusetts; Marie Evertsson, Swedish Institute for Social Research; Sabine N. Merz, University of Massachusetts at Amherst; Liana C. Sayer, Ohio State University; Magnus Nermo, Swedish Institute for Social Research Economic Dependency and Household Labor (NSFH 19921994). Wendy Marie Paulson, University of California, Irvine Explaining the Gender Gap in the Division of Household Labor: Bargaining/Resource Theory, Time Availability, and Gender Ideology. Michael B. Aguilera, University of Oregon A Blessed Resolution to a Stalled Revolution: Faith, Family Work, and Fairness in Early Marriage. Julia C. Wilson, University of Virgina 8. Race, Class, and Youth Presider: Paul W. Kingston, University of Virginia Bend It Like Bourdieu: Class, Gender and Race in American Youth Soccer. Paul Kooistra, Furman University Beliefs about Social Class Inequality: Affluent Children’s Perspectives. Heather Beth Johnson and Margaret Hagerman, Lehigh University 210 Tuesday, August 16, 10:30 a.m. Session 564, continued Voices from Blau Space: How Consumers Find Youth Service Providers. Beth M. Duckles, Joseph Galaskiewicz, and Alison Fogarty, University of Arizona Does Joint Custody Serve the Child’s Best Interests? The Views of Judges. Julie E. Artis, DePaul University 9. Academic Achievement Presider: Chadwick L. Menning, Ball State University Social Capital in Multiple Spheres: Measuring Social Capital at Home and at School. Mikaela Dufur, Brigham Young University; Toby L. Parcel, Purdue University; Kelly Palfreyman Troutman, Brigham Young University Educational Endowments and Test Score Divergence during Middle and High School. Keith Dion Robinson, University of Michigan 10. Work-Family Conflict Presider: Lynne M. Casper, National Institute for Child Health and Human Development Work-family Conflict and the Adjustment of Working Hours in Australia. Jeremy E. Reynolds and Lydia Aletraris, University of Georgia The Sandwiched Generation: Multiple Caregiving Responsabilities and the Mismatch between Actual and Preferred Work Hours. Jennifer Keene and Anastasia H. Prokos, University of Nevada-Las Vegas Self-Employment, Work-Family Fit, and Life Satisfaction among Male Workers. Robert C. Tuttle, Wilkes University The Experiences of Working Class Families in an Era of Uncertainty. Michelle Marie Proctor, Wayne State University Changes in Latitudes, Changes in Attitudes: Do Latitude and Demands at Work and Home Matter for Personal Control? Phyllis Moen and Donna Leigh Spencer, University of Minnesota 11. The Economics of Marriage Presider: Lynn White, University of Nebraska Cultural Context and Management of Money in Marriage: A Cross-national Study. Sean R. Lauer, University of British Columbia; Carrie L. Yodanis, Poverty and Parenting in Married Biological Parent Families. Ronald Edward Bulanda, Miami University Does Greater Interdepency between Spouses Lead to Greater Marital Stability? Tara Leigh Becker, University of Wisconsin, Madison 12. Family Conflict, Dynamics, Definitions Presider: W. Bradford Wilcox, University of Virginia Subjective Alienation and Family Conflict: Exploring Determinants of Psychological Well-Being among Taiwanese. Daisy Fan, The University of Texas at Austin Solidarity and Conflict between Adult Children and Their Parents. Exchange and Social Embeddedness. Ruben I. van Gaalen and Pearl Dykstra, Netherlands Interdisciplinary Demographic Institute and Utrecht University Sibling Rivalry: An Emerging Horizontal Nuance. Tina Armando, Temple University Sibling Relationships in Nuclear Families, Divorced Families, and Remarried Families. Monique C. Balsam, University of Nevada-Las Vegas Biological versus Social Definitions of the Family: Conflict, Coexistence, or Ambivalence? Mellisa Katharine Holtzman, Ball State University 13. Asian Family Patterns Presider: Steven L. Nock, University of Virginia The Transition into Marriage among Young Adult Asians: The Relative Influence of Family and Ethnicity. Sampson Lee Blair and Marilou Blair, University at Buffalo, State University of New York Does Sub-Cultural Norm Matter?: Comparison of Fertility Behaviors of Chinese Immigrants Speaking Different Dialects. Ping Ren, University of California, Irvine Factors Affecting Life Courses of Young Adults in Japan: Possible Causes for Late Marriage in Recent Years. Junya Tsutsui, Nagoya University of Commerce & Business Transnational Struggles in the Immigrant Family: A Case Study of Taiwanese Americans. Chien-Juh Gu, Michigan State University 14. Contemporary Issues in Race and Family Intermarriage amongst South Asian Immigrants. Farha Ternikar, Le Moyne College Broadened Horizons and Mediated Interactions: Openness and Contact in Transracial Adoptions. Jennifer A. Reich, University of Denver Negotiating Continuity: Family and religious socialization for Second Generation Asian Americans. Jerry Park, Baylor University; Elaine Howard Ecklund, Rice University Race and National Origins in the Construction of Families: The Case of International Adoption. Hiromi Ishizawa, Catherine T. Kenney, Kazuyo Kubo, and Gillian A. Stevens, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign 15. Comparative Gender Role Attitudes Presider: Laura Ann Sanchez, Bowling Green State University Knowledge, Attitudes, and Practices on Domestic Violence Against Women in Bangladesh. Rifat Akhter, A.K.M. 211 Tuesday, August 16, 10:30 a.m. Saiful Islam, and Kathryn B. Ward, Southern Illinois University A Life Course Perspective on Gender Boundary Conflict among the Widows of Okinawa. Kristen Schultz Lee, Pennsylvania State University Gender Role Attitudes: 1994-2002. Patricia L. Donze, University of California, Los Angeles The Construction of Gender among Cohabiting Couples. Amanda Jayne Miller, The Ohio State University; Sharon L. Sassler, The Ohio State University 16. Potpourri Female-Head Family Formation among Whites, Blacks, and Hispanics 1970-1990: Implications for Public Policy. Dula J. Espinosa, University of Houston, Clear Lake; Garry Lee Rolison, California State University, San Marcos How Race and Class Mitigate the Negative Effects of Motherhood on Women’s Employment. Rebecca Glauber, New York University The Life Course and Family Experiences of Women in the Military. Darlene M. Iskra, University of Maryland Men in the Margins: Single men, Stigma and Success. Beth A. Eck, James Madison University 565. Section on Comparative and Historical Sociology Paper Session. The Consolidation and Fragmentation of Historical and Contemporary Empires Philadelphia Marriott, Room 403 Organizer and Presider: Rebecca Jean Emigh, University of California, Los Angeles Repressing Rebels, Managing Bureaucrats: The Qing State’s Counter-Mobilization Against the Taiping Rebellion, 185168. King-To Yeung, Rutgers University Total War and State Breakdown: Russia, Austria-Hungary, and Germany (1917-1918). Pavel I. Osinsky, Northwestern University “The Learned Brâhmen, Who Assists Me”: Intellectual Interactions between the Indian and the British Colonial Scholars and Scientists. Alena K. Alamgir, Rutgers University Rise and Demise of the Qing Empire: Neo-Confucianist State, Class Conflict, and Arrested Transition to Capitalism in Early Modern China. Ho-Fung Hung, University of Indiana, Bloomington Discussant: Christopher Chase-Dunn, University of California, Riverside 11:30 am Meetings Fund for the Advancement of the Discipline Advisory Panel (to 2:10pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Conference Suite I Section on Alcohol, Drugs, and Tobacco Business Meeting (to 12:10pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Room 401-402 Section on Peace, War, and Social Conflict Business Meeting (to 12:10pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Room 304 Section on Rationality and Society Business Meeting (to 12:10pm) — Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington B Section on Sociology of Sexualities Business Meeting (to 12:10pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon J 12:30 pm Meetings Minority Fellowship Program Advisory Panel (to 2:10pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Conference Suite II 212 12:30 pm Tuesday, August 16, 12:30 p.m. Sessions 566. Thematic Session. Globalization and the Sociology of Non-Western Societies Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon G Organizer and Presider: Arvind Rajagopal, New York University How Not to Do Globalization Studies. Saskia Sassen, University of Chicago Intensive Capitalism. Scott M. Lash, Goldsmiths College, University of London Modernity and Its Mediations. Arvind Rajagopal, New York University It is well known that sociology as a discipline emerged in response to the problem of social order resulting from industrialization. It is important to reckon with the implications of this fact, namely that sociology was founded in the apprehension of democracy, not to further it. Today, when those in the west find themselves apprehensive of popular movements in different parts of the world, sociologists find many of them reprehensible or worse. No doubt such movements maybe ambivalent in both intent and outcome. Can we be certain, however, that sociology’s concern with order is not be reasserting itself in contexts that require the re-examination of that concern, and how it is expressed? This session will pose the problem of a sociology of non-western societies in the context of globalization as critical to the relevance and revitalization of the discipline as a whole. The need that this session will take as its premise, namely to historicize sociology’s origins, was ignored for at least two reasons. Firstly, sociology arrived after the boundaries of the modern nationstate were secured, and thus came to identify itself with social reform projects within an established political context. (Thus for instance, sociology has had an uneasy relationship with Marxism, as e.g., Michael Burawoy has argued.) Secondly, sociology developed within a western setting whose historical features came to be identified with modern norms tout court. Thus the sociology of non-western societies was confined to questions of “development,” or relegated to a different disciple, usually anthropology. But in the context of globalization, and the worldwide circulation of people and things in consolidated circuits of exchange becomes ever harder to ignore. The pretense that my modernity can be achieved at your expense and is yet a thing apart is harder to sustain. This then requires that we confront “non-western” phenomena (no longer uniquely nonwestern and local) in theoretical and not simply normative terms. 567. Thematic Session. Sociology in the Culture Wars: From Public Issues to Personal Problems and Back Again Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon C Organizer and Presider: Arlene Skolnick, New York University Panelists: Cynthia Fuchs Epstein, Graduate Center, City University of New York Frank F. Furstenberg, University of Pennsylvania Kathleen Gerson, New York University Michael Kimmel, Stony Brook University, State University of New York For the past quarter century, cultural conflicts have divided Americans from one another, and rocked the balance of politica1 power in the nation. The battle may shift from one topic to another abortion, women’s rights, gay rights, teen pregnancy, divorce, but the overarching framework is a “moral decay” and a “decline of the family.” If ever the country needed sociology’s empirical expertise and its theoretical insights it is in these highly polarized public debates. The understanding, for example, that the family is always in flux, and is profoundly affected by its wider social and economic contexts, could lead to a more nuanced public conversation. Yet there is often a striking discrepancy between the academic literature and the “findings” that provoke media coverage. Instead, the line between social science findings and political advocacy is blurred. Social science is selectively used and misused in support of political advocacy usually by conservatives. For example, in public discourse about the effects of divorce on children, the major findings of academic research are virtually ignored, in favor of a deeply flawed clinical study that comes to dire conclusions. Sociologists have played a variety of roles in these debates. They can be found on either side of the culture wars. But voices from the right are highly amplified by a well-financed network of think tanks, foundations, and a variety of local and national media outlets. Founded in the l970’s, this network was explicitly designed to replace the universities and mainstream foundations as sources of policy ideas. The panel will address the question: how can sociology play a larger role in framing public debates over family, sexuality, and gender? How can we advance a more complex, nuanced national conversation about these emotionally and politically charged matters? 568. Centennial Session. Comparative Perspectives on the Teaching of Sociology: A Century of Transmission Philadelphia Marriott, Room 305 Organizers: Wava G. Haney, University of Wisconsin Colleges; Diane Pike, Augsburg College Presider: Wava G. Haney, University of Wisconsin Colleges Teaching Sociology: From Interest Group to Scholarly Specialty. Carla B. Howery, American Sociological Association Tuesday, August 16, 12:30 p.m. Teaching as Public Sociology. Michael Burawoy, University of California, Berkeley The Matter of Teaching and Why Teaching Matters. Teresa A. Sullivan, The University of Texas at Austin The capacity for species survival depends upon transmitting the code. The capacity for sociology’s survival depends upon passing on the discipline. Most members of the ASA teach in some capacity-presumably none would be sociologists had they not been taught. Major founders in the field addressed issues of teaching the science of society passionately and eloquently and contemporaries continue to do so. Thus, an examination of the rising and declining significance of teaching in sociology, and in the ASA, is imperative at this century milestone. Four panelists consider this charge by each analyzing and interpreting an essay on teaching sociology selected from one quarter of the century. How can this text be compared to our present understanding of the role and status of teaching sociology? What are the competing explanations for why the teaching of sociology has fared as it has thus far? What should be the direction of the profession in the future and what role should sociology play as higher education debates the scholar-teacher role? Such intellectually important exchanges cannot help but to advance our understanding of how our collective ability to teach may secure our very future. 569. Special Session. Public Sociology in Contested Areas Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon H Organizer and Presider: Amy T. Schalet, University of California, San Francisco Panelists: Samuel R. Friedman, National Development and Research Institute Judith D. Auerbach, American Foundation for AIDS Rsch Judith Stacey, New York University Troy Duster, New York University Carole E. Joffe, University of California, Davis The presider will ask the panelists direct questions about the special challenges they, and colleagues, face as public sociologists working in such highly politicized fields as HIV/AIDS, gay marriage, the human genome project and abortion. The notorious “hit list”of researchers working in politically sensitive areas assembled by the NIH, and the recent spread of “junk science” in these contested areas are among the topics to be addressed. The audience will be encouraged to participate in open discussion and exchange. 570. Academic Workshop. Recruiting and Retaining Quality Majors Philadelphia Marriott, Room 408 Organizer and Presider: Susan Lynn Caulfield, Western Michigan University Panel: Edward L. Kain, Southwestern University Esther Wilder, Lehman College and the Graduate Center Sarah Susannah Willie, Swarthmore College This workshop will focus on the recruitment and retention of quality sociology majors, with a primary focus on undegraduate programs in Sociology. Recruitment will be addressed in terms of both directed 213 initiatives to recruit quality students as well as general approaches such as handbooks and pamphlets. Retention will be discussed in a couple of different ways as well, such as the unintended gatekeeping that may occur in some programs, or any “vascular weakness” in the curriculum “pipeline.” Examples of retention issues include issues around quantitative courses, use of cohorts, lack of coherence across the major, and interaction with other disciplines. The workshop is designed as a briefing session, where presenters provide insights, resources and exemplary models or programs. The majority of the time will be spent in conversation with workshop attendees on these very important issues. 571. Workshop cancelled 572. Research Workshop. Using Census Data for Research Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon L Organizer: William H. Frey, University of Michigan Panelists: Trent Alexander, University of Minnesota Matthew Sobek, University of Minnesota Andrew A. Beveridge, Queens College and Graduate Center City University of New York William H. Frey, University of Michigan This workshop provides an overview of prominent online resources for utilizing Census data in research, developed by three different University groups. They are: (1) the Integrated Public Use Microdata IPUMS project (www.IPUMS.org) developed at the University of Minnesota Population Center: (2) The Social Explorer (www.social.explorer.com) developed at the Queens College Sociology Department; and (3) CensusScope (www.CensusScope.org) developed by the Social Science Data Analysis Network (www.SSDAN.net) at the University of Michigan. IPUMS provides researchers with ready online access to 2000 US census and Current Population Survey micro-data as well as harmonized microdata for 16 previous US censuses, for trend and historical analyses. IPUMS also provides international census data. Social Explorer permits researchers to map and create reports that depict social and demographic characteristics for user-defined geographic areas including census tracts, or neighborhoods for current and earlier censuses. CensusScope provides a quick look-up of 1990 and 2000 census statistics, including segregation measures, for geographic areas with colorful graphics, maps, and ranking lists that are exportable into Word and Excel spreadsheets. The workshop will provide demonstrations of each of these web-based tools, discussions of how they have been used successfully in research settings and handouts which will allow participants to access them. 573. Teaching Workshop. Successfully Teaching Statistics without Watering Down Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon K Organizer: Ferris J. Ritchey, University of Alabama-Birmingham Leaders: Ferris J. Ritchey, University of Alabama-Birmingham Thomas A. Petee, Auburn University This workshop presents an overall strategy and class-tested techniques that prevent a common dilemma experienced by statistics 214 Tuesday, August 16, 12:30 p.m. Session 573, continued instructors: the perception that either class material must be oversimplified (i.e., “watered down”) or that math-challenged students must be rejected (i.e., “weeded out”). This approach shows how undergraduate statistics courses can be taught without compromising depth of understanding, comuptational skill levels, or scope of material. Specific methods are offered for reifying abstract ideas, such as standard errors, sampling distributions, the null hypothesis, and degrees of freedom. Innovative graphics software and internet resources are presented. Attendees are encouraged to share experiences and challenges of teaching statistics. 574. Teaching Workshop. Teaching Social Psychology Philadelphia Marriott, Room 410 Organizer: Laura Fingerson, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee Leader: Laura Fingerson, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee Co-Leaders: Sharon K. Araji, University of Alaska, Anchorage Anne Frances Eisenberg, State University of New York at Geneseo Rosemary F. Powers, Eastern Oregon University 576. Regular Session. Race and Ethnicity: (Re)Constructing the Language of Race Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington A Organizer: Vilna Francine Bashi, Rutgers University Presider: Jose Antonio Padin, Portland State University From Civil Rights to Science: An Institutional Examination of Racial Classifications in the Federal Government and Biomedical Research. Catherine Y. Lee, University of Michigan; John Skrentny, University of California, San Diego Moving from Prejudice to Privilege: Breathing New Life into Survey Research by Taking Whiteness Seriously. Paul R. Croll, University of Minnesota “Can’t We All Just Get Along?” Assessing Actors’ Racial Views through Interviews and Everyday Conversations. David G. Embrick, Texas A&M University “From the Factory to the Bakery”: The Social Construction of “Urban” and “Suburban” Schools. Linda M. Waldron, Christopher Newport University Discussant: Jose Antonio Padin, Portland State University This interactive workshop will focus on selected issues in teaching undergraduate sociological social psychology including: experiments and research conducted by students, teaching analytic skills, effective short assignments, making the most out of non-textbook readings, and using the web to enhance student learning. Lots of time will be available for questions, audience participations, and audience input. We will also have several handouts with information on selecting texts, assignment ideas, experiment/activity ideas, web resources, and print resources. The four papers in this panel together show that racial issues are continually re-constructed using words that racialize. The papers’ authors examine the use of the spoken word in everyday settings (the workplace and school grounds) and the written word in social science research (in surveys and biomedical research) and discuss the power of words in the process of racialization. It is hoped that by examining these language constructions together, we might find ways to combat that most negative counterpart to racialization: racism. 575. Regular Session. Class, Cultural Capital, and Education Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington C Organizer: Annette Lareau, University of Maryland, College Park; Kim Goyette, Temple University Presider: R. Sam Michalowski, Graduate Center, City University of New York Within the Walls and among the Students: Symbolic Boundaries and the Construction of Difference. Jenny M. Stuber, Indiana University The Invisible Hand: Middle Class Parent Pressures in Urban Public Schools. Elizabeth Siobhan McGhee Hassrick, University of Chicago Making the Transition from Parent Volunteer to Advocate. Maria L. Martinez-Cosio, University of Texas, Arlington Cultural Capital and Academic Achievement in Mexico. Javier Rojas, University of Texas at Austin Discussant: Annette Lareau, University of Maryland, College Park 577. Regular Session. Rational Choice: Advances in Theory Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington B Organizer: Nobuyuki Takahashi, Hokkaido University Presider: S. S. Levine, University of Pennsylvania Rational Choice: Positive, Normative, and Interpretive. Sun-ki Chai, University of Hawaii The Microfoundations of Social Action: Toward an Analytical Weberianism. Edgar Kiser, University of Washington Understanding the Role of Guanxi in Transitional Economies: Information, Uncertainty, and Network Structure. KuangChi Chang, University Wisconsin, Milwaukee Discussant: Mary C. Brinton, Harvard University Rather than focusing on specific aspects of social phenomena as the other Rational Choice session does, this session is concerned with Rational Choice perspective in a broader sense. Some papers are focused on metatheoretical discussion (e.g., what is the characteristic and the future of Rational Choice compared to other perspectives), while the other papers use Rational Choice perspective to interpret concrete and important social phenomena. Tuesday, August 16, 12:30 p.m. 578. Section on Peace, War, and Social Conflict Paper Session. Factors Fostering or Inhibiting Violence in Social Conflicts Philadelphia Marriott, Room 304 Organizer and Presider: Lee A. Smithey, Swarthmore College Narrative Networks and the Dynamics of Ethnic Conflict and Conciliation. Tammy Ann Smith, Columbia University A Globalized Conflict: Explaining Contemporary Anti-Jewish Violence in Ten European Countries. Robert B. Smith, Massachusetts Institute of Technology A Comparative Study of Anti-Semitic Attacks in Algeria in the 1920s and 1930s. Lizabeth A. Zack, University of South Carolina Upstate The Terrorist, Its Agents, and the Citizens: State Terror and the Need for an Interactive Sociological Perspective. Natasha M. Sacouman;and Meyer Kestnbaum, University of Maryland, College Park Discussant: Gregory M. Maney, Hofstra University 579. Section on Community and Urban Sociology Gender and Urban Space Philadelphia Marriott, Room 409 Organizer: Daphne Spain, University of Virgina Presider: Judith N. DeSena, St. John’s University Fear, Danger, Men: Violences of Gender and Development in a City in Crisis. Ryan Centner, University of California, Berkeley Gender and Space: A Quantitative Study of Older Urban Women and Mental Health. Mary E. Byrnes and Heather Elise Dillaway, Wayne State University Urban Neighborhoods, Stress, Gender and Depression: A factorial ecology. Flora I. I. Matheson, St, Michael’s Hospital; Rahim Moineddin, University of Toronto; James R. Dunn, Maria Isabella Creatore, and Piotr Gozdyra, St. Michael’s Hospital; Richard H. Glazier, University of Toronto Working Mothers and Child Care Decisions in Urban Neighborhoods. Lynda L. Laughlin, Temple University 580. Section on Sociology of the Family Paper Session. Negotiating Meaning in Families and Relationships Philadelphia Marriott, Room 302 Organizer: Julia McQuillan, University of Nebraska, Lincoln Presider: Rachel D. Brown, University of Nebraska, Lincoln Shared Fates in Transracial Adoption: Sorting through Differences in Asian-White Families. Jiannbin Lee Shiao and Mia Tuan, University of Oregon The Family’s Child: Kin Systems and the Crafting of Roles for Young Fathers in Low-Income African American Families. 215 Kevin Michael Roy, Purdue University Negotiating and Managing Intimacy when the Gendered Self Is Threatened: Living and Loving with Alzheimer’s. Jeanne Hayes, Kansas City VA Medical Center; Christopher A. Faircloth, North Florida-South Georgia VA Medical Center The Social Construction of Family in the Gay and Lesbian Community. Shlomit Bornstein, University of Wisconsin at Madison Discussant: Veronica Jaris Tichenor, State University of New York Institute of Technology 581. Section on Alcohol, Drugs, Tobacco Paper Session. Subcultural and Regional Perspectives on Drugs and Alcohol. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 404 Organizer: Tammy L. Anderson, University of Delaware Presider: Andrew Golub, National Development and Research Institutes, Inc. Asian American Youth, the Dance Scene and Club Drugs. Geoffrey Hunt, Institute for Scientific Analysis Ecstasy Sellers’ Risk Perceptions and Their Impact on Distribution Practices. Paloma Sales, University of California San Francisco; Sheigla B. Murphy, Institute for Scientific Analysis Heavy Drinking and Suicide Mortality in Russia. William Alex Pridemore, Indiana University Marijuana Argot as Subculture Threads: Social Constructions by Users in New York City. Bruce D. Johnson, Flutura Bardhi, Stephen J. Sifaneck, and Eloise Dunlap, National Development and Research Institutes, Inc. 582. Section on Sex and Gender Paper Session. Gender, Science, and Technology (co-sponsored with the Section on Science, Knowledge, and Technology) Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon J Organizer and Presider: Maria Ong, Harvard University and TERC “Ummm...ren’t u a girl?”: Youth and Social Inequalities in Cyberspace. Alyssa Richman, Temple University A Day in the Life: Inventing Engineers. Gina-Louise Sciarra, Graduate Center, City University of New York; Carroll Seron, Baruch College and Graduate Center, City University of New York; Susan S. Silbey, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Beyond Breast Cancer, Beyond Women’s Health: Disease Kinship Building within U.S. Environmental Breast Cancer Activism. Barbara L. Ley, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee University-Based Science Centers: A New “Old Boy’s” Aca- 216 Tuesday, August 16, 12:30 p.m. Session 582, continued demic Club? Monica Gaughan, Georgia Institute of Technology; Elizabeth Corley, Arizona State University Discussant: Susan Bell, Bowdoin College 583. Section on Sociology of Sexualities Paper Session. Sex Panics Philadelphia Marriott, Room 411 Organizer: Arlene J. Stein, Rutgers University Presider: Verta A. Taylor, University of California, Santa Barbara Crossing Borders for Sex: the New Global Panic Around “Trafficking in Women.” Elizabeth Bernstein, Barnard College, Columbia University Touching problems: Feminists, Conservatives and Child Sexual Abuse. Jean Halley, Wagner College Panic Over Marriage: Sex, Morality, and Sex in the ‘Bible Belt’. Melanie Ann Heath, University of Southern California Sex Panics and the Regulation of Prostitution in Late Capitalism: The Origins of Nevada’s HIV Policies for Prostitutes. Cheryl Radeloff, Minnesota State University, Mankato; Barbara G. Brents and Robert Futrell, University of Nevada-Las Vegas 584. Section on Sociological Practice Paper Session. The Future of Sociological Practice: Public Connections Philadelphia Marriott, Room 310 Organizer: Eleanor J. Lyon, University of Connecticut Presider: Lynetta Marie Mosby, Oakland University Symbiotic Partnering of Sociology and Public Policy: An Example from Workforce Development. Mary Gatta, Rutgers University; Kevin McCabe, New Jersey Department of Labor and Workforce Development Midwifery as Established Sect: An Expanded Application of the Church-Sect Continuum. Gail Elizabeth Murphy-Geiss, Colorado College; Dana Rosenfeld, Royal Holloway, University of London; Lara Foley, University of Tulsa “Are We Making a Change?” The Data and Research Needs of Toledo Area Non-Profit Organizations. Randy Stoecker, University of Toledo The Sociology of the Future, or Does Sociology Have a Future? Stephen F. Steele, Anne Arundel Community College 585. Section on Environment and Technology Refereed Roundtables and Business Meeting Philadelphia Marriott, Room 401-402 12:30-1:30pm, Roundtables: Organizer: Stella M. Capek, Hendrix College 1. Urban Issues and the Environment “We Already Got Enough Pollution”: An Industrial Neighborhood’s Power over Land Use Decisions. Diane M. Sicotte, Drexel University The Importance of Space: Environmental Inequality in Post-Industrial Detroit, Michigan and Portland, Oregon. Chad Leighton Smith, Texas State University, San Marcos Plots Against the American Dream: Framing Responses to Smart Growth Initiatives. Lauren Heberle, University of Louisville; Diane C. Bates, The College of New Jersey Urban Common-Pool Resource Management: A Case Study of the Urban Heat Island Problem. Kazumi Kondoh, Washington State University 2. Science and Agriculture Targets of Trust: Assessing Trust in the Evaluators, Watchdogs and Merchants of Genetically Modified Food in the United States. John T. Lang and William Hallman, Rutgers University Environmental Issues in Role Framing: The Social, Economic, and Environmental Impact of the Pork Industry in North Carolina. Eoghan P. Joyce and Bob Edwards, East Carolina University Negotiating a Community for Environmental Change: Science and Power in Agriculture. Christopher R. Henke, Colgate University 3. Globalization and Environment Globalizing Health, Safety, and Environmental Risks: The Asbestos Industry in Mexico. R. Scott Frey, University of Tennessee Soybeans and the Sino-Brazilian Socio-Ecological Division of Labor. John Lawrence Gulick and Harwood Schaffer, University of Tennessee, Knoxville Ecologically Unequal Exchange: Consumption, Equity, and the Challenges of Sustainable Development. James Rice, Washington State University 4. Democratizing Industry? Organizational Change and Resistance Eco-fund Negotiations: Conservation Crumbs or Participation Equity? Patrica A. Widener, Brown University Organized Labor and the Emergence of the Treadmill of Production: The Path Not Taken. Andrew D. Van Alstyne, University of Michigan Ecological Modernization in the Russian Context: Scenarios from the Forest Industry. Juha Kotilainen, University of Joensuu; Ivan Kulyasov, Antonina Kulyasova, Svetlana Pchelkina, and Maria Tysiachniouk, Centre for Independent Social Research 5. Self and Place Sovereignty, Spatiality, Serengeti. Cassie M. Hays, Yale Tuesday, August 16, 12:30 p.m. University Control over Territory in a Russian Nature Reserve: A Study of the Genius Loci Method. Tatiana Safonova, Centre for Independent Social Research Social Structure, Identities, and Values: A Network Approach to Understanding People’s Relationships to Forests. Howard Harshaw and David B. Tindall, University of British Columbia Thinking as Natural: Another Look at Human Exemptionalism. Jerry L. Williams, Steven F. Austin State University 6. Social Responses to Shifting Landscapes “The Bush Is No More”: Natural Resource Availability in Rural South Africa. Tracy Kirkland and Lori M. Hunter, University of Colorado, Boulder; Wayne Twine, University of Witwatersrand, South Africa Local Responses to Water Resource Degradation. Stephanie Jo Buechler and Gayathri Devi, International Water Management Institute What Do People Sell and Buy at a Flea Market? The Creation of Sustainability in Post-Soviet Russia. Oleg V. Pachenkov, Centre for Independent Social Research 7. The Sociology of Climate Change Individual Leadership Matters: The Case of Global Ozone Layer Protection. Penelope Canan and Nancy Reichman, University of Denver; Stephen DeCanio, University of California, Santa Barbara; Catherine Dibble, University of Maryland Carbon Management in Hokkaido: The Effects of Regional Stakeholder Networks on Kyoto Protocol Implementation. Stephan Scholz, Global Carbon Project/University of Arizona; Yoshiki Yamagata, National Institute of Environmental Studies, Japan; Joseph Cabrera, University of Arizona Factors Influencing Climate Change Policy Preferences. Thomas M. Dietz, Amy Dan, and Rachel Shwom, Michigan State University A “Passive Revolution” in Global Climate Politics: The Changing Dynamics of ENGO/Oil Company Relations. Simone Pulver, Brown University 1:30-2:10pm, Business Meeting 586. Section on Organizations, Occupations, and Work Authors-Meet-Critics Session and Business Meeting Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon D 12:30-1:30 p.m., Author Meets Critics: Occupational Ghettoes: The Worldwide Segregation of Men and Women Organizer: Frank Dobbin, Harvard University Authors: Maria Charles, University of California, San Diego David B. Grusky, Cornell University 1:30-2:10 p.m., Business Meeting 217 587. Section on Racial and Ethnic Minorities Roundtables Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon E Organizer: Ashley Woody Doane, University of Hartford 1. Theoretical Issues Understanding African Americans\’ Struggle for Political Power: The Intersection of Race and Class. Benedict Ngala, Montgomery College; Marie-Claude Jipguep, Howard University Trick or Treat? Exploring Halloween as a Uniquely Constructive Space for Engaging Race. Jennifer C. Mueller, Texas A&M University; Leslie Picca, University of Cincinnati; Danielle Dirks, University of Florida 2. Racial Attitudes and Prejudice Unveiling Islamophobia in the U.S.: Muslim Immigrants and their Context of Reception. James David Gibbon, Princeton University White Ambivalence: The Effect of Interracial Contact on Attitudes towards White Supremacists and their Organizations. John D. Foster, University of Florida Competent and/or Warm? Dimensions of Racial Stereotypes. Yan Li, Stanford University 3. Latino Identity Latinos United Will Never be Defeated!: The Predicaments of the Latino/a Identity. Gloria Natalia Ortiz, Northwestern University The Function of Latino Ethnic Identity by Race: A Demographic Comparison. Lindsay Hixson, University at Albany, State University of New York 4. History, Memory, and Racial Discourse The Reality and Legacy of Fear: White Oppression under Legal Segregation. Ruth Kathleen Thompson-Miller, Texas A&M University The Role of Collective Memory in the Dominant-Minority Group Struggle in America or the Education of Theresa Malloy. John P. Myers, Rowan University Recalling Racial Relations in a Southern Town: Black Memory and White Amnesia. Kristen Maria Lavelle, University of Florida 5. Race in Institutional Settings Certified Minority: The Quandary for Black Architects. Victoria Kaplan, Writing for Change Race at Work: The Effects of Race and Cultural Capital in Corporate Settings. David Purcell, University of Cincinnati The Doctor Patient Interaction: Addressing Issues of Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health Outcomes. Maria Kontorinakis, Rutgers University 6. Race and Legal Institutions Indignities Real and Perceived: Negotiating Color-blind Racism in America’s Elite Law School. Wendy Leo 218 Tuesday, August 16, 12:30 p.m. Session 587, continued Moore, University of Minnesota Sidestepping Racism: “Color Blind” Ideology, Commission Discourse, and Criminal Justice Reform. William T. Armaline, University of Connecticut 7. Race and Attitudes Toward Public Policy Black Opposition to Affirmative Action. Jessica C. Mills, Michigan State University Explaining Welfare Attitudes among African-Americans, Latinos, and Whites. Pamela Wald, University of Minnesota 8. Race, Segregation, and Spatial Assimilation Racial Preferences and Residential Segregation: A Factorial Experiment. Valerie A. Lewis and Michael O. Emerson, University of Notre Dame The Search for Spatial Assimilation: Trends in Spatial Assimilation among Blacks in Houston, Texas 19702000. Warren P. Waren, Texas A&M University 9. Race and School Achievement Decomposing the Racial Achievement Gap: A Multilevel Approach. R. L’Heureux Lewis and Anthony Daniel Perez, University of Michigan School Equity and Efficacy: Race and the Achievement Gap. Richard Ruiz Verdugo, National Education Association Segmented Assimilation? Explaining Ethnic Disparities in the School Achievement of Second Generation Students. Ellen Wight, University of California, Los Angeles 10. Race and College Performance Academic Disidentification in College: Negative Results from a Longitudinal Case Study. Kenneth Spenner, Sarah Mustillo, Anita Yvonne Bryant, and L. Richard Landerman, Duke University Assimilation and College Experience: Differences in College Performance and Retention between White, Black, Hispanic, and Asian Students at the City University of New York. Ingrid Alice Skadberg, Graduate Center City University of New York The Recognition of Ethnic Mongolian Students: A Case Study of Three Chinese Universities. Zhao Zhenzhou and Gerard A. Postiglione, The University of Hong Kong 11. Race, Maturation, and Identity An In-Depth Assessment of the Oppositional Culture Model: An Examination of the Theory’s Maturation Component. Angel Luis Harris, University of Michigan The Social Process of Racial Identity Development Across Adolescence: Monoracial vs. Multiracial Pathways. Steven Hitlin, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; J. Scott Brown and Glen H. Elder, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Antecedents of Success: Identity Orientation, Achievement and Self-Esteem among Koreans and Mexicans. Christine Jin Oh, University of California, Irvine 12. Race and Educational Equity Multiculturalism in Higher Education: Testing the Assumptions of Institutional Change to Improve Campus Diversity. Christopher Scott Chambers, Texas A&M University University Race and Perceptions of School Quality. Joshua Liam Freely, Temple University Visibility/Invisibility Blues: The Marginalization of Minority Faculty at Independent Schools. Katrina Bell McDonald and Adia M. Harvey, Johns Hopkins University; Shelly Brown, University of North Carolina Greensboro 13. Historical Perspectives Ethnic Segmentation and Labor Controls in the Southern Colorado Coal Fields: 1894 to 1905. Frank J. Weed, University of Texas at Arlington Experiencing the Sting of Racism: When Italians Were an “In-between” Racial Group in Arizona, 1880-1920s. Phylis Cancilla Martinelli, Saint Mary’s College The Social Construction of Hellenism: AHEPA’s Struggle Out of Nativism. Vaso V. Thomas, Bronx Community College 14. Race in the Carribbean Breaking Methods: Silence, Memory and Oraliteracy in Caribbean Studies. Mimi Sheller, Lancaster University Cuban Images: A barrio in transition. Siri J. Colom, University of California, Berkeley 15. Nationality, Religion, and Group Boundaries Ethnic Religion, Religious Nation: Rethinking the Role of Religion in Creating, Sustaining and Transtorming Group Boundaries. Merav Sadi-Nakar, University California, Los Angeles Nationality as Practice: Monitoring National Difference in Estonia. Lisa Fein, University of Michigan The Social Production of Muslimness in Late Colonial Bengal: The Early Writings of Bengali Muslim Intellectuals. Mahua Sarkar, State University of New York, Binghamton 588. Section on Sociology of Religion Refereed Roundtables and Business Meeting Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon F 12:30-1:30pm, Roundtables: Organizer: Lisa D. Pearce, University of North Carolina 1. Religion, Politics, and Activism Tuesday, August 16, 12:30 p.m. Presider: Darren E. Sherkat, Southern Illinois University Magic Happens: Emotions and Religion at a Social Movement Recruiting and Training Event. Elizabeth A. Williamson, Rutgers University Being Pious under a Theocracy: Religiosity in PostKhomeini Iran. Gunes Murat Tezcur, University of Michigan Political Constriction and Multidirectional Re-Framing of Palestinian Islamism during the Oslo Peace Process. Loren Diller Lybarger, California State University, Chico 2. Religion, Race, Ethnicity, and Immigration Presider: Yanick St. Jean, University of Wisconsin-Parkside Attitudes toward Immigrants in the United States: Does Religion Matter? Robert Brenneman, University of Notre Dame Churches Need Sociology Too: Examining Perspectives on Racism in Evangelical, Mainline and New Thought Congregations. Jeanette Baust, University of Denver and Iliff School of Theology Exploring Racial Identity among Interracial Church Attendees: Material for Cross-racial Bridging? Korie L. Edwards, The Ohio State University 3. Religion, Family, and Life Course Presider: John P. Bartkowski, Mississippi State University Adolescent Fertility and Religion in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil: The Role of Protestantism. Sarah McKinnon and Joseph E. Potter, University of Texas at Austin; José Eustáquio Diniz Alves, Escola Nacional de Ciências Estatísticas A Competing and Comparative Perspective on Religion as Determinant of Socio-Demographic and Economic Behaviour. Yaghoob Foroutan, Australian National University Transnationalism, Globalization, and Emerging Kin and Sexual Relations among Egyptians and Emiratis. Frances Hasso, Oberlin College 4. Religious Identities Presider: Sally K. Gallagher, Oregon State University Dakar’s Islamist Youth: International Imaginings and Revolutionary Piety. Erin Joanna Augis, Ramapo College “The Effect of Religiosity on Ethnic Identity among Second-Generation Muslim Americans.” Christine Soriea Sheikh, University of Arizona Religious Tensions on Campus: Perceptions of Latter-day Saint and Protestant Students in the Intermountain West. Lisa K. Zottarelli, Texas Woman’s University 5. Religion and Other Institutions Presider: Melissa J. Wilde, Indiana University Fundamentalism and Globalization of Education. Zack 219 Kertcher, University of Chicago Much Ado about Nothing: the Myth and Ceremony of Faith-Related NGOs. Paul A. Peters, University of Texas Regulating Religion through the Courts in Former Communist Countries. James T. Richardson, University of Nevada, Reno 6. Religion and Theory Presider: Robert D. Woodberry, The University of Texas at Austin Towards a Pragmatic Theory of Religion. David A. Smilde, University of Georgia Social Evolution and Religious Evolution. Wesley W. Roberts and Stephen K. Sanderson, Indiana University of Pennsylvnia The Iranian Revolution: A Process of Theocratic Legitimacy. Farnad Darnell, Wayne State University 7. Religion, Globalization and Modernity Presider: Christian Smith, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Creating Muslim Space in the USA or Americanization of Muslim Space in the USA: Turkish Mosque in Washington DC. Ismail Demirezen, University of Maryland, College Park The Moral Discourses of Globality: A Comparison of Secular and Religious Globalization Projects. Victor Roudometof, University of Cyprus Beyond Secularization, Rational Choice, and Fundamentalism: A Dialogue between Postcolonial and Sociological Analyses of Religion. Orit Avishai, University of California, Berkeley 8. Religion and Divorce The Impact of Religious Homogeneity on the Rate of Divorce in the United States, 1990-2000. Kimberly Brackett, Donald Bogie, Nelya McKenzie, and Larry Mullins, Auburn University, Montgomery Role Conflict and the Strategies of Its Resolution among Separated and Divorced Catholics: Internet Survey Findings. Anna Aleksandra Bruzzese, Stony Brook University, State University of New York Religious Dissimilarity and the Risk of Divorce: Evidence from Two Waves of the National Survey of Families and Households. Margaret L. Vaale and Christopher G. Ellison, University of Texas at Austin 9. Religion, Health, and Well-Being Does Religion Increase the Prevalence and Incidence of Obesity and Severe Obesity in Adulthood? Krista Marie Clark and Kenneth F. Ferraro, Purdue University Religion and Health Trajectories in the Russian Federation. Jennifer B. Barrett, The University of Texas at Austin Why Religion Matters. Candice A. Shannon, University of 220 Tuesday, August 16, 12:30 p.m. Session 588, continued Maryland 10. Religion and Knowledge Production Presider: Richard W. Flory, Biola University Nonprofit Directors’ Knowledge and Thoughts on FaithBased Initiatives and Their Capacity to Serve. Rebecca Joyce Kissane, Lafayette College The Epistemology of Esoteric Knowledge. Martin Laubach, Marshall University “Generalized Spirituality, Sacrifice, and the Popular Media: Christ as Everyman.” Patrick Burke, Carleton University 11. Dynamics of Religious Groups Presider: Taryn Kudler, University of Pennsylvania The Discourse of Conflict and Resolution: A Case Study of A Historic Church’s Approach to Conflict. Richard N. Pitt, Vanderbilt University The Cyclical Religious Life. Taryn Kudler, University of Pennsylvania A Dynamic Endurance Model of Religious Change and Persistence: The Case Study of the Mormons. Nathan D. Wright, Northwestern University 12. Religion in Action Presider: Philip Schwadel, University of North Carolina Raise Your Fist: The Straight-Edge Community as a Moral Community. Matt Nolan, Rutgers University Syncretic Religious Persistence: The Merits of Hybridization in Religious Markets. Sarah Michelle Sausner, University of Washington A Blessed Resolution to the Stalled Revolution? Faith, Family Work, and Fairness in Early Marriage. Julia C. Wilson, University of Virgina 589. Section on Comparative and Historical Sociology Paper Session. 100 Years of Sociology on Race and Ethnicity: Comparative and Historical Perspectives Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon D Organizer: Ashley Woody Doane, University of Hartford Presider: Scott Leon Washington, Princeton University Black and British, but Definitely not English: Race and Racism in British Immigration. Sherri-Ann P. Butterfield, Rutgers University, Newark Combining Tannenbaum and Roediger to Illuminate US and Cuban Race Relations. Christina Proenza-Coles, Virginia State University Reexamining Instrumentalist Approaches to Ethnic Identification within a Comparative Context. Lynn Marie Hempel, Mississippi State University Trajectories of Nation: Citizenship, Immigration and National Self-identification in Japan. Hwa-Ji Shin, Stony Brook University, State University of New York Discussant: Scott Leon Washington, Princeton University 1:30 pm Meetings Section on Environment and Technology Business Meeting (to 2:10pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Room 401-402 Section on Organizations, Occupations Business Meeting (to 2:10pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon D Section on Sociology of Religion Business Meeting (to 2:10pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon F 2:30 pm Meetings 2004-05 ASA Council (to 6:10pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon I Section on Sociology of the Family Council Meeting (to 3:30pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Room 303 2:30 pm Sessions 590. Thematic Session. Rethinking AIDS: The Big Picture Philadelphia Marriott, Room 305 Organizer and Presider: Ann Swidler, University of California, Berkeley Partnership Networks and the Spread of HIV. Martina Morris, University of Washington Antiretrovirals, Biopolitics, and Therapeutic Citizenship. Vinh-Kim Nguyen, McGill University How Do We Claim Success in HIV Prevention? Judith D. Auerbach, American Foundation for AIDS Research AIDS and Social Transformation. Craig Calhoun, Social Science Research Council Tuesday, August 16, 2:30 p.m. 591. Thematic Session. Sociology of the Future Philadelphia Marriott, Room 410 Organizer: Joan H. Fujimura, University of Wisconsin Towards a Sociology of Expectations in a Scientifictechnological (risk) Society. Arie Rip, University of Twente, The Netherlands; Nik Brown, University of York Futures in the Making: Contemporary Practices as Sociological Challenge. Barbara Adam, Cardiff University Future Imaginaries: Genome Scientists as Socio-Cultural Entrepreneurs. Joan H. Fujimura, University of Wisconsin Discussant: Ronald A. Lembo, Amherst College This session will present a new field of study that fits under the rubric of “the sociology of the future.” The field includes theoretical frames and empirical investigations of current enterprises that are making our futures. They focus especially on scientific and technological efforts that will have effects in the long term, but that are often taken for granted as “inevitable” and “unstoppable” in the present. Instead, this set of scholars use sociological imagination to examine how future expectations are being cast and framed by today’s technologists. 592. Centennial Session. Knowledge Accumulation in Sociology Philadelphia Marriott, Room 403 Organizer and Presider: Barbara Schneider, University of Chicago Reconceptualizing Knowledge Accumulation. Andrew Abbott, University of Chicago The Structure of Sociology. James Moody, Ohio State University Evaluating Knowledge Accumulation. Barbara Schneider, David Charles Schalliol, and Sarah Stewart Makela, University of Chicago A hundred years after the founding of ASA and almost two hundred years after the establishment of sociology, the question of what are the sources of knowledge that hold sociology together as a discipline remains largely unanswered. Sociology is often accused of being an aggregation of fragmentary areas of study. This accusation appears to be validated by the increasing range of problem areas studied by sociologists, the reliance on multiple and often conflicting theoretical assumptions, the markedly different methods employed by investigators, and the varied understandings of what constitutes scientific inquiry. Still, sociologists follow similar graduate training paths, participate in the same professional association, and share a common identity as sociologists. Our proposed session will examine the sources of cohesion (“the glue”) that binds 221 sociologists together. It will also consider the structure of sociology-the different levels of separation and connectedness, the subfields, the major schools of thought, the cleavages, and the bridges. Papers in this session will focus on the following questions: How is knowledge practiced by sociologists? What are the unifying concepts of sociology and have they changed over time? And finally, is knowledge accumulation possible under these conditions? 593. Special Session. The Public Sphere in U.S. Sociology Philadelphia Marriott, Room 310 Organizers: Mathieu Deflem, University of South Carolina; Jeffrey C. Alexander, Yale University Presider: Mathieu Deflem, University of South Carolina The Civil Sphere and Social Solidarity: Toward a New Theory of Justice and Exclusion. Jeffrey C. Alexander, Yale University From Mass to Public: Rethinking the Value of Media Culture. Ronald N. Jacobs, University at Albany, State University of New York Fear and Loathing of the Public Sphere: Can Sociology Liberate Itself from Nature and Reclaim the Right to Have Rights? Margaret R. Somers, University of Michigan Discussant: Michele Lamont, Harvard University Since the English translation in 1989 of Jürgen Habermas’ The Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere 27 years after the German original, the notion of the public sphere has been increasingly prominent in various strands of U.S. sociology. Conceptualizations of a public life intimately relevant to political power, however, have been present in U.S. sociology before Habermas as well. This panel reviews and discusses the use and usefulness of the public sphere in a variety of contexts and theoretical frameworks to bring out the unique contribution of this conceptualization and demonstrate its continued relevance in the presentday conditions of late-modern societies. 594. Special Session. How Did You Do That? Examples of Doing Applied Sociology (co-sponsored by the Association of Applied and Clinical Sociology, the Association of Black Sociologists, the Society for the Study of Symbolic Interaction, and Sociologists for Women in Society) Philadelphia Marriott, Room 306 Organizer and Presider: Jammie Price, Appalachian State University Panelists: Johnnie D. Spraggins, Our Lady of the Lake University Arthur B. Shostak, Drexel University Eleanor Lyon, University of Connecticut Stephen F. Steele, Anne Arundel Community College Jay Weinstein, Eastern Michigan University Suzanne Maurer, Indiana University of Pennsylvania John Glass, Colin County Community College 222 Tuesday, August 16, 2:30 p.m. 595. Academic Workshop. Approaches to Service-Learning Philadelphia Marriott, Room 412 Organizer: Brenda M. Kowalewski, Weber State University Panelists: Brenda M. Kowalewski, Weber State University Sam Marullo, Georgetown University Heather Sullivan-Catlin, State University of New York Potsdam Service-learning is a hands-on teaching tool that engages students in learning sociological concepts in community settings. A brief description and overview of service-learning and three different models involving community based learning will be presented. The three models highlighted are: an integrated service-learning approach to sociology; a comprehensive service-learning approach to sociology; and a comprehensive community based learning approach to the sociology major. This workshop will have something to offer everyone, from the novice to the expert. 596. Teaching Workshop. Teaching Sociology of the Middle East Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon K Organizer: Ali-Akbar Mahdi, Ohio Wesleyan University Panelists: Said Amir Arjomand, Stony Brook University, State University of New York John Foran, University of California Ali-Akbar Mahdi, Ohio Wesleyan University Valentine M. Moghadam, Illinois State University Trent Alexander, University of Minnesota Matthew Sobek, University of Minnesota This workshop provides an overview on resources and techniques for integrating US Census Data in user-friendly ways in a variety of undergraduate courses — from Intro Sociology and Social Problems, to Stratification, Race Relations, the Family, Sociology of Aging, Population and more. US Census data have the advantage of providing comprehensive information for local geographic areas, and small population subgroups, as well as permitting analyses of change over many decades. This workshop will introduce faculty to three prominent Census data dissemination projects with a focus on undergraduate courses: (1) The Social Science Data Analysis Network (www.SSDAN.net) which is working with the American Sociological Association’s Integrated Data Analysis (IDA) project to infuse data analysis in courses at all levels of the curriculum; (2) The Social Explorer (www.socialexplorer.com) which allows students to explore the social geography of neighborhoods and larger areas with maps, and a wide array of analysis tools; and (3) the Integrated Public Use Microdata IPUMS project (www.IPUMS.org) which permits students to analyze historical census data for the US, and other countries. The workshop will provide demonstrations of each of these web-based tools, discussions of how they have been used successfully in classroom settings and handouts which will allow participants to utilize them The Middle East has been a focal point of international relationships since the beginning of the last century. While its long history of civilization give it a significant role in understanding societal developments, more recently its strategic location and geopolitical significance have made it a site of global conflict. Since September 11, 2001, the region has become the focus of new attention and controversies. As a heavily Muslim populated region, the area finds itself in the midstof a “clash of civilizations” and home to two members of the US-designated “Axis of Evil.” Given the significance of the region and its role in world politics, how does one teach about this region in American classrooms? What special challenges and obstacles exist in analyzing the Middle Eastern countries with the conceptual and theoretical tools of Western social science? Which sociological perspectives and methodologies are more relevant in understanding the role of class, ethnicity, gender, and religion in Middle Eastern societies? This workshop will discuss the above issues and respond to concerns the attendees might have regarding teaching the sociology of the Middle East. 598. Regular Session. Cultures and Educational Institutions Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington C Organizer: Annette Lareau, University of Maryland, College Park; Kim Goyette, Temple University Presider: Stefanie Ann Deluca, Johns Hopkins University Crafting Legitimation Projects: An Institutional Analysis of Private Education Businesses. Janice Aurini, McMaster University Broken Brains and Broken Homes: How disability labels circulate. Regina Smardon, University of Pennsylvania Framing Social Problems at the School Site: Using Frame Analysis to Uncover the Microprocesses of Policy Implementation. Cynthia Coburn, University of California at Berkeley Educational Governance, School Autonomy, and Curriculum Implementation: A Comparative Study of School levels and School Sectors in Israel. Nura Resh, Hebrew University; Aaron Benavot, UNESCO, Paris Discussant: Tim Hallett, Indiana University 597. Teaching Workshop. Using Census Data in Teaching Undergraduate Sociology (co-sponsored by ASA’s Integrating Data Analysis Project) Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon L Organizer: William H. Frey, University of Michigan Panelists: William H. Frey, University of Michigan Andrew A. Beveridge, Queens College and Graduate Center City University of New York 599. Regular Session. Drug Use, Abuse, Treatment, and Control Philadelphia Marriott, Room 404 Organizer and Presider: Craig Reinarman, University of California, Santa Cruz Addiction and Discouragement: The Continuing Heroin Epidemic in the Chicago Puerto Rican Community. Ronald Glick, Northeastern Illinois University Tuesday, August 16, 2:30 p.m. Are You Clean or Not? Complications in Drug Testing as Objective Measure of Drug Use. Leslie S. Paik, University of California, Los Angeles Patient Views on Methadone Treatment as Conveyed in an Online Support Group. Jan Gryczynski, University of Maryland, Baltimore County Tobacco Use and Health: Pipe and Cigar Smoking As Tobacco Harm Reduction. Michael S. Garr, Wilkes University This session will feature a variety of papers that explore different aspects of drug use, drug problems, harm reduction, treatment, and social control. The papers use different theoretical frameworks and methodological strategies to explore opiate and crack use in a poor community, the vagueries of drug testing among probationers, uncensored patient views of methadone maintenance treatment, and the possibility of harm reduction tactics for tobacco smokers. 600. Regular Session. Social Determinants of Health and Illness: Current Issues Philadelphia Marriott, Room 409 Organizer: Adele E. Clarke, University of California, San Francisco Presider: Angela M. O’Rand, Duke University Toward a Neighborhood Resource-based Theory of Social Capital for Health: Can Bourdieu and Sociology Help? Richard M. Carpiano, University of Wisconsin at Madison Does Place Explain Race? Quantifying the Contribution of Residential Context in Accounting for Racial Disparities in Health. Brian Karl Finch, San Diego State University; Chloe E. Bird, RAND The Rural Mortality Gradient. Lois Wright Morton, Iowa State University Contextualizing the Education and Health Status Association: Evidence from a National Study of Asian Americans. Emily C. Walton and David T. Takeuchi, University of Washington Fractured Diagnoses: The Social Determinants of Osteoporosis. Jeanne Slizyk, University of Florida Gender Differences in the Link between Childhood Socioeconomic Position and Heart Attack Risk in Adulthood. Jenifer Hamil-Luker, Duke University; Angela M. O’Rand, Duke University Understanding the Relationship between Socioeconomic Status, Behavioral and Psychosocial Risk Factors, and Functional Health. Pamela Herd, University of Wisconsin, Madison 601. Regular Session. Social Stratification, Labor Market Processes and Income Inequality. Philadelphia Marriott, Room 302 Organizer: Gunn Elisabeth Birkelund, University of Oslo Income Inequality, Permanent Incomes and Income Dynamics: Comparing Europe to the United States. Markus Gangl, University of Mannheim 223 Income Inequality in the United States. Stephanie Moller, University of North Carolina at Charlotte; Arthur S. Alderson, Indiana University; Francois Nielsen, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Regional Integration and National Income Inequality in Western Europe. Jason Beckfield, Indiana University Earnings Inequality and the Minimum Wage: Panel Estimates from the States, 1980-2000. Thomas W. Volscho, University of Connecticut Effects of Occupational-Career Interruptions on Income for Women and Men: Sweden and Poland. Rachel E. Lovell and Kazimierz M. Slomczynski, The Ohio State University 602. Section on Racial and Ethnic Minorities Paper Session. Racial Formation and Color-Blind Racism Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon J Organizer and Presider: Annegret D. Staiger, Clarkson University Adoption in a Colorblind Society. Pamela Anne Quiroz and Amanda Evelyn Lewis, University of Illinois at Chicago Country Club Members Talk about Race. Jessica Holden Sherwood, Providence, RI “Because of Race”: Debating the Racialization of Ordinary Educational Acts. Mica Pollock, Harvard Graduate School of Education New Racisms Require New Theories: The Implications of a Color-Blind Perspective on Race Research. Charles A. Gallagher, Georgia State University Racial Formation in the Post-Civil Rights Era: From Domination to Hegemony. Reginald Daniel, University of California, Santa Barbara Race in Theory: Compromise and Contradiction in the Production of Race Paradigms. Naadiya Hasan, Yale University Discussant: Howard Winant, University of California, Santa Barbara 603. Section on Environment and Technology Paper Session. Science, Environment, and Democracy Philadelphia Marriott, Room 407 Organizer: Stella M. Capek, Hendrix College Presider: Diane M. Sicotte, Drexel University Small, Not Beautiful: Nanotechnology and the Treadmill of Production. Kenneth Alan Gould, St. Lawrence University Ignorance of Environmental Risks in the “Capital of Soviet Chemistry.” Alla Bolotova, Centre for Independent Social Research Knowledge Claims and Experimental Design: Handling Surprises in Ecological Restoration. Matthias Gross, UFZ Centre for Environmental Research, Leipzig Do Regulatory Agencies Matter?: Forest Service, Fish and 224 Tuesday, August 16, 2:30 p.m. Session 603, Continued Wildlife Service and Citizen Enforcement of Environmental Policy. Douglas Bevington, University of California, Santa Cruz 604. Section on Sociology of Religion Paper Session. Sociology of Religion IV Philadelphia Marriott, Room 408 Organizer: Darren E. Sherkat, Southern Illinois University Presider: John P. Hoffmann, Brigham Young University Faith Communities and the British State. James Arthur Beckford, University of Warwick International Institutions and Religious NGO Stratification. Evelyn L. Bush, Fordham University Macro and Micro Determinants of Democratic Support in Cross-National Contexts. Daniel B. Tope, Katherine Meyer, and Cheryl A. Sowash, Ohio State University Redefining Americanness by Reformulating Hinduism: Indian Americans Challenge American Academia. Prema Ann Kurien, Syracuse University 605. Section on Organizations, Occupations, and Work Paper Session. Change in Organizations Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon C Organizer and Presider: Alexandru Preda, University of Edinburgh Doing Corporate Culture Change: The Implications of Misalignment for Sustained Product Innovation at Alphaco. Mark Edward Dawes, University of Cincinnati Organizational Cultural Dynamics in a New Media Firm. Ryan C. Sperry, Columbia University Oversight and Delegation in Corporate Governance: How Companies Decide What the Board Decides. Michael Useem and Andy Zelleke, University of Pennsylvania Institutional Logics and Institutional Change in Organizations: Transformation in Accounting, Architecture, and Publishing. Patricia H. Thornton, Duke University; Candace Jones and Kenneth Kury, Boston College Governed by Governance: The Institutionalization of Governance as a Prism for Organizational Change. Gili S. Drori, Stanford University Discussant: David Stark, 606. Section on Peace, War, and Social Conflict Paper Session. Peace, War, and Military Institutions: Implications for Practitioners and Policy Philadelphia Marriott, Room 304 Organizer and Presider: Laura L. Miller, RAND Corporation Corporate Warriors: Changing Forms of Private Armed Force in America. Larry Isaac, Vanderbilt University; Daniel Harrison, Furman University Perceived Cohesion during Initial Training in the Finnish Defence Forces. Mikael Salo, Finnish National Defence College; Guy L. Siebold, U.S. Army Research Institute U.S.-Led Global War on Terrorism: Perspectives and Perceptions. Gloria Luz Martinez Nelson, University Philippines, Los Banos Discussant: Brigitte U. Neary, University of South Carolina Upstate 607. Section on Sociology of Sexualities Paper Session. Sexual Spaces Philadelphia Marriott, Room 411 Organizer and Presider: Daniel Keith Cortese, Cortese and Associates Research From Trailers to Pride Flags: Explaining Variation in Social Preservation. Japonica Brown-Saracino, Northwestern University A Sexual Chain Reaction in the Sex Industry: The Transformation of the Host Club Industry in the Post Bubble Economy in Japan. Reiko Yamagishi, Drag Performances and the Arousal of Sexual Desire. Verta A. Taylor, University of California, Santa Barbara Use of Pornographic Web Sites and Chat Rooms on the Internet. Ira Martin Wasserman, Eastern Michigan University 608. Section on Rationality and Society Paper Session. Rational Choice Theory and Its Sociological Applications Philadelphia Loews Hotel, Washington B Organizer and Presider: William I. Brustein, University of Pittsburgh Revising Hechter’s Group Solidarity Theory: The Case of Terrorist Organizations. Michael Genkin, Cornell University Rationality of Tolerance: An Insight in the Parent-Child Relationship. Kazuo Yamaguchi, University of Chicago Third-Party Effects on Trust in an Embedded Investment Game. Davide Barrera and Vincent W. Buskens, University of Utrecht Interests, the Market, and Legitimate Domination: A Weberian Perspective on the Gender Dynamics of Modern Rational Capitalism. Sarah Thebaud, Cornell University Discussant: Edgar Kiser, University of Washington 225 Tuesday, August 16, 2:30 p.m. 609. Section on Comparative and Historical Sociology Refereed Roundtables and Business Meeting Philadelphia Marriott, Room 401-402 2:30-3:30pm, Roundtables: Organizer: Brian Gran, Case Western Reserve University 1. Building Nations Presider: Yildiz Atasoy, Simon Fraser University Islam, the state and nation-building in Turkey (1839-1945). Yildiz Atasoy, Simon Fraser University Sino-centric World-System: A Chinese World Order. Miinwen Shih, West Chester University The Origins of the Argentine Nation. Rethinking Nation Formation through Historical and Cultural Institutionalist Perspectives. Guillermo R. Cantor, University of Maryland, College Park The Political Formation of Cultural Bases for South Korean Development: A Criticism on Theories of Developmental State. Ja Hyouk Koo, University of Virginia States, Movements, and Nationalism: The Case of Argentina, 1930-1955. Matthias vom Hau, Brown University The German Revolution of 1918 and Contemporary State Breakdown Theory. Stefan Klusemann, University of Pennsylvania The Ottoman Empire in Transition: The Role of Transnational Ideologies in State Building. Elif Andac, University of Washington 2. Ethnicity and Immigration Presider: Berch Berberoglu, University of Nevada, Reno Multiculturalism and the State: Ethno-Cultural Conflict, Globalization, and National Protection in Montréal, 1944-2004. Cory Allen Blad, University of Tennessee Nationalism and Ethnic Conflict in the Age of Globalization: A Critical Analysis of Nationalism and Ethnonationalist Conflict in Comparative-Historical Perspective. Berch Berberoglu, University of Nevada, Reno The Changing Face of Immigrants in Philadelphia during the 20th Century: An Examination of the Italian Immigrant Experience. Katherine M. Condon and Joseph Michael Costanzo, U.S. Census Bureau 3. Historical Perspectives Presider: William M. Norris, Wayne State University A Brief History of the Emergence of Sociology as an Academic Teaching Enterprise in the US. William M. Norris, Wayne State University Distinct Discipline: Hiring Patterns in Quebec’s FrenchSpeaking Sociology Departments. Daniel Beland, University of Calgary A Very Partial Genealogy of Some of the Appearances and Disappearances of the Holy Ghost in the New World. Charles Sarno, Holy Names University A Lutheran Knot: How Literal Is Taking the Role of the “Other” in the Modern Finnish Interpretation of Luther? Michael Robert Norris and Basil P. Kardaras, Capital University 4. Organized Resistance Presider: Marcela Fabiana Gonzalez, University of Buenos Aires Arboreal Landscapes of Imperial Power and Caribbean Resistance. Mimi Sheller, Lancaster University The Politics of Labor Laws Policy Making in the Eighties in Argentina. Marcela Fabiana Gonzalez, University of Buenos Aires 3:30-4:10pm, Business Meeting 3:30 pm Meetings Section on Comparative and Historical Sociology Business Meeting (to 4:10pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Room 401402 Section on Sociology of the Family Business Meeting (to 4:10pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Room 303 Wednesday, August 17 8:00 am Other Groups Association for Applied and Clinical Sociology (to 6:00pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Rooms 405-409 8:30 am Meetings 2005-06 ASA Council (to 4:00pm) — Philadelphia Marriott, Grand Salon I 226 Informational Poster Session 381 Research Funding Opportunities &Data Resources Organizers: Roberta Spalter-Roth and Mercedes Rubio, American Sociological Association Monday, August 15, 2005 ◊ 9:00 a.m. – 12:00 noon Philadelphia Marriott, Franklin Hall This poster/exhibit session provides a unique occasion to meet representatives of major research funding institutions and principal investigators, researchers, and managers of large-scale datasets that are publicly available for use. Each display by a funding institution provides a visual overview of research funding and the application process, materials for distribution, and time for direct individual discussion. Data resource representatives are available to talk about the featured datasets, their analytic potential, and issues relating to access and use, including state-of-the-art Internet services to access datasets. This is an opportunity for meeting attendees to learn about these datasets and their potential for research and teaching. All meeting participants, including students, are encouraged to attend. 1. The Wisconsin Longitudinal Study Center for Demography of Health & Aging, University of Wisconsin-Madison Presenters: Robert M. Hauser and Taissa S. Hauser, Center for Demography of Health and Aging, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 1180 Observatory Drive, Madison, WI 53706; phone: (608) 262-4715; fax: (608) 262-8400; e-mail: wls@ssc.wisc.edu; homepage: <http://www.ssc.wisc.edu/~wls/>. The Wisconsin Longitudinal Study (WLS) is a 47 year-long study of the life course among 10,000 men and women who graduated from Wisconsin high schools in 1957, and who have been followed up at ages 25, 36, 5354, and 64-65. Data from the original respondents or their parents from 1957 to 1975 cover social background, youthful and adult aspirations, schooling, military service, family formation, labor market experience, and social participation. The 1992-93 surveys cover occupational histories; income, assets, and economic transfers; social and economic characteristics of parents, siblings, and children; and mental and physical health and well-being. Parallel interviews were carried out with siblings in 1977 and 1993-94. A new round of survey data collection from graduates, siblings, and their spouses or widows began in mid-2003. Beyond repeated measures, the new surveys add more extensive data on health, health behaviors, health insurance, psychological and cognitive functioning, family relations, social and civic participation, religiosity, and preparation for retirement and for the end of life. WLS data and documentation are available on the World Wide Web (http://www.ssc.wisc.edu/~wls/), and public 2003-04 data for graduates will be released late in 2005. 2. The National Health Interview Survey Division of Health Interview Statistics National Center for Health Statistics, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Presenter: James M. Dahlhamer, Division of Health Interview Statistics, National Center for Health Statistics, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 3311 Toledo Road, Room 2217, Hyattsville, MD 20782; phone: (301) 458-4403; fax: (301) 458-4035; e-mail: fzd2@cdc.gov; homepage: http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/nhis.htm. The National Health Interview Survey (NHIS) is a cross-sectional, multipurpose health survey conducted by the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS), Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Conducted continuously since 1957, the NHIS is the principal source of information on the health of the civilian, noninstitutionalized household population of the United States. The data are used to monitor major health trends, plan and evaluate federal health policies, track progress 227 toward achieving national health objectives, and conduct public health and other research. In 1997, the NHIS underwent a major questionnaire revision to improve the relevance of the data. The redesigned questionnaire contains core questions that remain essentially unchanged over time, plus additional items added as supplements each year to provide more in-depth coverage of core subjects and/or information on new and emerging health issues. Core questions cover major topics such as health conditions and status, health care access and utilization, limitation of activity, immunizations, health behaviors and lifestyle, HIV/AIDS knowledge and attitudes, health insurance, income resources, and sociodemographic information. Past and planned supplements include questions on children’s mental health, chronic health conditions, cancer, complementary and alternative medicine, and Healthy People 2000 and 2010 program objectives. Public use data from the NHIS are released annually via the internet (and CD-ROM prior to 2003). 3. Indicators of Distributive Social Justice American Social Indicators Presenter: Emanuel Smikun, American Social Indicators, 16A Old Hickory Drive, Albany, NY 12204; phone: (518) 463-1489; email: esmik@socialindicators.org; homepage: http://www.socialindicators.org. We have developed a comprehensive system of descriptive indicators for valued objects circulating in social exchange and distribution. They include basic and visible lifestyle, ascribed and achieved status, deep and volatile orientation, and early and later socialization in major institutional domains - family, cultural, economic, and political. The indicators combine and transform two or more raw variables from the General Social Survey. They are measured by generalized (skewed) distributive normality interpreted as distributive justice. All indicators are differentiated by industrial, employment, residential, and regional class as well as by upper, middle, and lower social strata. Progress reports give overviews of current macro-social structure in terms of levels of distributive justice for all classes and strata as well as of its change over the past decades. Complete information on all indicators includes operational definitions and a procedure of their derivation from raw data. 4. Division of Science Resources Statistics National Science Foundation Presenter: Robert Bell, Division of Science Resources Statistics, National Science Foundation, 4201 Wilson Blvd., Arlington, VA 22203; phone: (703) 292-4977; fax: (703) 292-9092; e-mail: rbell@nsf.gov; homepage: www.nsf.gov/statistics. The Division of Science Resources Studies (SRS) at the National Science Foundation (NSF) fulfills the legislative mandate of the National Science Foundation Act to...“provide a central clearinghouse for the collection, interpretation, and analysis of data on scientific and engineering resources, and to provide a source of information for policy formulation by other agencies of the Federal Government...”. To carry out this mandate, SRS manages 10 periodic surveys as well as a variety of other data collections and research projects. Periodic surveys focus on (1) education and the nation’s workforce with emphasis on participation in science and engineering fields, (2) the size and health of the U.S. research and development (R&D) enterprise, and (3) public attitudes toward and understanding of science and technology. Access to much of SRS’s data is provided through on-line databases. Data files are available to users for many of the surveys—either as a public use data file or as a restricted file for which a researcher must apply for a license to gain access. SRS also supports a small program of extramural research on both methodological and substantive areas related to the work of SRS. Additional information about SRS surveys and other SRS activities may be found on the SRS web site (www.nsf.gov/statistics). 5. Electronic and Special Media Records Services Division National Archives and Records Administration Presenter: Nancy J. Melley, Electronic and Special Media Records Services Division, National Archives and Records Administration, 8601 Adelphi Road, College Park, MD 20740-6001; phone: (301) 837-0470; fax: (301) 837-3681; homepage: http://www.archives.gov. The National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) is the federal agency responsible for preservation of, and access to, the permanently valuable records of the federal government. The Electronic and Special Media Records Services Division has custody of the permanently valuable computerized records of federal agencies transferred into the National Archives for long-term 228 preservation. The Division has approximately 200,000 computerized data files from over 100 federal agencies in all three branches of government. Topics reflected in the electronic records holdings at NARA include agricultural data, attitudinal data, demographic data, economic and financial statistics, education data, environmental data, health and social services data, international data, military data, and scientific and technological data. 6. Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Presenters: Indu Ahluwalia, Ph.D., M.P.H. & Michele Sussman Walsh, M.Ed., Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 4770 Buford Highway NE, Mailstop K-66, Atlanta, GA 30341; phone (770) 488-2455; fax (770) 4888150; email: zzk7@cdc.gov; homepage: http://www.cdc.gov/brfss. This exhibit will present the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS), a state-based system of health surveys, which operate with assistance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Established in 1984, the BRFSS is now the largest telephone health survey in the world which collects information on health risk behaviors, preventive health practices, and health care access primarily related to chronic disease, as well as injury, infectious disease, and environmental health issues. Data files and documentation are available from the Web site from 1984 through 2004. In recent years, there have been many exciting new developments for the BRFSS, including local level data (SMART BRFSS: Selected Metropolitan/Micropolitan Areas Risk Trends) and GIS mapping, which will be highlighted. 7. The 2002 National Survey of Family Growth National Center for Health Statistics, CDC Presenter: William D. Mosher, NCHS, Room 7318, 3311 Toledo Road, Hyattsville, MD. 20782; phone: (301) 4584385; fax: (301)-358-4033; e-mail: NSFG@cdc.gov; homepage: http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/nsfg.htm. The National Survey of Family Growth (NSFG) is a study of fertility, contraception, infertility, marriage, cohabitation, and parenting among men and women 15-44 years of age. The first 5 cycles of the NSFG (in 19731995) sampled women 15-44 years of age; the 2002 NSFG is the first to include both men and women. 12,571 interviews (4,928 with men and 7,643 with women) were conducted in-person between March of 2002 and February of 2003. The response rate was 79 percent. The public use data files are available at no charge on CD-ROM and by download from the Internet. The codebook, User’s Guide, and other documentation for the 2002 NSFG public use file are also available on the NSFG web page. Data files from the 1973, 1976, 1982, 1988, and 1995 cycles of the NSFG are available at no charge on CD-ROM. In addition, data from the self-administered questionnaires used in 2002 are available to researchers by arrangement. Finally, contextual data files for the 1995 and 2002 cycles of the NSFG can also be used through the NCHS Research Data Center. The NSFG web page contains PDF files of all NSFG reports published by the National Center for Health Statistics, and bibliographies of more than 350 published reports and journal articles based on the NSFG. The NSFG is jointly planned and funded by nine agencies and programs of the US Department of Health and Human Services, including NCHS, NICHD, the Office of Population Affairs, and six others. 8. The National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health (Add Health) Carolina Population Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Presenter: Sally Middleton, Carolina Population Center, University Square CB#8120, 123 W. Franklin Street, Chapel Hill, NC 27516; phone: (919) 962-8412; fax: (919) 966-6638; email: addhealth@unc.edu, sallym@unc.edu; homepage: www.cpc.unc.edu/addhealth. The National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health (Add Health) is a longitudinal study of a nationally representative sample of more than 20,000 adolescents in grades 7-12 in the United States in 1994-95 who have been followed through adolescence and the transition to adulthood with three in-home interviews. Add Health was designed to explore the causes of health status and health– related behaviors with a special emphasis on the social contexts in which adolescents and young adults live. Add Health has collected information about respondents not simply as individuals, but as members of families, student bodies, neighborhoods and communities, and as participants in relationships with parents, siblings, peers, friends, and romantic partners. Add Health used a school based design in which schools were sampled from a national frame, an in-school questionnaire was administered to all students in selected 229 schools; and then adolescents were sampled from school rosters for in-home interviews. Three waves of data collection provide the following survey components available to the scientific community for research purposes. Wave I (1994-95): in-school student questionnaires (90,000 students); school administrator questionnaires (164); in-home adolescent interviews (20,745); and parent questionnaires (17,669). Wave II (1996): in-home adolescent interviews (14,738); and school administrator questionnaires (128). Wave III (2001-02): in-home interviews with Wave I respondents now 18 to 26 years old (15,197); and interviews with married, cohabiting, or dating partners of Add Health respondents (1,507). Add Health Data are available in two forms: publicuse data set and contractual data set. For information about study design, sample sizes, and data access, see the Add Health web site, www.cpc.unc.edu/addhealth. Add Health has been funded since 1994 by a program project grant from the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, with co-funding from 17 other federal agencies. 9. American Religion Data Archive The Pennsylvania State University, Department of Sociology Presenters: Gail Johnston Ulmer and Christopher Scheitle, Department of Sociology, The Pennsylvania State University, 211 Oswald Tower, University Park, PA 16802-6207; phone: (814) 865-6258; fax: (814) 863-7216; email: arda@pop.psu.edu; homepage: http://www.thearda.com. The American Religion Data Archive (ARDA) is an Internet-based data archive with online analysis tools and learning modules for classroom or personal use. Over 300 data files from the leading studies on American religion are disseminated free of charge from the ARDA. Online analysis features allow users to conduct basic data analysis, review codebooks, construct a survey instrument, download data and software, search for variables, principal investigators, or topics of interest, and create church membership reports, and maps of counties, states, and the nation. The learning modules are topic driven explorations into the numerous datasets that can be found on the ARDA and are also free of charge. Current modules provide overviews of American religion and explore religion’s relationship with science, gender roles, attitudes towards homosexuality, and politics. The ARDA is supported by the Lilly Endowment and housed at The Pennsylvania State University. 10. Program for International Student Assessment (PISA) The Progress in International Reading Literacy Study (PIRLS) Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study American Institutes for Research, National Center for Education Statistics Presenter: Gillian Hampden-Thompson, Education Statistics Service Institute – International programs, American Institutes for Research, National Center for Education Statistics, Suite 500, 1990 K Street NW, Washington, DC 20006; phone: (202) 403-6957; fax: (202) 737-4918; e-mail: ghampden-thompson@air.org; homepage: www.air.org, www.nces.ed.gov. Insights into the educational practices and outcomes of the United States are obtained by comparing them with those of other countries. International assessment studies provide answers to questions of how other countries educate their children and with what success. The poster presentation will highlight three international datasets: Begun in 2000, the Program for International Student Assessment (PISA) is an assessment that focuses on 15year-olds’ capabilities in reading literacy, mathematics literacy, and science literacy. PISA is currently being administered every three years. PISA 2000 focused on reading literacy, PISA 2003 focused on mathematics literacy, and in 2006, PISA will focus on science literacy; The Progress in International Reading Literacy Study (PIRLS) is a large international comparative study of the reading literacy of young students. The PIRLS study focuses on the achievement and reading experiences of children in 35 countries in grades equivalent to fourth grade in the United States. PIRLS 2001 was the first in a planned 5-year cycle of international trend studies in reading literacy. The Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study provides reliable and timely data on the mathematics and science achievement of U.S. students compared to that of students in other countries. Offered in 1995, 1999, and 2003, TIMSS provides trend data on students’ mathematics and science achievement from an international perspective. 230 The poster presentation will include information concerning the three datasets (flyers, reports etc.) and the actual data CD’s (available for free). A representative from the Educational Statistical Services Institute who supports the National Center for Education Statistics will be on hand to answer any questions. 11. SIMI (Site for Instructional Materials and Information) Inter-University Consortium for Political and Social Research, Institute for Social Research, University of Michigan Presenters: Amy Pienta and Dieter Burrell, ICPSR, University of Michigan, PO Box 1248, Ann Arbor, MI 48103; phone: (734) 615-7957; fax: (734) 647-8700; email: apienta@umich.edu; homepage: http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/SIMI. SIMI (Site for Instructional Materials and Information) is an initiative of ICPSR. The goal of the SIMI initiative is to advance the effective use of data by developing and disseminating data-related resources for undergraduate and graduate education. Faculty, students and staff at member institutions submit instructional materials that they have developed for their classes which can then be shared with other instructors at ICPSR member schools. The materials collected by SIMI include instructional modules, datasets and codebooks, notes to instructors, related publications, useful websites, and any other information that could be helpful to instructors. SIMI materials focus on quantitative social science: substantive and conceptual social science content, appropriate data analysis, social science methodology, and statistics. Faculty, staff and students at ICPSR member schools are free to use these materials in the classroom, to modify them to fit their own pedagogic goals, or use them at templates to create their own modules. SIMI materials are reviewed to ensure that they are of the highest quality and that they are complete, workable, and have the proper copyright clearance. This poster will highlight some of the resources available through SIMI. 12. General Social Survey National Opinion Research Center, University of Chicago Presenter: Tom W. Smith, National Opinion Research Center, University of Chicago, 1155 East 60th Street, Chicago, IL 60637; phone: (773) 256-6288; fax: (773) 753-7886; email: smitht@norc.uchicago.edu; homepage: http://www.norc.uchicago.edu/. The General Social Survey (GSS) of the National Opinion Research Center, University of Chicago, monitors social change in the United States. Since 1972, the GSS has gathered data on contemporary American society in order to monitor and explain trends and constants in attitudes, behaviors, and attributes of the adult population. These high quality data are easily accessible to a broadbased user community, including researchers, teachers in colleges and universities, students at undergraduate and graduate levels, business and corporate planners, journalists, and public officials who need to understand the pulse of our country in their work. The 25 national probability samples include interviews of over 46,000 respondents. Of the over 4,200 items that have been asked, there are time trends for over 1,200 items. Two recent developments regarding the GSS are featured—the adoption of a new sample frame based on the 2000 Census and a non-respondent, sub-sampling design that means that a new weight variable must be used. 13. Children & Young Adults of the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth/79 Cohort Center for Human Resource Research, Ohio State University Presenter: Paula C. Baker; NLS User Services, Center for Human Resource Research, 921 Chatham, Lane, Suite 100, Columbus, OH 43221-2418; phone: (614) 442-7375; fax: (614) 442-7329; e-mail: usersvc@postoffice.chrr.ohio-state.edu; homepage: www.bls.gov/nls/nlsy79ch.htm. The Children & Young Adults of the NLSY79 data focus on the development and achievement of the children of the mothers in the NLSY79. Sponsored by the U.S. Department of Labor, with support from NICHD, the NLSY79 Child & Young Adult (Child-YA) dataset is an outgrowth of the National Longitudinal Surveys of Youth/79 Cohort. Started in 1986 and repeated biennially, the NLSY79 Child-YA uses mother report and direct assessment to gauge the children’s cognitive ability, temperament, motor and social development, behavior problems, perceived self-competence, and home environment. Linked with the child assessment information is an extensive series of questions addressed to the mothers of the children about pre- and post-natal care and the health of their children. Since 1988, children 10 and older have reported on: child-parent interaction, 231 family decision-making, school attitudes, work activities, peer relationships, attitudes, religion, substance use, and sexual activity. Information on the children’s school characteristics, policies, student performance, and experiences was gathered between 1994 and 1996. The 1994 survey round replaced, for children 15 and older, the child assessment series with an hour-long CAPI interview of these Young Adults on schooling, employment, training, family experiences, health and attitudes. The NLSY79 Young Adult component also includes self-report on substance use, sexual activity, nonnormative behavior, computer use, and pro-social activities. The Child/YA sample ranges in age from birth to late twenties as of the current survey. The current Child-Young Adult file contains all assessment scores, questionnaire items, and constructed variables related to the family background, fertility, pregnancy history, childcare practices, and work experience of the mothers. Young Adult questionnaire information from is accompanied by a set of created variables for each survey round. Any item from the complete record of the main NLSY79 (mother) file can be linked by respondent ID to the child and young adult files. The surveys are ongoing. The Center for Human Resource Research (CHRR) at Ohio State University issues the maternal and child data and documentation at nominal cost on CD-ROM. Data and documentation are also available on-line at http://www.bls.gov/nls/nlsorder.htm. Topical research bibliographies and reports are available at no charge. The complete, annotated, on-line NLS bibliography can be accessed at http://www.bls.gov/nls/nlsbib.htm 14. National Cancer Institute National Institutes of Health Presenter: Meryl Sufian, PhD, Sociologist/Program Director, Office of Cancer Survivorship, Division of Cancer Control and Population Sciences, National Cancer Institute (NCI), 6116 Executive Boulevard, Bethesda, MD 20892; phone: (301) 402-2964; fax: (301) 594-5070; email: sufianm@mail.nih.gov; homepage: http://cancercontrol.gov/ocs/. The Division of Cancer Control and Population Sciences (DCCPS) is the extramural research division in the National Cancer Institute (NCI) that mainly supports cancer-related behavioral and social science research. DCCPS consists of five broad program areas to which investigators may apply for funding: the Office of Cancer Survivorship, the Behavioral Research Program, the Surveillance Research Program, the Applied Research Program, and the Epidemiology and Genetics Research Program. These programs are interested in funding research that investigates the relationship between social factors and various aspects of cancer-related behaviors, such as behavioral risk, prevention, screening, treatment decision making, responses to treatment, and survivorship issues. The scope of research supported by these programs include pilot and exploratory studies, qualitative research, secondary data analyses, descriptive studies, small and large-scale intervention studies, and studies that are focused on the development and testing of health behavior theories and methods. Special areas of interest include interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary research that examine sociocultural factors in health behavior and health disparities. The current research portfolio includes but is not limited to: the influence of social factors, attitudes, and belief systems on health risk and healthrelated behaviors as well as on quality of care and care delivery; cancer screening; decision making; health communication; interventions to improve the length and quality of survival post-diagnosis; and the burden of cancer on family members/caregivers. There are several funding mechanisms through which investigators may apply to NCI which include smaller grants for new investigators, pilot and exploratory studies, and an investigator-initiated mechanism for more experienced investigators. A broad range of training and career development grants are supported at different career levels and NCI also offers educational opportunities at the postdoctoral level. In addition, a number of special training opportunities for minority scientists are available. 15. Mexican Migration Project/ Latin American Migration Project Office of Population Research, Princeton University Presenter: Chiara Capoferro, Office of Population Research, Princeton University, Wallace Hall, Princeton, NJ 08544; phone: (609) 258-8155; fax: (609) 258-1039; email: capoferc@princeton.edu; homepage: http://mmp.opr.princeton.edu, http://lamp.opr.princeton.edu/. Founded in 1982, the Mexican Migration Project (MMP) has annually administered ethnosurveys to randomly sampled households in various communities in Mexico since 1987. In 1998, its sister project, the Latin American Migration Project (LAMP), was born with 232 surveys in Puerto Rico. For both projects, each community yields approximately 200 surveyed households in the home country (fewer in some LAMP countries), as well as 10 to 20 households of community members living in the U.S. who are identified through snowball sampling. Responses are converted to electronic format and compiled to form five unique data sets. The PERS file contains general socioeconomic information for each household member (as well as those children of the head of household who no longer live at home), including basic measures of domestic and international migration. MIG file contains detailed border-crossing characteristics, measures of migratory experience of family of origin, extended family and friends, and the social and economic characteristics of the last U.S. trip for each head of household. The HOUSE file contains measures of household composition and amenities, and data of household holdings: businesses, land, property, vehicles and livestock. Finally, the LIFE and SPOUSE files are labor histories for the head of household (LIFE) and his/her spouse (SPOUSE) in which each record represents a person-year detailing labor force participation, family/household formation, and cumulative U.S. experience. In addition to the core database, supplemental data, useful for both cross-sectional and longitudinal analysis, are gathered at aggregate levels. At the community level, measures of infrastructure, social resources, public services, labor force participation, education, land use and (in the case of Mexico) ejido characteristics are compiled. Labor market-specific data corresponding to U.S. destinations include economic indicators, immigration measures and population counts. In addition, the MMP offers border-patrol statistics, Mexico-U.S. finance and trade measures, and Mexican labor force indicators. Currently, the MMP database contains 93 communities, while the LAMP includes multiple communities surveyed in Puerto Rico, the Dominican Republic, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Peru, Paraguay, Guatemala, and Haiti. All data files, as well as qualitative materials (including oral histories of migrants and a retablo gallery) are accessible for download from the MMP and the LAMP websites: http://mmp.opr.princeton.edu/ and http://lamp.opr.princeton.edu/ 16. Joint Canada United States Survey of Health (JCUSH) National Center for Health Statistics, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Presenter: Catherine Simile, Division of Health Interview Statistics, National Center for Health Statistics, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 311 Toledo Road, Hyattsville, MD 20782: phone: (301) 458-4499; fax: (301) 458-4035; e-mail: csimile@cdc.gov; homepage: http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/nhis.htm. The Joint Canada United States Survey of Health (JCUSH) was a collaborative project undertaken by Statistics Canada (STC) and the U.S. National Center for Health Statistics, a center of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The project was designed to meet three objectives: 1) develop, implement, and document a collaboration between two national statistical offices; 2) enhance comparability between the two countries’ ongoing national surveys and 3) produce highly comparable health data on the Canadian and American populations. The JCUSH was a one time telephone survey with a sample of 3505 Canadian residents and 5,183 U. S. residents. Data on selected health topics were collected from one adult 18 years of age and older living in private dwellings. The data were collected from November 2002March 2003 and the microdata files were released June 2, 2004 and are available on the NCHS and Statistics Canada websites. A user’s guide, questionnaires in English, French and Spanish and an analytic highlights report are also available on the website. The poster session will present detail on the design of the survey and features of the data, present some comparable findings, and provide suggestions for other possible analyses using the data. 17. American Community Survey (ACS) Current Population Survey (CPS) United States Census Bureau Presenters: Scott Boggess and Joe Costanzo, Population Division, U.S. Census Bureau Coordinator: Jason Fields, Population Division, U.S. Census Bureau, Department of Commerce, Washington, DC 20233; phone: (301) 763-2465; fax: (301) 457-2481; email: Jason.M.Fields@census.gov; homepage: http://www.census.gov. The American Community Survey (ACS) is the U.S. Census Bureau’s new approach for collecting accurate and timely socioeconomic and housing information about our 233 nation and its states, cities, and communities. As part of the Census Bureau’s plan to re-engineer the decennial census, the American Community Survey will replace the long form in 2010. It will give federal, state, and local government officials, as well as the profit and nonprofit sectors, data every year to evaluate programs, make decisions, and chart the future. The Current Population Survey (CPS) is a monthly employment and population survey jointly sponsored by the U.S. Census Bureau and the Bureau of Labor Statistics. It provides data for national and staterepresentative estimates of demographic and labor market information. Periodic supplements provide information on various other topics. 18. Survey of Income and Program Participation (SIPP) Population Estimates and Projections (PEP) United States Census Bureau Presenters: Carole Popoff and Katherine Condon, Population Division, U.S. Census Bureau Coordinator: Jason Fields, Population Division, U.S. Census Bureau, Department of Commerce, Washington, DC 20233; phone: (301) 763-2465; fax: (301) 457-2481; email: Jason.M.Fields@census.gov; homepage: http://www.census.gov. The Survey of Income and Program Participation (SIPP) is a longitudinal survey of households designed to provide high quality, nationally representative data to examine short term changes in income and program participation and interactions between transfer programs, labor force participation, and household and family composition. The Population Estimates Program (PEP) produces estimates for years since the last decennial census, as well as past decades. Existing data series such as births, deaths, Federal tax returns, Medicare enrollment, and migration are used to update the decennial census counts. PEP estimates are used in Federal funding allocations, in setting the levels of national surveys, and in monitoring recent demographic changes.Population projections are estimates for future dates and illustrate plausible courses of future population change based on assumptions about future births, deaths, international migration, and state-tostate migration. The Census Bureau produces population projections for the nation and for states. 19. Reproductive Statistics Branch: Natality Data National Center for Health Statistics, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Presenter: Stephanie J. Ventura, Reproductive Statistics Branch, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Health Statistics, 3311 Toledo Road, Room 7318, Hyattsville, MD 20782-2003; phone: (301) 458-4547; fax: (301) 458-4033; email: SVentura@cdc.gov; homepage: http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/births.htm. The National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) collects and publishes information on a wide variety of demographic and health characteristics reported on the birth certificate for all births occurring in the United States. Information from birth certificates registered in the health departments of all states, New York City, the District of Columbia, and the territories, is provided to NCHS through the Vital Statistics Cooperative Program. Data are collected continuously. NCHS publishes preliminary and final data reports annually. Public-use data files are available beginning with the 1968 data year; a compressed data file is available on CD-ROMs for data years 1990-2002. A variety of special reports is available on specific topics, including most recently, rates of reproduction, pregnancy rates, state-specific demographic measures, and revised birth and fertility rates for the 1990s. Demographic characteristics available in the natality file include age, race, Hispanic origin, education, birthplace, marital status, residence, live-birth order, sex, and month and day of birth. Health information includes month prenatal care began, number of prenatal visits, medical risk factors, tobacco use, obstetric procedures, attendant at birth, place of delivery, method of delivery, complications of labor and/or delivery, period of gestation, birth weight, Apgar score, abnormal conditions of the newborn, congenital anomalies, and plurality. Currently underway is implementation of the 2003 revision of the birth certificate. The revised certificate collects new data on fertility therapy (drugs and ART separately), maternal infections during pregnancy, expanded information on tobacco use, receipt of WIC food during pregnancy, prepregnancy weight and height as well as weight at delivery, principal source of payment for the delivery, and breastfeeding, among other topics. Vital statistics systems are being re-engineered to improve data quality and timeliness through collection of data through worksheets from the best sources; ability to edit and query 234 data at the source; and standardization of best practices across states. 20. Behavioral and Social Sciences Working Group Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Presenters: Deborah Holtzman, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 1600 Clifton Road, NE, Mail Stop D-50, Atlanta, GA 30333; phone: (404) 639-7262; fax: (404) 639-7341; e-mail: DHoltzman@cdc.gov; homepage: www.cdc.gov. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), based in Atlanta, Georgia, is the nation’s lead public health agency for the prevention and control of disease, injury, and disability. It maintains a full prevention and health promotion agenda that includes prevention of infectious diseases, chronic diseases, injuries and violence, workplace hazards, birth defects and disabilities, and environmental hazards such as lead and other toxic substances. It also promotes healthy behaviors and lifestyle choices. Information will be available regarding current job opportunities, postgraduate training, the Epidemic Intelligence Service (EIS), and funding opportunities such as cooperative agreements and grants. 21. The Panel Study of Income Dynamics University of Michigan, Institute for Social Research Presenter: Kate McGonagle, Institute for Social Research, University of Michigan, 426 Thompson St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109; phone: (734) 936-1773; fax: (734) 936-3809; email: psidhelp@isr.umich.edu; homepage: http://psidonline.isr.umich.edu. With thirty-three waves of data, the Panel Study on Income Dynamics (PSID) is a longitudinal survey of a representative ample of US man, women, and children and the families in which they reside. Study content includes employment, retirement, income, expenditures, wealth, pensions, health, insurance, housing, marital and fertility behavior, mental health, and philanthropy. From 5,000 families in 1968, the study now includes nearly 8,000 families and more than 60,000 individuals as of 2003. The coverage of the PSID was expanded in 1997 with the addition of an immigrant refresher sample. A Child Development Supplement (CDS) was implemented in 1997 covering children in PSID families from birth through age 12, and then again in 2002 the same children who were then aged 5-18. All 33 waves of data and documentation are available to Internet users worldwide (http://www.psidonline.isr.umich.edu). The newly upgrades PSID Data Center is a user-friendly interface that allows the easy creation of customized data files and codebooks in a variety of formats. Primary sponsors of the PSID include the National Science Foundation, the National Institute on Aging, and the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development. Supplements in 2001 and 2003 were received by the Indiana University Center on Philanthropy. 22. The Child Development Supplement to the Panel Study of Income Dynamics The Panel Study of Income Dynamics University of Michigan, Institute for Social Research Presenter: Tina Mainieri, Institute for Social Research, University of Michigan, 426 Thompson St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109; phone: (734) 615-2885; fax: (734) 936-3809; email: psidhelp@isr.umich.edu; homepage: http://psidonline.isr.umich.edu/CDS The Child Development Supplement is one research component of the PSID, a longitudinal Study of a representative sample of US individuals and the families in which they reside. Since 1968, the PSID has collected data on family composition changes, housing and food expenditures, marriage and fertility histories, employment, income and wealth, time use, health, and more. In 1997, the PSID supplemented its core data collection with additional information on PSID parents and their 0-12 year-old children. Five years later, the same children and adolescents (then aged 5-18) whose families remained active in the PSID panel as of 2001 were interviewed a second time. Within the context of family, neighborhood, and school environments, CDS studies a broad array of developmental outcomes including health, emotional wellbeing, academic achievement, and social relationships with family and peers. The CDS survey design is complex relying on time diary methodology, cognitive assessments, height and weight measurements, and computer-assisted personal self-interviews. Data are collected from multiple family members and the schools that the youth attend. Data and documentation are available on the Internet free-of-charge. The PSID-CDS Data Center is a userfriendly interface that allows the easy creation of 235 customized data files and codebooks in a variety of formats. 23. Office of Behavioral and Social Sciences Research (OBSSR) National Institutes of Health Presenter: Ron Abeles, The Office of Behavioral and Social Sciences Research, Office of the Director, National Institutes of Health, Gateway Building, Rm. 256, MSC 9205, 7201 Wisconsin Avenue, Bethesda, MD 208929205: phone: (301) 496-7859, fax: (301) 435-8779: email: abeles@nih.gov; homepage: http://obssr.od.nih.gov. The Office of Behavioral and Social Sciences Research (OBSSR) opened officially on July 1, 1995. The U.S. Congress established the Office of Behavioral and Social Sciences Research (OBSSR) in the Office of the Director, NIH, in recognition of the key role that behavioral and social factors often play in illness and health. The OBSSR mission is to stimulate behavioral and social sciences research throughout NIH and to integrate these areas of research more fully into others of the NIH health research enterprise, thereby improving our understanding, treatment, and prevention of disease. OBSSR sponsors and coordinates funding opportunities across the NIH, organizes workshops and conferences, operates listserv’s for behavioral and social sciences, and provides training events such as summer institutes. See http://obssr.od.nih.gov. 24. National Institute of Child Health and Human Development National Institutes of Health Presenter: Rebecca L. Clark and Lynne M. Casper, Demographic and Behavioral Science Branch, Center for Population Research, National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, 6100 Executve Boulevard, Room 8B07G, Bethesda, MD 20892-7510; Telephone: (301) 496-1175; Fax: (301) 496-0962; E-mail: rclark@mail.nih.gov; Homepages: http://www.nichd.nih.gov; http://www.nichd.nih.gov/cpr; http://www.nichd.nih.gov/cpr/dbs/dbs.htm. The National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD), through its Center for Population Research, is the nation’s largest single source of funding for behavioral and social science research on population; most of this research is funded by the Demographic and Behavioral Sciences Branch. Program areas of interest include family and household structure and processes, fatherhood, children’s well-being, fertility and contraceptive behavior, sexual behavior related to the risk of pregnancy, HIV infection, and other sexually transmitted diseases; immigration, migration, and population distribution; population and environment; the relationship between demographic factors and labor markets and labor force participation; child care; mortality, especially infant mortality and child health; and formal demographic and methodological research. Within NICHD, the Center for Research on Mothers and Children also supports behavioral and social research in the areas of child development, mental retardation, and nutrition and growth; and the National Center for Medical Rehabilitation Research supports work on the behavioral aspects of disability. 25. Schools and Staffing Survey (SASS) Teacher Follow-up Survey (TFS) American Institutes for Research, National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) Presenter: Deanna Lyter and Beth A. Morton, Education Statistic Services Institute, American Institutes for Research, 1990 K Street, NW, Suite 500, Washington, DC 20006; phone: (202) 403-6165 (Lyter), (202) 403-6409 (Morton); fax: (202) 403-6401; e-mail: dlyter@air.org, bmorton@air.org; homepage: www.nces.ed.gov/surveys/sass. The Schools and Staffing Survey (SASS) by the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) is the nation’s largest sample survey of the characteristics and conditions of America’s elementary and secondary schools, principles, teachers, and library media centers. The 1999-2000 SASS, with data from over 120,000 respondents, provides national and state-representative estimates for public schools and affiliation-reliable estimates for private schools. This administration of the Survey also includes data from all public charter schools in operation during the 1998-1999 school year. The 2000-01 Teacher Follow-up Survey (TFS) is given to a sample of teachers who responded to the SASS in the previous year. The purpose of the survey is to determine how many teachers remained at the same school, moved to a new school, or left the teaching profession, what the characteristics of these teachers are, and what their reasons were for moving to a different school or leaving teaching. 236 26. National Institute of Justice (NIJ) Presenter: Thomas E. Feucht, National Institute of Justice, 820 7th Street NW, Washington, DC 20531; phone: (202) 307-2949; fax: (202) 305-8626; e-mail: Thomas.feucht@usdoj.gov; homepage: www.ojp.usdoj.gov/nij. The National Institute of Justice (NIJ) supports research and evaluation on a wide array of topics related to crime, justice, and public safety. Grants are awarded for basic research, program evaluation, secondary analysis of data, and various fellowship programs. Specific program areas supported by NIJ include research or evaluation on violence and violence prevention, crime victim services, crime control and prevention, court operations, corrections (institutional and community-based), and international crime issues. Plans in specific program areas are announced in solicitations released throughout the year. 27. Using the ESRC Question Bank: An Online Resource Developed for the Social Survey Research Community University of Surrey, UK Presenter: Julie Lamb, CASS QB, Department of Sociology, University of Surrey, Guildford, Surrey GU2 7XH, UK; phone: (+44) 1483 683762; fax: (+44) 1483 689551; email: qb@soc.surrey.ac.uk; homepage: http://qb.soc.surrey.ac.uk/. The Question Bank web site is an online tool developed for social survey researchers who wish to use the questionnaires from large-scale United Kingdom social surveys. Initially funded by the ESRC in 1995, the Qb has grown into a well-used and large resource. The Question bank is based in the UK, but is a truly unique resource that can be of use to social researchers everywhere. Most survey questionnaires are held in the form of PDF files. Many recent CAPI surveys are based upon the program BLAISE, and display the questionnaire in modified coded format. The Question Bank does not itself hold data, which is accessible through the UK Data Archive at the University of Essex. The Question Bank is intended as a tool for survey researchers designing questionnaires, for secondary analysts in search of the original questionnaires used in a survey, and more generally for students of survey methods. It is gradually building up commentary material on the measurement of 21 social and socioeconomic variables, related to the surveys, which are held in the QB. Its longer-term objective is to try to achieve improvements in survey measurement. The Question Bank website is available to Internet browsers worldwide. The Question Bank is supported by a UK academic advisory board, which provides input on the commentary material that is put up on the site. 28. Public Data Queries, Inc. Presenter: Albert F. Anderson, Public Data Queries, Inc., 310 Depot Street, Suite C, Ann Arbor Michigan 48104; phone: (734) 213-4964 x309; fax: (734) 475-8160; e-mail: afa@pdq.com; homepage: http://www.pdq.com; homepage: http://www.pdq.com/products/download. This exhibit will demonstrate the use of PDQ-Explore to access and analyze large microdata files. These data sets include, among others, the Public Use Microdata Samples (PUMS) from the U.S. Census Bureau, the Integrated Public Use Microdata Series (IPUMS) from the IPUMS project at the University of Minnesota Population Center, and the American Community Survey (ACS) files from the Census. The U.S. census microdata encompassed in the IPUMS files can be accessed as a single data set spanning the decennial censuses from 1850 through 2000. PDQ-Explore is a commercial product developed by Public Data Queries, Inc., with small business research support from the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD) and the National Institute on Aging (NIA) of the National Institutes of Health (NIH). The client software and documentation may be downloaded at http://www.pdq.com/products/download for free use in classrooms and non-profit research. 29. Division of Social and Economic Sciences National Science Foundation Presenter: Patricia White, Sociology Program, National Science Foundation, 4201 Wilson Boulevard, 995 SBE, Arlington, VA 22230; phone (703) 292-8762; fax (703) 292-9195 e-mail: pwhite@nsf.gov; homepage: http://www.nsf.gov/sbe/ses/sociol /. The Sociology Program at the National Science Foundation (NSF) supports research on human social organization, demography, and processes of individual and institutional change. The Program encourages theoretically focused empirical investigations aimed at improving the explanation of fundamental social processes. Included is research on organizations and organizational behavior, population dynamics, social movements, social groups, labor force participation, 237 stratification and mobility, family, social networks, socialization, gender roles, and the sociology of science and technology. The Sociology Program resides in NSF’s Division of Social and Economic Sciences. The Division supports disciplinary and multidisciplinary research, data collection, measurement, and methodological research. Its goal is to develop basic scientific knowledge of social, behavioral, and economic systems, organizations and institutions, and human interaction and decision-making. It also provides support for research conferences, doctoral dissertation research, international group travel, and data resource development. Fellowships to students at U.S. universities researching and writing doctoral dissertations on international peace and conflict. The Grant Program provides financial support for research, education, training, and the dissemination of information on international peace and conflict resolution to grantees based around the world. Unsolicited grants are provided for any topics that fall within the Institute’s broad mandate. Solicited Grants are awarded for special priority topics identified in advance by the Institute. For more information about these programs and for application materials, please visit the Institute’s website at <www.usip.org/gf.html>. 30. United States Institute of Peace 31a. Research and Fellowship Support for Sociologists Presenter: John T. Crist, Ph.D., U.S. Institute of Peace, 1200 17th Street, NW, Washington, DC 20036; phone (202) 429-3897; email: jcrist@usip.org; homepage: www.usip.org The United States Institute of Peace is an independent, nonpartisan federal institution created by Congress to promote the prevention, management, and peaceful resolution of international conflicts. Established in 1984, the Institute meets its congressional mandate through an array of programs, including research grants, fellowships, professional training, education programs from high school through graduate school, conferences and workshops, library services, and publications. The Institute’s Board of Directors is appointed by the President of the United States and confirmed by the Senate. USIP funds projects related to preventive diplomacy, ethnic and regional conflicts, peacekeeping and peace operations, peace settlements, democratization and the rule of law, negotiation, mediation and conflict management, nonviolent social movements, U.S. foreign policy in the 21st century, and related topics. The Institute is especially interested in topics addressing problems of the Muslim world, post-war reconstruction and reconciliation in Iraq and elsewhere, and responses to terrorism and political violence. Projects which demonstrate relevance to current policy debates will be highly competitive. The Institute sponsors several funding programs of interest to sociologists. The Jennings Randolph Program for International Peace awards Senior Fellowships (in residence) to enable outstanding scholars, policymakers, journalists, and other professionals to conduct research on important issues concerning international conflict and peace. The Jennings Randolph Fellowship Program also awards non-resident Peace Scholar Dissertation American Sociological Association Presenters: Roberta Spalter-Roth and William Erskine, American Sociological Association (ASA), 1307 New York Avenue NW, Suite 700, Washington, DC 20005; phone (202) 383-9005 x317; fax (202) 638-0882; email: executive.office@asanet.org; homepage: www.asanet.org. The American Sociological Association (ASA) provides funding for sociologists through two small grants programs and several fellowships programs. The ASA and the National Science Foundation jointly support the Fund for the Advancement of the Discipline (FAD). The goal of FAD is to nurture the development of scientific knowledge by funding ground breaking research initiatives and other important scientific research activities. FAD provides grant support (up to $5,000) for substantive and methodological breakthroughs that can advance knowledge and provide leverage for acquisition of additional research funds. Awards are limited to individuals with PhD degrees or the equivalent. ASA makes awards (up to $1000) through its Teaching Endowment Small Grants Program to support projects that extend the quality of teaching in the United States and Canada. Individuals, departments, and a program or a committee of a state or regional association are eligible to apply. Through its Sydney S. Spivack Program in Applied Social Research and Social Policy, ASA supports a Congressional Fellowship, Community Action Research Fellowships, and a Mass Media Fellowship. The ASA Congressional Fellowship provides a PhD level sociologist with in-depth experience as a staff member of a Congressional Committee or in a Congressional Office or agency. The Community Action Research Fellowships 238 provide support up to $2500 for sociological work with community organizations, local public interest groups, or community action projects. 31b. Minority Fellowship Program American Sociological Association Presenters: Mercedes Rubio and Felicia Evans, American Sociological Association (ASA), 1307 New York Avenue, NW, Suite 700, Washington, DC 20005; phone (202) 383-9005 x 322; fax (202) 638-0882; email: minority.affairs@asanet.org; homepage: http://www.asanet.org/. Through its Minority Fellowship Program (MFP), the American Sociological Association (ASA) supports the development and training of minority sociologists in mental health. Funded by a grant from the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH), the MFP seeks to attract talented minority students interested in mental health issues and to facilitate their placement, work, and success in an appropriate graduate program. In addition to providing financial support, the MFP works with Fellows and their faculty advisors at their home departments to help prepare Fellows in the sociology of mental health. Also, the MFP conducts symposia sessions at scholarly meetings, offers travel support to scientific conferences, and undertakes other initiatives that foster the development of formal and informal training for Fellows. 32. Web-Based Data Resources-Introduction to Data Cubes National Consortium on Violence Research (NCOVR) Presenter: Jacqueline Cohen, Carnegie Mellon University, Heinz School, Pittsburgh, PA 15213; phone: (412) 2683629; fax: (412) 268-2175; jc63@andrew.cmu.edu With support from the National Science Foundation, the Data Center of the National Consortium on Violence Research (NCOVR) at Carnegie Mellon University provides web access to a number of data collections relating to violent offending and victimization. Currently the collection includes: UCR police agency data on offenses and arrests for years since 1980, SHR incidentbased reports of homicides since 1980, NIBRS incidentbased reports since 1997, NCVS national victimization survey data since 1973, and Census data for 1980 and 1990 from the STF3A (“long form”) and STF1A (“short form”) datasets for summary levels from census block groups to national totals. While violent offending has been a substantive focus of NCOVR, understanding the shared and distinctive features of violence often involves comparisons between violent and non-violent behaviors. So NCOVR data resources include the full range of offending types available in each data collection. Two web-based tools application is a menu?are available for accessing the data. Oracle’s Discoverer driven query tool that allows users to customize an extract file to include user-selected variables and impose conditions on desired records. Cognos Powerplay provides flexible access to data “cubes”. Users can manipulate these cubes to aggregate or disaggregate data and focus on particular areas of interest. Query capabilities are also available for extracting variables and records from the underlying data set. Users only need an internet connection and standard browser to access the data with either tool. Poster session will introduce potential users to this resource. 239 Members of the 2004-2005 ASA Council Officers of the Association Members-at-Large Troy Duster, President, New York University Caroline Persell, Vice President, New York University Franklin D. Wilson, Secretary, University of Wisconsin, Madison Cynthia Fuchs-Epstein, President-Elect, Graduate Center, City University of New York Lynn Smith-Lovin, Vice President-Elect, Duke University Michael Burawoy, Past President, University of California, Berkeley Bernice Pescosolido, Past Vice President, Indiana University Sally T. Hillsman, Executive Officer Rebecca Adams, University of North Carolina, Greensboro Kathleen Blee, University of Pittsburgh Eduardo Bonilla-Silva, Texas A&M University Esther Ngan-Ling Chow, American University Jennifer Glass, University of Iowa Deborah K. King, Dartmouth College Rhonda F. Levine, Colgate University Nan Lin, Duke University Victor Nee, Cornell University Ann Orloff, Northwestern University Diane Vaughan, Boston College Bruce Western, Princeton University Min Zhou, University of California, Los Angeles Members of the 2005-2006 ASA Council Officers of the Association Members-at-Large Cynthia Fuchs-Epstein, President, Graduate Center, City University of New York Lynn Smith-Lovin, Vice President, Duke University Franklin D. Wilson, Secretary, University of Wisconsin, Madison Frances Fox Piven, President-Elect, Graduate Center, City University of New York Bonnie Thornton Dill, Vice President-Elect, University of Maryland, College Park Troy Duster, Past President, New York University Caroline Persell, Past Vice President, New York University Sally T. Hillsman, Executive Officer Rebecca Adams, University of North Carolina, Greensboro Judith D. Auerbach, American Foundation for AIDS Research Kathleen Blee, University of Pittsburgh Eduardo Bonilla-Silva, Texas A&M University Jennifer Glass, University of Iowa Evelyn Nakano Glen, University of California, Berkeley Michele Lamont, Harvard University Nan Lin, Duke University Victor Nee, Cornell University Ann Orloff, Northwestern University Gay Seidman, University of Wisconsin, Madison Diane Vaughan, Boston College Bruce Western, Princeton University Min Zhou, University of California, Los Angeles 240 2005 Committees and Representatives of the American Sociological Association Bylaws Committees COMMITTEE ON AWARDS Chair: Esther Ngan-ling Chow Elizabeth Higginbotham, Carol A. Jenkins, Nan Lin, Bruce Western, Charles V. Willie COMMITTEE ON COMMITTEES Jeffrey Chin, Sharon Hays, Hank Johnston, Anna Karpathakis, Lora Bex Lempert, Patricia Yancey Martin, Debra Umberson, Sarah Willie COMMITTEE ON THE EXECUTIVE OFFICE AND BUDGET Chair: Franklin D. Wilson Wendy Baldwin, Michael Burawoy, Lois DeFleur, Paul DiMaggio, Troy Duster, Cynthia Fuchs Epstein COMMITTEE ON PUBLICATIONS Chair: Carol Heimer Christine E. Bose, Daniel B. Cornfield, Troy Duster, Judith A. Howard, Brian Powell, Franklin Wilson, Erik Olin Wright COMMITTEE ON SECTIONS Chairs: Rhys H. Williams Carol S. Aneshensel, Eduardo Bonilla-Silva, Wava G. Haney, Patricia Madoo Lengermann, Ann Shola Orloff, Silvia Pedraza, Barry Wellman 2005 Award Selection Committees 2005 CAREER OF DISTINGUISHED SCHOLARSHIP AWARD SELECTION COMMITTEE Kevin Anderson, Donald Cunnigen, G. William Domhoff, Eiko Ikegami, Howard Kimeldorf (Chair), Edward Murguia, Murray Webster, Amy Wharton, Maurice Zeitlin COMMITTEE ON NOMINATIONS Chair: Caroline Hodges Persell Scott Coltrane, Nancy DiTomaso, Susan Eckstein, Susan Ferguson, Glenn Firebaugh, Cheryl Townsend Gilkes, Elizabeth Higginbotham, Pierrette Hondagneu-Sotelo, Sharon Lee, Irene Padavic, David Takeuchi 2005 DISTINGUISHED CAREER AWARD FOR THE PRACTICE OF SOCIOLOGY SELECTION COMMITTEE Rose Brewer, Jose Calderon, Xavier De Souza Briggs, John Foster, Jayati Lal, Paul Luebke (Chair) COMMITTEE ON PROFESSIONAL ETHICS Chair: Thomas Van Valey Shirley A. Hill, Thomas Hood, Lauren Krivo, Roberta Lessor, Diane Pike, Enrique S. Pumar, Martin Sanchez-Jankowski, Theodore Wagenaar 2005 DISTINGUISHED CONTRIBUTIONS TO TEACHING AWARD SELECTION COMMITTEE Maxine Atkinson, Leonard Berkey, Joseph Donnermeyer, Anne Eisenberg, Reuben May, Jodi O’Brien (Chair), Keith A. Roberts, Idee Winfield 2005 PROGRAM COMMITTEE Chair: Troy Duster Judith Auerbach, Patricia Collins, Joan Fujimura, Sally Hillsman, Arne Kalleberg, Ronald Lembo, Caroline Persell, Jill Quadagno, Barbara Risman, Stephen Steele, David Wellman, Franklin Wilson 2005 DISTINGUISHED SCHOLARLY PUBLICATION AWARD SELECTION COMMITTEE Margaret Andersen, Bernice Barnett, Susan Eckstein, John Lie (Chair), Marietta Morrissey, Angela O’Rand, Ann Orloff, Kathleen Schwartzman, Ann Tickamyer 2006 PROGRAM COMMITTEE Chair: Cynthia Fuchs Epstein Paul DiMaggio, Mitchell Duneier, Joan H. Fujimura, Sally Hillsman, Michele Lamont, Ronald A. Lembo, Valentine M. Moghadam, Mari Simonen, Lynn Smith-Lovin, Edward E. Telles, Steven Vallas, Franklin Wilson 2005 DUBOIS-JOHNSON-FRAZIER AWARD SELECTION COMMITTEE Charles Gallagher (Chair), Hayward Horton, Carole Marks, David Pellow, Leland Saito, Charles Smith, Hernan Vera, Alford Young 241 2005 JESSIE BERNARD AWARD SELECTION COMMITTEE Cynthia Anderson, Rebecca Bach, Joshua Gamson (Chair), Ann Goetting, Pierrette Hondagneu-Sotelo, Raka Ray, Anne Roschelle, Marybeth Stalp, Catherine Zimmer 2006 JESSIE BERNARD AWARD SELECTION COMMITTEE Cynthia D. Anderson, Rebecca Bach, Margaret May Chin, Ann Goetting, Demi Kurz, Raka Ray, Marybeth Stalp, Verta A. Taylor, Catherine Zimmer 2005 PUBLIC UNDERSTANDING OF SOCIOLOGY AWARD SELECTION COMMITTEE Joel Best, Cynthia Deitch, Peter Dreier, Alice Fothergill, Derek Greenfield, Philip Kasinitz, Wornie Reed (Chair), Barbara Risman 2006 PUBLIC UNDERSTANDING OF SOCIOLOGY AWARD SELECTION COMMITTEE Cynthia Deitch, Alice Fothergill, Derek Greenfield, Richard M. Levinson, Wornie L. Reed, Barbara Jane Risman, Michael Schudson 2006 Award Selection Committees Status Committees (CL=Council Liaison) 2006 CAREER OF DISTINGUISHED SCHOLARSHIP AWARD SELECTION COMMITTEE Richard D. Alba, Kevin Anderson, Donald Cunnigen, G. William Domhoff, Naomi Gerstel, Edward Murguia, Amy Wharton, Maurice Zeitlin COMMITTEE ON THE STATUS OF GAY, LESBIAN, BISEXUAL, AND TRANSGENDER PERSONS IN SOCIOLOGY Sine Anahita, Kathleen M. Blee (CL), Melissa Sheridan Embser-Herbert, Kevin D. Henson, Tracy E. Ore, Arle