Speaker series 2019

Christopher Wildeman
Cornell University
What Percentage of Americans Have Ever Had a Family Member Incarcerated? Evidence from the Family History of Incarceration Survey (FamHIS)
What percentage of Americans have ever had a family member incarcerated? To answer this question, we designed the Family History of Incarceration Survey (FamHIS). The Survey was administered in the summer of 2018 by NORC at the University of Chicago using their AmeriSpeak Panel. It was funded by FWD.us, which released a separate report using the data (Elderbroom et al. 2018). The data show that 45% of Americans have ever had an immediate family member incarcerated. The incarceration of an immediate family member was most prevalent for Blacks (63%), but common for Whites (42%) and Hispanics (48%) as well. College graduates had a lower risk of having a family member incarcerated, but the risk for Black college graduates was comparatively high. The most common form of family member incarceration was the incarceration of a sibling.

Yanfei Sun
Zhejiang University
Pre-modern Empires and Religious Toleration
Recent scholarship of pre-modern empires likes to compare pre-modern empires with modern nation states and stresses the propensity of pre-modern empires to tolerate diverse religions and cultures under their control. This emphasis, however, belies the fact that the religious policies of pre-modern empires differ significantly: some indeed allowed all kinds of religions to exist and flourish, while others persecuted heretics and non-believers, and carried out forced conversions. This talk will take a look at the religious policies of dozens of pre-modern empires and rank them according to their degree of toleration towards non-state religions. It will also present a theory to explain their differences.

Patrick Egan
New York University
Identity as Dependent Variable: How Americans Shift Their Identities to Better Align With Their Politics
Political science generally treats demographic identities as “unmoved movers” in the chain of causality because they are rooted in either ascriptive individual attributes or hard-to-change aspects of personal experience. Here I hypothesize that the high salience of partisanship and ideology as social identities in the U.S. is leading some liberal Democrats and conservative Republicans to shift their demographic identities to better align with the demographic prototypes of their political groups. Analyses of a representative panel dataset that tracks identities and political affiliations over a four-year span confirm that small but significant shares of Americans engage in identity switching regarding their ethnicity, religion, sexual orientation, and class that is predicted by partisanship and ideology in their pasts, bringing their identities into better alignment with their politics. These findings enrich and complicate our understanding of the relationship between identity and political behavior and suggest caution in treating identities as unchanging political phenomena.

May Al-Dabbagh
New York University Abu Dhabi
The Construction of Modern Motherhood and Work
My research is located at the intersection of gender, class, citizenship, migration, and global work. In my current project, I investigate the experiences of married expatriate women in the United Arab Emirates who leave full-time professional employment in order to establish entrepreneurial businesses after becoming mothers. These entrepreneurs specialize in mother or child related services or products and identify with the term “mompreneur” in ways that distinguish them from “mothers” and from “entrepreneurs”. Through a 3 year ethnographic investigation and 40 in-depth interviews, I explore how mompreneurs attempt to reimagine their mothering in market terms and how they describe the emotions involved in mothering and working. I also explore the variation in managerial practices of “work” in these entrepreneurial ventures: some businesses owners reproduce organizational cultures similar to their previous jobs while others cultivate cultures of resistance that reinforce the primacy of care as a work value for their employees. I argue that mompreneurs craft a class-based career mobility strategy that allows them to make certain types of care recognized as “work”. In particular, I explore the cultural capital that allows mompreneurs to feature in the UAE’s story of being modern and global in ways that they are not likely to have in other locations. Finally, the strategies they take help us rethink ideas about how paid and unpaid labor are recognized and how emotions feature as an important mechanism in defining “care” and “work”.

Diego Acosta
University of Bristol
Perspectives on the Global Compact on Migration and Latin America
Latin American countries have played a leading role in the adoption of the Global Compact on Migration. However, already two countries have rejected it (Chile and Dominican Republic) with a third one about do it (Brazil). What can Latin America offer to discussions on migration regulation at international level at a point in time where thousands of Venezuelans and Nicaraguans leave their country to apply for asylum or obtain an immigration residence permit in the region?
Speaker series 2018

Robert S. Jansen
University of Michigan
Revolutionizing Repertoires: The Rise of Populist Mobilization in Perú
Christian Joppke
University of Bern
Managing Diversity: Interculturalism v. Multiculturalism

Swethaa Ballakrishnen
New York University Abu Dhabi
Just Like Global Firms: Unintended Gender Parity and Speculative Isomorphism in India’s Elite Professions
Speaker series 2016

Mabel Berezin
Cornell University
Have the 1930s Returned? The Resurgence of Extreme Nationalism in Contemporary Europe

Matthias Koenig
Max Planck Institute, Georg-August-Universität Göttingen
Religious Freedom in International Law: Global Dynamics of Diffusion and Institutionalization

Hannah Brückner
New York University Abu Dhabi
Wikipedia, Democracy, and Academic Knowledge

Bryan Turner
Graduate Center, City University of New York
A Comparative Sociology of Islamophobia: Myths and Realities

David Cook-Martín
Grinnell College
How Their Laws Affect Our Laws: Mechanisms of Immigration Policy Diffusion in the Americas
