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Townshend Hall

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The fascination of Sociology lies in the fact that its perspective makes us see in a new light the very world in which we have lived all our lives.

~ Peter Berger

An Invitation to
Sociology


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11/23/2009 | : Dr. Robert M. Groves, Director, US Census. [Details...Date: 11/23/2009
Time: 3:00pm-4:00pm
Location: West Dining Room, 2nd Floor, Faculty Club
Title: "Dr. Richard Steckel, Professor of Economics, Ohio State
Description: "Robert Groves was nominated to be Director of the U.S. Census Bureau by President Obama in April 2009 and assumed the position in July 2009 after Senate confirmation. Groves is an eminent survey methodologist. For over three decades he held positions at the University of Michigan, including Director of the Survey Research Center. He has a PhD in Sociology from the University of Michigan."
]

12/04/2009 | CJRC: Christopher Lyons, University of New Mexico. [Details...Date: 12/04/2009
Time: 9:00am-10:20am
Location: Room 217 Journalism Building
Title: "The Social Organization of Racially Motivated Crime in Chicago Communities
Description: "Interest in “hate” crime continues to grow; yet we still know little about the etiology of racially motivated crime. This project joins a long tradition of Chicago-style research by focusing on the role of social organization in explaining variation in hate crimes against blacks and whites across Chicago communities. Drawing on six years of police reports, 1990 and 2000 census data, and survey data from the Project on Human Development in Chicago Neighborhoods (PHDCN), I examine the relationship between racially motivated crimes against blacks and whites and community-level economic conditions, racial demographics, conventional crime rates, and social capital. I evaluate alternative hypotheses about the social organization of racial hate crime derived from social disorganization, resource competition, macrostructural opportunity, and defended communities perspectives. Multivariate negative binomial analyses controlling for spatial autocorrelation suggest different patterns for antiblack and antiwhite hate crimes. Consistent with an extended defended communities perspective, antiblack hate crimes, in contrast to general forms of crime, are more likely in relatively organized, racially homogenous (white) communities with high levels of informal social control. Conversely, antiwhite incidents appear more numerous in racially heterogeneous and traditionally disorganized communities, especially those characterized by residential instability and high robbery rates. I offer some speculation for the different patterns by victim race, and discuss the implications of the results for criminological theory and research. Coffee, bagels and refreshments are being served"
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Begin section on latest news in Sociology.

Mong Awarded a Graduate Studies Grant (read more...)

InsideHigherEd Features Bobbit-Zeher’s Research (read more...)

Maimon Wins an ASA ’09 Award (read more...)

Honorable Mention for McDaniel at ASA ‘09 (read more...)