Search

Search results

    Sociology's Truth? W.E.B. Du Bois and the Origins of Sociology

    Sociology's Truth? W.E.B. Du Bois and the Origins of Sociology

    February 9, 2016

    Los Angeles Review of Books | By Monica Bell, Ph.D. candidate in Sociology & Social Policy. Reviewing Aldon Morris's The Scholar Denied: W.E.B. Du Bois and the Birth of Modern Sociology, Bell argues Morris evokes the challenges of black and activism-oriented scholars today.

    Should We Trust Forensic Science?

    Should We Trust Forensic Science?

    February 18, 2016

    Boston Review | Two forensic experts respond to Nathan J. Robinson, Ph.D. student in Sociology & Social Policy, and Robinson replies. Robinson argued in the previous issue of Boston Review that the problems of forensic science constitute an unheralded crisis of criminal justice. 

    Sentencing Reform in an Era of Racialized Mass Incarceration

    Sentencing Reform in an Era of Racialized Mass Incarceration

    November 3, 2016

    Doctoral fellow Alix Winter, Ph.D. candidate in Sociology & Social Policy, and Matthew Clair, a Ph.D. candidate in Sociology, respond to the Massachusetts Sentencing Commission's invitation to comment on issues relating to sentencing policies and practices for the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Winter and Clair provide "a brief overview of sociological research on mass incarceration, sentencing practices, and racial/ethnic minorities’ disproportionate contact with criminal justice institutions," drawing the Commission's attention to "empirical research pertaining to potential sentencing practices, policies, and principles that may assist the Commonwealth in reducing racial/ethnic sentencing disparities". They then draw on this research to make specific recommendations.

    Clair and Winter co-authored a related academic article, “How Judges Think about Racial Disparities: Situational Decision-Making in the Criminal Justice System," published in Criminology earlier this year. Learn more about their work at their homepages:
    scholar.harvard.edu/alixwinter
    scholar.harvard.edu/matthewclair

    Boston Review

    Selling Keynesianism

    December 9, 2019

    Boston Review | By Robert Manduca, PhD candidate in Sociology and Social Policy. In the 1940s and '50s, the general public understood and agreed upon Keynesian economic principles. Today, we can learn a lot from the popularizing efforts that led to that consensus and long-lasting economic success, Robert Manduca argues.

    Seeing Red in Trump's America

    Seeing Red in Trump's America

    November 10, 2016

    Radio OpenSource | Among this week's guests, Nathan J. Robinson, Ph.D. student in Sociology & Social Policy.

Pages