News

Last week, the Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies had the honor of hosting a two-day workshop with 25 educators in ...
Despite growing acceptance and legal recognition, scholarly work about marriage has often overlooked the voices of LGBTQ+ ...
Anna Kirkland has been studying law, health, and discrimination for twenty-five years. She is a professor of Women’s and ...
What advice would you give sociology teachers? Join the conversation with sociology graduate students who answered the question in this recent Teaching Sociology article by Sanchez and Gilbertson.
“Do high school students in the United States learn about the Armenian Genocide?” This is a surprisingly difficult question to answer. K-12 education in the United States is highly decentralized and ...
Answer the question: “why are sociologists underrepresented in the world of public policy?” with Josh McCabe in his recent ASA Footnote. Answer the question: "why are sociologists underrepresented in ...
Dr. Douglas Hartmann is Professor of Sociology at the University of Minnesota. He is the author of Midnight Basketball: Race, Sports, and Neoliberal Social Policy (University of Chicago Press, 2016) ...
New & Noteworthy Left Behind? Vote Populist by S. Ericson highlights new research by Rafaela Dancygier and colleagues on the rise of radical right populism in Europe. Published in the American Journal ...
Corey Moss-Pech is an Assistant Professor of Sociology at Florida State University. His research focuses on the relationship ...
Flashback Friday. Reader Lindsey H. sent me a copy of a book called Vaught’s Practical Character Reader, apparently published in 1902 and revised in 1907 by Emily H. Vaught. Also available on Amazon.
In the last few hundred years, dark-skinned peoples have been likened to apes in an effort to dehumanize them and justify their oppression and exploitation. This is familiar to most Americans as ...