Stone Inequality & Social Policy Seminar: Monica Bell

Date: 

Monday, March 18, 2024, 12:00pm to 1:15pm

Location: 

Malkin Penthouse

Fifty Mothers: Empirical Poems on Policing, Punishment & Poverty Governance

Monica C. Bell, Professor of Law, Associate Professor of Sociology, and Counselor to the Dean at Yale Law School

Abstract: Fifty Mothers is a project on how Black American women living on the margins love, fear, hope, dream, ache, wonder, resist, grieve, claim their dignity, and remake their lives around the laws, policies, practices, and social situations that closely regulate them.  To tell these mothers' stories and to advance theory and public discourse about the relationship between race, gender, class, and law, the project uses the tool of "empirical poetry"—a humanistic social science method that draws from data coded both thematically and poetically.

Monica Bell is a Professor of Law and Counselor to the Dean at Yale Law School and an Associate Professor of Sociology at Yale University. Bell works at the intersection of law and sociology, using sociological theory and research to explore legal questions regarding race and class inequality. Some subject matters that Bell has focused on include policing, violence, safety and security, welfare and public benefits, housing, and residential segregation. Bell uses multiple methods, with an emphasis on qualitative empirical methodology.

Bell's scholarship has appeared in the American Journal of Sociology, the Yale Law Journal, Journal of Economic Perspectives, NYU Law Review, Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review, and other journals. She has also published writing in popular outlets such as Politico Magazine, the Los Angeles Review of Books, Inquest, and the Washington Post

Bell has received recognition for her scholarship, teaching, and mentorship, such as the Yale Law Women Faculty Excellence Award, the Jane Addams Article Award as well as other distinguished article prizes from the American Sociological Association, a visiting scholar fellowship at the Russell Sage Foundation, and the Derrick A. Bell Jr. Award from the American Association of Law Schools. She currently serves on editorial boards of the American Sociological Review and the Law & Society Review.

She holds a B.A. from Furman University where she became a Truman Scholar, an M.Sc. from University College Dublin in Ireland where she was a Mitchell Scholar, a J.D. from Yale Law School, and a Ph.D. in Sociology and Social Policy from Harvard University.