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    American University
   
    Mar 29, 2024  
American University Catalog 2014-2015 
    
American University Catalog 2014-2015 [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Sociology


Chair Kim Blankenship

Full-Time Faculty

Professor Emeritus/a E. Chow, J.C. Scott, J.K. Siegenthaler, R. Stone

Professor K. Blankenship, C.M. Pascale, G.A. Young

Associate Professor B. J. Dickerson, S. Vidal-Ortiz, C. Xiao

Assistant Professor N. Angotti, M. Bader, A. Brenner, E. Castaneda, S. McDonic, M. Newton-Francis, R. Serhan

Scholars-in-Residence M. Biradavolu, J. Drysdale, R. Jalali

Sociology explores how individuals, through their collective actions, create and change patterns of social relations and how, in turn, these social relations influence people’s lives. Sociologists focus on three major levels of analysis, from whole societies as component parts of wider systems, to institutions as component sectors of society, to individuals as participants in two-person groups. They also study varied processes of social change, from migration to social mobility, from urbanization to mass communication. Finally, sociologists study a wide variety of themes, from racial and ethnic relations to social problems and political change. This quest for knowledge is both an end in itself and a pathway for informed social change.

The Department of Sociology of the College of Arts and Sciences shares a common purpose of education and research for social justice in an increasingly global social system. Faculty and students are empowered to participate in building equitable, humane, and sustainable social institutions by creating sociological knowledge and applying professional research skills to produce effective policies and programs for social change. One source of its strength is the department’s multicultural diversity, which its members take every opportunity to expand.

The Sociology Department serves the university, including students from throughout the world, as a center for the study of societal change, social institutions, and social processes, with an emphasis on inequality and social justice. Degree programs focus on forms of inequality, their origins and patterns or reproduction, related to issues of social justice, and how these issues vary within and between societies. They are intended to produce and apply knowledge for the benefit of society, not only to teach academic skills, but also to develop knowledge of value to those involved in working for the promotion of social equality. The programs prepare students for a variety of careers in social advocacy, research, teaching, human services, and both public and private sector policy-making institutions. Successful placements of the department’s graduates in academic, research, and policy-making institutions attest to the high standards our graduates meet.

The department’s focus on international and comparative sociology, the social dimensions of health, urban processes and structures, and public sociology are especially well suited to Washington, DC, an international capital and center for policy making. American University’s location provides unparalleled access to government, research institutions, data and archival sources, advocacy organizations, and leaders involved in social change.

The undergraduate program is unique in its emphasis on race, gender, social justice, global social change and applied sociology/social policy. Majors and minors take core course sequences in sociological theory and research methods, and courses from several areas of concentration. Membership in the American University chapter of Alpha Kappa Delta, the international honor society in Sociology, is open to qualifying majors. The society sponsors lectures and other activities that involve undergraduates in the professional workings of the discipline.

In collaboration with the Department of Biology and other departments, an interdisciplinary BA or BS in Public Health, as well as a minor, are available to students.

The Department of Sociology’s graduate program consists of core training in sociological theory and research methods, plus areas of concentration in race, gender, and social justice; the social dimensions of health; urban communities and processes; global sociology; and social inequality. The program not only teaches academic skills, but also develops knowledge of benefit to those working for the promotion of social equality. Courses are designed to enable students to deepen their knowledge of a specialty area, to develop advanced and systematic theoretical understanding, and to develop methodological areas for vocational and professional competence.