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Mark Abrahamson

Mark Abrahamson has been a professor of sociology at the University of Connecticut since 1976 and has also served that university in a variety of adminstrative positions.  He is a former Program Director (for Sociology) at the National Science Foundation and was a professor of sociology at Syracuse University before moving to Connecticut.  His main scholarly interests are in classical theory and urban sociology.  He has authored more than 30 papers and one dozen books, most recently including Global Cities (Oxford University Press, 2004).

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Daniel Béland

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Robert C. Bulman

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Candace Clark

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Edward J. Clarke

Edward Clarke is Chair, Department of Anthropology and Sociology at Vanguard University.  He received his Ph.D., M.M.F.T., and M.A. degrees from the University of Southern California. Dr. Clarke is the author of several articles, and Deviant Behavior: A Text-Reader in the Sociology of Deviance (Worth Publishers).  Dr. Clarke's specializations include deviance, juvenile delinquency, marriage and family therapy, marriage and the family, and inequality.

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William C. Cockerham

William S. Cockerham holds a Ph.D. from the University of California, Berkeley.  He is Distinguished Professor of Sociology, Medicine, and Public Health at the University of Alabama at Birmingham and was the 2004 recipient of the university's Ireland Award for Scholarly Distinction.  His recent books include Medical Sociology, 10th edition (2006), The Blackwell Companion to Medical Sociology (2005), and the Sociology of Mental Disorder, 7th edition (2004).

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James William Coleman

James William Coleman was born in 1947 and grew up in Los Angeles, California.  He received an M.A. and Ph.D. from the University of California, Santa Barbara.  He is currently Professor of Sociology at the California Polytechnic State University at San Luis Obispo, where he teaches courses in criminology, global problems, social psychology, and the sociology of religion, and conducts research in the areas of white-collar crime, religion and society, and international development.  He is the author of numerous articles on white-collar crime and other subjects, which have appeared in such journals as Social Problems and the American Journal of Sociology.  In addition to The Criminal Elite, he is the author of Social Problems (Prentice-Hall, 2005), now in its ninth edition, and The New Buddhism: The Western Transformation of an Ancient Tradition (Oxford, 2001).

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Peter Conrad

Peter Conrad is the Harry Coplan Professor of Social Sciences and Chair of the Health: Science, Society and Policy program at Brandeis University. The author of numerous books and journal articles on the sociology of health and illness, Dr. Conrad received the Lee Founder's Award from the Society for Study of Social Problems in 2007 and Leo G. Reeder Award from the American Sociological Association in 2004 for his distinguished contributions to medical sociology. His works include the award-winning Deviance and Medicalization (written with J.W. Schneider), the coedited Handbook of Medical Sociology, Sixth Edition, and The Medicalization of Society.

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Mark Costanzo

Mark Costanzo received his Ph.D. in social psychology from the University of California at Santa Cruz. He is a professor of psychology at Claremont McKenna College and a member of the plenary faculty at Claremont Graduate University. He has published research on a variety of law-related topics including police interrogations, false confessions, jury decision-making, sexual harassment, attorney argumentation, alternative dispute resolution, and the death penalty. He has also published research in the areas of nonverbal communication, teaching techniques, and energy conservation. Professor Costanzo is author of the books, Just Revenge: Costs and Consequences of the Death Penalty and Psychology Applied to Law. He has co-edited four books, including, Expert Psychological Testimony for the Courts and Violence and the Law.
Professor Costanzo has served as a consultant or expert witness for more than 80 criminal cases. In 2008, he was the winner of the Outstanding Teaching and Mentoring Award from the Society for the Psychological Study of Social Issues (SPSSI), and in 2010, he received the Outstanding Teaching and Mentoring Award from the American Psychology-Law Society (APLS).

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Tyler Cowen

Tyler Cowen is Holbert C. Harris Professor of Economics at George Mason University and Director of the Mercatus Center and the James M. Buchanan Center for Political Economy. He is published widely in economics journals, including the American Economic Review and Journal of Political Economy. With Alex Tabarrok he co-writes the Marginal Revolution blog, often ranked as the #1 economics blog. He is also the author of Discover Your Inner Economist (Dutton, 2007) and numerous other books on economics. He writes regularly for the popular press on economics, including for The New York Times, The Washington Post, Forbes, and The Wilson Quarterly.  University web page: http://economics.gmu.edu/faculty/tcowen.html WATCH: Tyler Cowen at the Economic Bloggers Forum

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Charles Derber

Charles Derber is professor of sociology at Boston College and former director of its graduate program on social economy and social justice.  He is a prolific scholar in the field of politics, economy, international relations, and U.S. culture, with 10 internationall acclaimed books and several major research grants.  Derber's most recent book is Hidden Power: What You Need to Know to Save Our Democracy (Berrett-Koehler, 2005).  Other recent books include People Before Profit: The New Globalization in an Age of Terror, Big Money, and Economic Crisis (Picador, 2003), which has been translated into Chinese, German, Arabic, and British English, as well as Corporation Nation (St. Martin's, 2000), a widely discussed analysis of the growing power and responsibilities of corporations in the U.S., recently translated and published in China.  Three others of note are The Pursuit of Attention (Oxford, 2000), The Nuclear Seduction (with William Schwartz, University of California Press, 1989), and Power in the Highest Degree (with William Schwartz and Yale Magrass, Oxford, 1990).  Derber espouses a public sociology that brings sociological perspectives to a general audience.  Derber lectures widely at universities, companies, and community groups, and appears on numerous media outlets.  His op-eds and essays appear in Newsday, the Boston Globe, and other newspapers, and he has been interviewed by Newsweek, Business Week, Time, and other news magazines.  He speaks frequently on National Public Radio, on talk radio, and on television.  His work has been reviewed in the New York Times, the Washington Post, the Boston Globe, the Boston Herald, the Washington Monthly, and numerous other magazines and newspapers.

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Gili S. Drori

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Kathryn Farr

Kathryn Farr is professor emerita of sociology at Portland Sate University.  Her research focuses on women, gender, and crime and has been published in a number of venues, including "Battered Women Who Were 'Being Killed and Survived': Straight Talk from Survivors" in Violence and Victims; "Defeminizing and Dehumanizing Female Murderers: Portrayals of Lesbians on Death Row" in Women & Criminal Justice; "Representations of Female Evil: Cases and Characterizations of Women on Death Row," co-authored with Sheila J. Farr in Quarterly Journal of Ideology; and "Classification of Female Inmates: Moving Forward" in Crime and Delinquency.  Farr's current research calls for a critical examination of violence against women, including its universal as well as culture-specific features.  More broadly, Farr's work is rooted in a feminist sociology that features the intersections of gender, race, and class in structures of violence and oppression.  Her commitment to feminist dialogue and social change is reflected in her long-term affiliation with women's studies at Portland State University.

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Chava Frankfort-Nachmias

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Daniel T. Gilbert

Daniel Gilbert is Harvard College Professor of Psychology at Harvard University. After attending the Community College of Denver and completing his BA from the University of Colorado, Denver, he went on to earn his PhD from Princeton University. From 1985-1996, he taught on the faculty of the University of Texas, Austin, during which time he received the American Psychological Association’s Distinguished Scientific Award for an Early Career Contribution to Psychology. In 1996, he joined the faculty of Harvard University. Gilbert has won numerous awards including the Phi Beta Kappa Teaching Prize and a Guggenheim Fellowship. His research on affective forecasting is an attempt to understand how and how well people predict their emotional reactions to future events. He is the author of the national bestseller Stumbling on Happiness.

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