Dr. Alondra Nelson presents at the 17th annual Albert Morris Lecture

On Thursday March 27th, Dr. Alondra Nelson (Institute for Advanced Study) traveled to BU to present Reimagining Resistance in the “Black Box Society” at our department’s 17th annual Morris Lecture. We were honored to meet Dr. Nelson and hear more about her recent research on artificial intelligence and “the relationship between the possibilities of knowing […]

BU Sociology at #ESS2025 next week

#ESS2025: “Building Solidarity to Break Cycles of Repression” March 6-9, 2025; Boston, MA The annual Eastern Sociological Society (ESS) conference will be in Boston this year and it starts next week! It will include scheduled sessions, mini conferences, author-meets-critics, and more. BU Sociology faculty and students, both graduate and undergraduate, will be represented throughout the […]

Loretta Lees and Initiative on Cities featured in The Brink

Sociology professor Loretta Lees was just featured in The Brink’s latest article, “BU’s Initiative on Cities Builds a Tool for Fighting Displacement.” It reports on the IOC’s partnership with the city of Louisville, Kentucky to help implement an  anti-displacement ordinance preventing development projects that would push neighborhood residents out of their homes. This was done […]

Special Topics Course on Migration and Immigration this Spring

We are offering a very topical and relevant course this semester on migration and immigration taught by CISS post-doc Tatiana Padilla. Registration is still open for the Spring so please spread the word! SO 290 Topics in Sociology: Migration and Immigration Enforcement in the United States Instructor: Tatiana Padilla Meets: Thursdays 12:30-3:15pm This course offers […]

Japonica Brown Saracino and Heather Schoenfeld receive Russell Sage Foundation research grants

The Russell Sage Foundation has announced their latest research grant recipients including two BU Sociology faculty for the program on Social, Political, and Economic Inequality. Japonica Brown Saracino, with Robin Bartram (University of Chicago), will use the grant to study gender and homeownership. You can read more about their research on “How Homeownership Stabilizes and […]

Laboring in the Shadow of Empire: Undergraduate student Lenny Adonteng on Professor Celeste Curington’s new book

By Lenny Adonteng (Sociology, Class of 2025) Professor Celeste Curington’s new book, Laboring in the Shadow of Empire, offers an exploration of the intersections of race, gender, and labor in Portugal. This new work builds on themes she examined in her earlier publication, The Dating Divide, which focused on race and relationship formation within the […]

Leping Wang publishes paper in Research in Social Stratification & Mobility

Sociology PhD candidate Leping Wang recently published a single-authored paper titled “Human capital and the upward occupational mobility of rural migrant workers in China” in the journal Research in Social Stratification and Mobility. In this paper, she explores the relationship between four human capital factors including formal education, professional training, professional certificates and the knowledge […]