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Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

49

Program Schedule The length of each session/meeting activities is one hour and forty minutes, unless noted otherwise. Session presiders and committee chairs are requested to see that sessions and meetings end on time to avoid conflicts with subsequent activities scheduled into the same room and to allow participants time to transit between hotels. Program Corrections: The information printed here reflects session updates received from organizers through July 14, 2000. Changes received after that date will appear in the Program Changes section of the Convention Bulletin distributed with Final Program packets. Please check that bulletin for the latest updates.

Pre-Meeting Activities Alpha Kappa Delta Executive Council—Friday, August 11, 8:00 a.m.-9:00 p.m.—Marriott Wardman Park, Nathan Hale North American Chinese Sociologists Association conference—Friday, August 11, 8:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m.)— Hilton Washington, Map Section on Political Sociology Conference—Friday, August 11, 8:30-5:30 p.m.—Hilton Washington, Monroe West 1. Didactic Seminar. Social Network Analysis (cosponsored by the ICPSR and the ASA Section on Methodology) Marriott Wardman Park, Harding Friday, August 11, 9:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m. Ticket required for admission Leaders: Stanley Wasserman, University of Illinois, Urbana Katherine Faust, University of South Carolina This seminar will present an introduction to concepts, methods, and applications of social network analysis in the social and behavioral sciences. Social network analysis focuses on relationships between social entities and is widely used in the social and behavioral sciences as well as in economics, marketing, organizational behavior, and industrial engineering. This focus on relationships requires a special set of methods distinct from the usual statistics and data analysis techniques used to analyze the standard "cases by variables" data. We will begin with the basic concepts and principles of social network analysis, including the elements of the social network paradigm and formal representations for social networks (graph theory and matrices). We will then discuss structural and locational properties of actors in social networks: centrality, prestige, and prominence; cohesive subgroups and cliques; equivalence of actors, including structural equivalence and block models; an introduction to local analysis including dyadic and triadic analyses; and basic distribution theory and statistical models.

The course text will be Social Network Analysis: Methods and Applications (Cambridge, ENG and New York: Cambridge University Press, 1994) by Stanley Wasserman and Katherine Faust. We will focus on chapters 3, 4, 5, 7, 9, 10, 13, and 15 from this book. We recommend that seminar attendees obtain this book in advance and read the first few chapters prior to the session.

2000 ASA Chair Conference (preregistration required)— Friday, August 11, 12:30-9:30 p.m.—Marriott Wardman Park, Balcony CD 2. Didactic Seminar. So You Want to Do Applied Policy Research? Howard University (shuttle departs from the Marriott) Friday, August 11, 1:00-6:00 p.m. Ticket required for admission Leaders: Roberta Spalter-Roth, American Sociological Association Beatrice Edwards, Public Services International This seminar is designed for those thinking of careers as applied policy researchers (including advocacy research) and those teaching courses in this area. In this overview, we introduce the following topic areas: approaches to applied policy research from "purple prose" to cost-benefit analysis; gaining credibility for different types of research; frequently used procedures and techniques, including types of research used at different stages of the policy process; developing quantitative and qualitative evidence (the "number" and the "victim"); policy analysis and writing; and the ethics of applied research. Two hands-on activities will illustrate the evidence gathering, the analysis, and the writing aspects of policy research. First, participants will work in groups to choose a policy issue (including standardized testing, contingent work, welfare reform, or privatization of public services), conduct an Internet search for relevant data, and analyze their findings. Second, participants will turn their findings into a piece of policy writing appropriate to a specific policy forum.

3. Professional Workshop. How to Navigate Congress Marriott Wardman Park, Coolidge Friday, August 11, 1:00-5:00 p.m. Ticket required for admission Leader: Rachel Gragg, Legislative Assistant, Office of Senator Paul D. Wellstone, United States Senate This professional workshop on will tell you all you ever wanted to know about how to approach members of Congress and their staff members on the Hill. This workshop will examine the best ways for social scientists to participate in all stages of the legislative process. If you are aiming to talk about your research, address an importance issue of science policy, "educate" about enhanced support for the social sciences, or otherwise get your "message" across in informal meetings or testimony, this workshop is for you. How should you go about setting up a meeting, what should you bring, what is the most effective mode of writing, should you prepare an opening statement for an office visit, how informal can you be, how do you best anticipate questions, and how much time can you expect are just some of the questions that are "fair game" in this session. The workshop will provide information and materials that will help prepare you for meetings and presentations. Bring your questions, though. No question is too foolish in dealing with politics and navigating Congress.

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

50

Honors Program Orientation—Friday, August 11, 1:30-5:30 p.m.—Hilton Washington, Caucus Committee on Publications—Friday, August 11, 2:00-5:30 p.m.—Hilton Washington, Chevy Chase Section on Undergraduate Education Council—Friday, August 11, 4:00-5:30 p.m.—Hilton Washington, C326 ASA Journal Editors—Friday, August 11, 7:30-9:30 p.m.— Hilton Washington, Chevy Chase Honors Program Roundtables—Friday, August 11, 7:309:30 p.m.—Hilton Washington, Jefferson West

Saturday, August 12 The length of each session/meeting activities is one hour and forty minutes, unless noted otherwise. Session presiders and committee chairs are requested to see that sessions and meetings end on time to avoid conflicts with subsequent activities scheduled into the same room and to allow participants time to transit between hotels.

7:00 a.m.

Meetings

Section on Aging and the Life Course Council Meeting (to 8:15 a.m.)—Hilton Washington, Independence Section on Sociology of Culture Council Meeting (to 8:15 a.m.)—Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8217

8:30 a.m.

Sessions

4. Thematic Session. Latinos and Racism Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom Salon 3 Organizer and Presider: Hernan Vera, University of Florida Proposition 187: A Case of Institutionalized Racism. Jorge Bustamante, University of Notre Dame Latino Racism: Overcoming Expressions of Racial Antagonism in Latino Communities. Gilberto Cardenas, University of Notre Dame An Assessment of the Status of Latinos in Sociology: Minor Advances and Major Challenges. Rogelio Saenz, Texas A&M University Discussion: Eduardo Bonilla-Silva, Texas A&M University 5. Special Session. Old Boundaries and New Frontiers: The Challenges and Achievements of U.S. Muslim Women Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia A Organizer and Presider: Jen'nan Ghazal Read, University of Texas, Austin Ethnic Identity as a Challenge: Exploring the Boundaries of Gender, Race, and Religion. Kristine J. Ajrouch, University of Michigan The Challenges of Being Poor, Muslim, and Female in an American City. Louise Cainkar, University of Illinois, Chicago The Religious Tie: Gender, Identity and the Ambivalence of Assimilation. Kathleen M. Moore, University of Connecticut Behind the Veil, Beyond Veiling: Recent Anthropological Observations. Fadwa El Guindi, University of Southern California Discussion: Yvonne Y. Haddad, Georgetown University

Meetings

ASA Chairs Conference (to 2:10 p.m.)—Marriott Wardman Park, Balcony CD Committee on Nominations (to 4:10 p.m.)—Hilton Washington, Hamilton Committee on Publications (to 4:10 p.m.)—Hilton Washington, Hemisphere Honors Program—Hilton Washington, State

8:30 a.m.

8:30 a.m.

Other Groups

AKD Sociological Inquiry Editorial Board—Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8209

6. Special Session. The Prison Industrial Complex Hilton Washington, Jefferson East Organizer and Presider: John Galliher, University of Missouri, Columbia The War on Drugs and the Prison Industrial Complex. William Chambliss, George Washington University Racism and the Prison Industrial Complex. David Patrick Keys, West Texas A&M University Privatization and the Prison Industrial Complex. Yngva Digernes, University of Missouri, Columbia Discussion: James Austin, George Washington University 7. Special Session. Politics and the Urban Context of Homelessness Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson B Organizer: Leon Anderson, Ohio University Presider: Mark LaGory, University of Alabama, Birmingham

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

Space, Politics, and the Strategic Responses of the Homeless. David A. Snow and Michael Mulcahy, University of Arizona Out of Sight—Out of Mind: Anti-Homeless Laws, Litigation and Alternatives in 50 United States Cities. Kelly Cunningham-Bowers, National Law Center on Homelessness and Poverty The Social Control of Unhoused Persons. Mitch Duneier, University of Wisconsin, Madison, and University of California, Santa Barbara Discussion: Leon Anderson, Ohio University 8. Cancelled. 9. Special Session. Continental Reorganization and Social Relations in Europe Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia C Organizer and Presider: Katherine O'Sullivan See, Michigan State University Extending Boundaries and Managing New Inequalities in the European Union. Barbara Schmitter Heisler, Gettysburg College; and Martin Heisler, University of Maryland (Re)Organizing Women and Gender Relations in Contemporary Russia. Valerie Sperling, Clark University Engendering Ethnic Accommodation: Grassroots Organizing and the EU Programme on Peace and Reconciliation in Northern Ireland. Linda Racioppi and Katherine O'Sullivan See, Michigan State University 10. Special Session. The Sociology of School Choice Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland A Organizers: Eric Rofes, Humboldt State University; and Lisa M. Stulberg, University of California, Berkeley Introduction: Towards a Progressive Politics of School Choice. Lisa M. Stulberg, University of California, Berkeley The Political Principal at Work: Charter Schools in Low Income Communities of Color. Patty Yancey, University of San Francisco and American Institutes for Research School Choice through a Foucauldian Lens: Disrupting Neoliberal Discourses. Stacy Smith, Bates College Charter Schools and Commmunity-Building: Opportunities and Limits. Marjorie D. Wilkes, West Oakland Community School and University of California, Berkeley Charter Schools and the Legacy of Brown. John B. King, Jr., Roxbury Preparatory Charter School Charter Schools as Social, Economic, and Cultural Capital: Deepening Our Understanding of School Choice. Eric Rofes, Humboldt State University

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11. Professional Workshop. Careers or Interludes in Academic Administration Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware A Leaders: Jean Dowdall, A.T. Kearney Executive Search Charles Keeley, Georgetown University 12. Teaching Workshop. Teaching Medical Sociology Hilton Washington, Map Organizer: Diane R. Brown, Wayne State University Presider: Tony Brown, University of Michigan Teaching Methods of Sociology and Health Policy for Undergraduates and Non-Majors. Larry Greil, Alfred University Using Technology Innovative and Methods in Teaching Medical Sociology. Eric R. Wright, Indiana University Emerging Topics in Medical Sociology. William Cockerham, University of Alabama The goal of this workshop is to provide participants with useful information and tools for teaching medical sociology to varied student populations. The session will cover issues related to teaching medical sociology to undergraduates and to non-sociology majors; the use of technology to enhance the understanding of medical sociology; inclusion of materials of the health and illness of multicultural/multiethnic populations; and emerging issues in medical sociology.

13. Regular Session. Collective Behavior Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson C Organizer: Benigno E. Aguirre, Texas A&M University Better Off by Doing Good: Why Anti Racism Must Mean Different Things to Different Groups. Ruud Koopmans, Wissenschaftszentrum Berlin fur Sozialforschung Who Is That Wo(man) in the Street? From the Normalization of Protest to the Normalization of the Protester. Peter Van Aelst and Stefan Walgrave, University of Antwerp Group Size and Fatality Risk in a Fire Disaster. William Feinberg and Norris R. Johnson, University of Cincinnati Protest and Violence in Greek Schools, with Special References to Upper Secondary Schools. Nicholas P. Petropoulos, A. Papastylianou, P. Katerelos, and K. Harisis, Pedagogic Institute, Athens, Greece Discussion: Robert A. Stalling, University of Southern California 14. Regular Session. Fertility Hilton Washington, Edison Organizer: S. Philip Morgan, Duke University Presider: Daniel Lichter, Ohio State University Why So Fast?: Latecomer Effects and the Pace of Fertility Decline Across Nations. Thomas K. Rudel, Rutgers University The Age-Period Interaction in U.S. Fertility, 1920 to 1994. Kate Miller, University of Pennsylvania

52

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

Session 14, continued Partnership and Parenthood: Unobserved Heterogeneity in Stepfamily Fertility. Elizabeth Thomson, University of Wisconsin, Madison; Jan M. Hoem, Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research; and Amy L. Godecker, University of Wisconsin, Madison Great Expectations: Consequences of Adolescent Sexuality, Pregnancy, and Childbearing on Perceptions of Adult Attainments. Kathleen Mullan Harris, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill; Johanne Boisjoly, University of Quebec, Rimouski; Greg J. Duncan, Northwestern University Discussion: Daniel Lichter, Ohio State University; and S. Philip Morgan, Duke University 15. Regular Session. Group Processes: Networks in Groups Hilton Washington, Georgetown East Organizer: Jan E. Stets, Washington State University Presider: Barry Markovsky, University of Iowa Perceptions of Fairness in Social Exchange: A Comparison of Negatively and Positively Connected Networks. Gretchen Peterson, University of Arizona Mixed Relations' Networks: An Extension of Elementary Theory. Kinga Wysienska and Jacek Szmatka, Jagiellonian University The Effect of Actor Strategies on Power in Exchange Networks. Marcel van Assen, University of Groningen; and Dudley Girard, University of South Carolina Ordering as a Structural Power Condition. Mamadi Corra, University of South Carolina; Kimberly White, University of Arizona 16. Section on Undergraduate Education. Textbook Quality: A Continuing and Important Issue Hilton Washington, Monroe East Organizer and Presider: Richard T. Schaefer, DePaul University Panel: John E. Farley, Southern Illinois University, Edwardsville Diana Kendall, Baylor University William Kornblum, Graduate School, City University of New York Claire M. Renzetti, St. Joseph's University 17. Theory Section. Refereed Roundtables and Business Meeting Hilton Washington, Jefferson West Refereed Roundtables (to 9:30 a.m.): Organizer: Robert K. Shelly, Ohio University Table 1: The Dialectics of Religious Rationalization and Secularization: Max Weber and Ernst Bloch. Warren Goldstein, Stonehill College

Table 2: A Weberian Theory of Time. Sandro Segre, University of Genoa, Italy Recognition: Charles Taylor's Relationship to Hegel. Alva C. Hayslip, Northwestern University Table 3: Poststructuralism and Feminist Theoretical Practice. Karen McCormack, Wellesley College Recent Trends in Generative Theory and Practice. Jeff Livesay, Colorado College Table 4: Food Consumption as a Mode of Ethical Practice. Sam Binkley and Dörte Fischen Rath, New School for Social Research The Changing Nature of Personal Identity: An Examination of Classical Symbolic Interactionist Theory. Norman A. Dolch, Louisana State University, Shreveport Table 5: The Structure of the Form of Social Action? Analogies of "Axioms" and Conclusions in Parsons' and Simmel's Frames of Reference. Helmut Staubmann, University of Innsbruck Ontology, Textuality, and Morality: New Directions for Substantive Progress in Sociology. Rob Stones, University of Essex Table 6: cancelled Table 7: A "Painful" Discipline: Confronting the Tensions in Sociological Theory. Eric K. Shaw, Rutgers University Table 8: Globalization: The Meaning of Chaos. JoAnn Chirico, Pennsylvania State University, Beaver Campus The Elusive Market: Embeddedness and the Paradigm of Economic Sociology. Greta Krippner, University of Wisconsin Table 9: The Shape of Gains and Losses: An Experimental Test of the Value Function. Pam Hunter-Holmes, Ann C. Johansson, and Jane Sell, Texas A&M University Designing a Research-friendly Theoretical Framework for the Social Sciences. M. Ross DeWitt, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee Theory Section Business Meeting (9:30-10:10 a.m.) 18. Section on Political Economy of the World System. Refereed Roundtables and Business Meeting Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware B Refereed Roundtables (to 9:30 a.m.): Organizers: Timothy P. Moran, State University of New York, Stony Brook; and Angela Crowly

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

1. Environmental Movements and Environmental Transformation in the Modern World-System Timber and the Expansion of the Early Modern WorldEconomy, 1350-1750: A Community Frontiers Approach. Diana Carol Moore Gildae and Jason W. Moore, Johns Hopkins University The "Globalization" of the Port of Oakland: Synthesizing World-Systems and Ecological Marxist Approaches. John Gulick, University of California, Santa Cruz China: The Epicenter of Environmental Crises and Movements in the Twenty-First Century. Ho-Fung Hung and Benjamin Brewer, Johns Hopkins University 2. Transnational Social Movements and Global Politics Nike Corporation: Overseas Sweatshops and New Forms of Social Mobilization. Miguel Korzeniewicz, University of California, Santa Cruz; and Victoria Carty Zapatista Mobilization and Global Opportunity Structures. Jose Munoz, State University of New York, Stony Brook Globalizing Representations of Human Rights Violations: A Constructionist Approach. Jennifer Reich, University of California, Davis; and Michael Alan Sacks, Northwestern University 3. Economic Development Processes The Effects of Institution, Openness, and Education on National Economic Development: A Structural Equation Modeling Approach. Byung-Soo Kim, Stanford University The Effect of Portfolio Investment on Economic Development, 1980-1995. Jeffrey D. Kentor, University of Utah; Edward L. Kick, Middle Tennessee State University; and Byron Davis, University of Utah 4. Sexuality of the Modern World-System Sexuality of the Modern World-System. Nancy Forsythe, University of Maryland Violence Against Women Act (VAWA): Domestic and International Contexts. Elena Ermolaeva, Shepherd College; and Robert Selby, Frostburg State University 5. Historical Analyses of the Soviet Union and Russia Political Transformation in Russia 1700-2000: A Kondratiev Wave Analysis. Oleg I Gubin, University of Utah; Edward L. Kick, Middle Tennessee State University; Yevgenity N. Moshchelkov, Moscow Lomonosov State University Section on Political Economy of the World System Business Meeting (9:30-10:10 a.m.)

53

19. Section on Aging and the Life Course. Changing of the Welfare State and Impacts on Life Course Outcomes Hilton Washington, Lincoln East Organizer and Presider: Karl Ulrich Mayer, Max-Planck Institute for Human Development Internal Labor Markets and Earnings Trajectories in the PostFordist Economy: An Analysis of Recent Trends. Thomas A. DiPrete, Duke University; Dominique Goux, National Institute of Statistics and Economics Study, France; and Eric Maurin, CREST, Paris, France When the Welfare State Grows up: Income Inequality, Cohort Succession and the Maturation of Canada's Retirement Income System. John Myles, Florida State University Changing Paths to Occupational Maturity in Britain during the Late 20th Century. Richard Breen, European University Institute, Florence, Italy Time Use in Retirement: What Do Social Policy Regimes Buy? Anne Gauthier, University of Calgary; and Timothy Smeeding, Syracuse University Discussion: David L. Featherman, University of Michigan 20. Section on Sociology of Culture. Symbols and Power Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland C Organizer and Presider: Lynn Chancer, Fordham University Clashing Icons: The Politics and Culture of Public Investigations. Robert Alford and David Peerla, City University of New York Graduate Center The Sentation Controversy at the Brooklyn Museum of Art: Poltics, Sociology and Art. David Halle and Gihong Yi, University of California, Los Angeles The Veil in School?: Responses of North African Women in France. Caitlin Killian, Emory University Are We a Family or a Business?: History and Ideology in Chicago's Street Gang Movement. Sudhir Alladi Venkatesh, Columbia University; and Steve D. Levitt, University of Chicago Discussion: Barry Glassner, University of Southern California 21. Section on Sociology of Alcohol and Drugs. Theoretical Innovations in the Study of Drugs and Alcohol Hilton Washington, Caucus Organizer: Lana Harrison, University of Delaware From Center to Margin: Identity Change Processes of Older Injecting Drug Users. Tammy Anderson and Judith A. Levy, University of Illinois, Chicago Social Capital and Drug Use after Treatment: A Study of Treated Heroin Addicts in Hong Kong. Yuet-wah Cheung and Nicole Wai-ting Cheung, The Chinese University of Hong Kong Teenage Smoking and the Adult Transition. Doris R. Entwisle, Karl L. Alexander, and Linda Steffel Olson, Johns Hopkins University

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

54

Session 21, continued Adolescent Drinking: A Chain of Determinants. William S. Pooler and Carrie L. Cokely, Syracuse University Discussion: Lana Harrison, University of Delaware 22. Section on International Migration. Immigrants in the United States Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia B Organizer and Presider: Luis M. Falcon, Northeastern University Immigrant Dreams and American Realities: Blacks, Jews, and Koreans in Urban America. Jennifer Lee, University of California, Irvine Homeownership and the American Dream: A Study of Homeownership Attainment by Asian Immigrants. Sharon Lee and Barry Edmonston, Portland State University Occupational Attainment and Mobility of Mexican and Other Formerly Unauthorized Immigrants. Mary G. Powers and William Seltzer, Fordham University; Ellen P Kraly, Colgate University Immigrant Day Laborers as Entrepreneurs. Abel Valenzuela, University of California, Los Angeles 23. Section on Mathematical Sociology. The Evolution of Social and Organizational Networks Hilton Washington, Monroe West Organizer and Presider: Kathleen M. Carley, Carnegie Mellon University Evolution of Social Networks in Fragments. Patrick Doreian, University of Pittsburgh The Cultural Evolution of Altruism, I: Cooperation. Noah Mark, Stanford University Emergence of "Small World" Networks in a Heterogeneous Population When Agents Are Rewarded for Performance. Rob Axtell, Brookings Institute Discussion: Kathleen M. Carley, Carnegie Mellon University

9:30 a.m.

Meetings

Section on Political Economy of the World System Business Meeting (to 10:10 a.m.)—Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware B Theory Section Business Meeting (to 10:10 a.m.)—Hilton Washington, Jefferson West

10:30 a.m.

Meetings

Section on Aging and the Life Course Business Meeting (to 11:30 a.m.)—Hilton Washington, Lincoln East

10:30 a.m.

Sessions

24. Thematic Session. Gender Discrimination Revisited: Subtle, Blatant, and Covert Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom Salon 3 Organizer and Presider: Nijole Benokraitis, University of Baltimore Panel: Rose Brewer, University of Minnesota Esther Ngan-ling Chow, American University Allan Johnson, University of Hartford College for Women Denise A. Segura, University of California, Santa Barbara Many Americans believe that gender discrimination has seriously declined and is practically nonexistent. There is a general assumption that women have blasted through the old barriers and now enjoy equality with men in employment, education, politics, and the professions. This panel will identify the gender gaps and gender traps that many women (and some men) still face in their everyday lives.

25. Special Session. Anti-Black Racialism and Racism in 21st Century American Social Sciences Hilton Washington, Monroe West Organizer and Presider: John H. Stanfield, II, Morehouse College Panel: Edmund T. Gordon, University of Texas, Austin Abraham Davis, Morehouse College David Rollock, Purdue University Samuel L. Myers, University of Minnesota William Darity, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Discussion: John H. Stanfield, II, Morehouse College 26. Special Session. Education and Equity: An Old Struggle, A New Challenge Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson C Organizers and Presiders: Walter R. Allen, University of California, Los Angeles; and Gail E. Thomas, Soka University Times, Activities, and Educational Achievement: A Strategic Approach to Extending Students’ Learning. Reginald Clark, Clark and Associates and California State University, Los Angeles Incentives to Learn: Achieving Improved Academic Performance among Urban High School Students. Margaret Beale Spencer, University of Pennsylvania Pathways to Success: Creating Research Opportunities for Minority Science Undergraduate Majors: Marguerite Bonous-Hammarth, University of California, Los Angeles Those Who Got in the Door: University of California-Berkeley Affirmative Action Success Stories. Grace Carroll, Howard University

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

27. Special Session. Surveillance and Domination: Gender and Control Hilton Washington, Jefferson East Organizer: Jim Thomas, Northern Illinois University Presider: Barbara Zaitzow, Appalachian State University Surveillance and the Social Control of Sheltered Homeless Women. Victoria Pitts, Queens College; and Martin Schwartz, Ohio University Embodied Surveillance and the Gendering of Punishment: Domination and Resistance in Women's Prisons. Jill McCorkel, Northern Illinois University Sex and Surveillance: Gender, Privacy and the Sexualization of Power in Prison. Teresa A. Miller, State University of New York, Buffalo Pirandello Meets the "New Panopticon": Technology, Domination, and Heterogendering on Cell Block D. Jim Thomas, Northern Illinois University Discussion: Barbara Zaitzow, Appalachian State University 28. Special Session. Toward a Sociology of the Holocaust and Post-Holocaust Life Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia A Organizers: Judith Gerson, Rutgers University; and Diane Wolf, University of California, Davis Presider: Lenore Weitzman, George Mason University Post Holocaust Identity: Variations on a Number of Themes. Debra Kaufman, Northeastern University Hollywood's Holocaust: Schindler's List and the Construction of Memory. Lynn Rapaport, Pomona College The Sources of Nazi Radicalism. Gershon Shafir, University of California, San Diego Sociology of the Holocaust: Theorizing Jewish Studies. Diane Wolf, University of California, Davis; and Judith Gerson, Rutgers University Discussion: Jeffrey Olick, Columbia University; and Joan Ringleheim, U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum 29. Special Session. Liberations Struggles in Latin America Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland A Organizer and Presider: Richard A. Dello Buono, Dominican University Cuba's Struggle in Defense of National Liberation and SelfDetermination. Elena Diaz and Jose Bell Lara, University of Havana, Cuba Vieques and the Struggle for Puerto Rican Independence. Alfonso R. Latoni, University of Puerto Rico, Mayaguez Armed Struggles and National Liberation in Colombia. Michael Gonzalez-Cruz, State University of New York, Binghamton

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30. Special Session. The Military Community in the 21st Century Hilton Washington, Georgetown West Organizers: Peggy McClure, Military Family Institute; and Lois West, Florida International University Presider: Lois West, Florida International University Organizational Theory, Race, and Military Communities. John Sibley Butler, University of Texas, Austin The Prospects for Community in the Changing Military. James Martin, Bryn Mawr College; and Peggy McClure, Military Family Institute Women and the Military: Fighting against Masculinity. Laurie Weinstein, Western Connecticut State University 31. Special Session. After Seattle: The WTO and the New World Order Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom Salon 2 Organizers: Steven J. Rosenthal, Hampton University; and Charles Derber, Boston College Presider: Steven J. Rosenthal, Hampton University Speaker: Ralph Nader, Center for Responsive Law Discussion: Dave Schop, International Association of Machinists; and Charles Derber, Boston College This special session brings together sociologists and workers who participated in the activities in Seattle in December, 1999, to analyze both the role of the World Trade Organization (WTO) and the anti-WTO protests by labor, environmentalist, consumer and other organizations. Panel presentations will be followed by a discussion including audience participation.

32. Author Meets Critics. The Corrosion of Character: The Personal Consequences of Work in the New Capitalism (W.W. Norton and Company, 1998) by Richard Sennett, London School of Economics Hilton Washington, Thoroughbred Organizer: Steven Vallas, Georgia Institute of Technology Book Author: Richard Sennett, London School of Economics Critics: Cynthia Epstein, City University of New York Graduate Center Ruth Milkman, University of California, Los Angeles Walter Powell, Stanford University SCANCOR Steven Vallas, Georgia Institute of Technology 33. Didactic Seminar. Doing Qualitative Analysis with Computer Assisted Software: An Introduction Hilton Washington, Military Ticket required for admission Leaders: Sharlene Hesse-Biber, Boston College Raymond C. Maietta, ResearchTalk, Inc. This didactic seminar is for qualitative researchers who wish to use computer software to analyze textual data (e.g., case records, newspaper articles, field notes, transcripts of interviews or focus group discussions), pictures, graphics, or audio and video tapes. We will briefly explore the history of computer-assisted software programs in the social sciences. We will analyze the problems and prospects of using

56

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

Session 33, continued computer-assisted software programs for qualitative data analysis. We will discuss the factors you should consider in selecting a software program. This seminar is intended for those who want a basic introduction to the field of computer-assisted software for qualitative data analysis.

34. Professional Workshop. Careers in Finance for Sociologists Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware A Organizer: Lois A. Vitt, Money Studies, Incorporated Panel: Lois A. Vitt, Money Studies, Incorporated Jurg K. Siegenthaler, Institute for Socio-Financial Studies Lucia Fort, World Bank Panelists will describe how sociology majors and sociologists can look forward to both academic and nonacademic careers in the vast world of finance. For academics, researching and teaching the sociology of money and finance can become a rewarding career in itself. But nearly all areas within sociology have financial aspects that can be seen more clearly and understood more readily when sociologists train their painstaking-crafted theories and methods on the macro and micro sociofinancial issues in everyday life.

35. Academic Workplace Workshop. Assessing and Enhancing Your Library Collection Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson A Leader: George Kreps, Ohio State University 36. Teaching Workshop. Integrating Multicultural Perspectives into Health-Related Courses (cosponsored by the ASA Section on Medical Sociology) Hilton Washington, Map Organizer: Robin D. Moremen, Northern Illinois University Panel: Martha Thompson, Northeastern Illinois University Anne Figert, Loyola University, Chicago Eric Wright, Indiana University Robert Peralta, University of Delaware Tassy Parker, University of New Mexico The goal of this workshop is to provide participants with the latest information and materials on integrating race, class, gender, and sexual orientation into health-related courses. Experts from diverse perspectives will discuss process (e.g., interactive exercises, alternative teaching styles, etc.) and content (e.g., syllabi, reading lists, video sources, etc.) issues with workshop participants in an interactive format. The perspectives of students in the Minority Fellowship Program will be integrated as well. Participants are asked to bring a syllabus for a course they wish to transform.

37. Informal Discussion Roundtables. Social Change in Local, National, and Transnational Contexts Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom Salon 1 Organizer: Stella M. Capek, Hendrix College 1. Social Exclusion and Inclusion in Community Policy and Practice: Great Britain and the United States. Charles Jaret and Charles A. Gallagher, Georgia State

University; Peter Somerville and Charles Cooper, University of Lincolnshire and Humberside 2. Third World Social Change: Historical, Contemporary, and Future Dimensions. Lewis A. Mennerick, University of Kansas 3. The Quandary: Inequality in the Booming Economy. Karen E. B. McCue, University of New Mexico 4. The Right Thing to Do: Upholding the Civil Rights of Americans with Disabilities--the Aftermath of Olmstead. Kathryn Beth Kramer, Texas Health and Human Services Commission Texas Lutheran University 5. Regional Disparities in Romania: Political and Social Psychological Variation in Transitional Societies. Russell K. Schutt, Siamak Movahedi, and Denisa Popescu, University of Massachusetts; Ali Pirzadeh, Suffolk University 6. What We Might Learn about Race, Law and Remedy by Studying the Afro-Latin Experience. Robert J. Cottrol, George Washington University 7. Hunger in a Strong Economy. Renee M. Overdyke, State University of New York, Albany 8. Untangling the Rhetoric of Reform: A Discussion of Welfare Reform and Welfare Caseload. Alesha Durfee, University of Washington 9. "The Biggest Problem Is Fear": Conceptualizing Immigrant Community Problems with Latinos in Kentucky. Brian L. Rich, Transylvania University 10. Community Organizing and Immigrant Settlement Issues: Anti-Racism Work in the City of Toronto, Canada. Maria Wallis, York University and McMaster University 11. The Issue of Historicity in Embeddedness: The Case of Urban Revitalization in a Working Class Community. Tony Lee, Johns Hopkins University 12. Rotating Credit Associations in the Korean American Immigrant Community. Byung-Soo Kim, Stanford University 13. Searching for Bridges Crossing the Peconic: A Study of Social Movement Networking. Vondora Wilson-Corzen, State University of New York, Stony Brook 14. Urban Civic Worlds of City Dwellers. Gila Menahem, Tel Aviv University

15. Social Movement Theory: The Next Generation. Donna A. Barnes, University of Wyoming 38. Regular Session. Group Processes: Extending Theory and Research on Groups Hilton Washington, Georgetown East Organizer and Presider: Jan E. Stets, Washington State University Trust: Theoretical Issues and Experimental Evidence. Karen S. Cook and Robin Cooper, Stanford University

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

Social Identity Theory and Status Characteristics Theory: A Graph-Theoretical Integration. Christopher Barnum and William Kalkhoff, University of Iowa Formal Vocabulary as a Status Cue: Interactions with Diffuse Status Characteristics. Leda Kanellakos and Michael J. Lovaglia, University of Iowa The Creation of Status Characteristics through Nonverbal Behavior. Lisa Slattery Rashotte, University of North Carolina, Charlotte 39. Regular Session. Health and Well-Being Hilton Washington, Monroe East Organizer: Mary Clare Lennon, Columbia University Age, Education, and the Sense of Control: A Test of the "Cumulative Advantage" Hypothesis. Scott Schieman, University of Miami Adult Disability as a Determinant of the Health of Children in the United States. Raymond R Hyatt, Jr., Brown University Revisiting the Relationship between Gender, Marital Status, and Mental Illness. Robin W. Simon, University of Iowa Gender, Paid Work, and Housework: The Division of Labor within Couples, Perceived Equity, and Self-Rated Health. Chloe E. Bird, Brown University 40. Regular Session. Poverty and Housing Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson B Organizers: Hector Cordero-Guzman, New School for Social Research; and Frank Bonilla, City University of New York Presider: Frank Bonilla, City University of New York Are Residential Choices Affected by Welfare Benefits? John Hartman; and Xinwei Michelle Miao, New York City Comptroller's Office Are Central Cities Unique?: Spatial Conditioning of Black Poverty. Lucy Dwight, Western Washington University Negotiating Housing in a Context of Scarcity. Susan Clampet-Lundquist, University of Pennsylvania Women's Vulnerability and Coping in a Guyanese Squatter Settlement. Maitreyi Das, University of Maryland, College Park Discussion: Emily Rosenbaum, Fordham University 41. Regular Session. The Civil Rights Movement Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland B Organizer and Presider: Jack M. Bloom, Indiana University Northwest Black Power and the American Dream. Rod Bush, St. John's University We Are Not King. John A. Noakes, Franklin and Marshall College Religion and the Civil Rights Movement: Constructing Priestly and Prophetic Mobilizing Ideologies. Rhys H. Williams and Kathryn B. Ward, Southern Illinois University

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Academic Agitators in Mississippi. Maria R. Lowe and J. Clint Morris, Southwestern University Discussion: Jack M. Bloom, Indiana University Northwest 42. Section on Undergraduate Education. Refereed Roundtables on Teaching Sociology Hilton Washington, International East Organizer: Diane Pike, Augsburg College 1. Exercises in Teaching Theory Table Presider: Peter R. Grahame, Mount St. Mary's College Theoretical Constructs: The Presentation of Theory in Undergraduate Instruction. Peter R. Grahame, Mount St. Mary's College Multidimensional Theoretical Analysis: Teaching Students How to Think Sociologically. H. Reed Geertsen, Utah State University 2. Deviance: Doing and Knowing Table Presider: Karen Bettez Halnon, Penn State Abington The Sociology of Doing Nothing. Karen Bettez Halnon, Pennsylvania State University, Abington The Salience of Friday the 13th for College Students. Jerry M. Lewis and Timothy J. Gallagher, Kent State University 3. Student Motivation: General and Particular Table Presider: Diane Zablotsky, University of North Carolina, Charlotte Exploring Big Issues in Large Classes: The Challenges of Teaching the Sociology of Death and Dying. Diane Zablotsky, University of North Carolina, Charlotte Motivating the Unmotivated College Student. Kim Cattat, State University of New York, Buffalo 4. Assessment: Within and Without Table Presider: Angela J. Hattery, Wake Forest University "Walking the Walk": A Service Learning Approach to Understanding Social Class Inequality. Angela J. Hattery and James P. Han, Wake Forest University Authentic Assessment as Resistance: A Community College Experience. Jeanne Cameron, Barbara Kobritz, Philip Walsh, Scott Ochs, and Tina Stavenhagen-Helgren, Tompkins Cortland Community College 5. Culture and Subcultures: Different Roles in the Classroom Table Presider: James J. Dowd, University of Georgia The Problems of Subcultures. James J. Dowd and Laura Dowd, University of Georgia Global Awareness and Self-Actualization: Significant Association and Profound Impact on College Education. Yan Yu, Grand Valley State University 6. Reflective Practice in Class: Two Student Exercises Table Presider: Susan Walzer, Skidmore College Using the Self in Learning and Teaching Qualitative Sociology. Susan Walzer, Skidmore College

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Session 42, continued Confronting the Social Context of the Classroom. Sarah Sobieraj and Heather Laube, State University of New York, Albany 7. Two Issues of Course Management Table Presider: William T. Clute, University of Nebraska, Omaha Retention Intervention and Introductory Sociology: Taming a "Killer Course". William T. Clute, University of Nebraska, Omaha Practical Needs and Altruistic Endeavors: Undergraduate Teaching Assistants in the Classroom. Laura Fingerson and Aaron Culley, Indiana University 8. Two (unrelated but interesting) Ideas for Introductory Sociology Table Presider: Carla D. Shirley, Indiana University Using Creative Problem Solving in the Classroom. Terrell A. Hayes, Davis and Elkins College Using Native American Tribal Cards to Discuss the Social Construction of Race. Camilla V. Saulsbury and Carla D. Shirley, Indiana University 43. Theory Section Miniconference. New Directions in Sociological Theory: Growth of Contemporary Theories I Hilton Washington, Lincoln West Organizers: Joseph Berger and Morris Zelditch, Stanford University Presider: Morris Zelditch, Stanford University Affect Control Theory Across Cultures. David Heise, Indiana University Resource Mobilization as Theorectical Research Program and as Epistemic Community: Progress and Transformation. Mayer Zald, University of Michigan; and John D McCarthy, Pennsylvania State University Understanding Revolutions: Theory Development from Simple to Conjunctural to Chaos Models of Social Change. Jack Goldstone, University of California, Davis A Theory of Political Institutions. Bruce Bueno de Mesquita, Stanford University Discussion: Jonathan Turner, University of California, Riverside 44. Section on Political Economy of the World System. Race in the Modern World-System Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia C Organizer: Gay Seidman, University of Wisconsin, Madison Racial Identities among Caribbean Immigrants. Vilna Bashi, Northwestern University Racial Accumulation on a World-Scale: A World-Systems Analysis of Racial/Ethnic Inequality in an National Labor Market. Cynthia Lucas Hewitt, University of Georgia

Defining Anti-Discriminiation Policy in a "Racial Democracy": Brazil’s "Strange Affair" with Jim Crow. Seth Racusen, Massachusetts Institute of Technology 45. Section on Aging and the Life Course. Business Meeting and Distinguished Scholar Address Hilton Washington, Lincoln East Business Meeting/Reception (10:30-11:30 a.m.) Chair: Ronald P. Abeles, National Institute of Health Distinguished Scholar Address (11:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m) Organizer and Presider: Ronald P. Abeles, National Institute of Health Life Courses in the Process of Transformation to Post Communism: The Case of East Germany. Speaker: Karl Ulrich Mayer, Max Planck Institute for Human Development, Berlin, Germany 46. Section on Sociology of Culture. The Culture of Everyday Life Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland C Organizer and Presider: Gary Alan Fine, Northwestern University Studies and Practices of Everyday Life: Institutional Innovation in the Fields of Sociology and Art. Britta B. Wheeler, New York University Settled Lives at Christian College: A Case of a Men's and a Women's College Basketball Team. Jason J. Maki, University of Notre Dame Small Group Culture and Socio Emotional Management: The Case of TD's Restaurant. Tim Hallett, Northwestern University The Price of Poverty: Money, Work, and Culture in the Mexican-American Barrio. Daniel Dohan, University of California, Berkeley Discussion: Christina Nippert-Eng, Illinois Institute of Technology 47. Section on Sociology of Alcohol and Drugs. Policy Directions for the 21st Century in Alcohol and Drug Control Hilton Washington, Caucus Organizer: Lana Harrison, University of Delaware What Policies Affect Heroin Use and HIV? Bruce D. Johnson, National Development and Research Institutes; and Lisa Maher, University of New South Wales Effects of Drug Treatment for Heroin Sniffers: A Protective Factor against Moving to Injection? Margaret S. Kelley and Dale D. Chitwood, University of Miami Harm Reduction Rhetoric and the Limits of Rational Discourse: Practical and Philosophical Problems. Andrew Hathaway, Center for Addiction and Mental Health Zero Tolerance for Drugs: A Dubious Strategy for Addressing Violent Crime in the 21st Century. Henry H. Brownstein, University of Baltimore

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

Discussion: Samuel Friedman, National Development and Research Institutes 48. Section on International Migration. Comparative Studies of International Migration in the World System (co-sponsored by the ASA Section on Political Economy of the World System) Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia B Organizer: Luin Goldring, York University Presider: Jeffrey Reitz, University of Toronto Immigrant Flows: A Qualitative Analysis of Economic, Demographic and Political Influences. Elizabeth Clifford, Towson University; and Brian Gran, University of Kentucky, Lexington Migration in the Periphery: A Case Comparison of Guatemalan Migration to Mexico and Haitian Migration to the Dominican Republic. Marion Carter and Meredith Kleykamp, Princeton University Differences in Welfare States and Immigrants Incorporation: A German-American Comparison. Hermann Kurthen, State University of New York, Stony Brook Labor Migration Policy and the Governance of the Construction Industry in Israel and Japan. David Bartram, Haverford College Discussion: Jeffrey Reitz, University of Toronto 49. Section on Mathematical Sociology. Informal Discussion Roundtables on Mathematical Sociology and Business Meeting Hilton Washington, Jefferson West Informal Discussion Roundtables (to 11:30 a.m.) Organizer: Carter T. Butts, Carnegie Mellon University 1. Structuration of Deviant Networks. Ju-Sung Lee, Carnegie Mellon University 2. Interaction Value Analysis: When Structured Communication Benefits Organizations. Walid Nasrallah, Stanford University 3. Co-evolution of Knowledge and Communication Networks: A Public Goods, Transactive Memory, and Social Capital Perspective.; Edward T. Palazzolo, Dana Ann Serb, and Yuechuan She, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign 4. The Influence of Organizational Networks on Performance: A Computer Simulation. Luigi Proserpio, SDA-Bocconi School of Management, Italy 5. Measuring and Modeling Change in C3I Architecture.; Yuquing Ren and David Krackhardt, Carnegie Mellon University 6. Legitimacy and the Evolution of Organizational Populations. Sampsa Samila, Columbia University Section on Mathematical Sociology Business Meeting (11:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m.

11:30 a.m.

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Meetings

Section on Mathematic Sociology Business Meeting (to 12:10 p.m.)—Hilton Washington, Jefferson West

12:30 p.m.

Meetings

Section on International Migration Council Meeting—Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8209

12:30 p.m.

Sessions

50. Thematic Session. The End(s) of Revolution at the Beginning of the 21st Century? Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom Salon 2 Organizers: John Foran, University of California, Santa Barbara; and Jeff Goodwin, New York University Presider: Jean-Pierre Reed, University of California, Santa Barbara Revolutions: Dead or Born Again in the 21st Century? Susan Eckstein, Boston University Revolution in the Real World: Myth, Memory, and the Future(s) of Revolution. Eric Selbin, Southwestern University The Changing of Revolutionary Discourse and the End of Revolutions. Farideh Farhi Why There Will Be Fewer Social Revolutions and More Socialism in the 21st Century. Jeff Goodwin, New York University Magical Realism: How Might the Revolutions of the Future Have Better End(ing)s? John Foran, University of California, Santa Barbara 51. Thematic Session. Health Policy and Inequality Hilton Washington, Monroe East Organizer: David R. Williams, University of Michigan Presider: Chiquita Collins, University of California, Berkeley Understanding and Reducing Socioeconomic Disparities in Health. James S. House, University of Michigan Race and Health: Persisting Disparities and Policy Options. Thomas A. LaVeist, Johns Hopkins University The Political Determinants of Social Inequalities in Health and Health Policy. Carlos Muntaner, Johns Hopkins University Discussion: Jo Phelan, Columbia University

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52. Special Session. Latinos: Citizens and Immigrants Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland A Organizer and Presider: Hector L. Delgado, University of California, Irvine Preliminary Findings from the Mexican-American People: A Generation Later. Vilma Ortiz and Edward Telles, University of California, Los Angeles Gendered Socialization: Concrete Talk, Gender Roles, and Differential School Outcomes among SecondGeneration Mexican Americans in New York City. Robert Smith, Barnard College; and Sandra Lara, Columbia University Latina Immigrant Domestics: Changes in EmployerEmployee Relations. Pierrette Hondagneu-Sotelo, University of Southern California Does Immigration Increase Homicide?: Negative Evidence from Three Border Cities. Matthew T. Lee, University of Delaware; Ramiro Martinez, Jr., Florida International University; and Richard Rosenfeld, University of Missouri, St. Louis 53. Special Session. Economists and Globalization Hilton Washington, Thoroughbred Organizer: Johanna K. Bockman, University of California, San Diego Presider: Dietrich Rueschemeyer, Brown University Mexican Economists. Sarah Babb, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Hungarian Economists. Johanna K. Bockman, University of California, San Diego Czech and Slovak Economists. Gil Eyal, University of California, Berkeley Chilean Economists. Veronica Montecinos, Pennsylvania State University, McKeesport Discussion: Miguel Centeno, Princeton University 54. Special Session. Inequalities in Careers in Academia and Science in a Cross-National Perspective Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland B Organizers and Presiders: Stefan Fuchs and Janina von Stebut, Ludwig Maximillians University, Munich Minority Participation in Science and Technology: The Critical Transition from Undergraduate to Graduate School. Henry Etzkowitz, State University of New York, Purchase; Willie Pearson, Jr., and Cheryl B. Leggon, Wake Forest University The International Integration of Women into the Educational System and in Scientific Labor Markets. Jutta Allmendinger, University of Munich Women in Science and Engineering Fields. Francisco O. Ramirez and Christine Min Wotipka, Stanford University Conceptual Innovations in Comparing Gender Equity in Education. Angelika Von Wahl, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

Science Careers in Germany and the USA: A Comparison. Britta Baron, German Academic Exchange Service Discussion: Sandra Hanson, Catholic University 55. Special Session. Race and Religion: Shifting Approaches to Shifting Categories (co-sponsored by the Association for the Sociology of Religion) Omni Shoreham Organizers: Elizabeth McAlister, Wesleyan University; and Henry Goldschmidt, University of California, Santa Cruz Presider: Elizabeth McAlister, Wesleyan University "A Man Born by My Foot": Tracing the Hegemony of "Race" in Crown Heights. Henry Goldschmidt, University of California, Santa Cruz Shifting the Categories of Racial Identity in Caribbean Culture: Rastafari as a Case Study. Nathaniel Samuel Murrell, University of North Carolina, Wilmington "Indian = Hindu": Religion and the Formation of a Race/Ethnic Identity among Indian Immigrants in the Late 20th Century United States. Sharmila Rudrappa, University of Wisconsin, Madison Discussion: Cheryl Townsend Gilkes, Yales University 56. Special Session. Talking with Whites about Race Hilton Washington, International West Organizers and Presiders: Thomas M. Shapiro, Northeastern University; and Charles A. Gallagher, Georgia State University Reproducing Racism in Research: Tales from the Field. Charles A. Gallagher, Georgia State University Good Neighborhoods, Good Schools: "Good" Choices and Race in the Minds of Whites. Heather Beth Johnson and Thomas M. Shapiro, Northeastern University Whiteness in the Next Century: The White 2K Problem. George Lipsitz, University of California, San Diego Discussion: Lawrence D. Bobo, Harvard University 57. Professional Workshop. Negotiating Your First Academic Position Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware A Organizer and Presider: Susan A. Farrell, Kingsborough Community College, City University of New York Panel: Bruce D. Haynes, Yale University Kathy Livingston, Quinnipiac University Tracy E. Ore, Saint Cloud State University Wendy S. Simonds, Georgia State University Edward J. Farrell, Jr., New York Life Asset Management This workshop will focus on the issues confronting new hires as they move into their first academic positions. Whether just out of graduate school or moving into academia after working in the private sector or as an applied sociologist, questions regarding salary, benefits, and tenure will be discussed by panelists from varied academic settings. Panelists will present their experiences as they applied for and were hired in their first academic positions. Along with an employee benefits specialist, the workshop will explore questions regarding the negotiation of a new academic position. Some topics to be covered: negotiating in a

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m. unionized academic setting; how to discuss and bargain for salary and benefits; choosing an HMO that covers you, your partner, or your children; how much research and publishing support is available for new faculty; and most important, how to find out exactly what the institution expects of new faculty in order to achieve tenure.

58. Teaching Workshop. Teaching Demography at the Graduate Level Hilton Washington, Map Organizer and Presider: Daniel T. Lichter, Ohio State University Panel: Joshua R. Goldstein, Princeton University Wendy D. Manning, Bowling Green State University Herbert L. Smith, University of Pennsylvania Michael J. White, Brown University Using illustrations from their own courses, panelists will discuss how best to train a "new" generation of demographers for academic and applied jobs in a rapidly changing field. What does it mean to be a demographer today? And how should the new curriculum and the content of population courses incorporate new substantive themes (e.g., bio-social processes), new methodological advances (e.g., GIS), and new technological developments (e.g., the internet), while responding to a new university research and teaching environment (e.g., with emphasis on multi-disciplinarity, diversity, and globalization)?

59. Regular Session. Collective Behavior II Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland C Organizer: Benigno E. Aguirre, Texas A&M University Presider: Dennis Wenger, Texas A&M University Literature and Dissent or How to Get Purchase on the Mobilization Motives. Helena Flam, University of Leipzig, Germany The Making of the White March: The Mass Media as a Mobilization Alternative for Movement Organizations. S. Walgrave and Jan Manssens, University of Antwerp, Belgium Distance Related Bias in Newspaper Coverage of Civil Disorders, 1968-1969. D. Myers, University of Notre Dame; B. S. Caniglia, University of Notre Dame Truths and Consequences: Quantitative Reflections on Alternative History and the Proper Use of the News Media in the Study of Contentious Politics. Christian Davenport, University of Maryland, College Park Discussion: John D McCarthy, Pennsylvania State University 60. Regular Session. Welfare Reform Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia B Organizer and Presider: Stacey J. Oliker, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee Explaining Employment Growth among Black and White Single Mothers, 1987-1998. Sandra S. Smith, Mary Corcoran, and Mary Noonan, University of Michigan Domestic Violence in the Context of Welfare Reform. Ellen K. Scott and Andrew S. London, Kent State University; Kathryn Edin, University of Pennsylvania

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Stepping In: Familial Survival Strategies in an Era of Welfare Reform. Lynne Haney, New York University; and Robin Rogers-Dillon, Yale University Ties That Bind: Single Mothers' Autonomy, Gender Relations, and U.S. Welfare State Restructuring. Renee A. Monson, Hobart and William Smith College Discussion: Stacey J. Oliker, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee 61. Regular Session. Sociology of Emotions Hilton Washington, Monroe West Organizer and Presider: Carolyn Ellis, University of South Florida Practices of Empathy in a Women's Prison. Deborah W. Kilgore, Iowa State University Emotions and Public Sexual Activities during Mardi Gras. David Redmon, Southwestern University Post Traumatic Stress Disorder: Examination of a Life History from the Perspective of the Sociology of Emotions. Don Stewart, University of Nevada, Las Vegas Self, Emotion and the Computer. Mary E. Virnoche, University of Colorado, Boulder Suspicious Bodies, Troubled Minds: Emotionality, Corporeality, and Reflexivity in Handling Heart Disease. Elizabeth E. Wheatley, Smith College 62. Regular Session. Fertility: Demographic, Economic, and Social Interrelations Hilton Washington, Edison Organizer: S. Philip Morgan, Duke University Presider: Shara Neidell, National Analysts, Philadelphia Why Is Chinese Americans' Fertility So Low?: Some Quantitative and Qualitative Insights. Wan He, U.S. Bureau of the Census; and Joan R. Kahn, University of Maryland, College Park International Migration and Fertility: Individual, Biological, and Social Effects. Payal Gupta, University of Pennsylvania Voluntary Associations and Fertility Limitation. Jennifer S. Barber and Lisa D. Pearce, University of Michigan; Indra Chaudhury and Susan Gurung, IAAS The Reproductive Effects of Rural Development: The Case of Ghana. Kofi D. Benefo, Union College Discussion: Shara Neidell, National Analysts, Philadelphia 63. Regular Session. Gender and Work: Women Working in Nontraditional Roles Marriott Wardman Park, Balcony B Organizer and Presider: Brenda L. Moore, State University of New York, Buffalo Gender Identity and Gender Composition in the Workplace. Robert Bossarte and Carolyn Bond, University of Notre Dame Informal Networks and Organizational Achievement: Gender Differences in Authority. Renee Van Der Hulst, Tom Snijders, and Karin Sanders, University of Groningen

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Session 63, continued Is It Really Who You Know?: Social Networks and Gendered Employment Outcomes among Professional, Technical, and Managerial Workers. Lisa Torres and Steven Velasco, University of California, Santa Barbara; Matt Huffman, University of California, Irvine The Disappearance of the "Good Ole" Boys' Club?: How Female Sheriffs Negotiate Gender Accountability at Work. Courtney C. Merrill, University of Connecticut The Gendered Construction of the Engineering Profession in the United States. Lisa M. Frehill, New Mexico State University Maintaining Gender Segregation: The Inclusion and Exclusion of Women in Construction Work. Amy M. Denissen, University of California, Los Angeles 64. Regular Session. Genocide and Gross Violations of Human Rights Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia A Organizer and Presider: Helen Fein, Institute for the Study of Genocide The Decision to Commit a Crime Against Humanity. Robert Fine and David Hirsch, University of Warwick, United Kingdom Genocide, Political Violence and the Neutralization of Evil. Mary White Stewart and Catherine C. Byrne, University of Nevada No Brave New World: Freedom and Violations of LifeIntegrity in the World, 1987 and 1997. Helen Fein, Institute for the Study of Genocide Lethal Myths and Motives for Genocide in Rwanda. Tracey McIntosh, University of Auckland Discussion: Suzanne Vromen, Bard College 65. Regular Session. Homelessness Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson B Organizer: Leonard Beeghley, University of Florida Presider: Mona Danner, Old Dominion University Pathways from the Street: Modeling the Transitions from AtRisk Situations to Literal Homelessness. Jonathan B. VanGeest, American Medical Association; Timothy Johnson and Richard B. Warnecke, University of Illinois, Chicago Citizenship: A New Dimension in Response to Homelessness. Michael Rowe, Bret Kloos, Matt Chinman, and Ann Boyle Cross, Yale University Road Dogs for a Lifetime or Just the Journey: An Ethnographic Examination of Street Partnerships among Homeless Men. Tim Pippert, Augsburg College Why Don't They Just Get a Job?: Employment and the Working Homeless in Orange County's New Economy. Brad Christerson, Biola University Discussion: George Wilson, University of Miami

66. Regular Session. Medical Sociology: Migration, Health, and Women's Bodies Hilton Washington, Georgetown East Organizer: Lisa Sun-Hee Park, University of Colorado, Boulder Presider: Brett Stockdill, California State University, Pomona Social Factors Associated with Violence Against Pregnant Women: A Comparative Study between Morelos (Mexico) and California (United States). Roberto Castro, National Autonomous University of Mexico; Corinne Peek-Asa and Lorena Garcia, University of California, Los Angeles; and Agustin Ruiz, National Autonomous University of Mexico The Ties That Heal: Guatemalan Immigrant Women's Networks and Medical Treatment. Cecilia Menjivar, Arizona State University Policing Immigrant Women's Bodies: Social Impact of Recent Welfare and Immigration Policies. Lisa Sun-Hee Park, University of Colorado, Boulder; and Angela Irvine, Northwestern University Negotiating "Responsible Citzenship": Biopolitical SubjectsTalk Back. Anna Romina Guevarra, University of California, San Francisco 67. Regular Session. Military Sociology Hilton Washington, Georgetown West Organizer and Presider: Wilbur Scott, University of Oklahoma Attitudes of Entry-Level Enlisted Personnel: Pro-Military and Politically Mainstreamed. David Segal, University of Maryland, College Park; Peter Freedman-Doan, Jerald G. Bachman, and Patrick O'Malley, University of Michigan A Few Good Men: Armed Forces, Status Distribution and the Welfare State. Brian Gifford, New York University Connected to Society: The Political Beliefs of U.S. Army Generals. James Dowd, University of Georgia The Kosovo War and American Involvement: A StructuralFunctional Analysis. Edward Tiryakian, Duke University 68. Regular Session. Prisons and Prisoners Hilton Washington, Jefferson East Organizer and Presider: Dana M. Britton, Kansas State University When Home Is a Prison Cell: Disciplinary Technologies of Space and Time. Sylvia J. Ansay Smoke 'Em if You Got 'Em: Cigarette Black Markets in U.S. Prisons and Jails. Stephen E. Lankenau, Gregory P. Falkin, and Sheila M. Strauss, National Development and Research Institutes Profiling Prisoners in a Maximum Security Prison for Women. Matthew Silberman, Bucknell University Body and Soul: The Movement from Treatment to the Containment of the "Convict" Psyche in the PostRehabilitation Era. John F. Ely, Saint Mary's College, California

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

Discussion: Jill McCorkel, Northern Illinois University 69. Regular Session. Seeking Profit, Avoiding Danger: Social Aspects of Risk Hilton Washington, Farragut Organizer: Carol A Heimer, Northwestern University and American Bar Foundation Presider: Barry Cohen, Northwestern University and American Bar Foundation Institutionalizing Risk Management: Early Twentieth Century Responses to Medical Research Hazards. Sydney Halpern, University of Illinois, Chicago Sources of Danger in Health Care Organizations: Four Mechanisms in Search of a Theory. Elizabeth West, Royal College of Nursing Institute The Atomic Fallout Shelter as a Metaphor. Andrew Szasz, University of California, Santa Cruz Risk in the Pits: An Ethnography of the Chicago Board of Trade. Caitlin Zaloom, University of California, Berkeley Discussion: Carol A. Heimer, Northwestern University and American Bar Foundation 70. Regular Session. Social Networks Hilton Washington, State Organizer and Presider: David Knoke, University of Minnesota The Payoffs to Networks of Strong Ties: What Difference Does Gender, Race and Ethnicity Make? Gail McGuire, Indiana University, South Bend Connecting Structure and Content: Personal Networks and Social Capital in Early Life. Pamela Popielarz, University of Illinois, Chicago Network Capital in a Multilevel World. Kenneth Frank, Michigan State University Social Solidarity, Social Distance and Interpersonal Ties. Michael Bourgeois and Noah Friedkin, University of California, Santa Barbara Discussion: David Knoke, University of Minnesota 71. Section on Undergraduate Education. The Scholarship of Teaching and Learning Hilton Washington, Caucus Organizer and Presider: Nancy A. Greenwood, Indiana University, Kokomo Is There Scholarship of Teaching in Teaching Sociology?: A Look at Papers from 1984-1999. Jeffrey Chin, LeMoyne College The Consolidation of Responsibility in the Mixed-Age College Classroom and a Preliminary Investigation of Discussion in Distance Learning Courses. Jay R. Howard, Indiana University, Columbus

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Liking or Learning?: The Effect of Instructor Likeability and Student Perceptions of Learning on Overall Ratings of Teaching Ability. Michael Delucchi, Bridewater State College; and Susan Pelowski, University of Hawaii, West Oahu Discussion: Nancy A. Greenwood, Indiana University, Kokomo 72. Theory Section Miniconference. New Directions in Sociological Theory: Growth of Contemporary Theories II Hilton Washington, Lincoln West Organizers: Joseph Berger and Morris Zelditch, Stanford University Presider: Martha Foschi, University of British Columbia Critical Mass Theory. Gerald Marwell and Pamela Oliver, University of Wisconsin, Madison Expectation States Theory: A Theoretical Research Program. David Wagner, State University of New York, Albany; and Joseph Berger, Stanford University New Theories in the Portfolio of Theoretical Justice Analysis. Guillermina Jasso, New York University Institutionalism. Ronald Jepperson, European University Institute and University of Tulsa; David Strang, Cornell University World-Systems Analysis, or How to Resist Becoming a Theory. Immanuel Wallerstein, State University of New York, Binghamton 73. Section on Political Economy of the World-System. Mentalities, Ideologies, and Cultural Constructions in the World-System Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia C Organizer: Albert J. Bergesen, University of Arizona Presider: Sing C. Chew, Humboldt State University The Rise and Demise of National Development Plans: A Cross-National Study, 1929-1995. Hokyu Hwang, Stanford University The So-Called Third Way. Teresa Brennan, Florida Atlantic University Orientalism in the World-System: The Western Conception of China, 1500-1968. Ho-fung Hung, Johns Hopkins University Discourse and Prioritization Schemas within the Global Environmental Movement. Thomas J. Burns, University of Utah; and Terri LeMoyne, University of Tennessee, Chattanooga Discussion: Sing C. Chew, Humboldt State University 74. Section on Aging and the Life Course. Roundtables on Aging and the Life Course Hilton Washington, International East Organizers: Cary S. Kart, University of Toledo; and Judith Treas, University of California, Irvine

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Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

Session 74, continued 1. Research Group on Parent-Child Relations in the Later Years Table Presider: Deborah Merrill, Clark University Whose Story: Congruence and Disparity in In-Law Interpretations. Deborah Merrill, Clark University Hang In There: Advice about Stepfamily Relations from Couples in Long-Term Remarriages. Barbara Vinick, VA Medical Center 2. Research Group on Comparative Gerontology Table Presider: Eldon Wegner, University of Hawaii Adequacy of Care: Issue in Family Care under the German Long-Term Care Insurance. Eldon Wegner, University of Hawaii Care for Older People in Britain, Germany and the U.S.: National and Local Perspectives. Michaela Schunk, University of California, San Francisco U.S./U.K. Family Expectations and Satisfaction with Residential Care: A Cross-National Comparison. Debra Dobbs-Kepper, University of Kansas 3. Research Group on Aging Well Table Presider: Tanya Fusco Johnson, University of Hawaii, Hilo Fall Prevention through Social Stimulation. Tanya Fusco Johnson, University of Hawaii, Hilo Aging Well and Age, Period, Cohort Effect. Jennifer Soloman, Winthrop University Self-Esteem and Aging Well. Laura Blankertz, Matrix Research Institute 4. Research Group on the Life Course Table Presiders: David Morgan, Portland State University; and Eliza Pavalko, Indiana University Leisure, Gender and the Life Course: Changes in Leisure Time from 1977 to 1997. Stacey S. Merola, Cornell University 5. Old Age Policies in Comparative Perspective Table Presider: Idolina Hernandez, Boston College Unintended Consequences of the Privatization of Latin American Public Pensions Systems: Early Evidence from Low Wage Workers and Women. Idolina Hernandez, Boston College Old-Age Security Policies in China, Japan, and Singapore. Ayumi Iseki, Boston College 6. Older Immigrants to the U.S. Table Presider: Judith Treas, University of California, Irvine Finding Their Place: Transnational Seniors in America's Immigrant Families. Judith Treas and Shampa Mazumdar, University of California, Irvine 7. Grandparenting Table Presider: Florence Rosenberg, University of Maryland American Grandparents in Children's Lives. Margaret M. Mueller, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill;

and Valarie King, Pennsylvania State University The Grandparent: Constructing a Role. Florence Rosenberg, University of Maryland Second-Time-Around Parenthood: Grandmothers Residing with Grandchildren in Two Cohorts of Women, 1967-1995. Richard K. Caputo, Yeshiva University 8. Religion and Aging Table Presider: Eva Kahana, Case Western University Placing Religious Coping in the Context of the Stress Paradigm. Boas Kahana, Cleveland State University; Amy Wisniewski, Eva Kahana, and Kyle Kercher, Case Western Reserve University The Relationship between Chronic Illness and Religious Activities in an Elderly Population. Maureen H. Reindl and Marc A. Musick, University of Texas, Austin; Deborah T. Gold, Duke University 9. Productive Aging Table Presider: Qiaoming Amy Liu, California State University, Sacramento Productive Activity over the Life Course. Jan E. Mutchler, Francis G. Caro, and Jeffrey A. Burr, University of Massachusetts, Boston Involvement in Community Improvement Activities by the Elderly in Small Towns and Rural Communities. Qiaoming Amy Liu, California State University, Sacramento 10. Studying Health Table Presider: Stephen J. Cutler, University of Vermont Recruitment of Subjects for Research on Aging and Dementia. Stephen J. Cutler, University of Vermont; and Lynne G. Hodgson, Quinnipiac College The Health of Older Americans: Highlights from Health and Aging Chartbook. Ellen A. Kramarow, Harold Lentzer, Ronica Rooks, Julie Weeks, and Sharon Saydah, National Center for Health Statistics A Study on the Long-Term care Services Use among Medicaid Eligibles in Hawaii. Chui Wai Yuan, University of Hawaii, Manoa 11. Parents and Children over the Life Course Table Presider: Edythe Krampe, California State University, Fullerton The Memory of the Father: Father Presence in Middle Aged and Older Adults. Edythe Krampe, California State University, Fullerton 12. Women's Life Course Transitions Table Presider: Akiko Nosaka, Pennsylvania State University The Position of Rural Bangladeshi Women in the Family from Middle to Old Age. Akiko Nosaka, Pennsylvania State University Women and the New Employee Pension Environment: The Organization of Pension Behavior within the Family. Kim Shuey, Florida State University

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

13. Caregiving Comparisons Table Presider: Eric Anderson, University of California, Irvine Men as Caregivers: Are They "Doing Gender?" Eleanor Palo Stoller, Case Western Reserve University; and Edward H. Thompson, Jr., Holy Cross College 14. cancelled. 15. Age Influences on Life Transitions Table Presider: Gay Kitson, University of Akron Dashed Hopes: A Measure of the Effects of Age Norms on Adjustment to Death of a Spouse. Gay Kitson, University of Akron 16. Understanding the Multigenerational Workplace Table Presider: R. Stovall Hanks, University of South Alabama ALIGN: A Service-Learning Network to Prepare Older Workers and Generation-Xers for a Multigenerational Work Place. R. Stovall Hanks, University of South Alabama Job Values of Young Adult Transition: Change and Stability with Age. Monica Kirkpatrick Johnson, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill 17. Couples and Aging Table Presider: Sonia Miner Salari, University of Utah Aggression in Mid and Later Life Couples. Sonia Miner Salari, University of Utah Intergenerational Patterns of Assistance among a Cohort of American Couples. Kim Shuey and Melissa Hardy, Florida State University 18. Issues in Work and Retirement Table Presider: Nancy L. Marshall, Wellesley College Issues Facing and Aging Workforce. Nancy L. Marshall, Wellesley College Health, Wealth, Occupation, and Other Determinants of Who Takes Early Retirement. Tay McNamara and John B. Williamson, Boston College 19. Qualitative Research for Quantitative Readers Table Presider: Linda Liska Belgrave, University of Miami How Do We Talk to Each Other?: Writing Qualitative Research for Quantitative Readers and Other Issues in Communicating Our Work. Linda Liska Belgrave, University of Miami; Diane Zablotsky, University of North Carolina, Charlotte; and Mary Ann Quadagno, National Institute on Aging Informal Discussion Roundtables: 20. Research Group on Gender and Aging: Informal Discussion Table Presider: Katherine Condon, Florida International University 21. Research Group on Work and Retirement Panel Discussion Table Presider: Donald C. Reitzes, Georgia State University

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Panel: David Eckert, University of Kansas John Williamson, Boston College Elizabeth J. Mutran, University of North Carolina Melissa Hardy, Florida State University Maximiliane Szinovacz, Eastern Virginia Medical School 75. Section on Sociology of Culture. Refereed Roundtables on Culture and Business Meeting Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom Salon 1 Refereed Roundtables (12:30-1:30 p.m.): Organizer: William G. Holt, Emory University 1. Art and Institutions Table Presider: Volker Kirchberg, University of Lueneburg Modernity and Imperialism in Soviet Uzbek Theatre. Laura Adams, Hamilton College Fashion as a System: Institutionalized Efforts to Maintain the Fashion Culture in Paris. Yuniya Kawamura, Columbia University The Museum in Town: Prescribed Roles, Manifest, and Latent Functions. Volker Kirchberg, University of Lueneburg Art in Eastern Europe: After the End of Communism. Marilyn Rueschemeyer, Brown University 2. Charisma and Religion Table Presider: Rita Melendez, Yale University The Power of Compassion: A Three Dimensional Case. Gloria Ho, New York University The Ritual of Civil Religious Pilgrimage and Its Challenges to National Collective Memory. Brad West, University of Queensland A Conflict Analysis of a Fundamentalist Spectacle. James David Williams, University of Arkansas 3. Cuisine and Culture Table Presider: Anne Boyle Cross, Yale University Lisa Simpson and the Absent Referent. Richard L. Bilsker, Charles County Community College The Sociology of Room and Board. Charles Gordon, Carleton University 4. Culture and Theory Network Table Presider: Nancy Hanrahan, George Mason University 5. Culture and Gender Table Presider: Sharon Hays, University of Virginia Literature Online: Gender in the Virtual Community of Readers. Elizabeth Long, Rice University Rhetorics of Recovery: Mothers in Substance-Abuse Treatment. Phyllis Baker, University of Northern Iowa Feminism 2000: Riot Grrrl Mobilizing Cultures. Chelsea Starr, University of California, Irvine Enchanted Relations: The Religious Contribution to the Marital Economy of Gratitude. W. Bradford Wilcox, Princeton University

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Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

Session 75, continued 6. Group Identities and Politics Table Presider: Rabab Abdulhadi, Yale University A Cognitive Social Psychology of Cultural Identity: Epistemological Foundations and a Methodological Response. Todd Hechtman, Eastern Washington University Enacting Obligation: Unexpected Practitioners of Identity Politics. Susan Munkres, University of Wisconsin, Madison Germany in the News: Four National Perspectives on the German Nation. Bess Rothenberg, University of Virginia Dutch-American Identity: A Case Study of the Netherlands-American Association of the Delaware Valley. Jennifer van Stelle, Stanford University 7. Identity Construction Table Presider: Karen A. Cerulo, Rutgers University MUDdying Identity: Constructing Gender in a Virtual Environment. Shannon Roper, Rutgers University Identity and Expression on the Internet. Katherine Walker, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Charitable Community, Identity and the Net. Janet M. Ruane, Montclair University The "Spirit" of Computerization and Ordinary Life. Joseph Sullivan, State University of New York, Albany Inequality in Access to Information on the Internet. Eszter Hargittai, Princeton University 8. Individual Experiences and Identity Table Presider: Michael Lewis, College of William and Mary The Importance of Experience: How Culture Changes through Its Active Application. Sarah Brown, University of California, Los Angeles Losers, Left-Out, and Lost Causes: The Social Construction of Losing Reputations. Michael Lewis, College of William and Mary; and Jacqueline Serbu, Rutgers University Liminality and Disability: The Symbolic Rite of Passage of Individuals with Disabilities. Jeffrey Willett and Mary Jo Deegan, University of Nebraska, Lincoln 9. Media and Representation Table Presider: Laura Grindstaff, University of California, Davis Quasi-Utopian Fantasies of Blame and Penance: Working Class Females and True Confession Magazines, 1964-95. Lilli M. Downes, Harford Community College; and Gary L. Matesig The Other America On-Line: Prison Activism on the Web. Dustin M. Kidd, University of Virginia The Whitening of American Literature. Beth Merenstein, University of Connecticut

10. Mental Health and Social Life Table Presider: Anna Zajicek, University of Arkanses Discourse, Cultural Marginalization, and the Construction of to the Fulfilled Self. Patricia Koski and Anna Zajicek, University of Arkansas 11. Music Table Presider: Anita M. Waters, Denison University Postmodern Pathways: Links to Success in the Rap World. Jennifer C. Lena, Columbia University Meaning, Media, and Musical Tastes. John Sonnett, University of Arizona Lyrical Counter-Histories: Oppositional Narratives in Jamaican Popular Music. Anita M. Waters, Denison University 12. Political Symbols and Symbolic Politics Piercing the Veil: Undermining Legitimacy and State Politics. Brian M. Lowe, University of Virginia State Speech, Race, and Democracy. Orville Lee, Northwestern University Values and the Genesis of the British Preservation Movement: Charity, Philanthropy, and Paternalism. Leslie Cintron, Radcliffe Public Policy Center Political Regulation and the Discourse of (Dis)Trust: Congress and the Nonprofit Sector, 1894-1992. Ronald N.Jacobs and Sarah Sobieraj, State University of New York, Albany 13. Popular Culture and Cultural Politics Table Presider: Randal Doane, City University of New York Microgroove as Materiality. Randal Doane, City University of New York Michel, Camille, and Me: A Discourse Analysis of Pagila on Foucault and “Sex, Art, and American Culture.” Rana Emerson, University of Texas, Austin Goethe and Buchenwald: Re-constructing German National Identity. Silke Roth, University of Weimar, Germany The White Space in the Middle. Robin Wagner-Pacifici, Swarthmore College 14. Space and Place Table Presider: David Brain, University of South Florida Resistance through Invasion: The Case of Arabesk in Turkey. Murat Ergin, University of Minnesota From the Medieval Pilgrim to Postmodern Tourist: Shifting Boundaries and Contesting Views of Religious and Other Forms of Travel. Lutz Kaelber, Lyndon State College Public Monuments and the Garden Paradigm: The Social Context of Cultural Production, 1880-1930. Edith Raphael 15 Symbolic Boundaries Network Table Organizer: Michele Lamont, Princeton University Section on Sociology of Culture Business Meeting (1:30-2:10 p.m.)

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

76. Section on Sociology of Alcohol and Drugs. Roundtables on the Sociology of Alcohol and Drugs and Business Meeting Hilton Washington, Jefferson West Informal Discussion Roundtables (12:30-1:30 p.m.): Organizer: Lana Harrison, University of Delaware Table 1: The Rise of Marijuana as the Drug of Choice among Youthful Arrestees. Andrew Golub, National Development and Research Institutes Consequences of Adolescent Marijuana Use on Young Adult Role Functioning among African-American and Puerto Ricans in New York City. Richard E. Adams, Judith S. Brook, Elinor B. Balka, and Erica Johnson, Mount Sinai School of Medicine Table 2: Social Norms Theory and College Student Drinking: A Critique and Reformation. Robert Biggert, Assumption College How Do Adolescents Perceive Their Social Environment?: The Consequence and Cause of Their Perception of Peer Marijuana Use. Hyun San Cho, University of North Carolina Updating Howard S. Becker's Theories on Marijuana Careers and Using Marijuana for Pleasure. Michael Hallstone, University of Hawaii Table 3: Social Participation in AA and Delayed Onset to Relapse. Lisa J. Thomassen, Indiana University Revisiting Age, Period, and Cohort Effects on Drug Use using the National Household Survey on Drug Abuse. Ju-Sung Lee, Carnegie Mellon University Table 4: Enforcement Strategies in Drug Distribution Networks. Sylvie C. Tourigny, University of Queensland Villian or Victim? Social Predictors of Drug Sentencing,1995-1996. Lisa Pasko Table 5: A Night in Ten Bar Rooms. Diana L. Wall, University of Georgia We're Not Here for the Alcohol!: Functional Drinking among Members of a Yachting Community. Jill Harrison, University of New Hampshire Table 6: Age and the Drug-Crime Nexus. Charles Freeman and Lana Harrison, University of Delaware An Ethnographers Perspective on Street Drug Markets in One U.S. City. Lana Harrison, Ronald Beard, and Charles Freeman, University of Delaware Section on Sociology of Alcohol and Drugs Business Meeting (1:30-2:10 p.m.)

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77. Section on Mathematical Sociology. Social Theory: Mathematical and Computational Theorizing Hilton Washington, Grant Organizer: Kathleen M. Carley, Carnegie Mellon University Presider: Edward Brent, University of Missouri, Columbia A Computational Approach to Sociological Explanations. Edward Brent, Alan Thompson, and Whitley Vale, University of Missouri, Columbia Global Structures, Local Processess ll: Tripartite Models of Action, Identity, and Representation in Political Mobilization. Ann Mische, Rutgers University Power over Groups through Effective Monitoring and Sanctioning. Joseph M. Whitmeyer and Rosemary Hopcroft, University of North Carolina, Charlotte The Logic of Role Theory. James Montgomery, London School of Economics and Political Science

1:00 p.m.

Meetings

MOST Program Student Orientation—Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8219

1:30 p.m.

Meetings

Section on Sociology of Alcohol and Drugs Business Meeting (to 2:10 p.m.)—Hilton Washington, Jefferson West Section on Sociology of Culture Business Meeting (to 2:10 p.m.)—Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom Salon 1

2:30 p.m.

Meetings

Committee on the Status of Women in Sociology—Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8217 Jessie Bernard Award Selection Committee—Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8218 Section on Undergraduate Education Business Meeting (to 3:30 p.m.)—Hilton Washington, Caucus

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

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2:30 p.m.

Open Forum

Open Forum on Reexamination of the Committee on Committees (COC) and Committee on Nominations (CON) Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia B Task Force Members: Myra Marx Ferree (chair), University of Connecticut; Richard Alba, University at Albany, State University of New York; Catherine White Berheide, Skidmore College; Bette Dickerson, American University; Paula England, University of Pennsylvania; Diana Kendall, Baylor University; Hernan Vera, University of Florida

2:30 p.m.

Sessions

78. Thematic Session. Confronting Racism, Sexism, and Homophobia in Academia Hilton Washington, International West Organizer and Presider: Ramon S. Torrecilha, Mills College Desperately Seeking Space: Gender and Spatial Inequalities in the Discipline and the Academy. Ann Tickamyer, Ohio University Demons in the Mirror: Challenging Institutionalized Prejudice in the Academy. Lionel Cantu, University of California, Santa Cruz Transcommunal Alliances for Long-Range Confrontation of Racism, Sexism, and Homophobia in Academia. John Brown Childs, University of California, Santa Cruz Analyzing and Challenging Patterns of Privilege in the Academy: A Graduate Student and Untenured Professor Speak Out about Racism, Sexism, and Homophobia. Deirdre Royster and Vanessa Mohr, University of Massachusetts, Amherst This thematic session problematizes institutional structures and culture in which women and minority academics function on a daily basis. Invited panelists will address three overlapping themes. The first theme encompasses personal struggles by women and minorities with covert and overt forms of racism, sexism, and homophobia within academia. The second them, "marginality," will focus on the questioning of prevailing paradigms in sociology that despite unreal claims display provincialism that is neither reflective nor representative of the experiences of women and minorities. The third theme,"valuing the self," will focus on identity and provide insights on how one might reconcile the self with expectations from the academy.

79. Special Session. Asian and Asian American Issues: Dialogue with Government and Asian American Communities (co-sponsored with the ASA Section on Asia and Asian America) Hilton Washington, Jefferson East Organizers: Esther Ngan-ling Chow, American University; and Sunhwa Lee, American Sociological Association Presider: Morrison Wong, Texas Christian University Panel: Paul Igasaki, Vice Chair, Equal Employment Opportunity Commission Claudette E. Bennett, Chief, Racial Statistics Branch, U.S. Bureau of the Census Daphne Kwok, Executive Director, Organization of Chinese Americans Jon Melegrito, Executive Director, National Federation of Filipino American Associations Discussion: Michael Omi, University of California, Berkeley The session is designed as a public forum for sociologists, policy makers, and Asian American community leaders to engage in dialogue and debates on public policies and problems that are confronted by the Asians and Asian Americans. Historical exclusion, social domination, and exploitation and their manifestations of social inequality based on race, ethnicity, gender, age, national-origin, sexual orientation, and disability are focal points of the discourse. Issues such as Affirmative Action policy, civil rights, multiracial categories in the Census 2000, immigration and refugees, campaign finance scandal, accusations of espionage, hate crime, intergroup tension, racial politics and ethnic entrepreneurship, some of which were politicized and became national news headlines, are possible topics of discussion.

80. Special Session. Future Directions for Housing Policy Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware A Organizer and Presider: John Goering, Baruch College, City University of New York Panel: Xavier de Souza Briggs, Harvard University and Former Assistant Secretary for Policy Development and Research, U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development Peter Dreier, Occidental College James Rosenbaum, Northwestern University Ann Schnare, Center for Housing Policy 81. Special Session. The Growth of Temporary Faculty and the Proletarianization of the University Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland A Organizer: James L. Wood, San Diego State University Part-Time Faculty and Strategic Plans in Higher Education. James L. Wood, San Diego State University The End of the Mid-Century Social Contract and the New Academic Labor System. Richard Moser, American Association of University Professors The Use of Temporary Faculty: A National Perspective. James T. Richardson, American Association of University Professors and University of Nevada, Reno Part-time Faculty in Canada. James L. Turk, Canadian Association of University Teachers

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

82. Special Session. Utopian Visions: A Continuing Conversation from Contemporary Sociology Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom Salon 2 Organizers Barbara Risman and Donald Tomaskovic-Devey, North Carolina State University and Co-Editors, Contemporary Sociology Presider: Donald Tomaskovic-Devey, North Carolina State University and Co-Editor, Contemporary Sociology Panel: Dan Clawson, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Paula England, University of Pennsylvania Morton Hunt, Gladwing, Pennsylvania Harvey L. Molotch, University of California, Santa Barbara, and New York University The millennial volume of Contemporary Sociology published twenty essays that applied social science toward solutions to pressing social problems. The essays ranged from preventing genocide to valuing caring work, and from sexual pleasure to steering globalization. The panelists will discuss the wisdom and pitfalls of sociologists embarking on utopian discussions.

83. Author Meets Critics. From Motherhood to Citizenship: Women’s Rights and International Organizations (Johns Hopkins University Press, 1999) by Nitza Berkovitch, Ben Gurion University Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson C Organizer and Presider: Connie L. McNeely, George Mason University Book Author: Nitza Berkovitch, Ben-Gurion University Critics: Kum-Kum Bhavnani, University of California, Santa Barbara Valentine M. Moghadam, Illinois State University Francisco O. Ramirez, Stanford University Julie Walters, George Mason University 84. Didactic Seminar. New Methods for Handling Missing Data Hilton Washington, Military Ticket required for admission Leader: Paul D. Allison, University of Pennsylvania This seminar is designed to introduce participants to two major developments in techniques for handling missing data, maximum likelihood and multiple imputation. The seminar begins with a review and critique of conventional methods for handling missing data in statistical analysis, including listwise deletion, pairwise deletion, dummy variable data adjustment and imputation. The concepts of missing at random and missing completely at random are defined and explained. Maximum likelihood methods for missing data at random are defined and explained. Maximum likelihood methods for missing data with linear models and log-linear models are explained, along with examples using the Amos package. The remainder of the seminar is devoted to multiple imputation, a method that can be used for any kind of statistical model, without resorting to specialized software (except for the imputation software). Information is provided on freeware and commercial software. Participants should be familiar with basic principles of statistical inference and have some knowledge of and experience with multiple regression.

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85. Professional Workshop. Publishing for a Scientific Audience of 140,000: How to Get an Article into Science (co-sponsored with the ASA Task Force on ASA-AAAS Relations) Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson B Organizer: A. Douglas Kincaid, Florida International University Presider: Kenneth Bollen, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Speaker: Brooks Hanson, Deputy Managing Editor, Science Panel: Tom Gieryn, Indiana University Harriet B. Presser, University of Maryland Robert J. Sampson, University of Chicago 86. Academic Workplace Workshop. Making the Right Hire: How to Conduct an Effective Faculty Search Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson A Organizer: Susan E. Wright, Drake University Panel: Barry Lee, Pennsylvania State University Nick Maroules, Illinois State University Diane Pike, Augsburg College This session will offer insight and practical advice on strategies for conducting an effective faculty search. Panelists will discuss all aspects of the process, from defining the purpose of a search and soliciting applications to interviewing candidates and making offers. Panelists will suggest resources that may prove useful to those interested in gaining more information on the topic. Time will be allocated for full audience participation and sharing of ideas and approaches.

87. Teaching Workshop. Graduate Courses in Comparative/Historical Sociology Hilton Washington, Map Leaders: David A. Smith, University of California, Irvine Judy Stepan-Norris, University of California, Irvine The workshop will provide a forum for discussing various options for teaching comparative and historical graduate courses to MA and PhD students. This continues to be a vital area in contemporary sociology-both the growing sense that we live in a "globalizing" world and the continuing appreciation that contemporary realities require an understanding of the past make comparative/historical sociology relevant, even for sudents who do NOT make it a primary area of specialization. In departments with a strong core of faculty in the subfield, there may be several courses in which comparative/historical themes are central. But other programs may have less expertise or faculty in this area, and need to make strategic choices about what to teach. Some may opt for "great book" survey courses in the area; others may decide that a seminar emphasizing comparative/historical methods is most important. As faculty who have taught courses in BOTH these genera, we will discuss advantages and disadvantages of each, as well as ideas for readings/syllabi and specific pedagogical strategies. We intend to run the workshop as a seminar with plenty of opportunity for questions and comments from those who attend.

88. Open Refereed Roundtables. Welfare, Work, Affirmative Action, Health and Health Care Hilton Washington, Jefferson West Organizer: Che-Fu Lee, The Catholic University of America

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Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

Session 88, continued 1. Assessment of Welfare Reform Table Presider: Neil G. Bennett, Columbia University An Evaluation of the Impact of Welfare Reform on the Economic Well-Being of Children, 1995-1998. Neil G. Bennett, Younghwan Song, and Hsien-Hen Lu, Columbia University Operationalizing the Welfare to Work Agenda: An Analysis of the Development and Execution of a Job Readiness Training Program. Celeste M. Watkins, Harvard University Child Service Professionals, Poverty, and Welfare Reform. Gregg Robinson, Grossmont College Class Conflict (including Marxism). Joel Allen Reisberg, Wagner College 2. Transition from Welfare to Work Table Presider: Diana M. Pearce, University of Washington Making the Transition: Using the Self-Sufficiency Standard to Make a Comparative Assessment of Welfare Reform. Diana M. Pearce, University of Washington The Implementation of Welfare Reform and the Construction of Gendered Citizenship: An Analysis of Women on Welfare's Perception of Their Rights. Anna Korteweg, University of California, Berkeley Welfare and Work Transitions: Impacts on Depression. Laura Hecht and J. Daniel McMillin, California State University, Bakersfield Investigating the OS&H Culture of Greek Workers from a Gender Point of View. Paraskevi Batra and George Tsobanoglou, University of Thessaly, Greece 3. Workplace Conditions and Job Satisfaction Table Presider: Dana Beth Weinberg, Harvard University The Impact of Workplace Conditions on Nurses and Their Ability to Do Their Work. Dana Beth Weinberg, Harvard University The Relationship between Organizational Commitment and Job Satisfaction among Public Sector Employees in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. Abeid A. Al-Amri, King Saud University 4. Affirmative Action, Diversity, and Program Implementation Table Presider: Dalia Rodriguez, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Privileging Whiteness: The Hopwood Case. Dalia Rodriguez, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign The Spread of Fair Employment in the United States, 1945-1970: A Comparison of Discrete-Time Event History Techniques. Matt Bahr, Purdue University The Political Economy of Diversity: Diversity Programs in Fortune 500 Companies. John Ryan and James Howdon, Clemson University 5. Health Cares and Social Cares Table Presider: Jack Levinson, City University of New York

The Logic of Risk in Community-Based Care. Jack Levinson, City University of New York Racial Differences in Self-Assessed Health: Biological or Social? Ronica N. Rooks, National Center for Health Statistics 6. Health Care Profession/Organization Table Presider: Elizabeth West, Royal College of Nursing Institute Management Matters: The Link between Hospital Organization and Quality of Patient Care. Elizabeth West, Royal College of Nursing Institute The Formalization of Professional Work: The Case of Clinical Practice Guidelines in Medicine. Seok-Woo Kwon, University of Southern California Doctor-Patient Relations within Cyberspace: Reworking Talcott Parson's "The Case of Modern Medical Practice." Pattie Thomas, University of Florida 89. cancelled. 90. Regular Session. Work and the Workplace Marriott Wardman Park, Balcony B Organizer and Presider: Angela Haddad, Central Michigan University More than Service with a Smile: Luxury Hotel Work and the Economy of Recognition. Rachel Sherman, University of California, Berkeley The Beginning of Consciousness: Union Certification Election Campaigns and the Formation of Worker Collective Identities. Robert Penney, University of Michigan Managers and Workers: Two Different Worlds of Work? Pavel Osinsky, Northwestern University; and Charles W. Mueller, University of Iowa Mediators of the Relationship between Perceived Overqualification and Organizational Commitment. Gloria Jones Johnson and W. Roy Johnson, Iowa State University Discussion: Mary Romero, Arizona State University 91. Regular Session. Economic Sociology: Business Networks Hilton Washington, Georgetown West Organizer: Wayne Baker, University of Michigan Presider: M. Tina Dacin, Texan A&M University The Changing Composition of Corporate Boards, 1955-1994: Uncertainty, Governance, and Legitimation Effects. Linda Brewster Stearns, University of California, Riverside; and Mark S. Mizruchi, University of Michigan The Nature and Experience of Market-Spanning Networks in an Accelerated Contract Labor Market. James A. Evans, Stanford University Social Embeddedness and Entrepreneurial Opportunity: The Case of African Americans. Nicholas Young, University of Chicago

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

The Effect of Trustfulness and Trustworthiness on the Growth Chances of Small Firms. Anthony B. Lee, Johns Hopkins University Leadership Migration from AEIC to NELA in the Early History of the Electricity Industry in the United States, 18551910: A Social Network Approach. Hyeyoung Moon and Alison Siskin, Stanford University Barbarians at the Gates? The Entry of Business Professionals into Non-Market Sectors, 1950-97. Martin Ruef, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill; and Peter Mendel, RAND Corporation and Stanford University 92. Regular Session. Sociology of Emotions II Hilton Washington, State Organizer: Carolyn Ellis, University of South Florida Presider: E. Doyle McCarthy, Fordham University Reconsidering Resistance: Emotion and the Possiblities for Feminist Subversion. Erica Effler, University of Pennsylvania Towards a New Agenda for Sociology of Emotions. Helena Flam, University of Leipzig, Germany; and Erika M. Hoerning, Max Planck Institute, Germany Emotional Labor Revisited: Theorizing the Psychological Aspects of Interactive Service Work. Katrin Kriz, Brandeis University To All Who Come to this Happy Place, Welcome: Postemotionalism and Its Discontents. Dianne Sykes, Marian College Affect Spectrum Theory. Warren D. TenHouten, University of California, Los Angeles 93. Regular Session. Medical Sociology: Race/Social Inequality and Health Hilton Washington, Georgetown East Organizer and Presider: Lisa Sun-Hee Park, University of Colorado, Boulder Thinking about Race: Three Possible Sources of the Racial Disparity in the Use of Medical Services. Jennifer Malat, University of Michigan Sex, Love, Secrets, and Lies: How Inequality Affects Disclosure of HIV Status. Brett Stockdill and Sergio Antoniuk, California State University, Pomona Culture, Race and Identity: Influences on the Health Practices of Older Mixed Race Americans. Cathy J. Tashiro, University of Washington, Tacoma Psychosocial Risk Factors and Environmental Stressors Associated with Infant Mortality. Irma T. Elo, University of Pennsylvania; and Jennifer Culhane, Thomas Jefferson University Racing to the Bottom and/or Building from the Ground Up?: Effects of Devolution on Services for the Elderly in the San Francisco Bay Area. Sara Shostak, Renee Beard, Sheryl Goldberg, and Karen Linkins, University of California San Francisco

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94. Regular Session. New Visions of Public Policy and the State Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia A Organizers: Lynn Weber, University of South Carolina; and Andre Mizell, University of Akron The Impact of Political Parties, Interest Groups, and Social Movement Organizations on Public Policy: Some Recent Evidence and Theoretical Concerns. Paul Burstein and April Linton Eaton, University of Washington Framing the Constitution: The Role of Legal Discourse in State Projects. David A. Merrill, University of Connecticut Mainstreaming in European Policy: Innovation or Deception? Alison Woodward, Versalius College, Free University of Brussels Theories of the State and Race, Class, and Gender: Toward a Comprehensive Contingency Perspective. Davita Silfen Glasberg and Sandra Bender Fromson, University of Connecticut; Dan Skidmore, American Institutes for Research Discussion: Laura Woliver, University of South Carolina 95. Regular Session. Population: Race and Ethnic Population Differentials Hilton Washington, Edison Organizer and Presider: Franklin D. Wilson, University of Wisconsin, Madison Interracial and Interethnic Marriages among Hispanics: Racial Ethnic, and Nativity Diversity. Zhenchao Qian and Jose A. Cobas, Arizona State University On Race, Income, Impoverishment, and Inequality, 19591989. Tukufu Zuberi and Quincy Thomas Steward, University of Pennsylvania The Influence of Wealth and Assets on Race/Ethnic Differences in Mortality. Richard G. Rogers and Patrick Krueger, University of Colorado, Boulder; Stephanie Bond Huie, University of Texas, Austin School Violence and Safety: A Study of Environmental Factors Affecting the U.S. Adolescent Population. Zina T. McGee, Hampton University Whites Who Say They'd Flee: Who are They and Why Would They Leave? Maria Krysan, Pennsylvania State University 96. Regular Session. Social Movements: Latin Movements Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland B Organizer: Jack M. Bloom, Indiana University Northwest Presider: Hank Johnston, University of Chicago Defying the Movement-Party Disjuncture?: Social Movements and Democratic Transition in Mexico. Jennifer L. Johnson, University of Chicago

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Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

Session 96, continued Peasant Struggle, Political Opportunities and the Unfinished Agrarian Reform in El Salvadore. Lisa Kowalchuk, York University, Toronto Mobilizing for Socio-Economic and Cultural Change: The Case of Mothers Against Drugs in Spain. Celia Valiente, Universidad Carlos III, Madrid Discussion: Hank Johnston, University of Chicago 97. Regular Session. Organizational and Political Networks Hilton Washington, Monroe West Organizer: David Knoke, University of Minnesota Presider: Joseph Galaskiewicz, University of Minnesota Who Is Playing Truant?: Part-time and Full-time Employed, Social Cohesiveness, and Short-tern Absenteeism within an Organization. Karin Sanders, University of Groningen From Women's College to Work: Female Labor Market and Institutional Mechanisms in Japan. Kayo Fujimoto, University of Pittsburgh The Dynamics of Political Mediation: Global Structures, Local Processes. Ann Mische, Rutgers University; and Philippa Pattison, University of Melbourne Structure and Culture in the Constitutional Process: MultiStatus Oligarchs and the Negotiation of Precarious Values. Emmanuel Lazega, University of Lille Discussion: Joseph Galaskiewicz, University of Minnesota 98. Regular Session. Substance Use, Abuse, and Treatment Hilton Washington, Thoroughbred Organizer and Presider: Judith A. Richman, University of Illinois, Chicago Adult Outcomes among Subjects from Alcoholic, Depressed and Non-Symptomatic Families. Valerie Johnson and Steven Buyske, Rutgers University Neighborhood Disadvantage, Stress, and Drug Abuse among Adults. Jason D. Boardman, University of Texas, Austin; Brian K. Finch, Florida State University; and James Jackson, University of Michigan Social Support Perceptions of Ex-offending Women: Recovery Challenges for Community-Based Drug-Free Treatment. Anthony J. Lemelle, Purdue University; Gregory Falkin and Sheila Strauss, National Development and Research Institutes Perceptions of Drinking and Alcoholism among African American Male Collegians. Vincent E. Miles, Cheyney University Discussion: Susan E. Martin, National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism

99. Regular Session. Empirical Assessments of the Scope of Application of Structural Models of Violent Crime Hilton Washington, Monroe East Organizer: Ruth D. Peterson, Ohio State University Presider: Patricia L. McCall, North Carolina State University Family Diversification, Urban Disadvantage, and Racial Homicide. Karen F. Parker and Tracy Johns, University of Florida Structural Covariates of Criminal Homicide: Does Type of Homicide Matter? Charis Kubrin, University of Washington Structural Determinants of Crime in Mexico City Neighborhoods. Andres Villarreal, University of California, San Diego Social Structure and Homicide in Post-Soviet Russia. William Alex Pridemore, State University of New York, Albany Discussion: Patricia L. McCall, North Carolina State University 100. Section on Undergraduate Education. Business Meeting and Hans O. Mauksch Award Ceremony Hilton Washington, Caucus Section on Undergraduate Education Business Meeting (2:30-3:30 p.m.) Hans O. Mauksch Award Ceremony (3:30-4:10 p.m.) 101. Theory Section Miniconference. New Directions in Sociological Theory: Growth of Contemporary Theories III Hilton Washington, Lincoln West Organizers: Joseph Berger and Morris Zelditch, Stanford University Presider: Joseph Berger, Stanford University The Theory of Structural Holes. Ronald Burt, University of Chicago Network Exchange Theory: Recent Developments and New Directions. David Willer, University of South Carolina; Henry Walker, University of Arizona; Shane Thye and Brent Simpson, University of South Carolina; and Barry Markovsky, University of Iowa Reflections on Structural Sociology. Peter M. Blau, University of North Carolina Theoretical Integration and Generative Structuralism. Thomas J. Fararo, University of Pittsburgh; and John Skvoretz, University of South Carolina Discussion: Murray Webster, Jr., University of North Carolina, Charlotte, and National Science Foundation

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

102. Section on Political Economy of the World System. Resistance and Reconstruction: Alternative Futures for the World System Marriott Wardman Park, Virginina C Organizer and Presider: Fred Block, University of California, Davis Beyond the Organizing Model: The Strategic Challenge of Global Capitalism for the U.S. Labor Movement. Edna Bonacich, University of California, Riverside; and Fernando Gapasin, University of California, Los Angeles Monitoring in the Garment Industry: Control and Resistance in the Global Economy. Jill Espenshade, University of California, Berkeley Reconstructing Globalization: Ways out of the Current Impasse. Ian Robinson, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Market Reform and Popular Resistance in India: Thinking beyond Neo-Liberalism? Mridula Udayagiri, University of California, Davis 103. Section on Aging and the Life Course. Selection Effects as Life Course Processes Hilton Washington, Lincoln East Organizer and Presider: Linda K. George, Duke University Life Course as Selection Sequence. Angela M. O'Rand, Duke University Careers, Gender, and the Life Course: Issues of Selection and Heterogeneity. Phyllis Moen, Cornell University Illness Careers and Selection Effects. Carol S. Aneshensel, University of California, Los Angeles Cold Fusion in the Social Sciences: The Link between IQ and Job Complexity. Duane F. Alwin, University of Michigan 104. Section on Sociology of Culture. The Social Organization of Identity Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland C Organizer and Presider: Wayne H. Brekhus, University of Missouri, Columbia Drawing the Distinctions: American Identity through Political Cartoons. Jacqueline Serbu, Rutgers University Ethnic Identity as Legal Strategy. Thomas Ford Brown, Johns Hopkins University Socially Embedded Identities: Theories, Typologies, and Processes of Racial Identity among Biracials. David L. Brunsma, University of Alabama, Huntsville; and Kerry A. Rockquemore, University of Connecticut Variations in the Prevalence and Contentiousness of Identity Politics among Christian Conservatives and Gay Men and Lesbians. Thomas J. Linneman, College of William and Mary Discussion: Elizabeth Armstrong, Indiana University, Bloomington

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105. Section on International Migration. Refereed Roundtables on International Migration and Business Meeting Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom Salon 1 Refereed Roundtables (2:30-3:30 p.m.): Organizer: Audrey Singer, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace 1. Immigrant Health Table Presider: Young Ik Cho, University of Illinois, Chicago The Effects of Immigration on Self-Rated Health: An Assessment of Competing Theories. Young Ik Cho and Timothy Johnson, University of Illinois, Chicago Racial and Ethnic Differentials in Immigrant Health: Unpacking the Epidemiological Paradox. Miguel Ceballos, University of Wisconsin, Madison 2. Education Table Presider: Jennifer Glick, Arizona State University Parental Expectations and Post-Secondary School Participation among Immigrant and Native Youth in the United States. Jennifer Glick, Arizona State University; and Michael J. White, Brown University To What Extent Does Education Differentially Mitigate the Effects of Disadvantaged Statuses: An Exploration of Interactive and Immigrant Adaption Models. Melanie Heron, Florida State University 3. Latino Immigration Table Presider: Eileen McConnell, University of Notre Dame Amigos de Munchos Colores: The Friendship Formation of Mexican Immigrants in the American Southwest and Midwest. Eileen McConnell, University of Notre Dame Prejudice and Discrimination: A Study of Immigrant's Perceptions in the Midwest. Katherine P. Novak and Antonio V. Menendez-Alarcon, Butler University The Opening of New Frontiers for Latino Migration in the United States: The Case of Dalton, Georgia. Victor Zuniga, University of Monterrey; and Ruben Hernandez-Leon, University of Pennsylvania 4. Naturalization Table Presider: Catherine Simpson Bueker, Brown University The 1996 Welfare Reform Act: Its Differential Impacts on Male and Female Naturalization Rates. Catherine Simpson Bueker, Brown University U.S. Naturalization in Historic Perspective: What Can the Past Tell us about the Present? Irene Bloemraad, Harvard University 5. Undocumented Immigration: Legal Categories and Cultural Stereotypes Table Presider: Cecilia Menjivar, Arizona State University

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Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

Session 105, continued Refugees and Illegal Immigration: Problems in Overlapping Legal and Humanitarian Categories. David Haines, George Mason University Illegal Europeans: Transients between Two Societies. Elzbieta Gozdziak, Refugee Mental Health Program, CMHS Policy Responses to Irregular Immigration Flows: The U.S. Case. Linda Gordon and Lisa Roney, Office of Policy and Planning, U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service 6. Immigration and the Welfare State Table Presider: Navid Ghani, State University of New York, Stony Brook Integration through Equal Opportunities in a Scandanavian Welfare State: The Norwegian Case. Navid Ghani, State University of New York, Stony Brook 7. Immigration and Identity Table Presider: Ryoko Yamamoto, University of Missouri, Columbia Immigration Race and Identity in the United States. Ryoko Yamamoto, University of Missouri, Columbia Ethnic Identity among Second-Generation Korean Americans in New York City. Sara Lee, Columbia University 8. Gender Table Presider: Guida Man, York University The Experience of Chinese Immigrant Women in Canada: An Exploration in Gender, Race, and Class. Guida Man, York University Albanian Immigrant Women in the United States: The Importance of Culture in Everyday Life. Tara Parrello, Fordham University 9. Immigrants and Natives Table Presider: Cynthia Feliciano, University of California, Los Angeles Assimilation or Enduring Racial Boundaries?: Generational Differences in Intermarriage among United States Groups. Cynthia Feliciano, University of California, Los Angeles Social Distance between Native Germans and Migrants of Different Nationalities in Germany as a Condition of the Context in the Process of Integration. Anja Steinbach, Chemnitz University of Technology and State University of New York, Albany 10. Migration Decision Making and Settlement Table Presider: Ai-Hsuan Sandra Ma, National Chengchi University The Duality of Migration Decision Making: The Cases of Chinese and Taiwanese Scientists in the United States. Ai-Hsuan Sandra Ma, National Chengchi University

Coming to America: Anticipations and Experiences of Korean Immigrants. Joseph M. Conforti, State University of New York, Old Westbury; Manjae Kim, Kangnung National University, Korea; and Eunseong Kim, Indiana University 11. The Role of Organizations Table Presider: Lorraine Majka, University of Chicago and University of Pennsylvania Opportunities, Constraints, and Disadvantage: The Nongovernmental and Public Sectors and Southeast Asians. Lorraine Majka, University of Chicago and University of Pennsylvania Assessing the Role of Community Based Organizations in the Socio-Economic Adaption and Incorporation of Immigrants. Hector Cordero-Guzman, New School for Social Research 12. Networks Table Presider: William Stevens, Northwestern University Naming Networks: Using Conceptual Categories of Migration Networks. William Stevens, Northwestern University Immigrant School Achievement and Network Closure Models of Social Capital. Carl L. Bankston III, Tulane University; and Min Zhou, University of California, Los Angeles The Role of Networks in the Incorporation of Immigrant Engineers. Ana Martinez, University of California, Los Angeles 13. Immigrant Composition and Economic Assimilation Table Presider: Mary G. Powers, Fordham University Comparing the Composition of Immigrants over Time: Some Research Issues. William Seltzer and Mary Powers, Fordham University; and Ellen Percy Kraly, Colgate University Immigrants' Earnings by Geographical Groups: An Application of the Hierarchical Linear Model. Yukio Kawano, Johns Hopkins University 14. Transnational Migration Table Presider: Eric Popkin, Sarah Lawrence College Guatemalan Political Transnationalism: Constructing State Linkages with Migrant Communities in a Post-War Context. Eric Popkin, Sarah Lawrence College To be announced. Patricia Landolt-Marticorena, Simon Fraser University Transnationalism and Incorporation: Competitive or Complementary Strategies? Jose Itzigsohn, Brown University Section on International Migration Business Meeting (3:304:10 p.m.)

3:00 p.m.

Meetings

First-Time Meeting Attendee Orientation (to 4:10 p.m.)— Hilton Washington, International East

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

3:30 p.m.

Meetings

Section on International Migration Business Meeting (to 4:10 p.m.)—Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom Salon 1

7:00 p.m.

Plenary

106. Opening Plenary Session. Sexism and Feminism: Challenges for the 21st Century Hilton Washington, International Center Organizer and Presider: Joe R. Feagin, University of Florida Forever Chasing Rainbows: Struggling to End Gender as We Know It. Judith Stacey, University of Southern California Black Feminism and Social Justice. Patricia Hill Collins, University of Cincinnati Gender Oppression and Gender Democracy in Global Market Society. R.W. Connell, University of Sydney, Australia Gender Vertigo: Toward a Post-Gender Society. Barbara Risman, North Carolina State University

6:30 p.m.

Receptions

Welcoming Party—Hilton Washington, International East Section on Sociology of Culture Reception—Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware B Theory Section and Section on Mathematical Sociology Joint Reception—Hilton Washington, Jefferson West

6:30 p.m.

Other Groups

"Launching Your Career" (Ron Abeles)—Hilton Washington, Georgetown East Society for the Study of Symbolic Interaction Executive Council (to 9:30 p.m.)—Hilton Washington, Hamilton Sociological Imagination Group: Open Research Conference on Bridging Specialized Fields I (to 10:30 p.m.)—Hilton Washington, Georgetown West

Receptions

Section on Sociology of Alcohol and Drugs Reception—Hilton Washington, Parlor 1101

7:30 p.m. 4:30 p.m.

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Meetings

Task Force on Journal Diversity (to 9:00 p.m.)—Hilton Washington, ASA Suite

8:00 p.m.

Meetings

American Sociological Review Editorial Board—Hilton Washington, State

8:30 p.m.

Other Groups

North American Chinese Sociologists Association—Hilton Washington, Caucus

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

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8:30 a.m.

Sunday, August 13 The length of each session/meeting activities is one hour and forty minutes, unless noted otherwise. Session presiders and committee chairs are requested to see that sessions and meetings end on time to avoid conflicts with subsequent activities scheduled into the same room and to allow participants time to transit between hotels.

7:00 a.m.

Meetings

Community College Sociologists Breakfast—Hilton Washington, Parlor 1101

7:30 a.m.

107. Thematic Session. Fighting Back: New Strategies and Visions in the U.S. Labor Movement Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom Salon 3 Organizers: Judy Stepan-Norris and Hector Delgado, University of California, Irvine Presider: Judy Stepan-Norris, University of California, Irvine Paradigm Shift: The Next Labor System Emerges. Dan Clawson, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Organizing the Unorganizable: The Challenge for the Labor Movement of Global/Flexible Production. Edna Bonacich, University of California, Riverside Voice@Work: The AFL-CIO's Campaign to Expand Workers' Freedom to Form Unions. Bill Fletcher, American Federation of Labor Congress of Industrial Organizations Discussion: Howard Kimeldorf, University of Michigan

Meetings

Section on Sociology of Religion Council Meeting (to 8:15 p.m.)—Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8211

8:30 a.m.

Sessions

Meetings

Distinguished Contributions to Teaching Award Selection Committee—Hilton Washington, C328 Distinguished Scholarly Publication Award Selection Committee (to 12:10 p.m.)—Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8217 Section on Sociology of Religion Business Meeting (to 9:15 a.m.)—Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom Salon 1 Spivack Program Advisory Committee—Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8218 Student Forum Business Meeting—Hilton Washington, International East Task Force on the Re-examination of the Committee on Committees and Committee on Nominations—Hilton Washington, C326

108. Special Session. Recent Research in the Sociology of Mental Health (co-sponsored by the ASA Minority Fellowship Program and the ASA Minority Affairs Program) Hilton Washington, Monroe West Organizers: Jack K. Martin, Kent State University; and Obie Clayton, Morehouse University Presider: Jack K. Martin, Kent State University The Impact of Parental and School Social Capital on Children’s Mental Health. Giovani Burgos and Elbert Almazan, Indiana University, Bloomington Addicts between a Rock and a Hard Place: Stigma and Boundary Maintenance during a Tuberculosis Health Crisis. Antonio D. Jimenez, Northwestern University The Role of Social Factors in Maternal Psychological WellBeing and Pregnancy Outcomes. Renee B. Canady, Michigan State University Predicting Drug Dependency and Abuse among Ethnic Minority Students. Robert L. Peralta, University of Delaware Discussion: Bernice A. Pescosolido, Indiana University, Bloomington 109. Special Session. Economic Liberalization and Inequality: The Case of Emerging Markets Hilton Washington, International West Organizer and Presider: Carlos H. Waisman, University of California, San Diego The New Poverty and Ethnicity in Transitional Economies. Ivan Szelenyi, Yale University Russia, 1991-99: A Failed Transition or Successful Integration? Boris Kagarlitsky, Institute for Comparative Political Studies, Russian Academy of Science

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

Social Inequalities and Weaker Labor Movements Inevitable in Open and Emerging Market Economies? Victor G. Nee, Cornell University Are New Inequalities and Weaker Labor Movements Inevitable in Open and Emerging Market Economies? J. Samuel Valenzuela, University of Notre Dame Discussion: Carlos H. Waisman, University of California, San Diego 110. Special Session. Sociology Confronts Human Rights Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia B Organizer and Presider: Gideon Sjoberg, University of Texas, Austin Women's Human Rights: Universal If Not Global. Gay Young, American University Immigration, Human Rights, and Citizenship. Timothy J. Dunn, Salisbury State University Genocide, Human Rights, and Deviant Behavior. Boyd Littrell, University of Nebraska, Omaha Sociology and Human Rights: Problems and Possibilities. Gideon Sjoberg, University of Texas, Austin; Elizabeth Gill, Randolph Macon College; and Norma Williams, University of Texas, Arlington 111. Special Session. Substance Abuse, Minority Communities, and the Social Construction of AIDS Hilton Washington, Lincoln West Organizers: Anthony J. Lemelle, Purdue University; and Renee White, Central Connecticut State University Presider: Renee White, Central Connecticut State University Social Construction of AIDS among Young Heroin Injectors. Sheigla Murphy, Terrence Murphy, Julia Choe, and Paloma Sales, Institute for Scientific Analysis, San Francisco Minority Male Outcomes from Specialized Drug Treatment Programming. James R. Walker, National Development Research Institutes, Inc. Household Behavior Patterns and Implications for AIDS: A Case Study. Eloise Dunlap, National Development and Research Institutes Romantic Idealism: The Sexual Lives of Black Teenage Females. Renee White, Central Connecticut State University Discussion: Carol F. Black, Purdue University 112. Special Session. The Duality of Careers and Organizations Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson C Organizers: Jesper B Sorensen, University of Chicago; and Rakesh Khurana, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Presider: Jesper B Sorensen, University of Chicago The Effects of Talent Agencies as Labor Market Intermediaries. William T. Bielby, University of California, Santa Barbara

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The Effects of Civil Rights Law on Employment Practices. Frank Dobbin, Princeton University; and Erin Kelly, University of Minnesota Mergers and Mobility: Occupational Implications of Organizational Growth at Lloyds Bank, 1885-1940. Katherine Stovel, University of Washington The Implications of Intra-Organizational Personnel Networks in the U.S. Paper Industry. James Wade and Harald Fischer, University of Wisconsin, Madison; Joseph Porac, Emory University Discussion: Heather Haveman, Columbia University 112x. Special Session. Africa at the Millennium Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia C Organizers: Loretta Bass, University of Oklahoma; and Matthew McKeever, University of Kentucky Presider: Loretta Bass, University of Oklahoma The Uncertain Promise of Southern Africa. York Bradshaw, University of Indiana; and Stephen Ndegwa, College of William and Mary Poverty and Educational Inequality in Sub-Saharan Africa. Claudia Buchmann, Duke University Will Polygyny Survive the 21st Century in Sub-Saharan Africa and Why? Jacob Adetunji and Ami Moore, Bowling Green State University Africa: What Went Wrong in the 20th Century and How Can It Be Put Right in the 21st ? Ann Reid, U.S. Department of State Discussion: Matthew McKeever, University of Kentucky 113. Author Meets Critics. The Racial Contract (Cornell University Press, 1999) by Charles Mills, University of Illinois, Chicago—Hilton Washington Hilton Washington, Jefferson East Organizer and Presider: Robert Newby, Central Michigan University Book Author: Charles Mills, University of Illinois, Chicago Critics: Rhonda F. Levine, Colgate University Joane Nagel, University of Kansas Noel Cazenave, University of Connecticut Stephen Steinberg, Queens College, City University of New York 114. Didactic Seminar. An Overview of Structural Equation Models Hilton Washington, Military Ticket required for admission Leader: Kenneth Bollen, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill The workshop provides an overview of Structural Equation Models (SEMs). Sometimes called "LISREL," this general statistical model includes ANOVA, multiple regression, path analysis, factor analysis, and many other procedures as special cases. A distinguishing feature of the model is that it allows multiple indicators of latent variables (concepts) and it can estimate relationships that take account of measurement error. The seminar will examine the major subtypes of the model and the

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

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Session 114, continued primary steps in applying it. We will discuss examples of programs and outputs from one or more of the major SEM packages. Participants should have a good background in multiple regression and should be familiar with matrix notation.

115. Didactic Seminar. Computer-Assisted Software for Qualitative Analysis (to 12:10 p.m.) Howard University (shuttle departs from the Marriott) Ticket required for admission Leaders: Sharlene Hesse-Biber, Boston College

Raymond C. Maietta, ResearchTalk, Inc. This didactic seminar is for qualitative researchers who wish a basic overview of computer software to analyze textual data, pictures, graphics, audio and video tapes. We will describe the range of some of the most important computer software programs available on the market today and will compare and contrast some of the most important program features. We will discuss the factors you should consider in selecting a software program. We will provide a brief demonstration of a range of some of the most important software program for analyzing qualitative data (text, audio tapes and video tapes). We will discuss some of the methodological implications of using computer-assisted software to analyze qualitative data.

116. Professional Workshop. Navigating Federal Support for Sociological Research: What You Should Know Hilton Washington, Map Organizer: Felice J. Levine, American Sociological Association Presider: Havidan Rodriguez, University of Puerto Rico, Mayaguez Panel: Christine Bachrach, National Institutes of Health Sally T. Hillsman, U.S. Department of Justice Murray Webster, Jr., National Science Foundation 117. Academic Workplace Workshop. Working Out Articulation Agreements with Two-year and Fouryear Colleges Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8219 Organizer and Presider: Rhonda Zingraff, Meredith College and ASA Task Force on Articulation of Sociology in Two-year and Four-Year Sociology Programs Panel: Gary A. Cretser, California State University, Pomona Harriet Hartman, Rowan University Lyle Hallowell, Nassau Community College, State University of New York Tina Martinez, Blue Mountain Community College Members of the ASA Task Force on Articulation of Sociology in Two-year and Four-year Sociology Programs will highlight the interdependencies of these institutional domains and share examples of formal relationships that strengthen the discipline. Greater attention to exemplary programs can assist faculty/administrators who are facing obstacles to successful articulation in their particular venue, so one benefit of the workshop is sharing useful information. Another benefit is the collaboration between faculty from both ends of the articulation pipeline, assuring a comprehensive and balanced dialogue.

Lastly, the workshop provides an excellent opportunity for sociologists with particular concerns about articulation to communicate with the Task Force during the mid-point of its investigation.

118. Teaching Workshop. "I Don't Want to Hear It": Dealing with Student Resistance to Sociological Material Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware A Organizer and Presider: Karen A. Cerulo, Rutgers University Panel: Spencer E. Cahill, University of South Florida Karen A. Cerulo, Rutgers University Stephen J. Pfohl, Boston College Janet M. Ruane, Montclair State University Peter Stein, William Paterson University Panel members will reflect on teaching methods, strategies, and tools that have aided (or hindered) efforts to engage students in a sociological agenda. Presenters' comments will be informal and sufficiently brief (10-15 minutes), allowing time for open discussion.

119. Regular Session. Community and Development II Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland A Organizer and Presider: Albert Hunter, Northwestern University Gentrifying Families and Activist Mothers: Consequences for Community Schools. Judith N. DeSena, St. John's University Chicago's Classroom on Wheels: Progressive Tourism as Counter-hegemonic Cultural Production. Emily M. Drew, Loyola University, Chicago Creating the Black American Dream: Race, Class, and Urban Neighborhood Development. Kesha S. Moore, University of Pennsylvania Fences, Dogs, and Yuppies: Reactions to Gentrification Across the Life Course. Jennifer Pashup, University of Chicago “We're Shutting 'Em Down”: Contemporary Prohibition in Chicago Neighborhoods. Arthur W. Redman, Chicago State University 120. Regular Session. Disability, Work, and Social Life Hilton Washington, Georgetown East Organizer and Presider: Barbara M. Altman, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality Assessing Personal Adjustment and Role Skills of Children Ages 6 to 17 with Functional Limitations by Type and Severity of Limitation. Julie C. Lima, Brown University Dating Relationships and Fertility Behaviors of Disabled Teens. Jeffrey A. Houser, Peggy C. Giordano, and Monica A. Longmore, Bowling Green State University The Transition to Adulthood among Young Persons with Special Needs. Dennis P. Hogan, Brown University; and Gary Sandefur, University of Wisconsin, Madison Disability and Nonstandard Work Schedules: A First Look. Harriet B. Presser, University of Maryland; and Barbara M. Altman, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

121. Regular Session. Education: Race, Beliefs, and School Reform Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson B Organizer: David A. Kinney, Central Michigan University Presider: Katherine Brown Rosier, Louisiana State University There Are No Children Here Either: The Absence of Black Children's Voices in Sociological Studies of Student Attitudes. Karolyn Tyson, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Did You Show That to Your Parents?: How Fourth Graders Create, Resist, and Mediate Their Parent's Involvement in Their Education. Tiffani Chin, University of California, Los Angeles Race and Beliefs about Students in Urban Elementary Schools: Perception, Enactment, and the Duality of Structure. John B. Diamond, Antonia Randolph, and James Spillane, Northwestern University Ideology and School Reform: An Empirical Case Study. Zeus Leonardo, University of California, Los Angeles Discussion: Prudence L. Carter, University of Michigan 122. Regular Session. Sexuality, Gender, and International Migration Marriott Wardman Park, Harding Organizer and Presider: Linda Miller Matthei, Texas A&M University Controlling and Containing Chinese and Japanese Immigration: Regulating Women, Sexuality, and NationBuilding, 1870-1920. Cathrine Y. Lee, University of California, Los Angeles Pathways Abroad: Gender and Migration Recruitment Choices in Northern Thailand. Teresa Sobieszczyk, Cornell University Mode of Entry and the Strength of Migrant Network Ties. Ann D. Bagchi, University of Wisconsin, Madison Men Who Migrate and Women Who Work: Non-Migrant Women and U.S.-Mexico Migration. Shawn Malia Kanaiaupuni and Paula W. Fomby, University of Wisconsin, Madison 123. Regular Session. Social Psychology: Self and Identity Hilton Washington, Monroe East Organizer and Presider: Mary Glenn Wiley, University of Illinois, Chicago Low Self-Esteem People: A Collective Portrait. Morris Rosenberg (deceased); and Timothy J. Owens, Purdue University The Impact of Stigma on Identity: An Analysis of the Psychosocial Well-Being of Welfare Recipients. Teri A. Milner, University of Nebraska, Lincoln Identity Theory: A Test of Central Tenets and Assumptions. Kathleen M. Brennan, Christian Ritter, Marnie M. Salupo, and Denny E. Benson, Kent State University

79

Discussion: Jill Kiecolt, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University 124. Regular Session. Social Stratification: Comparative Perspectives Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson A Organizer: Peter Meiksins, Cleveland State University Presider: Mark Wardell, Pennsylvania State University Social Positioning at Labor Market Entry in the UK and Germany. Steffen Hillmert, Max Planck Institute for Human Development Gender, Labor Market Structures and Forms of Employment: Earnings Inequality in Japan and Taiwan. Wei-hsin Yu, National University, Singapore Getting a Job in Urban China: Political and Human Capital in a Changing Institutional Environment. Rebecca Matthews, University of Iowa; and Yang Cao, Cornell University The Changing Patterns of Class and Class Conflict in China. Alvin Y. So, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology Discussion: Deborah Davis, Yale University 125. Regular Session. Teaching Sociology: Pedagogical Theory and Reality Hilton Washington, Independence Organizer and Presider: Jack Niemonen, University of South Dakota Public Technologies. Ann Travers, Simon Fraser University Discussions in Cyberspace: Collaborative Learning in an Asynchronous Sociology Course. Aileen Schulte, State University of New York, New Paltz Team Teaching over Distance: A New Set of Constraints. Jeanne Curran, California State University, Dominguez Hills; and Susan R. Takata, University of Wisconsin, Parkside Exploring Critical Feminist Pedagogy: Infusing Dialogue, Participation and Experience into the Classroom. Esther Ngan-ling Chow, Chadwick Fleck, Joshua Joseph, Deanna M. Lyter, and Gang-hua Fan, American University Underprepared Students or Underprepared Faculty? Cathleen L. Armstead, Valencia Community College Discussion: Jack Niemonen, University of South Dakota 126. Regular Session. Assumptions and Methodological Considerations in Explaining Violence Marriott Wardman Park, Balcony A Organizers: Pamela Rountree, University of Kentucky; and Ruth D. Peterson, Ohio State University Presider: Robert Nash Parker, University of California, Riverside Television and Homicide in Three Societies. Gary Jensen, Vanderbilt University

80

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

Session 126, continued Black, White and Hispanic Homicide Rates: Why the Difference? Julie A. Phillips, Rutgers University Testing a General Theory of Crime: The Relationship between Violent Causes of Death and Self Control. Danielle W. Toussaint and Mark Stafford, University of Texas, Austin Homicide Classification and Causal Inference. Colin Loftin, David MacDowall, and Craig Rivera, State University of New York, Albany 127. Theory Section. New Directions in Sociological Theory Hilton Washington, Caucus Organizer and Presider: David G. Wagner, State University of New York, Albany The Evolution of Sex Discrimination. Rosemary Hopcroft, University of North Carolina, Charlotte; and Satoshi Kanazawa, Indiana University of Pennsylvania A Conceptual Framework for Integrating Diffusion Models. Barbara Wejnert, Cornell University The Structure of Bipartite and Conditional Theories. Pidi Zhang and Edward Arroyo, Georgia Southern University What Makes Sciences "Scientific?" Stephan Fuchs, University of Virginia Discussion: David G. Wagner, State University of New York, Albany 128. Section on Sociology of Sex and Gender. Feminisms and Methodologies Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom Salon 2 Organizer and Presider: Jennifer L. Glass, University of Iowa Feminism and Methodology in the Social Sciences. Christine Williams, University of Texas, Austin Multicultural Lessons on Domestic Violence: Challenges for the 21st Century. Natalie J. Sokoloff, City University of New York; and Ida DuPont, John Jay College When "No" Means No: Accepting the Rejection of Feminism. Molly Andrews, University of East London Discussion: Marjorie DeVault, Syracuse University 129. Section on Peace, War, and Social Conflict. Refereed Roundtables and Business Meeting Hilton Washington, Jefferson West Refereed Roundtables (8:30-9:30 a.m.): Organizers: Bradford Booth and Meyer Kestnbaum, University of Maryland 1. Political Violence and States The State of War: The Ethiopian-Eritrea States in the Horn of Africa. Pietro Toggia and Pat Lauderdale, Arizona State University

Demography and Ethnic Conflict: The Role of Migration in Anti-State Rebellion. James Hendrickson, University of Maryland The Dynamics of Political Violence and Transnational Discourse. Markus S. Schulz, New School for Social Research Protecting the State from Multiple Societies: A Sociological Study of Nigeria's Civil Military Relations. E.C. Ejiogu, University of Maryland 2. Social Psychological Perspectives on the Armed Forces A Cyber Military Community: Computer Mediated Military Spouse Networks as Resources of Social Support. Yuko Kurashina, University of Maryland General Psychology, Service Learning, and the U.S. Military Academy. Janet L. Chapman, Morten Ender, and Susan Lee-Kratz, United States Military Academy Place, Time, and Job Search Strategies as Determinants of Re-Employment among Former Military Officers. David Rohall and V. Lee Hamilton, University of Maryland Presentation by Student Paper Award Recipient: Geeks at Play: Doing Masculinity on an Online Gaming Site. Natasha Chen Christensen, University of California, Los Angeles 3. Disciplinary Issues in the Sociology of War and the Military The Evolution of an Academic Program: Sociology at West Point, 1963-2000. John Hurley, Scott Efflandt, Brian Reed, and Robert Carter, United States Military Academy Juggling Difference and Equality: Women Soldiers in the South Korean Army. Seungsook Moon, Vassar College Historical Sociology and Warfare as a Driving Historical Force. Lars Bo Kaspersen, University of Copenhagen An Analysis of Predictors of Congressional Voting Behavior on Legislation Affecting Homosexuals and Women in the Military. Rachel V. Noble, University of Maryland 4. Perceptions of Social Threat Anthrax, Bioterrorism, and the Body Politic. Jeanne Guillemin, Boston College The Authoritarian Personality and Support for Eugenics. William H. McBroom, University of Montana Section on Peace, War, and Social Conflict Business Meeting (9:30-10:10 a.m.) 130. Section on Sociology of Population. Population and Culture: The Social Construction of Demographic Categories (co-sponsored by the ASA Section on Sociology of Culture) Hilton Washington, Thoroughbred Organizer: Amy Kaler, University of Pennsylvania

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

Constructing the Substance "Race" in the U.S. Census: The Color and Racial Classification of Persons of Mixed Blood, 1850-1920. Mary Lynn Washington, Lehigh University The Demographic Category as a Leaky Gender Boundary. Susan McDaniel, University of Alberta Ethnic Diversity and Assimilation in Senegal: Evidence from the 1988 Census. Pierre Ngom, Population Council, Nairobi; Ibrahima Sarr and Alioue Gaye, Direction de la Statistique, Dakar Conceptual and Operational Uses of Race and Ethnicity in the Journal of Health and Social Behavior, 1960-1998: Identifying Research Challenges. P. Rafael Hernandez, Brandeis University Discussion: Susan Watkins, University of Pennsylvania 131. Section on Aging and the Life Course. Health and Functioning over the Life Course Hilton Washington, Lincoln East (This session is dedicated to George Meyers.) Organizer and Presider: Ronald P. Abeles, National Institute of Health Chronic Disease in Midlife: The Long Arm of Childhood Experience. Mark D. Hayward, Pennsylvania State University; Debra Blackwell, National Center for Health Statistics; and Eileen M. Crimmins, University of Southern California Socioeconomic Differentials in Functional Status Transitions among the Aged in Wuhan, China. Jersey Liang, University of Michigan; Xian Liu, Walter Reed Army Medical Center; and Shengzu Gu, Wuhan University Persistent, New, and Resolved Economic Hardship: Does Age Moderate Their Association with Concurrent Change in Depression and Anxiety? John Mirowsky and Shana Pribesh, Ohio State University Functional Disability and Religious Service Attendance in Later Life: Examining the Barrier and Benefit Mechanism. Jessica A. Kelley-Moore and Kenneth F. Ferraro, Purdue University Perspectives of Old-Old Adults In and Out of HMOs on Rationing in Their Health Care Delivery. Eva Kahana and A. Wisniewski, Case Western Reserve University; Boas Kahana, Cleveland State University; and K. Kercher, G. Seckin, and K. Stange, Case Western Reserve University Discussion: Sidney M. Stahl, National Institute of Aging 132. Section on Political Sociology. Class, Economy, and State at the Millennium Hilton Washington, Georgetown West Organizer and Presider: Harland Prechel, Texas A&M University The Death of Class?: Political Power, Economic Interests, and Academic Discourse at the Millennium. Patrick Akard, Kansas State University

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Farm Concentration, Political-Economic Process, and Stratification. Martha Crowley, Ohio State University Does Economic Inequality Promote Economic Growth: A Cross-National Time-Series Analysis. Lawrence Raffalovich, State University of New York, Albany Globalization and Democratic Spaces. Robert Antonio, University of Kansas; and Alessandro Bonanno, Sam Houston State University Discussion: Barbara Brents, University of Nevada, Las Vegas 133. Section on Sociology of Emotions. Sociology of the Emotions Hilton Washington, Hamilton Organizer and Presider: Donna K. Darden, Tennessee Technological University Reflections on the Politicization of Emotion. Frank Furedi, Darwin College University of Kent A Sociological Critique of the Notion of "Emotional Intelligence." Eva Illouz, Tel Aviv University Love and Laughter in the Shelter. Steven Worden, University of Arkansas 134. Section on Sociology of Culture. Social Structures and Mental Structures Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland C Organizer and Presider: Eviatar Zerubavel, Rutgers University What's in an Order?: Reading Statistical Tables as Mental Artifacts. Joshua R. Goldstein, Princeton University Striking a Balance: Advantage and Disadvantage in Social Interaction. Kristen Purcell, Rutgers University Getting the Word Out: Notes on the Social Organization of Notification. Dan Ryan, Mills College Beyond Social Construction: The Case for a Cognitive Approach to Race, Ethnicity, and Nationalism. Rogers Brubaker, Peter Stamatov, and Mara Loveman, University of California, Los Angeles Preterm Babies in the Mother Machine: Discursive Strategies for Negotiating Prematurity in Popular Culture. Nicole Isaacson, Rutgers University Discussion: John Mohr, University of California, Santa Barbara 135. Section on Latina/o Sociology. The Sociology of Latina/o Immigration Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia A Organizer: Rogelio Saenz, Texas A&M University Presider: Jacqueline Hagan, University of Houston Rethinking the Relationship between Social Capital, Gender, and Labor Force Outcomes among Mexican Immigrants. Gretchen Livingston, University of Pennsylvania

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

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Pay Penalties for Legalized Latino Immigrants Working with Co-Ethnics. Michael Aguilera, State University of New York, Stony Brook; and Lisa Catanzarite, University of California, San Diego Reciprocity, Solidarity, and Altruism in Mexican Migration to the United States: A Case Study. Nadia Yamel Flores, University of Pennsylvania Political Refugees or Economic Immigrants?: Cuba's Latest Exodus. Silvia Pedraza, University of Michigan Discussion: Susan Gonzalez Baker, University of Texas, Austin 136. Section on Sociology of Religion. Business Meeting and Refereed Roundtables on Religion Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom Salon 1 Section on Sociology of Religion Business Meeting (8:309:15 a.m.) Refereed Roundtables (9:15-10:10 a.m.) Organizer: David Yamane, University of Notre Dame 1. The Social Rewards of Religion Table Presider: William H. Lockhart, University of Virginia Religion Reducing the Risks of Poverty: An Analysis of the National Longitudinal Study of Youth (NLSY) Data. William H. Lockhart, University of Virginia Church, Social Support, and Mental Health during the Midwestern Farm Crisis. Katherine Meyer and Tina Kassenbaum, Ohio State University 2. Religion and Immigration Table Presider: Okyun Kwon, City University of New York The Mother Tongue Faithful: The Sacred and the Mundane at a Chinese Language School. Gary Huang, Synetics, Incorporated Why Are There More Protestants in the Korean Community?: Pre-and Post-Migration Factors. Okyun Kwon, City University of New York 3. Religion and Political Involvement: Theoretical Advances Table Presider: Robert Mackin, University of Wisconsin Constructing Secularity: Framing Strategies for Religious Participation in Secular Institutions. Evelyn Bush, Cornell University Becoming the Red Bishop of Cuernavaca: Rethinking Gill's Religious Competition Model. Robert Mackin, University of Wisconsin

9:30 a.m.

Meetings

Section on Peace, War, and Social Conflict Business Meeting (to 10:10 a.m.)—Hilton Washington, Jefferson West

10:30 a.m.

Meetings

Labor and Labor Movements Section-in-formation Organizational Meeting—Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom Salon 3 Public Understanding of Sociology Award Selection Committee—Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8211 Regional, State, and Aligned Sociological Association Officers—Hilton Washington, C328 Task Force on Articulation of Sociology in Two-Year and Four-Year Sociology Programs—Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8218

10:30 a.m.

Sessions

137. Thematic Session. Who Needs the Worker?: Restructuring in the 21st Century Hilton Washington, Lincoln West Organizer and Presider: Roberta Spalter-Roth, American Sociological Association Work and Workers in the Global Economy. Harley Shaiken, University of California, Berkeley Economic Restructuring and the Rise of Bad Jobs in a Rural Community. Margaret Nelson, Middlebury College; and Joan Smith, University of Vermont Displaced Workers: The Rise of Temporary Employment in the U.S., Europe, and Japan. Heidi Gottfried, Wayne State University Discussion: Ann Swidler, University of California, Berkeley Presenters will discuss the key points of their papers after which the discussant will present a summary and highlight critical points. Following this the audience will be invited to interact with the presenters and the discussant.

138. Special Session. The Recruitment and Retention of Faculty of Color (co-sponsored by the ASA Minority Opportunities through School Transformation {MOST} Program) Hilton Washington, Caucus Organizer and Presider: Edward Murguia, American Sociological Association Panel: Miguel A. Carranza, University of Nebraska, Lincoln H. Mark Ellis, William Patterson College of New Jersey Kimberly Davies, Augusta State University Deirdre Royster, University of Massachusetts, Amherst This session will focus on both the recruitment and the retention of faculty of color in departments of sociology. Concerning recruitment, strategies will be discussed which can lead to the hiring of a racially and ethnically diverse faculty. Additionally, ways of enhancing the retention of faculty of color in departments after they have been hired will be discussed.

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

139. Special Session. Judging Moral Progress from the Treatment of Animals: The Status of Animal Oppression in the 21st Century Hilton Washington, Georgetown West Organizers and Presiders: Lisa Dobransky, Case Western Reserve University; and David Nibert, Wittenberg University The Reconstruction of Animals and the Redefinition of Animal Oppression. Janet Alger and Steven Alger, College of St. Rose Accounting for Abuse: Neutralizing and Rationalizing Animal Cruelty. Suzanne Goodney, Indiana University Abusive Behavior: Students' Perspectives on Animal Cruelty. Corwin Kruse, University of Minnesota Discussion: Lisa Dobransky, Case Western Reserve University; and David Nibert, Wittenberg University 140. Special Session. Academic Freedom in the 21st Century Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland A Organizers and Presiders: James T. Richardson, President, American Association of University Professors (AAUP), and University of Nevada, Reno; and James L. Wood, San Diego State University The Eroding Foundations of Academic Freedom and Professional Integrity: Implications of the Diminishing Proportion of Tenured Faculty for Organizational Effectiveness in Higher Education. Ernst Benjamin, AAUP Associate General Secretary and Chief Staff Person for the Annual AAUP Salary Report Discussion: Mary Gray, Professor of Statistics and Mathematics, American University Debra Friedman, Associate Provost for Academic Planning, University of Washington James T. Richardson, Professor of Sociology and Judicial Studies, University of Nevada, Reno 141. Special Session. Local Challenges to Globalization Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson C Organizer: Frank Lindenfeld, Bloomsburg University Presider: John C. Leggett, Rutgers University Panel: V. Elaine Gross, Sustainable America Frank Lindenfeld, Bloomsburg University Michael H. Shuman, Village Foundation Discussion: Len Krimerman, University of Connecticut The focus of this session is challenging globalization by building and maintaining sustainable local economies based on community- and worker-owned businesses and cooperative organizations.

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142. Special Session. New Opportunities for Social Science at the National Science Foundation: A Town Meeting with Norman Bradburn Hilton Washington, Monroe West Organizer and Presider: Felice J. Levine, American Sociological Association Speaker: Norman Bradburn, National Science Foundation Panel: Michael Hout, University of California, Berkeley John R. Logan, State University of New York, Albany Lynn Smith-Lovin, University of Arizona 143. Special Session. Human Rights in Global Perspective: Race, Gender, and the World Conference against Racism Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia B Organizer and Presider: M. Douglas Scott, International Capacity Building Services, Inc. "...No Racism in Canada": The Three Faces of Denial. Michelle Y. Williams, New York University School of Law Exploring the Parameters of Economic Globalization and Human Rights. Ibrahim Wani, The African Center for Strategic Studies More than Magic: Mobilizing U.S. NGOs for the 2001 World Conference against Racism. Irma McClaurin, University of Florida and 2000-01 AAAS Diplomacy Fellow, USAID Bureau for Program and Policy Coordination 144. Special Session. Addressing Disability Issues in the Academy and the Profession (co-sponsored by the ASA Committee on the Status of Persons with Disabilities in Sociology) Hilton Washington, Jefferson West Organizers and Presiders: Laura E. Nathan, Mills College; and Emilie Schmeidler Disability Definitions: Impact and Implications. Gary L. Albrecht, University of Illinois, Chicago Disability Studies: Teaching Throughout the Curriculum. Lynn Schlesinger, State University of New York, Plattsburgh Thoughts on Teaching Persons with Disabilities. Laura E. Nathan, Mills College Disability Research: Understanding the Environment. Richard Scotch, University of Texas, Dallas Invisibility of Disability. Mary Ellen Yates, Commonwealth of Massachusetts Transitions for Persons with Disabilities: Establishing Supportive Discourses and Practices. Edward J. Ponczek, Harper Community College

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Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

145. Regional Spotlight Session. Neighborhoods, Housing, and Poverty Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland C Organizer and Presider: Samantha Friedman, George Washington University Neighborhood Racial Change in the Washington, DC Metropolitan Area and an Analysis of Factors Influencing Neighborhood Racial Stability. Jennifer Gilligan Twombly, George Washington University An Analysis of Housing Investment Patterns in Washington, DC. Mark Rubin, The Urban Institute Examining Neighborhood Poverty and Nonprofit Services in the District of Columbia: Is There a Spatial Connection? Eric Twombly, The Urban Institute Discussion: Samantha Friedman, George Washington University 146. Author Meets Critics. The Sociology of Philosophies: A Global Theory of Intellectual Change (Harvard University Press, 1998) by Randall Collins, University of Pennsylvania Hilton Washington, International Center Organizer and Presider: Ruth Wallace, George Washington University Book Author: Randall Collins, University of Pennsylvania Critics: Eiko Ikegami, New School for Social Research Michele Lamont, Princeton University Charles Tilly, Columbia University 147. Professional Workshop. Issues to Consider in Preparing for an Academic Career (co-sponsored by Sociologists for Women in Society) Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8219 Organizer: Betsy Lucal, Indiana University, South Bend Panel: Melissa Herbert, Hamline University Elaine Bell Kaplan, University of Southern California Charlotte Kunkel, Luther College Eleanor Palo Stoller, Case Western Reserve University Panelists will discuss a variety of issues that one should consider when preparing for an academic career. Among the topics will be: tradeoffs in different types of positions/settings (e.g., research universities versus liberal arts colleges), work/family issues (e.g., time and timing constraints, children, workplace culture, geographic issues, career "portability"), being a good department and university citizen (e.g., the hidden workload of service; how and when to say "no"). Panelists will give informal presentations and answer questions from the audience.

148. Professional Workshop. Difficult Choices...No Easy Solutions: The Confidentiality Principle and Professional Service (co-sponsored with the ASA Committee on Professional Ethics) Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware A Organizer: Joyce M. Iutcovich, Keystone University Research Corporation

Panel: Ann Marie Ellis, Southwest Texas State University Eugene Sapadin, Johnson State College Bob Weller, National Institutes of Health Panelists will discuss issues surrounding the confidentiality principle as it applies to professional service. Specifically, these questions will be addressed: (1) Why have confidentiality rules? What are the reasons for them? What are the reasons not to have them? How are these rules changing within different organizational structures (e.g., academia, business/industry, government, and social service agencies)? (2) Are there conditions under which confidentiality rules can be breached (e.g., where there are conflicting ethical standards)? What are the consequences of breaking confidentiality...for the individuals who break the rules (e.g., whistle blowers)...for systems within which confidentiality is to be held? (3) In what ways can these dilemmas be resolved? Should there be protection for the whistle blowers...sanctions for those who break confidentiality...?

149. Academic Workplace Workshop. Preparing for a Program Review Hilton Washington, Map Leaders: Gregory L. Weiss, Roanoke College Peter Meiksins, Cleveland State University Marietta Morrissey, University of Toledo Catherine White Berheide, Skidmore College The goal of this workshop is to provide participants with helpful strategies and information that will be useful for chairs and departments in conducting an effective program review. The workshop will emphasize the role of program reviews in the assessment of faculty productivity and workload, methods to make the review a positive and collaborative experience, the essential material that should be included in a department report, and the kinds of questions asked by external reviewers and the issues that they address in final reports. Handouts will be provided, and there will be ample time for questions and answers.

150. Teaching Workshop. Teaching Courses on Inequality and Stratification Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware B Organizer and Presider: Scott Sernau, Indiana University, South Bend Panel: Elizabeth Clifford, Towson University Mark Ginsberg, University of Pittsburgh William G. Holt, Emory University Murray Milner, University of Virginia Timothy Patrick Moran, State University of New York, Stony Brook Jonathan White, Framingham State College Inequality and stratification are core concepts in sociology and yet many instructors find it difficult to help students to connect the concepts to their lives and experiences and to overcome apathy, naivete, or even hostility to the subject matter. This workshop emphasizes approaches, ideas, activities, and exercises to spark student interest and to help them grapple with social inequalities in meaningful ways. Topics will include teaching about hunger, the realities of budgeting in poverty, inequalities in opportunity, local-global connections, status in high schools, and the use of literature.

151. Research Poster Session. Inequalities: Race, Class, and Gender Hilton Washington, Exhibit Hall Organizer: Sean O'Riain, University of California, Davis

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

1. Everyday Understandings: Research on the Role of Race at an Urban Public Institution of Higher Education. Melanie Bush, City University of New York; and Sherry Drazner, Brooklyn College, City University of New York 2. Images of Patriarchy: Typologies of Masculinity. Robert Caputi, University of California, Santa Barbara 3. Understanding the Multiple Conceptions of Environmental Justice: A Qualitative Analysis of Stakeholder Perceptions and Values Regarding Title VI Environmental Justice Complaints. John Callewaert, University of Michigan 4. A Gendered Perspective on Independence/Interdependence in Modernizing Turkish Families. Ayse Dayi, Pennsylvania State University 5. Sex, Power, and the Adolescent Girl. Lynn H. Green, University of Pennsylvania 6. The Effect of Ending Affirmative Action on College Enrollments in Washington State: A Preliminary Assessment. Susan Wierzbicki, University of Washington 7. The Southern Black Belt: The Persistence of Historic Inequalities. Ronald C. Wimberley, North Carolina State University; and Libby V. Morris, University of Georgia 8. How Social Capital Impacts Educational Attainment among African American Adolescents. George L. Wimberly, University of Chicago 152. Research Poster Session. Research by New PhDs, 1996-2000 Hilton Washington, Exhibit Hall Organizer: Yung-mei Tsai, Texas Tech University 9. Gender Role Orientations in Adolescence and Early Adulthood: A Prospective Study of the Mental Health Effects of Change in Masculinity and Femininity. Anne E. Barrett, Institute for Health, Health Care Policy, and Aging Research 10. Adult and Family Homelessness: Resources in an Urban Neighborhood. Margaret Walsh, Russell Sage College 11. The Souls of Black Men: Male Discourse and Its Critical Implications for Rethinking Black Feminist Thought. Nandi S. Crosby, California State University, Chico 12. Opportunity Structures for Older Adults in Faith Communities: A Survey of Baptist Churches in South Carolina. Vinetta Goodwin Witt, Newberry College 13. Linking Gender Differences in Parenting to a Typology of Family Parenting Styles and Adolescent Development Outcomes. Leslie Gordon, Iowa State University

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153. Research Poster Session. Open Topic Research Presentations: Marriage and Family Hilton Washington, Exhibit Hall Organizer: Amy Schindler, Columbia University 14. "What Do You Mean What's Wrong with Her? There's Nothing Wrong with Her, She's Just Crippled”: Relationship of Frequency of Child's Informal Interactions with Age Peers to Mother's Perception of Stigma. Sara E. Green, University of South Florida 15. Cohabitation, Marriage and Earnings: Racial-ethnic and Gender Differences, 1995-1998. Philip N. Cohen, University of California, Irvine 16. Relationship between Marriage and Psychological Wellbeing: A Longitudinal Analysis. Hyoun K. Kim, Oregon Social Learning Center; and Patrick McKenry, Ohio State University 17. How Low-Income Single Mothers Leave Welfare for Selfsufficiency: The Role of Social Capital, Human Capital, and Psychosocial Characteristics. Robert Leibson Hawkins, Brandeis University 18. Where Should the "Bad" Kids Go?: A Closer Look at Alternative Education. Jessica Kenty 19. Beliefs and Practices of Violence Prevention, Conflict Resolution, and Restorative Justice in Central Minnesota Schools. Elizabeth Scheel, Ryan Fahrmann, and Alesia Strand, St. Cloud State University 20. The Effect of Parent-Child Relationships on Marital Quality. Lynn White and Hongyu Wang, University of Nebraska, Lincoln 21. The Effect of Family Structure on the Application and Effectiveness of Mothers' Parental Control. Paul A. Muller, University of New Hampshire 22. Patterns of Parenting Across Adolescence. Suzanne L. Maughan, Brigham Young University 23. The Effect of Extended and Irregular Work Hour Arrangements for Paid Work on Marital Quality. Debra F. Peterson, Bemidji State University 154. Student Forum. Refereed Roundtables Hilton Washington, International East Organizer: Alexandra Marin, Harvard University 1. Kids: When to Have Them and What to Do with Them Women's Fertility Decisions: Socialization or Rational Choice. Joyce A. Joyce, University at Buffalo "Home Alone" Kids: The Construction of a Social Problem. Rebecca Calcraft, University of Nottingham The Culture of Child Pageants: Who Participates and Why. Hilary Levey, Harvard University 2. Love and Sex in Cyberspace E-Love? Russian Mail-Order Brides. Jeane Batalova, University of California, Irvine

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Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

Session 154, continued A Cross-Cultural Pilot Study of America Online Chatrooms. Anthony Mohassel, University at Buffalo 3. Education and Inequality The Scar Tissue within Higher Education: An Examination of Inequitable Academic Status Differentials from Community College to Elite Universities. Benjamin B. Bolger, Stanford University The Effects of Resource Streams on Power and Decision Making in School Districts. Morgan Collins, Columbia University Exploring Salary Differentials for African American Female Faculty. Elizabeth A. Guillory, University of California, Los Angeles 4. Identity Formation and Social Psychology Self-Concept and the Discussion of Youth Sport: A Critique. Joel Nathan Rosen, University of Kent, Canterbury Bodies, Blood and Bonding in Women's Recreational Ice Hockey. Maura B. Rosenthal, University of Minnesota The Status Value of Power Use. Robert Willer, University of Iowa 5. Social Networks Homelessness and Social Networks: Comparing Informal Support in Britain and the United States. Wendy Roth, Harvard University Informal Networks Used in Social Movement Organizing at the Grass Roots Level. Vondora Wilson-Corzen, State University of New York, Stony Brook The Social Networks of Gay Professional Men. Bill Wagner, University of Illinois, Chicago 6. Potpourri I: Migration, Race, and Theory The Impact of Migration on Changing Gender Relations among Bosnian Muslim Refugees in Vermont. Kim Huisman, University of Southern California Does Race Have an Effect on Arrest and Incarceration Rates. Kim Luthman, Baldwin-Wallace College Unfettered Spirits: How Inmates Survive, Adapt to, and Justify Their Existence within Correctional Institutions, Thus Thwarting Punishment and Rehabilitation Efforts. Charles Fossett Structures of Power and Charisma within the Nazi Cult: Theoretical Approaches to Kershaw's "Hitler". Gabriel Acevedo, Yale University 7. Potpourri II: Employment, Organizations, and the Elderly The Effects of Marital Status and Parental Status on Living Arrangements of the Elderly. Sara A. Brallier and Joyce A. Joyce, University at Buffalo, State University of New York Fudging It, "Talking Past One Another" and Simply Keeping Your Trap Shut: Consensus Building as Part of Organizational Change. Katherine Clegg, University of Nottingham

Women's Unemployment and Reemployment in the Transition Era: A Case Study of Shanghai, China. Weizhen Dong, University of Toronto 155. Regular Session. Aging: Inequality, Well-being, and Care Hilton Washington, Independence Organizer: Tracy L. Dietz, University of Central Florida Presider: Jana Jasinski, University of Central Florida Caring for an Aging Society: Cohort Values and Eldercare. Tracy X. Karner, University of Kansas Use of Informal Care: The Influence of End of Life Circumstances. Robert J. Johnson and Timothy J. Gallagher, Kent State University; Fredric D. Wolinsky, St. Louis University Never Married Women Reaching Retirement: A Case of Economic Vulnerability. Howard Iams and Barbara Butrica, Social Security Administration Inequality among Women in Later Life: Challenges to Conventional Approaches. Andrea E. Willson, Florida State University 156. Regular Session. The Sociology of Culture: American Culture at the Turn of the Millenium Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia A Organizer and Presider: Wendy Griswold, Northwestern University Rituals of the Culture War: Conflict and Cohesion in English Literature. Bethany Bryson, University of Virginia Just How Is It That Americans Are Individualistic? Claude Fisher, University of California, Berkeley What Are Your Intentions?: Cultural Agency in Same-Sex Marriage. Kathleen Hull, Northwestern University The Dubious Place of Virtue: The Impeachment of Clinton and the Death of the Political Event in America. Magali Sarfatti Larson, Temple University; and Robin WagnerPacifici, Swarthmore College 157. Regular Session. Economic Sociology: Global Markets and Globalization Hilton Washington, Georgetown East Organizer and Presider: Wayne Baker, University of Michigan Framing Globalization: The Battle for Definitions of a Contested Issue. Peer Fiss, Northwestern University Corporate Governance and Globalization: Is There Convergence Across Countries? Mauro F. Guillen, University of Pennsylvania Nation States in Common Markets: Spheres of National Legislative Autonomy in the European Union and Mercosur. Francesco Duina, Harvard University Globalization of Production, Supplier Relations, and Convergence Theory: German Automotive Firms in the American South. Scott B. Martin, Columbia University Global Rationalization and the Expansion of Modern Accounting. Yong Suk Jang, Stanford University

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

158. Regular Session. Education: Race and Educational Expectations Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson B Organizer and Presider: David A. Kinney, Central Michigan University Image Transmission: Explaining Racial Differences in the Educational Expectations of Students. Simon Cheng, Brian Powell, and Brian Starks, Indiana University, Bloomington Ethnic Differences in the College Choice Process among Asian Americans. Robert Teranishi, Walter Allen, and Miguel Ceja, University of California, Los Angeles Effects of Educational Expectations and Performance on High School Graduation for Native and Immigrant Minorities. Roger A. Wojtkiewicz and Edward S. Shihadeh, Louisiana State University School Resources, Social Capital and Post Secondary Outcomes for Disadvantaged Students. Lori Diane Hill, University of Chicago Discussion: Carla O'Connor, University of Michigan

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Racial Hygiene in Chandler Arizona: The "Roundup", "Sweep," and "Raid" of Undocumented Mexicans. Sahee Kil, Arizona State University Conflicts Embedded in Structure: Korean and Latino Immigrants in the Los Angeles Garment Industry. KuSup Chin, Johns Hopkins University Gender and Social Networks: The Importance of Weak Ties. Kristine Zentgraf, California State University, Long Beach Discussion: Denise Silva, University of California, San Diego 161. Regular Session. Mental Health Hilton Washington, Lincoln East Organizer: Mark Tausig, University of Akron Early Child Development, Poverty, and Maternal Depression. Stephan M. Petterson and Alison Burke Albers, University of Virginia The Mediating Roles of Anxiety, Depression, and Hopelessness on Adolescent Suicidal Behaviors. Elaine A. Thompson, James J. Mazza, Jerald R. Herting, and Leona L. Eggert, University of Washington Does Mental Health Affect Transitions Out of the Labor Force in Older Workers? Linda Wray, University of Michigan Age and the Effect of Economic Hardship on Distress. Catherine E. Ross, Ohio State University Discussion: Susan Roxburgh, Kent State University

159. Regular Session. The Impact of Family Processes and Family Structure on Children Hilton Washington, Jefferson East Organizer: Shirley A. Hill, University of Kansas Effects of Sibsize on Educational Attainment over the Life Course: Great Britain and the United States Compared. Mary Ann Powell, University of Nebraska, Omaha Family Process and Children's Well-being Before and After Parents' Marital Disruption: A Longitudinal Analysis. Yongmin Sun, Ohio State University, Mansfield Family Structure, Ethnicity, and Socialization. William H. McBroom and Fred W. Reed, University of Montana Physical Discipline and Behavior Problems in African American, European American, and Latino Children: Emotional Support as a Moderator. Julia Smith and Vonnie McLoyd, University of Michigan Mother-only versus Father-only Households: Educational Outcomes for African American Males. Juan Battle, Hunter College; and BarBara M. Scott, Northeastern Illinois University Non-resident Parenting Beyond Child Support: The Joint Effects of Parent-Child Activity and Financial Contributions on Children's Educational Attainment. Chadwick L. Menning, Indiana University Discussion: Juan Battle, Hunter College

162. Regular Session. Social Stratification: Aspects of Race and Inequality Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson A Organizer: Peter Meiksins, Cleveland State University Presider: John Zipp, University of Akron Racial Differences in Household Wealth: Beyond Black and White. Lori Campbell and Robert L. Kaufman, Ohio State University Unequal Returns to Housing Investments?: A Study of Real Housing Appreciation among Black, White and Hispanic Households. Chenoa Flippen, Duke University The Power and Collapse of Paternalism: The Ford Motor Company and Black Workers, 1937-1941. John Brueggemann, Skidmore College Does Religion Shape American's Stratification Beliefs?: Race, Religious Affiliation, and Beliefs about the Causes of Poverty. Matthew Hunt, Northeastern University Discussion: Melvin Thomas, North Carolina State University

160. Regular Session. Immigration Marriott Wardman Park, Harding Organizer: Yen Le Espiritu, University of California, San Diego Presider: Linda Vo, University of California, Irvine Five Years after NAFTA: Rhetoric and Reality of Mexican Immigration in the 21st Century. Robert Manning and Anita Butera, Georgetown University

163. Regular Session. Realistic Utopias and Alternative Futures Marriott Wardman Park, Balcony B Organizers and Presiders: Elizabeth A. Gill, Randolph Macon College; and Steve Lyng, Virginia Commonwealth University Y2K: A Millennial Response to a Technological Threat. Andrea Hoplight-Tapia, University of New Mexico

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Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

Session 163, continued The Future of the Water Market in Texas: Voices from Those Shaping Policy. Karen Manges Douglas, Prairie View A&M University Reflections on Sociological Teaching about Utopias: Oh, What a Lift that Phantom Offers! Arthur Shostak, Drexel University Linking the Definition of the Situation with the Study of the Future: A Case Study Focusing on Work, Family, and Lesiure. Robert M. Orrange, Cornell University Can Utopianism Survive Globalization? Lawrence Sneden, California State University, Northridge 164. Regular Session. Youth Violence: The Role and Consequences of Perceptions, Exposure, and Normative Commitment Marriott Wardman Park, Balcony A Organizer: Ruth D. Peterson, Ohio State University Presider: Ross Matsueda, University of Washington Exposure to Violence and the Evolution of Stress and Strain Theories of Delinquency an Depression. John Hagan, Northwestern University; and Holly Foster, American Bar Foundation Witnessing Interparental Violence and Children's Adjustment. Kathleen Kopiec, University of New Hampshire Dealing with Danger: Avoidance and Coping Strategies of Inner City Youth. Howard L. Pinderhughes and Teresa Scherzer, University of California, San Francisco The Conditional Calculus of Violence. Lance Hannon, Vilanova University; James DeFronzo, University of Connecticut; and Jane Prochnow, Massey University Perceived Risk at School: A Multilevel Analysis of Students' Perceptions of Weapon Carrying and Violence Across 16 Schools. Phillip Neil Quisenberry, Scott A. Hunt, and Rick Zimmerman, University of Kentucky 165. Section on Sociology of Sex and Gender. Refereed Roundtables on Sex and Gender Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom Salon 1 Organizers: Judith A. Howard, Alesha Durfee, and Virginia E. Rutter, University of Washington 1. Gender and Education Table Presider: Karen Bradley, Western Washington University High School Education for Girls in Japan: Do Traditional Gender Role Values Still Matter? Hisayo Shikakura and Gavin W. Hougham, University of Chicago Reproducing the Sex Segregated Labor Force: A Gendered Selection of Activities Approach. Shelley J. Correll, Stanford University Revisiting Gender Variation in Post-School Human Capital Investment. Patricia A. Simpson and Linda Stroh, Loyola University, Chicago

2. Household Income Table Presider: Kris Paap, Hamilton College The Changing Impact of Wives' Earnings on the Distribution of White Married-Couple Income, 19791995. Susan G. Singley, University of Waikato; and Martina Morris, University of Washington Moving Beyond Gender as a Variable: A Hierarchical Study of Household Income in Germany and the United States from 1983 to 1994. Lisa M. Amoroso, Northwestern University 3. Domestic Violence Table Presider: Elisabeth O. Burgess, Georgia State University The Impact of Gender Role Ideology, Male Expectancies, and Acculturation on Wife Abuse. Juanita M. Firestone, University of Texas, San Juan; Richard J. Harris, University of Texas, San Antonio; and William A. Vega, University of Texas, San Antonio Sexual Violence and Pregnancy: Women's Experiences of Rape by Intimate Partners. Raquel Kennedy Bergen, Saint Joseph's University The Dilemmas of Policy Success: Evaluating Domestic Violence Programs. Lynda J. Ames, State University of New York, Plattsburgh 4. Gender and Media Table Presider: Neal King, Belmont University The Breaking of Approved Female Social Role Constructions: Popular Films "All Over Me" and "Foxfire" as Possible Tools in the Role of Women's Liberation. Gunilla Holm and Thomas Brignall, Western Michigan University The Portrayal of Women in Newsweek Magazine, 193595. Emily Johnson, Purdue University Behind the Words and Pictures: Producing Gender Representation in Children's Literature. Natalia Sarkisian, University of Massachusetts, Amherst 5. Work/Family Intersections Table Presider: Toni Calasanti, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Relationship Quality among Married and Cohabiting Couples: Gender Differences in the Effects of Children and Work. Sampson Lee Blair, Arizona State University Balancing Work and Family Life: Predicting Sacrifice and Success. Jennifer Reid, Florida State University Very Long Days: Determining Work Overload among Dual Career Couples. Daphne John, Oberlin College; and Beth Anne Shelton, University of Texas, Arlington Women Negotiating Identity: Postpartum Struggles in a Changing World. Edith Pratt Elwood, Brigham Young University 6. Gender Pay Gap Table Presider: Cheryl Laz, University of Southern Maine Gender, Self-Employment, and the Sex Gap in Earnings. Michelle J. Budig, University of Pennsylvania

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

Unionization and the Gender Wage Gap. Tracy F. H. Chang, University of Alabama, Birmingham She Blinded Me with Science: Explaining the Sex Pay Gap in Science and Engineering Fields. Anastasia Prokos and Irene Padavic, Florida State University 7. Work Transitions Table Presider: Denise Benoit Scott, State University of New York, Geneseo Status Processes and the Hiring of Women: Evidence from Law Firms. Elizabeth H. Gorman, Harvard University Should I Stay or Should I Go?: An Examination of Midcareer Employer Changes as Strategy for Increasing Women's Earnings. Rhonda Berg, Ohio State University Enabling Income: Helping Women with Disablilities Return to Work. Sally Kimpson, University of Victoria 8. Occupational Sex Segregation Table Presider: Marjukka Ollilainen, Weber State University Intergenerational Influences on Men's and Women's Entry into Nontraditional Employment. Lisa A. Cubbins and Benjamin Cornwell, University of Cincinnati "Living in a Large Family Does Something for You": Influence of Family on the Achievement of African and Caribbean Women in Science. Josephine Beoku-Betts, Florida Atlantic University Involuntary Unemployment and Occupational Sex Composition. Carrie L. Conaway, Harvard University Sex Segregation in the Hiring Interface: The Case of a Retail Bank. Alison Siskin, Stanford University 9. Social Welfare Issues Table Presider: Mary Tuominen, Denison University The Handkerchief Brigade: A Social History of the Hebrew Ladies' Old People's Home Association in Hartford, CT. Jennifer Hill, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Framing the Voice: The Influence of Race and Gender on Noninstitutionalized Social Movement Rhetoric. Catherine Forbes, Alma College; and Dana Reinke, University of Pittsburgh 10. Public Policy Table Presider: Julie Press, Temple University "It's All about Responsibility": Gender and Sexuality in Kansas Welfare Reform Rhetoric. Melissa A. Haveman, University of Kansas Canadian Women and the New Employment Insurance Policy. Norene Pupo, York University; and Ann Duffy, Brock University For Men Only: Divorce Rates among Israeli Citizens. Sylvie Fogiel-Bijaou, Beit-Berl College, New School of Journalism 11. Debating Feminist Identities Table Presider: Thomas J. Gerschick, Illinois State University

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The Janus-Faced Nature of Third Wave Feminism. Susan A. Mann, University of New Orleans Universalist Feminists and Particularist Jews: Jewish and Feminist Identities in Autobiography. Dina Pinsky, City University of New York Graduate Center Suburban Lesbians: Living Beyond "The" Community. Debbie Donovan, Long Island University Men Using Feminism to Study Men. Donald Gregory, Reinhardt College 12. Theoretical Approaches to Doing Gender Table Presider: Martha McCaughey, Virginia Polytechinc Institute and State University Sex Role Orientation and Care-Oriented Moral Reasoning: An Online Test of Carol Gilligan's Theory. Tasha D. Anderson, University of South Carolina, Columbia; and Lynn M. Mulkey, University of South Carolina, Beaufort The 120 Percent Woman: Garfinkel's Agnes, Desire, and Ideology. Rachel Dubrofsky, York University 13. Young Adults Doing Gender Table Presider: Marybeth C. Stalp, University of Georgia Did You See What I Saw?: Gender Differences in Perceptions of Avenues to Prestige among Adolescents. J. Jill Suitor, Staci A. Minyard, and Rebecca S. Carter, Louisiana State University Advertising Power: Hegemonic Masculinity in Fraternity Rush Ads. Ian Lapp, Monmouth University Athletes, Feminists, Sorors: Femininity on Campus. Karin A. Martin, University of Michigan 14. Gender and Values Table Presider: Sharon E. Preves, Grand Valley State University Self-Assessments of Gender-Role Values and Success. Susan E. Marshall, University of Texas, Austin The "Right" Balance: Gender and Religious Differences in Commitment to Work and Family. Tracy L. Scott, USQA Center for Health Care Research Liberation/Domination?: LDS Women and Mother-inHeaven. Susan Wortmann, University of Nebraska Promises, Paternalism, or Patriachy: Promise Keepers’ Prescriptions for Men as Husbands. Andrea Stepnick, North George College and State University 15. Medical Constructions of Gender Table Presider: Jan Thomas Gender and Health: The Rise and Fall of Type A Man. Elianne Riska, Abo Akademi University There's Something about Her: Attitudes about Women and Gender among Obstetrician-Gynecologists. Carrie Y. Lee, Vanderbilt University 16. Gender and Socialist Legacies Table Presider: Benita Roth, State University of New York, Binghamton Gender Beliefs and Economic Realities: Work-Family Choices in Post-Soviet Russia. Tania Rands Lyon, Princeton University

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Session 165, continued Reflections on Cuba's Socialist Experiment at the Turn of the Century. Elisa Facio, University of Colorado; Anne R. Roschelle, State University of New York, New Paltz; and Maura Toro-Morn, Illinois State University The Italian Women's Movement 1968-1978: The Influence of the Autonomous Feminist Movement on the Framing of Women's Issues within the Communist and Christian Democratic Parties. Abigail Brooks, Boston College 17. Sexual Agency Table Presider: Erin Calhoun Davis, University of Virginia Gendered Virginity: Gender and the Social Construction of Virginity Loss. Laura M. Carpenter, Johns Hopkins University "Every Sperm Is Sacred": Socio-cultural and Technological Representations of Semen. Lisa Jean Moore, College of Staten Island Masculinity and Sexuality Accounts of Transgender Men from the San Francisco Bay Area. Salvador VidalOrtiz, City University of New York Graduate Center; and Sean Camargo, National Latino/a Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Organization 166. Section on Peace, War, and Social The Military and Non-Military Participation in Peace Operations Hilton Washington, Hamilton Organizers: Mady Segal, University of Maryland, College Park; and John T. Crist, U.S. Institute of Peace Presider: John T. Crist, U.S. Institute of Peace If "It's Not a Soldier's Job But Only a Soldier Can Do It," Then Whose Job Is It?: Practice and Identity in Civilian Peacekeepers. Dana Eyre, Naval Postgraduate School American Public Opinion Towards U.S. Engagement in Peacekeeping Operations: The Value Hypothesis. Mariabina Palmisano, University of Maryland, College Park Building Peace with Justice: The Role of Civilian Police Operations in Peacekeeping. Lewis Rasmussen, U.S. Institute of Peace Give Peacekeepers a Chance: Peacekeeper Attitudes on Peacekeeeping. Brian Reed, Morten Ender, and Justin Jones, United States Military Academy 167. Section on Sociology of Population. Whither Demography? Hilton Washington, Thoroughbred Organizer and Presider: Susan Watkins, University of Pennsylvania Panel: Christine Bachrach, National Institutes of Health S. Philip Morgan, Duke University Amy Tsui, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

168. Section on Political Sociology. Society and Politics in America: The 2000 Elections Hilton Washington, International West Organizers: Frederick D. Weil, Louisiana State University; and Alexander Hicks, Emory University Presider: Frederick D. Weil, Louisiana State University Panel: Celinda Lake, Lake Snell Perry Ed Goeas, The Tarrance Group Paul Burstein, University of Washington Discussion: Frederick D. Weil, Louisiana State University This session features a panel of political experts discussing the 2000 elections. Celinda Lake and Ed Goeas are two of the most influential pollsters in America. Across-the-aisle colleagues, they conduct surveys for US News and World Report and for voter.com/Battleground 2000. Celinda Lake is a Democratic pollster and strategist for Emily’s List, the Sierra Club, and the AFL-CIO, among others. Ed Goeas is a Republic pollster and strategist for Trent Lott, Dick Armey, Christine Whitman, Tommy Thompson, and forty other top GOP candidates. Paul Burstein is Professor of Sociology and Political Science at the University of Washington, Seattle, and past president of the ASA Section on Political Sociology.

169. Section on Sociology of Emotions. Chair's Hour and Business Meeting Hilton Washington, Monroe West Chair’s Hour (10:30-11:30 a.m.) Presider: David A. Karp, Boston College Research Award Presentations: E. Doyle McCarthy, Fordham University Award Recipient: Misery and Company: Sympathy and Everyday Life by Candace Clark, Montclair State College Honorable Mention: Consuming the Romantic Utopia: The Cultural Contradiction of Capitalism by Eva Illouz, Tel Aviv University Section on Sociology of Emotions Business Meeting (11:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m.) Lifetime Achievement Award Recipient: Tom Scheff, University of California, Santa Barbara 170. Section on Latina/o Sociology. Latina/o Educational Outcomes Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia C Organizer: Rogelio Saenz, Texas A&M University Presider: Maria Cristina Morales, Texas A&M University Farm Background and Educational Attainment: The Children of Mexican Immigrants in California. Katy Pinto, University of California, Los Angeles The Educational Achievement of America's Youth: Expectations and Realizations among Whites, Chicanos and Other Latinos. Carlos M. Ramos, University of California, Los Angeles An Examination of Neighborhood Effects on the Drop-Out Patterns of Puerto Rican Youth in the New York Metropolitan Area, 1990. Ronald J. O. Flores, St. Lawrence University

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

High School Completion among Latino Youth: Is Early Employment a Factor? A. N. Olatunji, Tulane University Discussion: William Velez, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee 171. Section on Sociology of Religion. Religion and Homosexuality (co-sponsored by the ASA Section on the Sociology of Sexualities) Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland B Organizer and Presider: Jodi O'Brien, Seattle University Vital Conflicts: The Mainline Denominations Debate Homosexuality. Wendy Cadge, Princeton University Gay and Lesbian Seventh-Day Adventists: Resisting Homosexual Identities. Rene' Drumm, Andrews University Answering the Gospel's Call: Dignity and the Construction of Social Activism. James C. Cavendish, University of South Florida To Answer the Gospel’s Call: Dignity and the Construction of Social Activism. Donileen R. Loseke and James C. Cavendish, University of South Florida Religion and Tolerance of Homosexuality. Nathan Wright, Northwestern University

11:30 a.m.

Meetings

Section on Sociology of Emotions Business Meeting (to 12:10 p.m.)—Hilton Washington, Monroe East

12:30 p.m.

Other Groups

Affect Control Theory Research Group (David Heise)— Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8229 American Journal of Sociology Editorial Board—Marriott Wardman Park, Coolidge Society for the Study of Symbolic Interaction Feminist Luncheon—Radisson Barcelo Hotel, 2121 P Street NW

12:30 p.m.

Meetings

Contemporary Sociology Editorial Board—Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8206 1999-2000 ASA Council Members-at-Large (to 4:10 p.m.)— Hilton Washington, C326 Honors Program—Hilton Washington, Map MFP Fellows—Hilton Washington, Hemisphere 2002 Program Committee—Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8210

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Section on Economic Sociology Organizational Meeting— Hilton Washington, Georgetown East Sociological Theory Editorial Board—Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8209 Teaching Sociology Editorial Board—Hilton Washington, State

12:30 p.m.

Sessions

172. Thematic Session. Cultural and Media Representation of Oppression and Domination Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland C Organizer and Presider: Joshua Gamson, Yale University Panel: Lisa Navarrete, National Council of La Raza Hemant Shah, University of Wisconsin, Madison Suzanna Walters, Georgetown University Discussion: Andrea Press, University of Illinois 173. Special Session. International Environmental Justice Issues Hilton Washington, Monroe East Organizer and Presider: Dorceta E. Taylor, University of Michigan Injustice Framing and Environmental Justice Activism in Britain and the U.S. Dorceta E. Taylor, University of Michigan Race and Political Participation in Environmental Issues: Evidence from the Detroit Area. Paul Mohai, University of Michigan Human Rights, Social Justice and Conservation in Developing Countries. Steve Brechin, University of Michigan Urban Growth and Social Inequality. June Gin, University of Michigan 174. Special Session. Institutional Racism Hilton Washington, Jefferson East Organizer: Kenneth G. Lutterman The Persistence of Racism and Its Pervasive Consequences for Health. David R. Williams, University of Michigan Institutional Racism: Disparities in Health and Health Care. Ronald Manderscheid, Center for Mental Health Services Institutional Racism/Discrimination: Operationalizing Key Issues. Rodolfo Alvarez, University of California, Los Angeles Measuring Institutional Racism: Defacto Measures. Kenneth G. Lutterman

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175. Alpha Kappa Delta Distinguished Lecture Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland A Organizer and Presider: Claire M. Renzetti, St. Joseph's University Lecturer: Pepper J. Schwartz, University of Washington 176. Special Session. Aging and Modern Capitalism Hilton Washington, International West Organizer and Presider: Toni Calasanti, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University The Globalization of Capital, the Welfare State, and Old Age Policy. Carroll L. Estes, University of California, San Francisco Gender and the Myth of Generational Conflict in Modern Capitalist Societies. Sara Arber, University of Surrey, England From "Welfare States" to "Risk Society": Modern Capitalism and the Reconstruction of Identity in Later Life. Chris Phillipson, University of Keele, England Discussion: Jill Quadagno, Florida State University 177. Special Session. Global Perspectives on Indigenous Peoples' Movements Against and Resistance to Colonialism Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia C Organizer: Thomas D. Hall, DePauw University Presider: Jonathan Warren, University of Washington Indigenous Resistance in a Scandinavian Context: The Story of the Alta Dam in Norway. Ande Somby, University of Tromsoe The Hidden Transcripts of Antisystemic Discourse: Cherokee Women's Resistance to Deepening Capitalism and Americanization, 1800-1838. Wilma A. Dunaway, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University The Horn of Africa: Local Conflict, Global Order? Pat Lauderdale and Randall Amster, Arizona State University Discussion: Thomas D. Hall, DePauw University 178. Special Session. Racial Diversity in American Academic Organizations Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson B Organizer and Presider: Aldon Morris, Northwestern University Racial Diversity in the American Economics Association. Marcus Alexis, Northwestern University Racial Diversity in the American Political Science Association. Christian Davenport, University of Maryland, College Park Racial Diversity in the American Historical Association. Darlene Clark-Hine, Michigan State University Racial Diversity in the American Sociological Association. Aldon Morris, Northwestern University

179. Professional Workshop. Strategies for Identifying and Confronting Bias Hilton Washington, Caucus Leaders: Corinne Kirchner, American Foundation for the Blind Robert Newby, Central Michigan University The aim of this workshop is to share bias-related experiences of sociologists and students that have their basis in race, ethnicity, gender, sexual orientation, and disability. The purpose of the exchange is to increase the workshop participants' understanding of such experiences, to explore strategies that provide remedies to such manifestations of bias, and to provide advocacy for protection of those who are targets of these expressions. This workshop will focus on challenges that affect sociologists in educational and employment settings.

180. Academic Workplace Workshop. Preparing Future Faculty Initiatives Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8219 Organizer: Judith A. Howard, University of Washington Panel: Judith A. Howard, University of Washington Thomas J. Linneman, William and Mary College Suzanne Ortega, University of Nebraska, Lincoln Jean Shin, Western Maryland College This workshop will provide information and feedback about various models of Preparing Future Faculty (PFF) programs, based on the PFF programs with which the panelists have been involved. Panelists will discuss factors relevant to the new program, "Shaping the Preparation of Future Social Science and Humanities Faculty." They will focus on what worked more or less well in earlier PFF programs, and will lead discussion of alternative models for this aspect of training doctoral students in the broad range of faculty responsibilities.

181. Teaching Workshop. Teaching Social Psychology Hilton Washington, Military Leader: Suzanne Kurth, University of Tennessee, Knoxville 182. Regular Session. Caregiving Work: Reconciling Nurturance with the Organizational Dynamics of Paid Caregiving Hilton Washington, Lincoln East Organizers: Mary Tuominen, Denison University; and Lynet Uttal, University of Wisconsin, Madison Presider: Mary Tuominen, Denison University Paid Care for the Elderly: The Dynamics between Paid and Relational Care. Pamela Herd, Syracuse University Problematizing Emotional Caregiving: The Case of Doula Practice. Christine Morton, University of California, Los Angeles Multiple Realities of Work and Care in an "Alzheimer's" Group Home. Christopher Wellin, University of California, San Francisco; and Dale Jaffe, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee Discussion: Lynet Uttal, University of Wisconsin, Madison

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

183. Regular Session. Work and the Workplace II Marriott Wardman Park, Balcony B Organizer and Presider: Angela Haddad, Central Michigan University Female Concentration and the Adoption of Parental Leave in Japanese Work Organizations. Tetsushi Fujimoto, Nanzan University The Organization of Knowledge Work in Comparative Perspective. Karen Shire, Gerhard-Mercator University, Duisburg; and Marek Korcynski, Loughborough University High Performance Work Practices at Century's End: Incidence, Diffusion, Industry Group Differences, and the Economic Environment. Joseph Blasi and Douglas Kruse, Rutgers University Becoming Displaced by Structural Change: The Process, Meaning, and Relations of Displacement for High-Tech Workers in Birmingham, New York. Charles S. Koeber, Wichita State University Discussion: Vicki Smith, University of California, Davis 184. Regular Session. World-System(s) Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson C Organizer: Kathryn B. Ward, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale Development Ideology, State Policy, and the Street Vendors in Port of Spain, Trinidad. Marina Karides, University of Georgia World-Systems and Labor Control: A Case Study of the Triple Exploitation Theory. Niza Licuanan, Kent State University, Trumbull Muslim Politics in the 20th Century World Economy: Remaking Development Ideology in Turkey. Yildiz Atasoy, University of Manitoba The Vanishing Free Market: International Food Orders under British and U.S. Hegemony. William Winders, Emory University Discussion: Terry Boswell, Emory University 185. Regular Session. Potpourri Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia B Organizer: Frank Lechner, Emory University Presider: Paul Jean, Emory University The Gender Gap in Suicide Rates: An Analysis of Twenty Developed Countries, 1955-1994. Phillips Cutright, Indiana University; and Robert M. Fernquist, Central Missouri State University Ethnicity, State, and Civil Society: The Case of the Italian and Jewish Communities of Quebec. Michael Del Balso, Dawson College and McGill University; Michael Rosenberg, Dawson College and Concordia University Predicting Adolescent Sexual Activity: Attachment as a Measure of the Social Bond. Carrie L. Cokely and William S. Pooler, Syracuse University

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Inequality in Chinese Education. Xue Lan Rong, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill; and Tian Jan Shi, Duke University 186. Regular Session. The Sociology of Culture: Cultural Theory Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia A Organizer: Wendy Griswold, Northwestern University Presider: Paul McLean, Rutgers University Everyday Objects as Tools for Framing Political Defiance: Money in Poland in the 1980s. Elzbieta Benson, University of California, Berkeley Culture, Personality, & Emotion in George Herbert Mead: A Critique of Mindless Empiricism in Cultural Sociology. Mark Gould, Haverford College Multiple Realities and Cultural Studies. Norbert Wiley, University of Illinois and University of California, Berkeley Audience Aesthetics and Popular Culture. Denise Bielby, University of California, Santa Barbara Discussion: Paul McLean, Rutgers University 187. Regular Session. Group Processes: Gender in Groups Hilton Washington, Monroe West Organizer and Presider: Jan E. Stets, Washington State University Gender and Leadership in Groups. Peter J. Burke, Washington State University The Institutionalization of Female Leadership in Task Groups. Jeffrey W. Lucas, University of Iowa New Evidence on the Gender Gap in Just Earnings and Its Underlying Mechanisms. Guillermina Jasso, New York University; and Robert K. Shelly, Ohio University Status Processes and the Division of Labor in Households. Kei Nomaguchi and Barbara F. Meeker, University of Maryland, College Park 188. Regular Session. Immigrant Families Marriott Wardman Park, Harding Organizer and Presider: Mia Tuan, University of Oregon The Effects of Immigration on Three Generations of Dominican and Puerto Rican Women. Stefan Bosworth, Yeshiva University; and Rosie M. Soy, Hudson County Community College Family Influences on the Educational Outcomes of Immigrant Youth. Grace Kao, University of Pennsylvania The Immigrant Family in 2nd Generation Educational Outcomes: The Chinese American Case. Vivian Louie, Yale University Immigrant Generation, Assimilation and Adolescent Psychological Wellbeing. Kathryn Harker, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

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Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

189. Regular Session. Poverty Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson A Organizers: Hector Cordero-Guzman, New School for Social Research; and Frank Bonilla, City University of New York Presider: Hector Cordero-Guzman, New School for Social Research The Probability of Continuous, Transitional, and Return Utilization of Food Stamps and Medicaid after Exiting from AFDC/TANF: An Examination of Caseload Exits and the Rate of Recidivism in Texas. Tami Swenson, Steve White, and Steve H. Murdock, Texas A&M University Welfare Caseload Decline and Trends in Wisconsin's Poverty Population. 1986-1997. Tom Moore, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee; and Vicky Selkowe, Institute for Wisconsin's Future Poverty Spells Across the Adult Life Course: How Likely and How Long? Mark R. Rank, Washington University; and Thomas A. Hirschl, Cornell University Conceptualizing Child Neglect: The Failure to Distinguish Intentional Neglect from Poverty. Carson Hicks, Columbia University Discussion: Hector Cordero-Guzman, New School for Social Research 190. Regular Session. Teaching Sociology: ClassroomBased Exercises for Developing Critical Thinking Skills Hilton Washington, Independence Organizer: Jack Niemonen, University of South Dakota Presider: Ali Kamali, Missouri Western State College Mapping Sociological Concepts. Barbara Trepagnier, Southwest Texas State University Teaching Critical Observation as a Sociological Tool. David Stevens and Michelle VanNatta, Northwestern University Teaching Qualitative Coding in Undergraduate Field Methods Classes: An Exercise Based on Personal-Column Ads. Marybeth C. Stalp and Linda Grant, University of Georgia All the News That's NOT Fit to Print: Using Censored Stories as an Exercise in Critical Pedagogy. Peter Kaufman, State University of New York, New Paltz Discussion: Ali Kamali, Missouri Western State College 191. Section on Sociology of Sex and Gender. Gender Inequality in Wages and Opportunities at the Century's End (co-sponsored with the ASA Section on Sociology of Population) Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom Salon 2 Organizer and Presider: Irene Padavic, Florida State University Family, Labor Market, and Race/Ethnic Differences in Women's Employment Histories. Hiromi Taniguchi and

Rachel Rosenfeld, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Poverty and Gender: The Process of Falling into Poverty for U.S. Women and Men. Amy G. Cox, Research and Development Corporation Organizational and Individual Determinants of the Fates of Assistant Professors. Lowell Hargens, Ohio State University Gender, Parenting, and Free Time. Marybeth Mattingly, University of Maryland Discussion: Suzanne Bianchi, University of Maryland 192. Section on Peace, War, and Social Conflict. Race, Gender, and Class in the Study of Peace, War, the Military, and Social Conflict (co-sponsored with the ASA Section on Race, Gender, and Class) Hilton Washington, Hamilton Organizers: Mady W. Segal, University of Maryland; and Lynne M. Woehrle, Wilson College Presider: Mady W. Segal, University of Maryland Women in Military Intelligence: The Case of Nisei WACs during World War II. Brenda L. Moore, State University of New York, Buffalo Class Politics during Demobilization from Total War. Alec Campbell, Colby College "We Use It but We Don's Abuse It": Nonviolent Protective Accompaniment and the Use of Ethnicity and Privilege by Peace Brigades International. Patrick G. Coy, Kent State University Nurturers and Keepers of Culture: The Influence of Native American Women on the Development of Collective Action Frames. Timothy B. Gongaware, University of Nebraska, Lincoln Discussion: Lynne M. Woehrle, Wilson College 193. Section on Sociology of Population. Population and Education: Interpreting the Effect of Education on Demographic Outcomes (co-sponsored with the Section on Sociology of Education) Hilton Washington, Thoroughbred Organizer and Presider: Laurie F. DeRose, Univrsity of Maryland Adolescent Sexual Initiation and Academic Attainment. Michelle Frisco, Chandra Muller, and Daniel Powers, University of Texas, Austin Adolescent Fertility and Neighborhood SES Revisited: Determining the Role of Parental Education and Ethnic Variation in a Multi-Level, Ecological Framework. Deborah Roempke Graefe and Gordon F. De Jong, Pennsylvania State University Vital Connections for Students at Risk: Neighborhood and School Influences on Parental Education and Ethnic Variation in a Multi-Level, Ecological Framework. Sophia Catsambis, Queens College, City University of New York

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

Parental Education and Child Diarrhea: An Analysis from Vietnam DHS 1997. Vu Thanh Huyen, Brown University; and Philip Guest, Population Council, Thailand Discussion: David Baker, Pennsylvania State University 194. Section on Political Sociology. Refereed Roundtables and Business Meeting Hilton Washington, International East Refereed Roundtables on Political Sociology (12:30-1:30 p.m.): Organizer: Debra Street, Purdue University 1. Historical and Contemporary Politics of U.S. Welfare Reform Table Presider: Sandra Bender Fromson, University of Connecticut Defining Welfare: Policy Framing in the Struggle over Guaranteed Income, 1966-1980. Brian Steensland, Princeton University Re-motivating Work: State Efforts to Restore the Work Ethic of Welfare Mothers. Deborah L. Little Participatory Democracy, Collective Action, and Social Capital: A Case Study of the Welfare/Workfare Rights Movement. Sandra Bender Fromson, University of Connecticut 2. State/Labor Relations Table Presider: Joel Stillman, University of Arizona Emancipatory Globalization or "Globalization from Below": How the KMU Labor Center of the Philippines Builds International Labor Solidarity. Kim Scipes, University of Illinois, Chicago Privatization and Union Defection from Centralized Bargaining: Lessons from the Mexican Case. Leslie Gates, University of Arizona Democratic Transitions and the Dilemmas for Labor: Elite and Grassroots Organizing Strategies in the Chilean Transition. Joel Stillman, University of Arizona 3. Political Attitudes and Conceptual Issues Table Presider: Adam N. Moskowitz, Ohio State University Exploring the Relationship of Education and Tolerance: A Structural Equation Modeling Approach. Litao Zhao, Stanford University The Structuring of Mass Political Attitudes: Racial Liberalism as a Distinct Dimension of Political Ideology. Adam N. Moskowitz and J. Craig Jenkins, Ohio State University Support for Welfare State Policies in Poland under Conditions of Radical Social Change. Sheri Kunovich, Ohio State University 4. The Politics of Women's Health Table Presider: Susan Halebsky, University of California, San Diego

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Social Policy Reforms within Neo-Liberal Contexts: The Transformation of Infant-Maternity Nutritional Programs in Argentina and Chile. Alma Idiart, Emory University Women and Children Last: The Effect of Development, Health Infrastructure, and Gender Equality on Maternal Mortality. Lisa Morrison, Ohio State University 5. Political Discourse and Claims-Making Table Presider: Martha Easton, University of Minnesota Dichotomy and Political Discourse in the Norwegian 1994 EU Referendum. Martha Easton, University of Minnesota Political Claims-Making Against Racism and Discrimination in Britain and Germany. Ruud Koopmans, Wissenschaftszentrum Berlin fur Sozialforschung; and Paul Statham, University of Leeds 6. Citizenships and Identities I Table Presider: Linda Klouzal, University of California, Santa Barbara Emergent Citizenships: Talking and Practicing Participatory Governance. Gianpaolo Baiocchi, University of Wisconsin, Madison Biography and Revolution: Relationship Ties and Political Conversion in the Early Life of Ernesto Che Guevara. Linda Klouzal, University of California, Santa Barbara 7. Citizenships and Identities II Table Presider: Chad Alan Goldberg, New School for Social Research The New Right, Social Citizenship, and a Reconstructed Tocqueville. Chad Alan Goldberg, New School for Social Research Of Witnesses and Witch Hunts: Witness Behavior before the House Un-American Activitis Committee. Max Herman, Oberlin College 8. Power and Participation in Social Movements Table Presider: Betty Dobratz, Iowa State University Vigilantism in Everyday Life. Mark Halling, City University of New York The White Separatist Movement: The Tension among Religious Views and Race. Betty Dobratz, Iowa State University 9. Political Mobilization and Activism Table Presider: Alan Emery, University of California, Los Angeles How Do Organizations Mobilize?: Network vs. Activity Explanations for Political Involvement. Andrew J. Perrin and Margaret Weir, University of California, Berkeley Gay Political Activism. Lisa K. Waldner, University of Houston

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Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

Session 194, continued 10. Policy Learning and Social Change Table Presider: Krista McQueeney, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Institutional Expansion and Political Dilemmas: California's Human Relations Renaissance. Dennis J. Downey, University of California, Irvine Staying the Snowball Effect?: The Impact of Societal, State, and Supra-State Factors on Official English Adoption in the American States, 1983-1998. Krista McQueeney, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Changing American Drug Policy in the 1980s: Social Policy and the Politics of Retrenchment. Ellen Benoit, New York University 11. The State and Civil Society Table Presider: Manali Desai, University of California, Los Angeles Rethinking the Mechanism between Political Authoritarianism and Economic Development from the Postwar Taiwanese Case. Wei-Der Shu, Syracuse University Colonialism and Uneven Development in Malabar, Late Colonial India: Towards Radical Mobilization? Manali Desai, University of California, Los Angeles Corporatism and Pluralism: Reconsidering a Dichotomy. State-Third Sector Relations in Modern Greece. Sophia Tsakraklides 12. Participation, Processes, and Institutions Powers and Connections in Japanese and U.S Politics: The Embedded Network State. Corwin Kruse, University of Minnesota Education and the Culture of Administrative Rationalization: A Cross National Analysis, 19851995. Gili S. Drori, Yong Suk Jang, and John W. Meyer, Stanford University 13. Politics and Economies Table Presider: Beth Mintz, University of Vermont Is Poverty Permanent? William DiFazio, St. John's University Corporate Indebtedness in the Health Care Sector. Beth Mintz, University of Vermont Politics and Administration: The Form of the State and the Use of Tax Farming in the Roman Republic and Empire. Edgar Kiser, University of Washington; and Danielle Kane, University of Pennsylvania Section on Political Sociology Business Meeting (1:30-2:10 p.m.) 195. Section on Latina/o Sociology. Roundtables on Latina/o Sociology and Business Meeting Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom Salon 1 Refereed Roundtables (12:30-1:30 p.m.): Organizer: Rogelio Saenz, Texas A&M University

1. Focus on Latina/o Communities Table Presider: Lynn England, Brigham Young University A Binational Case Study of a Mexican Community: Internal Colonization in the 21st Century. Manuel Barajas, University of California, Riverside History and Lives of Hispanic Women of Carbon County: The Invisible Minority. Lynn England, Brigham Young University Latino Migration and Ethnic Inequality in Houston, 19751998. Karl Eschbach, University of Houston 2. Latinas in the Welfare State and Non-Governmental Organizations Table Presider: Marietta Morrissey, University of Toledo The U.S. Welfare State in Puerto Rico: Gender and Other Inequalities. Marietta Morrissey, University of Toledo Mobilization and Latina Non-Government Organization Activism in Mexico and the U.S. Southwest. Milagros Pena, University of Florida 3. Chicanas in the Entertainment Industry Table Presider: Pamela S. Meyer, Texas A&M University, Corpus Christi Chicanas in Reel Life: Feminism in Chicana/o Cinema. Florence Maatita, University of Connecticut The Sociocultural Dialectics of Minority Stardom: The Case Study of Selena. Bilaye Benibo, Pamela S. Meyer, and Javier Villarreal, Texas A&M University, Corpus Christi 4. Innovations in Latina/o Political Sociology Table Presider: Felipe Gonzales, University of New Mexico Bringing Chicanas/os Back In: A Challenge to the White/Black Binary Paradigm in Civil Rights Scholarship. Elvia Ramirez, University of California, Riverside Hispanic Constellation: The Organization of Political Ethnicity in the Southwest. Felipe Gonzales, University of New Mexico 5. Regional Socioeconomic Patterns among Latinos Table Presider: Gilbert Marzan, State University of New York, Albany Regional Differences in Socioeconomic Status among Puerto Rican Males in the United States: A Descriptive Analysis. Gilbert Marzan, State University of New York, Albany The Melting Pot Revisited: Hispanic Integration in MidSize American Cities. Debra Schleef, Mary Washington College; and H.B. Cavalcanti, University of Richmond 6. Labor Market Experiences of Latina/o Workers Table Presider: Roberto M. De Anda, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Beyond Hispanic: Decomposing the Earnings Gap between Puerto Ricans, Cubans, and Mexicans. Rosalie Torres Stone, University of Connecticut

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

Testing the Validity of Dual Economy and Labor Market Segmentation Models: Through an Empirical Examination of Chicana and Mexicana Labor Market Experiences in Los Angeles during the 1980's. Paul Lopez, California State University, Chico Immigration and Underemployment among Mexican Origin Men and Women. Roberto M. De Anda, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign 7. Industrial and Occupational Patterns of Latina/o Workers Table Presider: Robyn L. Bateman, Baylor University Occupational Distribution of Mexican American Workers: The Impact on Income and the Importance of Networking. Robyn L. Bateman and Amy Pieper, Baylor University Mexican American Representation in Public Administration inTexas Communities, 1980 and 1990. Victor Guadalupe Villarreal, Texas A&M University 8. Potpourri Table Presider: Cruz Torres, Texas A&M University The Effects of Reference Group Influence on Hispanic Consumer Behavior. Leslie McAllister, Baylor University Abriendo Caminos: Experiences and Perceptions of Latino Faculty in Sociology. Cruz Torres, Texas A&M University

1:00 p.m.

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Sessions

197. Information Poster Session. Opportunities for Research Support (to 4:00 p.m.) Hilton Washington, Exhibit Hall Organizers and Presiders: Felice J. Levine and Sarah Skinner, American Sociological Association This poster/exhibit session is an important opportunity to meet program officers and representatives of major research funding institutions to talk about research and fellowship support. This is a chance for convention participants to speak one-on-one with representatives and learn about new and continuing funding initiatives, application procedures and review processes, and elements of a competitive research proposal. Each exhibit provides a visual overview of research funding and the application process, materials for distribution, and time for direct individual discussion. All meeting participants, including students, are encouraged to attend. For detailed information on programs and institutions, see pp. 197.

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Section on Latina/o Sociology Business Meeting (1:30-2:10 p.m.)

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196. Section on Sociology of Religion. Immigration and Religion (co-sponsored by the ASA Section on Sociology of Population) Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland B Organizer: Peggy Levitt, Wellesley College Presider: Prema Kurien, University of Southern California, Los Angeles Transnational Religions and Native Racial Positions: Ethnic Boundaries of Indian American and Korean American Religious Organizations. Pawan H. Dhingra, Cornell University When Immigrants Take Over: The Changing Face of Seventh-day Adventism in England, France, and Canada. Ronald Lawson, Queens College, City University of New York Different Patterns for Different Groups: Explaining the Political Behavior of Indian American Religious Organizations. Prema Kurien, University of Southern California, Los Angeles A Religion Transformed: from Secrecy to Publicity in the National and Transnational Social Spheres. Sehriban Sahin, New School for Social Research Discussion: Christian Smith, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

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7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16.

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National Science Foundation, Division of Social and Economic Sciences, Sociology Program. Patricia White National Science Foundation, Division of Undergraduate Education, Directorate for Education and Human Resources. Myles Boylan National Institutes of Health, National Institute of Child Health and Human Development. Rebecca Clark National Institutes of Health, National Institute of Mental Health. Emeline Otey National Institutes of Health, National Institute on Aging, Behavioral and Social Research Program. Sidney M. Stahl National Institutes of Health, National Cancer Institute, Division of Cancer and Population Sciences, Behavioral Research Program. Veronica Chollette National Institutes of Health, National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism. Susan E. Martin National Institutes of Health, Office of Behavioral and Social Science Research. Susan Persons National Institutes of Health, Office of AIDS Research. Judith D. Auerbach National Institutes of Health, Center for Scientific Review. Michael Micklin Department of Health and Human Services, Office of Research Integrity. Anita Ousley Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Behavioral and Social Sciences Working Group. Karin A. Mack U.S. Department of Justice, National Institute of Justice. Cynthia Mamalian U.S. Department of Justice, National Institute of Justice. Laura Luhn U.S. Department of Justice, National Criminal Justice Reference Service. Cheryll Bissell U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Justice Programs, Office of Juvenile Justice & Delinquency Prevention. Charlotte Kerr U.S. Department of Education, Office of Educational Research and Improvement. Ram N. Singh

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

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18. The Spencer Foundation. Susan Dauber 19. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Cooperative State Research, Education, and Extension Service. John Michael and Mark Bailey 20. United States Institute of Peace. John T. Crist 21. Council for International Exchange of Scholars. Christine Morfit 22. Civic Education Project. Emily Lehrman 23. National Endowment for the Humanities. Kathy A. Toavs 24. National Humanities Alliance. Jessica Jones 25. American Council of Learned Societies. Donna Heiland 26. Consortium of Social Science Associations. Howard Silver 27. Social Science Research Council. Jennifer A. Winther 28. Social Science Research Council, Sexuality Research Fellowship Program. Funmi E. Vogt 29. American Sociological Association, Minority Fellowship Program. Edward Murguia 30. American Sociological Association, Research and Fellowship Support for Sociologists. Roberta SpalterRoth

1:30 p.m.

Meetings

Department Resources Group Program Review Refresher— Hilton Washington, Map Dissertation Award Selection Committee—Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8218 Distinguished Career Award for the Practice of Sociology Selection Committee—Hilton Washington, C328 Section on Sociology of Sex and Gender Business Meeting— Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom Salon 2

2:30 p.m.

200. Special Session. Changing Undergraduate Admissions Policy : An Example of Sociological Practice in the University of California and the University of Texas Hilton Washington, Lincoln West Organizer: Rodolfo Alvarez, University of California, Los Angeles Panel: Rodolfo Alvarez, University of California, Los Angeles Richard Flacks, University of California, Santa Barbara David Montejano, University of Texas, Austin Discussion: Amitai Etzioni, George Washington University

Meetings

Section on Latina/o Sociology Business Meeting (to 2:10 p.m.)—Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom Salon 1 Section on Political Sociology Business Meeting (to 2:10 p.m.)—Hilton Washington, International East

2:30 p.m.

199. Special Session. Global Financial Turbulence and Cities Hilton Washington, Georgetown East Organizer: Susan S. Fainstein, Rutgers University Presider: John R. Logan, University at Albany, State University of New York Panel: Janet Abu-Lughod, New School for Social Research Fred Block, University of California, Davis Manuel Castells, University of California, Berkeley Saskia Sassen, University of Chicago

Sessions

198. Thematic Session. Marxism and Capitalism in the 21st Century Hilton Washington, International West Organizer and Presider: Erik Olin Wright, University of Wisconsin, Madison Panel: Giovanni Arrighi, Johns Hopkins University Robert Brenner, University of California, Los Angeles

201. Special Session. Race Relations and the Changing Meaning of Whiteness Hilton Washington, Jefferson East Organizer: Charles A. Gallagher, Georgia State University Presider: Woody Doane, University of Hartford White Racial Projects. Howard Winant, Temple University Some Are More Equal Than Others: Whiteness and Colorblind Ideology at the Dawn of the 21st Century. Amanda E. Lewis, University of Michigan Pedagogy of Whiteness in Popular Culture. Henry Giroux, Pennsylvania State University Discussion: Woody Doane, University of Hartford 202. Special Session. Religion and Global Civil Society (co-sponsored by the Association for the Sociology of Religion) Omni Shoreham Organizer and Presider: Jose Casanova, New School for Social Research Panel: Grace Davie, University of Exeter Robert Hefner, Boston University Catalina Romero, Pontifica Universidad Catolica, Peru George Thomas, Arizona State University 203. Undergraduate Program Directors Conference Marriott Wardman Park, Harding Organizer and Presider: Carla B. Howery, American Sociological Association Panel: Allen Scarboro, Augusta State University Edward L. Kain, Southwestern University

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

Helen A. Moore, University of Nebraska, Lincoln Sam Cohn, Texas A&M University What are the key elements of a strong research program for undergraduates? What are the necessary prerequisites for students to achieve maximum learning and personal growth in these experiences? How can this learning and growth be assessed? How are these experiences integrated into the curriculum? What are some promising practices and models in sociology departments? All directors of undergraduate programs are invited to participate in the discussion of these important issues.

204. Didactic Seminar. Teaching and Research in Cyberspace Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware B Ticket required for admission Leaders: Andrea Baker, Ohio University, Lancaster Chris Toulouse, Hofstra University Jessie Daniels, University of California, Berkeley This seminar will survey emerging issues in the use of the internet in teaching and research, with presentations from three panelists who have extensive, and varied, experience with internet technology. Sociologists will do more and more research online as people integrate cyberspace into their experience of the everyday world. Rather than an "exotic" or "deviant" form of human behavior, the online world is increasingly a place where people are forming and maintaining vital communities and significant relationships. Andrea Baker, drawing on her own research of online romances, will raise questions about the advantages and disadvantages of applying traditional methods of interviews, questionnaires and participant/observation to the virtual realm. Chris Toulouse will discuss issues arising from the use of cutting-edge internet-based teaching tools (known as server scripts) which allow instructors to go beyond merely posting course home pages and move toward sculpting participation in coursework. These tools, including forms, weighted quizzes and online forums, can provide new kinds of challenges for instructors and unique learning opportunities for students. Toulouse will address some of the skills required to master these new tools and offer some suggestions for how best to implement them. Jessie Daniels will briefly discuss some of her own experiences with both research and teaching "race relations" online. Daniels will also address a few of the questions emerging around these new horizons, such as, what are some of the theoretical, methodological and ethical implications of doing sociology online; what is in the best interest of faculty for implementing new practices; and what are the competing agendas trying to shape their use. For more information about this seminar, please visit: http://www.jessiedaniels.org/ASA/seminar.

205. MFP Professional Development Workshop. Research Directions and Issues in the Sociology of Mental Health (co-sponsored by the ASA Minority Fellowship Program and the ASA Minority Affairs Program) Hilton Washington, Military Organizer and Presider: Edward Murguia, American Sociological Association Panel: Carol Aneshensel, University of California, Los Angeles William R. Avison, University of Western Ontario David R. Williams, University of Michigan The purpose of this year's session is to lay out some parameters of the sociology of mental health, and to indicate in what directions

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researchers are going and why they are going in those directions. Also to be addressed are the debates going on in the field, as well as possible research gaps in the sociology of mental health. The panel is composed of well-recognized researchers in the sociology of mental health.

206. Academic Workplace Workshop. Development and Administration of Internship Programs in Sociology Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8219 Leaders: Richard Salem, University of Wisconsin, Whitewater Charles S. Green III, University of Wisconsin, Whitewater Rebecca Bach, Duke University Jammie Price, University of North Carolina, Wilmington This workshop will focus on four general issues: the development of internships in the community, the supervision of internships, departmental advising in preparation for internships, and the content of a prerequisite course linking internships to the sociology major. Handouts relevant to these issues will be provided.

207. Teaching Workshop. Teaching Sociology of Aging Hilton Washington, Monroe East Leaders: Carolyn C. Rizza, Slippery Rock University Suzanne R. Kunkel, Miami University, Ohio Leslie A. Morgan, University of Maryland, Baltimore County The sociological perspective on aging helps students move beyond their individual experience to understand how historical events, social location and opportunity structures affect aging. The goals of this workshop are: (1) to identify the introductory content which best conveys this perspective; (2) to discuss how this content differs from other introductory courses in aging; and (3) to share teaching techniques which effectively present the sociological perspective in ways which nurture student's sociological imagination, convey the diversity of the aging experience, and provide information which is personally meaningful and professionally useful. Participants are encouraged to bring examples of successful exercises and assignments for discussion.

208. Teaching Workshop. Effective Use of Visual Materials in Teaching Sociology Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware A Leaders: Tim Curry, The Ohio State University John Marshall Grady, Wheaton College J. Brian Brown, The Ohio State University This workshop invites participants to consider visual dimensions of gender and sexual identities. Two visual techniques will be demonstrated. J. Brian Brown will present his work with documentary still photographs as applied to the drag identity. John Grady will show how to use a data base program to create a computer file of gender advertisements for analysis and classroom exercises. The workshop will also provide information on videos that can be rented or purchases to help students explore sociological concepts concerning race, class, and gender inequalities. If time permits, brief portions of a few of these videos will be shown to stimulate discussion on their pedagogical value.

209. Open Refereed Roundtables. Criminology, Law, Education, Youth, and Race/Ethnicity Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom Salon 1 Organizer: Che-Fu Lee, The Catholic University of America

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Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

Session 209, continued 1. Theories of Criminology Table Presider: Kennon Rice, North Carolina State University Finding an Appropriate Metatheory for Social Disorganization Theory: A Structuration Model for the Integration of Unit Theory in Criminology. Kennon Rice and Richard D. Fave, North Carolina State University Caribbean Criminology as an Empirical Question: Confronting the MegaCity-Urban Bias in Current Criminological Theorizing. Peter K. B. St. Jean, University of Chicago 2. Social Control Release from Prison: The First Thirty Days a Study of Family and Successful Reintegration. Perry Deess and Marta Nelson, Vera Institute of Justice If "Not God," Then Who?: Managing Conflict in Alcoholics Anonymous. Heath C. Hoffman, University of Georgia 3. Law and Society Table Presider: J. Dennis Willigan, University of Utah Institutionalized Discrimination in Federal Jury Pools. J. Dennis Willigan, University of Utah American Exceptionalism and the Death Penalty. Jon C. Pennington, University of California, Berkeley 4. Sociology of Education Table Presider: James G. Hougland, Jr., University of Kentucky Education Reform and the Public: A Study of Attitudes during the First Decade of the Kentucky Education Reform Act. James G. Hougland, Jr., University of Kentucky Costs and Benefits of Religious Identification for United States Universities. Stephanie Litizzette Mixon, Baylor University Early Signals of More Women and Fewer Men in College: Changes in College Expectations in 1979 and 1997 NLSY. John Reynolds and Jennifer Pemberton, Florida State University 5. Youth Development Table Presider: Janis Whitlock, Cornell University Do They Care?: Changes and Correlates of a Compassion Orientation in High School Youth from 1980-1997. Janis Whitlock, Cornell University Gendering and Anthropomorphization of Human-Horse Interactions in Young Adult Literature: A Challenge to the Status Quo? Judith A. Warner and Frances Rhodes, Texas A&M International University 6. Racial/Ethnic Identity Fringes of American Indian Identity: The Racial Identification of People with American Indian Heritage. Carolyn A. Liebler, University of Wisconsin, Madison

Biracial Identity: A Collective Process. Renee Lee, Portland State University 7. Racism Table Presider: Rachel Delgado, George Mason University People, Not Mascots: Race, Policy, Activism, and Social Movement on Pejorative Symbolism in American Indian Sports Icons. Rachel Delgado, George Mason University; Michael S. Haney, National Coalition on Racism in Sports and the Media; and Lawrence Baca, Native American Bar Association 8. Learning and Assessment Table Presider: Nicole Bouchet, University of Akron The Relationship between Giftedness, Gender, and Overexcitability. Nicole Bouchet and R. Frank Falk, University of Akron Alternative Approaches and issues in Assessing Student Learning. Martin Patchen, Purdue University 9. Violence/Misbehavior Table Presider: Shanhe Jiang, University of Akron Inmate Misconduct: A Test of the Deprivation, Importation, and Situational Models. Shanhe Jiang and Marianne Fisher-Giorlando, Grambling State University The Extreme Fan: Understanding the Social Constructions and Causes of Sports Fan Violence. Russell E. Ward, Jr., Francis Marion University 210. Regular Session. Aging: Relationships and Identities Hilton Washington, Georgetown West Organizer and Presider: Tracy L. Dietz, University of Central Florida Age Embodied. Cheryl Laz, University of Southern Maine Lingering and Changing Identities in Retirement. Donald C. Reitzes, Georgia State University; and Elizabeth J. Mutran, University of North Carolina Grandparenting and Age Identity. Gayle Kaufman, Davidson College; and Glen H. Elder, Jr., University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Intergenerational Relationships and Emotional Well-Being: When Grandparents Live with Grandchildren (and Children). Amy M. Pienta, Wayne State University 211. Regular Session. Community and Development I Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland A Organizer and Presider: Albert Hunter, Northwestern University Investing in Chicago: Urban Elites, Public Works, and Urban Spatial Development. Bonnie Lindstrom, University of Illinois, Chicago The Dawn of the Living Wage: The Politics of a Local Development Strategy. Isaac Martin, University of California, Berkeley

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

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Confined in the Prison-Industrial Complex: Prison Expansion and Local Economic Growth in U.S. Countries. Gregory Hooks, Clayton Mosher, Thomas Rotolo, and Linda Lobao, Ohio State University

Labor Markets, Transition and Labor Market Transitions in Contemporary Russia. Theodore Gerber, University of Arizona Discussion: Matthew McKeever, University of Kentucky

212. Regular Session. Culture and Identity Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia A Organizer and Presider: S. Craig Watkins, University of Texas, Austin Labor of Love: Motherhood and Meaning among LowIncome, White Women. Maria Kefalas, University of Pennsylvania Mothers and the Construction of Race and Cultural Identities in Filipino-White Multiracial Families. Evelyn I. Rodriguez, University of California, Berkeley Emotional Memories: Nostalgia and Identity among China's Red Guard Generation in the 1990s. Guobin Yang, University of Hawaii, Manoa Negotiating Black Identities: The Construction and Use of Social Boundaries among Middle-Class Black Suburbanites. Karyn Lacy, Harvard University Discussion: S. Craig Watkins, University of Texas, Austin

215. Regular Session. Mathematical Sociology: Models of the Emergence of Social Structure Hilton Washington, Monroe West Organizer and Presider: Barbara F. Meeker, University of Maryland The Nonlinear Growth of Ottoman Empire and Her Fractal Dimension. Gungor Gundoz, Teknik University, Ankara, Turkey Opposition Relations: An Algebraic Formulation of Spinoza's heory of Human Relationships. John Bramsen Explaining Norms of Cooperation: Nested Hierarchies. SunKi Chai, University of Arizona The Power You Need for a Cost You can Afford: How to Use Individual and Collective Sanctions. Joseph M. Whitmeyer, University of North Carolina, Charlotte

213. Regular Session. Indigenous Peoples Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia C Organizer: Jonathan Warren, University of Washington, Seattle Presider: France Winddance Twine, University of California, Santa Barbara Repatriation as Healing the Wounds of the Trauma of History: Cases of Native Americans in the United States of America. Russell Thornton, University of California, Los Angeles Paths Toward a Mohawk Nation: Narrative of Citizenship and Nationhood in Kahnawake. Audra Simpson, McGill University Lack of Respect for Navajo Elders: English Language as a Form of Control and Intimidation by English-Speaking Navajo. Wesley Thomas, Idaho State University Transnational Dimensions of Indigenous Rights: The San Blas Kuna and the Brazilian Amazonian Yanomani. Gregory M. Maney, University of Wisconsin, Madison 214. Regular Session. The Labor Market in Post-Soviet Russia Marriott Wardman Park, Balcony B Organizer: Thomas A. DiPrete, Duke University Presider: Matthew McKeever, University of Kentucky Labor Market of Sweepstakes?:Employment in the Russian Federation. Dennis Donahue, University of Texas, Austin How Russian Industry Works: The Effects of NeoPaternalistic Factory Regimes on the Developing Labor Market. Caleb Southworth, University of California, Los Angeles

216. Regular Session. Consequences of War Hilton Washington, Hamilton Organizer and Presider: Wilbur Scott, University of Oklahoma Pathologies of War: Shell Shock, Battle Fatigue, and Posttraumatic Stress Disorder. Marisa Smith, University of California, San Diego Predictors of Psychological, Physical, and Organizational Health among U.S. Army Soldiers Deployed in Kosovo. Robert Bienvenu II, U.S. Army Medical Research Unit, Europe Kicking the Vietnam Syndrome: How Contemporary War Is Mediated to the American Public. Ann Marie Strahm, University of Oregon A Knock at the Door: Managing Death in the Israeli Defense Forces. Vered Vinitzky-Seroussi and Eyal Ben-Ari, Hebrew University of Jerusalem 217. Regular Session. Occupations and Professions: Specialization in Health Professions Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson C Organizer: Robert Zussman, University of Massachusetts Amherst Presider: Renee Anspach, University of Michigan Cohort and Gender Changes in Specialty Choices among Physicians, 1970-1990. Leslie Killgore, Mary Fennell, and Kevin Leicht, University of Iowa National Patterns of Medical Specialization: Comparing Medical Genetics in the UK and Canada. William Leeming The Division of Labour in Vision Care: Professional Competence in a System of Professions. Fred Stevens, Frans van der Horst, Frans Nijhuis, and Sylvia Bours, University of Maastricht, The Netherlands Discussion: Sydney Halpern, University of Illinois, Chicago

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Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

218. Regular Session. Social Movements: Movements of Resistance Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson B Organizer: Jack M. Bloom, Indiana University Northwest Presider: Nancy A. Naples, University of California, Irvine Ideology and Culture among Core Activists in the British AntiRoads Movement. Cristina Eguiarte, University of California, Berkeley Mobilizing Against Modern Technology. Ed Walsh, State College, Pennsylvania Resistance to Vaccination: Medical "Counter-Movements" in American Discourse on Pertussis. Jacob Heller, State University of New York, Stony Brook Contradictory Discourse in Resistance Communities. Melissa S. Fry, University of Arizona Discussion: Nancy A. Naples, University of California, Irvine 219. Regular Session. Social Stratification: Education and Social Stratification Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson A Organizer: Peter Meiksins, Cleveland State University Presider: Sarah H. Matthews, Cleveland State University The Total Impact of the Family on Educational Attainment: A Comparative Sibling Analysis. Inge Sieben and Paul M. de Graaf, University of Njimegen, The Netherlands Inner City/Rural Disadvantage, Educational Process and Achievement/Attainment in the U.S. Vincent Roscigno, Ohio State University; Donald Tomaskovic-Devey, North Carolina State University; and Martha Crowley, Ohio State University Teacher Quality and Educational Inequality. Richard Ingersoll, University of Georgia Pathways to Prominence: Social Origins, Educational Prestige and Career Achievements of American Rhodes Scholars. Ted I.K. Youn, Karen Arnold, and Katya Salkever, Boston College Discussion: Caroline Persell, New York University 220. Section on Sociology of Population. Refereed Roundtables on Population and Business Meeting Hilton Washington, International East Refereed Roundtables (2:30-3:30 p.m.): Organizer: Craig St. John 1. Alternatives to Childbearing Table Presider: Jennifer Ridenhour-Levitt, University of California, San Diego The Surrogate Mothering Process: Redefining and Reinstating Gender and Class Boundaries. Jennifer Ridenhour-Levitt, University of California, San Diego Is Adoption a Cure for Infertility and Subfecundity? Katie J. Kendall, Texas A&M University 2. Fertility in the United States Table Presider: Ann Meier, University of Wisconsin, Madison

Adolescents' Transition to First Intercourse: Religiosity and Attitudes about Sex. Ann Meier, University of Wisconsin, Madison Maternal Employment Experience and Birth Spacing. Marin Clarkberg, Cornell University Virgins, Planners, or Just Plain Lucky: The Contraceptive Behavior of African American Elites. Averil Y. Clarke, University of Pennsylvania 3. Aging and Mortality in the United States Table Presider: Roberta Satow, Brooklyn College, City University of New York Baby Boomers Caring for Elderly Parents. Roberta Satow, Brooklyn College, City University of New York Wealth and Mortality among the Oldest Old. Johnny Johnson, Florida State University 4. Education, Work Status, and Fertility in Southeast Asia Table Presider: Sara Curran, Princeton University Changing Educational Opportunities in Thailand: The Effects of Gender, Siblings, and Village Location. Sara Curran and Wendy Cadge, Princeton University; Anchalee Varangrat, Mahidol University Correspondence between Survey and In-depth Interview Data on the Subject of Pregnancy Wantedness in the Philippines. Lindy Williams and Teresa Sobieszczyk, Cornell University The Relationship between Fertility Behavior and Work Status in Taiwanese Women: A Contextual Analysis. Jin-Kai Godfrey Li, Texas A&M University 5. Health and Mortality in Developing Nations Table Presider: Ami Moore, Bowling Green State University AIDS Knowledge and Attitudes among Togolese Men and Women. Ami Moore, Bowling Green State University Infant Mortality and Inequality in Nepal. Pranab Rajbhandari, Michigan State University 6. Fertility in Africa and the Middle East Table Presider: Laurie F. DeRose, University of Maryland Fertility Effects of Education Decline. Laurie F. DeRose, University of Maryland Spouses' Fertility Desires and Unmet Need in Ethiopia. Susan E. Short, Brown University; Gebre-Egziabher Kiros, Brown University The Recent Rise in Palestinian Fertility: Permanent or Transient? Marwan Khawaja, Fafo Institute for Applied Social Science 7. Marital Dissolution and Unmarried Partnering Table Presider: Joseph Hopper, University of Chicago Extramarital Affairs and the Dissolution of Unions. Joseph Hopper, University of Chicago; and Voon Chin Phua, TIAA-CREF Changing Partners: Toward a Macrostructural Opportunity Theory of Marital Dissolution. Scott J. South, Katherine Trent, and Yang Shen, State University of New York, Albany

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

Unmarried Partners: A Comparison of Anglo, Black, Asian, and Hispanic Cohabitation from an Assimilation Perspective. Carol Walther, Texas A&M University 8. Migration and Immigration Table Presider: Jeffrey J. Kuenzi, U.S. Bureau of the Census A Fuller Picture: Integrating Data Sources for the Study of Domestic Migration in the U.S. Jeffrey J. Kuenzi and Marc J. Perry, U.S. Bureau of the Census Why People Move: Examining the March 1998 Current Population Survey. Jason Schachter, U.S. Bureau of the Census Improving International Migration Statistics in the United States: Data Collection. Joseph Costanzo, U.S. Bureau of the Census 9. Residential Segregation Table Presider: Christian M. Calienes, Pennsylvania State University Are More African Americans Living in Less Segregated Environments?: Evidence from Metropolitan Countries, 1980-1990. Christian M. Calienes and Barry Lee, Pennsylvania State University Social Isolation, Economic Segregation, and Civic Engagement in the U.S. Troy C. Blanchard, Louisiana State University Community Effects on Adolescent Sexual Activity. Eric P. Baumer, University of Missouri, St. Louis; and Scott J. South, State University of New York, Albany Section on Sociology of Population Business Meeting and Reception (3:30-4:10 p.m.) 221. Section on Political Sociology. Politics and Institutions: Building and Changing Social Orders Hilton Washington, Lincoln East Organizer and Presider: Elisabeth S. Clemens, University of Arizona Institutional Contingency in General Theories: The Case of Rate Regulation in the Fire Insurance Industry. Tim Bartley and Marc Schneiberg, University of Arizona Citizens and Manufacturers: Political Institutions, Class Formation, and Ideologies of Work among Cincinnati Employers,1880-1910. Jeffrey Haydu, University of California, San Diego Breaking the Iron Law of Oligarchy: Union Revitalization in the American Labor Movement. Kim Voss and Rachel Sherman, University of California, Berkeley Creative Partnering: The Cooptation of an Emergent Organization Form amidst Recombinant Capitalism. Paul Hirsch, Northwestern University; and Hayagreeva Rao, Emory University Discussion: Elisabeth S. Clemens, University of Arizona

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222. Section on Sociology of Emotions. Refereed Roundtables. Researching Emotions: Theoretical and Empirical Considerations Hilton Washington, Jefferson West Organizers: Simon Gottschalk, University of Nevada, Las Vegas; and Lori Holyfield, University of Arkansas 1. Emotional Dimensions of Work and Play Table Presider: Douglas J. Adams, University of Arkansas Affective Dimension of Lottery Participation. Douglas J. Adams, University of Arkansas Fear in the Garden of Eden: Supermarket Cashiers in Brazil and Quebec. Angelo Soares, University of Quebec 2. Emotions and Illness Table Presider: David A. Karp, Boston College Living One Day at a Time: Parental Dilemmas in Caring for Children with Cancer. Annika Lillrank, Brandeis University Committed to Care: Mental Illness, Family Ties, Moral Responsibility. David A. Karp, Boston College 3. Emotion Talk: Language, Emotion, and Paradox Table Presider: Lori Holyfield, University of Arkansas Language, Emotions, and Paradox: Young Women Talking Violence. Vivian Chavez, University of Michigan Infusing Emotions in the Classroom: Lessons from Cooley and Mead. Lori Holyfield, University of Arkansas 4. From Emotionality to Rationality: Theoretical Models for Consideration Table Presider: Robert Prus, University of Waterloo Generating, Intensifying, and Redirecting Emotionality: Aristotle and the Study of Rhetoric. Robert Prus and Lorraine Prus, University of Waterloo Beruf, Emotions, and Rationality in Weber's Sociology. Jack Barbalet, University of Leicester 5. Emotions Potpourri Table Presider: Margaret Malone, Wilfrid Laurier University An Affect Control Model of Trust and Lying Japan, China, and the U.S. Herm W. Smith, University of Missouri, St. Louis Knowledge, Gender, Marital Separation, and the "Financial": Carol's Story. Margaret Malone, Wilfrid Laurier University 223. Section on Sociology of Religion. Social Networks and the Maintenance of Religious Meaning Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland C Organizer and Presider: C. Kirk Hadaway, United Church of Christ The Popular Imagination and the Vernacular Religion (a.k.a the "funky" side of religion): An Ethnographic Exploration of Beliefs in the Supernatural among

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

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Session 223, continued Contemporary U.S. Teens. Lynn Schofield Clark, University of Colorado, Boulder The Effects of Professional Training: The Social and Religious Capital Acquired in Seminaries. Kevin D. Dougherty and Roger Finke, Purdue University Communion Tables and "Dog Collars": Maintenance and Negotiations of Rituals, Images, and Titles of Women in the Episcopal Priesthood. Amy A. Holzgang, Syracuse University Friendship Networks and Religious Marginality. Penny L. Marler, Samford University Discussion: Rhys H. Williams, Southern Illinois University

3:30 p.m.

Meetings

Section on Sociology of Population Business Meeting/Reception (to 4:10 p.m.)—Hilton Washington, International East

4:30 p.m.

Plenary

224. Plenary Session. ASA Awards Ceremony and Presidential Address Hilton Washington, International Center Presider: Nan Lin, Duke University Moment of Remembrance Awards Ceremony Presider: Nan Lin, Duke University Moment of Remembrance Award Ceremony Presider: Carole C. Marks, University of Delaware 2000 Dissertation Award Recipient: Wan He, University of Maryland, for “Choice and Constraints: Explaining Chinese Americans’ Low Fertility” 2000 Jessie Bernard Award Recipient: Maxine Baca Zinn, Michigan State University 2000 DuBois-Johnson-Frazier Award Recipient: Charles U. Smith, Florida A&M University 2000 Award for Public Understanding of Sociology Recipient: Arlie Russell Hochschild, University of California, Berkeley 2000 Distinguished Career Award for the Practice of Sociology Recipients: Francis Fox Piven, City University of New York Graduate Center; and Richard A. Cloward, Columbia University 2000 Distinguished Contributions to Teaching Award Recipient: George Ritzer, University of Maryland 2000 Distinguished Scholarly Publication Award Recipient: Charles Tilly, Columbia University, for Durable Inequality (University of California Press, 1998) 2000 Career of Distinguished Scholarship Award Recipient: Seymour Martin Lipset, George Mason University Presidential Address Introduction. Nan Lin, Duke University Social Justice and Sociology: Agendas for the 21st Century. Joe R. Feagin, University of Florida

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

6:30 p.m.

Special Event

Honorary Reception—Hilton Washington, International East Sponsors: University of California, Berkeley, Department of Sociology City University of New York Graduate Center, PhD Program in Political Science College of William and Mary, Department of Sociology Columbia University, Department of Sociology Cornell University, Department of Sociology University of Florida, Department of Sociology George Mason University, Department of Sociology & Anthropology George Mason University, School of Public Policy George Washington University, Department of Sociology Harvard University, Department of Sociology Howard University, Department of Sociology & Anthropology The John Hopkins University, Department of Sociology Loyola College in Maryland, Department of Sociology University of Maryland, College Park, Department of Sociology Marymount University, Department of Sociology & Criminal Justice Michigan State University, Department of Sociology University of New Mexico, Department of Sociology University of Oregon, Department of Sociology University of Pennsylvania, Department of Sociology Pennsylvania State University, Department of Sociology Sweet Briar College, Departments of Anthropology & Sociology Swarthmore College, Department of Sociology & Anthropology Temple University, Department of Sociology University of Texas at Austin, Department of Sociology Washington State University, Departments of Sociology & Rural Sociology Western Maryland College, Department of Sociology Donors: American University, Department of Sociology Bryn Mawr College, Department of Sociology Catholic University of America, Department of Sociology City University of New York Graduate Center, PhD Program in Sociology Old Dominion University, Department of Sociology & Criminal Justice St. Joseph’s University, Department of Sociology Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, Department of Sociology

7:00 p.m.

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Other Groups

Sociological Research Association Reception/Dinner (to 11:00 p.m.)—Hilton Washington, Jefferson West

7:15 p.m.

Other Groups

Sociologists for Women in Society Banquet (to 10:00 p.m.)— Mama Ayesha's Restaurant

7:30 p.m.

Other Groups

"Scholarship of Teaching and Learning" Task Forces (to 9:30 p.m.)—Hilton Washington, State Sociological Imagination Group: Open Research Conference on Bridging Specialized Fields II (to 10:30 p.m.)—Hilton Washington, Georgetown West University of Pennsylvania Department of Sociology Reception (to 9:30 p.m.)—Hilton Washington, Parlor 1101

8:30 p.m.

Other Groups

Christian Sociological Society—Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia B International Research Committee on Disasters Panel— Hilton Washington, Independence Sociologists' AIDS Network (SAN)—Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia A "Sociology of Economics" Interest Group (Roger Krohn)— Hilton Washington, Georgetown East South Asian Sociologists Caucus—Hilton Washington, Hamilton University of Wisconsin-Madison Alumni Reception—Hilton Washington, Caucus

9:00 p.m.

Special Reception

Teaching Enhancement Fund Evening (to 11:00 p.m., ticket required for admission)—Hilton Washington, Parlor 7101

9:30 p.m.

Special Reception

Minority Fellowship Program Benefit Reception (to 11:30 p.m., ticket required for admission)—Hilton Washington, Thoroughbred

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

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Monday, August 14

Section on Rational Choice Council Meeting (to 9:30 a.m.)— Hilton Washington, Georgetown West Section on Sociological Practice Council Meeting (to 9:30 a.m.)—Hilton Washington, Independence

The length of each session/meeting activities is one hour and forty minutes, unless noted otherwise. Session presiders and committee chairs are requested to see that sessions and meetings end on time to avoid conflicts with subsequent activities scheduled into the same room and to allow participants time to transit between hotels.

8:30 a.m.

7:00 a.m.

Other Groups

NIMH Breakfast for the Section on Sociology of Mental Health—Hilton Washington, Jefferson West Sociologists for Women in Society Business Meeting— Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland B

7:30 a.m.

Meetings

Section on Social Psychology Council Meeting (to 8:15 a.m.)—Hilton Washington, C326

8:00 a.m.

Meetings

Directors of Graduate Studies Conference (to 12:10 p.m., ticket required for admission)—Hilton Washington, Map

8:30 a.m.

Other Groups

ESS Sociological Forum Editorial Board—Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8209

8:30 a.m.

Meetings

2001 Program Committee—Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8218 Career of Distinguished Scholarship Award Selection Committee—Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8217 DuBois-Johnson-Frazier Award Selection Committee— Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8211 Journal of Health and Social Behavior Editorial Board—Hilton Washington, C328 Minority Fellowship Program Advisory Committee—Hilton Washington, C327 New General Perspectives Journal Editorial Board—Hilton Washington, Hemisphere Orientation for New Section Officers—Marriott Wardman Park, Balcony C

Sessions

225. Thematic Session. Justice in Native America: Future and Past Millennia Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland C Organizer: James V. Fenelon (Lakota), California State University, San Bernardino Presider: Rodney Brod (Nemaha), University of Montana Sovereignty and Economic Justice. Manley Begay (Navajo), Harvard University Cultural Struggles for Survival. Duane Champagne (Turtle Mountain Chippewa), University of California, Los Angeles Repatriation and Representations of Native America. Suzan Shown Harjo (Cheyenne & Hodulge Muscogee), Morning Star Institute Justice and Cultural Sovereignty. Carol Lujan (Dine' Navajo), Arizona State University Discussion: James V. Fenelon (Lakota), California State University, San Bernardino This thematic session presents Native American and Indian Nation perspectives on "Justice" in terms of the millennium just ending, and the one just beginning—500 years of colonial oppression, genocide, and cultural domination, with a prospectus for the future of surviving Native Nations. Indigenous Scholars and Organizational Leaders view these struggles through four directions: Sovereignty and Economic Development; Cultural Struggles for Social Survival; Repatriations and Representations; and ongoing Justice Issues in Native America. Discussion is invited from audience participants to heighten sociological analysis of indigenous social justice.

226. Special Session. Spatial Inequalities Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia A Organizers: Anthony M. Orum, University of Illinois, Chicago; and Sharon Zukin, Brooklyn College and Graduate Center, City University of New York Presider: Anthony M. Orum, University of Illinois, Chicago Landscapes of Memory, Fear, and Power. Sharon Zukin, Brooklyn College and Graduate Center, City University of New York Urban Boundaries: The Spatial Construction of Race and Urban Inequality. Thomas J. Sugrue, University of Pennsylvania Space Matters: Gendered Spatial Inequalities in the North American City. Gerda Wekerle, York University Metropolitics: A Response to Social Separation and Sprawling Development Patterns. Myron Orfield, Minnesota House of Representatives and the Metropolitan Area Research Corporation, Minneapolis

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

227. Special Session. Oppression and Resistance within Families and Households Hilton Washington, Georgetown East Organizer and Presider: Demie Kurz, University of Pennsylvania The Concept of Oppression in Family Studies: A Retrospective and Prospective View. Nancy Mezey and Maxine Baca Zinn, Michigan State University Inner-City Mothers' Child Caring Strategies: Conditions That Determine a Measure of Success and Inequality. Elaine Bell Kaplan, University of Southern California Contours of Childhood: Social Class, Institution, and Inequality. Annette Lareau, Temple University Violence Against and the Harassment of Women in Canadian Public Housing: An Exploratory Study. Walter DeKeserdy, Carleton University; Shahid Alvi, University of St. Thomas; and Martin Schwartz, Ohio University Discussion: Demie Kurz, University of Pennsylvania 228. Special Session. Immigration, Day Laborers, and Labor Structure Hilton Washington, Lincoln East Organizer and Presider: Jose Z. Calderon, Pitzer College Day Labor Work: Japanese and U.S. Comparisons. Janette A. Kawachi, University of California, Santa Barbara; and Abel Valenzuela, Jr., University of California, Los Angeles Day Laborers in San'Ya, Japan. Matthew D. Marr, University of California, Los Angeles A Day Labor Center in the Informal Economy. Silvia Rodriguez, Pitzer College 229. Special Session. Racial Privilege: The View from Above Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom Salon 3 Organizer: Rhonda F. Levine, Colgate University Presider: G. William Domhoff, University of California, Santa Cruz Poor Whites Are Not the Only "Racists" in America: An Analysis of the Racial Views of Upper Class Whites in Detroit. Eduardo Bonilla-Silva, Texas A&M University Contexts and Attachments: Reflections on the Psyche of Whiteness. Ruth Frankenberg, University of California, Davis Are There Blacks in the White Establishment?: Another Look. Richard L. Zweigenhaft, Guilford College What White Men Think about Race. Rhonda F. Levine, Colgate University 230. Special Session. Latina/o Public Policy in the 21st Century Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson A Organizer: Rogelio Saenz, Texas A&M University

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Presider: Refugio Rochin, Smithsonian Center for Latino Initiatives Panel: Marisa Demeo, Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund Jorge Chapa, Indiana University Clara Rodriguez, Fordham University Charles Kamasaki, National Council of La Raza Discussion: Gilberto Cardenas, University of Notre Dame The panelists will discuss what they view as the key public policy challenges in the 21st century involving the Latina/o population and how sociologists can participate more effectively in matters related to public policy. The goal will be to stake out some common ground between academicians and non-academicians in the public policy arena.

231. Author Meets Critics. Constructive Conflicts: From Escalation to Resolution (Rowman & Littlefield, 1998) by Louis Kriesberg, Syracuse University Hilton Washington, Jefferson East Organizer: Martha Gimenez, University of Colorado, Boulder Presider: Robin Crews, Goucher College Book Author: Louis Kriesberg, Syracuse University Critics: Elizabeth McLean Petras, Drexel University Barbara Chasin, Montclair State University Lloyd Klein, University of Tennessee 232. Didactic Seminar. Multilevel Analysis (to 11:30 a.m.) Howard University (shuttle departs from the Marriott) Ticket required for admission Leader: Tim Futing Liao, University of Illinois, Urbana The very nature of nested social phenomena has stimulated interest in and development of multilevel methods in the social sciences. In sociology, contextual analysis developed to deal with the same analytic problem faced by researchers using multilevel methods. The wide availability of software for multilevel modeling has in recent years made multilevel analysis easier. This didactic seminar aims to provide the participant with the ability to (1) understand the basic theory of multilevel modeling, (2) identify circumstances under which multilevel analysis is appropriate, (3) apply multilevel methods using an appropriate software package, and (4) interpret results from multilevel analysis. We will cover the model with a continuous dependent variable and the model with a categorical one. Taught in a computer laboratory, the seminar emphasizes hands-on experience. The free version of a special-purpose program, HLM, will be available for everyone's use. We will also discuss how to use general-purpose software such as SAS for multilevel modeling. The prerequisite for the workshop is a good familiarity with linear models. To learn to apply multilevel modeling with a discrete dependent variable, familiarity with logit models is also necessary.

233. Didactic Seminar. Participatory Research Methods Hilton Washington, State Ticket required for admission Leader: Randy Stoecker, University of Toledo This seminar will focus on using the research and education methods variously known as participatory research, action research, participatory action research, community-based research, collaborative research, activist research, and popular education. It is intended for people with little to moderate experience using these methods to collaborate with community-based groups.

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Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

Session 233, continued The seminar will be interactive, drawing on your experiences, questions, and concerns. Thinking about the roles of academics, grassroots folks, and others, we will discuss how groups can use participatory research to develop a research question, choose research methods, collect data, report results, and organize action. Depending on participants' interests and time available, we will also discuss concerns that academics have about doing participatory research, such as publishing articles, achieving tenure, getting arrested ;-), etc.

234. Professional Workshop. Career Lives Opportunities in the Federal Government Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson B Organizer: Ronald Manderscheid, Chief, Survey and Analysis Branch, Center for Mental Health Services, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Presider: Ann Maney, Senior Social Science Analyst, Office of Prevention, National Institute of Mental Health, National Institutes of Health, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Panel: Harold Goldsmith, Senior Research Sociologist (retired), National Institute of Mental Health and Center for Mental Health Services, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Virginia Cain, Special Assistant to the Director, Office of Behavioral and Social Science Research, National Institutes of Health, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Scott Brown, Office of Special Education and Rehabilitation, U.S. Department of Education Federal Sociologists in different roles will describe their career histories, the intersection of their careers and the discipline of sociology, and future prospects for sociologists in the Federal Government. Ample time will be provided for discussion and interaction.

235. Professional Workshop. Managing (and Relieving) the Pressures on Women and Minority Faculty Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia C Organizer and Presider: Dennis Rome, Indiana University Panel: Alberto Torchinsky, Indiana University Norma Nager, Trinity College Matt Oware, Indiana University Diane R. Brown, Wayne State University "Managing (and Relieving) the Pressures on Women and Minority Faculty" is a workshop where participants will describe their experiences being a woman and/or minority faculty member on predominantly white campuses. This workshop is not intended to be viewed as a session where attendees come to complain and "vent-off steam;" rather, our intent is that we utilize the collective experiences of participants and attendees to construct tangible and viable solutions to some of the most salient problems that women and minority faculty members are faced with. Our overarching objective is that we leave the session armed with knowledge of strategies and solutions that have proven successful at other campuses.

236. Academic Workplace Workshop. Assessing Undergraduate Learning in Sociology Hilton Washington, Military Organizer: Peter Meiksins, Cleveland State University Panel: Theodore Wagenaar, Miami University, Ohio Keith Roberts, Hanover College Stephen Steele, Anne Arundel Community College David F. Gordon, State University of New York, Geneseo Panelists will discuss experiences with assessing student learning in a variety of different institutional settings (from community colleges to departments with graduate programs). The workshop will focus on the advantages and disadvantages of different methods of assessing student learning and on the various ways in which Sociology departments can respond to the growing demand for and interest in assessment.

237. Teaching Workshop. Teaching Sociology of Science and Technology Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8219 Organizer and Presider: Stephen Zehr, University of Southern Indiana Panel: Mary Frank Fox, Georgia Institute of Technology Daniel Kleinman, Georgia Institute of Technology Kelly Moore, Barnard College Stefan Timmermans, Brandeis University This workshop will cover issues related to the design and execution of sociology of science and technology courses. It will provide both general information about developing these courses and specific information about problems and strategies in teaching them. Several issues will be covered, including: course designs for the non-sociology major, finding accessible reading material, using scientists as guest speakers, developing successful research projects and class exercises, and overcoming and using students' stereotypes about science and technology. Handouts including sample syllabi, reading lists, and project assignments will be available. Participants are urged to bring ideas to share with the group.

238. Open Refereed Roundtables Social Movements, Political Sociology, Social Networks, Organizations, and Development Hilton Washington, International East Organizer: Che-Fu Lee, The Catholic University of America 1. Social Movements Table Presider: Matthew T. Bowles, American University Transforming North Ireland in the 21st Century: Cultural Identity, Political Violence, and Question of Legitimacy. Matthew T. Bowles, American University The Beginnings of Two Distinct Women's Organizations. Deanna Meyler, University of Nebraska, Lincoln 2. Volunteerism Table Presider: Bob Edwards, East Carolina University Who Is Being Served?: The Impact of Volunteering on Local Community Organizations. Bob Edwards, Linda Mooney, and Carl Heald, East Carolina University

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

Who Are Suburbia's Firefighters?: A Comparative Analysis of the Attributes of Volunteer Firefighters and Their Communities. Lucinda A. Manolakes, State University of New York, Stony Brook Volunteerism in Japan. Kumiko Shimizu and Qiaoming Amy Liu, California State University, Sacramento Abeyance in Voluntary Organizations: A Close Look at the League of Women Voters. Patricia R. Hoffman, University of Nebraska 3. Public Sphere Table Presider: Daniel Glass, State University of New York, Albany The Social and Demographic Determinants of America's Urban Associational Sector. Daniel Glass, State University of New York, Albany The Development of the Public Sphere within the Protestant Church in the German Democratic Republic, 1950-1989. Carey Pieratt-Seeley NGOs and Civil Society: Observations from Bangladesh. Rifat A. Salam, New York University Planning a Public: Public Spaces in Indianapolis, 19601995. Indermohan Virk, University of North Carolina 4. Organizational Networks Table Presider: Susan Bastani, University of Toronto Getting Support On-line: A Study of Muslim Women's Online Relations. Susan Bastani, University of Toronto 5. Reform and Transitional Development in China Table Presider: Yusheng Peng, Chinese University, Hong Kong Chinese Government as Business Partners in Foreign Investment. Yusheng Peng, Chinese University, Hong Kong Seeking Reemployment: Diversity among the Laid-off State Employees in Jiangsu Province. Che-Fu Lee, The Catholic University of America Centrally Administered Mobility Reconsidered: The Political Dimension of Educational Stratification in State-Socialist Czechoslovakia. Eric Hanley, University of Kansas How Experiences of Collectivization Shape the Peasant’s Ideas and Actions: A Case in One Chinese Village. Lu Hui Lin, The Chinese University of Hong Kong 6. Sociology of Development: Comparative Bura Irrigation and Resettlement Project: An Analysis of a Development Project in Kenya. Niclas Neglen 7. Community/Regional Development Table Presider: Sean Wheeler, University of Texas, Austin Complexity Theory and Social Organization among Urban Communities. Sean Wheeler, University of Texas, Austin From the "Rural Other" to the "Varsolu Others": A Critical Approach to Studies on Rural-to-Urban Migrants and Their Housing Environment in Turkey. Tahire Erman, Bilkent University Regional Differences in Socioeconomic Status among

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Puerto Rican Males in the United States: A Descriptive Analysis. Gilbert Marzan, State University of New York, Albany 239. Informal Discussion Roundtables. New Applications for Sociology Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom Salon 1 Organizer: Stella M. Capek, Hendrix College 1. Conducting Sociology Classes Online: Practices and Procedures. Ray Kerns-Zucco, Western New England College 2. New Developments in Teaching with Student CHIPendale. Gregg Carter, Bryant College 3. Approaching Adolescents: Qualitative Methods and Teenage Subjects. Lynn H. Green, University of Pennsylvania 4. Teaching, Learning, and Practicing Sociology as a Community Service. Brenda Hoke, Agnes Scott College; Willie Melton, Michigan Technological University; and Linda Lindsey, Maryville University, St. Louis 5. Every Class Is Like a Different Emotional World: Emotion and the Student in College Classrooms. Catherine G. Valentine, Nazareth College; and Bob Rosenwien, Lehigh University 6. Doing Sociology in the Community College. William Bennett, Washington State Community College 7. Launching a Teacher Training Course for Sociology Graduate Students: Practical Aspects to Consider. George Becker, Vanderbilt University 8. Training Participants to Collect and Analyze Data for Program Enrichment. Norman Dolch, Louisiana State University, Shreveport 9. Adventures in Custom Publishing. Paul D. Starr and James Gundlach, Auburn University 10. The War in Our Schools: A Sociologically Informed Approach for Educational Professionals Dealing with School Violence. John A. Kovach, Kutztown University 11. Service Learning and Sociology. Brenda Marsteller Kowalewski, Weber State University 12. Using Case Studies in Teaching Sociology. Frances V. Moulder, Three Rivers Community College 13. Funding Social Research in the English Speaking Caribbean. Peter K. B. St. Jean, University of Chicago 14. The Mentoring Effects on the Educational Attainment of Disadvantaged Groups. Buffy Smith 15. Not Just Fun and Games: Tracking Students through Schools' Extracurricular Programs. Shannon Curtis, University of Michigan

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Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

240. Regular Session. Collective Behavior III Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia B Organizer: Benigno E. Aguirre, Texas A&M University Presider: Russ Curtis, University of Houston Bread and Circuses. Ordinary Russians coping with Changing Social Environment Olga Shevchenko, University of Pennsylvania Decentered Movements: The Case of the Structural and Preceptual Versatility of the Rastafari. AlemSeghed Kebede, University of Tennessee Social Movement Organization and Network Formation. Doowon Suh, University of California, Berkeley Identity and Reflexivity. Isher-Paul Sahni, McGill University Social Systems and Collective Subjectivity. Jose Mauricio Domingues, Rio de Janeiro Federal University Discussion: Sam Cohn, Texas A&M University 241. Regular Session. Voluntary and Nonprofit Organizations Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8206 Organizer and Presider: Susan M. Chambre, Baruch College, City University of New York Has Voluntary Association Activity Declined?: A CrossNational Perspective. Douglas Baer, University of Western Ontario; James Curtis, University of Waterloo; and Edward Grabb, University of Western Ontario Religious Involvement and Volunteering: Implications for Civil Society. Penny Edgell Becker and Pawan H. Dhingra, Cornell University Between Giving and Getting: Legitimacy and Differentiation in the Field of Workplace Charity. Emily A. Barman, University of Chicago A Test of Ecological, Institutional, and Network Determinants of Survival among Nonprofit Organizations. Mark A. Hager, Americans for the Arts; and Joseph Galaskiewicz, University of Minnesota Discussion: Kirsten A. Gronbjerg, Indiana University 242. Regular Session. Consumption, Identity, and Resistance Marriott Wardman Park, Balcony B Organizer: Eva Illouz, Tel Aviv University Presider: George Ritzer, University of Maryland, College Park Social Categorization and Group Identification: How African Americans Shape Their Collective Identity through Consumption. Virag Molnar and Michele Lamont, Princeton University Creating the Consumer, Establishing Legitimacy in Britain and Europe. Adam Burgess, University of Reading The Paradox of Simple Living: Voluntary Simplicity as Meaningful Resistance. George Dillmann, University of Buffalo Aquarian Consumption: Imaginative and Ethical Hedonism in the Whole Earth Catalog. Sam Binkley, New School for Social Research

Discussion: George Ritzer, University of Maryland, College Park 243. Regular Session. Deviance and Social Control: Quantitative Hilton Washington, Lincoln West Organizer: Ramiro Martinez, Jr., Florida International University Presider: Robert Nash Parker, University of California, Riverside The Economics and Politics of Punishment in the American States, 1974-1996. Thomas D. Stucky and Karen Heimer, University of Iowa Victim Characteristics and Homicide Clearance: Do Race, Gender and Age Matter? Kenneth J. Litwin, Ohio State University Occupation and Suicide. Steven Stack, Wayne State University A Meta-Analysis of the Religion-Crime Relationship. Jason Miller, University of Arizona Discussion: Robert Nash Parker, University of California, Riverside 244. Regular Session. Gender and Work Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland B Organizer: Brenda L. Moore, State University of New York, Buffalo Citizenship, Gender, and Employment: The German Case of Equal Employment Measures. Angelika Von Wahl, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Economic Restructuring and Female Force Participation in Mexico. Emilio A. Parrado, Duke University; and Rene M. Zenteno, Campus Guadalajara A Special Kind of Exclusion: Race, Gender, and Self Employment. Kiran Mirchandani, University of Toronto Gender Differences in Trends and Patterns of Contingent Employment: 1980-1995. Chigon Kim, State University of New York, Buffalo Choosing Time and Time for Work: The Flexibility of Women's Preferences. Ingalill Montanari, Swedish Institute for Social Research 245. Regular Session. The Informal Economy Hilton Washington, Hamilton Organizer: Alfonso Morales, University of Texas, El Paso Presider: Robert Jimenez, University of Michigan Street Vendors in a Changing Economy. Maggie Ussery Social Capital and the Informal Economy in Novosibrisk, Russia: Some Preliminary Observations. Sarah Busse, University of Chicago Enlarging the Street and Negotiating the Curb: The LongTerm Effects of Urban Growth on Street Vendors in the Informal Sector Economy. Loretta Bass, University of Oklahoma

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

Policy from Theory: A Critical Reconstruction of Theory on the "Informal" Economy. Alfonso Morales, University of Texas, El Paso Discussion: Bruce Wiegand, University of Wisconsin, Whitewater 246. Regular Session. Population: Issues in Comparative Demography Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson C Organizer and Presider: Franklin D. Wilson, University of Wisconsin, Madison Patterns of Male and Female Fertility in Taiwan: Description and Explanations. Dudley L. Poston, Jr., and ChiungFang Chang, Texas A&M University The Other Side of the Paradox: Low Birth Weight among Mexican Infants in Mexico. Reanne Frank, University of Texas, Austin Re-examining the Epidemiological Paradox: A Bi-national Study of Health among Mexican Non-Migrants, Returned Migrants, and Current U.S. Immigrants. Shawn M. Kanaiaupuni, University of Wisconsin, Madison; and Katherine M. Donato, Rice University Expectations, Gender, and Norms in Migration Decision Making. Gordon F. De Jong, Pennsylvania State University Bridging Numbers and Meanings: The Role of Culture in Demographic Explanations. Zhanlian Feng, Brown University; and Qian Cai, Portland State University 247. Regular Session. Traditional Religion and Personal Spirituality Marriott Wardman Park, Balcony D Organizer: Dean Hoge, Catholic University of America Presider: Patrick McNamara, University of New Mexico Talking Spirituality: Reframing the Relationship between Religion and Rationality. Kelly Besecke, University of Wisconsin, Madison The Social Structure of Therapeutic Religion: An Ethnographic Study. James Tucker, University of New Hampshire Tracking Religious Involvement over the Life-Course: Evidence from a 70-year Longitudinal Study. Michele Dillon, Yale University The Transformation of Christian Worship Style: The Impact of Denomination on the Adoption of the New Worship Form. Hui-Tzu Grace Chou, University of California, Riverside Discussion: Dean Hoge, Catholic University of America 248. Regular Session. Social Theory: Critical Reflections upon the Classics Hilton Washington, Thoroughbred Organizer: Mustafa Emirbayer, University of Wisconsin, Madison Presider: Michele Ollivier, University of Ottawa

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Anomie and Strain: Merton's Two Theories. Richard Featherstone and Mathieu Deflem, Purdue University Class and Causation in Bourdieu. Elliot Weininger Rethinking the Sociological "Canon": An Examination of Difference in the Epistemological Perspectives of Gilman and Durkheim. Melanie Heath, University of Southern California Political Durkheim: A Discussion of Religion, Culture, and the Sacred. Simonetta Falasca-Zamponi, European University Institute and University of California, Santa Barbara Status Revisited: Durkheim and Weber in a Post-Modern World. Michele Olliver, University of Ottawa 249. Section on Sociology of Education. Achievement Studies in the Sociology of Education Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland A Organizer: Francisco O. Ramirez, Stanford University Presider: Sophia Catsambis, Queens College, City University of New York The Effects of Ability Group Misplacement on Student Achievement. Maureen Hallinan, University of Notre Dame Student Experiences in Home and School: Gender Gap Comparisons among 1990 Sophomores in the National Educational Longitudinal Study. Cornelius Riordan, Providence College Parent Information Network in Magnet Schools: Their Formation and Impact on Student Performance. Sheela Kennedy, University of Pennsylvania Parental Involvement and Student Performance: The Influence of Social Context. Ralph McNeal, University of Connecticut Discussion: Samuel Lucas, University of California, Berkeley 250. Section on Social Psychology Miniconference. Sociological Social Psychology at the Millennium: What We Do and Don’t Know about Group Processes Hilton Washington, International West Organizer and Presider: Cecilia L. Ridgeway, Stanford University Panel: Murray Webster, Jr., National Science Foundation Linda Molm, University of Arizona Dawn Robinson, Louisiana State University John Skvoretz, University of South Carolina 251. Section on Political Sociology. Politics from Below Hilton Washington, Monroe West Organizer and Presider: Pamela E. Oliver, University of Wisconsin, Madison Class Consciousness and the American Dream. Brian Starks, Indiana University, Bloomington Social Capital and Democracy: An Interdependent Relationship. Pamela Paxton, Ohio State University

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Session 251, continued How Movements Matter: Political Opportunity Structure and the Creation of a Democratic Path of Political Development in South Africa. Alan Emery, University of California, Los Angeles The Civil Rights Movement and Black Politics after the Voting Rights Act: Mobilization and Demobilization in Two Mississippi Communities. Kenneth T. Andrews, Harvard University Discussion: David S. Meyer, University of California, Irvine 252. Section on Asia and Asian America. Transnational Asia-Asian American Linkages Session and Business Meeting Hilton Washington, Caucus Session on Transnational Asia-Asian American Linkages: View from Asian America (8:30-9:30 p.m.): Organizer and Presider: John Lie, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Are Indian Immigrants in the United States Transnationals? Syed Ali, University of Virginia Transcending Old Paradigms in New Spaces: An Analysis of Internet Discussions about Locations, Citizenship, and Membership in an Ethnic Community. Emily Noelle Ignacio, Loyola University, Chicago Reinventing Ayurveda: Asia Medicine, American Bodies, and the New Age. Sita Reddy, University of Pennsylvania Discussion: John Lie, University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign Section on Asia and Asian America Business Meeting (9:3010:10 p.m.) 253. Section on History of Sociology. Roundtables on the History of Sociology and Business Meeting Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware B Roundtables (to 9:30 a.m.): Organizers: Patricia Lengermann, The George Washington University; and Jill Niebrugge-Brantley, Wells College 1. Sociology and Its Organizational Settings Organizational Culture and the History of American Sociology. Larry Nichols, West Virginia University The Intellectual and Social Organization of ASA 1990-97: Exploring the Interface between the Discipline of Sociology and Its Practitioners. Phaedra Daipha, University of Chicago 2. Sociology Outside the Academy The "Oh So Social" Science of Espionage: O.S.S. Radio War in Europe. Susan Cavin, New York University Consequences of Historic State Censorship: Western Migration of Polish Sociologists in Polish AntiSemitism Discourse. Lisa Romanienko, Louisiana State University

Attention Deficit Disorder: The Sociological History of a Disease. Rosa Haritos, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill 3. Women in the History of Sociology I The Role of Women in Early Chicago Sociology and the University. Harold Orbach, Kansas State University Sociology's Foremothers: The Relationship between Women Sociologists and Feminist Sociology. Kimberly Simmons, University of Maine 4. Women in the History of Sociology II The Beginning of a School: Contemporary Elaborations of the Sociology of Dorothy E. Smith. Kamini Grahame, Lesley College What Dreams Are Made Of: The Vision of Hortense Powdermaker. Candace L. Kemp, McMaster University 5. History of Sociological Thought I A Re-Interpretation of Cooley's Conception of Self as Sentiment. Frank Page, University of Utah; and Joe Wheeler Anselm Strauss and the Concept of "Illness Trajectory". Russell Kelly, University of Central Lancashire 6. History of Sociological Thought II An Elective Affinity in the History of Sociological Thought: Transcending Pure Economics in Adam Smith and Max Weber. Milan Zafirovski, Athens State University Zygmunt Bauman's Postmodern Sociology: Reconciling the Epistemological and the Empirical. Rekha Mirchandani, University of Utah 7. Intellectual Dilemmas in the History of Sociology Ethics in Society and in the Development of Sociological Thought. Celine-Marie Pascale, University of California, Santa Cruz Re-establishing the Pragmatist Divide in the 13th Century: Aristotle, Aquinas, and the Humanly Engaged World vs. Plato, Cicero, Augustine, and Averroes. Robert Prus, University of Waterloo Section on History of Sociology Business Meeting (9:3010:10 a.m.)

9:00 a.m.

Sessions

254. Information Poster Session. Data Resources (to 12:00 noon) Hilton Washington, Exhibit Hall Organizers and Presiders: Felice J. Levine and Sarah Skinner, American Sociological Association This poster/exhibit session provides a unique occasion to meet principle investigators, researchers, and managers of large-scale data sets that are publicly available for use. Each exhibit showcases at least

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m. one major data set of tremendous value for primary and secondary analysis. Representatives are available to talk about the nature of these data sets, their analytic potential, and issues relating to access and use, including the development of state-of-the-art internet services to access data sets. This is an opportunity for convention registrants to learn about these data sets and their potential for research and teaching. All meeting attendees, including students, are encouraged to attend. For detailed information on session participants, see pp. 204.

1. 2. 3.

4.

5.

6.

7.

8. 9. 10.

11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17.

18. 19.

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General Social Survey, National Opinion Research Center, University of Chicago. Tom W. Smith International Social Survey, National Opinion Research Center, University of Chicago. Tom W. Smith The Panel Study of Income Dynamics, University of Michigan, Institute for Social Research. Sandra Hofferth, Hiromi Ono, and Jean Yeung The Wisconsin Longitudinal Study, Center for Demography of Health and Aging, University of Wisconsin, Madison. Robert M. Hauser and Taissa S. Hauser National Survey of Families and Households, University of Wisconsin, Department of Sociology. Larry Bumpass The British Household Panel Survey, Institute for Social and Economic Research, University of Essex. David Pevalin The National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health, Carolina Population Center, The University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill. Francesca Florey The Health and Retirement Study, Institute for Social Research, University of Michigan. Heather Hewett Mexican Migration Project, Population Center, University of Pennsylvania. Nolan J. Malone Demographic and Behavioral Sciences Branch, National Institute of Child Health and Human Development. V. Jeffery Evans Behavioral and Social Science Research Program, National Institute on Aging. Kristen Robinson Sociometrics Corporation. Michael Carley Inter-University Consortium for Political and Social Research. James McNally Murray Research Center, Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study. Annemette Sorensen and Copeland Young Division of Science Resources Studies, National Science Foundation. Susan Hill and Monica Hill National Longitudinal Surveys, U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics. Jay Meisenheimer National Archive of Criminal Justice Data, National Institute of Justice Data Resources Program. Cynthia Mamalian and Janet Stamatel National Center for Education Statistics, U.S. Department of Education. Carl Schmitt Schools and Staffing Survey, Education Statistics Services Institute, American Institutes for Research. Benjamin A. Cohen and Matthew Walker Center for Electronic Records, National Archives and Records Administration. Theodore J. Hull

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21. American Religion Data Archive, Purdue University, Department of Sociology and Anthropology. Jennifer McKinney, Matt Bahr, and Roger Finke 22. Indicators of Social Justice, American Social Indicators. Emanuel Smikun 23. National Medical Expenditure Panel Survey, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. Gregg Taliaferro and Jim Kerby 24. National Hospital Discharge Survey, Hospital Care Statistics Branch, National Center for Health Statistics. Jennifer Popovic 25. National Nursing Home Survey and National Home and Hospice Care Survey, Long-Term Statistics Branch, National Center for Health Statistics. Barbara J. Haupt 26. Reproductive Statistics Branch: Natality Data, National Center for Health Statistics. Stephanie J. Ventura 27. Mortality Statistics Branch: Mortality Data, National Center for Health Statistics. Donna L. Hoyart 28. National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey and National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey, Ambulatory Care Statistics Branch, National Center for Health Statistics. David Woodwell 29. Data Dissemination Branch, National Center for Health Statistics. Linda R. Washington and Tammy StewartPrather 30. National Survey of Family Growth, Reproductive Statistics Branch, National Center for Health Statistics. Joyce Abma 31. The National Health Interview Survey, Division of Health Interview Statistics, National Center for Health Statistics. J. Neil Russell 32. Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System, Division of Adult and Community Health, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Deborah Holtzman 33. Census Data in the Classroom: The Social Science Data Analysis Network. William Frey 34. Public Data Queries, Inc. Albert F. Anderson 35-37. Population Division Surveys, U.S. Census Bureau. Kurt Bauman, Ken Bryson, Barbara Downs, Jason Fields, Tammany Mulder, and Kristin Smith 38. Consortium of Social Science Associations and Council of Professional Associations on Federal Statistics. David Hess 39. Integrated Public Use Microdata Series, University of Minnesota, History Department. Catherine Fitch and Susan Brower 40. American FactFinder, U.S. Census Bureau. J.R. Wycinsky

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

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9:30 a.m.

Meetings

Section on Asia and Asian America Business Meeting (to 10:10 a.m.)—Hilton Washington, Caucus Section on History of Sociology Business Meeting (to 10:10 a.m.)—Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware B Section on Rational Choice Business Meeting (to 10:10 a.m.)—Hilton Washington, Georgetown West Section on Sociological Practice Business Meeting (to 10:10 a.m.)—Hilton Washington, Independence

10:30 a.m.

Meetings

Chairs of Award Selection Committees with the Committee on Awards—Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8210 Committee on the Status of Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and Transgendered Persons in Sociology—Hilton Washington, C326 Committee on the Status of Racial and Ethnic Minorities in Sociology—Hilton Washington, C327 Honors Program—Hilton Washington, Jefferson West

10:30 a.m.

Open Forum

Open Forum on Preparing Future Faculty (PFF) Projects Hilton Washington, Map PFF Advisory Board: Judith Howard, University of Washington; Ted Long, Elizabethtown College; Suzanne Ortega, University of Nebraska, Lincoln; William Roy, University of California, Los Angeles; Nancy Sacks, State University of New York, Stony Brook; Marcia Texler Segal, Indiana University Southeast; and Jean Shin, Western Maryland College

10:30 a.m.

Other Groups

Eastern Sociological Society Publications Committee— Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8209

10:30 a.m.

Sessions

255. Thematic Session. Racial Discrimination Revisited Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom Salon 3 Organizer and Presider: Sharon M. Collins, University of Illinois, Chicago The End of Race? William Darity, Jr., University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Explaining Afro-American Outcomes: Causal Interaction in Structure, Culture, and Time. Orlando Patterson, Harvard University Race Relations: The Problem with the Wrong Name. Stephen Steinberg, City University of New York Graduate Center Discussion: William T. Bielby, University of California, Santa Barbara 256. Special Session. The Scholarship of Teaching Sociology: A Conversation with the Carnegie Scholars in Sociology Hilton Washington, Monroe West Organizer: Theodore Wagenaar, Miami University, Ohio Presider: Jeffrey Chin, LeMoyne College Panel: Theodore Wagenaar, Miami University, Ohio Mona T. Phillips, Spelman College John Eby, Messiah College Jeffrey Chin, LeMoyne College 257. Special Policy Session. Democratizing Devolution: Bottom-Up Policy Formation and Social Action Around the World Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia C Organizer: Archon Fung, Harvard University Presider: Erik Olin Wright, University of Wisconsin, Madison Panel: Gianpaolo Baiocchi, University of Wisconsin, Madison Archon Fung, Harvard University Dara O'Rourke, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Discussion: Erik Olin Wright, University of Wisconsin, Madison This session focuses on social science knowledge about policy formation from the “bottom up” in industrialized and developing nations. The session will be conducted in the format of a policy briefing, with each presenter emphasizing what we know about different aspects of democratic reform. Briefing packets (which include fact sheets and resource contacts) will be available at the session itself.

258. Special Session. Consumerism and Social Justice in Global Perspective Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia B Organizer and Presider: Toby A. Ten Eyck, Michigan State University Control Efforts in a Global Economy: Identity and Social Justice. Toby A. Ten Eyck, Michigan State University

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

Racism at Tiffany's: Does Shopping Make People Equal? Sharon Zukin, Brooklyn College and Graduate Center, City University of New York A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Simulacrum. Robert Goldman, Lewis and Clark College Discussion: Paul DiMaggio, Princeton University 259. Special Session. Jews in the 21st Century (cosponsored by the Association for the Social Scientific Study of Jewry) Marriott Wardman Park, Balcony A Organizers: Allen Glicksman, Association for the Social Scientific Study of Jewry and Temple University; and Harriet Hartman, Rowan University Presider: Harriet Hartman, Rowan University Jewish Identity in the 21st Century. Harriet Hartman, Rowan University; and Moshe Hartman Economic Issues Related to Jews in the 21st Century. Carmel Chiswick, University of Illinois, Chicago The Future of the Jewish Family. Rela Geffen, Gratz College The Future of Intermarriage between Jews and Non-Jews. Bruce Phillips, University of Southern California Discussion: Samuel Z. Klausner, University of Pennsylvania 260. Special Session. Perspectives for a Transpersonal Sociology Marriott Wardman Park, Balcony D Organizers: Steven F. Cohn, Susan F. Greenwood, and Kyiacos C. Markides, University of Maine Presider: Susan F. Greenwood, University of Maine Christian Spirituality and Transpersonal Sociology. David O. Moberg, Marquette University The Interface of Transpersonal Perspectives with Sociological Theory and Research. Steven F. Cohn, University of Maine Evolutionary Social Theory and Transpersonal Perspectives. Severyn Bruyn, Boston College Discussion: Edward Tiryakian, Duke University 261. Didactic Seminar. Postmodernism and Social Analysis Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware A Ticket required for admission Leader: Charles Lemert, Wesleyan University The seminar will examine historical and other empirical reasons sociologists might entertain the idea that the world is becoming postmodern. Its premise is that well-known, and poorly understood, theories of the postmodern may not be the best guide to understand the issues. Just the same, the literature associated with postmodern thinking will be discussed comparatively. Special attention will be given to feminist, African-American, postcolonial, and queer theories, as well as the usual cast of characters (e.g., Foucault, Derrida, Baudrillard). Attempts will be made to demonstrate the empirical conditions that have given rise to this kind of thinking. In turn, the theories will be discussed with an eye to their value as indices of empirical trends.

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The seminar will give special attention to the fate of analytic methods in sociology as they may be enriched or defeated by the demands of a postmodern world. Ample time will be allowed for questions and discussion. Participants should read the following book in advance: Charles Lemert, Postmodernism Is Not What You Think (Blackwell, 1997).

262. Professional Workshop. Issues for Building Effective Research Networks Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8206 Leader: V. Jeffery Evans, National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, National Institutes of Health The goal of this workshop is to help researchers establish, operate, and fund research networks. The workshop leader will draw on personal experience in working with research networks and discuss case studies that illustrate different models and strategies for building research networks. The workshop will examine general principles for optimizing network performance. The virtues of multi-disciplinary versus mono-disciplinary membership will be discussed. Research/policy interfaces will be examined. Funding mechanisms will be identified and the implications of dealing with topics involving children, families, and welfare reform; the principles involved are relevant to many other topics of interest to sociologists. The workshop will discuss topics sequentially and encourage audience interaction.

263. Professional Workshop. Navigating Research Careers in Contract Research Firms Hilton Washington, Hamilton Organizer and Presider: Rita J. Kirshstein, The American Institutes for Research Panel: George Bohrnstedt, The American Institutes for Research Gregory Gaertner, The Gallup Organization David Myers, Mathematica Policy Research This workshop will focus on sociologists working in contract research environments. Panelists will be asked to address a number of questions that provide workshop attendees with different views of work in this setting. Specifically, sociologists from a number of different contract research organizations will summarize what they do, the focus of their research, how their organizations operate, and how research is conducted within their organizations. Doing research in contract research firms will be compared to doing research in academe and in associations. Attendees will also have an opportunity to raise questions of the panelists.

264. Academic Workplace Workshop. Making Your Department Technologically Up to Date: What Are Reasonable Goals and Sources of Help? Marriott Wardman Park, Balcony B Leader: Robert E. Wood, Rutgers University, Camden This workshop will explore changing technology in the context of: (1) technology use in the classroom; (2) the use of new technologies in the design of courses; (3) the development of student skills; (4) the functions of departmental websites; and (5) almost-universally inadequate instructional technology support. The importance of keeping pedagogical goals at the center of technology use will be emphasized, along with the formulation of department-wide policies. The concept of a web-enhanced curriculum at the departmental level will be explored.

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265. Teaching Workshop. Teaching Sociology of Disabilities Hilton Washington, Military Leaders: Sharon Barnartt, Gallaudet University Tanis Doe, Pearson College Susan Foster, Rochester Institute of Technology Lynn Schlesinger, State University of New York, Plattsburgh The goal of this workshop is to illuminate some of the issues which make teaching the Sociology of Disability difficult—and to suggest some solutions. Issues to be discussed include which specific topics should be included, problems of subjectivity and objectivity, and whether teaching the sociology of disability is the same as, or different from, teaching the sociology of race or gender. Participants are encouraged to bring their syllabi or ideas about such classes. The format will include short presentations with plenty of time for discussion.

266. Teaching Workshop. Teaching Sociology Using Literature, Art, and Drama Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson B Organizer and Presider: Nancy Weiss Hanrahan, George Mason University Panel: Jeffrey C. Goldfarb, New School for Social Research Elizabeth Long, Rice University Yaffa Schlesinger, Hunter College, City University of New York Britta Wheeler, New York University The purpose of the workshop is to explore the ways in which the arts can be used to engage students in sociological inquiry. Presenters will discuss not only the arts themselves as an area of sociological analysis but also how the arts may be used to entertain broader sociological questions of value and meaning. The pedagogical relationship between sociology and the humanities will also be addressed.

267. Informal Discussion Roundtables. New Directions in Sociology Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware B Organizers: Felice J. Levine, American Sociological Association; and Jan E. Thomas, Georgetown University 1. Sociology in the Community Table Presider: Howard Sacks, Kenyon College Sociologists as Change Agents. Sandra Schroer, Western Michigan University Out of the Classroom and Into the Community. Shirley A. Jackson, Southern Connecticut State University Mapping Neighborhhood Impacts to Identify Points of Challenge and Points of Change: Using Social Research to Assist in Community Re-vitalization Efforts. Michael E. O’Neal, Augsburg College Educational Integrity: Society as the Customer. Denise Williams, California State University, Domiguez Hills 2. Changing Social Relations Table Presider: Lisa Troyer, University of Iowa Imaginary Social Relations. Susan Cavin, New York University

“Pure Sociology.” James Tucker, University of New Hampshire Rural and Urban Circuits of Production. Alexander R. Thomas, State University of New York, Morrisville 3. Tracking and Preventing HIV/AIDS Table Presider: Sue Hoppe, University of Texas Health Science Center, San Antonio Medical-Sociological Issues in HIV/AIDS Data Collection and Reporting. Alice Kroliczak, Jill Jacobsen, Sam Ndubuisi, John Milberg, and Celia Gabrel, HIV/AIDS Bureau, Health Resources and Services Administration Organizational Factors in the Early Detection of HIV. Oscar Grusky, Peter Newman, Mary Jane Rotheram, and Naihua Duan, University of California, Los Angeles 4. Increasing Diversity in Society Table Presider: Havidan Rodriguez, University of Puerto Rico, Mayaguez Educational Achievement, Language-Minority Students, and the New Second Generation. Carol Schmid, Guilford Technical Community College New Patterns of Dominance: Disjunctures between Societal Status and Organizational Status. Douglas Snyder, Prince George’s Community College 5. Educational Challenges in Imparting Sociology Table Presider: Edward Kain, Southwestern University The Future of Academic Sociology: Is the Academic House Getting More Inclusive or Simply Less Orderly? Robert Engvall, Roger Williams University Sociology, Criminology, and Criminal Justice: Finally Getting It Together or Inherently Frozen into Doing Their Own Thing? Richard Monk, Coppin State College Sociology in the High Schools: New Directions for Introduction to Sociology at the College Level. Henry D. Olsen, Medgar Evers College, City University of New York Emergent Sociology: Imaginative Potentials. William Cross, Illinois College 6. Teaching and Building Theory Table Presider: Robert Antonio, University of Kansas The Information Society: New Directions for Classical Social Theory. M. Gilbert Dunn and Jacqueline M. Keil, Roanoke College Theory Training in the Elite Sociology Programs. Barry Markovsky, University of Iowa 7. Globalizing Research and Theory Table Presider: Frederick D. Weil, Louisiana State University Immigration, Transnationalism, and International Trade. Ivan Light, Min Zhou, and Rebecca Kim, University of California, Los Angeles Globalization, Deregulation, and Financial Crime. Robert Tillman, St. John’s University

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

Advanced Mathematics and Theorizing the Global. Timothy M. Koponen, Kenyon College 8. Opportunity for New Modes of Inquiry Table Presider: John Kennedy, Indiana University In Plain Sight: Photographing the Hidden Curriculum in Higher Education. Marina Gair, Guy Mullins, and Lydia Montelongo, Arizona State University The “Power Cube” and Cross-National Comparative Research. Jeffrey Broadbent, University of Minnesota Survey 2000 and Web-Based Survey Instruments: Opportunities and Challenges. Philip Howard, Northwestern University 9. Youth at Risk Table Presider: Christy Visher, The Urban Institute Emergency Medical Services. A Promising Field of Inquiry for Sociologists. Isabelle Melese-d’Hospital, EMSC National Resource Center Closing the Theory-Research Gap in the Sociological Study of Youth Crime and Juvenile Delinquency: Lessons Learned from Reanalyzing Data from the Cambridge-Somerville Youth Study and Other Studies. James Paul Heuser, Portland State University 268. Regular Session. Sociology of the New Genetics Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland B Organizer and Presider: Barbara Katz Rothman, City University of New York Knowledge and Understanding: Lay Perspectives of the New Genetics. Peter Conrad and Emily Kolker, Brandeis University Stories in Decisions: Understanding How At-Risk Individuals Decide to Request Predictive Testing for Huntington Disease. Susan Cox, Brandeis University It's Our Baby But It's Her Body: Latino Couples, Gender Rationales, and Amniocentesis Decision Making. Susan Markens, Brandeis University; Carole Browner and Mabel Preloran, University of California, Los Angeles Setting the Agenda in Genetic Counseling. Alison Pilnick and Jessica Ive, University of Nottingham Discussion: Elizabeth Ettorre, University of Plymouth 269. Regular Session. The Sociology of Culture: Arts Institutions Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson A Organizer: Wendy Griswold, Northwestern University Presider: Vera Zolberg, New School for Social Research Composing the Orchestra: Linking Gendered Imagery of Musical Instruments with the Sexual Division of Labor in U.S. Symphony Orchestras. James Roebuck, University of Arizona Culture and Rationalization: The Impact of a National Foundation Initiative on a Community-Based Arts

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Center. Jeffery Halley and Avelardo Valdez, University of Texas, San Antonio Nineteenth-Century Italian Opera and Nationalism: The Case of Giuseppe Verdi. Peter Stamatov, University of California, Los Angeles Give, Get, or Get Off: The Negotiation of Roles and Perspectives among Different Organizational Actors in an Art World. Brendan Walsh, University of Connecticut Discussion: Vera Zolberg, New School for Social Research 270. Regular Session. Deviance and Social Control: International Perspectives Hilton Washington, Lincoln West Organizer and Presider: Ramiro Martinez, Jr., Florida International University Exploring Violent Behavior among Youth in Israel. Gustavo Mesch, Gideon Fishman, and Zvi Eizikovitz, University of Haifa Juvenile Delinquency in Korea. Cheong Sun Park, University of Chicago Policing the Pearl: Transformations of Social Control in Hong Kong. Mathieu Deflem and Yunqing Li, Purdue University Associations between Family Environments and Juvenile Delinquency in Colombia and Bolivia. Jing Zhou, Brigham Young University 271. Regular Session. Economic Sociology: Transitional Economies Hilton Washington, Lincoln East Organizer: Wayne Baker, University of Michigan Embedded Economies: Determinants of Foreign Direct Investment in Central and Eastern Europe. Nina Bandelj, Princeton University Competitive Dynamics in Polish Telecommunications: Growth, Privatization, and Regulation of an Infrastructural Multi-Network. David Dornisch, Central European University Grass Roots Capitalism and The Formation of the Petty Bourgeoisie in Central and Eastern Europe: Evidence from the Romanian Case. Augustin Stoica, Stanford University Institutions, Social Networks, and Market Exchange: Matching Workers and Jobs in Russia. Valery Yakubovich, Stanford University 272. Regular Session. New Family Forms Hilton Washington, Georgetown East Organizer and Presider: Mary Bernstein, Arizona State University For Richer, for Poorer, but Just for Now?: Contingency and Trust in the Financial Arrangements of Cohabiting Couples. Lynn Magdol and Diane R. Bessel, State University of New York, Buffalo

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Session 272, continued Families in Contemporary Intentional Communities: Diversity and Purpose. William L. Smith, Georgia Southern University What Do Single Mothers Want?: Rural Women Talk about Their Immediate Needs. Margaret K. Nelson, Middlebury College The Kids Are More Than All Right: The Theoretical and Practical Implications of Shared Primary Caregiving by Lesbian Coparents. Maureen Sullivan, University of California, Davis Discussion: Karen Miller-Loessi, Arizona State University 273. Regular Session. Structural Determinants of Success or Failure in the Labor Market Hilton Washington, Monroe East Organizer: Thomas A. DiPrete, Duke University Presider: George Farkas, Pennsylvania State University Trouble in Paradise: The Youth Labor Market and SchoolWork Institutions in Japan's Economy. Mary Brinton, Cornell University An Empirical Look at the Earnings of Japanese Men: The Significance of College Quality, Occupations, and Firm Size. Hiroshi Ono, Stockholm School of Economics Unemployment Duration in the U.S. and West Germany: The Role of Market Structure and Labor Reallocation Dynamics. Markus Gangl, University of Mannheim Cognitive Ability and the Persistence of Labor Market Discrimination. Stephen Petterson, University of Virginia Discussion: George Farkas, Pennsylvania State University 274. Regular Session. Mathematical Sociology: Models of Individual Beliefs and Behaviors Hilton Washington, Thoroughbred Organizer: Barbara F. Meeker, University of Maryland Games Daughters and Parents Play: Teenage Childbearing, Parental Reputation and Strategic Transfers. Lingxin Hao, Johns Hopkins University; V. Joseph Hotz and Ginger Zhe Jin, University of California, Los Angeles Status Generalizaton as a Mathematical Game. Geoffrey Tootell, San Jose State University; Alison Bianchi and Paul T. Monroe, Stanford University Algebraic Representations of Belief and Attitudes II: Microbelief Models for Dichotomous Belief Data. John Levy Martin, Rutgers University; and James Wiley, Public Health Institute A Theory of Structural Ordering: Ordering in Exchange Networks, A Theoretical Extension. Mamadi Corra, University of South Carolina

275. Regular Session. Occupations and Professions: Professions and Markets Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8219 Organizer and Presider: Robert Zussman, University of Massachusetts, Amherst The Early Career Ghettoization and Subsequent Job Mobility among Law Teachers: Implications for Sex Inequality in Legal Academia. Debra McBrier, University of Miami Professionalization, Financial Crises, and the Globalization of Business Rescue. Bruce Carruthers, Northwestern University; and Terence Halliday, American Bar Foundation Structural Unemployment and the Reconstruction of the Professional Self in the Changing Economy. Vicki Smith, University of California, Davis Economic Restructuring, Organizational Change and the Professions: A Case Study of Manchester's Business and Financial Sector. Fiona Devine, Joanne Britton, Rosemary Mellor, and Peter Halfpenny, University of Manchester, England Discussion: Robert Zussman, University of Massachusetts, Amherst 276. Regular Session. Place and Space: Tourism, Multiculturalism, and Public Life Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia A Organizer and Presider: Jan Lin, Occidental College Memory and Place: The Importance of Attending to Absence in Place-Based Research. Rob Shields, Carleton University Redefining Nature and Place Identity: Conflicts over Development and Sprawl. Christopher Mele, State University of New York, Buffalo Multicultural Spaces: Issues of Identity, Ethnicity, and Citizenship. Julia Kauste, New School for Social Research Mobility and the Transformations of "Public" and "Private Life". Mimi Sheller and John Urry, Lancaster University Discussion: John Eade, Southlands College 277. Regular Session. Social Implications of Population Aging Hilton Washington, Jefferson East Organizer and Presider: Donald Adamchak, Kansas State University Alternative Remedies: Demographic Change and the Publicto-Private Shift in Health Care. Brian Gran, University of Kentucky, Lexington Delaying Family Formation in Aging Populations: The Unintended Consequences for Youth. Elizabeth Fussell, University of Pennsylvania Social Consequences of Increasing Ethnic Diversity of America's Older Population. Kyriakos S. Markides, University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

278. Regular Session. Social Movements: New and Old Social Movements Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland C Organizer: Jack M. Bloom, Indiana University Northwest "New" Social Movement Theory, Civil Society, and Multiple Publics: ACT UP and the Limits of Challenging Codes. James Dean, University of Albany The Old Class Politics of New Social Movements—or, Ralph Nader’s Role in the Turn to the Right. Monica Prasad, University of Chicago Using Formal Methods of Qualitative Analysis to Examine Social Movements: An Event Structure Analysis of Split Labor Markets and AFL Organizing, 1917-19. Cliff Brown, University of New Hampshire Media and Mobilization: The Case of Radio and Southern Textile Worker Insurgency, 1929-1934. Vincent Roscigno, Ohio State University; and William F. Danaher, College of Charleston 279. Section on Sociology of Education. Refereed Roundtables and Business Meeting Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom Salon 1 Refereed Roundtables (10:30-11:30 a.m.): Organizer: Francisco O. Ramirez, Stanford University 1. Cross-National Perspectives The Rise of the Social Sciences in the University: Change and Variation over the Twentieth Century. David Frank and Jason Gabler, Harvard University An Exploration of Effects of Participation in Global Educational Comparison. Elizabeth H. McEneaney, University of Nevada, Las Vegas The Global Rise of Masters in Business Administrations. Hyeyoung Moon, Stanford University 2. Comparative Perspectives on Social Capital Table Presider/Discussant: Annette Lareau, Temple University Social Capital and Scholastic Achievement in an Icelandic Setting. Thorolfur Thorlindsson and Inga Dora Sigfussdottir, University of Iceland; and Stefan Hrafn Jonsson, Pennsylvania State University "It's Not What You Know, But Who You Know": Adult Social Capital and Track Placement of Ethnic Groups in Germany. Regina E. Werum, Emory University 3. Theoretical Issues in Education Table Presider/Discussant: Julia Wrigley, City University of New York Graduate Center Social Criticism and Sociology of Education. Scott Davies, McMaster University Cultural Capital or Cultural Competence?: Specialized Knowledge and Self-Presentational Acumen in American Secondary Education: Some Preliminary Hypotheses. Jason Kaufman, Harvard University

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Immigrant Families, Capital Conversion, and Educational Outcomes: The Case of Youth from the Former Soviet Union. Aaron Benavot and Katerina Bodovski, Hebrew University, Jerusalem 4. Educational Reform Issues Table Presider/Discussant: Richard Arum, University of Arizona Career Academies and the Reform of American High Schools: Symbolism, Opportunism, and Pedagogy. Robert G. Croninger, University of Maryland; and David J. Johnson, University of Michigan Early Elementary Class Size Reduction: A NeoInstitutional Analysis of the Social, Political, and Economic Influences on State-Level Policymaking. Ross E. Mitchell, University of California, Riverside Composing a Vision of Institutional Change: Lessons from Educational Reform. Christopher B. Swanson, University of Chicago 5. Educational Issues in Africa Table Presider/Discussant: Claudia Buchmann, Duke University Education Policy Script and Education Practice in NewlyDemocratic South Africa: A Case of Integration or Displacement? Ken Harley and Elizabeth Mattson, University of Natal, South Africa Families, Communities, and Schooling: A Comparative Study of Rural Malawi and Kenya. Mark J. Schafer, Louisiana State University 6. Educational Issues in the Asian Context Table Presider/Discussant: Suk-Ying Wong, Chinese University, Hong Kong Globalization and Professional Autonomy: The Academy in Hong Kong, Shanghai, and Beijing. Gerard Postiglione, University of Hong Kong Healing Hurting Hearts or Learning Language?: The Social and Academic Uses of a Japanese Language Saturday School. Roslyn Arlin Mickelson, University of North Carolina, Charlotte; and Moemi Kuroiwa, City of Sapporo School System 7. The Transition from Secondary to Post-Secondary Education Table Presider/Discussant: Sean Reardon, Pennsylvania State University Rethinking the Transition from High School to College: New Evidence from Non-Parametric Modeling Techniques. Robert A. Petrin, University of Chicago Extracurricular Participation and Progress Toward Postsecondary Education. Ann Marie R. Power and Vladimir T. Khmelkov, University of Notre Dame Cooling Out or Warming Up?: Change in Students' Academic Expectations. David Hurst, Educational Statistics Service Institute; and Ellen M. Bradburn, National Center for Education Statistics

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Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

Session 279, continued 8. The Race Earnings Gap Table Presider/Discussant: Ann Mullen, National Center for Educational Statistics Literacy Skills and Earnings: Race and Gender Differences. Roberto M. DeAnda and Pedro M. Hernandez, University of Illinois, Urbana Getting a Post-Collegiate Job: Social Structure, Undergraduate Resources, and College-to-Work Transitions. Cory Heyman, American Institutes for Research Why Major Matters: A Preliminary Analysis of the Role of College Major in the Race Earnings Gap. Richard N. Pitt, Jr., University of Arizona 9. Understanding School Leaving Table Presider/Discussant: Sylvia Hurtado, University of Michigan Leaving Community College: Do Existing Models of College Dropout Apply to Community College Students? Regina Deil, Northwestern University College Attrition at American Research Universities: Comparative Case Studies. Joseph C. Hermanowicz, University of Georgia Academic Achievement and School Removal: An Analysis of Multiple Pathways. Hanno Petras, M. Diane Clark, and Sheppard Kellam, Johns Hopkins University 10. High School Attrition and the Influence of Race Table Presider/Discussant: Guang Gao, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Estimating the Influence of Place of Residence on Mexican American High School Attrition: Evidence from Nineteen Metropolitan Statistical Areas in 1990. Anne Danenberg, Public Policy Institute, California The Impact of Adolescent Employment on High School Dropout: Differences by Race and Labor Market Characteristics. John R. Warren and Jennifer C. Lee, University of Washington 11. Noncognitive Influences and Academic Outcomes Table Presider/Discussant: Pamela Barnhouse Walters, Indiana University Sports Participation in High School: Effects on Grades, Self-Concept, Academic Self-Confidence, and Achievement. Will J. Jordan, Johns Hopkins University Do Noncognitive Behaviors Affect Grades and Life Outcomes? Stefanie DeLuca and Shazia Miller, Northwestern University 12. Students at Risk Table Presider/Discussant: Kimberly Goyette, Temple University Reframing the Problem of Student Failure: The Impact of School Context on the Effect of "At-Risk" Status. Emily Beller, University of California, Berkeley

It Takes a Village: Educational Gains for Children in Residential Treatment with Chemically Dependent Mothers. William R. Morgan, Durelle Robinson, and Gretchen Ruth, Cleveland State University How Parental Layoffs Affect Teenagers' Marks, Aspirations, and Attitudes to Work. Derek Wilkinson, Laurentian University 13. Adult Education Table Presider/Discussant: Kathleen Piker-King, Mount Union College Employer Support for Working Adults Who Pursue Vocational Degrees. David B. Bills and Mary Ellen Wacker, University of Iowa Educational Experience and Women's Likelihood of Welfare Recipiency. Irenee R. Beattle, University of Arizona 14. Issues Concerning Grades Institutional Covariates of "Grade Inflation" for U.S. Undergraduate Education. Emory Morrison, University of Washington Grade Retention and Social Promotion in Texas: An Assessment of Academic Achievement among Elementary School Students. Jon Lorence, Anthony Gary Dworkin, Laurence Toenjes, and Antwanette Hill, University of Houston 15. Teachers' Education Table Presider/Discussant: Susan Semel, Hofstra University Which Teachers Are Willing to Take Responsibility for Student Learning? Shannon Curtis, University of Michigan How Induction Programs Help New Teachers Cope with Complexity and Uncertainty. Douglas E. Mitchell and David Boyns, University of California, Riverside From "The Higher Branches" to "The Lower Branches": Changes in Teacher Education during Feminization. JoAnne Preston, Brandeis University 16. Policy Issues and Equal Opportunity Table Presider/Discussant: Joe Conaty, U.S. Department of Education The Meaning of Equity in Single Gender Public Schooling. Amanda Datnow, Ontario Institute for Studies in Education; and Lea Hubbard, University of California, San Diego The Effects of Teacher Professionalization on Attitudes and Orientations Promoting Equal Education Opportunities. Paula M. Moore, Georgia State University 17. Math, Science, and Engineering Education Table Presider/Discussant: Sandra Hanson, Catholic University More than Ability: Influences of Personal Relationships and Gender on the Likelihood of Students Leaving Sciences, Math, or Engineering Studies. James Daniel Lee, University of South Alabama

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

Explaining Regional Variation in Children's Reading and Mathematics Achievement. Toby L. Parcel and Mikaela Dufur, Ohio State University American Exceptionalism?: Relationships among Mathematics and Science Achievement and Family Resources in the Schools of 24 Countries. Stephen B. Plank, Johns Hopkins University 18. Influences of Families and Communities on Educational Outcomes Table Presider/Discussant: Chandra Mueller, University of Texas, Austin Cosmopolitan Environments and Adolescent Achievement Gains. Vicki L. Lamb, Lisa A. Pellerin, and Elizabeth Stearns, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Improving Student Attendance: Effects of Family and Community Involvement. Joyce L. Epstein and Steven Sheldon, Johns Hopkins University 19. Explaining High School Outcomes Table Presider/Discussant: Mark Berends, Rand Corporation Using Lottery Admission to Magnet Schools to Create Evaluations Based on Random Assignment. Robert L. Crain, Morehead State University; and Robert Thaler, Teachers College, Columbia University What Determines High School Outcomes? Edward B. Reeves and Edward F. Breschel, Morehead State University 20. Issues in School Organization Table Presider/Discussant: David L. Levinson, Bergen Community College High School Class Schedules: The Negative Academic Effects of One Systemic Failure in the Scheduling Process. Warren N. Kubitschek, University of Notre Dame Mentoring Network and Social Control of Deviance: Evidence from American High Schools. Kazuaki Uekawa and Charles E. Bidwell, University of Chicago Section on Sociology of Education Business Meeting (11:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m.) Stevenson Graduate Student Paper Award Recipient: Christopher Swanson, for "Cooling-Out and WarmingUp: Then Role of the Postsecondary Institutional Environment in Managing Ambitions." 280. Section on Sociology of Sex and Gender. Author Meets Critics: Feminist Sociology, Social Change, and the Millennium Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland A Organizer: Jennifer L. Pierce, University of Minnesota Presider: Deborah A. Smith, University of Minnesota Book Title: Feminist Sociology: Life Histories of a Movement (Rutgers University Press, 1997) edited by Barbara Laslett and Barrie Thorne

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Book Editors and/or Contributors: Barrie Thorne, University of California, Berkeley Bonnie Thornton Dill, University of Maryland Elizabeth Higginbotham, University of Delaware Lynn Weber, University of South Carolina Critics: Raka Ray, University of California, Berkeley Hokulani Aikau, University of Minnesota Peter M. Hennen, University of Minnesota 281. Section on Social Psychology Miniconference. Sociological Social Psychology at the Millennium: The State and Future of Social Structure and Personality Research (co-sponsored by the International Sociological Association Social Psychology Committee) Hilton Washington, International West Organizer and Presider: James S. House, University of Michigan Panel: Lawrence D. Bobo, Harvard University Deborah Carr, University of Michigan Melvin Kohn, Johns Hopkins University Jeylan Mortimer, University of Minnesota 282. Section on Marxist Sociology. Refereed Roundtables and Business Meeting Hilton Washington, International East Refereed Roundtables (10:30-11:30 a.m.): Organizers: B. Ricardo Brown, Pratt Institute; and Alan Spector, Purdue University 1. Theoretical Issues in Marxist Sociology: Human Nature and Democracy Table Presider: Manjur Karim, Culver Stockton College Marxism and Democracy. Manjur Karim, Culver Stockton College 2. Radical Pedagogy and Racial Praxis Table Presider: Beverly H. Burris, University of New Mexico Teaching Marx: What Works and What Doesn't. Beverly H. Burris, University of New Mexico 3. Reading Louis Althusser Althusser's "Machiavelli and Us." Larry Miller, University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth 4. Negri and Potenza: Autonomous Marxism in the PostSocialist Era Table Presider: Kristin Lawler, City University of New York Graduate Center Italian Marxism and the Ecological Question. Kristin Lawler, City University of New York Graduate Center Negri and the Autonomia Movement. Mark Haller, City University of New York Graduate Center To be announced. Mike Roberts, City University of New York Graduate Center Antonio Negri: Communism and the Subject. Bruno Gulli, City University of New York Graduate Center

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Session 282, continued Marketing Marxism: Antonio Negri and Post-Structuralist Theory. Jonathan Cutler, Wesleyan University 5. Whither Materialist Feminism? Table Presider: Martha E. Gimenez, University of Colorado, Boulder A Marxist-Feminist Critique of Materialist Feminism. Martha E. Gimenez, University of Colorado, Boulder Negri Beyond Negri: Materialist Feminism and Negri. David Staples, City University of New York, Graduate Center Revealing the Wolf in Sheep's Clothing: Materialist (Marxist) Feminist Sociology. Chrys Ingraham, Russell Sage College Recovering the "Subject" of Class: Gender, Structure, and Agency in the Transformation of Indian Women to Factory Workers. Jayati Lal, Johns Hopkins University 6. Film and the Production of Space during the Time of Capital Table Presider: Ivan Zatz, Pratt Insitute A Touch of Evil: The Screen and the Production of Space. Ivan Zatz, Pratt Institute "The Viewer's Dialectic": The Revolutionary Cinema of Tomas Gutierrez Alea. Lora Stone, University of New Mexico 7. Issues in Marxist Criminology I: Popular Culture/Popular Justice Table Presider: Lloyd Klein, University of Tennessee A Verdict for the People: False Consciousness and the Television Depiction of Popular Justice. Lloyd Klein, University of Tennessee; and Steven Lang, Nassau Community College, New York 8. Popular Culture and the Reification of Urban Spaces Table Presider: William Menking, Pratt Institute Music, Space, and Identity. Melinda Ann Russell, Carleton College The City as Spectacle: The Changing Role of Mass Media in the Urbanization of Capital. Miriam Greenberg, City University of New York Graduate Center Public Art and Gentrification in Rome, Miami, and New York. William Menking, Pratt Institute 9. Marxism and Science: Problems of History and Method Table Presider: B. Ricardo Brown, Pratt Institute Science, the Origins of Race, and the Rise of Sociology. B. Ricardo Brown, Pratt Institute Chemistry and Communism: the Work of Carl Schorlemmer. Bruce Robinson, University of Manchester, U.K. Fundamental Problems Interpreting Marxist Methodologies. Paul Paolucci, University of Kentucky

10. Issues in Marxist Criminology II: Prisons, Courts, and Power Table Presider: Robert Carl Schehr, University of Illinois Policing Capitalism. Robert Carl Schehr, University of Illinois Racial Disparities in the Criminal Justice System. Victor Holden, Purdue University, Calumet 11. Welfare Reform, Education, and the Obligation to Work From Freedom and Democracy to Work Force Development: Welfare Reform in California Community Colleges. Brenda Rogers, University of California, Irvine 12. Women and Development Table Presider: Ife Modupe, Howard University African American Women and Production: The Shifting Relationship between Black Women and the Process of Production within the Current Stage of Capitalist Development. Ife Modupe, Howard University Impact of Economic Development on Muslim Women. Fahara Tenikar, Loyola University, Chicago Migrant Women: Informal Survival. Joanna Hadjicostandi, University of Texas, Permian Basin 13. Accumulation and Health Table Presider: Sergio Reuben Soto, University of Costa Rica The Future of Health Care under Capitalism or in Terms of Latin American Sociology, the Future of the "Estado Desarrollista" (or Welfare State) under the Condition of Peripheric Capitalism. Sergio Reuben Soto, University of Costa Rica Issues of Alienation and Health. Jackie Carrigan 14. Biological Determinism: Anti-Scientific Ideology in Service to Capital Economics, Politics, and the Rise of Racist Biological Determinism. Alan Spector, Purdue University 15. Authoritarianism, neo-Fascism, Proto-Population, and Nationalism in the New Millennium Table Presider: Stephanie Shanks-Meile Women in the White Race War: The Transformation of Economic and Gender Roles. Stephanie ShanksMeile Anti-Immigrant Groups in Los Angeles. Carina A. Bandhauer, Binghamton University Rage in the City of Angels: Political Opportunity Structures and Participation in the White Racialist Movement. Pete Simi, University of Nevada, Las Vegas 16. The Centrality of Class and Class Struggle in the 21st Century Table Organizer/Presider: Berch Berberoglu, University of Nevada The Coming Class Struggle at the Dawn of the 21st Century. Berch Berberoglu, University of Nevada

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

The Coming Class Struggle from the Standpoint of the Capitalist Class. Rosalyn Bologh, Staten Island and Graduate Center, City University of New York 17. Accumulation on a World Scale Table Presider: Ricardo Duchesne The Role of the Colonial Trade in the Industrialization of Europe: The Verdict of Recent Research. Ricardo Duchesne Bourdieu and Resistance to Globalization. Kieran Allen 18. Ethnic War and Nationalism Table Presider: Mike-Frank G. Epitropoulos, University of Pittsburgh Kosovo: A Marxist Analysis of Greek National Response. Mike-Frank G. Epitropoulos, Duquesne University Ethno-nationalist Conflict in Gorbachev's Soviet Union: A Comparison of Theories. Douglas Wiese, University of Colorado Crusades and Imperialism Past and Present: The Discourse of Modernity and Religion in the Colonization of the Holy Land. Khaldoun Samman, Binghamton University 19. Local Organizations and Local Action Table Presider: Daniel D. Martin, Miami University, Ohio To be announced. Mikala Bembery, Roofless Women A Community Action Project with Low-Income, African American Parents of Murdered Children: Some Preliminary Results. Daniel D. Martin, Miami University, Ohio The Role and Development of Community-Based Research: Expertise and Community Power. Douglas Taylor, Loka Institute 20. Contemporary Views of Classical Theories Table Organizer/Presider: Eric Boria, Loyola University Globalization and Civility. Eric Boria, Loyola University 20th Century Marxism: The Agenic Tradition. Hank Rich, Loyola University, Chicago Franz Fanon: Culture, Consciousness, and Nationality. Derrick Brooms, Loyola University, Chicago "Where the Links Were Broken": Mandating Efficiency through an Electronics Supply Chain. Jackie Zalewski and Anteaus Rezba, Loyola University, Chicago 21. With Marx and Against Marx Table Presider: Dieter Bogenhold, Bremen University With Marx and Against Marxism: Toward a Sociology of Consumption. Dieter Bogenhold, Bremen University The Capitalist Character of Advertising Labor. Sean Noonan, Kansas State University Section on Marxist Sociology Business Meeting (11:30 a.m.12:10 p.m.)

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283. Section on Sociological Practice. Current Topics at Century's Beginning Hilton Washington, Independence Organizer and Presider: Jerrald D. Krause, Humboldt State University Evaluating Welfare Systems Change in Alaska: The Alaska Works Project. Karl T. Pfeiffer, University of Alaska, Anchorage Sociological Practice and Diversity in the Workplace. Peter J. Stein and Kathleen Korgen, William Paterson University Career Development for Graduates of Sociology Departments. Rick Stephens, Greenville College Designing and Evaluating Alcohol Prevention Programs with Elementary Students: Overcoming the Challenge of Limited Reading Ability. Ann Marie Ellis, Southwest Texas State University; Mary Lou Bell, Bell Group; and Kappie K. Bliss, Bliss Consulting Discussion: Harvey Williams, University of the Pacific 284. Section on Asia and Asian America. Transnational Asia-Asian American Linkages: Views from Asia Hilton Washington, Caucus Organizer: Alvin Y. So, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology Presider: Xiangming Chen, University of Illinois, Chicago Legal and Illegal Migration from Fujian (China) to the U.S.: A Sending Country's Perspective. Zai Liang, Queens College, City University of New York Taiwan-Taiwanese American Linkages: A Transnationalism Approach to Return Migration. Yen-Fen Tseng and SueChing Jou, National Taiwan University Global Fantasies: Constructions and Commodification of Vietnamese Women in Post-Embargo Vietnam. DiemMy Bui, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Engendering Globalization from Below: The Solidarities between an Indian NGO and Asian American Communities. Manisha Desai, Hobart and William Smith College Discussion: Alvin Y. So, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology 285. Section on Sociology and Computers. Ethical Issues in Computing Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson C Organizer and Presider: Ronald E. Anderson, University of Minnesota Fear and Alienation at the Turn of the New Millennium: A Sociological Analysis of Beliefs about Y2K. Eric Rice, Stanford University Acceptable Use Policies on School Web Sites. Brian Dill and Ronald E. Anderson, University of Minnesota Security of Computerized Medical Information: Threats from Authorized Users. James G. Anderson and Maria Brann, Purdue University

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

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Privacy Concerns and Ethics in Maintaining Electronic Patient Records. Shu-Fen Tseng and Chin-Chang Ho, Yuan-Ze University, Taiwan Discussion: Judith Perrolle, Northeastern University 286. Section on Rational Choice. Rationality in Group Formation Hilton Washington, Georgetown West Organizer and Presider: Edward J. Lawler, Cornell University The Strength of Weak Power: A Further Result of Simulation Study of Network Evolution. Phil Bonacich, University of California, Los Angeles Macrostructural Exchange Theory: Power in the Exchange Networks of Active Drug Injectors. Douglas Heckathorn, Cornell University Rationality and Group Solidarity: The Importance of Relational Signals. Siegwart Lindenberg, University of Groningen A Theory of Network Cohesion. Shane Thye, University of South Carolina 287. Section on History of Sociology. History of Sociology Outside the Academy Marriott Wardman Park, Balcony C Organizers: Kay Broschart, Hollins University; and Linda Rynbrandt, Grand Valley State University Presider: Kay Broschart, Hollins University Settlement Sociology. Patricia Lengermann, George Washington University; and Jill Niebrugge-Brantley, Wells College Ellen Swallow Richards and the Settlement House Movement: Assimilationist or Feminist Advocate? Barbara Richardson, Eastern Michigan University The Ecofeminism of Charlotte Perkins Gilman. Mary Jo Deegan and Christopher Podeschi, University of Nebraska, Lincoln A History of Intellectuals and the Demise of the New Class: Academics and the U.S. Government in the 1960s. Eleanor Townsley, Mount Holyoke College Discussion: Linda Rynbrandt, Grand Valley State University

12:30 p.m.

288. Plenary Session. Racism and Anti-Racism Struggles: Global Perspectives Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom Salon 2 Organizers: Florence B. Bonner, Howard University; and Joe R. Feagin, University of Florida Presiders: Joe R. Feagin, University of Florida; and James E. Blackwell, University of Massachusetts (Emeritus) “And They Seemed Like Such Nice People”: The Legacy and Landscape of Racism in U.S. Higher Education. Walter R. Allen, University of California, Los Angeles Combating Racism in the 21st Century: Using the United Nations and Other International Strategies. Deborah Robinson, International Possibilities, Unlimited Soldiers in the Army: Black Women Civil Rights Activists and Their Resistance Strategies. Bernice McNair Barnett, University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign Understanding the Present, Understanding the Future: Toward a New Civil Rights Movement Agenda. Eduardo Bonilla-Silva, Texas A&M University

2:30 p.m.

Meetings

Section on Sociology of Education Business Meeting (to 12:10 p.m.)—Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom Salon 1 Section on Marxist Sociology Business Meeting (to 12:10 p.m.)—Hilton Washington, International East

Meetings

Committee on the Status of Persons with Disabilities in Sociology—Hilton Washington, C326 Department Resources Group Training on Assessment of Student Learning—Hilton Washington, Hamilton Section Officers with Committee on Sections—Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware A

2:30 p.m. 11:30 a.m.

Plenary

Other Groups

Eastern Sociological Society Executive Committee—Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8209

2:30 p.m.

Sessions

290. Special Session. What Makes Social Movements Successful? Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia C Organizer and Presider: Belinda Robnett, University of California, Irvine

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

Changing Meaning and Policy: Child Sexual Abuse, Culture, and the State. Nancy Whittier, Smith College Paths to Success, Paths to Failure: The Women's Movement and the Revival of Midwifery in the United States, 19681998. Kelly Moore, Columbia University Claiming Credit: The Social Construction of Success. David Meyer, University of California, Irvine Discussion: Kim Voss, University of California, Berkeley 291. Special Session. Pro-Democratic Aspects of Sociological Practice (co-sponsored by the ASA Section on Sociological Practice, the Society for Applied Sociology, and the Sociological Practice Association) Hilton Washington, Monroe East Organizer and Presider: Andrew Ziner, Cedar Crest College Panel: Amitai Etzioni, George Washington University Donald Light, Rutgers University Art Shostak, Drexel University Jay Weinstein, Eastern Michigan University Discussion: Ross Koppel, Social Research Corporation 292. Special Session. Sociology of Popular Music Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia A Organizer: Thomas J. Scheff, University of California, Santa Barbara Popular Music: The Interplay of Ideology and Technology. Jon D. Cruz, University of California, Santa Barbara Predicting the Pop Music of 2020 Using the Production of Culture Perspective. Richard A. Peterson, Vanderbilt University Individualism and Alienation in Popular Love Songs: 19301999. Thomas J. Scheff, University of California, Santa Barbara Discussion: C. Lee Harrington, Miami University 293. Special Session. Indian America, 1969-1999: A Prelude to Cultural, Political, and Economic Incorporation in the 21st Century Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland C Organizer and Presider: Brian Alan Baker, Cornell University Red Power: A Catalyst for Change in American Indian Political and Cultural Identity. Angela A. Gonzales, San Francisco State University Supply-side, Trickle-down: Neo Colonial REZconomics. Michael James Yellow Bird, University of Kansas American Indian Cultural Incorporation and Resistance: Associations between Religious Expression and Emotional Well-Being on Two Reservations. Eva Marie Garroutte, Boston College Discussion: C. Matthew Snipp, Stanford University

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294. Special Session. Beyond AIDS: Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual Health Issues Hilton Washington, Jefferson East Organizer and Presider: Kristen Esterberg, University of Massachusetts, Lowell Sociological Perspectives on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgendered Health: An Overview. Don Barrett, California State University, San Marcos Health Issues for Lesbians: From Preventive Health to Cancers, from Birthing to Aging. Christy M. Ponticelli, University of South Florida Medical Subjects and Objects: Emergent Lesbian and Gay Male Health Agendas on the National Stage. Steven Epstein, University of California, San Diego Beyond VD and HIV: Documenting Gay Men's Health Organizing Since Stonewall. Eric E. Rofes and Crispin Hollings, Humboldt State University Discussion: Kristen Esterberg, University of Massachusetts, Lowell 295. Special Session. Race, Gender, and Entrepreneurship Hilton Washington, Georgetown West Organizers: Marlese Durr, Wright State University; and Thomas S. Lyons, University of Louisville Presider: Hayward Derrick Horton, State University of New York, Albany African American Women Entrepreneurs: Overcoming Obstacles. Karyn A. Loscocco, State University of New York, Albany; Marlese Durr, Wright State University; and Sharon Parkinson, State University of New York, Albany Helping Minority Women to Develop Entrepreneurial Skills through Social Capital Building. Thomas S. Lyons, University of Louisville; and Gregg A. Lichtenstein, Collaborative Strategies Latina Entrepreneurial Activity in the 1990's: Lessons for the 21st Century. Barbara J. Robles, University of Texas, Austin Race and Entrepreneurship in the 21st Century. John Sibley Butler, University of Texas, Austin Discussion: Barbara J. Robles, University of Texas, Austin Social costs, the denial of opportunities to participate in the larger social, cultural, and economic arenas of society are the products of inequality and its varying features of oppression and domination. This is particularly true for African Americans and women when perceptions of subordinate status remain woven into the society's fabric, barring these individuals from participation within the larger society. These papers discuss these women's obstacles and successes in becoming a larger part of the enterprise arena.

296. Special Session. Medicare Reform (co-sponsored by the Section on Medical Sociology) Hilton Washington, International West Organizer: Anne Figert, Loyola University, Chicago

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Session 296, continued Presider: William Gronfein, Indiana University-Purdue University at Indianapolis Panel: Carroll L. Estes, University of California, San Francisco Mary Jo Gibson, AARP Jonathan B. Oberlander, University of North Carolina Discussion: William Gronfein, Indiana University-Purdue University at Indianapolis 297. Author Meets Critics. Time and Poverty in Western Welfare States: United Germany in Perspective (Cambridge University Press, 1999) by Lutz Leisering, University of Bielefeld, and Stephan Leibfried, University of Bremen Hilton Washington, Lincoln East Organizer: Glen H. Elder, Jr., University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Presider: David L. Featherman, University of Michigan Book Authors: Lutz Leisering, University of Bielefeld; and Stephan Leibfried, University of Bremen Critics: Rebecca M. Blank, University of Michigan John Bynner, University of London Karl Ulrich Mayer, Max-Planck Institute for Human Development, Berlin, Germany 298. Didactic Seminar. Qualitative Interviewing: Intersubjectivity, Reflexivity, and Painful Moments to Be Endured and Even Shared with Colleagues Afterward Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson A Ticket required for admission Leaders: Arlene Kaplan Daniels, Northwestern University Those who are at all open and forthcoming about their interviewing experience admit that these experiences, though rewarding, can be painful and even excoriating. I have written at length about what can be learned from such experiences, both upon the subject of concern and also about one's own character and one's need for improvement in that area. In this seminar we will look at the problems and opportunities created by the ambience developed between the interviewer and the respondent over time. We will discuss the interview--protracted and continued over time--and the venue, the previous expectations and understandings, the nature of the topics to be discussed (whether innocuous or touchy) as well as how the topics work out for discussion in interaction. We will also consider the nature of the interviewers revelations and willingness to reveal his or her own interests and values. Finally we will consider the relative social skills and powers of the interviewer and the informant for an appreciation of what nuances and unspoken directives may guide the interview situation, irrespective of its ostensible purpose.

299. Didactic Seminar. Introduction to ComputerAssisted Telephone Interviewing (to 6:10 p.m.) Howard University (shuttle departs from the Marriott) Ticket required for admission Leader: Mary Scheuer Senter, Central Michigan University

This seminar will introduce participants to Computer-Assisted Telephone Interviewing (CATI), using software available from Sawtooth Technologies. The seminar will meet in a computer laboratory so that participants can simulate the stages of designing an interview schedule, loading a sample, establishing study specifications, and monitoring the progress of interviewing. While the seminar leader has experience working with CATI only in a small, university-based research center (with 12 interviewing stations), the software can be used by large facilities as well.

300. Professional Workshop. Experimental Research Using the Web-Lab (to 5:30 p.m.) Hilton Washington, Military Organizers: David Willer, University of South Carolina; and Michael J. Lovaglia, University of Iowa Panel: Casey Adam Borch, University of South Carolina Blane Dobey, University of South Carolina Dudley Girard, University of South Carolina Michael Lovaglia, University of Iowa David Willer, University of South Carolina Robert Willer, University of Iowa This workshop introduces participants to the Web-Lab, a new tool for sociological research. The Web-Lab is an active Web-site that houses software for experimental research. Workshop participants will design and run experiments and download results exactly as they will at their home schools. NO PROGRAMMING SKILLS ARE REQUIRED. With the experience of this workshop, participants will be able to design experiments on their office computers and run them on any computers with access to the Internet. A computer classroom can be a lab, but the participant's lab need be no more than a few computers distributed at many locations. For example, the Web-Lab has run experiments where half the subjects were in the U.S. and half were in the Netherlands. Participants will find that the Web-Lab is a powerful teaching tool. Research-based learning components in graduate and undergraduate classes can use exactly the same designs as used when experiments are run on the Web.

301. Academic Workplace Workshop. Ideas for Recruiting Majors and Minors in Sociology, before Their Senior Year! Hilton Washington, Map Organizer: Christopher Hunter, Grinnell College Panel: Charley Flint, William Paterson University Christopher Hunter, Grinnell College Norah D. Peters-Davis, Beaver College Allen Scarboro, Augusta State University This workshop will explore what sociology departments can do to recruit majors and do so at a reasonable time in students' academic careers. We will also explore how departments can deal with the problems which can arise when our recruiting is successful.

302. Teaching Workshop. Teaching Graduate Family Sociology Hilton Washington, Georgetown East Leaders: Maxine P. Atkinson, North Carolina State University Jason D. Joyner, North Carolina State University The goal of this workshop is to help instructors develop graduate family classes such that students understand and can articulate the relationship between family sociology and the larger discipline. Too often family sociology is devalued in the graduate curriculum. We believe that

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m. one of the reasons for this devaluation is the lack of understanding of how it is that family sociology is integrated into and contributes to the discipline. We illustrate and encourage participants to practice teaching techniques which demonstrate the broader relevance of family sociology. Handouts will be provided; participants are asked to bring a syllabus or short list of readings that might be assigned to a graduate family sociology course.

303. Teaching Workshop. Teaching about Ethics in the Sociology Curriculum (co-sponsored with the ASA Committee on Professional Ethics) Hilton Washington, Caucus Organizer: Joyce M. Iutcovich, Keystone University Research Corporation Panel: Helen Moore, University of Nebraska, Lincoln Earl Babbie, Chapman University Brad Smith, Western Maryland College Presenters will discuss their approach to teaching ethics within their sociology curriculum. Approaches for both graduate as well as undergraduate students will be addressed. Specifically, the presenters will discuss how ethics is taught—in what courses, using what materials, and in what depth and breadth. Participants in the workshop will not only learn why it is important to incorporate the teaching of ethics within the sociology curriculum, but they will gain practical ideas for teaching ethics as well.

304. Open Refereed Roundtables. Theories, Social Movements, Culture, Cognition, Technology, and Methodology Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom Salon 1 Organizer: Che-Fu Lee, The Catholic University of America 1. Sociological Theories Table Presider: Guido Mollering, University of Cambridge Georg Simmel and the Nature of "Trust": Restoring the Reactivation of Consent. Guido Mollering, University of Cambridge Toward a Resisting Social Ethics: An Ethics of Freedom and the Reactivation of Consent. Scott Schaffer, California State University, Fullerton 2. Theories and Issues of Social Movements Table Presider: Linda Bridges Karr, University of South Carolina Collective Action by Accident?: Issues of Organization and the Suppression of Free-Riding. Linda Bridges Karr, University of South Carolina Idiosyncratic Differences in Isomorphic Forms: A Case for Early Institutional Research in a World of Neoinstitutional Thinking. Duane M. Covrig, University of Akron Lineage Socialization, Family Status and Student Activism in South Korea. Byeong-Chul Park and Richard E. Ratcliff, Sterling College, Syracuse University Czech Families Ten Years after the Velvet Revolution. Joseph Hraba and Frederick O. Lorenz, Iowa State University

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3. Culture, Media, and Social Action Table Presider: Katherine Jackson, Northwestern University Simply Experiencing the Past?: Affect and Authenticity in American Civil War Reenacting. Katherine Jackson, Northwestern University One Size Fits All: Packaging Childhood in an OtherDirected Society. Dianne Sykes, Marian College; and Carla Glover, Texas A&M University Cognition and Enacted Social Action: Gesture, Projection Space, and Intention. David S. Fearon Jr., University of California, Santa Barbara 4. Social Cognition Table Presider: Susan Carol Losh, Florida State University On the Application of Social Cognition and Social Location to Creating Casual Explanatory Structures. Susan Carol Losh, Florida State University The Ghosts and Veblen among Engineers of a Peripheral Society: Engineers in Turkey, Their Class Positions, Ideologies, and Identities. Ahmet Oncu and Ahmet Hasim Kose, Sabanci University, Turkey 5. Technology and Society Table Presider: Kristopher Robinson, Ohio State University Cyber-Space and Post-Industrial Transformations: A Cross-National Analysis of Internet Development. Kristopher Robinson and Edward Crenshaw, Ohio State University A Culturalist Notion of Technology. Hangwoo Lee, State University of New York, Buffalo The Resurgence of Technological Pessimism. Roger Neustadter, Northwest Missouri State University Marx, Computers, and the End of Industrial Unionism. Sanjiv Gupta and Thomas O'Donnell, Population Studies Center, Randall Laboratories Scientific Productivity, New Communication Technology and Inequality: Does CMC Narrow the Gap? John P. Walsh, Nancy Maloney, and Stephanie Kucker, University of Illinois, Chicago 6. On-Line Interaction Table Presider: Natasha Chen Christensen, University of California, Los Angeles Geeks at Play: Doing Masculinity in an Online Gaming Site. Natasha Chen Christensen, University of California, Los Angeles The Effect on Identity in Internet-based Distance Learning. Christopher Sutcliff, University of Akron Nazis on the Net: The Small-World Problem Re-visited in Virtual Space. Katherine A. Giuffre and Blythe Massey, Colorado College 7. Ghost/Haunting as Sociological Evidence Table Presider: Sara Dorow, University of Minnesota

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Session 304, continued Imagining a Life: Haunting and Transnational Adoption. Sara Dorow and Douglas Hartmann, University of Minnesota Gender, Race, and Nationalism in the United States: Immigrant Experiences. Alyssa Goolsby, University of Minnesota 8. Methodology (Qualitative) Table Presider: Amy Blackstone, University of Minnesota Getting in on the Way to Getting There: The Process of Discovery and the Discovery of Process in Establishing Rapport. Amy Blackstone and Alyssa Goolsby, University of Minnesota Methodological Concerns in International Strike Research: Preserving the Nation-State as a Unit of Analysis. Kristen M. Wallingford, State University of New York, Albany The Stranger in the Interview: Reflections on the Research Process. Donna B. Barnes, California State University, Hayward 305. Special Roundtable Session. Minority Opportunity through School Transformation (MOST) Program Student Presentations (co-sponsored with the ASA Minority Affairs Program and the ASA MOST Program) Hilton Washington, State Organizer: Edward Murguia, American Sociological Association 1. Government, Law, Media, and Organizing Table Presider: Sung Hak Choi, University of California, Los Angeles Women in the Mexican and U.S. Government. Rocio Curiel, University of California, Santa Barbara Law and Society. Roberto C. Elorduy and Karla Hernandez, University of Texas, El Paso Ideology and Stereotypes in Mass Media News in Puerto Rico. Edgar Rios-Santiago, University of Puerto Rico, Mayaguez Race-Based Organizing: Internal Issues, Contradictions, and Conflict in Student Organizing. Josina Morita, Pitzer College 2. Education and Social Inequality Table Presider: Frieda Fowler, University of Nebraska, Lincoln The Effects of Unequal Preparation on Chicano(a) Students' Perceptions of Post-High School Educational Opportunities. Cindy Gutierrez, University of California, Santa Barbara The Legacy of Conquest and American Indian Education in Nebraska Schools. Colette Mast, University of Nebraska, Lincoln

Natives of the Field: A Cultural Study of High School Football: Values, Beliefs, and Social Realities. Jose Mata, Pitzer College 3. Immigration, Discrimination, and Age Segregation Table Presider: David A. Lemmel, University of California, Los Angeles The Migration Experience of Mexican Origin Immigrants to California. Veronica Diaz, University of California, Santa Barbara Perceived Discrimination among Latinos of Isla Vista, California. Juan Aquino and Isidro Pineda, University of California, Santa Barbara Some Elder Persons: A Qualitative Study of How Elder Persons Make the Decision to Move into AgeSegregating Housing. Vanessa Hewitt-Quinland, Missy Allport, and Susan Patty, Augusta State University Cognition and Depressive Feelings in a Family Context: A Pilot Study. Sheilla F. Quinones, University of Puerto Rico, Mayaguez 4. Employment, Gender, and Violence Table Presider: Portia L. Cole, American University The Significance/Meaning of Paid Labor for Women: The Case of 10 Chilean Women. Brenda Munoz, University of California, Santa Barbara The Effects of Structural Adjustment Programs on Women in Nicaragua and Kenya. Lorena Vargas, University of California, Santa Barbara The Impact of the Violence Against Women Act on Latina Immigrants. Victoria Vasquez, University of Texas, El Paso Violence and Drugs in a Southern City. Katina Williams, Augusta State University Police Stress: An Analysis of Stress Experienced by Lincoln Police Officers. Erica Nordhagen, University of Nebraska, Lincoln 306. Informal Discussion Roundtables. Shifting Contexts for Gender and Family Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware B Organizer: Stella M. Capek, Hendrix College 1. Women's Citizenship and Contemporary Reproductive Politics. Rob Yaw Adwere-Boamah, University of Michigan 2. Going Pro?: A Qualitative Analysis of Elite Male and Female College-Bound Athletes' Identities. Todd A. Migliaccio and Scott A. Melzer, University of California, Riverside 3. Women, Gender, and Globalization. Jennifer Brickham Mendez, College of William and Mary 4. Publish or Parent: The Challenges and Benefits of Combining Work and Family. Kimberly Simmons, University of Southern Maine

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

5. Conceiving a Sociology of Pregnancy. Elizabeth M. Armstrong, University of Michigan 6. Alimony: A Missing Link in the Sociological Study of Divorce. Constance Shehan, Felix M. Berardo, Erica Owens, and Donna H. Berardo, University of Florida 7. Incarcerated Parents and Their Children: Issues of Custody, Visitation, and Separation. Rosann Bar, Caldwell College 8. Interconnections between Work and Family Demands over Time. Julia McQuillan and Alyson Frickle, University of Nebraska, Lincoln 9. The White Male as an Organizational Minority. Douglas Snyder, Prince George's Community College 307. Information Poster Session. Graduate Programs in Sociology (to 5:30 p.m.) Hilton Washington, Exhibit Hall Organizers: Charmaine Samaraweera and Meghan Rich, American Sociological Association Graduate programs will display information describing their programs, special emphases, financial aid and admissions criteria, and opportunities to work with faculty researchers and instructors. Department representatives will be on hand to answer questions from undergraduate students and their advisors, MA students looking to pursue a PhD, and other interested parties. Some departments will bring information and admission packets to distribute to attendees. Participating institutions, followed by their poster numbers, include:

University of Akron – #22 University of Arizona – #28 Arizona State University – #1 Ball Street University – #32 Baylor University – #30 Boston College – #13 Bowling Green State University – #10 Brown University – #6 University of California, Davis – #27 University of California, Los Angeles – #36 University of California, Riverside – #33 University of California, Santa Barbara – #23 California State University, San Marcos – #21 Case Western Reserve University – #15 University of Chicago – #37 University of Colorado, Boulder – #40 University of Delaware – #29 DePaul University – #8 Duquesne University – #19 Florida State University – #16 University of Hawaii, Manoa – #25 University of Illinois, Chicago – #20 University of Iowa – #5 Johns Hopkins University – #24 University of Kansas – #34 University of Kentucky – #4 Miami University – #14 North Carolina State University – #12

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Northeastern University – #31 Northern Arizona University – #38 University of Notre Dame – #17 University of Pennsylvania – #39 Pennsylvania State University – #18 South Dakota State University – #11 University of Tennessee – #3 Tulane University – #2 University of Utah – #36 Vanderbilt University – #7 Washington State University – #9 Wayne State University – #26 West Virginia University – #35 308. Student Forum. The Changing Nature of Work in the New Millennium Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8219 Organizer: Katherine Clegg, University of Nottingham Networking Labour Market Institutions: Case Studies of OneStop Career Centers. Joaquin Herranz, Jr., Massachusetts Institute of Technology The Information Revolution: Effects on American Working Class, The Poor, and The Third World. Pablo Serrato, Chapman University Labor Controls in China Enterprise: A Case Study. Benjamin Miu, Hong Kong Polytechnic University Changing the Nature of Work: Confrontations and Compromise in a Worker Cooperative. Elizabeth Hoffman, University of Wisconsin, Madison Work Place Deviance: A Look at Postal Workers Who Take the Lives of Their Co-Workers. Lisa Ann Geason, Michigan State University "Identity" at Work: Approaching Changing Workplaces and Changing Workers. David Wright, University of Nottingham 309. Regular Session. Death, Dying, and Bereavement Hilton Washington, Independence Organizer: Renee R. Anspach, University of Michigan Presider: Robert Zussman, University of Massachusetts Amherst Location of Death: Gender Differences in the End of Life. Chloe E. Bird and Oma Intrator, Brown University Bridging Law and Medicine in Death Investigation: Maintaining Professional Integrity in a Medical Examiner's Office. Stefan Timmermans, Brandeis University Why Do People Request Physician-Assisted Death? Tracy Shroepfer, University of Michigan Death, Dying, and Decision-Making in Detroit: Determinants of Attitudes Toward Euthanasia. Zhen Zeng and Renee R. Anspach, University of Michigan Discussion: Daniel Chambliss, Hamilton College

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310. Regular Session. Deviance and Social Control: Qualitative/Historical Hilton Washington, Monroe West Organizer: Ramiro Martinez, Jr., Florida International University Presider: Richard Tewksbury, University of Louisville Public Deviance during Mardi Gras: A Qualitative Exploration. David Redmon, Southwestern University; and Kathleen Rivera, Texas Woman’s University Criminalizing Homelessness: Changing Police Practices towards the Homeless in New York and San Francisco. Alex S. Vitale, Brooklyn College, City University of New York Passing the Buck: Risk Avoidance and Risk Management in the Illegal Drug Trade. John C. Cross and Bruce D. Johnson, National Development and Research Institute The Effects of Moral Panics: Repressive and Productive Models of Social Control. Susan Chimonas, University of Michigan Discussion: Richard Tewksbury, University of Louisville 311. Regular Session. Sociology of Food Marriott Wardman Park, Balcony B Organizer and Presider: John M. Talbot, Colby College Judaism and Islam: Common Practices and Divergent Meanings. Samuel Z. Klausner, University of Pennsylvania The East Is East and the Yeast Is West: Food in the Migrant Imagery of Home. Krishnendu Ray, Culinary Institute of America Recipes for Identity: Ingredients from My Kitchen. Josephine Vu, The Latin School, Chicago You Are Who You Eat With: A Community Study of Commensality. Jeffery Sobal and Mary K. Nelson, Cornell University Eating Out: The Rise and Character of Public Evaluation of Food. Grant Blank, American University 312. Regular Session. Occupational and Job Segregation in the Workforce Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8206 Organizer: Thomas A. DiPrete, Duke University Presider: Patricia Roos, Rutgers University Occupational Sex Segregation in East and West Germany, 1980s and 1998: Levels, Patterns, Change. Rachel Rosenfeld, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill; and Heike Trappe, Max Planck Institute for Human Development, Berlin Gender Segregation in Organizations: A Comparison between the U.S. and Germany. Juliane Achatz, Thomas Hinz, and Jutta Allmendinger, University of Munich A Look at Equal Employment Opportunity by Gender over a Quarter of a Century (1962-1988): A Demographic Analysis of the Federal Government White Collar

Workforce. Shelby Stewman, Carnegie-Mellon University; Hisashi Yamagata, University of California, Berkeley; and Hiroko Dodge, University of Pittsburgh Ethnic Networking and Niching in Today's Urban Labor Markets: How Important Is the Connection, and for Whom? James R. Elliott, Tulane University Discussion: Patricia Roos, Rutgers University 313. Regular Session. The Lasting Effects of Early Life Course Events Hilton Washington, Jefferson West Organizer and Presider: Stephen T. Russell, University of California, Davis The Vietnam War, Uncertainty, and the Timing of First Marriage: Effects of the Draft and Military Service. Christopher Chan, Florida State University Inner-City Mothers in Later Life. Salvatore J. Babones, University of Texas, Arlington; and Janet B. Hardy, Johns Hopkins University The Wisconsin Model of Status Attainment as a Life Course Process: Evaluating the Long-Term Effects of Social Psychological Variables. Jennifer Sheridan, University of Wisconsin, Madison The Long-Term Effects of Childhood Adversity on Adult Educational and Occupational Attainment. Cheryl Elman, University of Akron; and Angela O'Rand, Duke University Discussion: Linda K. George, Duke University 314. Regular Session. Power and Inequality in Organizations Marriott Wardman Park, Balcony D Organizer: J. Kenneth Benson, University of Missouri, Columbia Presider: Peter M. Hall, University of Missouri, Columbia The Organizational Advantage?: Social Capitol, Gender, and Small Business Owners' Access to Resources. Amy Davis and Howard E. Aldrich, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Particularism in Control over Monetary Resources at Work: An Analysis of Racioethnic Differences in the Authority Outcomes of Black, White, Asian, and Latino Men. Ryan Alan Smith, Rutgers University Organizing the Market: Power/Knowledge, Resistance, and the Process of Organizational Change. The Case of Russia's Market Revolution. Jeffrey K. Hass, Duquesne University The Impact of Activist Institutional Investors on Diversification and Performance: A Study of the U.S. Fortune 500, 1982-1994. David L. Kang, Harvard University The Over-Socialized View of the Individual in Organizational Theory. Richard A. Colignon, Duquesne University

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

315. Regular Session. Popular Culture: Race, Class, and Ethnicity in Cultural Contestation Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia B Organizer: Suzanna Walters, Georgetown University Presider: Kathleen Curry, University of Delaware Blackface in Italy: Cultural Power between Nations in an Era of Globalization. Richard Kaplan, University of California, Santa Barbara Animating Cultural Politics: Challenging Visual Democracy in Disney's “Aladdin.” Janet Palmer, University of Michigan Is It Something He Said?: The Mainstream Appeal of Richard Pryor's Culturally Intimate Humor. Evan Cooper, State University of New York, Albany Class War in a Film Genre. Neal King, Belmont University Discussion: Kathleen Curry, University of Delaware 316. Regular Session. Race, Class, and Gender: Diminished Dreams Marriott Wardman Park, Balcony A Organizer: Lorraine Mayfield-Brown, University of South Florida Class, Race, and Gender Inequality. Richard Hogan, Purdue University Criminalization of Students: School as a Landscape of Fear. Michelle Ronda, City University of New York Race, Gender, and Educational Advantage among the Urban Poor. Katrina Bell McDonald and Thomas A. LaVeist, Johns Hopkins University Hoop Dreams and Life Schemes: Women, Sport, and Social Mobility. Jane Downing, University of Missouri, Columbia Social Economic Position and Physical Health Outcomes for Mexican Americans, Puerto Ricans, and Cubans in the United States. Mercedes Rubio, University of Michigan 317. Regular Session. Sociology of Church Involvement Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson B Organizer: Dean Hoge, Catholic University of America Presider: Madeleine Cousineau, Mount Ida College Why Stay?: Progress and Constraints for Women Leading in Local Catholic Congregations. Elaine Howard, Cornell University As the Flocks Gather: How Religion Affects Voluntary Association Participation. Pui-Yan Lam, Washington State University Testing the Promise of the Churches: Income Inequality in the Opportunity to Learn Civic Skills in Christian Congregations. Philip Schwadel, Pennsylvania State University Gender Differences in the Professional Orientations of Protestant Clergy. Elaine M. McDuff, Iowa State University; and Charles W. Mueller, University of Iowa Discussion: Adair Lummis, Hartford Seminary

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318. Regular Session. Social Theory: Dilemmas of Contemporary Life Hilton Washington, Thoroughbred Organizer: Mustafa Emirbayer, University of Wisconsin, Madison Presider: Ira Cohen, Rutgers University Social Integration in Heterogeneous Societies: Community through Thin Norms. Benjamin Gregg, University of Texas, Austin On Fragmentation, Urban and Social. Judit Bodnar, Rutgers University Learning from Populism: Narrative Analysis and Social Movement Consciousness. Gary Bologh, University of Michigan Sociology: From "Society" to "Mobilities." John Urry, Lancaster University Detached Involvement: On the Sociology of Solitude. Ira J. Cohen, Rutgers University 319. Section on Sociology of Education. Schooling: Organizational and Interactional Issues Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland A Organizer: Francisco O. Ramirez, Stanford University Presider: Barbara Schneider, University of Chicago Downplaying Choice: Institutionalized Emotional Norms in U.S. Middle Schools. Gerald LeTendre, Pennsylvania State University The Teacher-Student Role Frame: Relations of Exchange and the Balance of Multiple Role Considerations. Daniel McFarland, University of Notre Dame Curriculum Structure in High Schools Divided into Schoolswithin-Schools. Valerie Lee and Douglas Ready, University of Michigan; Diana Oxley, University of Oregon Capacity for Change: A Framework for Understanding Contemporary School Reform. Adam Gamoran, University of Wisconsin, Madison Discussion: Kathyrn Schiller, State University of New York, Albany 320. Section on Sociology of Sex and Gender. Women and Gender in Ethnic-Political Conflict: CrossCultural Perspectives Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland B Organizers and Presiders: Frances Hasso, Oberlin College; and Paola Bacchetta, University of Kentucky You've Struck a Rock: Gender, Social Resistance, and Transformation in Comparative Perspective. M. Bahati Kuumba, Buffalo State College Contextualizing Maternal Thinking: A Case Study of Palestinian Motherists. Enid Schatz, University of Pennsylvania The Korean "Comfort Women": The Victims Intersected by Race, Gender, and Class. Pyong Gap Min, Queens College, City University of New York

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Session 321, continued Discussion: Paola Bacchetta, University of Kentucky; and Frances Hasso, Oberlin College 321. Section on Social Psychology. Refereed Roundtables on Social Psychology Hilton Washington, International East Organizer: Lisa Troyer, University of Iowa 1. Personality and Social Roles Table Presider: Will Kalkhoff, University of Iowa Role Repertoires. A. Paul Hare and Sharon Hare, BenGurion University Still Stable After All Those Years?: Personality Stability Theory Revisited. Monika Ardelt, University of Florida Personality Development and Life Experiences in Young Adulthood. Yumei Sun, Iowa State University 2. Social Psychology and Health Table Presider: Kristen Marcussen, University of Iowa and Kent State University Abortion and Women's Psychology: Reinventing the Abortion "Problem" in Anti-Abortion Discourse. Ellie Lee, University of Kent, Canterbury The Health Benefits of Emotional Narratives: Why and How Do They Work? Linda E. Francis, State University of New York, Stony Brook AIDS Preventive Behavior among Taiwanese University Students. Ya-Chien Wang, University of North Texas 3. Status, Expectations, and Interaction Table Presider: Shelley Correll, Stanford University Physical Attractiveness and Vocal Accommodation. Anne E. Haas, Ohio State University; and Stanford W. Gregory, Kent State University Experimental Research on Gender as Status: Challenges and Solutions. Martha Foschi, University of British Columbia Sentiment and Status Processes: A Test between Constitutive and Mediator Models in the Expectation States Tradition. Alison J. Bianchi, Stanford University Determinants of Performance Expectations. Brent Simpson, Cornell University; and Henry A. Walker, University of Arizona Do Mistakes Matter?: Examining the Impact of Status Mistakes on Interaction. Chris Bourg, Stanford University 4. Social Relations and Social Psychological Outcomes Table Presider: Gretchen Peterson, University of Arizona Social Relationships and Social Psychology: Beginnings and Future Possibilities. Diane Felmlee, University of California, Davis; and Susan Sprecher, Illinois State University

Social Support and Professional Commitment among Teachers in South Korea: A Structural Equation Approach. Young-Choon Kim, Stanford University Applying the Social Interactionist Perspective to Understanding the Impact of Domestic Violence on the Children. Lori Collins-Hall, Hartwick College Family Time and Experience of Happiness among Adolescents: Effects of Interpersonal Processes and Structural Resources of the Family. Qin Chen, University of Chicago Conflict Networks: The Theory and Its First Experimental Test. Joanna Heidtman and Jacek Szmatka, Jagiellonian University, Poland 5. Social Psychology of Self and Identity Table Presider: Alicia Cast, Iowa State University The Relationship between Positive Self-Esteem and Moral Reasoning Ability. Deborah Cummins, American Medical Association; and Donnie J. Self, Texas A&M University Adverse Social Comparison Processes and Negative SelfFeelings. Beverly L. Stiles and Howard B. Kaplan, Texas A&M University Evolutionary Social Psychology of the Self. Derek S. Reiners, Indiana University, Bloomington Identity Breakthroughs: Youth at Risk Design Possible Selves. Seana S. Lowe, University of Colorado, Boulder Living as an Imposter: False Identity and Impression Management Techniques. Kevin D. Vryan, Indiana University, Bloomington 6. Structure, Culture, and Values Table Presider: Paulette Lloyd, University of California, Los Angeles Ratings or Rankings?: Measuring Value Change in Societies. Seth Ovadia, University of Maryland, College Park Why Do People Donate to Charity?: Values and Prosocial Decision Making. Mark Konty, Nobuyuki Takahashi, and Elizabeth Borland, University of Arizona The Mobius Strip: An Answer to Cartesian Thought's Inconsistencies. Prudence Stone, New York University Socialization in Modern Society. Gordon J. DiRenzo, University of Delaware Individualism and Opposition to Affirmative Action: Evidence from Priming Experiments. Markus Kemmelmeier, University of Michigan 322. Section on Marxist Sociology. The Nation-State in the Global Age Hilton Washington, Lincoln West Organizers: Lauren Langman, Loyola University Chicago; and Kevin Anderson, Northern Illinois University Presider: Lauren Langman, Loyola University Chicago

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

Purdue University, Islamism, Nationalism and Gender. Janet Afary, Purdue University Marx on Poland: Nationalism, Democracy, and Revolution. Kevin Anderson, Northern Illinois University The Resurrection of Marxist Economic in the Age of Globalization. Alan Barton, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill From Subject to Citizen to Audience: Embodiment and the Mediation of Hegemony. Lauren Langman and Hank Rich, Loyola University of Chicago The Rise of the Transnational State. William Robinson and Gioconda Robinson, New Mexico State University 323. Section on Sociology and Computers. The Consequences of Computing Technology for Higher Education Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson C Organizer and Presider: David Elesh, Temple University Panel: John R. Regalbuto, University of Illinois, Chicago David Post, Temple University and Cyberspace Law Institute Steven Gilbert, TLT Group Universities are joining or creating distance education programs, believing that they must do so or see competitors erode their markets. These efforts raise significant issues as to the nature of the educational process, faculty workloads, ownership of intellectual property, and, ultimately, the role of faculty within the university.

324. Section on History of Sociology. Images of Sociology, 1800-2000 Marriott Wardman Park, Balcony C Organizers: Jack Nusan Porter, University of Massachusetts, Lowell and The Spencer School, West Newton; and Jan E. Thomas, Georgetown University Presider: Jan E. Thomas, Georgetown University Images of Professional Sociology in the American Press, 1890-1930. Michael Hill, University of Nebraska, Lincoln Sociologists as Characters: The Image of Sociology in Novels. Diane Bjorklund, Illinois State University Images of Female Sexuality Across Race in Women's Magazines. Gloria Gadsden, Fairleigh Dickinson University Discussion: Jack Nusan Porter, University of Massachusetts, Lowell. and The Spencer School, West Newton

4:30 p.m.

Meetings

Committee on Sections—Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8218 Preparing Future Faculty Advisory Board—Hilton Washington, C328 Section on Social Psychology Business Meeting (to 5:30 p.m.)—Hilton Washington, International West Task Force on the International Focus of American Sociology—Hilton Washington, C327

4:30 p.m.

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Open Forum

Open Forum on Journal Diversity (sponsored by the ASA Task Force on Journal Diversity) Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland C Chair: Bernice Pescosolido, Indiana University Vice-Chair: Carole C. Marks, University of Delaware

4:30 p.m.

Sessions

325. Thematic Session. Recognizing Oppression and Facilitating Change: Demystifying Disability Hilton Washington, Jefferson East Organizer: Barbara M. Altman, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality Presider: Gary Kiger, Utah State University Speaker: Judy Heumann, Assistant Secretary, U.S. Department of Education Is Oppression a Latent Function of Disability Policy? Barbara M. Altman, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality Resisting Oppression through Protest: Social Movements in the Disability Community, 1970-1999. Sharon N. Barnartt, Gallaudet University Disability and Institutional Change: A Human Variation Perspective on Overcoming Oppression. Richard K. Scotch, University of Texas, Dallas; and Kay Schriner, University of Arkansas Discussion: Corinne Kirchner, American Foundation for the Blind; and Tanis Doe, Pearson College 326. Special Session. The Multiracial Movement: Revisioning the Meaning of Race, Family, and Politics Hilton Washington, Caucus Organizer and Presider: Karen Dugger, Towson University New People...Again: the Disappearance, Rediscovery, and Transformation of American "Multiracials." Kimberly DaCosta, University of California, Berkeley Who Is Mixed Race?: Patterns and Determinants of Adolescent Racial Identity. David Harris and Jeremiah J. Sim, University of Michigan Multiracial Identity and the New Millennium: Black No More or More Than Black. Reginald Daniel, University of California, Santa Barbara Mark All that Apply: Assessing the Benefits and Limitations of the New Rule Regarding Federal Racial Classification. Rainier Spencer, University of Nevada, Las Vegas Discussion: Kenneth W. Goings, University of Memphis

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Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

327. Special Session. Aging in the Developing World Hilton Washington, Georgetown West Organizer: Vicki L. Lamb, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Presider: Richard Suzman, National Institute on Aging Current and Future Aging Trends in the Developing World. Kevin Kinsella, National Research Council Families and Resources of the Elderly in the Developing World. Emily M. Agree, Johns Hopkins University Health and Disability among the Elderly in the Developing World. George C. Myers, Duke University 328. Special Session. Cultural Boundaries in Theory and Practice: Implications for Social Change Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson C Organizer and Presider: Christina Nippert-Eng, Illinois Institute of Technology Watersheds and Turning Points: On the Social-Narratological Construction of Historical Discontinuity. Eviatar Zerubavel, Rutgers University Multiple Transgressions: Boundary Problems in Alterations of Gender and Professional Roles. Cynthia Fuchs Epstein, City University of New York Graduate Center Narratives of Change and Constraint: Cultural Boundaries in the Construction of Institutions. Calvin Morrill, University of Arizona Social Distinction and Presidential Dignity: Picturing the Erosion of the Presidency. Barry Schwartz, University of Georgia Discussion: Mark D. Jacobs, George Mason University 329. Special Session. The Sociology of Immanuel Wallerstein: An Appreciation Hilton Washington, Thoroughbred Organizer and Presider: Albert J. Bergesen, University of Arizona Panel: John W. Meyer, Stanford University Janet Abu-Lughod, New School of Social Research Randall Collins, University of Pennsylvania Walter L. Goldfrank, University of California, Santa Cruz Discussion: Immanuel Wallerstein, Binghamton University 330. Special Session. Advances in Neurosociology Hilton Washington, Georgetown East Organizer: David D. Franks, Virginia Commonwealth University Presider: Michael Hammond, University of Toronto The Neurology of Human Evolution and the Evolution of Culture. Jonathan H. Turner, University of California, Riverside Mind, Self, and Society in Neurological Perspective. Alexandra Maryanski, University of California, Riverside Why Sociology Needs Neuroscience. Thomas S. Smith, University of Rochester

Culture, Brains, and Time Consciousness. Warren D. TenHouten, University of California, Los Angeles; and Charles D. Kaplan, Limburg University, The Netherlands Discussion: David D. Franks, Virginia Commonwealth University 331. Regional Spotlight Session. E. Franklin Frazier and His Work in DC (co-sponsored by the Association of Black Sociologists) Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland B Organizers: James E. Teele, Boston University; and Ralph Gomes, Howard University Presider: James E. Teele, Boston University Enfant Terrible: Frazier’s Contributions to Sociology. Tony Platt, San Francisco State University They Have Careers: Women, Class, and Families in the Sociology of E. Franklin Frazier. Cheryl Townsend Gilkes, Yale University The Family and E. Franklin Frazier’s Research. Andrew Billingsley, University of South Carolina E. Franklin Frazier on Race and Culture Contracts, MiddleClass Formations, and the Assimilation Problem. Clovis E. Semmes, Eastern Michigan University Discussion: Stanford Lyman, Florida Atlantic University 332. Author Meets Critics. Fighting Words: Black Women and the Search for Justice (University of Minnesota Press, 1998) by Patricia Hill Collins, University of Cincinnati Hilton Washington, Lincoln East Organizer and Presider: Bernice McNair Barnett, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Book Author: Patricia Hill Collins, University of Cincinnati Critics: Charles Lemert, Wesleyan University Lori Waite, Trinity College Howard Taylor, Princeton University 333. Professional Workshop. Navigating Institutional Review Boards Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware A Organizer and Presider: Sue Hoppe, University of Texas, San Antonio Panel: David R. Segal, University of Maryland Jeff Cohen, Office for Protection from Research Risks, National Institutes of Health This workshop is directed to researchers who have not yet had the experience of "navigating" the Institutional Review Board (IRB) process in seeking approval for proposed research. It covers the purposes of IRBs, including a brief summary of the history of their development; how IRBs operate in different institutional settings; and the relationship between federal regulations governing IRBs and the ASA Code of Ethics. IRB requirements for on-going review of research and ways to deal with ethical issues that arise during the course of research projects will be addressed. Panelists will include a representative from the Office for Protection from Research Risks (OPRR) at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and sociologists who will describe their experiences with IRB review of quantitative and qualitative research projects.

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

334. Academic Workplace Workshop. Scanning the Future and Department Strategic Planning Hilton Washington, State Leader: Joel D. Lapin, System Director of Planning, Community College of Baltimore County The goal of this workshop is to introduce the concept and practice of external environmental scanning and forecasting, and especially its application to strategic planning. A major purpose of environmental scanning is to develop a set of external trends, or forces of change, to use as the anchor for a strategic plan. Applying the sociological perspective and research and related higher order skills to this effort is more likely to result in a successful strategic plan which should allow a department of sociology to answer the basic question of what should it do to assure a more successful future in light of documented trends.

335. Teaching Workshop. Teaching Undergraduate Courses on Racial and Ethnic Relations Marriott Wardman Park, Balcony C Organizer: Donald Cunnigen, University of Rhode Island Panel: Rodney Coates, Miami University of Ohio Edna Molina, Wright State University Jack Niemonen, University of South Dakota Edward K. Sanford, Austin Peay State University The workshop will consist initially of a panel focusing on topics such as textbook selection, pedagogical techniques, web-based course technology, and other aspects of teaching racial and ethnic relations. Following the panel presentations and a brief question and answer period, participants may convene small discussion groups, with those in attendance selecting the discussion topic of most interest.

336. Teaching Workshop. Teaching the Graduate Methods Course Hilton Washington, Map Leaders: Kenneth C. Land, Duke University Patrick Heuveline, University of Chicago Nan Lin, Duke University Lyn H. Lofland, University of California, Davis Peter V. Marsden, Harvard University Charles C. Ragin, Northwestern University The goal of this workshop is to help instructors develop ideas about course content, reading materials, instructional devices, class assignments, computer laboratory assignments and software instruction, and the like. Workshop leaders will coordinate the discussion (Land) and make brief presentations on their experiences in teaching graduate methods courses in the areas of comparative/historical methods (Ragin), demographic methods (Heuveline), qualitative research methods (Lofland), statistical methods (Marsden), and survey research methods (Lin). Leaders will also be asked to reflect on challenges in constructing and teaching an adequate graduate methods research program in the contemporary context of diversity in research methods used by sociologists. Handouts will be provided.

337. Regular Session. The Welfare State Marriott Wardman Park, Balcony B Organizer and Presider: Rebecca Jean Emigh, University of California, Las Angeles The New Federalism Meets Welfare Policy: A Spatial Analysis of Wages and Welfare Benefits in the United

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States. John T. Hartman, Young and Rubicam; and Andrew G. Kourvetaris, Columbia University From Welfare Rights to Workers' Rights: The Transformation of Welfare Rights Activism in the United States. Ellen Reese, California State University, San Bernardino; and Garnett Newcombe, University of Missouri, Columbia "Chiselers," "Loafers," and "Welfare Cheats": The Postwar Attacks on Aid to Dependent Children. Nancy K. Cauthen, Columbia University An Institutional Analysis of Pension Reform in Three Postcommunist Countries. Mitchell A. Orenstein, Syracuse University Discussion: Nancy A. Naples, University of California, Irvine 338. Regular Session. The Politics of Consumption Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia A Organizer: Eva Illouz, Tel Aviv University Presider: Daniel Thomas Cook, University of Illinois, Champaign-Urbana Age Cures: The Business of Passing. Pattie Thomas and Erica Owens, University of Florida Image Is Everything: Corporate Personae and Consumer Politics on the World Wide Web. Rosemary Coombe, University of Toronto; and Andrew Herman, Drake University The Politics of Shopping: Anti-Chain Activity and the Consumption Related Social Movement. Laura J. Miller, University of Western Ontario China R US: Care, Consumption and the Construction of Needs in the Transnational Adoption of Children. Sara Dorow Discussion: Daniel Thomas Cook, University of Illinois, Champaign-Urbana 339. Regular Session. Disasters Hilton Washington, Monroe West Organizer and Presider: Dennis Mileti, University of Colorado, Boulder Civil Society and the State: Turkey after the Earthquake. Rita Jalali and Sermin Gologlu, Middle East Technical University Predicting Long-term Business Recovery from Disaster: A Comparison of the Loma Prieta Earthquake and Hurricane Andrew. Gary R. Webb, Kathleen J. Tierney, and James M. Dahlhamer, University of Delaware Behavioral and Organizational Response Challenges Likely to Be Encountered in a Bio-terrorist Attack. Henry W. Fischer, III, Millersville University Overcoming the Effects of Disaster: A Rationale for the Kuwaiti CTSM Program. Fahed Al-Naser, Kuwait University Do Disasters Affect Individuals' Psychological Well-being?: A Longitudinal Study of the Effect of Hurricane Floyd on Men and Women in Eastern North Carolina. Marieke Van Willigen, East Carolina University

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Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

Session 339, continued Discussion: Russell R. Dynes, University of Delaware 340. Regular Session. Economic Sociology: Banking and Finance Hilton Washington, Hamilton Organizer: Wayne Baker, University of Michigan Presider: Robert Faulkner, University of Massachusetts Knowledge of Failure or the Failure of Knowledge? Bankruptcy, Credit, and Credit Reporting in the 19th Century U.S. Bruce Carruthers and Barry Cohen, Northwestern University Governance from a Financial Focus: An Effective Strategy for Asset Development in the 1980s and 1990s. Dena Wise, University of Tennessee; Tami Swenson and Mary Zey, Texas A&M University Product Categories as Sense-Making Mechanism. Michael Lounsbury, Cornell University; and Hayagreeva Rao, Emory University Who Gets Credit?: The Economic Value of Social Status in Money Lending. Lynne Moulton, Rutgers University Banking on Each Other: The Situational Logic of Rotating Savings and Credit Associations. Nicole Woolsey Biggart, University of California, Davis Status Competition and Firm Pricing: Evidence from Banking Legal Services. Brian Uzzi and Ryon Lancaster, Northwestern University 341. Regular Session. Gay and Lesbian Studies: Narratives and Counter-narratives of Identity Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia B Organizer and Presider: Lionel Cantu, University of California, Santa Cruz The Female Unapologetic: Queer Resistance in Sport. Kendal L Broad, University of Florida Homosexuality and National Identity in the Art and Performance of Gay and Lesbian Mexicans. Ed McCaughan, Loyola University, New Orleans Toward a Lesbian Barbie?: Theorizing the Possibility of a Sexually Idealized Lesbian Image. Andrea Noack, York University "Embarcado con un Balsero": Gay Cubans across Generations. Susana Pena, University of California, Santa Barbara Theorizing Bisexual Male Invisibility and Gay-Bisexual Relations. Erich Steinman, University of Washington, Seattle 342. Regular Session. Industrial Transformations and the Labor Market Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8206 Organizer: Thomas A. DiPrete, Duke University Presider: Kevin Leicht, University of Iowa Expansion of the Service Sector: A Comparison of the Labor

Markets in the U.S.A., West Germany, and Switzerland. Andreas Diekmann, University of Berne; Henriette Engelhardt, Max Planck Institute for Human Development; and Ben Jann, University of Berne Performance without the High: Firms and Technology in LowEnd Services. Annette Bernhardt, Columbia University Displaced or Downsized: New Evidence on Demographic Patterns in Organizational Restructuring. William P. Bridges and Erin Ruel, University of Illinois, Chicago What's Friendship Got to Do with It?: Looking for Jobs from Elliott Lake. Derek Wilkinson and David Robinson, Laurentian University Discussion: Kevin Leicht, University of Iowa 343. Regular Session. Law and Society Hilton Washington, Independence Organizer and Presider: Simon Singer, State University of New York, Buffalo The Institutionalization of a Policy Response to Discriminatory Violence: From Social Movement Concept to Law Enforcement Practice. Ryken Grattet, University of California, Davis; and Valerie Jenness, University of California, Irvine Sentencing of Drug Trafficking Defendants: The Effects of Title VIII of the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994. Celesta Albonetti, University of Iowa Taking a Broader View of Sentencing Policy Effectiveness: A Case Study of a Recent Juvenile Justice Reform. Daniel P. Mears, University of Texas, Austin Moral vs. Legal Definitions of Clients' Selves in Divorce. Joseph Hopper, University of Chicago Discussion: Richard Schwartz, Syracuse University 344. Regular Session. Organizations: Power/Networks/Culture Marriott Wardman Park, Balcony D Organizer and Presider: J. Kenneth Benson, University of Missouri, Columbia Networks of Company Job Training. David Knoke and Lisa Janowiec-Kurle, University of Minnesota North Carolina's Smart Start Initiative and Interorganizational Collaboration: An Inductive, Structural-Constructionist Approach to Network Analysis. P. Roger Ehrlich, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill An Interorganizational Power Perspective on Retrenchment: The Adoption of Faculty Retrenchment Programs among Ontario Universities. Art Budros, McMaster University The Pervasive Effects of Embeddedness in Organizations. Brooke Harrington, Brown University Culture and Politics in the Emergence of Organizational Routines. Deborah B. Balser, University of Missouri, St. Louis; and Robert N. Stern, Cornell University

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

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345. Regular Session. Place and Space: Race, Gender, and Agency Marriott Wardman Park, Balcony A Organizer and Presider: Jan Lin, Occidental College Place-Making and Community-Building in Vietnamese America: Orange County and Boston. Karin Aguilar-San Juan, Macalester College Environment as Container and Environment as Experience: What Is the Role of "Place" in Women's Health? Sara Shostak, University of California, San Francisco "In This Nigger Place...": Race, Class, and the Garbage of Gentrification. Monique Taylor, Occidental College Using Space: Agency and Identity in a Public Housing Development. Kevin Fox Gotham and Krista Brumley, Tulane University Discussion: Phil Kasinitz, City University of New York, Hunter College

348. Section on Sociology of Education. Educational Reform and Innovation Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland A Organizer: Francisco O. Ramirez, Stanford University Presider: Mary Metz, University of Wisconsin, Madison Beyond Educational Policy: Bilingual Teachers and the Social Construction of Teaching "Science" for Understanding. Pamela Quiroz and Abel Mercado, University of Illinois, Chicago The Unintended Consequences of Stigma-Free Remediation. Regina Deli and James Rosenbaum, Northwestern University Business "Partnerships" with Educational Institutions. Kevin Dougherty, Manhattan College Adult Participation in Education in Life Course Perspective. Aaron Pallas, Michigan State University Discussion: Alan Sadovnik, Adelphi University

346. Regular Session. Changing Religious Communities Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8219 Organizer: Dean Hoge, Catholic University of America Presider: Fenggang Yang, University of Southern Maine The Effect of Group Size on Interfaith Marriages. James D. Davidson and Tracy Widman, Purdue University Changing Faith: A Study of Racial Dissimilarity and Religious Switching. Coye Cheshire, Stanford University Becoming Christians: The Roles of Agency and Culture in Chinese Immigrants' Conversion to Christianity. Kwai Hang Ng, University of Chicago The Future of Islam in Europe: A Study of the Configuration of the Religious Field. Oussama Cherribi, University of Amsterdam Discussion: R. Stephen Warner, University of Illinois, Chicago

349. Section on Sociology of Sex and Gender. Gender and Non-normative Bodies Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom Salon 3 Organizer and Presider: C. L. Cole, University of Illinois, Champaign-Urbana Born Again and Again: The Exquisite Ontologies of Reproduction. Charis Thompson, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Female-Controlled or Female Contrived?: The Configuring of Gendered Bodies by New Safer Sex Technologies. Michael Scarce, University of California, San Francisco "The Social Evil" and "the Social Body": Anti-Prostitution Agitation in Turn-of-the-Century New York. Val Marie Johnson, New School of Social Research and University of Toronto Transgression or Niche: The Queer Sports Body? Toby Miller, New York University

347. Regular Session. Social Movements: International Movements Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia C Organizer: Jack M. Bloom, Indiana University Northwest Presider: Jackie Smith, State University of New York, Stony Brook The Diffusion of Collective Action: An Event History Analysis of International Indigenous Activism. Kelly Dietz, Cornell University The International Organizations of the Prodemocracy Movement. Thomas Loya The International Human Rights Movement for Comfort Women. Kiyoteru Tsutsui, Stanford University Creating Transnational Solidarity: The Use of Narrative in the U.S.-Central America Peace Movement. Sharon Erickson Nepstad, Duquesne University Discussion: Jackie Smith, State University of New York, Stony Brook

350. Section on Marxist Sociology. Does Sociology Have a Future?: A Marxist Perspective Hilton Washington, Lincoln West Organizer and Presider: Carol Brown, University of Massachusetts, Lowell The Dialectical Relationship of Sociology and Marxism: Why Sociology Can Have No Theory of Human Societies. Leslie G. Carr, Old Dominion University Marxist Tools for Sociology: Reconsidering Human Nature. Elizabeth A. Wissinger, City University of New York Free Enterprise and Marxism: The Neurobehavioral Basis for Reconciliation. Gerald Cory, Center for Behavioral Ecology Discussion: Larry Miller, University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth

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Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

351. Section on Sociological Practice. The Role of Sociological Practice for the Profession Hilton Washington, Monroe East Organizer and Presider: Jerrald D. Krause, Humboldt State University The Place of Theory in Applied Sociology: A Reflection. Jay Weinstein, Eastern Michigan University Applied Sociology and Organized Labor: On Going Better Together. Arthur Shostak, Drexel University The Participatory Approach to Practicing Sociology (The History of an Adventure of Invention). Jerrald D. Krause and Judith Little, Humboldt State University Discussion: Andrew Scott Ziner, Cedar Crest College 352. Section on Asia and Asian America. Refereed Roundtables: Topics in Sociological Studies of Asia and Asian America Hilton Washington, International East Organizer: John Lie, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign 1. Caste at the End of the Millennium: In the Memory of M.N. Srinivas Table Presider/Discussant: Bam Dev Sharda, University of Utah Sanskritization and Hindutva. Joseph W. Elder, University of Wisconsin, Madison The Village Remembered, the City Observed. Murray Milner, Jr., and Syed Ali, University of Virginia Caste among Non-Hindu Communities. Victor S. D'Souza Caste and Community in India's Politics Today. Bam Dev Sharda, University of Utah; and Proshanta Nandi, University of Illinois, Springfield 2. Socio-Cultural and Political Arrangements of South Asia at the End of the 20th Century Table Presider: Bandana Purkayastha, University of Connecticut, Storrs From Colonialism to the "New" Global Economy: A Look at Asian Indian Women Activists/Activism, Then and Now. Bandana Purkayastha, University of Connecticut, Storrs Mate-Seeking through Personals: Contrasts in Values and Styles between Indian Immigrants and Main Stream Americans. Proshanta Nandi, University of Illinois, Springfield The Construction of Collective Identity and Identity Politics in a Changing Political Opportunity Structure: A Study of the National Language Movement of East Bengal, 1947-1956. Afroza Anwary, Concordia College; and Sharful Alam, Metropolitan State University Table Discussant: Manisha Desai, Hobart and William Smith College 3. Friends, Networks, and the Chinese Diaspora Table Presider: Philip Q. Yang, Texas Women's University Just Friends: Social Networks and Middle Class Chinese

Immigrants. Weizhen Dong and Janet W. Salaff, University of Toronto Han and Zhuang's Residential Patterns in Middle Guangxi. Maochun Liang, Institute of Sociology What Is Universal about Friendship Ties? Danching Ruan, Hong Kong Baptist University; and Wenhong Zhang, Nankai University Conceptualizing Chinese Transnationalism. Philip Q. Yang, Texas Women's University 4. The Fate of Chinese Economic Reforms From Revolutionary Comrades to Gendered Partners: Marital Construction of Breadwinning in Urban China. Jiping Zuo, Saint Cloud State University Feminism and Globalization in China. Binh Pok, Cornell University Views of Rural Chinese on the Economic and Political Reform. Yingfeng Wu, State University of New York, Stony Brook Embeddedness Effects in Different Market Contexts: A Study of Exchange Relationships among Private Business, State-owned Enterprises, and Government Officials in Transitional China. Hongwei Xu, University of Minnesota 5. Occupations, Careers, and Work Careers Inside Organizations: A Comparative Study of Promotion Determination in Urban China. Yang Cao, Cornell University Occupational Disparity between Asian American Women and Whites: An Ecological Perspective. Bibin Qin, Texas A&M University Power Relation at White-Collar Workplace: Personnel Evaluation Practice at Japanese Company. Jun Imai East Asian Invested Enterprises in China: Labor Disputes in Organizational Perspectives. Young-Jin Choi, Chinese University of Hong Kong 6. Asian American Activism and Politics Asian American Activism in Local School Reform: Gaining Visibility and Voice. Yvonne M. Lau, Loyola University, Chicago The Effects of Multi-Ethnic Competition on the Rise of Asian American Organizations. Dina Okamoto, University of Arizona The Search for a Discipline: The Network Structure of Asian American Studies. Anthony Paik, University of Chicago 7. Ethnic Enclaves and Immigrant Businesses around the World Testing the Ethnic Enclave Hypothesis in State Socialist Economy. Harris H. Kim, University of Chicago Gender and Ethnic Stratification in Immigrant Small Businesses. Eunju Lee, State University of New York, Albany 8. Religion Table Presider: Emily Ignacio, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

The Ethnic Consequences of Religion: A Comparison between Taiwanese Immigrant Buddhists and Christian Converts in the United States. Carolyn Chen, University of California, Berkeley Religion and Japanese Americans' Views of Their World War II Internment. Stephen S. Fugita and Marilyn Fernandez, Santa Clara University Faith and Empowerment in Filipino Women. Freddie R. Obligacion, Franklin Pierce College; and Julie Obligacion-Arboleda, Bicol University 9. Education Table Presider: Linda Vo, University of California, Irvine Social Capital and Mathematics Achievement of Female High-School Students in China. Lynne Rich, Mississippi State University; and Ming Tsui, Millsaps College Teachers' Life History and the Entrance Examination System in Japan. Mamoru Tsukada, Sugiyama Jogakuen University The Fight over Racial Quotas: A Comparison between Jewish and Asian Immigrants. Rose M. Kim, City University of New York Equity vs. Excellence: Hong Kong's Education Reform. Anita Poon, Lingnan University 10. Democracy, Class, and Justice in Asia Table Presider: Chulhee Chung, Chonbuk National University New Class and Democratic Social Relations in South Korea. Chulhee Chung, Chonbuk National University Justice, Democracy, and the Indian Supreme Court: Development through Social Action Litigation. Modhurima Dasgupta, Brown University Civil Society in China: A Case Study of Dagang Oilfield. Hui Niu, University of Minnesota Two Conceptions of Political Reform in China's Reformist Era. Y. C. Wong, Lingnan University The State and Neoliberal Transition in Taiwan. MingChang Tsai, National Taipei University 11. Adoption, Marriage, and Public Health A Unique Diaspora?: The Case of Adopted Girls from the People's Republic of China. Karen Miller-Loessi and Zeynep Kilic, Arizona State University Early Marriage in the Hmong Community: Beyond a Cultural Explanation. Zoua Vang, University of Pennsylvania Comparative Study on the Trend and Pattern of Lung Cancer in the Chinese Diaspora: Age-Period-Cohort Analysis. Wei Wang and Richard Barrett, University of Illinois, Chicago Welfare Policy and the Shaping of Single Motherhood in Japan. Aya Ezawa, University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign 12. Identities and Representations Table Presider: Kwang Chung Kim, Western Illinois University

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Pluralistic Accommodation and Ethnic Identity of Young Korean Americans. Kwang Chung Kim, Western Illinois University; Young In Song, California State University, Hayward; and Ailee Moon, University of California, Los Angeles Reconstructing Ethnic Identity/Creative Belonging: A Case Study of the Role of Community Youth Programs in the Lives of Adolescent Laotian Girls. Bindi Shah, University of California, Davis 13. Multiracial Asian Americans and Ethnic Options Table Presider: Diem-My Bui, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Representations of Vietnamese Amerasians and the Multicultural Imagined Community. Natalie Cherot, Binghamton University Comparing Minorities' Ethnic Options: Do Asian Americans Possess "More" Ethnic Options than African Americans? Miri Song, University of Kent 14. Transnational Economic Relations Table Presider: Jo H. Kim, Columbia University Coethnic Identities and the Institutionalization of Transnational Space: A Study of the South Korean Transnational Corporations in the United States. Jo H. Kim, Columbia University Toward an Integration of Global, Regional, and Local Perspectives to Explicate the Development and Change of ANICs. Lai Si Tsui-Auch, Nanyang Business School Gendered Organizations, Managerial Regimes, and Employment: A Comparative Study of Japaneseand American-Managed Firms in Taiwan. Esther Chow, American University; and Ray-May Hsung, Tunghai University, Taiwan 15. Gender, Culture, and Inequality Table Presider: Eri Fujieda, University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign Context of "Sex Trafficking": Contemporary Japan's Sex Industry and Foreign Women. Eri Fujieda, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Gender and Culture: The Reception of Immigrant Specificities in the Age of Multiculturalism. Monisha Das Gupta, Syracuse University Married Daughters and Membership in the Family of Origin: Focus-Group Interviews of Three Cohorts of Chinese Women in Hong Kong. Gina Lai and Odalia Wong, Hong Kong Baptist University 16. Political Economy of the Asian Crisis Table Presider: Kyung-Sup Chang, Seoul National University The Myth of Market and the Misunderstanding of the State: A Critique of Neo-Liberal Political Economy. Myung Soo Kim, Hanyang University Asian Values and Asian Economic Crisis. Sang-In Jun, Hallym University

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Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

Session 352, continued Corporate Restructuring Since the Asian Financial Crisis: The Changes in the Organizational Structure of the South Korean Chaebol. Eun-Mee Kim, Ewha Womans University From Developmental Liberalism to Neo-Liberalism: Crisis Politics, Dependent Reflexivity, and Social Policy in South Korean Development. Kyung-Sup Chang, Seoul National University 353. Section on Sociology and Computers. Roundtables on Sociology and Computers and Business Meeting Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware B Roundtables (4:30-5:30 p.m.): Organizer: Edward Nelson, California State University, Fresno 1. Face-to-Face Faculty Discussions about Teaching Online. Rebecca Adams and Samantha Ammons, University of North Carolina, Greensboro 2. Information Technology and Development: Challenges, Possibilities, and Promise. Wendy Bokhorst-Heng, Stacy Cummings, and Sarah Ford, American University 3. A Theoretical Model of the Behavioral Epidemiology of Chlamydial Infections among Adolescent Females. M. Aaron Sayegh and James G. Anderson, Purdue University; Marilyn Anderson, Anderson Consulting 4. The New Panopticon: Hyper-Reality Takes Control. Thomas W. Brignall III, Western Michigan University 5. Using Computers in Introductory Sociology Courses. Edward Brent, University of Missouri, Columbia 6. Channeling User Attention on the World Wide Web. Eszter Hargittai, Princeton University; and Balazs Hargittai, University of Minnesota 7. Computer-Based Training in Quantitative Reasoning and Analysis. Charles Cappell, Thomas Haapoja, and Fang Gong, Northern Illinois University Section on Sociology of Computers Business Meeting (5:306:10 p.m., followed by a reception) 354. Section on Rational Choice. The New Institutionalism in the Social Sciences Hilton Washington, Jefferson West Organizer: Victor Nee, Cornell University Presider: Mary C. Brinton, Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences Panel: Douglass C. North, Washington University Neil Fligstein, University of California, Berkeley Avner Greif, Stanford University Frank Dobbin, Princeton University Victor Nee, Cornell University Discussion: Paul Hirsch, Northwestern University

5:30 p.m.

Meetings

Section on Sociology and Computers Business Meeting (to 6:10 p.m.)—Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware B

5:30 p.m.

Sessions

355. Section on Social Psychology. Cooley-Mead Award Ceremony (to 6:10 p.m.) Hilton Washington, International West Organizer and Presider: Karen A. Hegtvedt, Emory University Introduction. Henry A. Walker, University of Arizona Cooley-Mead Address. Legitimacy and the Stability of Authority: A Theoretical Research Program. Morris Zelditch, Jr., Stanford University

6:30 p.m.

Receptions

Joint Section Reception (Marxist Sociology; Race, Gender, and Class; and Racial and Ethnic Minorities)—Tryst, 2459 18th Street, NW Joint Section Reception (Rational Choice, Social Psychology, and Sociology of Emotions)—Hilton Washington, International Terrace Reception for International Scholars—Hilton Washington, Parlor 8101 Section on Asia and Asian America Reception—Thai Chef Restaurant, 1712 Connecticut Avenue NW Section on Collective Behavior and Social Movements and Section on Political Sociology Joint Reception—Hilton Washington, Hemisphere Section on Peace, War, and Social Conflict—Viareggio’s, 1727 Connecticut Avenue NW Section on Sociology and Computers Reception—Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware B Section on Sociology of Education Reception (sponsored by the American Institutes for Research)—Marriott Wardman Park, Wilson AB Section on Sociology of Sex and Gender Reception—Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom Salon 3 Student Reception—Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom Salon 1

6:30 p.m.

Other Groups

AAHE-ASA Diversity Project (Catherine White Berheide and Carolyn Vasques-Scalera)—Hilton Washington, C328 Collins' Book Reception—Hilton Washington, Parlor 2101 "Discussion of Care Work Research and a Care Work Network" (Mary Tuominen)—Hilton Washington, Hamilton Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation (GLAAD) Reception—cancelled

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

"Institutional Ethnography Network: Informal Exchange for Those Interested in Dorothy Smith's Social Organization of Knowledge Approach” (Marjorie Devault)—Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8219 International Research Committee on Disasters Panel II— Hilton Washington, Independence "Interracial Relationships" Interest Group (Clayton Majete)— Marriott Wardman Park, Independence Sociological Imagination Group: Open Research Conference on Bridging Specialized Fields III—Hilton Washington, Georgetown West Sociologists' Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Caucus business meeting—Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia B Sociologists of the Right: Researching Right Wing Social Movements and Politics (Abby Ferber)—Hilton Washington, Map

8:30 p.m.

Plenary

356. Plenary Town Meeting. Who Matters and Who Counts: Taking Stock of Census 2000 Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom Salon 2 Organizer: Felice J. Levine, American Sociological Association Presider: Teresa A. Sullivan, University of Texas, Austin Speaker: Kenneth Prewitt, U.S. Bureau of the Census Panel: Terri Ann Lowenthal, Census 2000 Initiative Robert B. Hill, Westat, Inc. Marisa Demeo, MALDEF (Mexican-American Legal Defense Fund)

10:00 p.m.

DAN

Departmental Alumni Night (to 11:30 p.m.)—Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom Salon 1

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Tuesday, August 15 The length of each session/meeting activities is one hour and forty minutes, unless noted otherwise. Session presiders and committee chairs are requested to see that sessions and meetings end on time to avoid conflicts with subsequent activities scheduled into the same room and to allow participants time to transit between hotels.

7:00 a.m.

Business Meeting

357. ASA Business Meeting (to 8:30 a.m.) Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom Salon 1 All meeting attendees are invited to join ASA officers and Council members for continental breakfast and discussion of several important issues that are currently under consideration by the ASA Council. In addition, members and groups may present resolutions for vote and transmission to ASA Council. Those resolutions need to have background materials on the issue and must be submitted in advance to the ASA Office in Park Tower 8222 at the Marriott Wardman Park by 3:00 p.m. on Monday, Auguat 14. A Business Meeting agenda will be included in every registrant's meeting packet.

8:30 a.m.

Meetings

Committee on Awards (to 12:10 p.m.)—Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8217 Department Resources Group Business Meeting and Round Robin Update—Marriott Wardman Park, Balcony C Section on Medical Sociology Council Meeting (to 12:10 p.m.)—Hilton Washington, Hemisphere Task Force on ASA-AAAS Relations—Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8218 Task Force on Hate/Bias Acts on College and University Campuses—Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8211

8:30 a.m.

Other Groups

Environmental Policy Symposium (to 4:15 p.m., followed by a reception) (co-sponsored by the ASA Section on Environment and Technology and the Rural Sociological Society National Resources Research Group)— Renaissance Mayflower Hotel

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

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8:30 a.m.

Sessions

358. Thematic Session. Liberation for What?: Reconsidering Feminism and Postmodernism Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom Salon 2 Organizer and Presider: Rosalyn Bologh, City University of New York, Staten Island and Graduate Center Pragmatism, Postmodernism and the Classical Sociological Question: Freedom and Liberation, Truth and Reason. Anne Warfield Rawls, Wayne State University Postmodern Critiques of Science and the Rise of Reactionary Modernism in South Asia. Meera Nanda, Boston University Feminism and Postmodernism. Dorothy E. Smith, University of Toronto 359. Special Session. Poverty and the International Division of Labor Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland C Organizer and Presider: Nestor Rodriguez, University of Houston Poverty, Global Coloniality, and the International Division of Labor. Ramon Grosfoguel, Boston College The "Race to the Bottom" Thesis: A Reassessment. Beverly J. Silver, Johns Hopkins University The Poverty of the Global Order. Philip McMichael and Dia Mohan, Cornell University New Employment Regimes: Implications for Inequality. Saskia Sassen, University of Chicago Discussion: Giovanni Arrighi, Johns Hopkins University 360. Special Session. African American Student Athletes Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia C Organizer and Presider: Earl Smith, Wake Forest University An Unconscionability Analysis of the Student-Athlete University Contract and Its Implications for AfricanAmerican Student-Athletes. Timothy Davis, Wake Forest University Rethinking Initial Eligibility Rules. Kenneth Shropshire, University of Pennsylvania The Payment of Student-Athletes in Revenue-Producing Sports. Rodney K. Smith, University of Arkansas The Effects of Intercollegiate Athletic Participation on the Academic Achievement of African American Student Athletes. Earl Smith, Wake Forest University 361. Special Session. Cultural Producers and Politics: The Sociology of Pierre Bourdieu Hilton Washington, Lincoln West Organizer and Presider: David Swartz, Boston University Bourdieu's Relational Method in Theory and Practice. John W. Mohr, University of California, Santa Barbara

Pierre Bourdieu and the Mass Media. Rodney D. Benson, American University of Paris Pierre Bourdieu's Politics of Sociology and Sociology of Politics. David Swartz, Boston University Discussion: Vera Zolberg, New School for Social Research 362. Special Session. Conflict and Change on the United States-Mexico Border Marriott Wardman Park, Balcony B Organizer and Presider: Chad Richardson, University of Texas, Pan American Conflict in Border Colonias. Peter M. Ward, University of Texas, Austin The Non-economic Impact of NAFTA on the Border. Robert Lee Maril, University of Texas, Pan American Ethnic Conflict on the Border. Chad Richardson, University of Texas, Pan American Discussion: Harold A. Nelson, Guatemalan Human Rights Commission, USA 363. Special Session. Asian Americans and Racism Hilton Washington, Jefferson East Organizer and Presider: John Lie, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Visibility, Marginality, and Hate: Asian Americans and Racism. Michael Omi, University of California, Berkeley Race, Immigration, and Asian America. Yen Le Espiritu, University of California, San Diego The "Yellow Peril" Mystique: Origins and Vicissitudes of a Racist Discourse. Stanford Lyman, Florida Atlantic University Discussion: John Lie, University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign 364. Author Meets Critics. The Abolition of Feudalism: Peasants, Lords, and Legislators in the French Revolution (Pennsylvania State University Press, 1996) by John Markoff, University of Pennsylvania Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland A Organizer and Presider: Richard Lachmann, State University of New York, Albany Book Author: John Markoff, University of Pittsburgh Critics: Michael Schwartz, State University of New York, Stony Brook Eric Selbin, Southwestern University Robert Liebman, Portland State University Richard Lachmann, State University of New York, Albany 365. Didactic Seminar. Web-based Resources for Instruction (to 12:10 p.m.) Howard University (shuttle departs from the Marriott) Ticket required for admission Leaders: Nan Chico, California State University, Hayward

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

Ed Nelson, California State University, Fresno Elizabeth Nelson, California State University, Fresno Jim Ross, California State University, Bakersfield This seminar will focus on instructional uses of quantitative data sets available on the web. These web sites provide both the data and the statistical software for analysis at no cost. While some faculty may choose to download the data sets and use them with software (e.g., SPSS, SAS, STATA) available on their home computers, other faculty may have their students analyze the data using software available on the web site. The seminar will focus on several different types of data: Census data, the General Social Survey, American National Election data, Field Poll data, and data housed in the topical archives of the Interuniversity Consortium for Political and Social Research. Handouts will include materials that can directly be incorporated into the classroom. Participants will also be introduced to the Social Sciences Teaching Resources Depository, a web site maintained by the Social Sciences Research and Instructional Council of the California State University. (http://www.csubak.edu/ssric/).

366. Professional Workshop. Writing a Successful Grant Proposal: Advice and Opportunities for Beginners Hilton Washington, Map Organizer and Presider: Patricia White, National Science Foundation Panel: Dalton Conley, New York University Walda Katz-Fishman, Howard University Regina Werum, Emory University Patricia White, National Science Foundation This workshop targets graduate students, faculty, and researchers who are new at proposal writing and submission. Representatives from the National Science Foundation, its dissertation review committee, and new grantees will discuss the proposal development process, elements of a competitive proposal, proposal submission and review, and funding opportunities for graduate students and new faculty. The format will be interactive, allowing for audience questioning and participation.

367. Academic Workplace Workshop. Mentoring New Faculty Members Hilton Washington, Hamilton Organizer: Helen A. Moore, University of Nebraska, Lincoln Panel: Helen A. Moore, University of Nebraska, Lincoln Allen Scarboro, Augusta State University Presenters will discuss their approaches and priorities in mentoring new faculty members. Several models for formalizing the process will be contrasted to informal strategies and discussed across the varying campus structures of the workshop participants. The workshop presenters include Chairs and former Chairs of Sociology Departments, members of formalized mentoring committees and informal mentors. Two junior faculty members will also discuss their priorities in the mentoring process. Our goal is to merge these perspectives into a flexible framework for successful faculty development. Workshop participants are encouraged to bring ideas and innovations with them to circulate as well.

368. Teaching Workshop. Teaching about Globalization and Global Processes in Undergraduate Sociology Courses Hilton Washington, Military Organizer: Gay Young, American University

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Panel: Gay Young, American University Wendy Bokhorst-Heng, American University Jennifer Fish, American University Grant Blank, American University Russell A. Stone, American University With the aim of illuminating resources available, the workshop panelists draw on their experiences teaching a curriculum focused on global social change. The panelists will demonstrate software for putting course material on the web, illustrate conceptual and pedagogical issues relevant to teaching about global processes, review texts available and make recommendations on videos, display internet sources on macrolevel information on social well-being, and engage participants in interactive classroom activities.

369. Student Forum Teaching Workshop. Teaching Sociology for Beginners Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware A Organizer: Diane R. Bessel, State University of New York, Buffalo Panel: Diane R. Bessel, State University of New York, Buffalo Kimberly Cattat, State University of New York, Buffalo Donald W. Matteson, State University of New York, Buffalo The goal of this workshop is to provide new instructors with information about teaching sociology courses. It is intended for graduate students who are required to lead discussions and/or teach their own classes as part of their professional training and for undergraduate students interested in teaching as a career option. Additionally, faculty members and administrators will also benefit by gaining greater insight into the concerns of beginning instructors. The workshop will focus on three general areas: basic syllabus construction, techniques for generating discussion in sociology classes, and resources available to sociology instructors including syllabus sets, teaching journals, and books. Handouts will be provided and ASA materials will be on hand for participants to examine. There will be a question and answer period at the end of the session during which attendees are invited to share their concerns and stories about teaching.

370. Regular Session. Advocacy, Alternatives, and Coping with HIV/AIDS Hilton Washington, Thoroughbred Organizer: Brenda Seals, Hunter College Presider: Juan Battle, Hunter College Perceptions of Social Support Availability and Coping Behaviors among Gay Men with HIV. Koji Ueno, Vanderbilt University; and Rebecca Adams, University of North Carolina, Greensboro Fighting for Our Lives: Advocacy Training for Women Living with HIV/AIDS. Leslie R. Wolfe, Wendy G. Smooth, Rose Ann M. Renteria, and Brynn Gaberman Epstein, Center for Women Policy Studies Embracing Religion, Changing Church: Views of Multicultural People with HIV. Jean Oggins, University of California, San Francisco Use of Alternative Therapists among People with HIV Infection. Andrew S. London, Kent State University; Carrie E. Foote-Ardah, University of Colorado, Boulder; Jennifer Furin, Harvard Medical School; John A. Fleishman, Agency for Health Care and Policy

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Session 370, continued Research; Samuel A. Bozzette, University of California, San Diego; and Martin F. Shapiro, University of California, Los Angeles Discussion: Norah D. Peters-Davis, Beaver College 371. Regular Session. Economic Sociology: Asian Economies Hilton Washington, Monroe West Organizer: Wayne Baker, University of Michigan Presider: Mark S. Mizruchi, University of Michigan The Social Basis of Economic Structure: Capital Structure and the Emergence of China's Financial Market, 19801989. Lisa A. Keister, Ohio State University Bargaining under Hierarchies: Economic Transition, Corporate Change and Employment Benefit Practices in China. Man-Shan Kwok, Princeton University Relative Deprivation, Efficiency Wages, and Industrial Productivity in Taiwan. Jeng Liu, Nan-hwa University, Taiwan; and Arthur Sakamoto, University of Texas, Austin The Puzzle of Embeddedness: How Prior Embeddedness Fails to Explain Current Inter-Firm Relationships. Kuang-Chi Chang, University of Chicago Financial Crisis and Network Response: Changes in the Ownership Structure of Korean Chaebol since 1997. Dukjin Chang, Ewha Womans University, South Korea 372. Regular Session. Environmental Sociology: International Development Hilton Washington, Farragut Organizer: Shirley Laska, University of New Orleans Presider: Paige Tucker, George Mason University Japan's Changing Environmental Regime: Treadmill or Modernization? Jeffery Broadbent, University of Minnesota Limits of Technocratic Politics in Environmental Policy: Some Results of a Case Study in Local Traffic Policy in Germany. Stephan Elkins, Brandenburgische Technische Universitat Cottbus, Germany Multi-faceted Aspects of Envirnomental Problems in Istanbul and Willingness to Pay for Environmental Improvement. Fatos Goksen, Koc University, Turkey; Fikret Adaman and Unal Zenginobuz, Bogazici University, Turkey Forest Conservation, Value Conflict, and Interest Formation in a Honduran National Park. Max J. Pfeffer, Cornell University; John W. Schelhas, Auburn University; and Leyla Ann Day, Cornell University Discussion: Steve Kroll-Smith, University of New Orleans 373. Regular Session. Epistemology and the History of Sociology Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware B Organizer and Presider: Shanyang Zhao, Temple University

Irrationalism and the Myth of Logocentrism: Resistance to Reason in the Age of Classical Theory. David Smith, University of Kansas From Epistemology of the Avant Garde: Marcel Duchamp and the Sociology of Knowledge in Resonance. Aaron Panofsky, New York University Durkheim and Multiple Forms of Truth. James S. Benton, St. Norbert College Ex Cathedra: The Representation of American Society in ASA Presidential Addresses, 1906-1998. Gad Yair, Hebrew University of Jerusalem 374. Regular Session. News Media, Power, and Social Control Hilton Washington, Independence Organizer and Presider: William Hoynes, Vassar College Children and the Discourse of Fear. David Althiede, Arizona State University "The Undeserving Rich": Media Constructions of Corporate Welfare. Daniel Egan, University of Massachusetts, Lowell Media Publicity and the Nonprofit Sector. Ronald N. Jacobs and Dan Glass, State University of New York, Albany Self Reflections: U.S. Press Coverage of Cuba. William S. Solomon, Rutgers University Discussion: Laura J. Miller, University of Western Ontario 375. Regular Session. Political Sociology: Gender and Race in Political Processes Marriott Wardman Park, Coolidge Organizers: Lynn Weber, University of South Carolina; and Andre Mizell, University of Akron Presider: Stephen J. McNamee, University of North Carolina, Wilmington The Gender Gap and American Political Consciousness. Jeff Manza and Kendra Schiffman, Northwestern University Race and the State: The Politics of Racial Categorization and Census-Taking in the United States and Brazil. Melissa Nobles, Massachusetts Institute of Technology The Nuts and Bolts of Bombs for Boobs: Department of Defense Funding for Breast Cancer and Prostate Cancer Research. Susan Halebsky, University of California, San Diego Midnight Basketball and the 1994 Crime Bill Debates: The Cultural Politics of Race, Crime and Public Policy in Contemporary American Society. Douglas Hartmann and Darren Wheelock, University of Minnesota Discussion: Howard Winant, Temple University 376. Regular Session. Race and Ethnicity Hilton Washington, Monroe East Organizer and Presider: Susan D. Toliver, Iona College Racialization, Recognition, and Rights: Lumping and Splitting Multiracial Asian Americans in the 2000 Census. Rebecca Chiyoko King, University of San Francisco

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

Assimilation and Internal Ethnic Identity of Mexican Origin Persons. Hiromi Ono, University of Michigan Place, Race and Ethnicity: Transnational Migration Analysis and the Construction of Identity. Lelia Lomba De Andrade, Bowdoin College The Opportunity for Interracial Contact and Interracial Interaction and Friendship. Monica Kirkpatrick Johnson, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill; and Margaret Mooney Marini, University of Minnesota Discussion: Anthony J. Lemelle, Purdue University 377. Regular Session. Social and Cultural Capital Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia A Organizer and Presider: Bonnie H. Erickson, University of Toronto Congregations and Cultural Capital: Religious Variations in Arts Activity. Mark Chaves, University of Arizona; and Peter V. Marsden, Harvard University Public Lives, Private Schoolers: Schooling Organizations, Social Capital, and Parents' Civic Participation. David Sikkink, Notre Dame University Negative Social Capital and the Nation of Islam: Sub-Cultural Support and Educational Attainment. Antwi Akom, University of California, Berkeley Social Networks as Social Capital for Immigrant Entrepreneurs. Jin-Kyung Yoo Discussion: Paul DiMaggio, Princeton University 378. Regular Session. Social Movements: Gay Movements Marriott Wardman Park, Harding Organizer: Jack M. Bloom, Indiana University Northwest Presider: Mary Bernstein, Arizona State University Constructing A Salient Identity: Outcomes and Continuity in Two Social Movement Contexts. Kimberly Dugan and Jo Reger, Eastern Connecticut State University The Emergence and Diffusion of the Lesbian, Gay and Bisexual Workplace Movement. Nicole C. Raeburn, University of San Francisco Fear, Shame, Pride and Anger: Lesbian and Gay Political Responses to AIDS, 1981-1986. Deborah Gould, University of Chicago Living Proof: Antigay, Ex-gay, and Lesbian and Gay Activism and Interaction. Tina Fetner, New York University Discussion: Mary Bernstein, Arizona State University 379. Regular Session. Social Policy Hilton Washington, Edison Organizer: Phil Nyden, Loyola University, Chicago Presider: Anne Shlay, Temple University Devolution and Inequality: The Importance of State Policy. Mildred Warner, Cornell University The Unavailability of Information on Insurance Unavailability: Insurance Redlining and the Absence of Geo-Coded Disclosure Data. Gregory Squires and Sally O'Conner,

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University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee; Josh Silver, National Community Reinvestment Coalition Beyond Resource Dependency and Social Control: The Role of Community Organizations in Setting Foundation Funding Agendas. Ira Silver, Wellesley College The Globalization of the U.S. Apparel Industry: Free Trade, Neoclassical Economics, and the Origin of Domestic Sweatshops. Ellen Rosen, Nichols College Discussion: Anne Shlay, Temple University 380. Regular Session. Symbolic Interaction Hilton Washington, Grant Organizer: Norma Williams, University of Texas, Arlington Presider: Tracy L. Dietz, University of Central Florida Spiritualizing Sexuality, Sexualizing Spirituality: Catholicism, Sexual Marginalization and the Rhetorical Production of the "Dignified Self". Donileen R. Loseke and James C. Cavendish, University of South Florida Manufacturing Happiness: Social Construction of Reality in the Pharmaceutical Industry. Cherylon Robinson, University of Texas, San Antonio; and Laura Hartman, Averett College Time Work, Agency, and Self-Actualization: Customizing Temporal Experience. Michael G. Flaherty, Eckerd College The Negotiation of Client Identities in a Micro-enterprise Program: Success, Exclusion, and Entrepreneurship. Julie Cowgill and Nancy C. Jurik, Arizona State University 381. Regular Session. Urban Sociology: Changing Cities and Social Orders Marriott Wardman Park, Balcony A Organizer and Presider: Michael Indergaard, St. John's University The Continuing "Winds of Change" in the Balkans: Housing Transformations in the City of Sofia. Elena Vesselinov, State University of New York, Albany The Canadian View of Detroit: Finding the Border between Suburb and Downtown. Paul S. Moore, York University Seoul in the Global Economy: Employment Trends and State Policy. Kyoung-Ho Shin, Northwest Missouri State University Shifting Patterns of Spatial Inequality: Race and Class in the Developing New York and Los Angeles Metropolises, 1940 to 2000. Andrew Beveridge and Susan Weber, Queens College, City University of New York 382. Section on Crime, Law, and Deviance. Studies of Crime and Delinquency Hilton Washington, Georgetown West Organizer and Presider: Christopher Uggen Community and Family Contexts of Gendered Aggression. Holly Foster, American Bar Foundation; John Hagan,

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Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

Session 382, continued Northwestern University; and Richard Tremblay and Bernard Boulerice, University of Montreal Socialization Contexts and Delinquency: a Multi-Level Analysis with an African American Sample. Ronald Simons, Rand Conger, Kuei-Hsiu Lin, and Leslie Gordon, Iowa State University; Gen Brody, University of Georgia The Long Arm of the Law: Effects of Labeling on Employment. Scott Davies, McMaster University; and Julian Tanner, University of Toronto, Scarborough Perceived Marginalization and Delinquency: A Two Site Longitudinal Replication. Tammy Anderson, University of Illinois; Jason Carmichael, Ohio State University; Erin Ruel, Richard Campbell, and Brian Flay, University of Illinois 383. Section on Sociology of Education. Education in Cross-National Perspective Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland B Organizer: Francisco O. Ramirez, Stanford University Presider: Laura Salganik, American Institutes for Research Women in Higher Education: Accounting for Cross-National Differences. Karen Bradley, Western Washington University; and Maria Charles, University of California, San Diego Re-Thinking the Generation Gap: The Relationship between Adult Women's Status and Girls' Math and Science Education in an International Context. Catherine RiegleCrumb, University of Chicago Cross-National Expansion of Educational Enrollments and Science Production: An Exploration of Latent Growth Models. Jerald R. Herting, Shawn Bauldry, and Aaron Laing, University of Washington Technical and Institutional Environments of Schools: A Comparative Analysis of Principal Leadership, Achievement, and National Bureaucracies. Alex Wiseman, Motoko Akiba, David Baker, Brian Goesling, and Gerald LeTendre, Pennsylvania State University Discussion: Bruce Fuller, University of California, Berkeley 384. Section on Sociology of the Family. Refereed Roundtables on Family and Business Meeting Hilton Washington, International East Refereed Roundtables (8:30-9:30 a.m.): Organizer: Nan Marie Astone, Johns Hopkins University 1. The Determinants of Divorce Table Presider: Shannon N. Davis, North Carolina State University Interactive Effects of Gender Ideology and Age at Marriage on Likelihood of Divorce. Shannon N. Davis and Theodore N. Greenstein, North Carolina State University

Wives' Income and Marital Dissolution: A Longitudinal Analysis. K. Jill Kiecolt and John N. Edwards, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University 2. Fertility Intentions Table Presider: Kimberly A. Hack, University of Texas, Austin Retrospective Reports of Pregnancy Wantedness and Child Well-Being in the United States. Kimberly A. Hack and Robert A. Hummer, University of Texas, Austin Stepchildren and Childbearing among U.S. Couples. Susan D. Stewart, Bowling Green State University 3. Transition to Adult Family Roles Table Presider: Christopher Chan, Florida State University Why Laundry, Not Hegel? Imagining the Transition to Residential College. Lynda Lytle Holmstrom, David A. Karp, and Paul S. Gray, Boston College Differences in Risk of Sexual Debut by Race, Family Structure and Parental Discipline for Adolescents in the NLSY97. Mignon R. Moore, Columbia University Teenage Childbearing and the Transition to Young Adulthood: Sequencing School and Work-Related Activities in the Early Years. Ann Marie Sorenson, Gabriele Dankert, and Sandy Welsh, University of Toronto 4. Family Process Table Presider: Nicholas Dempsey, University of Chicago The Functions of Television and Other Media in Family Life. Nicholas Dempsey, University of Chicago The Effect of Mother's Monitoring on Youth Anti-social Behavior: A Latent Growth Curve Analysis. Lance D. Erickson, Brigham Young University Do Parents Opinions Matter?: Family Processes and Adolescent Sexual Behavior. Laura Fingerson, Indiana University Do Childhood Behavioral Problems Predict Outcomes in Young Adulthood?: Exploring the Relationship between Offspring Behavior Problems While Growing Up and Their Outcomes in Young Adulthood. Chris Knoester, Pennsylvania State University 5. The Consequences of Early Childbearing Table Presider: Tricia Davis, University of Wisconsin, River Falls Pregnant Again?: Repeat Pregnancies of Unwed Adolescent Mothers. Tricia Davis, University of Wisconsin, River Falls Effects of the Timing of the Transition to Motherhood on Intergenerational Relationships. Jenifer Hamil-Luker, University of North Carolina Academic and Behavioral Outcomes among the Children of Young Mothers. Judith A. Levine, University of Chicago; Harold Pollack, University of Michigan; and Maureen E. Comfort, University of Michigan

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

6. Imagining the Filial Bond Table Presider: Kate Linnenberg, Northwestern University A Man's Home Is His Castle: Active Fathers Coping with Isolation. John Hurley, United States Military Academy The Study of Father Presence: The Child as Knower. Edythe M. Krampe, University of California, Irvine; and Paul D. Fairweather (deceased) Conceptions of Parenthood: The Impact of New Reproductive Technologies on the Ambiguity of What Makes a Person a Parent. Kate Linnenberg, Northwestern University Stepparents: De Facto Parents of Legal Strangers? Nicholas H. Wolfinger, University of Utah; Mary Ann Mason, Sydney Harrison Jay, and Gloria Svare, University of California 7. Families in Africa Table Presider: Michelle Hindin, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill The Family in Botswana: Is It in a State of Transformation or Disintegration? Gwen N. Lesetedi, University of Botswana Persistent Social, Economic and Political Challenges that Impede on the Effective Discharge of Function by the African Family. Munyae M. Mulinge, University of Botswana 8. Work and Family I Table Presider: Qin Chen, University of Chicago What Matters More, Jobs or Children? A Study of Time Use and Experience of Happiness among DualEarner Couples. Qin Chen and Ye Luo, University of Chicago Time for Theoretical Housekeeping: Reexamining Theories of the Division of Household Labor. Amy Kroska, Kent State University Managing Family Life: Implications for Success at Home, Work, and Balancing Both. Robert Orrange, Francille M. Firebaugh, and Ramona K.Z. Heck, Cornell University Exploring the Impact of Working Reduced Hours and Hiring Paid Help on the Division of Household Tasks: A Study of Married, Professional Women. Jean E. Wallace, University of Calgary 9. Immigration and the Family Table Presider: Calvin Goldscheider, Stockholm University Family and Work Attitudes in Sweden: Turkish and Polish Second-Generation Immigrants Confront a Gender Equal Society. Eva Bernhardt and Calvin Goldscheider, Stockholm University; Frances Goldscheider, Brown University Fertility Expectations and Reasons: A Comparison of Immigrant and U.S. Native Born Women 18-39 Years. Kristin Smith, Jason Fields, and Martin O'Connell, U.S. Bureau of the Census

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10. Work and Family II Table Presider: Wendy Furst Macro-level Determinants of the Division of Household Labor: The Influence of Social and Economic Alternatives to Marriage. Wendy Furst Trends and Gender Differences in Market and Non-Market Work. Liana Sayer, University of Maryland 11. Health and the Family Table Presider: Clifford Broman, Michigan State University Marital Satisfaction and Health. Clifford Broman, Michigan State University Family Factors and Social Support in the Developmental Outcomes of Children Who Were Very Low Birthweight at 32 to 38 Months of Age. Dennis P. Hogan and Jennifer Park, Brown University She Does It All: Determents of Health Care Behaviors int he Dual-Earner Family. Janice K. Purk, Kent State University Does Cohabitation Matter?: Union Status and Health. Zheng Wu, Michael S. Pollard, and Margaret J. Penning, University of Victoria 12. "Parenting" by Nonparents Table Presider: JoAnn DeFiore, University of Washington, Bothell "Comadres en el barrio": The Cultural Practice of CoMothering in a Rural Paraguayan Neighborhood. JoAnn DeFiore, University of Washington, Bothell; and Valarie King, Pennsylvania State University What Grandparents Do: Social Influences on Grandparenting. Brenda Wilhelm and Margaret M. Mueller, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill 13. Family and the Labor Market Table Presider: Sarah Avellar, University of Michigan Education and the Motherhood Wage Penalty. Sarah Avellar, University of Michigan Continuity and Change in the Structure of Occupations, Opportunity Costs, and Work/Family Accommodation: The Case of Employed Mothers and Preschoolers. Mark Evan Edwards, Oregon State University 14. Gender Ideology, Work, and Family Table Presider: Pamela R. Davidson, University of Massachusetts Have Breadwinner Dads and Homemaker Moms Petered Out?: An Interdisciplinary Analysis of Changing Gender Norms in the U.S., 1977-1998. Lee Badgett, Pamela R. Davidson, Nancy Folbre, and Jeannette Lim, University of Massachusetts Like Mother, Like Daughter? The Influence of Mother's Work on the Work Activities of Unmarried Adolescent Girls in Pakistan. Valerie Durrant, The Population Council Career Hierarchy in Dual-Earner Couples: Self Reports of Career Balancing Decisions. Joy E. Pixley, Cornell University

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Gender Role Attitudes and Family Value Attitudes of Married Women in China. Yantao Wang and Kazuo Yamaguchi, University of Chicago 15. Imagining Sexual Unions Table Presider: Lynn Magdol, State University of New York, Buffalo The Concept of Family: Families of Choice among Gays and Lesbians. Angela L. Wadsworth and Joanna M. Badagliacco, University of Kentucky High Hopes: Unmarried Parents' Expectations about Marriage at the Time of Their Child's Birth. Maureen Waller, Public Policy Institute of California Section on Sociology of the Family Business Meeting (9:3010:10 a.m.) 385. Section on Organizations, Occupations, and Work. Organizational Theory, Organizational Change Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom Salon 3 Organizers: William P. Barnett and Aimee-Noelle Swanson, Stanford University Presider: Aimee-Noelle Swanson, Stanford University The Lost Twin Strikes Back: Rejoining Heterogeneity and Density Dependence within Organizational Ecology. Luca Solari, Universita degli Studi di Trento; and Ruggero Rossi, Universita Commerciale L. Bocconi Dynamics of Niche-Width and Resource Partitioning. Stanislav D. Dobrev, Tulane University; and Tai-Young Kim and Michael T. Hannan, Stanford University The Emergence of Organizational Forms: A Community Ecology Perspective. Martin Ruef, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Adaptive Organizations and Emergent Forms. Kathleen M. Carley, Carnegie Mellon University The Resource Partitioning of a Corporate Legal Market: The Proliferation of Specialist Law Firms in Silicon Valley, 1966-1997. Jonathan Jaffee, University of California, Berkeley Discussion: Jesper Sorensen, University of Chicago 386. Section on Sociology of Mental Health. Beyond the Individual: Macrostructural and Cultural Influences on Mental Health and Illness Hilton Washington, Georgetown East Organizer and Presider: Jo C. Phelan, Columbia University Structural Contexts of Adolescent Depression. Carol S. Aneshensel, Dawn Upchurch, William Mason, and Richard G. Wight, University of California, Los Angeles Recession and Gender Differences in Exposure to Labor Market Stressors. Mark Tausig and Rudy Fenwick, University of Akron Unfair Treatment, Neighborhood Effects, and Mental Health in the Detroit Metropolitan Area. Amy Schulz, David Williams, and Barbara Israel, University of Michigan; Adam Becker, Tulane University

What's Variance Got to Do with It?: On Wholes and Parts, Facts and Counterfactuals and Errors of the Third Type. Sharon Schwartz, Columbia University Discussion: Peggy A. Thoits, Vanderbilt University 387. Section on Science, Knowledge, and Technology. Biotechnology, Medicine, and Society Hilton Washington, Caucus Organizer and Presider: Troy Duster, University of California, Berkeley To be announced. Joanna Kempner, University of Pennsylvania Empowering Technologies: Connecting Women and Science in Microbicide Research. Susan Bell, Bowdoin College Genes, Gender, and the Popular Press: Fads and Foibles in Scientific Reporting. Ann Marie Wood, University of California, Berkeley 388. Section on Race, Gender, and Class. Equality and Justice Issues in Race, Gender, and Class Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia B Organizer and Presider: Suzanne Vaughan, Arizona State University West The Effects of "Extraordinary Family Circumstances" Departures on Federal Sentencing for Women. Amy Farrell, Northwestern University Silence as Resistance: Words as Weapons. Katherine O'Donnell, Hartwick College Discussion: Wendy Carter, Arizona State University West; and Paul C. Luken, Arizona State University

9:30 a.m.

Meetings

Section on Sociology of the Family Business Meeting (to 10:10 a.m.)—Hilton Washington, International East

10:30 a.m.

Meetings

MOST Coordinators/Chairs—Marriott Wardman Park, Hoover Section on Collective Behavior and Social Movements Council Meeting (to 11:30 a.m.)—Marriott Wardman Park, Harding Task Force on Implications of Assessing Faculty Productivity and Teaching Effectiveness—Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8210

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

10:30 a.m.

Sessions

389. Thematic Session. Strategies for Social Justice Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom Salon 3 Organizer and Presider: David Wellman, University of California, Santa Cruz Panel: Stanley Aronowitz, City University of New York Graduate Center David Montejano, University of Texas, Austin Dana Takagi, University of California, Santa Cruz Becky Thompson, Simmons College Discussion: Troy Duster, University of California, Berkeley, and New York University 390. Special Session. Spotlight on Environmental Racism: Strategies for the New Millennium Hilton Washington, Jefferson West Organizer: Glenn S. Johnson, Clark Atlanta University Presider: Beverly Wright, Xavier University of Louisiana The Costs and Consequences of Environmental Racism. Robert D. Bullard and Glenn S. Johnson, Clark Atlanta University; Beverly Wright, Xavier University of Louisiana The Law and Legal Remedies to Address Environmental Injustice. Natalie Walker and Monique Harden, Earthjustice Legal Defense Fund Research Methods and Tools for Assessing Disparate Impact. Paul Mohai, University of Michigan The International Face of Environmental Racism. Deborah Robinson, International Possibilities Unlimited; and Damu Smith, Greenpeace, USA 391. Special Session. Older Americans: Key National Indicators of Well-Being--What Are the Policy Implications (co-sponsored with the ASA Section on Aging and the Life Course) Hilton Washington, International West Organizer: Kristen N. Robinson, National Center for Health Statistics Presider: Edward J. Sondik, National Center for Health Statistics Panel: Robyn Stone, American Association of Homes and Services for the Aging Beth Soldo, University of Pennsylvania Ted Totman, Senate Special Committee on Aging Seeing the need to assess the overall status of the U.S. population 65 years of age and over at the end of the century, the Federal Interagency Forum on Aging-Related Statistics produced its first interagency report on indicators of health and well-being among the older population. The Older Americans: Key Indicators of Well-Being chartbook includes 30 indicators and focuses on several important areas in the lives of older people, such as population, economics, health status, health risks and behaviors, and health care. Panel members will discuss the policy implications of the key findings in this report.

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392. Special Session. Assessing Welfare Reform Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland A Organizer: Florence Bonner, Howard University Panel: Andrew Cherlin, Johns Hopkins University Lynn Burbridge, Rutgers University Ellen Scott, Kent State University Greg Duncan, Northwestern University 393. Special Session. Women and Service to the Academy: A Form of Oppression or Liberation? (cosponsored with the ASA Committee on the Status of Women in Sociology) Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom Salon 2 Organizer and Presider: Robin Jarrett, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Presider: Jennie Kronenfeld, Arizona State University Panel: Catherine White Berheide, Skidmore College Cora Marrett, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Bette Dickerson, American University Linda Grant, University of Georgia Kathryn B. Ward, Southern Illinois University This session examines the impact of service on women's career trajectories and advancement in the academy. Service will be explored both as a form of oppression that stratifies women into lower tiers in the academy by virtue of excessive demands that are unrewarded. It will also be explored as a form of empowerment that enhances women's personal development and that is rewarded in more informal arenas.

394. Special Session. Interracial Relationships Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland C Organizer: Clayton Aaron Majete, Baruch College, City University of New York Interracial Marriages: Across the Color Line in the 21st Century. Erica Childs, Fordham University What are the Political and Religious Implications of Interracial Relationships: Are They Welcomed into Churches and Political Arenas? Abby L. Ferber, University of Colorado, Colorado Springs Who Is Marrying Interracially?: A Discussion of the Gender/Race Patterns in Black/White Marriages. Sheryline A. Zebroski, St. Louis Community College, Forest Park What are the Expectations for Their Biracial Children? Are Biracial Couples Less Likely to Have Children? Clayton Aaron Majete, Baruch College, City University of New York Discussion: Clayton Aaron Majete, Baruch College, City University of New York 395. Regional Spotlight Session. Ethnic Cultures in Washington, DC Hilton Washington, Caucus Organizer and Presider: Wendy A. Wiedenhoft, University of Maryland, College Park

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The Government as Marginalizer: Immigrant Lives in Langley Park, Maryland. William Hanna, University of Maryland, College Park Issues in Community Organizing in Socioculturally Diverse Communities: Examples from Washington, D.C. Tony Whitehead, University of Maryland, College Park Caribbean Currents: A Profile of West Indian Immigrants in Greater Washington, D.C. Ivy Forsythe-Brown, University of Maryland, College Park An Ethnic and Cultural Map of D.C.: Some Intimations. Anthony Alvarez and G. Patricia DelaCruz, University of Maryland, College Park Discussion: Wendy A. Wiedenhoft, University of Maryland, College Park 396. Author Meets Critics. Marxism and Human Nature (Routledge Studies in Social and Political Thought, 1998) by Sean Sayers, University of Kent Hilton Washington, Lincoln West Organizer and Presider: Martha Gimenez, University of Colorado, Boulder Book Author: Sean Sayers, University of Kent Critics: Michael Neuchatz, American Physics Institute David N. Smith, University of Kansas Valerie Scatamburlo-D'Annibale, York University Paul Paolucci, University of Kentucky 397. Didactic Seminar. Toward a New Culture of Sociological Inquiry: Historicity, Explanation, and Research Methods for the New Millennium Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware A Ticket required for admission Leader: John R. Hall, University of California, Davis Despite the historic turn in the human sciences, sociology has remained largely bifurcated between ahistorical approaches, which investigate social phenomena without considering how past events and long-duration processes shape the present and future, and historical sociology, which typically studies social phenomena of other times and places. This seminar erases that division, by exploring how sociology has become an epistemic domain of "integrated disparity." It will propose an integrated approach to understanding the diversity of alternative research practices in relation to each other, that will result in "historicizing" sociology as a whole, rather than treating historical sociology as a subfield. Drawing on John R. Hall, Cultures of Inquiry: From Epistemology to Discourse in Sociohistorical Inquiry (Cambridge University Press, 1999), the seminar will specify eight core methodological practices of inquiry that are shared between "presentist" and "historical" sociology. These will be identified in terms of how they resolve key formative problems centered on values, the use of narrative, social theory, and the representation of historicity in explanation. By considering concrete exemplars of research, the seminar will demonstrate how even seemly radically alternative methodologies (e.g., participant-observation, quantitative sociology, and historicalcomparative sociology) share core cultural logics of inquiry, and it will explore the possibilities of resolving the problem of "translation" between seemingly radically different kinds of sociological knowledge.

398. Professional Workshop. Career Opportunities in Non-Profit Organizations and Associations Marriott Wardman Park, Balcony C Organizer and Presider: Steven D Nelson, American Association for the Advancement of Science Panel: Catherine Didion, Association for Women in Science Daniel Dodgen, American Psychological Association Robert H. Rich, American Chemical Society Howard J. Silver, Consortium of Social Science Associations In discussing career options and opportunities for sociologists in non-profit organizations and associations, panelists will focus on (1) identifying such organizations, (2) career ladders within them, (3) the nature of work in such organizations and how this draws upon sociologists' skills, (4) how one can prepare oneself for approaching and interviewing at such organizations, and (5) making the transition from other settings (including academic) to work in these settings.

399. Academic Workplace Workshop. Strengthening Applied Programs in Sociology Departments Hilton Washington, Edison Organizer and Presider: James Sherohman, St. Cloud State University Panel: Harry Perlstadt, Michigan State University Jan Marie Fritz, University of Cincinnati Jeanne Ballantine, Wright State University Kathy Trier, Indiana University-Purdue University, Fort Wayne This workshop is designed for those who wish to develop or improve undergraduate or graduate programs in applied sociology, sociological practice, or clinical sociology. Workshop leaders will provide advice and suggest resources that may be of value in program development. In addition, they will identify characteristics of strong programs and will discuss several exemplary programs.

400. Teaching Workshop. Teaching the Sociology of Sexualities Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware B Organizer and Presider: Tracy E. Ore, Saint Cloud State University Panel: Sharon Abbott, Wittenberg University Sine Anahita, Iowa State University Jane D. Downing, University of Missouri, Columbia Robert Heasley, Ithaca College This workshop will address a multitude of issues relating to teaching about sexualities in the sociology classroom. A variety of techniques and strategies for negotiating hostility, incorporating identities, and drawing interconnections between issues of race, class, ethnicity, gender, ability, and community will also be discussed. The session format is highly interactive and those attending are encouraged to share what they have experienced as obstacles, opportunities, and the methods they have developed to handle a variety of situations. This workshop is appropriate for those teaching courses on sexualities or those who incorporate such material into their own courses.

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

401. Teaching Workshop. Writing as a Pedagogical Tool Hilton Washington, Map Leaders: Carol A. Bailey, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Ellsworth R. Fuhrman, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University While recognizing that writing is important, do you have a series of unanswered questions about using writing in the sociology classroom? How do I design a good writing assignment? Can I use writing in large classes? How can I grade assignments fairly and efficiently? Why should I teach writing instead of sociology? This highly interactive workshop will address these and other questions as determined by the participants. Participants will design writing assignments tailored to their classes. Grading efficiencies and the importance of informal writing assignments will be explored. Using writing to improve teaching and learning is the central theme of the participatory workshop. Workbooks will be provided.

402. Research Poster Session. Open Topic Research Presentations: Health and Well-being Hilton Washington, Exhibit Hall Organizer: Amy Schindler, Columbia University 1. Healthcare Utilization in Matlab, Bangladesh: Who Visits? J. T. Youngberg and Jane Menken, University of Colorado 2. Elderly Dependency and Economic Growth: A Pooled Time-Series Cross-Sectional Analysis of Developing Countries. Michelle L. Bata, Lisa M. Martinez, and James M. Noon, University of Arizona 3. Measuring Attitudinal Barriers to and Motivators for HIV Testing. Jennifer L. Lauby, Philadelphia Health Management Corporation; Dogan Eroglu, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; and Lisa Bond and Heather Batson, Philadelphia Health Management Corporation 4. cancelled 5. Socio-Demographic Factors, Health Status, and Body Mass Index. Kristi Rahrig Jenkins, Wayne State University 6. The Where's and Why's of HIV Testing: An Examination of Reason Given for Last HIV Test and Place of Last HIV Test in a National Sample of Adults, BRFSS 1998. Karin A. Mack and Deborah Holtzman, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 7. Substance Abuse Treatment: Evaluating a Treatment Improvement Dissemination Activity. Kevin P. Mulvey, Susan Hubbard, Kris Hamill, and Lynne MacArthur, Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration 8. Knowledge and Behavior about HIV/AIDS among Homeless Mentally Ill Adults. Russell K. Schutt, University of Massachusetts, Boston; and Stephen M. Goldfinger, State University of New York, Downstate Medical Center

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9. Reliability Study of an Adaptive Communication Device for People with Developmental Disabilities. David G. Loconto, Northwest Missouri State University; and Richard A. Dodder and Amanda Fullerton, Oklahoma State University 10. The UK's New Socio-Economic Classification and Its Relationship to Health Inequalities. David Rose and David J. Pevalin, Institute for Social Economic Research 11. Young Women of the Stone: Long-term Effects of Palestinian Adolescent Involvement in the Intifada and Their Movement from the Private to Public Sphere. Suzanne L. Maughan and Brian K. Barber, Brigham Young University 12. The Impact of Social Support and Other Coping Strategies on Emergency Worker Health and Performance. Lolita Burrell, Walter Reed Army Institute of Research; Andrew Baum, University of Pittsburgh; and Doris Durand, Walter Reed Army Institute of Research 13. Evidence against Distrust Theories of Racial Division over Voluntary Euthanasia. William L. MacDonald, Ohio State University, Newark 403. Student Forum. Policy and Practice: Papers on the Sociology of Culture, Institutions, and Organizations Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia B Organizer and Presider: Patrick J.W. McGinty, University of Missouri Planned Parenthood and "Project REACH": Preliminary Analysis of the Promise and Impact of a Rural Teen Pregnancy Program. Lisa Corbin and Kate O'Donnell, Hartwick College Movements for Change and Mechanisms of Conflict. Benjamin B. Bolger, Stanford University The Relevance of Heroes to Narrative and Frame Analytic Perspectives in Social Movements. Edward T. Walker, Drexel University Working between Culture and Structure: An Ethnographic Study of the Culture of Importance. Penelope Dane, University of Massachusetts 404. Regular Session. Policy, Politics, and AIDS in the 21st Century Hilton Washington, Thoroughbred Organizer: Brenda Seals, Hunter College Presider: Richard Needle, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services NGOs, Fertility, and HIV/AIDS Control in East Africa. Teresa G. Labov, University of Pennsylvania The Death of AIDS Discourse? A Content Analysis of HIV/AIDS in ASA Programs and Sociology Journals. Bronwen Lichtenstein, University of Alabama, Birmingham

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Session 404, continued Social and Policy Predictors of Community Vulnerability to HIV among Drug Injectors and of Proportions of Drug Injectorsin Metropolitan Populations. Samuel Friedman, National Development and Research Institutes, Inc. Eco-social World Health and the HIV Epidemic. Brenda Seals, Hunter College Discussion: Judith D. Auerbach, National Institutes of Health 405. Regular Session. Children and Youth: International Perspectives Hilton Washington, Military Organizer: Roberta Goldberg, Trinity College Presider: Enrique Pumar, William Paterson University A Comparative Study of the Global Problems of Child Malnutrition and Mortality in Different World Countries and Regions. Ashraf Ragab El-Ghannam and Ahmad Atwan Suleiman, United Arab Emirates University Malnutrition among Preschool Children in China: Levels and Correlates. Zhanlian Feng, Brown University Does Class Matter?: SES and Psychological Health among Hungarian Adolescents. Bettina Piko, Albert-SzentGyorgyi Medical University; and Kevin Fitzpatrick, University of Alabama, Birmingham Discussion: Konia Kollehlon, Trinity College 406. Regular Session. The State and Development in World Society Marriott Wardman Park, Balcony B Organizer and Presider: Susan Tiano, University of New Mexico Embedded Autonomy Revisited: An Organizational Framework for State-Building in the Postcolonial Third World. Matthew Lange, Brown University South African State Capacity and Post-Apartheid Economic Reconstruction. John Luiz, University of Witwatersrand Interpreting Development and Rights: Adhering to CEDAW in Pakistan. Anita M. Weiss, University of Oregon International Norms and Cultural Change: The Case of Female Genital Cutting. Elizabeth Heger Boyle, University of Minnesota; Barbara McMorris, Institute for Social and Behavioral Research; and Mayra Gomez, University of Minnesota Discussion: Robert Fiala, University of New Mexico 407. Regular Session. Economic Crisis and Class Politics in Global Capitalism Hilton Washington, Monroe East Organizer: Hagen Koo, University of Hawaii Presider: Diane E. Davis, New School University Chronicle of a Re-birth Foretold: Restructuring the Economic Landscape along Asia's Pacific Rim. Ravi Palat, University of Auckland

Structural Adjustment, Social Realignment, and Coalition Change in South Korea: From a Comparative Perspective. Hyun-Chin Lim, Seoul National University; and Suk-Man Hwang, Changwon National University Globalization and Inequality: Is Japan Still an Egalitarian Society? Bai Gao, Duke University Unionized Workers versus Economic Globalization. Maria Gritsch, University of California, Los Angeles Discussion: Diane E. Davis, New School University 408. Regular Session. Education: Race and Schooling in America Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia C Organizer: David A. Kinney, Central Michigan University Presider: Christopher Weiss, Princeton University Extra-curricular Activity Participation of Philadelphia Students: Opportunity-to-Learn or Mechanism for Social Tracking. Pamela Quiroz and William Edward Wagner, III, University of Illinois, Chicago Special Education or Racial Segregation: Understanding Variation in the Disproportionate Representation of African American Students in Special Education Programs. Tamela McNulty-Eitle, University of Miami Testing the Peer Relations and School Resistance Aspect of Oppositional Culture Theory: Race/Ethnic and Gender Differences. Garvey Lundy, University of Pennsylvania; and Glenn Firebaugh, Pennsylvania State University School Effects: Explaining the Race Gap in Mathematics Achievement. Shelly Brown, University of Michigan Race-Ethnicity, Social Background, and Grade Retention. Robert M. Hauser, Devah Pager, and Solon Simmons, University of Wisconsin, Madison Discussion: Christopher Weiss, Princeton University 409. Regular Session. Ethnomethodology and Conversation Analysis: Interaction in Medical Settings Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia A Organizer and Presider: Virginia Teas Gill, Illinois State University The OPSCAN Form as a Not-So-Silent Third Part in an HIV Prevention and Test Counseling Session. Ann Marie Kinnell, University of Southern Mississippi "Don't Say No...Say Oh You'll Have a Go": Disagreements on Capacity and Competence in Physiotherapy Treatments. Ruth Parry, University of Nottingham, England An Ethnomethodological Approach to the Study of Patient Compliance and Medical Treatment Regimen Design. Karen Lutfey, Indiana University Competing Agendas in Genetic Counseling. Alison Pilnick, University of Nottingham, England

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

410. Regular Session. Historical Sociology: Social Issues in Contemporary China Marriott Wardman Park, Balcony D Organizer: Fatma Muge Gocek, University of Michigan Presider: Yusheng Peng, Chinese University of Hong Kong Political and Cultural Capital as Axes of Contention in Student Factional Conflict during the Chinese Cultural Revolution. Joel D. Andreas, University of California, Los Angeles A Comparative Study of Agricultural Reform and Labor Reform in China: Focusing on State Autonomy and Capacity. Jung-Hee Lee, Pukyong National University (In)Compatibility of Socialism and Feminism: The Changing Meaning of Socialism and Its Impact on the Contemporary Chinese Women's Movement. Naihua Zhang, Florida Atlantic University Discussion: Yusheng Peng, Chinese University of Hong Kong 411. Regular Session. Popular Culture: Rapture, Rupture, and Feminist Cultural Studies Marriott Wardman Park, Coolidge Organizer: Suzanna Walters, Georgetown University Time, Space, and Transgression: Talk Shows as Carnivelesque. Julie Engel Manga, Boston College Don't Step on My Groove: Women and the Social Experience of Rock. Danielle Bessett, New York University The Structures of Appeal in “Ally McBeal”: Recognition, Identification, and Desire. Rachel Dubrofsky, York University The discussant, along with the presenters, will raise critical issues around cultural studies, gender, and the politics of interpretive methodologies. This session is intended to be interactive and engaged, with presenters commenting on each others' work and "talking through" their papers.

412. Regular Session. Postmodern Theory Hilton Washington, Jefferson East Organizer and Presider: Ben Agger, University of Texas, Arlington Critical Theory and Cybersociety. Douglas Kellner, University of California, Los Angeles Cybercritique: A Critical Theory of Online Agency and Virtual Structures. Timothy Luke, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University The Internet as Postmodern Culture. Mark Poster, University of California, Irvine Discussion: Karin D. Knorr Cetina, University of Bielefeld, Germany 413. Regular Session. Public Opinion Hilton Washington, Independence Organizer: Tom W. Smith, National Opinion Research Center Declining Government Confidence and Policy Preference in the U.S.: Devolution, Regime Effects, or Symbolic

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Change? Clem Brooks and Simon Cheung, Indiana University Outlook on Life and Political Views in the United States, 1973-1996. David Weakliem, University of Connecticut European Integration Fatigue?: A Cross-National Comparison of Public Opinion in EU Member States. Holli A. Semetko, University of Amsterdam The Impact of Celebrity on the Formation of AIDS Knowledge. Patrick J. Moynihan, Rutgers University; and John H. Gagnon, State University of New York, Stony Brook 414. Regular Session. Social Indicators and Social WellBeing Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8206 Organizer and Presider: Brett V. Brown, Child Trends Social Indicators and Social Well-Being: A Preliminary Study. Anna Petra Nieboer and Siegwart Lindenberg, University of Groningen Volunteering and Helping: Pro-social Acts and Their PsychoSocial Rewards. Gretchen DeHart, Washington State University How to Measure What People do for a Living in Research on the Socioeconomic Correlates of Health. John Warren and Hsiang-Hui Daphne Kuo, University of Washington Measuring Material Well-Being in the Survey of Income and Program Participation. Kurt Bauman, Population Division, U.S. Bureau of the Census Discussion: Robert Kominski, U.S. Bureau of the Census 415. Section on Crime, Law, and Deviance. Qualitative Research in the Study of Crime, Law, and Deviance Hilton Washington, Georgetown West Organizer and Presider: George S. Bridges, University of Washington Competing Interpretations of Sophistication in the Contemporary Juvenile Court. Alexes Harris, University of California, Los Angeles Risky Business: Interagency Strategies Used by Public Agencies Serving Aggressive Youth with Mental Health Problems. Deborah Potter, Brandeis University Community Reparative Boards: Theory and Practice. David Karp, Skidmore College; and Lynne Walther, Vermont Department of Corrections Discussion: Sara Steen, Vanderbilt University 416. Section on Sociology of the Family. Families, Caring, and Resource-Sharing Hilton Washington, Lincoln East Organizer and Presider: Merril Silverstein, University of Southern California Adult Siblings as Family Resources: Factors that Shape Contact and Care. Shelley Eriksen, California State University, Long Beach; and Naomi Gerstel, University of Massachusetts, Amherst

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Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

Session 416, continued Out of Sight, Out of Mind: Cohesion in Kinship and Friendship Networks with Geographic Distance. Kristen E. Schultz, Cornell University Achievement, Ascription, and the Structure of Asset Inequality. Yuval Elmelech, Columbia University Kin Effects on Black-White Account and Home Ownership. Colleen M. Heflin, University of Michigan; and Mary Pattillo-McCoy, Northwestern University Discussion: Emily M. Agree, Johns Hopkins University 417. Section on Organizations, Occupations, and Work. Refereed Roundtables on Organizations, Occupations, and Work Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom Salon 1 Organizers: Sean O'Riain, Eva Skuratowicz, Vicki Smith, and Anand Swaminathan, University of California, Davis 1. Special Session: A Dialogue on Women of Color in Corporate America Table Presiders/Discussants: Elizabeth Higginbotham, University of Delaware; and Jacqueline Johnson, Syracuse University No More "Business As Usual": Women of Color in Corporate America—Report of the National Women of Color Work/Life Survey. Jennifer Tucker, Leslie R. Wolfe, Wendy G. Smooth, and Rose Ann M. Renteria, Center for Women Policy Studies 2. Environmental Change and Organizational Evolution Table Presider: James Wade, University of Wisconsin, Madison Style Wars: Sources of Environmental Uncertainty in the Genre Niches of the Recorded Music Industry. Linda J. Andes, Southern Illinois University Environmental Discontinuities and Organizational Evolution: Functional Orientations and Founding Processes in Argentine Universities, 1973-1999. Ernesto Gantman and Mauricio Contreras, University of Buenos Aires, Argentina An Ecology of Utopia: Density Dependence in Mortality of American Communes, 1609-1965. James A. Kitts, Cornell University 3. Personal and Institutional Determinants of Work Outcomes Table Presider: Carol J. Auster, Franklin and Marshall College Death of a Salesman Japanese-Style: The Social Epidemiology of Karoshi. Scott North, University of California, Berkeley Militarization among American Police Departments: The Effects of Military Service on Occupational Tasks in Police Officers. George T. Patterson, New York University Explaining Informal Workplace Deceptions: Dramaturgical Infrastructure and the Shadow Administration of Work. David Schulman, Lafayette College

Clinical Nursing Expertise Measures for Outcomes Research. Eileen T. Lake, University of Pennsylvania 4. Processes Leading to Gender Inequality Table Presider: Rosemary Wright, Sociological Resources Industrial Restructuring, Technological Change and Inequality: Gender Differences in Underemployment and Returns to Education, 1971-1993. Nicole T. Flynn, University of South Alabama; and Joan E. Manley, Louisiana State University Job Search and Recruitment Strategies: Consequences for Gender-Based Earnings Inequality. Matt L. Huffman, University of California, Irvine; and Lisa Torres, University of California, Santa Barbara Stereotypic Work Conditions and Earnings Differences by Race and Sex. Robert L. Kaufman, Ohio State University 5. Space, Time, and Gender Table Presider: Melinda J. Milligan, Tulane University Thwarting Occupational Gender Segregation: Time Off as an Employment Advantage. Ivy Kennelly, Georgia Institute of Technology; and Hiromi Taniguchi, Carolina Population Center Maternity and Paternity Leave: Who Thinks They Get It and Who Does Not. Chardie L. Baird, Florida State University Spatial Restructuring and "Demasculinization" in TeamBased Offices. Marjukka Ollilainen, Weber State University 6. Current Trends in the Employment Contract: Contingent and Part-time Work Table Presider: Kevin D. Henson, Loyola University, Chicago Part-time Work in American Organizations. Eric Barth and Naomi Cassirer, University of Notre Dame Being a Temp: The Meaning and Experience of Temporary Work. Melanie A. Hulbert, State University of New York, Albany Outwork as Legitimate Labor: The Case of Editorial Freelancing. Debra Osnowitz, Brandeis University 7. Organizations: Team, Professional, and Managerial Performance Table Presider: Donald Palmer, University of California, Davis Management Myopia: The Negotiated Outcome of Increasing Owner Influence and Management Efforts to Maintain Autonomy. Greg Greenberg, University of North Carolina Organizational Change: Marketing Trust and the Move Toward Performance Measurement. Joan E. Manley, Louisiana State University Effects of Organizational Structure on the Behavior and Performance of Polar and Space Work Teams. Patrick Nolan, University of South Carolina; and Marilyn Dudley-Rowley, OPS-Alaska

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

8. Demography: Point and Counterpoint Table Presider: Pamela Forman, University of California, Davis The Death of the "Organization Man": The Effects of Postbureaucratic Practices on Sex Composition of the Workplace. Alexandra Kalev, Princeton University Success and Failure Predictors in Professional Athletic Careers: A Study of PGA, LPGA, ATP, and WTA Tour Players. Eui-Hang Shin and Casey Adam Borch, University of South Carolina Occupational Integration and Gender Equity. Mary Lizabeth Gatta and Patricia Roos, Rutgers University 9. Stratification and Mobility Table Presider: Marlese Durr, Wright State University Technological Change and the Stratification of Adult Schooling and On-the-job Training. Lorraine R. Bell, University of Wisconsin, Madison Bottle Rockets and Falling Stars: Sex, Race, and Mobility within Occupational Internal Labor. Mikaela Dufur, Ohio State University Less-Alienated Labor and the Structuration of Mobility Socialization by Working-Class Parents. Vincent Serravallo, Rochester Institute of Technology 10. Professions and Professionalizing Processes Table Presider: Carrie Yang Costello, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee The Social Construction of Professionalism by NonProfessional Workers: Paralegals Working in Private Law Firms. Kathryn J. Lively, University of Tulsa, Oklahoma The Process of Professionalization: An Analysis of the Occupation of Emergency Management in Florida. Jennifer Wilson, Florida International University Stuck in the Middle: Effects of Education Rank on Careers of Life Science PhDs. Laurel Smith-Doerr, Boston University 11. Commitment and Satisfaction in Organizations Table Presider: Maura Belliveau, Texas A&M University Preferential Treatment of Women and Men on the Job: Equitable, Rational, or Reparative? Matthew Oware, Indiana University "Here Today, Gone Tomorrow:" Outsourcing Electronics Production Jobs and Its Alienating Effects on Temporary Workers. Jackie Zalewski, Loyola University, Chicago Organization within the Church: Sources of Conflict and Change. Richard Startup, University of Wales 12. Organizations and Community Table Presider: Sean O'Riain, University of California, Davis The Entrepreneurial Lifestyle: Capitalists, Cultural Pockets, and the Cultural Context of Community. Gregory Peter and Peter F. Korsching, Iowa State University

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Processes of Deinstitutionalization and Reinstitutionalization among Israeli Kibbutzim, 19901998. Raymond Russell and Robert Hanneman, University of California, Riverside; Schlomo Getz, Haifa University 13. Occupational Case Studies Table Presider: William Finlay, University of Georgia Occupations in Subacute Care: Report of an Ethnographic Study. Ariel M. Ducey, City University of New York Job Quality and Opportunity in Entry-Level Service Sector Jobs: A Case Study of a Supermarket. Katherine L. Hughes, Columbia University Constructing Teams of Distant Workers. David Schweingruber, Iowa State University 14. Institutional Power: Unions and Workplace Democracy Table Presider: Jonathan Isler, University of California, Davis The Two Faces of Unionism: A Historical Understanding of Union Dual Closure. Yong-Dal Chung, North Carolina State University When Class Isn't Enough: The Politics Behind Workplace Democracy. Ed Collom, University of California, Riverside 418. Section on Community and Urban Sociology. The Symbolic Economy as a Force for Urban Production Marriott Wardman Park, Balcony A Organizer and Presider: Leonard Nevarez, Vassar College The City as an Entertainment Machine. Richard Lloyd and Terry Nichols Clark, University of Chicago Exploring Urban Landscapes after Apartheid: Fortification Aesthetics and the Revanchist City. Martin J. Murray, Binghamton University The Bullriders of Silicon Alley: New York Places Its Bets. Michael Indergaard, St. John's University 419. Section on Social Psychology Miniconference. The State of Sociological Social Psychology at the Millennium: Symbolic Interaction and Its Connection to the Other Faces of Our Field Hilton Washington, Monroe West Organizer and Presider: Lynn Smith-Lovin, University of Arizona Panel: Sheldon Stryker, Indiana University Gary Alan Fine, Northwestern University Edward Lawler, Cornell University Peggy Thoits, Vanderbilt University 420. Section on Sociology of Mental Health. Beyond Psychiatry: What Are the Appropriate Outcomes for the Sociology of Mental Health? Hilton Washington, Georgetown East Organizer: Allan V. Horwitz, Rutgers University

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Session 421, continued The Importance of Dimensional and Categorical Measures of Mental Health. Ronald Kessler, Harvard Medical School Positive Mental Health: The Diagnosis and Epidemiology of Languishing and Flourishing in the United States. Corey Lee Keyes, Emory University Objects, Subjects, and the Assessment of Well-Being. John Mirowsky, Ohio State University Violent Behavior: An Expression of Emotional Upset. Debra Umberson, Kristi Williams, and Kristin Anderson, University of Texas, Austin 421. Section on Science, Knowledge, and Technology. Refereed Roundtables on Scientific Knowledge and Technology and Business Meeting Hilton Washington, State Refereed Roundtables (10:30-11:30 a.m.): Organizer: Kathryn A. Henderson, Texas A&M University 1. Institutions, Standardization, and Culture in Science-based Knowledge Critical Legal Theory and Critical Science Studies: Engaging Institutions. Jennifer L. Croissant, University of Arizona Insider-Outsiders: Bureaucracy, Politics, and Culture: A Case Study of Institutional Standardizing of Alternative Builiding Methods. Kathryn Henderson, Texas A&M University Is Science Cultural? Mark A. Schneider, Southern Illinois University 2. Pollution, Status, and Identity in the Production of Science Producing Air Pollution: Objects for Scientific Research. Joshua W. Dunsby, University of California, San Diego Activists and the Politics of Identity: Producing Science and Re-producing Status. Marc Chung, Columbia University 3. Transitions, Gender, and Risk-Taking in the Practice of Science Gender, Lifecourse, and Risk-taking in Science. David A. Rier, Bar-Ilan University The End of Socialism and the Reinvention of the Self: A Study of the East German Psychotherapeutic Community in Transition. Christine Leuenberger, Cornell University 4. Digital Logic, Daily Life, and Decontextualization in an Age of Computer-Mediation The Logic of Digital Reproduction. Paul-Brian McInerney, Columbia University Connecting Technology to the Time Squeeze: Evidence from the Cornell Couples and Careers Study. Noelle A. Chesley, Cornell University Computer-Mediated Communications and the Decontextualization of Information. Kenneth Oman, University of Virginia

Section on Science, Knowledge, and Technology Business Meeting and Reception (11:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m.) 422. Section on Race, Gender, and Class. Putting Class Back into Gender and Race Scholarship Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland B Organizers: Judith A. Howard, University of Washington; and Mary Romero, Arizona State University Presider: Mary Romero, Arizona State University Border Work between Classes: Race, Identity, and Performance among White and Mexican-American Youth. Julie Bettie, University of California, Santa Cruz Manicuring Interactions: Race, Gender and Class in New York City Korean-owned Nail Salons. Miliann Kang, New York University Putting Class Back in Race and Scholarship: Liberal versus Marxist Approaches. Steve Rosenthal, Hampton University; and Stephanie Shanks-Meile, Indiana University Northwest Abstract Subjects: "Class," "Race," "Gender," and Modernity. Jeffery M. Paige, University of Michigan Discussion: Mary Romero and Eric Margolis, Arizona State University

11:30 a.m.

Meetings

Section on Collective Behavior and Social Movements Business Meeting (to 12:10 p.m.)—Marriott Wardman Park, Harding Section on Science, Knowledge, and Technology Business Meeting (to 12:10 p.m.)—Hilton Washington, State

12:30 p.m.

Meetings

Committee on Professional Ethics—Hilton Washington, C326 Section on Crime, Law, and Deviance Council Meeting (to 1:30 p.m.)—Hilton Washington, Georgetown West Section on Organizations, Occupations, and Work Council Meeting (to 1:30 p.m.)—Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland B Social Psychology Quarterly Editorial Board—Hilton Washington, State Sociological Methodology Editorial Board—Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8218 Sociology of Education Editorial Board—Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8219

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

12:30 p.m.

Sessions

423. Thematic Session. Asians and Race Relations in the U.S. and Canada: Emerging Patterns, Increasing Diversity Hilton Washington, International West Organizer and Presider: Eric Fong, University of Toronto Residential Segregation and Socio-Economic Integration of Asians in Canadian Cities. T. R. Balakrishnan, University of Western Ontario Pan-Asian Ethnic Boundaries in the United States. Pyong Gap Min, Queens College, City University of New York The "Boat People's" First Ten Years in Canada: Factors that Helped and Forces that Hindered Their Integration. Morton Beiser, University of Toronto Forms of Capital in Asian American Occupational Mobility. Jimy Sanders, University of South Carolina Discussion: Charles Hirschman, University of Washington 424. Special Session. Neoliberal Restructuring and Social Movement Unionism Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia C Organizer: Ian Robinson, University of Michigan Presider: Howard Kimeldorf, University of Michigan Is Neoliberal Restructuring Promoting Social Movement Unionism in the USA and Canada? Ian Robinson, University of Michigan; and Michael Dreiling, University of Oregon Social Movement Unionism in South Africa: A Reassessment Where It All Began. Glenn Adler and Eddie Webster, University of Witwatersrand European Union Responses to Neoliberal Restructuring: An Overview. George Ross, Brandeis University, Neoliberal Restructuring and Union Responses: Northern Europe and East Asia Compared. Juhana Vartiainen, Labor Institute, Helsinki Discussion: Howard Kimeldorf, University of Michigan 425. Special Session. The Progressive Traditions of Sociology: Rekindling C. Wright Mills Hilton Washington, Lincoln West Organizer: Lauren Langman, Loyola University Chicago Presider: David Simon, San Jose State University Biography and History in a Global Age. Lauren Langman, Loyola University Chicago The Sociological Imagination Today: The Legacy of C. Wright. David Simon, San Jose State University The Power Elite and Politics: Is There Any Hope for Left Insurgents? William Domhoff, University of California, Santa Cruz

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Knowledge for What?: Robert Lynd and C. Wright Mills as the Conscience of Sociology. Stanley Aronowitz, City University of New York Graduate Center; and William DiFazio, Fordham University 426. Special Session. Women's Struggles for Reproductive Rights Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland A Organizer and Presider: Vilna Bashi, Northwestern University Regional Variations in Women's Reproductive Rights: A Matter of Human Rights. Vijayan K. Pillai, University of Texas, Arlington; and Guang-zhen Wang, University of Arkansas, Little Rock To be announced. Radhika Ramasubban, Centre for Social and Technological Change Beggars and Choosers: How the Politics of Choice Shapes Abortion, Adoption, and Welfare in the U.S. Rickie Solinger To be announced. Cheryl Meyer, Wright State University Discussion: Dorothy Roberts, Northwestern University 427. Special Session. The Commodification of Leisure: Trends, Trajectories, and Implications Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland C Organizer: Daniel Thomas Cook, University of Illinois, Champaign-Urbana Enchanting the Settings in Which Leisure Is Consumed: Fundamental Contradictions. George Ritzer and Todd Stillman, University of Maryland, College Park Exchange Value as Pedagogy in Children's Leisure. Daniel Thomas Cook, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Ethical Transformations and Consumption: From Asphalt Bodies to the New Urban Health Culture. C. L. Cole, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Discussion: Chris Rojek, Nottingham Trent University 428. Special Session. The School to Work Life Course Transition Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia B Organizer: John Robert Warren, University of Washington The School to Work Transition: Ethnic and Gender Issues Early in the Life Course. Doris R. Entwisle and Karl L. Alexander, Johns Hopkins University Adolescent Work as an Expression of Agency in the Schoolto-Work Transition. Jeylan T Mortimer and Sabrina Oesterle, University of Minnesota Early Occupational Careers of Black, White and Hispanic Women. Marta Tienda and Sigal Alon, Princeton University Adolescent Employment and Schooling Outcomes: New Data, New Perspectives. Paul C. LePore, University of Washington Discussion: Ralph B. McNeal, University of Connecticut

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428x. Special Session. Achieving Gender Equality in a Gendered Society Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom Salon 3 Organizer and Presider: Beth B. Hess, County College of Morris Using Gender to Undo Gender: A Feminist Degendering Movement. Judith Lorber, Brooklyn College and Graduate Center, City University of New York Where the Boys Aren't: Anti-Sexist Work in the University. Michael Schwalbe, North Carolina State University, Raleigh Who Cares?: Toward Race and Gender Justice in Caring Work. Evelyn Nakano Glenn, University of California, Berkeley Looking for Levers in the Policy Machinery: Lessons from the Rest of the World. Myra Marx Ferree, University of Wisconsin, Madison 429. Professional Workshop. Science and Education Indicators: Data Access and Use Hilton Washington, Map Leader: Jennifer Bond, National Science Foundation 430. Academic Workplace Workshop. Evaluating NonTraditional Forms of Scholarship Marriott Wardman Park, Balcony B Organizer: Hugh F. Lena, Providence College Panel: Garry Hesser, Augsburg College Hugh F. Lena, Providence College Rachel Parker-Gwin, Virgina Polytechnic Institute and State University The mission of institutions of higher education invariably rest on the three pillars of research, teaching, and service. So too, evaluations of faculty for tenure and promotion are based on these activities. Today, on campuses across the nation, there is a recognition that faculty reward systems do not match the full range of academic activities and that faculty must increasingly evaluate non-traditional forms of scholarship. In this workshop, panelists will discuss faculty roles and rewards and provide advice and examples of methods for evaluating non-traditional forms of scholarship.

431. Teaching Workshop. Teaching Sociology of Sport Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware A Organizer and Presider: Jim Steele, James Madison University Panel: Jay Coakley, University of Colorado, Colorado Springs Leslea Haravon-Collins, University of Iowa Earl Smith, Wake Forest University Jim Steele, James Madison University Shari L. Dworkin, The University of Southern California The goal of this workshop is to explore with instructors the status of the study of sport in sociology and various approaches to current issues and their consequences for student research. We will examine theoretical and methodological techniques used in teaching sport, and workshop participants will receive handouts of teaching resources.

Leaders will also discuss some of the concerns of female and minority athletes and advocates, including gender, socialization, the body, and the emerging cultural studies perspective.

432. Informal Discussion Roundtables. Knowledge and Identity Hilton Washington, International East Organizer: Stella M. Capek, Hendrix College 1. Politics of the Body in the 21st Century. H. Hugh Floyd, Samford University 2. Straddling Borders: Western Enunciative Modalities and the "Nativized" Feminist Ethnographer. Josephine Ann Cutajar, University of Toronto 3. Expert Knowledges as Disciplinary Technologies. Roblyn Rawlins, Carol S. Lindquist, and Jacob Heller, State University of New York, Stony Brook 4. Consumption, Identity, and the Self. Robert Dunn, California State University, Hayward 5. National Identity and Social Ritual: The Role of Festivals and Other Ritualized Practices during Societal Disruption. J. David Knottnerus, Jean Van Delinder, and Jennifer Wolynetz, Oklahoma State University 6. Social Identity Factors and the Distribution of Mental Health Problems. David Rohall and Marybeth Mattingly, University of Maryland 7. Exploring Roles and Identities: Caregivers in the 1990s. Patricia Fanning, Bridgewater State College 8. Excluded Identities and Structural Violence. Jeanne Curran, California State University, Dominguez Hillls; and Susan R. Takata, University of Wisconsin, Parkside 9. Measuring Race/Ethnicity: Identification(s) for Mixed-Race Children in Schools. Alejandra Marcella Lopez, University of California, Los Angeles 10. The Insanity Defense and Juror Decision Making. Jason Ford, Bowling Green State University 11. Focus Group on C. Wright Mills' Ideas: Sexism, Feminism, and Racism. Richard Edgar, University of New Orleans 12. How Experiences of Collectivization Shape the Peasant's Ideas and Actions: A Case Study in One Chinese Village. Lu Huilin, Chinese University, Hong Kong 13. Theorizing about Asian Americans and Racial Theory: Past, Present, and Future. Susan A. Suh, University of California, Los Angeles 14. Cultural Values: An Applied Perspective. Purna Mohanty, Paine College 433. Regular Session. Applied Research and Evaluation Hilton Washington, Edison Organizer and Presider: Robert B. Hill, Westat, Inc. Evaluation of an Educational Reform Initiative: Connections to Work Culture. Cheryl Albers, Buffalo State College

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

Applying Sociology to Jury System Challenges: Revealing Biases and Affecting Outcomes. Andrew Beveridge, Queens College, City University of New York Credit Cards on Campus: Current Trends and Informational Deficiencies. Robert Manning, Georgetown University Assessing A Multi-Intervention Youth Program: A Formative Evaluation of the Youth Fair Chance Program. Anne Statham, Xun Wang, and Helen Rosenberg, University of Wisconsin, Parkside Discussion: Robert B. Hill, Westat, Inc. 434. Regular Session. Online Academic Publication: Debate and Controversy Hilton Washington, Military Organizer and Presider: Timothy McGettigan, Wake Forest University The NOESIS Model of Academic Publishing. Anthony Beavers, University of Evansville The Impact of Electronic Publishing in the Medical World. Olivier Wenker, University of Texas Discussion: Mike Sosteric, Athabasca University 435. Regular Session. Environmental Sociology: Mobilization, Disputes, and Claimsmaking Hilton Washington, Farragut Organizer: Shirley Laska, University of New Orleans Presider: Chris Biga, Washington State University Towards a Sociology of the Weather. Steve Matthewman, Ackland University of Technology Public Awareness of Environmental Issues Prior to Earth Day, 1970. Harry R. Potter, Purdue University Dealing with Toxicity in the Risk Society: The Case of the Hamilton, Ontario, Plastics Recycling Fire. Harris Ali, University of Toronto, Scarborough A Gulf of Difference: Disputes over Gulf War-Related Diseases. Phil Brown, Brown University; Sabrina McCormick, Aracely Alicea, Joshua Mandelbaum, and Theo Luebke, Brown University Discussion: Valerie Gunter, University of New Orleans 436. Regular Session. Ethnographic Studies Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia A Organizer: Spencer Cahill, University of South Florida Presider: Clinton Sanders, University of Connecticut Friendly Gatekeeping: How Frontline Medical Workers Shape Lay Problems into Medical Cases. Yvette Guerra, University of California, Los Angeles Narrative Editing and the Interactive Dynamics of Client Work. Amir Marvasti, Bethune-Cookman College Teaching Wedding Rules: How Bridal Workers Accomplish Control over Brides. Marisa Corrado, University of Connecticut Rhythmicity and Seasonality in Resorts: The Social Construction of "Commercial Time". Patricia Adler,

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University of Colorado; and Peter Adler, University of Denver 437. Regular Session. Young People, Gender, and Social Structures Marriott Wardman Park, Coolidge Organizer: Joey Sprague, University of Kansas Presider: April Brayfield, Tulane University Gendering Violence: The Youth Violence/Adult Intimate Violence Connection. L. Susan Williams and Elizabeth Cauble, Kansas State University Do Single Gender Schools Address the Needs of At-Risk Students?: The Case of California's Single Gender Public Schools. Lea Hubbard, University of California, San Diego; and Amanda Datnow, Ontario Institute for Studies in Education The North End Teen Clinic: The Production of Sexuality. Elizabeth Campbell, University of Chicago Gender Integration at Virginia Military Institute and the United Stated Military Academy at West Point. Diane Diamond and Michael Kimmel, State University of New York, Stony Brook Discussion: April Brayfield, Tulane University 438. Regular Session. Globalization and Its Consequences Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware B Organizer and Presider: Robert K. Schaeffer, San Jose State University Two Hundred Year Trajectories of Trade and Investment Globalization. Chris Chase-Dunn, Yukio Kawano, Ben Brewer, Phil Hough, Corey Patterson, and Jennifer Johnson, Johns Hopkins University North American Free Trade and Changes in the Nativity of the Garment Industry Workforce in the United States. David Spener, Trinity University; and Randy Capps, University of California, Irvine Breaking the Neo-Liberal Consensus: The Multilateral Agreement on Investment and Its Links to the Seattle Protests Against the World Trade Organization. Lorna Mason, City University of New York Graduate Center Globalization and Social Movement Solidarity: Mobilization and Conflict in an Era of Global Trade Liberalization. Jackie Smith, State University of New York, Stony Brook Discussion: Robert K. Schaeffer, San Jose State University 439. Regular Session. Historical Sociology: Race in U.S. History Marriott Wardman Park, Balcony D Organizer and Presider: Fatma Muge Gocek, University of Michigan Centers, Peripheries, and Boundaries: Rethinking the Origins of American Racism. Chris Smaje, University of Surrey, England

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Session 439, continued Narrative, Process, and the Development of Political Interests: Race and the Agrarian Revolt in Virginia. Joseph Gerteis, University of Minnesota Whiteslavery Narratives, Racial Boundaries, and the Trial of Belle Moore. Brian Donovan, Northwestern University Inverse Cyclical Fluctuations in the U.S. Federal Policy toward American Indians and in the Soviet Nationality Policy. Elena Ermolaeva, Shepherd College Discussion: Sherri-Ann P. Butterfield, University of Michigan 440. Regular Session. Intergenerational Processes Hilton Washington, Monroe West Organizer: Lynne M. Casper, National Institute of Child Health and Human Development Presider: Jason Fields, U.S. Bureau of the Census Multigenerational Families in the 1990s: Parents and Adult Children Living Together. Philip N. Cohen, University of California, Irvine; and Lynne M. Casper, National Institute of Child Health and Human Development Parental Marital Disruption and Children's Health. Sharon K. Houseknecht and Darcy W. Hango, Ohio State University Perceptions of Parenting Across Generations: How Involved Are Fathers? Melissa A. Milkie, University of Maryland, College Park The Effects of Parent's Self-Efficacy, Work Conditions, Marital Conflicts, and Family Economic Condition on Parenting Behaviors and Adolescents' Self-Efficacy: A Longitudinal Study. Cheng-hsien Lin and Howard B. Kaplan, Texas A&M University Discussion: Nan Marie Astone, Johns Hopkins University 441. Regular Session. Sociology of Science Hilton Washington, Monroe East Organizer and Presider: Andrew Pickering, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign How New Markets Are Made: How the Minimoog Was Sold to Rock 'n' Roll. Trevor Pinch, Cornell University The "Soul of the Brand": Breast Cancer-related Marketing, Women's Health Policy, and the Feminization of American Culture. Samantha King, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign The Search for Other Worlds: Faith and Fact among UFO Researchers. Ann Cross, Yale University An Intertwining of Ethnography and History in the Study of a Hybrid Controversy: The Case of DNA Profiling. Mike Lynch, Cornell University Knowledge Regimes in a Global Era: Five Transitions in Post-Social Knowledge Societies. Karin D. Knorr Cetina, University of Bielefeld, Germany

442. Section on Medical Sociology. Mental Health Services Research: Sociology's Role in Influencing the Agenda (co-sponsored with the Section on Sociology of Mental Health) Hilton Washington, Georgetown East Organizers and Presiders: Bernice A. Pescosolido, Indiana University, Bloomington; and Ann A. Hohmann, National Institute of Mental Health Racial and Ethnic Differences among Mentally Ill Offenders in the Context of Social Distance Theory. Stephanie Hartwell, University of Massachusetts, Boston Divergent Views of Clients and Professionals: Implications for Mental Health Services Research. Jami Stockdale, University of Pittsburgh; Rosalyn Benjamin Darling, Indiana University of Pennsylvania; Mark Hager, Americans for the Arts; and D. Alex Heckert, Indiana University of Pennsylvania Stigmatization and Mental Illness: An Example of Useful Cumulative Theory Building. Laura Blankertz, Matrix Research Institute Does Theory Have Any Place in Today's Sociology? Monica Morris Discussion: Ann A. Hohmann, National Institute of Mental Health 443. Section on Sociology of the Family. Families, Social Policy, and Civil Society Hilton Washington, Lincoln East Organizer: Rosanna Hertz, Wellesley College Presider: Naomi Gerstel, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Race, Gender and the FMLA: The Successes and Failures of Gender Neutrality. Naomi Gerstel and Amy Armenia, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Competing Interests: Legislating Responsibility for AfterSchool Care. Anita Garey, University of Connecticut Working Hours and Community Involvement of Dual-Earner Couples: Building Social Capital or Competing for Time? Penny Edgell Becker and Heather Hofmeister, Cornell University Caught between the Family and the State: China's Migrant Women in an Era of Economic Reform. Eileen M. Otis, University of California, Davis In Search of Prosperity, Justice, and a Good Life: Globalization and the Future of the Family. Janet Zollinger Giele, Brandeis University 444. Section on Collective Behavior and Social Movements. Mobilizing Structures and Culture in Social Movement Communities Marriott Wardman Park, Harding Organizer and Presider: Suzanne Staggenborg, McGill University

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

More than One Feminism: Organizational Structure and the Construction of Collective Identity. Jo Reger, Skidmore College Organizing One's Own: The Competitive Social Movement Sector and the Rise of Organizationally Distinct Feminist Movements. Benita Roth, Binghamton University Political Commemorations as Symbolic Resources of Collective Action: Protest Mobilization in Eastern Europe and China in 1989. Steven Pfaff, University of Washington; and Guobin Yang, University of Hawaii, Manoa More than Motherhood: Explaining Women's High-Risk Activism in El Salvador. Jocelyn S. Viterna and Kent Redding, Indiana University Discussion: Carol Mueller, Arizona State University West 445. Section on Race, Gender, and Class. Roundtables on Race, Gender, and Class and Business Meeting Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom Salon 1 Refereed Roundtables (12:30-1:30 p.m.): Organizer: Lora Bex Lempert, University of Michigan, Dearborn 1. Constructing Power: Mothers and Workers Table Presider: Manuela Romero, Texas A&M International University Mothers and Workers: Gender, Class, and the Construction of Need in a Welfare-to-Work Program. Stephanie A. Limoncelli, University of California, Los Angeles 2. Constructing Quality in Marriage and Parenthood Table Presider: Judy Aulette, University of North Carolina, Charlotte What a "Good" Mom Knows: The Construction of Maternal Identity in an Adolescent Parenting Program. Chishamiso T. Rowley, Wayne State University Class, Class Background, Marital Quality, and Marital Stability: A Longitudinal Study. Michael D. Grimes, Yoshinori Kamo, and Michelle Livermore, Louisiana State University 3. Race, Gender, and Class Issues for Women of Color in Careers/Employment Table Presider: Joyce Chinen, University of Hawaii, West O'ahu Explaining the Gap in Black and White Women's Employment: Why are Black Women More Likely than White Women to Exit Employment? Lori L. Reid, Florida State University Family and Career Trajectories among African American Female Attorneys. Mary Blair-Loy and Gretchen DeHart, Washington State University African American Women and Leadership. Roxana Moayedi, Trinity College

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4. Contexts and Consequences Table Presider: Melinda Goldner, Union College Some of My Best Friends Are...: Toward an Understanding of Friendships Which Cross Social Boundaries. James A. Vela-McConnell, Augsburg College 5. Cultural Products Table Presider: Mimi Schippers, Albion College Martha Stewart as a Sociological Phenomenon. Magalene Harris Taylor, University of Arkansas The Crossroads of Race and Sexuality: Mate Selection among Men. Voon Chin Phua, Graduate School and University Center, City University of New York; Gayle Kaufman, Davidson College 6. Race, Gender, and Class Issues in Health and Well-being Table Presider: Kim Blankenship, Yale University Social Inequality, Neighborhood Effects, and Women's Health. Amy Schulz, University of Michigan; and Lora Bex Lempert, University of Michigan, Dearborn A Study of Ethnic Minority's Psychosocial Well-being: Korean American Women in Kansas. Kyoung-Ho Shin and Jang-Ae Yang, Northwest Missouri State University The Intersections of Race, Class, and Gender and Drug Use in Washington, DC, 1991. Stephani Hatch and Mark F. Pioli, University of Maryland, College Park 7. Media Representations of Race, Gender, and Class Table Presider: P.J. McGann, Radcliff Institute Prescribing Priviledge: Racialized and Gendered Images in Medical Advertisements. Emily Drew, Christine Carr, and Stephanie Nawyn, Loyola University Chicago The Media and Executing Women: A Race, Class, Gender and Religion Analysis. Christopher Kudlac, Fordham University 8. Race, Gender, and Class Effects on Earning Power Table Presider: Judith Warner, Texas A&M International University Social Class and Earning in Taiwan Labor Force: A Marxist Analysis of Earning Determination. Tian-Yow Wang, National Central University Payback Time: Racial, Ethnic, and Gender Differences in the Effects of Education on Annual Income and Earned Income,1976-1998. Mary E. Campbell, University of Wisconsin 9. Historical Perspectives on Race, Gender, and Class Table Presider: Kirsten Paap, Hamilton College 10. Theorizing Race, Gender, and Class Table Presider: Beverly Lundy Allen, Iowa State University Getting Past Class: Hegemony and Ideology in Race, Gender, and Class Issues. Seth Adler, University of California, Santa Cruz Attacking the Iron Cage from Within: Race, Class, Gender, and the Paradoxes of Anti-Racist Work. Kristen Myers, Northern Illinois University

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

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Session 445, continued Nathan Glazer Changes His Mind, but not about Latinas/os. Theresa A. Martinez, University of Utah Informal Discussion Roundtables: 11. The Subversive Syllabus in Practice: Linking Classroom and Community for Social Transformation. M. Bahati Kuumba, Buffalo State College; Jerome Scott, Project South; Stan Mosley, University of Maryland, Eastern Shore; Tomas Encarnacion, Howard University; Rebecca L. Naser, Project South; and Benedict Ngala, Howard University 12. Theorizing Difference: Conducting Research on Health, Illness, and Biomedicine. Laura A. Mamo, University of California, San Francisco Section on Race, Gender, and Class Business Meeting (1:30-2:10 p.m.) 445x. Section on Community and Urban Sociology Award Presentations and Business Meeting Marriott Wardman Park, Balcony A Presider: Barry Wellman, University of Toronto Robert E. Park Book Award Presentation: Award Committee Chair: Hilary Silver, Brown University Award Recipient: Urban Exodus: Why the Jews Left Boston and the Catholics Stayed (Harvard University Press, 1999) by Gerald H. Gamm Business Meeting (1:30-2:10 p.m.)

1:30 p.m.

Meetings

Section on Community and Urban Sociology Business Meeting (to 2:10 p.m.)—Marriott Wardman Park, Balcony A Section on Crime, Law, and Deviance Business Meeting (to 2:10 p.m.)—Hilton Washington, Georgetown West Section on Organizations, Occupations, and Work Business Meeting (to 2:10 p.m.)—Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland B Section on Race, Gender, and Class Business Meeting (to 2:10 p.m.)—Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom Salon 1

2:30 p.m.

Meetings

1999-2000 ASA Council (to 6:10 p.m.)—Hilton Washington, Hemisphere Honors Program closing session—Hilton Washington, Georgetown East Rose Series in Sociology Editorial Board—Marriott Wardman Park, Hoover

2:30 p.m.

Sessions

446. Thematic Session. Beyond Triple Jeopardy: Women of Color, Public Policy, and the Limits of Citizenship Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom Salon 2 Organizer and Presider: Bonnie Thornton Dill, University of Maryland State Supervision of Black Mothers: Welfare Reform and the Child Welfare System. Dorothy Roberts, Northwestern University Migration, Citizenship, and Intersectionality. Pierrette Hondagneu-Sotelo, University of Southern California Discussion: Yen Le Espiritu, University of California, San Diego; and Lynn Weber, University of South Carolina 447. Special Session. Patterns and Consequences of Race-Ethnic Differences in Educational Attainment Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland C Organizers: Charles Bidwell, University of Chicago; Adam Gamoran, University of Wisconsin, Madison; and Maureen T. Hallinan, University of Notre Dame Presider: Maureen T. Hallinan, University of Notre Dame Racial Test-Score Trends, 1971-1996: Popular Youth Culture and Community Academic Standards. Ronald Ferguson, Harvard University Racial and Ethnic Differences in Social Capital and Educational Attainment. Gary Sandefur, Mary E. Campbell, Jennifer Eggerling, and Ann Meier, University of Wisconsin, Madison Wage Consequences of Educational Continuation Decisions of Black, White and Hispanic Men and Women. Kim Lloyd and Marta Tienda, Princeton University Race-Ethnicity, Educational Attainment, and Aging in the United States. Robert Hauser, University of Wisconsin, Madison 448. Special Session. The Sociology of the Superordinate: Masculinity, Hetersexuality, Whiteness Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia C Organizer and Presider: Michael Kimmel, State University of New York, Stony Brook Masculinity: Michael A. Messner, University of Southern California Discussion: Judith Lorber, Graduate Center and Brooklyn College, City University of New York Whiteness: Mike Hill, State University of New York, Albany Discussion: Noel Ignatiev, University of California, Riverside Heterosexuality: John H. Gagnon, State University of New York, Stony Brook Discussion: Calvin Thomas, Georgia State University

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

449. Special Session. The Life Course in the 21st Century Hilton Washington, Monroe West Organizer and Presider: Jill Quadagno, Florida State University The Life Course and Human Development. Glen H. Elder, Jr., University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Retirement as a Complex Transition: Gender, Marriage and Well-Being. Phyllis Moen, Cornell University Family Matters: Solidarity across the Life Course. Vern L Bengtson, Roseann Giarrusso, and Merrill Silverstein, University of Southern California Agency, Structure, and the Life Course in the Era of Reflexive Modernization. Victor Marshall, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill 450. Special Session. The Welfare State in Comparative Perspective Marriott Wardman Park, Balcony B Organizer and Presider: Walter Korpi, Stockholm University The Political Economy of Pension Reform: Latin America in Comparative Perspective. Evelyn Huber and John D. Stephens, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Power, Equality, Institutions: The Gender Aspects of Welfare Regimes. Ann Shola Orloff, Northwestern University Globalization, the Welfare State and Comparative Studies of Regulation and Deregulation. Robin Stryker, University of Iowa Distributive Conflict, Political Mobilization and the Welfare State: Comparative Analyses of Long-term Developments in the Western Countries. Walter Korpi and Joakim Palme, Stockholm University Discussion: John Myles, Florida State University 451. Special Session. Globalization: Asian Perspectives Hilton Washington, Jefferson East Organizer: Hsiao-Chuan Hsia, Shih Hsin University The Regime of International Capital Accumulation: The Case of Asia. Pao-Yu Ching, Marygrove College Internationalization of Capital and the Trade in Asian Women. Hsiao-Chuan Hsia, Shih Hsin University To be announced. Judy M. Taguiwalo, University of the Philippines Globalization and Formation of Transnational Civil Societies. Lucie Cheng, Shih Hsin University Discussion: Lucie Cheng, Shih Hsin University 452. Author Meets Critics. Reconstructing Reconstruction: The Supreme Court and the Production of Historical Truth (Duke University Press, 1999) by Pamela Brandwein, University of Texas, Dallas Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland A Organizer: Gideon Sjoberg, University of Texas, Austin

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Presider: Karen Manges Douglas, Prairie View A&M University Book Author: Pamela Brandwein, University of Texas, Dallas Critics: Mark Gould, Haverford College William Chambliss, George Washington University Boyd Littrell, University of Nebraska, Omaha 453. Professional Workshop. Activism and Participatory Learning: Doing Activist Sociology Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware A Organizer: Jose Z. Calderon, Pitzer College Panel: Jose Z. Calderon, Pitzer College Juan de Lara, Pitzer College Sandra Enos, Rhode Island College Sam Marullo, Georgetown University Kerry J. Strand, Hood College Panelists will discuss how they use Service and Participatory Learning in their courses, in their research, and in the community. The workshop will draw out examples of "activist" service learning models which promote and advance social change, critical thinking, values formation, civic participation, and positive intergroup relations.

454. Academic Workplace Workshop. Making the Most of an Interdisciplinary Department: Sociology and Anthropology Hilton Washington, Map Organizers: A. Douglas Kincaid and Richard Tardanico, Florida International University Presider: A. Douglas Kincaid, Florida International University Panel: Marilyn Fernandez, Santa Clara University Ralph Gomes, Howard University Joseph Scimecca, George Mason University Richard Tardanico, Florida International University Michael Timberlake, Kansas State University 455. Teaching Workshop. Teaching Introductory Sociology for the First Time Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware B Organizer: Diana Kendall, Baylor University Panel: Diana Kendall, Baylor University Kathryn S. Mueller, Baylor University Robyn L. Bateman, Baylor University Whether you are teaching Introduction to Sociology for the first time or want to rethink how you teach this important course, this participatory workshop provides tried-and-true techniques for teaching smaller classes and large lecture sections (100+ students), as well as ways to incorporate Internet learning activities into your teaching. The workshop is designed to facilitate interaction among participants.

456. Teaching Workshop. Teaching on the Internet Hilton Washington, Military Leaders: Joan M. Morris, University of Central Florida David Jaffee, University of North Florida Vincent N. Parrillo, William Paterson University

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Session 456, continued The goal of this workshop is to help instructors develop internet assignments. We will focus on: enhancing face-to-face courses with online components, the process of transforming a face-to-face course for web delivery, software tools for course content, course management packages, online sociology resources, and inter-institutional collaboration on web-course delivery. Handouts will be provided, and there will be time for questions.

457. Research Poster Session. Modes of Visual Research and Analysis Hilton Washington, Exhibit Hall Organizer: Pablo Vila, University of Texas, San Antonio 1. Using Multimedia and Visual Images of Civil Rights Struggles from the Cairo, IL, Oral History Project: An Interactive Poster Presentation. Robert Jenkot, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale 2. Places Remembered. Places Change. Judith Friedman, Rutgers University 3. Visual Clues in Data Collection: Collecting Retrospective Data with a Residential History Calendar. Barbara Downs and Jane L. Dye, U.S. Bureau of the Census 4. Seeing Ourselves: The Draw-a-Sociologist Project. Leslie Irvine and Patrick Krueger, University of Colorado, Boulder 5. Illness as Visual Metaphor: Visual Props in the Study of Childhood Chronic Illness. Cindy Dell Clark, Pennsylvania State University, Delaware County 458. Regular Session. At-Risk Youth Hilton Washington, Thoroughbred Organizer: Cynthia C. Harper, University of California, San Francisco Presider: Christopher Weiss, Princeton University An Analysis of Health Risk Behaviors among Adolescents. Shelley McDonough, Harvard University Social and Behavioral Correlates of Refusing Unprotected Sex among African American Adolescent Females. Catlainn Sionean, Ralph DiClemente, and Gina Wingood, Emory University Childhood Trauma among Violent Mexican-American Male Gang Members. Avelardo Valdez, University of Texas, San Antonio; and Alice Cepeda, City University of New York Graduate Center Family Violence and Smoking among Young Adolescent Females: An Extension of the Link to Risk Behavior. Gregory C. Elliott, Brandon Hoshiko, and Roger Avery, Brown University Gender Labels and Identity as Predictors of Drug Use among Ethnically Diverse Middle School Students. Stephen Kulis and Flavio Marsiglia, Arizona State University Discussion: Christopher Weiss, Princeton University

459. Regular Session. Critical Theory Hilton Washington, Caucus Organizer and Presider: Neil McLaughlin, McMaster University Gouldner's Nightmare Marxism. James Chriss, Cleveland State University Connections between Parsonian and Critical Theory, 1930s1980s. Uta Gerhardt, Heidelberg University Symbolic Interaction and Radical Democracy: Understanding Domination and Resistance in a Legislative Hearing. Peter L. Callero, Western Oregon University Weber and the Intercultural Foundations of Critical Theory. Fuyuki Kurasawa, York University 460. Regular Session. Environmental Sociology: Organization and Equity Issues Hilton Washington, Jefferson West Organizer: Shirley Laska, University of New Orleans Presider: Patrica Widener, University of New Orleans Environmental Aid: Driven by Recipient Need or Donor Interests? Tammy Lewis, Denison University Water, Power and Gender: Pressing Questions and Overlooked Interests in a Poor and Crowded Delta. Ben Crow, University of California, Santa Cruz; and Farhana Sultana, United Nations Development Program Where the Hogs Are: Corporate Swine Production and Environmental Justice in North Carolina, 1982-97. Bob Edwards, East Carolina University; and Anthony Ladd, Loyola University Is Big Good or Bad for the Environment?: An Empirical Analysis of the Effects of Organization Size on Toxic Emissions. Don Grant, Albert J. Bergesen, and Andrew Jones, University of Arizona Discussion: Betty Morrow, Florida International University 461. Regular Session. Mass Media and Social Change Hilton Washington, Monroe East Organizer and Presider: William Hoynes, Vassar College The Evolution of Questioning in Presidential Press Conferences. Steven Clayman and John Heritage, University of California, Los Angeles Charting Race: The Success of Black Performers in the Mainstream Recording Market, 1940-1990. Timothy Dowd and Maureen Blyler, Emory University Symbiosis: Mass Media and the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of South Africa. Ron Krabill, New School for Social Research Televison Viewing Behavior of Specific Reader Types, 19751995. Kees van Rees, Princeton University; and Koen van Eijck, Tilburg University Discussion: David Croteau, Virginia Commonwealth University

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

462. Regular Session. Quantitative Methodology Marriott Wardman Park, Coolidge Organizer: Guang Guo, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Liang-Zeger Method for Dyadic Interdependence in the Analysis of Nonsymmetric Social Networks. Kazuo Yamaguchi, University of Chicago When Not to Select a Growth Curve: The Case for a Piecewise Model. Peter Tice, Rutgers University Does Neighborhood Context Affect Age at Onset of Cigarette Use? An Analysis of Individual and Neighborhood Effects Using Multi-Level Discrete-Time Hazard Models: Methods and Preliminary Results. Sean F. Reardon, Pennsylvania State University; and Robert Brennan and Stephen L. Buka, Harvard University Fixed Effects Methods for the Analysis of Non-Repeated Events. Paul D. Allison, University of Pennsylvania; and Nicholas Christakis, University of Chicago Discussion: Tim Futing Liao, University of Illinois, Urbana

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Pressure in the Post-Title IX Era. Marvin Washington, Texas Technical University; and Pamela Forman, University of California, Davis 465. Regular Session. Symbolic Interaction II Hilton Washington, Grant Organizer: Norma Williams, University of Texas, Arlington Presider: Cherylon Robinson, University of Texas, San Antonio The Fashion of Their Dreams: Nocturnal Identities in a Chicago Blues Club. David Grazian, University of Chicago "Don't Tell Me to Just Relax!:" An Identity Theory Approach to Women's Infertility. Jeni Loftus and Paul Ruggerio, Indiana University Tracking Discourse: Symbolic Interactionist Theory and Method in the Information Age. Martin Innes, University of Surrey, England A Reexamination of the Influence of American Pragmatism on Symbolic Interactionist Theory. Frank J. Page, University of Utah

463. Regular Session. Nations and Nationalism Marriott Wardman Park, Harding Organizer and Presider: H.H. Michael Hsiao, Academia Sinica, Taiwan Nation and Empire: English and British National Identity in Comparative Perspective. Krisham Kumar, University of Virginia Ethnic Nationalism and Liberalism in Post-War Croatia. Garth Massey, University of Wyoming; Randy Hodson, Ohio State University; and Dusko Sekulic, Flinders University, Australia The Reproduction of the Nation-State in the European Union: The Case of France. Antonio V. Menendez-Alarcon, Butler University National Self-Determination: The Emergence of an International Norm. Michael Hechter, University of Washington; and Elizabeth Borland, University of Arizona Discussion: Russell A. Stone, American University

466. Section on Medical Sociology. Caregiving: What Structures are in Place for 2020? Hilton Washington, International West Organizer and Presider: Debora A. Paterniti, Houston VA Medical Center and Baylor College of Medicine The Structure of Non-Metropolitan HIV Care Services in the United States. J. Gary Linn, VA Medical Center Innovations in Health Care Delivery for the Medically Indigent. Anne M. Hornsby, Health Care Financing Administration Conceptualizing Sports Medicine as Occupational Health Care: Ethnographic Illustrations. Joseph A. Kotarba, University of Houston Home versus Hospital as the Setting for Hi-Tech Treatment of Chronic Illness. Gene Gallagher and Betty Ann Ray Duke, University of Kentucky Discussion: Jacqueline L. Angel, University of Texas, Austin

464. Regular Session. Sociology of Sport Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia A Organizer: Becky Beal Presider: Stephan Walk, California State University, Fullerton The Social Production of Racial Difference in High School Sports Participation. Pat Antonio Goldsmith, University of Wisconsin, Parkside Are They Apologizing?: Adolescent Female Athletes and the Apologetic Defense. Nancy Malcom, Vanderbilt University Gender, Sport, and Spectacle: Cheerleading and the Bid for Cultural Legitimacy. Laura Grindstaff, University of California, Davis Adoption and Abandonment Patterns in Men's Collegiate Athletics: The Impact of Competing Institutional

467. Section on Crime, Law, and Deviance. The Contexts and Consequences of Imprisonment Hilton Washington, Georgetown West Organizer: John R. Sutton, University of California, Santa Barbara Culture and Politics in Accounts of Penal Expansion. Katherine Beckett, Indiana University, Bloomington Incarcerated Youth Grown Up: Prison and Its Aftermath. John H. Laub, University of Maryland, College Park; and Robert J. Sampson, University of Chicago Incarceration and Educational Inequality. Bruce Western, Princeton University and Russell Sage Foundation Labor Markets, Macroeconomic Performance, and Prison Expansion. John R. Sutton, University of California, Santa Barbara

166

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

Session 467, continued Politics and Punishment: A Pooled Cross-National Analysis of Imprisonment Rates. David Jacobs and Richard Kleban, Ohio State University 468. Section on Sociology of the Family. Family Demography Hilton Washington, Lincoln East Organizer and Presider: Laura Sanchez, Tulane University The Dynamics of Nonresidential Fatherhood in the U.S., 1968-1992. Sanjiv Gupta and Pamela J. Smock, University of Michigan; Wendy D. Manning, Bowling Green State University Are Parents Investing Less in Children?: Trends in Mothers' and Fathers' Time with Children. Suzanne Bianchi and Liana Sayer, University of Maryland Children's Perspectives on Family Structures: An International Perspective. Patrick Heuveline and Jeffrey M. Timberlake, University of Chicago; Frank F. Furstenberg, Jr., University of Pennsylvania When Unwed Mothers Marry: A Prospective Study of the Men in Women's Lives. Deborah Roempke Graefe, Pennsylvania State University Discussion: S. Kelly Raley, University of Texas, Austin 469. Section on Organizations, Occupations, and Work. Organizations and Risky Technologies: Managing Hazards and Disasters (co-sponsored with the ASA Section on Science, Knowledge, and Technology) Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland B Organizers: Thomas D. Beamish, University of California, Davis; and Kathleen Tierney, University of Delaware Presider: Gary R. Webb, University of Delaware Identifying Threats to the Safety of the Blood Supply: An Exercise in Organizational Definitions of Danger. Michal Tamuz, University of Texas, Houston; James B. Battles, University of Texas, Dallas; and Harold S. Kaplan, Columbia University Communicative Ecologies and Intellectual Capital: The Case of Nuclear Power Plant Operations. Constance Perin, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Cognitive Aspects of Organizational Failure: Power, Culprits and Complacency. Lee B. Clarke, Rutgers University The Agency Beat: Waiting for a Tanker on the Rocks. Thomas D. Beamish, University of California, Davis Discussion: Charles B. Perrow, Yale University 470. Section on Community and Urban Sociology. Urban Neighborhoods in Theory and Practice Marriott Wardman Park, Balcony A Organizer and Presider: Philip Olson, University of Missouri, Kansas City

Urban Space, Restrictive Covenants and the Origin of Racial Residential Segregation in a U.S. City, 1900-1950. Kevin Gotham, Tulane University The Role of Organizations in Neighborhood Unemployment: San Francisco, 1940-1970. Jacqueline Olvera, Stanford University Consequences of Neighborhood Disadvantage for Residents' Levels of Trust. Catherine Ross and Shana Pribesh, Ohio State University Understanding Community: Combining Standard Methods with Directions in Research. Jewlya Lynn, University of Nebraska, Lincoln Beyond Poverty and Ethnicity: The Characterization of Urban and Suburban Neighborhoods and Their Effects on School Achievement. Vicki Lamb, John Hipp, Elizabeth Stearns, and Judith Blau, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill 471. Section on Sociology of Mental Health. Refereed Roundtables on Mental Health and Business Meeting Hilton Washington, International East Refereed Roundtables on Mental Health (2:30-3:30 p.m.): Organizer: Teresa L. Scheid, University of North Carolina, Charlotte 1. Sources of Psychological Distress Table Presider: Patricia Drentea, University of Alabama, Birmingham Psychological Distress among HIV Infected Urban Adolescents. Lee Martin, University of Maryland School of Medicine Debt and Anxiety. Patricia Drentea, University of Alabama, Birmingham Why Does Self Disclosure Decrease Psychological Distress?: Social Psychological Explanations. Rebecca Brooks, Kent State University 2. The Community Context of Mental Health Table Presider: Jeff Davis, California State University, Long Beach The Impact of Race and Community Socioeconomic Context on Diagnosis, Treatment, and Service Costs for Schizophrenia and Mood Disorder in Riverside County. Glenn T. Tsunokai, Yoko Katsuyama, and Edgar W. Butler, University of California, Riverside Acculturation in Context: The Psychological Well-Being of Chinese Immigrants. Jason Schnittker, Indiana University 3. Work Transitions and Mental Health Table Presider: Marta Elliott, University of Nevada, Reno Do Race and Sex Segregated Jobs Affect Workers' Psychological Well-Being? Jacqueline D. Brooks, Ohio State University Unemployment and Self Esteem in Socio-economic Context. Marta Elliott, University of Nevada, Reno

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

4. Appropriate Measure of Mental Illness and Treatment Table Presider: Karen Pugliesi, Northern Arizona University Gender and Depression: The Sociology of Antidepressant Drug Use. Regina E. Smardon, University of Pennsylvania Measuring the Subjective Well-Being of Clients in Psychosocial Rehabilitation Center. Piet Bracke, University of Ghent, Belgium 5. Studies of Clients in Treatment Settings Table Presider: Richard Adams, Mount Sinai School of Medicine Psychosis, Aggressive Behavior, and the Criminal Justice System. Richard Adams, Mount Sinai School of Medicine; and Kimberly Hornak, State University of New York Recovery, Inc.: A Self Help Group. James R. Davis, St. Peter's College Assessing the Impact of the New York Supported Housing Initiative for Homeless Persons with Severe Mental Illness on Public Shelter Use in NYC. Stephen Metraux, Steven Marcus, and Dennis Culhane, University of Pennsylvania 6. Studies of Mental Health Care Providers Table Presider: Mark F. Pioli, University of Maryland, College Park Mastery, Social Status, and Health Outcomes among Alzheimers' Caregivers. Mark F. Pioli, University of Maryland, College Park Accessing Mental Health Specialists and General Medical Providers for Mental Health Care. Stephanie Taylor, Columbia University; M. Audrey Burnam, Cathy Sherbourne, and Ron Anderson, University of California, Los Angeles 7. Gender and Depression Table Presider: Susan Roxburgh, Kent State University Gender Differences in Depression: Can We Generalize Across Race? Susan Roxburgh, and Jennifer Ali, Kent State University Taking the Therapeutic Space while Sharing the Blues: Results from a Feminist Project for Depressed Women. Irmeli Laitinen and Elizabeth Ettorre, University of Plymouth 8. Transitions and Other Life Dilemmas: Effects on Mental Health The Well-Being of Married People and Its Effect on Attitudes Toward Abortion for Genetic Defect. Lori Heald and Marieke Van Willigen, East Carolina University Stressors and Distress: Reciprocal Influences during the Transition from Adolescent Adulthood. Lora Ebert Wallace, Institute for Social and Behavioral Research

167

The Well Being of Married People and Its Effect on Attitudes toward Abortion for Genetic Defect. Lori Heald and Marieke Van Willigen, East Carolina University Informal Discussion Roundtables: 9. Teaching Resources for the Sociology of Mental Health and Illness: An Open Discussion to Innovative Approaches to Teaching and Learning Table Presiders: William Magee, University of Toronto; and Teresa L. Scheid, University of North Carolina, Charlotte Section on Sociology of Mental Health Business Meeting (1:30-2:10 p.m.) 472. Section on Collective Behavior and Social Movements. Refereed Roundtables on Collective Behavior and Social Movements Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom Salon 1 Organizer: Kelly Moore, Barnard College 1. Countermovements Table Presider: Jack M. Bloom, Indiana University, Northwest Preparing for Counterrevolution: Solidarity vs. the Communist Party in Poland. Jack M. Bloom, Indiana University, Northwest Defending a "One Hundred Percent American President": The Ku Klux Klan and the President's Politics in Indiana, 1924. Rory McVeigh, Skidmore College 2. The Development and Use of Movement Tactics Table Presider: Marci Eads, University of Colorado, Boulder Analyzing Video Records of Collective Action. Clark McPhail, University of Reading and University of Illinois, Champaign-Urbana; David Schweingruber, Iowa State University; Alin Ceobanu, University of Illinois, Champaign-Urbana; and P.A.J. Waddington, University of Reading The Tactics of Contention: Native American Political Activity, 1890-1997. Daniel M. Cress and Marci Eads, University of Colorado, Boulder Breaking Barriers: A Participant-Observer Approach to the Theory and Practice of Consensus-Building. G. E. Mortimore, Green Victoria Challenge Society 3. States and Social Movements Table Presider: Patrice LeClerc, Saint Lawrence University Social Movements and State Reconfiguration. Carol McClurg Mueller, Arizona State University Between Co-optation and Irrelevance: A Comparison of State Linked and Autonomous Women's Movement Organizations. Rita Jalali, Middle East Technical University

168

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

Session 472, continued Challenging and Changing: Canadian Women's Movements, the State, and the Law. Patrice LeClerc, Saint Lawrence University 4. Conceptualizations and Determinants of Movement Success Table Presider: Afroza Anwary, Concordia College Making of the Combination of an Alternative Politics and Popular Culture: Success of the National Language Movement of East Bengal. Afroza Anwary, Concordia College Consequences and Evaluations: Activists' Perceived Efficacy and the Meaning of Social Movement Success. Rachel Einwohner, Purdue University Emergence of Multiculturalism: The Case of Black Studies. Fabio Rojas, National Opinion Research Center 5. Gender and Political Mobilization Table Presider: Eric Magnuson, Pomona College Mobilizing the Montreal Women's Movement Community. Suzanne Staggenborg and Josee Lecompte, McGill University The Cultural Construction of Political Discourse in Social Movement Communities: The Case of Liberational Masculinity. Eric Magnuson, Pomona College Subversive Femininity: Women and the Cuban Revolution: 1952-1959. Julia Denise Shayne, University of California, Santa Barbara 6. The Role of Organizations in Social Movements Table Presider: Pauline Cullen, State University of New York, Stony Brook Negotiating Donor Relations: Accountability and Representativeness among European Union Social NGOs. Pauline Cullen, State University of New York, Stony Brook Philanthropic Activism: The Environmental Justice Movement and Progressive Philanthropy. Deborah McCarthy and Daniel Faber, Northeastern University Social Movement Organizations and Protests: A Reclarification of the Mobilization of Civil Society. Dana Fisher, University of Wisconsin, Madison 7. Ideologies and Beliefs in Political Mobilization Table Presider: Ziad Munson, Harvard University Ideological Production in the Christian Right: The Case of the Christian Coalition. Ziad Munson, Harvard University The Remaking of an Agrarian Capitalist Class in Mexico. Delores Trevizo, Occidental College The UAW and the Question of Race: Interviews with Rank and File. Adriana Leela Bohm, Temple University Demarcating Democracy: Deliberation and Control in Contemporary Social Change Organizations. John D. Krinsky, Columbia University

8. The Media and Social Movements State, Media, and the Construction of Public Opinion during the 1989 Beijing Student Movement. Dingxin Zhao, University of Chicago 9. Struggles, Alliances, and Interactions within Movements Discontinuity and Consequences in the History of Social Movements. Chris Rhomberg, Yale University Addressing Temporality in a Social Movement: The Case of Harm Reduction. Neil Wieloch, State University of New York, Buffalo Transnational Social Movements: Moving Beyond the McAdam and Rucht Model. Sean Chabot and Jan Willem Duyvendak, Verwey-Jonker Institute, The Netherlands 10. Emotional and Social Psychological Aspects of Social Movements Table Presider: Chad Alan Goldberg, New School for Social Research Political Repression as a Substitute for Political Mobilization: The Case of the Puerto Rican Nationalists. Gilda Zwerman, State University of New York, Old Westbury Rethinking the Emotional and Social Psychological Context of Collective Action. Mustafa Emirbayer, University of Wisconsin, Madison; and Chad Alan Goldberg, New School for Social Research Emergence in Collective Behavior: A Case Study of Improvisational Theater. R. Keith Sawyer, Washington University, St. Louis 11. Structural Determinants of Movement Emergence Table Presider: Rima Wilkes, University of Toronto The Re-Emergence of Social Movements in the Transition to Democracy in El Salvador. Adam Flint, State University of New York, Binghamton Collective Action by Native Bands in Canada, 1981-1998. Rima Wilkes, University of Toronto Political Protest, Rationality and Lifestyles: An Empirical Test of Alternative Propositions. Karl-Dieter Opp, University of Leipzig Community Structure and Rape Crisis Center Mobilization Against a Pro-Rape Climate. Patricia Yancey Martin and Robert Gately, Florida State University; Tracy Burkett, College of Charleston 12. Strategic Framing in Social Movements Table Presider: Anne F. Eisenberg, State University of New York, Geneseo Mom, Apple Pie, and Chevrolet: How the "Parents" in PFLAG Mainstreamed Fringe Issues into a Social Movement. Anne F. Eisenberg, State University of New York, Geneseo Packaging a Social Movement. Mary J. Fischer, University of Pennsylvania

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

473. Section on Race, Gender, and Class. Teaching Race, Gender, and Class in Undergraduate and Graduate Programs Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia B Organizers: Mary Romero, Arizona State University; and Theresa Martinez, University of Utah Presider: Theresa Martinez, University of Utah Teaching Anti-Racist Research from the Academy. Tania Das Gupta, Atkinson College Subverting the Syllabus: Radical Pedagogy and the New Politics of Race-Gender-Class Equality. Walda Katz Fishman, Howard University Educating Global Citizens: Critical Thinking and Faculty Partnerships in Teaching Race, Gender, and Class. Deborah M. LaFond and Marica Hernandez, State University of New York, Albany Discussion: Theresa Martinez, University of Utah

3:30 p.m.

Meetings

Section on Sociology of Mental Health Business Meeting (to 4:10 p.m.)—Hilton Washington, International East

4:30 p.m.

Meetings

Student Forum Officers—Hilton Washington, C326 Section on Medical Sociology Business Meeting—Hilton Washington, International West

4:30 p.m.

Sessions

474. Thematic Session. Microfoundations of Domination Hilton Washington, Jefferson East Organizer and Presider: Judith A. Howard, University of Washington Panel: Judith A. Howard, University of Washington Cecilia L. Ridgeway, Stanford University David A. Snow, University of Arizona Kum-Kum Bhavnani, University of California, Santa Barbara 475. Special Session. Nuclear Power and Anti-Nuclear Struggles Hilton Washington, Jefferson West Organizer: Lester R. Kurtz, University of Texas, Austin The Future of Anti-Nuclear Movements. William A. Gamson, Boston College

169

Nukes as a Way of Life?: Contextualizing the Nuclear Madness in South Asia. S.P. Udayakumar, University of Minnesota NO NUKES: Global Strategies, Setbacks, and Successes. Barbara Wien, U.S. Institute of Peace 476. Special Session. Southeastern Europe at the Dawn of the 21st Century Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland A Organizer: Victor Roudometof, University of Pittsburgh Presider: Mike-Frank Epitropoulos, University of Pittsburgh The Dwindling of Balkan Jewry at the Turn of the Millenium. Yitzchak Kerem, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem Civil Society in Southeastern Europe. Tina MavrikosAdamou, American College of Thessaloniki, Greece "We belong to the West"?: Representations of Eastern and Western Europe in the Greek Press and the Positioning of the "We." Anna Triandafyllidou, Euopean University Institute, Italy Economic Realignments in Southeastern Europe. Robert Donnorummo, University of Pittsburgh Discussion: Victor Roudometof, University of Pittsburgh 477. Special Session. Queer Politics for a New Millennium: Culture, Policy, and Mobilization (cosponsored by the ASA Committee on the Status of Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and Trangendered Persons in Sociology) Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland C Organizers and Presiders: Nancy Whittier, Smith College; and Stephen Valocchi, Trinity College Panel: Barry Adam, University of Windsor Jason Heffner, Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation Verta Taylor, Ohio State University Suzanna Walters, Georgetown University 478. Special Session. Race, Law, and Civil Liberties: U.S. Government Treatment of the Japanese in the U.S. during World War II Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland B Organizer and Presider: Akihiro Yamakura, Tenri University The U.S. Government's Internment of Japanese Peruvians during World War II: A Legal Analysis. Natsu Taylor Saito, Georgia State University Loss of Nationality: Expatriation of U.S. Citizens of Japanese Descent. Yoko Murakawa, Chiba Keiai University Two Wartime Japanese Policies: Government Treatments of the Japanese Population on the Mainland and in Hawaii. Akihiro Yamakura, Tenri University Discussion: Tetsuden Kashima, University of Washington

170

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

479. Special Session. Humanist Sociology for a New Day (co-sponsored by the Association for Humanist Sociology) Hilton Washington, Monroe West Organizer and Presider: Chet Ballard, Valdosta State University Advocating for Humane Urban Transit Systems in a Democratic Mileau. Brian Sherman, Albany State University Humanizing Housing: The Cohousing Movement, Community-Building, and Political Activism. Heather Sullivan-Catlin, State University of New York, Potsdam Social Activism and the Vocation of Sociology: Compatible Relevance Structures? Monte Bute, Metropolitan State University Humanizing our Schools. Christopher Dale, New England College 480. Professional Workshop. Writing for the Trade Press and Using Agents and Publicists Hilton Washington, Map Organizer and Presider: Pepper J. Schwartz, University of Washington Panel: Virginia E. Rutter, University of Washington Barry Glassner, University of Southern California Marcia Millman, University of California, Santa Cruz Lisa Jasie, SIEBUS The workshop panel is composed of people who have either worked as professionals promoting other people's books, or sociologists who have entered trade publishing and learned to utilize agents, editors and public relations people. Each panelist will speak for a short time, tell about their own experience, and give practical advice about navigating the tradebook world. We will reserve significant time for discussion.

481. Academic Workplace Workshop. Making Community Service More Sociological Marriott Wardman Park, Balcony A Leaders: John W. Eby, Messiah College Rachel Parker-Gwin, Virgina Polytechnic Institute and State University This workshop will explore ways to design community service activities to help students connect sociological knowledge with societal issues and with approaches to service and social change. It will draw on the participants' experience and expertise to explore issues such as facilitating reflection, using service-learning to help students understand sociological concepts, creating productive connections with community partners, and integrating sociological understanding with volunteer service.

482. Teaching Workshop. Teaching Sociology of Education Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware A Organizer and Presider: Jeanne Ballantine, Wright State University

Panel: Jeanne Ballantine, Wright State University Floyd Hammack, New York University Caroline Hodges Persell, New York University 483. Teaching Workshop. Teaching Social Policy Courses Hilton Washington, Military Leaders: Janet Zollinger Giele, Brandeis University Joya Misra, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Catherine Mobley, Clemson University The goal of this workshop is twofold: first, to provide a forum for instructors who already teach policy courses in such fields as family, gender, health, or criminal justice to share their knowledge and experience; and second to help instructors who are contemplating such courses to design their own. The workshop leaders will provide examples of course outlines, syllabi, and assignments at both the graduate and the undergraduate level.

484. Open Refereed Roundtables. Marriage, Family, Work, Gender, and Feminism Hilton Washington, International East Organizer: Che-Fu Lee, The Catholic University of America 1. Intimate Relations Table Presider: Jennifer Gossett, University of Cincinnati Love and the "Lecherous Professors": Consensual Relationships between Professors and Students. Marcia L. Bellas and Jennifer Gossett, University of Cincinnati Spatial Determinants of Black Outmarriage. Jennifer Bratter, University of Pennsylvania Social Selection and Social Causation: Dual Prosses in Relationships between Marriage and Body Weight. Jeffery Sobal, Barbara S. Rauschenbach, and Edward A. Frongillo, Jr, Cornell University Changes in Quality of Marital Sex: Theory and Evidence. Chien Liu, Wagner College University of Kansas 2. Family, Work, and Social Supports Table Presider: Lauren Rauscher, Emory University Social Networks, Social Support, and Employment among Low-Income Black and White Female Heads of Households. Lauren Rauscher, Emory University Neighborhood Inequalities and Children's Well-Being: Seeking the Linkages. Jason D. Joyner, North Carolina State University Grandmothers, Mothers, Granddaughters: Generations and Labor Life. Marta Caballero, El Colegio Mexico Major Family and Employment Trends among American Women at the End of the 20th Century. Mary Jo Huth, University of Dayton 3. Family Values, Divorce, and Impacts Table Presider: Carolyn A. Kapinus, Ball State University The Intergenerational Transmission of Attitudes Toward Divorce: The Influence of Gender and Parental Divorce. Carolyn A. Kapinus, Ball State University

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

4. Fertility, Women’s Employment, and Child Health Table Presider: Ashraf R. El-Ghannam, United Arab Emirates University An Examination of Factors Affecting Fertility Rate Differentials as Compared among Women in Less and More Development Countries. Ashraf R. ElGhannam, United Arab Emirates University 5. Topics and Issues in Gender and Parenting Table Presider: James Gramlich, University of Illinois, Chicago MYTH-ter Mom: Some Polemical Observations on Contemporary American Fatherhood. James Gramlich, University of Illinois, Chicago The Military as “Other Mother”: An Exploratory Analysis of Black British G.I. Wives' Experiences with Mothering in the U.S. Rhonda E. Dugan, University of Illinois, Chicago Child-Rearing Patterns and Gender Differences in Personality. Mary Jean Cravens, University of Illinois, Chicago (School) Work and Family: The Conflicting Demands of Marriage, Parenthood, and Law School. Jennifer Tello Buntin, University of Chicago 6. Gender Roles Table Presider: Nancy Theberge, University of Waterloo "No Fear Comes": Adolescent Girls, Ice Hockey, and the Embodiment of Gender. Nancy Theberge, University of Waterloo The Impact of Woman-Centered University Courses on Student Attitudes about Gender. Terri LeMoyne and Leila J. Pratt, University of Tennessee, Chattanooga Media, Women, and Sports: A Cultural Theory Approach to Explaining Women's Fight Against Hegemony. Tania H. Cantrell, Brigham Young University 7. Sexual Orientation and Social Structure Table Presider: Adam Isaiah Green, New York University Sexual Orientation and Social Structure: A Comparative Study of the Sexual Careers of Heterosexual and Homosexual Men. Adam Isaiah Green, New York University Fashioned Beauty: The Creation of a Hegemonic Ideal Male Beauty through Gay Sensibilities. Daniel K.H. Cortese, University of Texas 8. Sexuality Table Presider: James M. Noon, University of Arizona Gay White Male, Healthy, in Search of Same: Presentation of Health Status in the Personals by Gay Men in the Age of AIDS. James M. Noon, University of Arizona Embracing the "Monstrous": The Performance of Liberatory Gender. Jennifer K. Wesely, Arizona State University Reverse Objectification?: Watching Men Strip. Beth Montemurro, University of Georgia

171

9. Feminists and Feminism Table Presider: Suzanna Crage, Brigham Young University Agenda-setting and Framing: A Theoretical Approach to the Gap between Acceptance of Feminist Ideals and Identification with Feminism. Suzanna Crage, Brigham Young University Toward Developing a Relevant Discussion of Chinese Women, Socialism, and Economic Globalization: A Consideration of Discourse from a Western Feminist Woman of Color. Pok H. Binh, Cornell University 485. Regular Session. Children and Youth: Children, Parents, and Peers Hilton Washington, Thoroughbred Organizer: Roberta Goldberg, Trinity College Presider: Paul Perl, University of Notre Dame Precocity as Pathology: 19th Century Constructions of Early Intellectual Development in Children. Roblyn Rawlins, State University of New York, Stony Brook Psychological Aggression by American Parents: National Data on Prevalence, Chronicity, and Severity in Relation to Child and Family Characteristics. Murray A. Straus and Carolyn Field, University of New Hampshire Maternal Work and the Behavior of School Age Children: Married versus Single Mother Families. Jessica Ziembroski, University of Notre Dame "You Want to Be a Girl and Not My Friend": AfricanAmerican/Black Girls' Play Activities with and without Boys. Kimberly A. Scott, Hofstra University Discussion: Roxana Moayedi, Trinity College 486. Regular Session. Cross-Cultural Comparative Sociology Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8206 Organizer: Jose Itzigsohn, Brown University Presider: Mahua Sarkar, State University of New York, Binghamton Changing the Worldviews of Islamic Publics: Findings of Pilot Surveys in Egypt, Iran, and Jordan. Mansoor Moaddel, Eastern Michigan University; Ronald Inglehart, University of Michigan; Saad ed- Din Ibrahim, Ibn Khaldun Center for Development Study; Abdul Hamid Safwat, Suez Canal University; Taghi Azadarmaki and Hamid Abdollahyan, University of Tehran; Mustafa Hamarneh and Tony Sabbagh, University of Jordan Sexuality and Modernity: Towards a Comparative Sexual Ethics. Amy Schalet, University of California, Berkeley Twentieth Century Trends in Inequality: Towards a WorldSystem Analysis. Roberto Patricio Korzeniewicz and David Consiglio, University of Maryland, College Park; Timothy Moran, State University of New York, Stony Brook; and Angela Stach, University of Maryland, College Park

172

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

Session 486, continued Gender and the Political Economy of Poverty in Central America. Richard Tardanico, Florida International University Discussion: James Mahoney, Brown University 487. Regular Session. Global Production Networks in the World Economy Marriott Wardman Park, Balcony B Organizer and Presider: Susan Tiano, University of New Mexico Generative Sectors and the New Historical Materialism: Development and Underdevelopment in the World and National Economies. Stephen C. Bunker, University of Wisconsin, Madison; and Paul S. Ciccantell, Kansas State University Trading Places: Social Networks and Regional Development in the Dominican Republic. Andrew Schrank, University of Wisconsin, Madison Torreon: The New Blue Jeans Capital of the World. Gary Gereffi, Martha Martinez, and Jennifer Bair, Duke University NAFTA, Economic Development, and Regional Reconfiguration: The Southern California-Mexico Apparel Commodity Chain. Judi Kessler, University of California, San Diego Moving Up the Timber Commodity Chain: The Politics of Indonesian Producers and Japanese Plywood Markets. Paul Gellert, Cornell University 488. Regular Session. Ethnomethodology and Conversation Analysis: Misunderstanding in Social Interaction Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia A Organizer and Presider: Virginia Teas Gill, Illinois State University Greeting Preferences: Interaction Orders of Race. Anne Warfield Rawls and Waverly Duck, Wayne State University Some Limitations of Standardized Interviewing as a Form of Talk. Robert Moore, Xerox Corporation, Palo Alto Research Center Disputing Neutrality: When Routine Mediation Practice Is Perceived as Bias. Angela Garcia, Kristina Vise, and Stephen Whitaker, University of Cincinnati The Consequences of Methodological Choices in Studying Misunderstandings. Anita Pomerantz, State University of New York, Albany 489. Regular Session. Feminist Theory Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia C Organizer and Presider: Denise A. Segura, University of California, Santa Barbara

Feminism, Black Feminist Thought, and Resistance. Maria Teresa Baquero, University of Florida Are Court Determinants of Legal Parental Status Affected by Race and Gender?: An Application of West and Fenstermaker'sTheory "Doing Difference". Susan Dalton, California State University, Chico, and University of California, Santa Barbara Performance and Accomplishment: Reconciling Feminist Conceptions of Gender. Molly Moloney and Sarah Fenstermaker, University of California, Santa Barbara What Do the Most Liberated Women Have in Common?: Cases from Ecuador, Thailand, Guinea-Bissau, and China, and Links to a General Theory of Gender Stratification. Rae Lesser Blumberg, University of Virginia and University of California, Santa Barbara Discussion: Elisa Facio, University of Colorado, Boulder 490. Regular Session. Gay and Lesbian Studies: Normative Discourses of Sexuality and the Politics of HIV/AIDS Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware B Organizer: Lionel Cantu, University of California, Santa Cruz HIV/AIDS and Migrant Sexualities in Southeast Asia: Governments Quest for Control and Increase Condom Use. Peter Chua, University of California, Santa Barbara Soul Warfare and the Politics of Sexuality: The Religious Right, the Secular Left, and Socio-political Claimsmaking in the 1992 National Republican Convention. Thomas Michael Conroy, Saint Peter's College Gendered Sexuality in the Age of AIDS. Peter M. Hennen, University of Minnesota Integrating Theories of Collective Action: Lesbian HIV Risks and the "Sex Wars" in the Alternative Press. Sarah Wilcox, University of Pennsylvania Intergenerational Exorcisms: White and Latino Gay Youth's Parental Stories. Matt G. Mutchler, University of California, Santa Barbara 491. Regular Session. Gender and Responses to Inequality Marriott Wardman Park, Coolidge Organizer: Joey Sprague, University of Kansas Presider: Barbara Risman, North Carolina State University Masculinity and Femininity in Contemporary American Society: A Reevaluation Using the Bem Sex Role Inventory. Carol J. Auster and Susan C. Ohm, Franklin and Marshall College The Stigman of Charity. Alice Fothergill, University of Colorado Gender Consciousness and Welfare Attitudes: Paradoxes in Public Opinion. Cynthia Deitch, George Washington University

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

Feminist Generations?: The Long-Term Impact of Social Movement Involvement on Working-Class Palestinian Women's Lives. Frances Hasso, Oberlin College Discussion: Barbara Risman, North Carolina State University 492. Section on Medical Sociology. Award Ceremony and Business Meeting Hilton Washington, International West Organizer: Mary L. Fennell, Brown University 493. Section on Crime, Law, and Deviance. Refereed Roundtables on Crime, Law, and Deviance Hilton Washington, State Organizer: Rodney L. Engen, North Carolina State University 1. Explaining Crime and Deviance: Advances in Social Process Theories Table Presider: Stacy DeCoster, North Carolina State University Common Antecedents and Mutual Influences of Law Violation and Depression: Extending Differential Social Control Theory. Stacy DeCoster, North Carolina State University; and Karen Heimer, University of Iowa "What's Love Got to Do with It?": Stress, Strain and Social Support in Gendered Models of Juvenile Delinquency. Monica L. P. Robbers, Marymount University Peer Pressure, Sibling Influence, and Parental Control: The Effects of Close Social Relations on Adolescents' Deviant Attitudes and Behavior. Monika Ardelt and Laurie Day, University of Florida Social Network Ties and the Structure of Illegitimate Opportunities: Integrating Differential Opportunity and Social Embeddedness Theories. C. Wesley Younts, University of Iowa 2. Explaining Crime and Deviance: The Importance of Social Structure and Context Table Presider: Rodney L. Engen, North Carolina State University The Effects of Structural and Lifestyle Factors on Urban Homicide: An Examination of Race and Gender Specific Homicide. Mari De Wees and Karen F. Parker, University of Florida City Kids and Country Cousins: Communities, Deviance and Social Control. L. Susan Williams, Kansas State University Community Involvement and Adolescent Resilience in Disadvantaged Neighborhoods. Raymond R. Swisher, University of Montreal Race, Neighborhood Context, and Criminal Severity among Male Juvenile Offenders. Jeb A. Booth, Northeastern University 3. Reactions to Crime and Deviance: Formal Social Control Table Presider: Lloyd Klein, University of Tennessee

173

Where Have All the Children Gone?: Habitual Sexual Offenders and the Legacy of Megan's Law. Lloyd Klein, University of Tennessee Community Policing and the Mentally Disordered: Theoretical Implications of the New Policing on an Old Problem. Robert A. Brooks, American University Predictors of Support by Whites for Greater Spending on Law Enforcement. Steven E. Barkan and Steven F. Cohn, University of Maine 4. Reactions to Crime and Deviance: Informal Social Control Table Presider: Edem F. Avakame, Temple University Under Siege: Fear, Experience, Viability and GunOwnership. Sarah Butler, Temple University Gun Ownership and Attitudes toward Gun Control in the U.S. Katarzyna Celinska, University of Utah The Rugged Individual: Honor and Youth Violence in the U.S. Gail P. Myers, Ohio State University The Social Structure of Right and Wrong: An Empirical Assessment of Black's Theory on the Determinants of Violent Self-Help as an Instrument of NonGovernmental Social Control. Edem F. Avakame, Temple University 5. Evidence on the Nature of Deviance Table Presider: David J. Hartmann, Western Michigan University The Prevalence of Pathological Gambling and Its Variation by Key Demographic Characteristics in Michigan. David J. Hartmann, Western Michigan University Becoming a Body Deviant: The Process of Collecting Tattoos. Katherine Irwin, University of Colorado, Boulder When Religion Becomes Deviance: Introducing Religion in Deviance and Social Problem Courses. Robin D. Perrin, Pepperdine University 494. Section on Sociology of the Family. Families and Work Hilton Washington, Lincoln East Organizer and Presider: Marin E. Clarkberg, Cornell University Family Conflict in the Context of Rising Inequality. Elizabeth Rudd, University of Michigan Transitions of Women in the Period Surrounding a First Birth. Jiyeun Chang and Lawrence Wu, University of Wisconsin, Madison Paradox of the Family Friendly Workplace: Employee's Use of Family Responsive Policies and the Workplace Social Context. Mary Blair-Loy and Amy Wharton, Washington State University Segregation and Gender Differences in Work-Family Conflict. David Maume, Jr., and Paula Houston, University of Cincinnati Discussion: Linda J. Waite, University of Chicago

174

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

495. Section on Organizations, Occupations, and Work. Authors Meet Critics: The Changing Nature of Work: Implications for Occupational Analysis (National Academic Press, 1999) by the NRC Committee on Techniques for the Enhancement of Human Performance: Occupational Analysis Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom Salon 2 Organizers: Nicole W. Biggart, University of California, Davis; and Ken Spenner, Duke University Members of the NRC Committee on Techniques for the Enhancement of Human Performance: Occupational Analysis: Thomas A. Kochan, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Nicole W. Biggart, University of California, Davis Arne L. Kalleberg, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Ken Spenner, Duke University Robert J. Vance, Pennsylvania State University Critics: Donna Dye, U.S. Department of Labor Paula England, University of Pennsylvania Richard Klimoski, George Mason University Barbara F. Reskin, Harvard University 496. Section on Community and Urban Sociology. Refereed Roundtables on Community and Urban Sociology Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom Salon 1 Organizer: John C. Kilburn, Jr., Eastern Connecticut State University 1. Cities in Poor Countries Table Presider: Josef Gugler, University of Connecticut World Cities in Poor Countries. Josef Gugler, University of Connecticut Joining the Competition for World City Status: Shanghai. Weiping Wu, Virginia Commonwealth University; and Shahid Yusuf, World Bank 2. Urban Culture Table Presider: Margarethe Kusenbach, University of California, Los Angeles From Places to Practical Maps: Contextualizing Everyday Practices in the Urban Environment. Margarethe Kusenbach, University of California, Los Angeles City People, County Fairs: Adaptive and Transformative Uses of Cultural Institution. Krista E. Paulsen, University of California, Santa Barbara Irrational Belief Systems of the Drug Addicted Community of Northeastern Connecticut. Michael Cancellaro, Eastern Connecticut State University A Religious Community in a Secular Metropolis. Yona Ginsberg, Bar-Ilan University 3. Ethnic Communities Table Presider: Robert Adelman, State University of New York, Albany

Ethnicity, Niches, and Retail Enterprise in Northern Cities, 1900. Robert L. Boyd, Mississippi State University The American Dream: Household Structure, and Income Pooling among Asian Immigrant Groups. QuynhGiang Tran, Pennsylvania State University A Multivariate Analysis of Teenage Pregnancy among African American Women in the Kansas City, Missouri, School District. Jessica Dumas, University of Missouri, Kansas City 4. Visual Sociology I Table Presider: Judith Friedman, Rutgers University A Web-based Visual Exploration of Changing New York City, 1910-2000. Susan Weber and Ahmed Lacevic, Queens College, City University of New York; Kenneth Trippel, Aperture Foundation; Michiyo Yamashiki, Handa Hizmetli, and Iris Schweitzer, Queens College, City University of New York BrooklynSoc.Org: A Multimedia Site for Teaching and Research. Mary Howard and Timothy Shortell, Brooklyn College, City University of New York Virtual Communities: An Exploratory Study of Feminists in Cyberspace. Tracy L.M. Kennedy, Brock University 5. Visual Sociology II Table Presider: Diana Papademas, State University of New York, Old Westbury Perceptions of Neighborhoods and Computer Mapping Techniques. Emily Talen, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Teaching City Profiles: Using the Web to Explore Cities in Urban Sociology Courses. Chris Toulouse, Hofstra University A Day in the Life of Novosibirsk. Sarah Busse, University of Chicago; and Aron Spencer, University of California, Irvine 6. Visual Sociology III Table Presider: Jerome Krase, Brooklyn College, City University of New York Navigating Ethnic Vernacular Landscapes. Jerome Krase, Brooklyn College, City University of New York Privatizing Public Space: A Phenomenological Approach to the Study of New York City's Cellar Doors. Ariadna Rodenstein, Brooklyn College, City University of New York In Search of Latino Religiosity. Teresa Vazquez and Esther Polanco, Brooklyn College, City University of New York 7. Neighborhoods Table Presider: Richard Adams, Mount Sinai School of Medicine Gender, Neighborhood Disorder and Well-being. Townsand Price-Spratlen, Ohio State University Inter-household Exchange and Social Engagement in Rural Hungary. David L. Brown, Cornell University; and Laszlo Kulcsar, Saint Stephens University, Hungary

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

Ethnic Assimilation in the Suburbs... and Other Myths of Human Ecology. Ray Hutchison, University of Wisconsin, Green Bay The Mediation of Neighborhood Effects on Educational Acheivement. James Ainsworth-Darnell, Georgia State University 8. Municipal Investments Public Housing and Paid Work: Help of Hindrance? Jennifer A. Stoloff, U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development Labor Market Dynamics in a Postindustrial City: A Spatial and Sectoral Analysis of Employment Changes in the Phoenix MSA. Amy L. Nelson and Sharon L. Harlan, Arizona State University 9. Trans-regional Community Table Presider: James Elliott, Tulane University The Global Chronopolis in the Global City. Michel S. Laguerre, University of California, Berkeley Rural-Urban Migration and Urbanization in Pakistan and Peru. Luis A. Posas, Minnesota State University, Mankato Northeast Asian Cities in Transborder Regional Spaces. Xiangming Chen, University of Illinois, Chicago 10. Methods Table Presider: Kimberly B. Dugan, Eastern Connecticut State University Researcher/Community-Based Organization Relations Guidelines for Researchers. Louise Cainkar, University of Illinois, Chicago; and Ada Skyles, University of Chicago An Analysis of Changes to the Segregation Scores over Time in the U.S. Metropolitan Areas. Wenquan Zhang, State University of New York, Albany 11. Civic Involvement Table Presider: Rob Kleidman, Cleveland State University Challenging Racism: Faith Based Community Activism in the Inner City. Mark Warren, Fordham University Beyond Populism? Multiculturalism, Regionalism, and Religious Values in Faith-Based Community Organizing. Rob Kleidman, Cleveland State University The Influences of Social Capital and Human Capital on Civic Involvement in an Urban Context. Douglas B. Currivan and Amy Nyman, University of Massachusetts, Boston 12. Urban Politics Table Presider: Jack Kinton, Northern Illinois University and SSSR Before the Growth Machine and the City on the Edge: The Social Foundations of Uneven U.S. Urban Political Development. Perry Chang, New School for Social Research Residential Segregation and the Rise of African-American Female-Headed Households. James Dentice, University of North Texas

175

497. Section on Sociology of Mental Health. Open Topics in Mental Health and Illness Hilton Washington, Georgetown East Organizer and Presider: Pamela Braboy Jackson, Duke University Parent-Child Relationships, Family Structure, and Children's Mental Health. Christina Falci, University of Minnesota Linking Trajectories of Self-Rated Health to Illness, Stress, and Distress in Czech Couples. Frederick O. Lorenz and Joseph Hraba, Iowa State University; Zdenka Pechacova, Czech Agricultural University Expecting Stress: Americans and the "Midlife Crisis." Elaine Wethington, Cornell University To What Degree Does Racial Inequality at Work Explain Black-White Differences in Depression Symptoms? Jeffrey Davis, California State University, Long Beach Discussion: Deborah Carr, University of Michigan 498. Section on Collective Behavior and Social Movements. The Macro-Social Consequences of Social Movements Marriott Wardman Park, Harding Organizer: Edwin Amenta, New York University Presider: Kenneth T. Andrews, Harvard University The Townsend Movement's Image Problem: Understanding the Impact of Social Movements. Edwin Amenta, New York University Historical Institutions, Opposing Movements, and the MacroSocial Impacts of the Anti-Abortion Movement. Drew Halfmann, New York University Victory, and then What?: Outcomes of the Abortion Movements in Sweden and United States, 1962-1983. Annulla Linders, University of Cincinnati How Women Won the Vote in the West: The Political Successes of the State Suffrage Movement, 1866-1919. Holly J. McCammon and Karen E. Campbell, Vanderbilt University The Symbolic Influence of Protest: Black Protest and the Civil Rights Decisions of the Supreme Court. Wayne Santoro, Vanderbilt University 499. Section on Racial and Ethnic Minorities. Race and Racism in the 21st Century Hilton Washington, Lincoln West Organizer: Eduardo Bonilla-Silva, Texas A&M University Reading, Writing, Arithmetic, and...Racial Formation: The Reproduction of Racial Boundaries in Three Schools. Amanda E. Lewis and Tyrone Forman, University of Michigan Hyper-Isolation and Discourses on Race: What Poor Black Men May Think and Say in the Next Century. Alford Young, Jr., University of Michigan Legacies of the Three-Fifths Compromise: Race, Citizenship, and Criminal Justice in the Twentieth Century. Geoffrey Ward, University of Michigan

176

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

500. Section on Science, Knowledge, and Technology. Information and Media Technologies and Society Hilton Washington, Caucus Organizer and Presider: Joan H. Fujimura, Institute of Advanced Study The Informatics of Social Dis-ease: Cybernetics and Psychiatry. Jackie Orr, Syracuse University Programs, Promises, and the Genomics Futures Market: How Tomorrow Gets Spliced Into the Bio-informatic Systems of Today. Michael Fortun, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Assessing Collective Action in Social Cyberspaces: Cooperation and Conflict in Usenet Newsgroups. Marc A. Smith, Microsoft Research Only Connect: The Cultural Context of Generating an Information City. Sarah Green and Penny Harvey, Manchester University Global Labor: Indian Programmers in American Corporations. A. Aneesh, Rutgers University Discussion: Mike Lynch, Cornell University

6:30 p.m.

501. Section on Race, Gender, and Class. Interdisciplinary and Global Perspectives in Race, Gender, and Class Scholarship Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia B Organizers: Christina F. Brinkley and Jyoti Puri, Simmons College Presider: Christina F. Brinkley, Simmons College Agents of Knowledge and Action: Selected Africana Scholars and Their Contributions to the Understanding of Race, Class, and Gender Intersectionality. Assata Zerai, Syracuse University Constructing Class and Race Globally and Locally: Filipina Migrant Domestic Workers and Taiwanese Employers. Pei-Chia Lan, Northwestern University The Significance of Group Structure in Building Capabilities for "Social" Empowerment: The Case of MSK (India). Mangala Subramaniam, University of Connecticut Mullahs, Martyrs, and "Men": Conceptualizing Masculinity in the Islamic Republic of Iran. Shahin Gerami, Southwest Missouri State University Discussion: Jyoti Puri, Simmons College

6:30 p.m.

Receptions

2000 Program Committee—Hilton Washington, Parlor 8101 Joint Section Reception (Comparative Historical Sociology; Crime, Law, and Deviance; Sociology of Law; and Sociology of Sexualities)—Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom Salon 3 Section on Community and Urban Sociology Reception— Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom Salon 1 Section on Medical Sociology and Section on Sociology of Mental Health Reception—Hilton Washington, International Terrace Section on Organizations, Occupations, and Work Reception—Marriott Wardman Park, Marriott Ballroom Salon 2 Section on Sociology of Children Reception—Hilton Washington, Parlor 2101 Section on Sociology of the Family Reception—Hilton Washington, Lincoln East

Other Groups

"Ethnomethodology and Conversation Analysis" Social Gathering (Virginia Teas Gill)—Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia A Japan Sociologists Network (Patricia G. Steinhoff)—Hilton Washington, Edison National Council of State Sociological Associations—Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8209 Sociological Imagination Group: Open Research Conference on Bridging Specialized Fields IV (to 10:30 p.m.)— Hilton Washington, Georgetown West

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

8:30 a.m.

Wednesday, August 16 The length of each session/meeting activities is one hour and forty minutes, unless noted otherwise. Session presiders and committee chairs are requested to see that sessions and meetings end on time to avoid conflicts with subsequent activities scheduled into the same room and to allow participants time to transit between hotels.

7:00 a.m.

Meetings

Section on Sociology of Children Council Meeting (to 8:15 a.m.)—Hilton Washington, Grant

7:30 a.m.

Meetings

Section on Comparative and Historical Sociology Council Meeting (to 8:15 a.m.)—Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8218

8:30 a.m.

Meetings

Honors Program Advisory Board—Hilton Washington, Farragut Orientation for New 2000-01 ASA Council Members—Hilton Washington, Edison Section on Methodology Council Meeting (to 9:30 a.m.)— Marriott Wardman Park, Harding

8:30 a.m.

Other Groups

New Frontiers in Rational Choice Theory Miniconference (cosponsored by ISA Research Committee #45 on Rational Choice and the ASA Section on Rational Choice)— Hilton Washington, Thoroughbred

177

Sessions

502. Thematic Session. Grassroots Movements to End Racism in the 21st Century: The Struggle Continues Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland A Organizers: Walda Katz-Fishman, Howard University; and Jerome Scott, Project South Presider: Walda Katz-Fishman, Howard University Ending Racial Icons: American Indian Movement Coalitions. James V. Fenelon, California State University, San Bernardino Radical Legacies: Sociology for Whom in the Struggle for Racial Transformation. Rose Brewer, University of Minnesota Struggles from the Grassroots: Linking the U.S. South and the Global South. Jerome Scott, Project South Discussion: Hernan Vera, University of Florida 503. Special Session. Criminalization and Disenfranchisement: The Unintended Consequences of Incarceration Hilton Washington, Monroe West Organizer: Dina R. Rose, John Jay College of Criminal Justice Presider: Tracey Meares, University of Chicago, Law School The Unintended Impacts of Sentencing Guidelines on Family Structure. Samuel L. Myers, University of Minnesota Crime, Coercion and Community: The Effects of Incarceration and Arrest Policies on Informal Social Control in Neighborhoods. William J. Sabol, The Urban Institute; and James P. Lynch, American University Coercive Mobility and Crime: The Impact of Removing and Returning Offenders on the Community. Dina R. Rose, Todd R. Clear, and Judith Ryder, John Jay College of Criminal Justice Discussion: Robert J. Bursik, Sr., University of Missouri, St. Louis 504. Special Session. Inequality in Urban America Marriott Wardman Park, Coolidge Organizer: Anthony J. LaGreca, University of Florida Presider: Kent P. Schwirian, Ohio State University Panel: Elijah Anderson, University of Pennsylvania Nancy Denton, State University of New York, Albany Mark LaGory, University of Alabama, Birmingham Kent P. Schwirian, Ohio State University The world political economy will have an ever increasing impact on the structure and quality of life of people in cities throughout the world. Our cities will encapsulate the effects of the major, forceful issues that will change our society: economic re-structuring, racial/ethnic relations, class marginality, and power solidification. These issues of inequality are reaching a critical mass in our dominant settlements of urban America. This panel discusses these issues and their impact in this new century.

178

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

505. Special Session. Institutional Ethnography and the Study of Ruling Relations Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8216 Organizers: Peter R. Grahame, Mount St. Mary's College; and Dorothy E. Smith, University of Toronto Presider: Peter R. Grahame, Mount St. Mary's College Standardized Testing and the Family-School Relation. Alison I. Griffith, York University Mapping the Textual Trails of U.S. Health Insurance: Practicing the Skills of Institutional Ethnography. Timothy Diamond, Western Michigan University The Textual Politics of Land Development: How Texts Shape Residents' Strategies. Susan Turner, Guelph University Another Look at Institutional Ethnography. Dorothy E. Smith, University of Toronto 506. Professional Workshop. Preparing Your File for Promotion and Tenure Hilton Washington, Military Leader: Idee Winfield, College of Charleston The goal of this workshop is to provide participants with information and tools which will help them prepare the tenure and promotion file. We will start with general rules for the road and then break out into smaller groups based on the teaching and research focus of the participants' institutions. We will address learning about your review process, evaluation of scholarship, the teaching portfolio, outside reviewers, student evaluations, and starting the file on the first day of your job.

507. Academic Workplace Workshop. Setting Up an Effective Advising System within the Department Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia B Organizer and Presider: Carol M. Albrecht, Texas A&M University Panel: Carol Ray, San Jose State University Kathy Frank, University of Minnesota James Barrum, Sam Houston State University Ruth Schemmer, Texas A&M University Christina Morales, Texas A&M University Sarah Skinner, Texas A&M University 508. Teaching Workshop. Tested Methods in Teaching Criminology/ Criminal Justice Courses: Activities and Assignments Hilton Washington, Georgetown East Organizer: Kim Davies, Augusta State University Panel: David P. Aday, Jr., College of William and Mary Kim Davies, Augusta State University Kevin Early, Oakland University Elizabeth Mustaine, University of Central Florida The goal of this workshop is to provide participants with examples of assignments and activities that will be of use to those who teach criminology and criminal justice type courses. Panelists who are instructors from a variety of universities, will talk about exercises/ activities/assignments that they have used in the classroom. Some of the teaching topics which will be discussed are environmental design and crime, criminal events, and methods and statistics in criminology. Handouts will be provided, and there will be time for discussion.

509. Regular Session. The Sociology of the Body Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8206 Organizer and Presider: Eleanor M. Miller, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee Women's Hair, Women's Power, and the Nature of Resistance. Rose Weitz, Arizona State University "Holding Back:" Fitness, Bodies, and the New Culture of True Womanhood. Shari L. Dworkin, University of Southern California Theorizing Hair: Articulations among Black Women. Ingrid Banks, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University The Uses of Sleep: Care, Bodies and Meaning. Allison Pugh, University of California, Berkeley Discussion: Carrie Yang Costello, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee 510. Regular Session. Women and Development: Fertility, Reproduction, and Women's Health Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware A Organizer: Amy Kaler, University of Pennsylvania Women's Reproductive Health and Reproductive Rights in Developing Countries: An Empirical Approach. Guangzhen Wang, University of Arkansas, Little Rock; and Vijayan Pillai, University of Texas, Arlington The Politics and Policies of Breastfeeding and Child Health: Implications for Maternal Health in Nepal. Vrushali Patil and Sonalde Desai, University of Maryland, College Park Women's Status, Fertility Decline and Women's Health in Developing Countries: Direct and Indirect Influences of Women's Social Status on Women's Health. K. A. S. Wickrama and Lakhath Peeris, Iowa State University “Rariu” and Luo Women: Deviance and Social Illness in Africa. Nancy Luke and Ina Warriner, University of Pennsylvania 511. Regular Session. Sociology of Knowledge Hilton Washington, Lincoln West Organizer: Larry T. Reynolds, Central Michigan University Presider: J. David Knottnerus, Oklahoma State University Sociology and American Indians: Out of Irrelevance. Brian Alan Baker, Cornell University The New Sociology of Economics. Roger Krohn, McGill University Excavating Masada: The Politics/Archaeology Connection in Work. Nachman Ben-Yehuda, Hebrew University Do Sociologists Fiddle While Rome Burns? James Abbott, Rowan University Discussion: Jay A. Weinstein, Eastern Michigan University

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

512. Regular Session. Political Consciousness and Progressive Change in the 21st Century Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8219 Organizer and Presider: Richard Flacks, University of California, Santa Barbara Passionately Political Parents: Nurturing the World While Politicizing the Family. Marita McComiskey, University of Connecticut Identity Politics and Israeli/Palestinian Peace. Sherry Gorelick, Rutgers University Friendship and Democracy. Francesca Polletta and Miriam Bearse, Columbia University Toward a New Consciousness of Class Consciousness: Reflections on the Study of Middle Class Economic Populist Attitudes in the Contemporary U.S.. Jonathan Martin, Brandeis University Discussion: Gordon Fellman, Brandeis University 513. Regular Session. Technology, Computers, and Society Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia A Organizer: Marc A. Smith, Microsoft Research Netting Scholars: Online and Offline. Emmanuel Koku, Nancy Nazer, and Barry Wellman, University of Toronto Netville to Nations: Social Capital and Internet Use in the Wired Suburb. Keith Hampton, University of Toronto Internet Technology in the Classroom. Mary E. Virnoche and Matt Lessem, University of Colorado, Boulder Public Betrayals and Private Portrayals: Activist Intentions in Tension on the WWW. Lynn Owens and L. Kendall Palmer, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill 514. Section on Medical Sociology. Communities and Organized Delivery Systems: How Does Context Change the Relationship and Outcome? Hilton Washington, Jefferson East Organizer and Presider: Richard B. Warnecke, University of Illinois, Chicago Overview: Context and Mediating Organizations in Strategies for Building Community Empowerment. Richard B. Warnecke, University of Illinois, Chicago The Appalachian Leadership Initiative for Cancer: Rural Partnerships for Community Organizations for Health Promotion. Jennifer Parsons, University of Chicago The Black Leadership Initiative for Cancer: Urban Partnerships for Community Organization for Health Promotion. Rise' Dawn Jones, University of Illinois, Chicago Bureaucratic Partnering: Community Empowerment to Enhance Access to Breast Cancer Screening. Charles LeHew, University of Illinois, Chicago

179

Reconceptualizing Social Movement Outcomes: The Impact of the Complementary and Alternative Medicine Movement. Melinda Goldner, Union College, Schenectady Discussion: Constance Nathanson, Johns Hopkins University 515. Section on Organizations, Occupations, and Work. Technological Innovation, Information, and Organizations Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland B Organizer: Toby Stuart, University of Chicago New Arenas for University Competition: Accumulative Advantage in Academic Patenting. Jason Owen-Smith, University of Arizona Organization Endowments and the Performance of New Ventures. Holly Raider, INSEAD; and Scott Shane, University of Maryland, College Park Entrepreneurship and the Structure of Social Capital: The Effects of Corporate Sponsorship at Founding on Organizational Survival. Patricia H. Thornton, Duke University 516. Section on Environment and Technology. Refereed Roundtables and Business Meeting Hilton Washington, International East Refereed Roundtables (8:30-9:30 a.m.): Organizer: Carole L. Seyfrit, Old Dominion University 1. Environmental Advocacy and Activism Table Presider: Shelly K. Habel, Whitman College The Emancipatory Possibilities of Faith-Based Organizing. Sherrie Steiner-Aeschliman and Ruthann Hionides, Eastern College The Politics of Cycling: Bicycle Advocacy Groups in an Environmental Context. Eric J. Petersen, Northwestern University 2. Environmental Inequality Table Presider: Karen O'Neill, Rutgers University The Migration of Hazardous Industries to the Export Processing Zones of East Asia. R. Scott Frey, Kansas State University Ecological Fallacy or Environmental Fact?: An Investigation of Aggregation Bias in the Study of Environmental Justice. Glynis Daniels, Pennsylvania State University 3. Global Environmentalism and Local Actions Table Presider: Suzanne B. Maurer, Syracuse University Natural Pragmatism and the Grassroots Environmental Movement. Jerry L. Williams, Stephen F. Austin State University The Downside of Global Environmentalism: How Global Actors Stifle Local Solutions to Conflict in the Amazon. Michael J. Reynolds, University of Chicago

180

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

Session 516, continued 4. Environmental Values Table Presider: Riley E. Dunlap, Washington State University Environmental Values: Qualitative Evidence of "Ruralism." Lori M. Hunter, Utah State University Sustainable Development as a Dialogue of Values. Blake D. Ratner, TIGER Research 5. Fisheries Table Presider: Christopher K. Vanderpool, Michigan State University Local Effects of a Large-Scale Change: Newfoundland after the Codfish Collapse. Lawrence C. Hamilton and Cynthia M. Duncan, University of New Hampshire Conflicting Environmental Discourses in the Estuary: Mariculture, Ecotourism, and Nostalgia. Steven Lang, Nassau Community College 6. Toxic Hazards and Sustainable Development Table Presider: Stephen R. Couch, Pennsylvania State University The Hidden Costs of Manufacturing: Economic Change and Environmental Hazards in Vermont. Eric J. Krieg, Buffalo State College The Role of Network Management Coordinative Interstitial Groups toward Sustainable Development. Arthur Oyola-Yemaiel, Florida International University 7. Actions of Nation-States and Environmental Impacts Table Presider: Paul Gellert, Cornell University Toward a Theory of the Environmental State: Directions for Research. Debra J. Davidson, University of Alberta Which Nations Sign Which Environmental Treaties and Why?: Patterns in Ratification and Gaps in Understanding a Decade after Dietz and Kalof. Alexis A. Vasquez and J. Timmons Roberts, Tulane University 8. Environmental Attitudes and Behaviors Table Presider: Annette P. Hanada, George Mason University Household Energy Use and Attitudes toward Energy Conservation: Implications for Voluntary Energy Conservation Programs. Monica J. Nevius, University of Wisconsin, Madison Explaining Curbside Recycling Behavior: The Relative Effects of Cognitive and Affective Components. Trent Wade Moore, Florida State University; and Mary McLaughlin, University of Texas, Arlington 9. Risk, Science, and Modernity Table Presider: Kenneth A. Gould, St. Lawrence University The Paradoxes of Modernity: Scientific Advances, Environmental Problems, and Risks to the Social

Fabric? Margarita Alario, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign; and William R. Freudenburg, University of Wisconsin, Madison Trust, Risk, Contamination, and Recreancy: Community Divisions at DOE's Oak Ridge Site. Tamara L. Mix, University of Tennessee, Knoxville 10. Framing of Environmental Issues and Policies Table Presider: Erin E. Robinson, University at Buffalo Environmental Concern and Environmental Policy in International Comparison. Axel Franzen and Andrea Hungerbuhler, University of Berne, Switzerland The Role of German and U.S. Environmental Organization in Shaping Public Opinion and Public Policy: Members and Fundraising as Constraints. William T. Markham, University of North Carolina, Greensboro 11. Growth, Change, and Environmental Quality Table Presider: J. Stanley Black, Illinois Environmental Protection Agency How Do Environmental Battles Change the Growth Machine?: A Conceptual Discussion and an Application. Melissa M. Toffolon-Weiss, University of Alaska, Anchorage Neighborhood Change and Environmental Quality. Jennifer S. Barber, Ann E. Biddlecom, and William G. Axinn, University of Michigan 12. Other Issues Table Presider: Susan H. Roschke, City of Norwood, Ohio Dam Ecology and Dam Politics: The State of Nature and the Nature of the State in the American West. Kevin Wehr, University of Wisconsin, Madison An Application of the Irrationality of Rationality Thesis: Human-Nonhuman Animal Relations, the MeatEating Ethos, and Environmental Degradation. Lisa Anne Zilney and Sam J. Zahran, University of Tennessee, Knoxville Reduce, Reuse, Recycle--Do They Really Go Together?: Patterns of Environmental Activity. Sabrina Oesterle, University of Minnesota Section on Environment and Technology Business Meeting (9:30-10:10 a.m.) 517. Section on Racial and Ethnic Minorities. Whiteness: Current Research and Activism on Racial Privilege Hilton Washington, Jefferson West Organizers: Melanie Bush, City University of New York; and Rod Bush, St. John's University Presider: Rod Bush, St. John's University Rearticulation versus Abolition: White Identities in the Struggle for Racial Justice. Jennifer Eichstedt, Humboldt State University Rearticulate Rape and Child Abuse, but Do Not Ask Me to Rearticulate Whiteness. Noel Ignatiev, Massachusetts College of Art

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

The Recovery School of Whiteness Studies. Joe I. Kincheloe, Brooklyn College, City University of New York; Belle Zeller, Pennsylvania State University; and Shirley R. Steinberg, Adelphi University Whites Will Be Whites: Interrogating Racial Privilege. John Powell, University of Minnesota Everyday Whiteness: Discourse, Story, and Identity. Karyn McKinney, University of Florida Everyday Understandings: The Role of Race in Public Higher Education. Melanie Bush, City University of New York 518. Section on Comparative and Historical Sociology. The Past in the Present Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia C Organizers: Jeff Goodwin, New York University; and Ewa Morawska, University of Pennsylvania Presider: Steven Pfaff, University of Washington Three Trajectories: The Shaping of National Health Policy in Canada, Australia, and the United States. Pamela Behan, University of Houston-Downtown Rethinking the Origins of Affirmative Action: Race, Institutions, and the Politics of Anti-discrimination Policy in the New Deal Order, 1941-1971. Anthony Chen, University of California, Berkeley From Irish Land Insurgency to Structuring the Irish Republic: The Transformation, Construction, and Endurance of Irish National Narratives. Anne Kane, University of Texas, Austin Power of the Past: Turkish Secularists and Islamists Debate the Lausanne Treaty (1922-23). Fatma Muge Gocek, University of Michigan Discussion: Arthur L Stinchcombe, Northwestern University 519. Section on Sociology of Children. Refereed Roundtables on Children and Business Meeting Hilton Washington, State Refereed Roundtables (8:30-9:30 a.m.): Organizer: Katherine Brown Rosier, Louisiana State University 1. Children's Public/Private Voices Table Presider: Spencer Cahill, University of South Florida Engaging the Voice of Children: An Observational Study of a Mentoring Program in Urban Elementary Schools. Suellen Gawler Butler, West Chester University Pint Sized Participants: Children's Verbal Contributions to Parent Interviews. Ingrid Castro, Northeastern University, Boston International Adoption: Private and Public Contexts. Roberta Goldberg, Trinity College 2. Social Policy and Children's Well-Being Table Presider: Joel Best, University of Delaware

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Preschool Education and Public Policy in the U.S. and Taiwan. Katherine G. Hadley, Indiana University, Bloomington Ambivalent Policy: Children's Rights and Child Adoption. Suzanne Shanahan, Duke University 3. Race/Class/Gender Table Presider: David A. Kinney, Central Michigan University Contextual Continuities and Discontinuities in Adolescent Lives. Mary J. Fischer and Frank F. Furstenberg, Jr., University of Pennsylvania The Intersection of Race and Gender in the Transition to Adulthood: A Longitudinal Study of Urban Philadelphia Youth. Julie A. Kmec, University of Pennsylvania Comparing Kids' Constructions of Race and Gender. Valerie Ann Moore, University of Vermont 4. Adolescent Sexuality Table Presider: Jennifer Manlove, Child Trends, Inc. Examining the Connection between Adolescent Networks and Sexual Activity. Grace M. Barnes, State University of New York, Buffalo Effects of Social Control and Individual Characteristics on Interracial Romantic Involvement among Adolescents. Kara Joyner and Grace Kao, McGill University Gender Differences in the Effects of Sport on the Number of Sexual Partners: Identity Development as a Mediating Variable Explaining the Differential Effects of Sports on Sexual Activity in Males and Females. Lisa Cafferata Zurn and Michael P. Farrell, State University of New York, Buffalo 5. Representations of "Children" Table Presider: Katherine Brown Rosier, Louisiana State University Images of Children in Family Sociology. April Brayfield and Sue Falter Mennino, Tulane University "Don't Write That We Are Children!": On the Dual Nature of Ethnographic Research with Preadolescents. AnnCarita Evaldsson, Linkoping University, Sweden Gender Roles in Children's Literature: A Review of NonAward Winning Books. Renae M. Poarch and Elizabeth Monk-Turner, Old Dominion University 6. Children's Household Work Table Presider: Barbara Schneider, University of Chicago Parents and Family Structure: An Examination of EthnicBased Variations in Children's Household Labor. Sampson Lee Blair, Arizona State University; and Michael P. Johnson, Pennsylvania State University Money and Children's Sense of Responsibility for Housework. Yun-Suk Lee and Linda J. Waite, National Opinion Research Center, Chicago Section on Sociology of Children. Business Meeting (9:3010:10 a.m.)

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520. Section on Sociology of Law. Refereed Roundtables on Sociology of Law and Business Meeting Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware B

Discussion: Beth Schneider, University of California, Santa Barbara

Refereed Roundtables (8:30-9:30 a.m.): Organizer: Nancy Reichman, University of Denver 1. Socio-legal Perspectives on Crime and Justice Rationality and Death Row Volunteering: Defense Attorneys' Perceptions of Client Competence. C. Lee Harrington, Miami University Homicide, Bereavement and the Criminal Justice System. Sarah Goodrum, University of Texas, Austin 2. Women, Identity, and Law The Good (Welfare) Mother: Identity and the Law of Welfare. Karen McCormack, Wellesley College Legal but Prosecuted: The State of Prostitution in Tanzania. Sheldon Bernard Lyke, University of Chicago; Deidre Sullivan and Hillary Levitt, Northwestern University 3. Law and Social Change Social Changes and the Legal Profession in Taiwan. Shang-Luan Yan, Chung Cheng University 4. Legal Frames Table Presider: Nancy Reichman, University of Denver The Contract as Social Artifact. Mark C. Suchman, University of Wisconsin From the Crisis of Legitimacy to Compensation Culture. Tracey Brown, University of Kent Statutory Frameworks and Agency "Praxis Framing": The Creation of Social Regulatory "Domains." Caitilin R. Rabbitt, New York University

9:30 a.m.

Section on Sociology of Law Business Meeting (9:30-10:10 a.m.) 521. Section on Sociology of Sexualities. Exploring the Relationship between Genders and Sexualities: Creating, Affirming, and Moving Beyond Dichotomies Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland C Organizer: Valerie Jenness, University of California, Irvine Presider: Beth Schneider, University of California, Santa Barbara Gay Men Are Still Guys: Everyday Sexism among Lesbians and Gay Men in Political Organizing. Sara L. Crawley, University of Florida Living and (Im)possibility: Narratives of Identity among Lesbian Mothers. Amy Hequembourg Explanations for the Gendered Nature of Homosexuality: Testing the Materialist Hypothesis. Greggor Mattson, University of California, Berkeley Four Renditions of Doing Female Drag: Feminine Appearing Conceptual Variations of a Masculine Theme. Steven P. Schacht, State University of New York, Plattsburgh

Meetings

Section on Environment and Technology Business Meeting (to 10:10 a.m.)—Hilton Washington, International East Section on Methodology Business Meeting (to 10:10 a.m.)— Marriott Wardman Park, Harding Section on Sociology of Children Business Meeting (to 10:10 a.m.)—Hilton Washington, State Section on Sociology of Law Business Meeting (to 10:10 a.m.)—Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware B

10:30 a.m.

Meetings

Advisory Committee on the Fund for Advancement of the Discipline—Hilton Washington, Edison

10:30 a.m.

Sessions

522. Thematic Session. The Ideology and Politics of Meritocracy Hilton Washington, Monroe East Organizer and Presider: Nancy DiTomaso, Rutgers University Oral Language and Reading Deficits for Low-Income and Ethnic Minority Children: How Important Are They? How Can We Narrow Them? George Farkas, Pennsylvania State University Meritocracy: Ideology and Reality. Barbara Reskin, Harvard University Assets Matter. Thomas M. Shapiro and Heather Beth Johnson, Northeastern University Social Definitions of Virtue and Blame: Moral Fault in Child Care. Julia Wrigley, City University of New York, Graduate Center Discussion: Nancy DiTomaso, Rutgers University 523. Special Session. Cybernetworks: The Rise of Social Capital? Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8219 Organizer and Presider: Nan Lin, Duke University Living and Working Networked in a Wired World: Social Capital Online and Offline. Barry Wellman, Janet W. Salaff, Caroline Haythornthwaite, Dimitrina Dimitrova, Keith Hampton, Emmanuel Koku, and Nancy Nazer, University of Toronto Lost in Cyberspace: Internet Addiction as Social Isolation or Social Connection? David Greenfield, Center for Internet Studies, Psychological Health Associates

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

Academic Communication and Internet Discussion Groups: Are They Sources of Information or Means for Extending One's Network? Uwe Matzat, University of Groningen Cybernetworks and a Social-Capital-Based Economy. Nan Lin and Bai Gao, Duke University 524. Special Session. Inner and Outer Realities: Psychoanalysis and Social Theory Hilton Washington, Lincoln West Organizer: Catherine Silver, Brooklyn College and Graduate Center, City University of New York Panel: Lynn Chancer, St. John University, New York Wendy Hollway, Leeds University Tony Jefferson, Keele University Patricia Clough, Queens College and Graduate Center, City University of New York Sonia Gojman, Mexican Institute of Sociopsychoanalysis Discussion: Neil McLaughlin, McMaster University The dynamics of conscious and unconscious mental states are explored in an effort to heighten the role of psychoanalysis as a form of social criticism of knowledge production. An understanding of social change requires that we pay closer attention to how historically situated individuals and collectivities internalize gendered representations, identify with state ideologies, and conform to social expectations in order to reproduce existing social structures and mentalities. Equally important, one needs to identify sources of inner and outer resistance, symbolization, and representation(s) that produce critical thinking. The papers of the panel discuss the production of new theoretical and methodological knowledge around issues of technologies (technoscience and teletechnology), social movements, education practices, and fear of crime. These topics become the sites to explore the real and imaginary mesh of the intrapsychic and the institutional.

525. Rescheduled as Session 112x on Sunday, August 13, 8:30 a.m. 526. Regional Spotlight Session. Restructuring Sentencing in the Nation's Capital Hilton Washington, Georgetown East Organizer: Claire Johnson, George Washington University Presider: James Austin, George Washington University Panel: William Sabol, The Urban Institute Robert Wolkins, District of Columbia Public Defender Service Michelle Sedgewick, District of Columbia Advisory Commission on Sentencing 527. Academic Workplace Workshop. Playing on the "Second String"?: Debunking the Myths of Working at a Small College Hilton Washington, Military Organizer: Debra Lemke, Western Maryland College Panel: Debra Lemke, Western Maryland College Boni Li, Northern Kentucky University

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Stella M. Capek, Hendrix College Brad Smith, Western Maryland College Jean Shin, Western Maryland College The goal of this workshop is to provide information for participants who may be thinking of starting their careers at small colleges. It will also provide a forum for discussing issues of particular interest to current small college faculty. It is sometimes assumed that working at a small college indicates a lack of ability or motivation to compete at a larger, research-oriented university; that there are fewer opportunities for professional growth and visiblity; and that there is a lack of resources available at small colleges that is professionally limiting or stifling. The truth is that most who work at small colleges have made a conscious choice to be in that setting, and that small colleges provide research, service, and teaching opportunities not available at larger institutions. This workshop will address the real challenges and benefits of life at small college and debunk some myths about the day to day routine present in these settings.

528. Teaching Workshop. Teaching about Families: A Diversity of Approaches Hilton Washington, Georgetown West Organizer: Ginger Macheski, Valdosta State University Teaching about Families: A Typology of Approaches. Ginger Macheski, Valdosta State University Active Learning: Teaching Marriage and Family on the Web. Michael Cushion, Aquinas College Students' Observations vs. Family Myths: Providing Opportunity, Structure, and Theory. Barbara Keating, Mankato College Connecting Teaching Strategies to Learner's Lives: An Approach to Family Sociology. Meg Wilkes Karraker, University of St. Thomas Built upon the 3rd edition of the ASA publication Teaching about Families, this workshop celebrates the diversity of ways sociologists approach teaching about families in their courses. Workshop presenters will offer both pedagogical and hands-on discussion and demonstrations from a number of contrasting and complementary perspectives.

529. Regular Session. Criminology: Theoretical and Empirical Advancements Hilton Washington, Monroe West Organizer: Pamela Wilcox Rountree, University of Kentucky Presider: Scott A. Hunt, University of Kentucky Familial Social Control and Peer Group Interactions: The Impact of Families and Friends on Trajectories of Offending Behavior over the Life Course. Amy D'Unger, Emory University Rethinking Social Relations to Crime: Personal and Altruistic Fear in Family Households. Mark Warr, University of Texas, Austin Subcultural Diversity and the Fear of Crime and Gangs. Jodi Lane, University of Florida; and James W. Meeker, University of California, Irvine Public Support for Gun Control, 1996-1999. Tom W. Smith, National Opinion Research Center; and Luis Martos, University of Chicago Discussion: Scott A. Hunt, University of Kentucky

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530. Regular Session. Ethnomethodology and Conversation Analysis: Interaction at Work Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia A Organizer: Virginia Teas Gill, Illinois State University Presider: Douglas W. Maynard, Indiana University Realizing Virtual Objects: Embodiment and Gesture in HiTech Work Settings. Deirdre Boden, Copenhagen Business School; Monika Buscher, Lancaster University; and Andreas Wittel, University of London Conversational Practices of Controllers in NASA's Mission Control Center. Erik Vinkhuyzen, Xerox Corporation, Palo Alto Research Center Interactional Troubles across the Convenience Store Counter: Immigrant Entrepreneurs and Customer Relations. Gary David, Bentley College Trust and Understanding: Investment Services and Customer Interaction. Marilyn Whalen and Steve Sampson, Xerox Corporation, Palo Alto Research Center 531. Regular Session. Gender and Bodies Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8206 Organizer: Joey Sprague, University of Kansas Presider: Linda M. Blum, University of New Hampshire Negotiating the Constraints of Gender Binarism: Intersexuals Challenge Gender Categorization. Sharon Preves, Grand Valley State University Romantic Love, Power, and Sexuality: The Sexual Agency of African-American and European-American Women. Lisa Anne Jones Women, Control, and the Body: How Feminism Influences Women's Understandings of Their Bodies with Regard to Eating Disorders and Work. Rita Melendez, Yale University The Cultural Contradictions of Motherhood? The Case of Breast Feeding: Extolling Science, Reproducing Capitalism. Orit Avishai, University of California, Berkeley Discussion: Linda M. Blum, University of New Hampshire 532. Regular Session. Political Sociology: Globalization and Democracy Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8216 Organizers: Lynn Weber, University of South Carolina; and Andre Mizell, University of Akron Presider: Jacqueline M. Keil, Roanoke College The Fate of Anti-Apartheid Social Movements in a Democratic South Africa. Glenn Adler, University of the Witwatersrand Theorizing Polities in a Globalizing World: Politics Beyond the Nation-State. Sylvia Walby, University of Leeds, United Kingdom Unto Themselves: Insularity and Democracy. Robert Faris, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Discussion: Robert K. Schaeffer, San Jose State University

533. Regular Session. Race, Class, and Gender: Family Demographics and Choices Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia B Organizer: Lorraine Mayfield-Brown, University of South Florida Interracial Marriage: Social Connection, Marital Conflict and Divorce. Rose M. Kreider, U.S. Bureau of the Census Shaping the Retirement Experiences of African American Professional Women: The Importance of Race, Class, and Gender. Kathleen F. Slevin, College of William and Mary; and C. Ray Wingrove, University of Richmond Skin Color and Perceptions of Attractiveness among African Americans: Does Gender Make a Difference? Mark E. Hill, University of Pennsylvania The Demography of Difference and Interracial Marriage: An Empirical Description of Increasing Diversity and Interracial Marriage. Tukufu Zuberi and Jennifer Bratter, University of Pennsylvania Discussion: Mary Holley, Montclair State University 534. Regular Session. Rural Sociology Marriott Wardman Park, Coolidge Organizer: Angela G. Mertig, Michigan State University Presider: Alan Rudy, Michigan State University Citizen Participation in Rural Community Development Centers: An Example from Saudi Arabia. Saleh Alsoghair, King Saud University The Political Economy of Environmental Policy in Rural Hawaii. Shelly K. Habel, Whitman College; and Jon K. Matsuoka, University of Hawaii, Manoa Institutional Sources of Marginality: Midwestern Family Farming in a Period of Economic Decline. Linda Lobao and Katherine Meyer, Ohio State University Environmental Crises and the "Metabolic Rift" in WorldHistorical Perspective. Jason W. Moore, Johns Hopkins University Discussion: Alan Rudy, Michigan State University 535. Regular Session. Social Movements: Right-Wing Movements Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland A Organizer: Jack M. Bloom, Indiana University Northwest Presider: Chip Berlet, Political Research Associates The Patterning of Repression: FBI Counterintelligence and the New Left. David Cunningham, Brandeis University Explaining Variation in Levels of Patriot and Militia Mobilization. Nella K. Van Dyke and Sarah A. Soule, University of Arizona To Counter "the Very Devil" Itself. Larry Isaac, Florida State University Hegemonic and Marginalized Masculinities in the Promise Keepers. Melanie Heath and Michael Messner, University of Southern California Discussion: Chip Berlet, Political Research Associates

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

536. Section on Methodology. Developments in Qualitative Methods Marriott Wardman Park, Harding Organizer: Peter V. Marsden, Harvard University Presider: Gwendolyn Dordick, Harvard University CodeRead: A Multiplatform Coding Method for Text-Based Data. Andrew J. Perrin, University of California, Berkeley Listening to the World's Music: Using Psychoanalysis and Anthropology to Enrich Sociological Interviewing and Analysis. Evelyn Ibatan Rodriguez, University of California, Berkeley The Access Problem: Toward a Theory of Beginnings in Ethnography. Brooke Harrington, Brown University; Laura Masterson, Inter-American University Policy in Action: Using Ethnography to Evaluate the New Poverty Paradigm. Gwendolyn Dordick, Harvard University Sociology's Chimera: The Qualitative versus Quantitative Debate. Barbara Hanson, York University, Atkinson College 537. Section on Medical Sociology. Macro Structures and Health Care Delivery Hilton Washington, Jefferson East Organizer and Presider: Ann Barry Flood, Dartmouth College Is Beauty in the Eyes of the Beholder?: Predicting Organizational Identification and Its Consequences Using Identity and Image. Brian Golden, University of Western Ontario; Janet Dukerich, University of Texas, Austin; and Stephen Shortell, University of California, Berkeley The Effect of Managed Care Markets on Usual Source of Care and Physician Thoroughness. Andrew R. Sommers, Douglas Wholey, and Todd Rockwood, University of Minnesota Changing Organizational Forms of Managed Care in the Nineties: Some Implication for Institutionalization. Denise L. Anthony, Dartmouth College; and Jane C. Banaszak-Holl, University of Michigan Commodification and Contradiction: The Rationalization of Mental Health Care. Teresa L. Scheid, University of North Carolina, Charlotte Establishing Geriatric Health Centers: Learning to Navigate the Changing Health Care System. Donald J. Pratt and Joyce M. Iutcovich, Keystone University Research Corporation Discussion: Jacqueline S. Zinn, Temple University 538. Section on Organizations, Occupations, and Work. Technology and Inequality Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland B Organizer and Presider: Steven Peter Vallas, Georgia Institute of Technology

185

Professionals, Higher Education, and the Knowledge Economy: Rethinking the Theory of Postindustrial Society. Steven G. Brint, University of California, Riverside Technocratic Teamwork: Combating Gender Differences and Marginalization in High-Tech Firms. Gerhard Daday and Beverly Burris, University of New Mexico Resocialing Work?: An Anticipatory Anthropology of the Labor Process. David Hakken, State University of New York Institute of Technology, Utica/Rome Technology and Participation in Elite Scientific Communities: Does Access to Electronic Working Paper Repositories Alter Inequalities? Eric Meyer and Rob Kling, University of Indiana Discussion: Daniel B. Cornfield, Vanderbilt University 539. Section on Environment and Technology. Enviromental Justice: Political Economy, History, and Theory (co-sponsored by the Section on Race, Gender, and Class) Hilton Washington, Lincoln East Organizer and Presider: David N. Pellow, University of Colorado, Boulder Native Americans, National Security, and Toxic Waste: The Environmental Injustice of the Military-Industrial Complex. Gregory Hooks and Chad Smith, Washington State University Regulatory Agencies and Environmental Justice: Social Impacts of the Proposed Emergency Outlet at Devils Lake, North Dakota. Jan Buhrmann, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency How Does the Growth Machine Manufacture Environmental Injustice: Incentives, Politics, and Resistance in Louisiana. Melissa Toffolon-Weiss, University of Alaska, Anchorage; and J. Timmons Roberts, Tulane University The Hazards of Work: Environmental Racism at the Point of Production. David N. Pellow, University of Colorado, Boulder Discussion: David N. Pellow, University of Colorado, Boulder 540. Section on Racial and Ethnic Minorities in Sociology. Refereed Roundtables Hilton Washington, International East Organizer: Hernan Vera, University of Florida 1. The Struggle against Racism Table Presider: Ted Manley, Jr., DePaul University I Didn't Know I Was a Racist: Uncovering Unconscious Racism. Ted Manley, Jr., DePaul University Does Diversity Training Challenge or Maintain White Privilege? Eileen O'Brien and Jason B. Willis, State University of New York, Brockport 2. Colonialism and Ethnicity Table Presider: Aziza Khazzoom, Tel Aviv University

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Session 540, continued Colonialism, Ethnic Identity, and the Agency of Women: Conversations with Elite Iraqi Women Who Migrated to Israel in the 1950's. Aziza Khazzoom, Tel Aviv University The Filipino Exclusion Movement in the United States: White Labor and the Logic of Racial Despotism. Rick A. Baldoz, Binghamton University A Comparison of Whiteness: Presidential Speeches and Quotes from Nixon, Reagan, Verwoerd, and Botha. Jeremy Van Blomentein, University of Florida 3. Demographic and Macro Studies Table Presider: Ann Morning, Princeton University Who Is Multiracial?: Definitions and Decisions. Ann Morning, Princeton University 4. Macro Studies of Brazil Table Presider: Stan Bailey, University of California, Los Angeles Racial Imaging and the National Census: A Look at Brazil. Stan Bailey, University of California, Los Angeles A Comparison of the Results of Discriminatory Practice Against Women and Against Blacks in Brazil. Sergei Suarez Dillon Soares, Institute for Applied Economic Research 5. Segregation in Black and White Table Presider: Betsy Welch, University of California, Santa Cruz Institutions of Disorder and Insecurity: Gated Communities and Loitering Laws. Betsy Welch, University of California, Santa Cruz Race Differences in Public Opinion Towards Policing Practices and the American Court System. Craig A. Boylstein, University of Florida Educational Status and Black/White Segregation in Neighborhoods and Schools. Michael Emerson, University of Houston; and David Sikkink, University of Notre Dame Beyond Black: Biracialism and the Black Middle Class. Kerry A. Rockquemore, University of Connecticut; and David L. Brunsma, University of Alabama, Huntsville 6. Community and Identity Table Presider: Christina Gomez, Dartmouth College Minority Students on an Elite White Campus: Understanding Community and Identity. Christina Gomez, Dartmouth College Black and White NOW Members Talk about the Racial Diversification of the National Organization for Women. Suzanne Rumph Constructing the Non-Prejudiced White Self. Shannon Krista Houvouras, University of Florida

7. Whiteness Table Presider: Jose Padin, Portland State University The Triple Racial Consciousness of White Americans: Empirical and Conceptual Exploration into the Racial Attitudes in the Post-Civil Rights Era. Jose Padin, Portland State University Whiteness, White Otherness, and Jewish Identity. Kelly Amanda Train, York University The Trouble with Whiteness. Cynthia Levwe-Rasky 8. New York, New York Table Presider: Jonathan Markowitz, University of California, San Diego Bernhard Goetz and the Politics of Fear. Jonathan Markowitz, University of California, San Diego 9. The Media and the Color Line Table Presider: Carla Denise Edwards, The University of Florida Reinvestigating the Color Line at the Turn of the Century: An Empirical Analysis of DuBois' Theory of Race Contact. Carla Denise Edwards and Laurel Tripp, University of Florida Ebony's Changing Definition of Black Identity, 1950-1975. Jennifer Eggerling-Boeck, University of Wisconsin, Madison Fear of Freaknik: A Print Media Analysis. Lara Foley, The University of Florida; and Eileen O'Brien, State University of New York, Brockport 10. Racial Formations Table Presider: Peter Knapp, Villanova University Systemic and Individualistic Forms of Racism. Peter Knapp, Villanova University Studying Race and Racial Formation: Lessons from Black Nationalist Practice. Algernon Austin, Northwestern University Whiteness and the Quandary of Cross Racial Dialogue. Mark George, University of New Mexico Informal Discussion Roundtables: 11. Black Liberation and the Struggle for Democracy Table Presider: Tomas Encarnacion, Howard University Panel: Ralph Gomes, Howard University Benedict Ngala, Howard University Tomas Encarnacion, Howard University Rebecca Naser, Howard University Marie Claude Jipguep, Howard University Troye Macarthy, Howard University 12. The New Abolitionism From Anti-Racism to Anti-Whiteism: The Centrality of the New Abolitionism to Freedom Struggles in the 21st Century. Christopher Niles, The New Abolitionists Society 13. Community Organization Anarchism and the Black Revolution. Lorenzo Ervin, Black Autonomy Network of Community Organizers

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

541. Section on Comparative and Historical Sociology. Refereed Roundtables in Comparative and Historical Sociology and Business Meeting Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware B Refereed Roundtables (10:30-11:30 a.m.): Organizer: George Steinmetz, University of Michigan 1. The Historical Sociology of Labor, Capital, and the State in the U.S. Table Presider: Charles Post, Borough of Manhattan Community College Regional Uneven Development in the Antebellum U.S.: Slavery and Southern Economic Development. Charles Post, Borough of Manhattan Community College Strange Bedfellows: How Large Capitalists and Organized Labor Attempted to Jointly Consolidate America's Bituminous Coal Industry. Max Stevens, University of California, Los Angeles The New Deal "Myth" and the 1935 Banking Act: Explaining the Shift in the Legal Independence of the Federal Reserve System. Susan Stockdale, University of Arizona 2. The Historical Sociology of Gender and the State Table Presider: Anne Kane, University of Texas, Austin A Diminishing Paternal Presence: Public Fatherhood and Poor Relief in New Jersey, 1820-1936. Jesse Crosson, UMDNJ True Womanhood, Economic Rights, and Rearticulations of Gender Identity. Natasha Kirsten Kraus, State University of New York, Buffalo Female Textile Factory Workers in Thailand: Forms of Control and Possibilities of Resistance. Piyasuda Pangsapa, State University of New York, Binghamton 3. The Historical and Comparative Sociology of the Middle East From State-Building to State Disintegration: An Historical Institutionalist Account of Nationalism in the Ottoman Empire. Wade Roberts, University of Arizona The Rise of Non-Secular Nationalism in Iran, 1870-1905: A World-Historical View. Farshad Araghi, Florida Atlantic University The Sociological Study of Resilience in Religious Institutions: The Ulema as an Example. Kamel Ghozzi, Central Missouri State University The Role of Ibn Khaldun's Personality Traits in the Making of his Pioneering Social Thought. Mohmoud Dhaouadi, University of Tunis 4. The Historical and Comparative Sociology of Europe Table Presider: Ewa Morawska, University of Michigan Elites and Economic Hegemony: External Opportunities and Internal Limits in Three Historical Cases and the Contemporary United States. Richard Lachmann, State University of New York, Albany

187

The Europeans and the European Union: Dynamics of Public Support for the "European Monetary Union." Stefano Dominioni, Yale University Do Nations Matter in the Globalizing TelecommunicationIndustry?: Comparing Liberalization and Privatization Policies in the Netherlands, the United Kingdom, and France. Willem Hulsink, Erasmus University, Rotterdam 5. Comparative and Historical Sociology of Race Table Presider: George Steinmetz, University of Michigan Ethnic Image-Making: A Comparative Analysis of African American and Welsh Stereotypes. Susan Pitchford, University of Washington 6. Methods and Theory Table Presider: John R. Hall, University of California, Davis Path Dependece in Historical Sociology. James Mahoney, Brown University Cultural Difference and the Comparative-Historical Method. Chadan Gowda, University of Michigan The Comparative Historical Method Applied to "Exemplars". Barbara R. Walters, Kingsborough Community College, City University of New York 7. Culture, Violence, and the State Table Presider: Samuel Clark, University of Western Ontario Census, Race and Nation-Building in 19th Century Latin America. Mara Loveman, University of California, Los Angeles Transformations in Punishment in 18th and 19th Century Britain: Penal Power, Liberty, and the State. James Willis, Yale University From Economic Imperative to Cultural Dialect: The Development of Colonial Medicine in South Asia. Warren Fincher, University of Texas, Austin Violence as Politics: Police, Party Politics, and Violence in New Orleans, 1852-1900. Stacy McGoldrick, New School for Social Research Section on Comparative and Historical Sociology Business Meeting (11:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m.) 542. Section on Sociology of Children. Generational Perspectives on the Sociology of Childhood Hilton Washington, Jefferson West Organizer: Jens Qvortrup, Norwegian Centre for Child Research, Trondheim Presider: William A. Corsaro, Indiana University The Comparative Access of Children and Adults to Market and Public Resources. Donald J. Hernandez, State University of New York, Albany Children’s Agency and Theories of Care. Barrie Thorne, University of California, Berkeley Feminization of Childhood. An-Magritt Jensen, Norwegian University for Science and Technology, Trondheim

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

188

Session 542, continued Generation as a Category in Sociological Childhood Research. Jens Qvortrup, Norwegian Centre for Child Research, Trondheim Discussion: Viviana A. Zelizer, Princeton University 543. Section on Sociology of Law. Sociology of Law Meets Public Policy Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia C Organizerw and Presider: Abigail Saguy, Princeton University; and Mia Cahill, New York University Researching Judicial Decision-making on Child Custody: Some Methodological Considerations. Julie Artis, DePaul University Law and Litigation in Policy Implementation: A Comparative Perspective. Kathrin Zippel, University of Wisconsin, Madison The Political Consequences of Felon Disfranchisement Laws in the United States. Christopher Uggen, University of Minnesota; and Jeff Manza, Northwestern University The Impact of Legal Counsel on Procedural Outcomes for Poor Tenants in New York City's Housing Court: Results on an Andomized Experiment. Carroll Seron, Gregg Van Ryzin, Martin Frankel, Jean Kovath, Baruch College, City University of New York Discussion: Abigail Saguy, Princeton University; and Mia Cahill, New York University 544. Section on Sociology of Sexualities. Sexualities: Theoretical and Empirical Approaches Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland C Organizer and Presider: Kristen Esterberg, University of Massachusetts, Lowell The Cultrual and Developmental Significance of American Males' Experiences of First Ejaculation (Semenarche). Loren Frankel, Cornell University Take It Off and Put It On: Performance of Masculinity in a Male Strip Club. Malati Gadgil, Temple University Is Sexual Dysfunction a Social Problem? Karin Martin and Joel Puriss, University of Michigan The Queer Makes Good: Notes on the Domestication of Transgressive Sexualities in the Academy. Jeffery P. Dennis, State University of New York, Stony Brook Discussion: Don Barrett, California State University, San Marcos

11:30 a.m.

Meetings

Section on Comparative and Historical Sociology Business Meeting (to 12:10 p.m.)—Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware B

12:30 p.m.

Meetings

2000-01 ASA Council (to 6:00 p.m.)—Hilton Washington, Hemisphere Section on Racial and Ethnic Minorities Council Meeting (to 1:30 p.m.)—Hilton Washington, Jefferson West Section on Sociology of Sexualities Council Meeting (to 1:30 p.m.)—Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland C

12:30 p.m.

Sessions

545. Thematic Session. Prospects for Democracy and Justice in the Global Economy Hilton Washington, Jefferson East Organizer and Presider: Robert J. S. Ross, Clark University Fighting Sweatshops: What Role Can Consumers Really Play? The Fair Labor Association and the Workers' Rights Consortium. Richard P. Appelbaum, University of California, Santa Barbara Global Democracy and the Collapse of Historical Capitalism. Christopher Chase-Dunn, Johns Hopkins University; and Elson Boles, University of Science and Arts Oklahoma Prospects for a New Global Social Contract. Beverly J. Silver and Darlene Miller, Johns Hopkins University Discussion: James W. Russell, Eastern Connecticut State University; and Robert J. S. Ross, Clark University 546. Cancelled. 547. Special Session. Inequality in Rural America Marriott Wardman Park, Coolidge Organizer and Presider: Dudley L. Poston, Jr., Texas A&M University Civic Community and Inequality in Rural America. Thomas Lyson, Cornell University; and Charles M. Tolbert, Louisiana State University Earnings Inequality and Underemployment in Rural America. Leif Jensen and Diane K. McLaughlin, Pennsylvania State University Race and Ethnic Inequalities in Rural America. Rogelio Saenz, Texas A&M University Declining Welfare Roles in Rural America: Jobs, Poverty and More Inequality. Thomas Hirschl, Cornell University Discussion: David Brown, Cornell University; and Cynthia M. Duncan, University of New Hampshire

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

548. Special Session. Women and the State: Both Friends and Foes Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia A Organizer and Presider: Joya Misra, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Gendering Men and Welfare States: Obligations, Rights, and the Social Politics of Fatherhood. Barbara Hobson, Stockholm University A Comparative Analysis of the Chinese and Taiwanese States. Ping-Chun Hsiung, University of Toronto Discussion: V. Spike Petersen, University of Arizona; and Ann Shola Orloff, Northwestern University 549. Professional Workshop. Workforce Training, Advocacy, and Policies for Progressive Change Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware A Leader: Patricia Clancy, Hawaii Pacific University A 3.4% per year growth rate is expected in the employment area of "Job Training and Related Services" (Standard Industrial Classification 833) through 2005 [James C. Franklin, 1993, "Industry Output and Employment," Monthly Labor Review 116, 11 (November): 41-57.] Sociology has a long history of identifying and challenging inequality due to membership in asocial category: gender, race, ethnicity, nationalorigin, sexual preference, disability, or age. Its goal is to create more fair and equalitarian systems. In the workplace, sociological practitioners have a great deal to contribute to workforce diversity training and advocacy. Many practitioners specialize in one area, e.g., sexual harassment advocacy; antiracism training; mainstreaming those who are physically challenged; or dealing with age discrimination. Others use a common system and process to end harassment or increase tolerance in a specific workforce. This session seeks to explicate change strategies that are effective in creating a more just organization and more pleasantly diverse workforce. What practices work best in corporate or agency environments to counter harassment by category? What practices foster tolerance, enhance interaction, induce cooperation, or increase productivity? What problem types are resistant to change efforts? Is there a need for continuing academic research concerning these specific resistant problem-types?

550. Teaching Workshop. Active Learning Techniques Hilton Washington, State Leaders: Barbara Heyl, Illinois State University Tom Gerschick, Illinois State University The goal of this workshop is to enhance student learning by providing theory, context, useful information, and opportunity for discussion about using active learning exercises in our classes. Facilitators and participants will share resources, example strategies and assignments, problems, and solutions related to using active learning techniques. The format of the session will include presentation, discussions, small group work, and activities. Handouts are provided. Participants are encouraged to bring a list of concerns and example strategies or assignments currently used. Because we have less than two hours together, this workshop is meant to serve as a catalyst for further exploration regarding teaching in ways that actively engage students in working through ideas central to our classes.

189

551. Regular Session. Affirmative Action Hilton Washington, Georgetown East Organizer and Presider: Fred Pincus, University of Maryland, Baltimore County Explaining Federal Anti-Discrimination Policies in Housing, Employment and Education. Chris Bonastia, New York University The Paradox of Affirmative Action for Women Directors in Israel. Dafna N. Izraeli, Bar-Ilan University Race Traitors, Self-Haters or Equal Opportunists? Explaining Support for the "Wrong Views" on Affirmative Action. Cedric Herring, University of Illinois, Chicago; Hayward Derrick Horton, State University of New York, Albany; Verna Keith, Arizona State University; and Melvin Thomas, North Carolina State University Why Anti-Discrimination Policies Are Not Enough: The Legacies and Consequences of Affirmative Inclusion— For Whites. Nancy DiTomaso, Rutgers University 552. Regular Session. Children and Youth: The Social Context of Adolescence Hilton Washington, Georgetown West Organizer: Roberta Goldberg, Trinity College Presider: Patricia Weitzel-O'Neill, Trinity College Family Processes, Neighborhood Context, and Adolescent Risk Behavior. Kathleen Mullan Harris and Suzanne Ryan, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Comparing the Effects from Earlier versus Concurrent Parental Constructive Behavior on Adolescent Association with Achievement-Oriented Friends. ZengYin Chen, Texas A&M University Adolescents' Work Intensity, Time Use, and Substance Use: Is It a Matter of Time Exchange? Deborah J. Safron, John Schulenberg, and Jerald G. Bachman, University of Michigan Social Support and the Adolescent Transition: Race and Gender Differences in Adolescent Psychological Distress and Support from Friends and Parents. Michael P. Farrell, David Blake, and Grace M. Barnes, State University of New York, Buffalo Discussion: Roberta Goldberg, Trinity College 553. Regular Session. Theorizing and Measuring Development Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia C Organizer: Susan Tiano, University of New Mexico Presider: Robert Fiala, University of New Mexico Demography and Development: The Role of Population in Contemporary Economic Growth. Edward Crenshaw, Ohio State University The Effects of Foreign Investment on Inequality, Population Growth, and Economic Development: 1980-1995. Jeffrey Kentor, University of Utah The Developmental Consequences of Foreign Direct Investment. Lawrence King, Yale University

190

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

Session 553, continued Development in Russia: Networks and Regionalization in Tatarstan. Leo McCann, University of Kent, Canterbury Measuring Development: A Critical Assessment of Purchasing Power Parities. Roberto Patricio Korzeniewicz, Angela Stach, and David Consiglio, University of Maryland, College Park 554. Regular Session. Hate Crimes Hilton Washington, Monroe West Organizer: Howard J. Ehrlich, The Prejudice Institute Hate Speech: The Sociological Issues. Robert D. Purvis, The Prejudice Institute The Characteristics of Perpetrators of Hate Crimes. Edward Dunbar, University of California, Los Angeles Hate Crime Hot Spots and Institutional Responses. Karen Umemoto, University of Hawaii, Manoa Hate Crimes on Campus: Strategies for Intervention. Grant Ingle, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Discussion: G. Sam Sloss, Indiana University Southwest; and Frederika E. Schmitt, Millersville University 555. Regular Session. Sociology of Intellectuals Hilton Washington, Lincoln West Organizer: Larry T. Reynolds, Central Michigan University The Role of the Intellectual in Public Affairs: Changing Perspectives in the Modern Era. Charles Gattone, Oberlin College Intellectuals as the Social Basis of Democratization, 19051912 and 1988-1994. Charles Kurzman and Erin Leahey, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Sociologists, Intellectuals, and Sociocide: The Case of Mihailo Markovic. Keith Doubt, Truman State University Death by Weaselization: The Fate of Intellectuals in the FourYear Liberal Arts College. Joseph David Damrell, Northland College Discussion: Gil Richard Musolf, Central Michigan University 556. Regular Session. Qualitative Methodology Marriott Wardman Park, Park Tower 8216 Organizer and Presider: Shulamit Reinharz, Brandeis University Political Narratives and the Production of Legitimacy: The Case of Corruption in Post-Mao China. Carolyn L. Hsu, Williams College Literature as a Documentary Source for Immigration Studies. Ethel V. Kosminsky, UNESP-Marilla, Brazil Interview with Female-to-Male Transgenders: A Qualitative Research Project with Transgenders from the San Francisco Bay Area. Salvador Vidal-Ortiz, City University of New York Graduate Center Discussion: Rebecca E. Klatch, University of California, San Diego

557. Regular Session. Business Organizations: Institutional and Population-Ecology Perspectives Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia B Organizer: J. Kenneth Benson, University of Missouri, Columbia Presider: Chikako Usui, University of Missouri, St. Louis The Dynamics of Organizational Populations: A Comparison of Three Modes of Organizational Entry, Exit, and Growth. David Barron, University of Oxford Liability of Illegitimacy and Dynamics of Product Categories. Tai-young Kim, Stanford University Markets with Hierarchies: "Visible Hand" Effects on the Rate of Organizational Disbanding in Higher Education Publishing. William Ocasio, Northwestern University; and Patricia H. Thornton, Duke University From Stakeholders to Shareholders: The Development of Corporate Public Affairs Offices, 1965-1974. Man-shan Kwok and Julian Dierkes, Princeton University Ecological Dynamics of Transaction Costs: The Theoretical Framework. Olga M. Khessina, University of California, Berkeley 558. Regular Session. Social Movements: Political Opportunities Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland A Organizer: Jack M. Bloom, Indiana University Northwest Presider: Michael Foley, Catholic University When Strategic Framing and Exploitation of Political Opportunities Are Not Enough: The Effects of "Organizational Opportunities" on Challenger Success. Amy Binder, University of Southern California Are Protesters Opportunists?: Political Opportunities and the Emergence of Political Contention. Jeff Goodwin, New York University Creating Opportunities and Overcoming Constraints: Nonviolent Action and the Anti-Apartheid Movement in South Africa. Kurt Schock, Rutgers University Political Opportunities for Altruism?: The Role of State Policies in Influencing Crime-Making by British AntiRacist and Pro-Migrant Movements. Paul Statham Discussion: Michael Foley, Catholic University of America 559. Section on Methodology. Research Methods and Measurement Marriott Wardman Park, Harding Organizer: Peter V. Marsden, Harvard University Developing Nonresponse Standards. Tom W. Smith, National Opinion Research Center Study of Non-response in a Community Survey. Delfino Vargas, Vernon D. Ryan, and Kerry A. Agnitsch, Iowa State University Are Cited Texts Influential Texts? John H. Evans, University of California, Los Angeles

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

The Politics and Practice of Doing Online Surveys: A Case Study of Higher Education Students in Web-Based Courses. Laura C. Brewer, Arizona State University 560. Section on Medical Sociology. Refereed Roundtables Hilton Washington, International East Organizer: Jacqueline L. Angel, University of Texas, Austin 1. New Directions in Research on Religion and Health Table Presider: Christopher G. Ellison, University of Texas, Austin Religion and Health to the Very End of Life. Ellen Idler, Rutgers University; Judith Hays, Duke University; and Stanislav Kasly, Yale University Religious Involvement, Lifestyles, and Causes of Death: Evidence from a Followback Study of Death Certificates. Robert A. Hummer, Danielle W. Toussaint, and Christopher G. Ellison, University of Texas, Austin Forgiveness, Stress, and Mental Health. Marc Musick, University of Texas, Austin Congregations, Religious Support and Coping, and MentalHealth. Christopher G. Ellison, University of Texas, Austin; Neal Krause, University of Michigan; and Mark Chaves, University of Arizona 2. Poverty, Children, and Health Care Reform Table Presider: Jennie Jacobs Kronenfeld, Arizona State University Children and Health Programs: An Early Look at Outreach Efforts for the CHIP Program. Jennie Jacobs Kronenfeld, Arizona State University Perceived Barriers and Facilitators to Accessing Medicaid: Factors Central to Assessing the Implementation and Effectiveness of Welfare Reform. Emily Leventhal, University of Texas, Austin 3. The Sociology of Health and Illness: Global Perspectives Table Presider: Eugene B. Gallagher, University of Kentucky Hi-Tech Home Treatment for Patients with Serious Chronic Illness: A Global Issue. Eugene B. Gallagher and Betty Ann Ray Duke, University of Kentucky Health, Health Care and Use: The Jirels of Eastern Nepal. Janardan Subedi and Sree Subedi, Miami University Health Life Styles in Russia. William Cockerham, University of Alabama Family Structure Effects on Self-Reported Health among Moscow Wives and Husbands. Lisa Cubbins and Magdalena Szaflarski, University of Cincinnati 4. Deconstructing Gender: Methodological Issues in Health and Disability Research Table Presider: Robin D. Moremen, Northern Illinois University Girlfriends for Life, Girlfriends for Health. Robin D. Moremen, Northern Illinois University

191

Gender Differences in Disability among Older Adults: Methodological Issues and Policy Implications. Anna M. Campbell and Joby Dixon, University of Texas, Austin Substantive Issues in Qualitative Research on the Terminally Ill. Beverly Rosa Williams, University of Alabama, Birmingham The Influence of Mid-Life Adult Status and Functional Health Status on Health Lifestyles. Neale R. Chumbler, Marshfield Medical Research Foundation; Ashley Foster, James W. Grimm, and James W. Williams, Western Kentucky University 5. Biomedical Ethics Theory and Research Table Presider: Jacqueline Hart, University of Pennsylvania The Sociological and Ethical Dimensions of Health Care Resource Allocation. Jacqueline Hart, University of Pennsylvania Locating a Paradigm for Bioethics. Deborah Cummins, American Medical Association The Sociology of Bioethics: Perspectives and Implications of Euthanasia. Duane A. Matcha, Siena College Technoscience and the New Biomedicalization: Western Roots, Global Rhizomes. Jennifer Ruth Foskett, Jennifer R. Fishman, Janet K. Shim, and Laura Mamo, University of California, San Francisco 6. Individual and Societal Implications of Maternal/Prenatal Behavior Table Presider: David Pevalin, University of Essex Adverse Birth Outcomes, Maternal Prenatal Behavior and Their Social Context. David Pevalin, University of Essex; Terrance J. Wade, University of Cincinnati; Augustine Brannigan, University of Calgary; and Reginald Suave, University of Calgary "How in the World Did Women Lose Control of Childbirth?": A Pilot Study of College Student Knowledge of Pregnancy, Labor, and Delivery. Elaine R. Cleeton, State University of New York, Geneseo Social Interaction, Social Support, and Intent to Get a Mammogram. Ann Boulis, University of Pennsylvania; and Ross Koppel, Social Research Corporation Social Interaction, Social Support and Intent to Get a Mammogram.; Robert W. Bailey, Rutgers University, Camden 7. Significance of Race in Understanding Help-seeking Behavior Table Presider: Olga Bright, University of California, Irvine Predicting Employer Based Health Care Benefits. Olga Bright, University of California, Irvine Depicting the Patient: Racial and Gender Representation in Drug Advertisements in Medical Journals. Stephanie Nawyn, Christine Carr, and Anne Figert, Loyola University Chicago

192

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

Session 560, continued Income Inequality and Adult Physical Health: Evidence from China. Ming Wen, University of Chicago; Ye Luo, University of Chicago 8. Immigrant Health and Illness Table Presider: Brian K. Finch, Florida State University Perceived Discrimination and Depression among Mexican American Immigrants in California. Brian K. Finch, Florida State University; Bohdan Kolody, San Diego State University; and William A. Vega, Robert Wood Johnson Medical School Asian Bodies in American Medical Settings: Taiwanese Immigrants' Medical Experiences in East Lansing. Chien-Juh Gu, Michigan State University 9. Physicians: Education, Training, and Practice Characteristics Table Presider: Robert Carrothers, Kent State University Emotional Intelligence and Race in Medical School Applicants. Robert Carrothers and Stanford W. Gregory, Jr., Kent State University Client Ascendancy: The Impact of Patient Characteristics on Physician Income. B. L. McCall, Vanderbilt University 10. Issues in Rural Health Table Presider: Neale R. Chumbler, North Florida/South Georgia Veterans Health System and the University of Florida The Psychological Effects of Farm-Related Injuries to Youth in Central Wisconsin: A Pilot Study. Neale R. Chumbler, North Florida/South Georgia Veterans Health System and the University of Florida; John R. Schmelzer, Marshfield Medical Research Foundation; Jack M. Geller, Mankato State University; and Andrew W. Weier, Marshfield Medical Research Foundation Community Perspectives on Rural Health. Lois Wright Morton, Iowa State University 11. The Changing Context for Medicaid Providers and Clients Table Presider: Mary Zimmerman, University of Kansas A Reality Check on the Idea of Consumerism in Medicaid Managed Care. Mary Zimmerman, Shirley Hill, and Michael Fox, University of Kansas Medicaid Caseload Decline in Wisconsin, 1996-1998. Michael Soref, Wisconsin Department of Health and Family Services 12. The Sociology of Reproduction: Building a Network of Researchers I Table Presider: Jacquelyn Litt, Iowa State University To be announced. Adele Clarke, University of California, San Francisco To be announced. Christine Morton

13. The Sociology of Reproduction: Building a Network of Researchers II Table Presider: Stephen L. Fielding, University of Rochester Taking Control of Their Lives: Comments from Women Who Used Mifepristone (RU486) to End Their Pregnancies. Stephen L. Fielding and Lisa Fuller, University of Rochester Fecundity Status and Anxiety. Rosalind Berkowitz King, University of Pennsylvania Neighborhood Context and Condom Use among Female Adolescents. Catlainn Sionean, Emory University 14. Gender Roles, Social Inequality, and Subjective Assessments of Health Table Presider: Erin Reidy, University of Michigan Gender, Class, and Health: Does the Relationship between Socioeconomic Status and Health Differ by Gender? Erin Reidy, University of Michigan Marital Status, Marital Quality, and Health: A Reconsideration and Clarification of Gender Differences. Kristi Williams, University of Texas, Austin Social Structure and Mental Health: An Examination of the Links between Employment, Gender, and Distress. Sheila R. Cotten, University of Maryland, Baltimore County; and Michael D. Schulman, North Carolina State University Social Determinants of Mental and Physical Well-Being among Women Living in an Urban Community in the Mid-West. Barbara Israel and Edith Parker, University of Michigan 15. Perspectives on International Health and Wealth Table Presider: William Alex McIntosh, Texas A&M University Analyzing the Scope and Worldwide Decline in Infectious Disease in the 20th Century. Richard Barrett, University of Illinois, Chicago Health, Inequality, Social Integration, and Economic Growth: A Test of the Wilkinson Hypotheses. William Alex McIntosh, Texas A&M University 16. Health across the Life Course Table Presider: Kathleen A. Foley, University of Pennsylvania Does the Timing of Low Socioeconomic Position in Early Life Matter for the Adult Health Status? Kathleen A. Foley, University of Pennsylvania Reducing the Survival Gap between the Infants of Educated Black and White Mothers in the U.S. Jacob Adetunji, Bowling Green State University 17. The Health Care Delivery System Table Presider: Tasleem Padamsee-Garrett, University of Michigan Natural Partners: Constructing Collaboration between the Physician and the Pharmaceutical Corporation. Tasleem Padamsee-Garrett, University of Michigan

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

An Elaborated Theory of Countervailing Powers: The Role of the System of Alliances in the Decline of Physician Dominance. Heather Hartley, Portland State University The Impact of the For-Profit Conversions of Rural Serving Non-for-Profit and Public Hospitals on Rural Communities. Sharyn Potter, University of New Hampshire The Method of Legitimizing an Innovation: The Accupuncture Legislation of New York State. Motoko Yoshida, Komazawa University The Emergence of Chicago's Long-term Care Infrastructure: How Urban Settlement Shapes Health Care Delivery. Susan C. Reed, DePaul University 18. The Sociology of Public Health Table Presider: Harry Perlstadt, Michigan State University Definitions, Models, and Measurement of Need and Unmet Needs for People Living with HIV/AIDS. Harry Perlstadt, Susan Grettenberger, and Peter Hovmand, Michigan State University The Immoral Patient: Interactional Constructions of Morality in STD Diagnoses. Adina Nack, University of Colorado, Boulder A Game Theoretic Model of HIV Transmission: Signaling and Coordination in a Game of Limited Information. Kirby D. Schroeder and Fabio Rojas, University of Chicago 561. Section on Environment and Technology. Global Economy: Environmental Tradeoffs? Hilton Washington, Lincoln East Organizer: Carole L. Seyfrit, Old Dominion University Presider: Eugene A. Rosa, Washington State University A Cross-National Exploration of Social, Political, and Economic Dimensions of Deforestation. Sandra T. Marquart-Pyatt, Ohio State University Development and the Environmental Crisis. James Talley, University of Tennesse Environmental and Social Tradeoffs during Economic Development in Comparative Perspective. Eric Kostello, University of California, Los Angeles Discussion: Zsuzsa Gille, University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign 562. Section on Comparative and Historical Sociology. Law and Domination in Comparative-Historical Perspective (co-sponsored by the Section on Sociology of Law) Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland B Organizers: Bruce G. Carruthers, Northwestern University; and Elizabeth Boyle, University of Minnesota Presider: Kathleen E. Hull, Northwestern University Colonial Domination and Family Law: French Strategies in North Africa. M. M. Charrad, University of Texas, Austin

193

Colonizing through Crime: Mexicans and the Criminal Justice System in Territorial New Mexico. Laura E. Gomez, University of California, Los Angeles Rhetorics of Legitimation in Ancient and Modern Law. David F. Greenberg, New York University Master and Servant Law, Labour Conflict and Legal Cultures in Mid-Victorian England. Marc W. Steinberg, Smith College Discussion: Richard Lempert, University of Michigan

1:30 p.m.

Meetings

Section on Racial and Ethnic Minorities Business Meeting (to 2:10 p.m.)—Hilton Washington, Jefferson West Section on Sociology of Sexualities Business Meeting (to 2:10 p.m.)—Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland C

2:30 p.m.

Sessions

563. Thematic Session. Gay and Lesbian Movements: Oppression, Domination, and Liberation Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland C Organizer: Dennis Altman, LaTrobe University Globalization and the Uses of Gay Liberation. Dennis Altman, LaTrobe University Incomplete Revolution: Confronting Race, Class and Gender Inequalities in LGBT Communities. Beth Schneider, University of California, Santa Barbara From Liberation to Transgression, or Now What? Barry Adam, University of Windsor Discussion: Tamara Jones, Yale University 564. Special Session. The Politics of Comparability Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia B Organizers and Presiders: Wendy Nelson Espeland, Northwestern University; and Mitchell L Stevens, Hamilton College Rationalizing Contemporary Education Policy: Measurement, Comparability, and Fairness. Meredith Phillips and Tiffani Chin, University of California, Los Angeles Uniform Money and Variable Practice. Viviana Zelizer, Princeton University The Politics of Changing the Translation Parameters of Commensuration. Arthur L Stinchcombe, Northwestern University The Institutional Sources of Sameness and Difference: How Stratification in Organizational Fields Matters for Comparability. Marc J Ventresca, Northwestern University Discussion: Wendy Nelson Espeland, Northwestern University; and Mitchell L Stevens, Hamilton College

194

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

565. Moved to Tuesday, August 15, 12:30 p.m.; see session #428x. 566. Teaching Workshop. Management of Hostility in the Classroom Marriott Wardman Park, Delaware A Organizers: Catherine T. Harris, Wake Forest University; and Michael Wise, Appalachian State University Presider: Nancy Kutner, Emory University Dissent without Distress: How I Manage Potential Hostility in My Classes. Betsy Lucal, Indiana University, South Bend Mass Class- Chaos? Jerry M. Lewis, Kent State University Chilling Out: Minimizing Confrontation in Heated Discussions. Rebecca Bach, Duke University Passing in the Night: Goal Disjunctions, a Source of Student Hostilty. Michael Wise, Appalachian State University On the national level, there has been increasing concern over hostility and violence in the classroom and its relationship to the values of "Generation X." The issues and consequences of student hostility and violence have had a dramatic impact at the secondary school level and are emerging as a concern for post-secondary education. A consequence of this concern among our educators is a need for information, practical suggestions and workable techniques for dealing with classroom disruption, student hostility and the threat of violence.

567. Regular Session. Women and Development: Measuring Women's Autonomy and Power Marriott Wardman Park, Virginia A Organizer: Amy Kaler, University of Pennsylvania Women's Rights and Democratization in the Middle East: Examining Activists' Attitudes in Kuwait. Helen Rizzo, Ohio State University Gender Stratification: Application of a Structural Model to Case Examples in Less Developed Countries. Laurie Wermuth and Miriam Ma-at-ka-ra Monges, California State University, Chico In Their Own Words: Gender, Social Context, and Family Life in Rural Malawi. Enid Schatz and Kathryn Edin, University of Pennsylvania From Singlehood to Widowhood: Changes in Women's Autonomy through the Marital Life Cycle in Zimbabwe. Michelle Hindin, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Discussion: Rita Gallin, Michigan State University 568. Regular Session. Complexity Theory and Research in Sociology Hilton Washington, Lincoln West Organizer and Presider: Kenneth D. Bailey, University of California, Los Angeles Complexity and Luhmann's Die Gesellschaft der Gesellschaft. Daniel B. Lee, Pennsylvania State University

Culture, Social Psychology, and Emergence: Building Multilevel Theories. Kevin Mihata, University of Washington Social Evolution and Complexity. Patrick Baert, University of Cambridge Some Notes on Operationalizing Chaos and Complexity: Nonlinear, Discontinuous and Interactive Effects in Macro-Comparative Research. Thomas J. Burns, Mark A. Lewis, and Andrew Jorgenson, University of Utah The Role of Complexity Theory in Social Science: Linear and Non-Linear Applications. Thomas E. Kearin, Weber State University 569. Regular Session. Criminology: Issues of Formal Social Control Hilton Washington, Georgetown East Organizer: Pamela Wilcox Rountree, University of Kentucky Presider: William F. Skinner, University of Kentucky The Social Structure of Deterrence: Conditional Effects of Legal Subjectivity on Criminal Offending. Michael Massoglia and Ross Macmillan, University of Minnesota The Civil Rights Movement and Social Control: An Analysis of Conflict Assertions. Jessica Maguire and Richard Lundman, Ohio State University Subordination and Violence against State Control Agents: Testing Political Explanations for Lethal Assaults against the Police. David Jacobs, Ohio State University Incarceration and Life Opportunities among Baltimore Minority Youths: Pathways in and out of Trouble. Cynthia C. Harper, University of California, San Francisco Jang's Market: Theoretical Reflections on the Evolution of Criminal Surveillance Strategies in South Central Los Angeles. Sung Hak Choi, University of California, Los Angeles 570. Regular Session. Urban Sociology: Social Networks and Community Welfare Marriott Wardman Park, Coolidge Organizer: Michael Indergaard, St. John's University Presider: Ray Hutchison, University of Wisconsin, Green Bay Urban Social Networks and Informal Social Control: Neighborhood Effects on the Sexual Partnering Strategies of Urban Men. Christopher R. Browning, Ohio State University Urban Street Activists: Gang and Community Efforts to Bring Peace and Justice to LA's Neighborhoods. Juan Francisco Esteva, University at Albany, State University of New York Retail Development and the Growth Machine. Steve Halebsky, University of Wisconsin, Madison

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

Leader Discrimination during Default. Mickey Lauria, Vern Baxter, and Bridget Bordelon, University of New Orleans Discussion: Ray Hutchison, University of Wisconsin, Green Bay 571. Section on Methodology. Quantitative Methods: Advances and Applications Marriott Wardman Park, Harding Organizer: Peter V. Marsden, Harvard University Estimating Causal Effects in the Presence of Missing Data. Thomas A. DiPrete, Duke University; and Henriette Engelhardt, Max Planck Institute for Human Development Network Inference, Error and Informant (In)Accuracy: A Bayesian Approach. Carter Butts, Carnegie Mellon University Age Stratification at Work: Continuity and Change in The American Occupational Structure, 1950-1960. Alair MacLean, University of Wisconsin, Madison Plus ça change: Work and Family Time Trends in France and America, 1965-1998. John P. Robinson, University of Maryland, College Park; and Alain Chenu, Crest Laboratory of Quantitative Sociology 572. Section on Medical Sociology. Social Determinants of Health Hilton Washington, Monroe East Organizer and Presider: Bruce G. Link, Columbia University It’s about Time: The Effect of Wife's and Husband's Employment on Each Other's Health. Ross Stolzenberg, University of Chicago The Influence of Region of Birth and Migration Status on Adult Mortality. Greg Drevenstedt, University of Pennsylvania; and Eric Backlund, U.S. Bureau of the Census Is the "Mexican-American Epidemological Paradox" Advantage at Birth Maintained through Early Childhood Development? Yolanda Padilla, Jason D. Boardman, and Marilyn Espitia, University of Texas, Austin Inequality, Social Welfare and Children's Health: An Aggregate Analysis in the 50 United States. Jane McLeod, Indiana University; Kathleen Call and James Nonnemaker, University of Minnesota Discussion: Stephanie Robert, University of Wisconsin, Madison 573. Section on Environment and Technology. Science and Activism: Framing Environmental Issues Hilton Washington, Lincoln East Organizer: Carole L. Seyfrit, Old Dominion University Presider: Tammy Lewis, Denison University Framing Scientist Activism: "Chemical Risk to Future Generations" and the Rise of Genetic Toxicology. Scott Frickel, University of Wisconsin, Madison

195

The Controversy over Global Warming: The Roles of Skeptic Scientists and Their Supporters. Aaron M. McCright and Riley E. Dunlap, Washington State University Issue Framing and Citizen Apathy Towards Local Environmental Contamination. Stephen Zavestoski, Kate Agnello, and Frank Mignano, Providence College Print Media Coverage of Environmental Causation of Breast Cancer. Phil Brown, Brown University; Stephen Zavestoski, Providence College; Sabrina McCormick, Joshua Mandelbaum, Aracely Alicea, and Theo Luebke, Brown University Discussion: Loren Lutzenhiser, Washington State University 574. Section on Racial and Ethnic Minorities. White Privilege in Democratic Society Hilton Washington, Monroe West Organizer: Hernan Vera, University of Florida Presider: Amir Marvasti, Bethune Cookman College Taking the Law to Heart: Virgins, Vigilantes, and Juvenile Reform of the Black Rapist as a Show of Southern Civilization. Annette L. Bickford, University of Western Ontario Globalization and the Mobilization of White Privilege in the United States. Andrew L. Barlow, University of California, Berkeley The Christian Right: Shedding Its Racist Reputation?: The Meaning of Racial Reconciliation in the Promise Keepers Movement. Mary Stricker, Temple University "Racing for Innocence": Whiteness, Corporate Culture, and the Backlash against Affirmative Action. Jennifer Pierce, University of Minnesota Reverse Discrimination vs. White Privilege: An Empirical Analysis of Alleged Victims of Affirmative Action. Fred L. Pincus, University of Maryland, Baltimore County 575. Section on Comparative and Historical Sociology. Culture, Politics, and the State Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland A Organizer and Presider: George Steinmetz, University of Michigan 7When Chinese Medicine Encountered the State, 1928-1937: Medical Group Formation, the Field of the State, and the Making of Chinese Medicine. Sean Hsiang-lin Lei, National Tsing-Hua University, Taiwan Political Cultures of Opposition: Exploring Idioms, Ideologies, and Revolutionary Agency in the Nicaraguan Revolution. Jean-Pierre Reed and John Foran, University of California, Santa Barbara Democracy's Breakdown and the Rise of Fascism: The Case of the Spanish Second Republic 1931-1936. Sarah Schatz, University of Florida Discussion: George Steinmetz, University of Michigan

196

Monday, August 14, 9:00 a.m.

576. Section on Sociology of Children. Children and Youth Culture Hilton Washington, Georgetown West Organizer and Presider: William A. Corsaro, Indiana University, Bloomington It's in the "Act": The Substance of Black Cultural Capital among Low-Income African American Youth. Prudence L. Carter, University of Michigan Lessons for Life: Adolescent Culture and Society in the World of True Confessions. Lilli M. Downes, Harford Community College Children's Attribution of Needs and Feelings to Virtual Pets: Does Gender Matter? Elizabeth A. Osborn, St. Mary's College, Maryland Selfhood Developed: Verbal and Nonverbal Expressiveness in First-Grade African American Girl's Play. Kimberly A. Scott, Hofstra University 577. Section on Sociology of Law. Transnational Perspectives on Law (co- sponsored by the Section on Comparative and Historical Sociology) Marriott Wardman Park, Maryland B Organizers: Elizabeth Heger Boyle, University of Minnesota; and Bruce Carruthers, Northwestern University Presider: Elizabeth Heger Boyle, University of Minnesota Rationales for a Choice: How Substance Enters Formal Law in the "Eastern Enlargement" of the European Union. Jozsef Borocz, Rutgers University Law Against Order: A History of Human Rights Activism in Israel and Palestine. Lisa Hajjar, Morehouse College Lawyers, Guns, and Money: A Devil's Advocate Perspective on Unlocking the Black Box of Globalization. Thomas Erlich Reifer, Binghamton University The Rise of Process Rationality in Modern Law: A Comparative Perspective. Wolf Heydebrand, New York University Discussion: Elizabeth Heger Boyle, University of Minnesota

Post-Meeting Activities 2000-01 ASA Council—Thursday, August 17, 8:30 a.m.-1:00 p.m.—Hilton Washington, Hemisphere

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