Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. Race
Amplifying the Youth Voice of the Food Justice Movement with Film:
Action Media Projects and Participatory Media Production - Michael
Cermak
Place and Race: Cultural Democracy and Reclaiming Public Space -
Diane Grams
Social Movements in Action: Combating Environmental Racism on a
Native American Reservation - Brandon Hofstedt
When Resilience is Not Enough: Recovery, Privilege, and Hurricane
Katrina - Pamela Jenkins
Living the DREAM: Race, Privilege, and DREAMs of a Brighter Future
- Joshua Warren
Bridging the Campus and the Community: Blogging about the Asian
American Experience - C.N. Le
Discussion Questions
Resources
2. Class
Confronting Slavery with the Tools of Sociology - Kevin Bales
From Magazine Publishing to Homelessness, From Public Housing
Research to Congressional Testimony - Deirdre Oakley
An Accidental Activist: My Stumble Upon Sociology - Bria Wilbur
Putting a New Theory of Philanthropy Into Practice: Challenges and
Opportunities - Susan A. Ostrander
Localizing International Human Rights: Engaging with the World
Social Forum Process - Jackie Smith
Housing and HIV/AIDS: A Tale of Academic, Provider, Advocacy, and
Public Policy Collaboration - Angela Aidala
Discussion Questions
Resources
3. Gender
Breast Cancer Activism: Learning to Write Collaboratively for
Social Change - Amy Lubitow
Honor Killings: Murder of Mores, Mores of Murder - Mazhar Bagli
Speaking Out for Social Justice: Sociology and Cultural
Transformation - Brian Klocke
On Becoming a Public Sociologist: Amplifying Women’s Voices in the
Quest for Environmental Justice - Tracy Perkins
Talking the Talk and Walking the Walk: Linking Research and Action
on Domestic Violence - Margaret Abraham
Transforming Rape Culture on a College Campus: Using Peer Advocacy
for Social Change - Linda Olson
Discussion Questions
Resources
4. Sexuality
Being an Academic Ally: Gender Justice for Sex Workers - Crystal A.
Jackson
Disrupting a Narrative: Developing a New Discourse of Empowerment
for LGBT People of Color - Juan Battle and Antonio (Jay)
Pastrana
Indian Blood: Two-Spirit Cultural Dissolution, Mixed-Race Identity,
and Sexuality---A Journey of Return - Andrew Jolivette
Sex Work and Sex Trafficking: Influencing State Policy on a Complex
Social Issue - Jennifer J. Reed
From Damaged Goods to Empowered Patients - Adina Nack
Discussion Questions
Resources
5. Intersections
Social Movements and Activist Sociology - Charles Derber
How Refugee Girls Change the World (and How You Can Too) - Laura
Boutwell
Becoming a Sociologist in Action through Theory and Practice: A
Personal Journey - Nancy Mezey
Using Sociology to Increase Citizen Participation in a Medium-Sized
Midwestern City - Michael Stout
Knowledgeable Power and Powerful Knowledge: Research and Organizing
for Educational and Social Justice - Mark R. Warren
Learning from Each Other’s Struggles - Laurence Cox
Taking it to the Streets: Addressing Inequalities through the Human
Rights Cities Movement - Shelley K. White and Dottie Stevens
Discussion Questions
Resources
Index
About the Editors
Shelley K. White, PhD, MPH, is a sociologist and Assistant
Professor of Health Sciences and Public Health at Worcester State
University. She recently taught in the Sociology Department at
Simmons College, where she also coordinated the Simmons World
Challenge - an interdisciplinary, student-led learning program
which creates actionable solutions to global social justice
problems. Shelley’s teaching and research focus on health and
illness, globalization and development, inequalities, social
movements and social justice. She previously worked in HIV/AIDS
policy globally and domestically, and serves on the board of
directors of Free the Children and SocMed. She is co-editor of
Sociologists in Action: Sociology, Social Change, and Social
Justice (with Kathleen Odell Korgen and Jonathan White), (2nd
Edition, Sage 2013) and her recent publications appear in the
Journal of Human Rights Practice; Education, Citizenship and Social
Justice; Public Health Reports; and Critical Public Health.
Jonathan M. White, PhD, is director of the Bentley Service Learning
Center and associate professor of sociology at Bentley
University in Massachusetts. His primary areas of
specialization are inequality, poverty, globalization, human
rights, and public sociology. Dr. White has received numerous
teaching and humanitarian awards. He is the founding director
of Sports for Hunger, the Hunger Resource Center, and the
Halloween for Hunger, We are Silent, and Pass-the-Fast
campaigns. He serves on the board of directors for Free The
Children, Peace Through Youth, Me to We, and the
Graduation Pledge Alliance. Dr. White has authored several
articles in the fields of inequality and globalization. His
work on public sociology includes coediting (with Kathleen
Korgen and Shelley White) Sociologists in Action: Sociology,
Social Change, and Social Justice (2014) and Sociologists
in Action on Inequalities: Race, Class, Gender, and Sexuality
(2015). He is also currently writing a book titled Hungry to Be
Heard: Voices From a Malnourished America. Dr. White lives in
Waltham, Massachusetts, with his wife, Shelley, and is the very
proud uncle of his 13 nieces and nephews, Jarred, Kyle, Tyler,
Arielle, Cameron, Brianna, Mikayla, Joshua, Jack, Logan, Tyler,
Joey, and Brookelyn.
Kathleen Odell Korgen is Professor of Sociology at William
Paterson University, a comprehensive university in Wayne, New
Jersey. Kathleen enjoys teaching her students that sociology is a
remarkably useful discipline and highlights how “Sociologists in
Action” make a positive impact on society. Her published works on
race relations and racial identity include From Black to
Biracial, Crossing the Racial Divide, Multiracial Americans and
Social Class, Race Policy and Multiracial Americans. Her teaching
texts, in addition to Sociology in Action, include Our Social
World, The Engaged Sociologist, Sociologists in Action,
, and Social Problems in Action. Kathleen is also the editor of The
Cambridge Handbook of Sociology.
Kathleen works as a consultant for other sociology departments as a
member of the American Sociological Association Departmental
Resources Group and received William Paterson University’s award
for Excellence in Scholarship/Creative Expression in
2006 and the university’s award for Excellence in Teaching in
2014.
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