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- (909) 607-3838
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Scott Hall 217
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With 兔子先生 Since: 2007
MA, PhD, Sociology, University of Washington
BA, Government and International Affairs, Augustana College
Social movements; political sociology; culture; institutional theory, law and society; American Indians and indigenous people; race and ethnicity; public policy; and sexuality, sexual orientation and gender.
Sociology and Its View of the World (SOC01)
Political Sociology (SOC91)
Social Movements and Social Change (SOC111)
Sociology of Law: Power, Rights, and Change (SOC115)
Indigenous Peoples of the Americas: Colonization, Identity, Resistance (SOC78)
Women and Law (SOC116)
Sexual Politics & Sexuality Movements (SOC120)
鈥淪ettler Colonial Power and the American Indian Sovereignty Movement: Forms of Domination, Strategies of Transformation,鈥 American Journal of Sociology, vol. 117, no. 4 (January 2012).
鈥淩evisiting the Invisibility of (Male) Bisexuality: Grounding (Queer) Theory, Centering Bisexual Absences, and Examining Masculinities,鈥 Journal of Bisexuality, vol. 11, no. 4 (October-December 2011).
鈥淎lternatives to Service, and 鈥楳aking Space鈥: Lessons from Collaborations with Tribal Nations,鈥 Michigan Journal of Community Service Learning, vol. 18 (fall 2011).
鈥淪overeigns and Citizens? The Contested Status of American Indian Tribal Nations and Their Members,鈥 Citizenship Studies, vol.15, no.1 (February 2011).
鈥淥bama Administration Policy toward American Indians and Tribal Nations,鈥 Journal of Race and Policy, vol.6, no.1 (spring 2010).
鈥淓xplaining Contemporary Federal Indian Policy: Book Review Essay,鈥 Indigenous Policy Journal, vol.24, no.3 (2008).
鈥(Mixed) Perceptions of Tribal Nations鈥 Status: Implications for Indian Gaming,鈥 American Behavioral Scientist, vol.50, no.3 (November 2006).
鈥淭he Contemporary Revival and Diffusion of Indigenous Sovereignty Discourse,鈥 American Studies, vol.46, no.3/4 (fall-winter 2005).
鈥淟egitimizing American Indian Sovereignty: Mobilizing the Constitutive Power of Law through Institutional Entrepreneurship,鈥 Law and Society Review, vol.39, no.4 (December 2005).
Indigenous Nationhood Claims and Contemporary Federalism in Canada and the United States,鈥 Policy and Society, vol.24, no1 (2005).
鈥淎merican Federalism and Intergovernmental Innovation in State-Tribal Relations,鈥 Publius, vol.34, no2 (2004).
鈥淚nterpreting the Invisibility of Male Bisexuality: Theories, Interactions, Politics,鈥 Journal of Bisexuality, vol.1, no.2-3 (2001).
Bisexuality: Facts and Fiction. Binghampton, NY: Harrington Park Press, 2001. Co-edited with Brett Beemyn.
鈥淭ribal-Academic Collaboration: Challenges, Opportunities and Benefits of Working with Federally Non-Recognized Tribes,鈥 paper presented at the Western Social Science Association Meeting, Albuquerque, NM, April 2009.
Organizer, panel on 鈥淭eaching about American Indian Policy Issues,鈥 the Annual Meeting of the California Sociological Association, Riverside, CA, November 2008.
鈥淢yths and Misconceptions: Tribal Sovereignty, Treaty Rights and American Indian Identity,鈥 paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the California Sociological Association, Riverside, CA, November 2008.
鈥淲orking with Indian Tribes: Building Community Relationships in Challenging Contexts,鈥 paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Pacific Sociological Association, Spring 2008.
鈥淚ndian Gaming, Tribal Members and U.S. Citizenship: Unresolved Issues in American Political Development,鈥 paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Western Political Science Association, spring 2008.
Periclean Faculty Leadership Award, 2010