PRELIMINARY PROGRAM (as of 5/12/2016) This document is subject to change. Any changes made will be made to the online program.

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PRELIMINARY PROGRAM (as of 5/12/2016) This document is subject to change. Any changes made will be made to the online program. Friday, August 19 8:00 am Meetings Alpha Kappa Delta (AKD) Council Meeting (Bethany Titus) Association of Black Sociologists (ABS) (Earl Wright) Department Chairs Conference. Studying Sociology / Doing Sociology: Connecting the Dots to Meaningful Employment Outcomes for Majors North American Chinese Sociologists Association (Xiaoling Shu) 8:30 am Meetings Gender, Science and Organizations Writing Workshop (Laura Hirshfield) Orientation for 1st Year Minority Fellowship Program (MFP) Fellows Program for the International Assessment of Adult Competencies Mini-Conference (Lindsey Wilkinson) Section on Teaching and Learning Pre-conference Workshop: The Relevant Syllabus, Interating Current Events into Our Classes (Melinda Messineo) 9:00 am Meetings Group Processes ( David Melamed) Joint Pre-conference: Section on Sociology of Mathematics; Section on Rationality and Society; Japanese Association for Mathematical Sociology (Douglas Heckathorn) Mind, Self and Society (Lauren Langman) 10:00 am Sessions 1. Course. Reframing Immigration and Immigration Reform: A Workshop on Strategic Communications (presented by The Frameworks Institute) Session Organizer and Leader: Moira E. O'Neil, FrameWorks Institute Co-Leader: Marisa Gerstein Pineau, The Framewords Institute The American Immigration Council has noted, study after study has shown that commonsense immigration reform will strengthen the economy, spur innovation, reduce the deficit and increase U.S. trade and exports. Yet, current public discourse is highly divisive, policy change elusive and expert knowledge about immigration is drowned out or ignored. To address the need for meaningful, productive conversations that lead to strong public support for immigration and immigration reform, immigration experts joined forces with communications experts to explore what Americans know about immigration, how this knowledge base differs from what experts would like them to know, and what communications techniques can be leveraged to build support for adopting and implementing meaningful solutions. With funding from the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, the FrameWorks Institute conducted a series of studies to develop communications strategies, tools, and techniques that researchers can use to translate the growing body of research on immigration and immigration reform to members of the public and policymakers. In this interactive workshop, participants will learn the research base that informs the framing recommendations and will include ample opportunities for participants to begin to apply them to translate their own research to non-academic audiences. Through this workshop, participants will learn to recognize problematic and optimal framing strategies, get practice in deconstructing and reconstructing communications around an important social issue, and explore the potential of a shared communications strategy in building issue coalitions and informing public policy. 2. Course. Creating Opportunities for Student- Facilitated Discussions in the Classroom and the Broader Community Session Organizer and Leader: Suzanne R. Goodney Lea, Interactivity Foundation During courses that use the IF model, students connect and bond more with fellow students particularly those from different backgrounds both inside and outside of class. Faculty, too, come to see and connect with students in more meaningful ways as they have a chance to really hear where students are coming from and to connect with them as mentors/coaches. During this intensive workshop, you will learn the IF method by doing/using it, with feedback as we go along on best practices. You will have time to think about how it might fit into one of your classes, and you will be ready to hit the ground running should you decide to use it even in a Fall 2016 course. There will be lots of time for questions, and you will receive unlimited access to IF s wide range of teaching support materials, student guides, rubrics, policy reports, and even a guide for using our discussions in online forums/classes. We will also support you via phone/email consultation once you return to campus so that you can truly adapt this method to your particular class(es). We look forward to spending an engaging day with you! 3. Course. MAXQDA 12 for Windows and Mac Qualitative Data Analysis (QDA) Software Training Session Organizer and Leader: Neville Li, MAXQDA Introduction: MAXQDA is a powerful qualitative data analysis software program used by researchers in education, government, NGOs and the commercial sector worldwide. In this workshop, we will learn the key functions of the software. Learning will be interactive and hands-on with sufficient time for participants to practice. Participants can walk out the classroom and start using MAXQDA in their projects right away! Learning objectives: 1. To identify what MAXQDA is and how it is different from other QDA software; 2. To learn the basic functions of MAXQDA including creating a project, coding, using visual tools, conducting text retrieval, and creating models for presentations and team meetings; 3. To interact in a hands-on learning environment and be able to use MAXQDA in your own projects right after the class. Technical requirements: Students will need to come with a laptop with MAXQDA version 12 already installed. It can be a purchased full license or a 30-day free trial downloaded from the company s website. This class is for MAXQDA for Windows AND Mac and is designed for the beginner and intermediate level. Outline I. Introduction to MAXQDA II. Coding III. Other useful tools IV. Variables V. Modeling - Using MAXMaps to visualize your data VI. Data Analysis and Exploration VII. Mixed Methods Analysis VIII. MAXDictio for quantitative content analysis IX. Practice exercises/mini-test X. Questions & Answers 4. Course. Qualitative Comparative Analysis and Fuzzy Sets Session Organizer and Leader: Charles C. Ragin, of California-Irvine The analytic challenge of case-oriented research is not simply that the number of cases is small, but that researchers gain useful in-depth knowledge of cases that is difficult to represent using conventional forms (e.g., representations that emphasize the net effects of independent variables ). The researcher is left wondering how to

represent knowledge of cases in a way that is meaningful and compact, but which also does not deny case complexity. Set-theoretic methods such as Qualitative Comparative Analysis (QCA), the central focus of this workshop, offer a solution. QCA is fundamentally a case-oriented method that can be applied to small-to-moderate size Ns. It is most useful when researchers have knowledge of each case included in an investigation, there is a relatively small number of such cases (e.g., 10-50), and the investigator seeks to compare cases as configurations. With these methods it is possible to construct representations of crosscase patterns that allow for substantial heterogeneity and diversity. This workshop offers an introduction to the approach and to the use of the software package fsqca (a free download from www.fsqca.com). Both the crisp (i.e., Boolean) and fuzzy-set versions of the method will be presented. Fuzzy set analysis is gaining popularity in the social sciences today because of the close connections it enables among verbal theory, substantive knowledge (especially in the assessment of degree of set membership), and the analysis of empirical evidence. Fuzzy sets are especially useful in case-oriented research, where the investigator has a degree of familiarity with the cases included in the investigation and seeks to understand cases configurationally as specific combinations of aspects or elements. Using fuzzy-set methods, case outcomes can be examined in ways that allow for causal complexity, where different combinations of causally relevant conditions combine to generate the outcome in question. Also, with set-theoretic methods it is a possible to evaluate arguments that causal conditions are necessary or sufficient. Analyses of this type are outside the scope of conventional analytic methods. Specific topics addressed in the course include: the differences between set-theoretic and correlational methods; conventional crisp sets versus fuzzy sets; the calibration of fuzzy sets; how calibration differs from conventional forms of measurement; analyzing fuzzy set relations; the correspondence between concepts and fuzzy set membership scores; the correspondence between theoretical statements and the analysis of fuzzy set relations; using fuzzy sets to study cases as configurations; and using fuzzy sets to unravel causal complexity, with a special focus on equifinality. 12:00 pm Sessions 5. ASA Social Media Preconference Session Organizers and Leaders: Dustin Kidd, Temple and Tressie Cottom, Virginia Commonwealth The 2016 Annual Meeting will offer a special pre-conference aimed at increasing knowledge of social media and strategies for using these tools in sociological work. The Social Media Pre-conference is organized by Tressie McMillan Cottom (Virginia Commonwealth ) and Dustin Kidd (Temple ). The Pre-conference will take place on Friday, August 19 as part of the pre-convention program activities, at a charge of $50.00 to registered attendees of the Annual Meeting. Those interested in attending must register in order to reserve their space. Topics covered include: Creating a social media strategy Twitter for Academics Framing Social Research on Social Media Social Media Techniques for the Classroom 1:30 pm Meetings Directors of Graduate Studies Conference. Excellence in Graduate Student Teacher Training: Practical Insights for Graduate Programs and Their Leaders 1:30 pm Sessions 6. Course 6. Incorporating American Community Survey and US Census Data into Undergraduate Courses Session Organizer: William H. Frey, Brookings Institution Leader: John Paul DeWitt, of Michigan Co-Leaders: Jill Bouma, Berea College Katherine R. Rowell, Sinclair Community College Esther Isabelle Wilder, Lehman College This course will focus on how professors can integrate analyses of U.S. Census and American Community Survey (ACS) data in relevant, user-friendly ways in such courses as Intro Sociology, Social Problems, Stratification, Race Relations, the Family, Sociology of Aging, Population, and more. Adding data analysis to substantive undergraduate sociology courses supports the American Sociological Association initiatives to introduce students to data "early and often throughout the curriculum. This course will introduce resources available for integrating data analysis into a wide range of sociology course subjects and levels. Participants will learn about the Social Science Data Analysis Network (SSDAN) directed by Professor Frey at the of Michigan. The course will begin with an overview of the SSDAN project and data analysis materials. Brief tutorials on the easy-to-use software tools will follow, with examples drawn from existing U.S. Census and ACS access tools. In a hands-on session, two person teams will play the role of students and conduct analyses of pre-tailored 1950-2010 Census, and 2010 ACS data. 2:00 pm Meetings Association of Korean Sociologists in America (AKSA) (Hyeyoung Woo) 2:00 pm Sessions 7. Course. Reframing Immigration and Immigration Reform: A Workshop on Strategic Communications (presented by The Frameworks Institute) Session Organizer and Leader: Moira E. O'Neil, FrameWorks Institute Co-Leader: Marisa Gerstein Pineau, The Framewords Institute The American Immigration Council has noted, study after study has shown that commonsense immigration reform will strengthen the economy, spur innovation, reduce the deficit and increase U.S. trade and exports. Yet, current public discourse is highly divisive, policy change elusive and expert knowledge about immigration is drowned out or ignored. To address the need for meaningful, productive conversations that lead to strong public support for immigration and immigration reform, immigration experts joined forces with communications experts to explore what Americans know about immigration, how this knowledge base differs from what experts would like them to know, and what communications techniques can be leveraged to build support for adopting and implementing meaningful solutions. With funding from the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, the FrameWorks Institute conducted a series of studies to develop communications strategies, tools, and techniques that researchers can use to translate the growing body of research on immigration and immigration reform to members of the public and policymakers. In this interactive workshop, participants will learn the research base that informs the framing recommendations and will include ample opportunities for participants to begin to apply them to translate their own research to non-academic audiences. Through this workshop, participants will learn to recognize problematic and optimal framing strategies, get practice in deconstructing and reconstructing communications around an important social issue, and explore the potential of a shared communications strategy in building issue coalitions and informing public policy. 4:00 pm Meetings Honors Program Orientation 7:00 pm Sessions 8. Opening Plenary. Beyond the Battle of Seattle

Session Organizer and Presider: Ruth Milkman, CUNY Graduate Center Panelists: Walden Bello, of Philippines, Diliman Amy Goodman, Democracy Now Kshama Sawant, Seattle City Council In November 1999, the city of Seattle was the site of massive protests against the World Trade Organization, during its meeting there, an event that became known as the "Battle of Seattle." More recently, Seattle has emerged as one of the nation's most dynamic cities, and one that is unusually progressive. The city's voters elected an avowed Socialist to its City Council and led the nation in the "Fight for 15," an effort to raise the minimum wage to $15 per hour. Panelists will reflect on the Battle of Seattle and its legacy, as well as on recent developments in the city. 9:00 pm Meetings Welcome Reception

PRELIMINARY PROGRAM (as of 5/12/2016) This document is subject to change. Any changes made will be made to the online program. Saturday, August 20 The length of each daytime session/meeting activity is one hour and forty minutes, unless noted otherwise. The usual turnover is as follows: 8:30am-10:10am 10:30am-12:10pm 12:30pm-2:10pm 2:30pm-4:10pm 4:30pm-6:10pm 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. 7:00 am Meetings Section on Labor and Labor Movements Council Meeting Section on Sociology of Culture Council Meeting 8:30 am Meetings 2017 Public Understanding of Sociology Award Selection Committee ASA Code of Ethics Revision Committee Committee on Nominations Current Minority Fellowship Program (MFP) Fellows Fund for the Advancement of the Discipline (FAD) Advisory Panel Honors Program Kickoff Journal of Health and Social Behavior Editorial Board Rose Series in Sociology Editorial Board Social Psychology Quarterly Editorial Board Sociological Theory Editorial Board 8:30 am Sessions 9. Thematic Session. Right-Wing Movements and Inequality: Looking to the Future Session Organizer and Presider: Rory M. McVeigh, of Notre Dame Panelists: Kathleen M. Blee, of Pittsburgh Mabel Berezin, Cornell Christopher Parker, of Washington Discussant: Rory M. McVeigh, of Notre Dame A wave of progressive social movement activism beginning in the 1960s helped to reduce various types of social inequalities. The spread of progressive activism also attracted the attention of sociologists and other social scientists, creating a vibrant research field as scholars sought to better understand the emergence of social movements as well as the determinants of their successes and failures. In recent decades we have observed increases in conservative or rightwing activism, with many right-wing movements borrowing organizational forms and tactics previously employed by progressive counterparts. While social scientists were somewhat late in turning their attention to right-wing movements, that has begun to change. Our knowledge of conservative activism has grown substantially in recent years. In this session, scholars who have expertise pertaining to different types of right-wing movements will draw upon their past research to project into the future. While the wave of progressive activism has contributed to social equality in areas such as civil rights, LGBT rights, and gender equality, is there reason to expect that in the years ahead right-wing movements will experience success in rolling back gains that progressive movements have achieved, and exacerbating ongoing inequalities and injustices? Presentations by leading scholars will be followed by an open discussion of the future of right-wing activism. 10. Thematic Session. Urban Protest in the Global South Session Organizer: Ann Mische, of Notre Dame Panelists: Patrick G. Heller, Brown Ann Mische, of Notre Dame Zeynep Tufekci, of North Carolina Discussant: Gay W. Seidman, of Wisconsin- Madison In the past half-decade, the world has seen an expansive wave of global protest, triggered by a combination of economic and political grievances that include austerity measures, unemployment, inequality, precarious public services, authoritarianism, corruption, police violence and state repression. Economic demands have been interwoven, in varying proportions, with challenges to political leadership and institutions and calls for the expansion of electoral and participatory democracy. Many of these protests have taken on a specifically urban dimension, occupying public squares and avenues while raising issues of access to and mobility in urban space. At the same time, the protests have relied heavily on new social media technologies, which have linked these protests together in a transnational public arena. This panel will explore the political, economic and social dimensions of these protests, with a focus on movements in the global South (broadly understood). We will feature panelists who are currently studying the recent protests in India, Brazil, and Turkey, putting these in comparative perspective with protests in other parts of the world. 11. Author Meets Critics Session. Do-It-Yourself Democracy: The Rise of the Public Engagement Industry (Oxford Press, 2015) by Caroline W. Lee Session Organizer: David S. Meyer, of California, Irvine Critics: Nina Eliasoph, Southern California William D. Hoynes, Vassar College Philip George Lewin, Florida Atlantic Gianpaolo Baiocchi, NYU Author: Caroline W. Lee, Lafayette College 12. Professional Development Workshop. Writing for Contexts. And the World Session Organizer: Syed Ali, Long Island Leaders: Syed Ali, Long Island Philip N. Cohen, of Maryland, College Park Panelists: Letta Page, Contexts Magazine Joshua Aaron Page, of Minnesota Ilene Kalish, New York Press Dana R. Fisher, of Maryland Writing for the broader public is a skill many sociologists haven't developed. The editors of Contexts and others on the panel will try to help. We'll give you our take on how to write for a broader audience,

starting with how to write for Contexts. Others on the panel who have written for Contexts and the popular media will also help explain how to translate your academic research for the world. 13. Policy and Research Workshop. European Research Council: Funding for U.S. Sociologists (and Elsewhere!) Willing to Explore Ideas or Territories Never Explored Before Session Organizer and Leader: Lionel Thelen, European Research Council In Turbulent Times not only banks, institutions, companies or even countries are under pressure but also individuals and, among them, researchers. Studying crisis times can be of the utmost interest for social sciences in general and for sociology in particular. Unfortunately another feature of our hectic times are, in US and in various countries worldwide, financial difficulties to make ends meet as well as limited budgets for universities, research centres and, subsequently, frequent cuts in social sciences research funding. Taking the exact opposite position, the ERC funding capability increases each year and the part of the budget devoted to social sciences has been bettered from 2015 onwards. With funding up to 3.75 million $ for a 5 year project, the ERC has become in less than 8 years one of the major funding bodies worldwide and certainly the most generous for Social Sciences and Humanities. What do the ERC schemes have to offer to sociologists? How to get started with an application? How to increase your chances to get funding? What are the main hitches to avoid? These are all relevant questions that will be raised during this workshop. Do not hesitate to bring yours! This session is opened to all sociologists aiming to design and lead to their good end ground-breaking research projects. The presentations will be done by ERC Scientific Staff as well as by Grantees and Panel Evaluators. Each presentation will be followed by a Q&A session and presenters will of course be available during the whole duration of the Conference to answer your queries. Flyers, reports and publications will be available to help you inasmuch as possible, not forgetting, last but not least, our website: http://erc.europa.eu/ 14. Regular Session. Biosociology/Biosocial Interaction Session Organizer: Dalton Conley, Princeton Economic Hardship and Biological Weathering: The Epigenetics of Aging in a Sample of Black Women. Ronald L. Simons, of Georgia; Man Kit Lei, The of Georgia; Leslie Gordon Simons, of Georgia Opportunities and Challenges of Big Data for the Social Sciences: The Case of Genomic Data. Hexuan Liu, The of NC at Chapel Hill; Guang Guo, of North Carolina The Role of the Retirement Environment in Shaping the Genetics of Cognitive Decline. Robbee Wedow, of Colorado at Boulder; Benjamin Domingue, Stanford ; Jason D. Boardman, of Colorado; Andrea Tilstra, of Colorado - Boulder The Effect of Birth Weight on Behavioral Problems: New Evidence from Monozygotic Twins. Stine Moellegaard, of Copenhagen, Dept. of Sociology 15. Regular Session. Care Work/Caring Labor Session Organizer: Jennifer Fish, Old Dominion Presider: Jennifer Fish, Old Dominion Care as Violence: A Feminist Disability Analysis of Home Care and Long-term Care Workers. Christine Kelly, of Manitoba Caring off the Clock: Cape Verdean Eldercare Workers from Praia to Lisbon. Celeste Curington, of Massachusetts-Amherst Colonial Domesticity: Law and Democracy for Peruvian Household Workers. Katherine Maich, of California, Berkeley Gender, Nativity and Race in Care Work: The More Things Change. Monica Boyd, of Toronto; Naomi Lightman, of Toronto People with Disabilities as Elder Care Providers in the United States. Carrie L. Shandra, State of New York at Stony Brook; Anna Penner, of California, Irvine 16. Regular Session. Collective Memory 1: Analytical Tools Session Organizer: Christina Simko, Williams College Presider: Christina Simko, Williams College Nostalgia as an Analytical Tool applied to Turkey's Relationship with its Past. Yagmur Karakaya, of Minnesota Narratives, Causality, and Boredom: Comparing the Holocaust to Apartheid in South African History Classrooms. Chana Teeger, of Johannesburg Divided Memory and the New Cold War Thesis: Rise and Decline of a Double-edged Analogy. Jeremy Brooke Straughn, Westminster College; Lisa Fein, Westminster College, MO Class: A Forgotten Factor in Collective Memory. Bin Xu, Florida International Discussant: Thomas DeGloma, Hunter College, CUNY 17. Regular Session. Comparative Ethnography of Power Session Organizer: Ching Kwan Lee, UCLA Presider: Ching Kwan Lee, UCLA Explaining Evictions: The Politics of Representation and Recognition in Post-Apartheid Land Occupations. Zachary Levenson, of California-Berkeley Making Democracy Real: Participatory Governance in Urban Latin America. Gabriel Hetland, at Albany Partnering with the Strong but Blind State: How Civic Associations Co-create Policy during ACA Implemention. Josh Pacewicz, Brown Settling Dismissal Grievances Under Socialism and Neoliberalism in Chile. Cesar F. Rosado Marzan, Illinois Institute of Technology Wormholing, Deep-diving, and Disappearing: Immersive, Techno-mediated Experience among Routine, Creative Industry Workers. Michael L. Siciliano, of California Los Angeles Discussant: Javier Auyero, UT 18. Regular Session. Environmental Policy

Session Organizer: Beth Schaefer Caniglia, Oklahoma State Disclosure Conflicts: Crude Oil Trains, Frack Chemicals, and the Politics of Transparency. Abby J. Kinchy, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute; Guy Schaffer, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute; Wynne Hedlesky, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Rethinking the Legislative Process: "Buffering Opportunities" as Limits of Social Movement Influence in Environmental Policymaking. Joshua A. Basseches, Northwestern The Sticky Science of Non-Stick Chemicals: Forty Years of Research and (In)Action on Fluorinated Compounds. Lauren Richter, Northeastern The World Bank and Organized Hypocrisy? A Crossnational Analysis of Structural Adjustment and Forest Loss. John M Shandra, Stony Brook ; Heidi E. Rademacher, STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK Stony Brook; Carolyn R. Coburn, STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK at Stony Brook 19. Regular Session. Family and Kinship 1: Global Issues and Migration Session Organizer: Michelle Y. Janning, Whitman College Presider: Michelle Y. Janning, Whitman College Co-residence with Grandparents: Does it Help Migrant Children in China? Yifan Bai, Controlling the Home: Ownership And Household Structure in Four Post-Soviet Countries. Nadina Lauren Anderson, of Arizona; Jane R. Zavisca, of Arizona; Theodore P. Gerber, of Wisconsin-Madison Emotional Kinscripting: Managing Emotions in Asian Immigrant Families. Angie Y. Chung, at Albany The Romantic Career: Partner Choice and Interracial Couples in Los Angeles and Rio de Janeiro. Chinyere Osuji, Rutgers at Camden Understanding Variations in Parental Advice and Interest: Educational Differences Between Parents and Adult Children. Brett Ory, Erasmus Rotterdam; Renske Keizer, Erasmus Rotterdam; Pearl A. Dykstra, Erasmus Rotterdam 20. Regular Session. Fertility Session Organizer: Lauren Jade Martin, Penn State, Berks Presider: Katherine M. Johnson, Tulane Family Policies and Working Women s Fertility Intentions in South Korea. Seung-won Choi, Michigan State ; Aggie Jooyoung Noah, Pennsylvania State ; Tse-Chuan Yang, at Albany, STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK Plantations and Parasites: Development, Disease, and Fertility Differentials in the Early Twentieth Century American South. Cheryl Elman, The of Akron; Robert A. McGuire, Department of Economics, of Akron; Andrew S. London, Syracuse Revisit the Birth Control Policies in China: Trends in Age at First Birth during Fertility Transition. Menghan Zhao, of Pennsylvania; Hans-Peter Kohler, of Pennsylvania The Surprising Decline in the Non-marital Fertility Rate: Description and Preliminary Explanation. Daniel J. Schneider, UC Berkeley; Alison Gemmill, of California, Berkeley Who Matters: Intervening Factors Affecting Unintended Pregnancy. Jaspreet Kaur, Loyola Chicago; Andrea Bertotti Metoyer, Gonzaga 21. Regular Session. Gender, Work, and Overwork Session Organizer: Allison Pugh, of Virginia Presider: Sarah Elizabeth Mosseri, of Virginia Misconceiving Merit: Consequences of the Work Devotion Schema in Academic Science and Engineering. Mary Blair-Loy, Univ. California-San Diego; Erin A. Cech, Rice Equality in Misery: The Shared Emotional Consequences of Everwork Among Women and Men. Alison Wynn, Stanford Men s Work Pathways and Physical and Mental Health at Midlife*. Adrianne Frech, of Akron; Sarah Damaske, The Pennsylvania State Gendered Discourses of Work-family Balance: The Limitations of Voluntary Corporate Policy. Christine L. Williams, of Texas at Austin Discussant: Erin Kelly, MIT Sloan School of Management 22. Regular Session. Internet and Society Session Organizer: Jenny L. Davis, James Madison Presider: PJ Rey, of Maryland Bottom-up Jurisprudence: Enactment of Wikipedia s Notability Guideline. Shing-Chung Jonathan Yam, The Chinese of Hong Kong Dying and Mourning in the Twittersphere. Nina Lyn Cesare, of Washington; Jennifer Lynn Branstad, of Washington Pierre Bourdieu as Theorist of the Digital. Gabe Ignatow, of North Texas; Laura Robinson, Santa Clara Social Media and Offline Conversation: Putting Political Discussion in Context. Keith N. Hampton, Michigan State ; Inyoung Shin, Rutgers ; Weixu Lu, Rutgers Taking it to Twitter: Countering State-sanctioned Violence. Latoya Lee, STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK Binghamton The Emotional Costs of Computers: An Expectancyvalue Theory Analysis of Young Students STEM Attitudes. Christopher Ball, Michigan State ; Kuo-Ting Huang, Michigan State

; RV Rikard, Michigan State ; Shelia R. Cotten, Michigan State Discussant: PJ Rey, of Maryland 23. Regular Session. Latino/as Session Organizer: Ed A. Munoz, of Utah Presider: Nilda Flores-Gonzalez, of Illinois- Chicago Latinos Need to Stay in Their Place: Contemporary Latino Segregation. Celia Olivia Lacayo, UCLA Linking Immigration and Terrorism in the Post 9/11 Era. Luis Romero, The of Texas at Austin; Amina Zarrugh, of Texas at Austin Numbers, Narratives, and Nation: Media Representations of U.S. Latino Population Growth in the Census, 1990-2010. Eileen Diaz McConnell, Arizona State Queering Mestizaje and the Notion of Choice in Racial Identity Formation. Adriana Nunez, of Colorado Sofía Vergara in U.S. Media - On Representations of Latinidad. Salvador Vidal-Ortiz, American 24. Regular Session. Marriage, Civil Unions, and Cohabitation Session Organizer: Susan L. Brown, Bowling Green State Cohort Differences and the Marriage Premium: Emergence of Gender-Neutral Household Specialization Effects. Misun Lim, of Massachusetts Amherst; Michelle J. Budig, of Massachusetts Estimating the Effect of Student Loan Debt on Timing of Marriage among Race/Ethnic Groups. Stella Min, Florida State ; Miles G. Taylor, Florida State Educational Assortative Mating and Income Dynamics in Couples: A Longitudinal and Dyadic Perspective. Yue Qian, Ohio State Cross-national Differences in Married and Cohabiting Couples' Income Organization. Joanna Pepin, of Maryland Men s and Women s Marriage and Cohabitation Earnings Gaps in Comparative Perspective. Claudia Geist, of Utah 25. Regular Session. Microsociologies Session Organizer: Gabrielle Raley, Knox College Presider: Gabrielle Raley, Knox College Going Out: Situated Outings and the Life of Public Parks. Michael DeLand, Yale; David Trouille, James Madison Just Let People be People: Intoxication and a Social Ecology of Work in a Public Marketplace. Laura A. Orrico, Pomona College The Interactional Geometry of Microaggressions. Michael E. Bare, of Chicago Balancing Creative Ambition and Profit: An Ethnography of Great jobs and Good Enough Jobs. Laura E. Noren, New York 26. Regular Session. Religious Vitality and Threat Session Organizer: Amy D. McDowell, of Mississippi Presider: Amy D. McDowell, of Mississippi Shifting Alliances and Opponents: Abortion, Mainline Protestants, and Religious Restructuring since 1960. Sabrina Danielsen, Creighton Gay Seouls: Religious Spaces for Sexual Minorities in South Korea. Gowoon Jung, at Albany, STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK; Joseph E. Yi, Hanyang Doing Boundary Work as an Inclusive Group: A Qualitative Study of a Liberal Congregation. Laura Krull, of North Carolina at Chapel Hill We re All in This Together: Sub-Cultural Identity in a Fundamentalist Christian Church. Lindsay Wood Glassman, of Pennsylvania Seeing is (Not) Believing: Longitudinal Effects of Viewing Pornography on Personal Religiosity. Samuel L. Perry, of Oklahoma 27. Regular Session. Social Deminsions of AIDS Session Organizer: Samuel R. Friedman, Natl. Development & Research Inst. Presider: Brooke S. West, of California San Diego Social Neighborhoods and HIV transmission risk. David C. Bell, Indiana -Purdue Indianapolis From Workers to Entrepreneurs: Articulating Femininity in Indian Sex Worker Activism. Gowri Vijayakumar, UC Berkeley Community Organizations and Rights: Women Sex Workers and HIV/AIDS in Karnataka, India. Mangala Subramaniam, Purdue ; Jenean Cox, Purdue Thinking Critically about HIV Prevention for Gay and Bisexual Men. Barry D. Adam, of Windsor Discussant: Claire Laurier Decoteau, of Illinois, Chicago 28. Regular Session. Sociology of Higher Education. Varied Choices and Unequal Outcomes among Post-Secondary Students Session Organizer: Amy J. Binder, of California, San Diego Presider: Kelly J. Nielsen, of California-San Diego College Mismatch and Socioeconomic Stratification and Intergenerational Mobility for Whites, Blacks, and Hispanics. Jordan Andrew Conwell, Northwestern ; Mary E. Pattillo, Northwestern Postsecondary Curricular Trajectories: Trends, Outcomes, and New Directions. Christina Ciocca, Columbia Race/Ethnic Differences in How Living at Home during College Affects Postsecondary Trajectories. Amy Gill

Langenkamp, of Notre Dame; Nicole Perez, of Notre Dame; Andrew Hoyt, of Notre Dame Class Inequality among College Graduates. Dirk Witteveen, ; Paul A. Attewell, CUNY, Graduate Center Discussant: Jennie E. Brand, of California - Los Angeles 29. Regular Session. Sociology of Knowledge Session Organizer: Annulla Linders, of Cincinnati Presider: Annulla Linders, of Cincinnati Discourse Analysis of Cultural Competence in the Journal of the American Medical Association. Cirila Estela Vasquez Guzman, of New Mexico Expert Knowledge Production of Cell-Free Fetal DNA Screening Tests. Aleksa Owen, of Illinois at Chicago Wounded Healing with Provisos: Doctors Illness Experiences as Ambiguous Assets in Medical Communication. Hwa-Yen Huang, Rutgers Who's to Say: Dissent, Disagreement, and Professional Uncertainty in Book Reviewing. Phillipa K Chong, McMaster Discussant: Kelly Moore, Loyola Chicago 30. Section on Aging and the Life Course Paper Session. Life Course Research and Social Policy Session Organizer: Madonna Harrington Meyer, Syracuse Presider: Madonna Harrington Meyer, Syracuse Exploring Life Course and Network Mechanisms Underlying Prison-based Therapeutic Communities. Derek A. Kreager, Pennsylvania State ; Dana L. Haynie, Ohio State ; David R. Schaefer, Arizona State ; Jacob T.N. Young, Arizona State ; Martin Bouchard, Simon Fraser ; Michaela Soyer, Pennsylvania State School Wellness Policies and Adolescent Obesity: An Ecological Study. Rebecca L. Utz, of Utah Stratified Care and Aging: State Austerity and the Rise of Immigrant Filipina Entrepreneurship. Jennifer Nazareno, Brown The Forgotten Generation: Public Health, HIV/AIDS, and the Elderly. Robin D. Moremen, Northern Illinois Transitions, Trajectories and the Role of Activation Policies for Young People. Margherita Bussi, of Brighton Discussant: Jacqueline L. Angel, of Texas at Austin 31. Section on Asia and Asian America Paper Session. Social Change and Resistance in Asia and Asian America Session Organizer: Jennifer Jihye Chun, of Toronto A Theory of Immigrant Political Incorporation: Hmong Americans Movement against Welfare Reforms. Yang Sao Xiong, of Wisconsin-Madison From Labor Commodification to Land Dispossession: The Changing Foundations of Chinese Development, 1978 to present. Julia Chuang, Boston College Making and Remaking Gentrification: The Case of Korea Re-inventing Commercial Tenants as Activists Against Gentrification. Yewon Andrea Lee, Weapons of the Weak Soldiers: Military Masculinity and Embodied Resistance in Taiwanese Conscription. Ying-Chao Kao, Rutgers 32. Section on Children and Youth Paper Session. Civic Participation among Minority and Immigrant Youth Session Organizer: Veronica Terriquez, UC Santa Cruz Presider: May Lin, of Southern California A Safe Place to Go: Latina/o Youth and Parents and Politically Minded Community Organizations. Melanie Jones Gast, of Louisville; Dina G. Okamoto, Indiana Institutions, Policy, and Resilience: Educational Trajectories of Undocumented Students in Boston and North Carolina. Alessandra Bazo Vienrich, of Massachusetts Boston Commemorative and Civic Participation in the 21st century: a Comparison across Generations and Ethnic Origin. Manja Coopmans, Utrecht ; Duane F. Alwin, Pennsylvania State Univ. Discussant: Hyeyoung Kwon, Indiana 33. Section on Crime, Law, and Deviance Roundtable Session and Business Meeting. 8:30-9:30am, Roundtables: Session Organizer: April Fernandes, of Washington Table 1. Punishment and Incarceration 1 Table Presider: Meghan Dawe, of Toronto Conservative Politics, Sacred Cows, and Sacrificial Lambs: The Role of Evidence During Canada s Prison Farm Closures. Meghan Dawe, of Toronto; Phil Goodman, of Toronto Development of a Prison Aggression Perception Scale. Aimee Lauren Peyton-Greene, of Washington Tacoma Indigenous Incarceration, State Policy and Gang Formation. Tracey Kathleen MciNtosh, Of Auckland On the Fringes: Female Prisoners in Ukraine, are They Unique? Marianna A. Klochko, The Ohio State ; Alexey Serdyuk, Kharkiv National

of Internal Affairs, Kharkiv, Ukraine Table 2. Punishment and Incarceration 2 Table Presider: Michael T. Light, Purdue Short-term Immigration-related Detention and the Role of the State. Guillermo R. Cantor, American Immigration Council Deadbeat Dads or Debtor s Prison? Jailing for Child Support Nonpayment. Elizabeth Cozzolino, of Texas at Austin How Many Lives Does Incarceration Actually Save? Accounting for Infant Mortality in the Incarceration Ledger. Michael T. Light, Purdue ; Joey Marshall, Purdue The Racial Politics of Mass Incarceration. Adaner Usmani, New York ; John J Clegg, NYU Parental Incarceration and Child Well-Being: A Methodological and Theoretical Critique of Propensity Score Analysis. Jennifer Ellen Copp, Bowling Green State ; Peggy C. Giordano, Bowling Green State ; Wendy Diane Manning, Bowling Green State ; Monica A. Longmore, Bowling Green State Univ Table 3. Schools, Education and Violence Table Presider: Nayan Ramirez, The Pennsylvania State Communication, Structure, and Equality in Peacemaking Circles: An Evaluation of Power in Peace Circles Boston. Lauren Ann Cripps, of Massachusetts, Boston Delinquency, Drinking, and Academic Success: A Test of Subculture Theory. Nayan Ramirez, The Pennsylvania State ; Douglas Baals, The Pennsylvania State Table 4. Communities, Institutions and Violence Table Presider: Katie E. Corcoran, West Virginia Age, Commitment to Neighborhood, and Perceptions of Collective Efficacy. Wes Jeffrey, Brigham Young ; Benjamin G. Gibbs, Brigham Young Cross-national Criminal Victimization: Confronting the Neglected Regional Effects. Katie E. Corcoran, West Virginia ; Rodney Stark, Baylor Neighborhood Destabilization, Foreclosure, and Crime in Portland, Oregon. Alana Rose Inlow, Perceptions of the Police and Fear of Crime: The Compensatory Role of Neighboring. Seth Alan Williams, of California - Irvine The Growth of Chinese Think Tanks and the Question of Crime. Kevin John McCaffree, Indiana -Purdue, Fort Wayne Table 5. Children, Youth and Violence 1 Table Presider: Brielle Eileen Bryan, Harvard Crimes Against Innocence: How American Prosecutors Theorize Vulnerability in Child Sexual Abuse Cases. Jamie L Small, of Michigan Do Hurt Girls Run Differently? Analyzing Maltreatment, Runaway Behavior, and Gender Among Juvenile Offenders. Micah Johnson, of Florida; Melissa Bright, of Florida; Nancy Hardt, of Florida; Nathan Epps, Florida Department of Juvenile Justice Paternal Incarceration and Adolescent Social Network Disadvantage. Brielle Eileen Bryan, Harvard The Consequences of Adolescent Delinquent Behavior for Adult Employment Outcomes. Angela Carter, UC Davis Table 6. Procedures and Justice Table Presider: Caitlin Curry, of Arkansas Parole Revocations and Racial Disproportionality in Prison Admissions (1990-2009). Caitlin Curry, of Arkansas; Rodney L. Engen, of Arkansas Psychopathy in the Penal System: A Case of Medicalization? David Showalter, of California, Berkeley Sex, Lies, and Politics: Building a Sex Offender Law Reform Movement. Emily Horowitz, St. Francis College State Correctional Department Leaders and the Persistent Socio-legal Control of Consensual Prison Sex. Jay W. Borchert, of Michigan Table 7. Inequality and Crime 1 Table Presider: Anna Reosti, of Washington Getting to Know You: The Struggle Over Information in Welfare Fraud Control. Spencer Headworth, Northwestern Social Context and Sentencing Disparity Revisited: Effects of Race/Ethnicity and Skin Tone Across Court Communities. Noah Painter-Davis, ; Christopher J. Lyons, of New Mexico Tenant Screening and Fair Housing in the Information Age. Anna Reosti, of Washington The Racialization of Broken Windows. Jessica Rose Kalbfeld, New York Table 8. Inequality and Crime 2 Table Presider: Luis Daniel Gascón, of San Francisco Feminized Need and Racialized Risk: A Race, Class, Gender Comparison in a Midwestern Drug Court. Veronica L. Horowitz, of Minnesota; Teresa Gowan, of Minnesota No Experience Required: Violent Crime and Anticipated, Vicarious, and Experienced Racial Discrimination. Daniel E. Herda, Merrimack

College; Bill McCarthy, UC Davis The Effects of Socio-economic Development and Rate of Change on National Suicide Rates. Thoroddur Bjarnason, Unversity of Akureyri; Sylwia Piatkowska, Old Dominion Straight for the Gun: Understanding Gang Violence and Space Policing in South Los Angeles. Luis Daniel Gascón, of San Francisco Table 9. Inequality and Crime 3 Table Presider: Holly Nguyen, Contemporaneous Participation in Legal Employment and Income Generating Crime. Holly Nguyen, Ferguson and Beyond: A Theoretical and Empirical Assessment of How Race and Place Matter for Arrest. Lora A. Phillips, The Ohio State Gender, Board Diversity, and Corporate Crime: Specifying the Relationship between Informal and Formal Crime Control. Sally S. Simpson, of Maryland; Miranda Galvin, of Maryland; Gerald Martin, American ; Debra Shapiro, of Maryland; Christine M. Beckman, of Maryland Interrogating Staggolee: Investigating the Meanings of Hustling. Deirdre D. Caputo-Levine, Idaho State White Privilege in Black Markets: Gang Participation, Illegal Income, and Drug Markets. Takuma Kamada, Tohoku Table 10. Reentry and Recidivism Table Presider: Kate O'Neill, of Washington Beyond Litchfield: Examining The Role of Friendship in Women s Narratives of Community Re-Entry. Kaitlyn Dick, of Alberta Motivational Capital: Investigating Adherence to Prosocial Goals and Future Orientation as Protective Factors against Recidivism. Kate O'Neill, of Washington; Michael Hughes Esposito, of Washington; John Thomas Leverso, of Washington The Myth of Public Safety and Ceremony of Urban Governance: Prisoner Reentry and Neoinstitutionalism. Francis Bruce Prior, of Pennsylvania Table 11. Policing 1 Table Presider: Andrew Dawson, Glendon College, York Black and White? Police Department Racial Diversity and Black and White Men s Relative Arrest Likelihoods. Katharina Roesler, Stanford From copper to Steel: Police Militarization at the End of the 20th Century. Zach Patrick Baumgart, of Wisconsin - Madison Police Legitimacy and Homicide: A Macrocomparative Analysis. Andrew Dawson, Glendon College, York The Allocation of Police Resources and Practices in New York City, 1988-2001. David F. Greenberg, New York Table 12. Theoretical Criminology Table Presider: Xiaozhao Yousef Yang, Purdue Alienation, Anomie, and Strain: A Theoretical Analysis. Ekaterina Lytkina, Higher School of Economics, Laboratory for Comparative Social Research Separating Peer Association from Routine Activities: Friends, Motivation, Targets, and Guardians in Prostitution Patronage. Xiaozhao Yousef Yang, Purdue ; Jerry Chen, Purdue Unanswered Questions in Deterrence Theory: Crime- Specific Risk Updating and Behavioral Effects. Kyle Thomas, of Missouri-St. Louis; Benjamin Hamilton, of Missouri-St. Louis; Thomas A Loughran, of Maryland Table 13. Gender and Sexual Violence Table Presider: Brooke Wagner, Wittenberg Intimate Partner Violence and Controlling Behaviors: Women s Barriers of Contacting the Police. Tyrone Chiwai Cheng, of Alabama; Celia C. Lo, Texas Woman's Rape Myths and Victim Credibility: An Analysis of Sexual Assault Case Dispositions and UCR reports. Brooke M. Wagner, Wittenberg Instabilities and Private Suffering Within: Investigating Sexual Assault Kits in Medical and Legal Practice. Andrea Quinlan, Trent Precarious Masculinity and Rape Culture in Canadian Sport. Curtis A. Fogel, Lakehead Orillia Table 14. Substance Use Table Presider: Zachary Rowan, of Maryland An Evaluation of the Social Influences for Black and White Adolescent Substance Use. Zachary Rowan, of Maryland Gender, Criminological Theory, and College Student Substance Use. Matthew Grindal, of California, Riverside; Amanda Admire, of California, Riverside Marijuana Legalization and the Liminality of Deregulation. Alex Thompson, of Colorado Marijuana use at early midlife and the trajectories of social bonds. Xiaozhao Yousef Yang, Purdue Parental Immigration, Legal Status, and Children's Substance Use. Alyssa Howard-Tripp, Pennsylvania State ; Corina Graif, The Pennsylvania State

Table 15. Culture, Media, and Socialization Table Presider: Mari Kita, of Hawaii at Manoa Patriarchy as a Contextual and Gendered Pathway: A Qualitative Study of Iranian Women Offender. Nahid Rahimipour Anaraki, ; Dariush Boostani, of Kerman; Raziyeh Bahmayi, Social Sciences Department, Shahid Bahonar of Kerman, Kerman, Iran Religion in Civil Society: The Spatial Effects of Black Protestant Affiliation Rates on Crime. Robert A. Thomson, Baylor The Silent Cry: Societal Reactions to Crime and Family Members of Offenders in Japan. Mari Kita, of Hawaii at Manoa The Social Problem of Terrorism. Pat L. Lauderdale, ASU Political Ideology and Concerns about White-collar Crime: Exploring the Switch Hypothesis. Marshall Schmidt, The of Oklahoma; Amy Kroska, of Oklahoma Table 16. Policing 2 Table Presider: Carlos Felipe Bustamante, of California, Berkeley Trust in Police: A Comparative Study of Belgium and The Netherlands. Ozgur Solakoglu, U.S.-style Crime Control in Latin America: Adaptedimport through Limited State Capacities and Legacies of State Violence. Carlos Felipe Bustamante, of California, Berkeley Why is Corruption (Un)successful? A Comparative Event Structure Analysis of Australian and British Corrupt Police Networks. Ivan Aymaliev, Reactive Policing, Social Disorder, and Neighborhood Context. Jessica White Gillooly, of Michigan Table 17. Children, Youth, and Violence 2 Table Presider: Daniel Semenza, Emory Criminal Carrying: Predictors of Gun Possession during a Crime. Daniel Semenza, Emory Emerging Adulthood and the Age-Crime Curve: Does Delaying Young Adulthood Delay Desistance? Ty Miller, Purdue Trajectories of Criminal Offending: Does Timing of Transition into Parenthood Matter? Jessica Ziegler, Bowling Green State Table 18. Procedures and Justice 2 Table Presider: Allison Nobles, of Minnesota Risk-assessment tools in the U.S. Criminal Justice System: Construction, Diffusion, and Uses. Angele Christin, Data & Society Research Institute Somali Piracy and the Disappearance of Nexus in the Application of Universal Jurisdiction. Jeffrey T. Tirshfield, of California, San Diego The Emergence of Life Without Parole in Florida: Groundwork for a Penal State Case Study. Christopher Seeds, New York The Unintended Consequences of Protecting Women: How Minnesota Domestic Violence Law Constrains Women's Agency. Allison Nobles, of Minnesota 9:30-10:10am, Section on Crime, Law and Deviance Business Meeting 34. Section on Economic Sociology Paper Session. Money, Credit and Society Session Organizer: Bruce G. Carruthers, Northwestern Presider: Bruce G. Carruthers, Northwestern A Bitcoin s Worth: Talks of Money and Value at the Advent of Digital Currency. Lynette Shaw, of Washington Losing Their Way? Credit Unions Embrace of Marketbased Investment Practices. Marc Schneiberg, Reed College; Darci Kovacs, What is the Crowd Worth? The Role of Social Influence in Crowdfunding. Andreea Daniela Gorbatai, of California at Berkeley; Lucy Hu, Haas School of Business, UC Berkeley The Uses of Money and Moral Vhoices in Electronic Finance. Alex Preda, King's College London Household Financial Practices and Wealth Mobility in the Era of Mass-participatory Finance and Growing Inequality. Angelina Grigoryeva, Princeton 35. Section on Global and Transnational Sociology Paper Session. Negotiating Universal Standards and Norms in Local Contexts Session Organizer: Amy Adams Quark, College of William & Mary Presider: Amy Adams Quark, College of William & Mary At the Crossroads of Globalization: Universal Currency, and Metric Measures in 19th Century North America. Hector Vera, UNAM Feminicidio, Transnational Human Rights Advocacy and Transnational Legal Activism. Paulina Garcia del Moral, of Toronto Is There Ecological Reflexivity in Global Public Spheres? A Case Study of the Chinese Songhua. HAOYUE LI, STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK,Albany Microprocesses Of Norm Localization By Transnational Agents: Muslim Faith-Based NGOs and Liberal Civil Society. Zeynep Atalay, St. Mary's College of California Discussant: Jessica Epstein, Reed College 36. Section on Labor and Labor Movements Refereed Roundtables and Business Meeting 8:30-9:30am, Roundtables: Session Organizer: Nancy Plankey-Videla, Texas A&M

Table 1. Worker Cultures, Identities, and Prospects for Resistance Table Presider: Andrew Wolf, of Wisconsin- Madison A Framing Analysis of the CIO s Postwar Program and 1940s American Political Culture. Kristina Fuentes, Identity, Solidarity, Opposition: Dimensions of Resistance in Big-box Retail. Peter R. Ikeler, STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK College at Old Westbury The Fight to Globalize Labor: Transnational Labor, Free Trade Agreements, and International Law. Andrew Wolf, of Wisconsin-Madiosn The Determinants of Class Identity in Latin America: A Comparative Study of Argentina and Chile. Rodolfo Gaston Elbert, Instituto Gino Germani, Universidad de Buenos Aire; Pablo Perez- Ahumada, of California- San Diego Table 2. States, Workers, and Labor Movements: East Asian Context Table Presider: Sudarat Musikawong, Siena College Chinese and Ecuadorian Workers in China s Construction Project: Group Interactions and the Effect on Subordination. Ruijie Peng, of Texas at Austin From Political Enchantment to Legal Logic: A Discursive Analysis of Contentious Labor Politics in China. Xiuying Cheng, of California, Berkeley Seeing Ghosts: The Struggle for Thai Migrant Workers' Rights in South Korea. Sudarat Musikawong, Siena College Table 3. Social Movements and Labor Solidarity Table Presider: Lauren Contorno, Northeastern Bringing the KMU Back Into Labor Discussions. Kim Scipes, Purdue Northwest Foul Weather Friends: Short-Term and Intentionally Limited Coalitions. Amanda Pullum, Duke Turtles and Teamsters Revival? Analyzing Labor Unions Environmental Discourse from the 2014 People s Climate March. Lauren Contorno, Northeastern Table 4. Changing Employment Structrues and the Impacts on Workers Table Presider: Patrick Inglis, Grinnell College Geographical Panorama of the Stable Employment in México, 2005 to 2015. Yolanda Ornelas, Universidad de Guadalajara; Song Yang, of Arkansas The Caddie Question: Informalizing Formal Labor at Golf Clubs in Bangalore, India. Patrick Inglis, Grinnell College Workers Views on Plant Closures: The Global Context of Production. Norene Pupo, York ; Hart Walker, Table 5. Worker and Union Strategies and Structures: The United State in an International Context Table Presider: Pablo U. Gaston, of California, Berkeley As the World Turns: Actors on the Stage of Transformational Social Change. Melanie E. L. Bush, Adelphi Moral Contention and Labor Conflict: Nurse Organizing and the Corporatization of Care. Pablo U. Gaston, of California, Berkeley Revisiting Union Decline: What Caused Organized Labor's Crisis? Nathan Meyers, of Massachusetts Amherst Table 6. Worker and Union Strategies and Structures: Beyond the United States Table Presider: Emily Helen Yen, UCLA Intractable Subjective Outcomes of Labor Mobilizations: A Prolonged Case from Turkey. Alpkan Birelma, Bogazici Migrants of Lujiazui: Spotlights of Hidden Power Structures in Labor Conditions in Shanghai. Emily Helen Yen, UCLA Mobilizing and Educating via Social Media: How Swedish Trade Unions use YouTube. Katrin Uba, Uppsala ; Jenny Jansson, Uppsala Table 7. Immigrant Labor Experiences in the United States Table Presider: Dan Zuberi, of Toronto Challenging Barriers and Advancing Equity: The Experiences of Immigrant and Refugee Women Employed in Hospitals. Dan Zuberi, of Toronto Who Works Here? Non-family Labor and Immigrant Labor on U.S. Dairy Farms. Rebecca L. Schewe, Syracuse ; Bernadette Marie White, Syracuse 9:30-10:10am, Section on Labor and Labor Movements Business Meeting 37. Section on Marxist Sociology Paper Session. Pedagogies for Solidarity: Education for Collective Consciousness Session Organizer: Roxanne Gerbrandt, Austin Peay State Presider: Philip Mancus, College of the Redwoods Encounter, Solidarity, and Education at Trump Tower: Horizontal Pedagogy in Occupy Wall Street. David Backer, Food Sovereignty and Pedagogical Mobilization in the