Episodes
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Philip Gorsky is a comparative-historical sociologist from Yale University. His areas of research interest and focus include state formation, nationalism, revolutionism, economic development and secularization, with a special emphasis on religion and politics. You can find out more about Philip’s work on Yale’s Sociology department website.
In this episode, we discuss his publication, American Babylon: Christianity Before and After Trump.
Catch us on the Twitter handle @DTRRHpodcast for updates.
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Jason Pagaduan is a PhD candidate at the Department of Sociology at the University of Toronto. His research interests include race and ageing.
In this episode, we discuss his dissertation topic Mall Walking: Community, Pleasure, and Self-Preservation Among Racialized Older Adults.
Catch us on the Twitter handle @DTRRHpodcast for updates.
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Episodes manquant?
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Jessi Streib is an assistant professor of sociology at Duke University. Her research looks at the experiences, reproduction, and alleviation of social class, all of which are a common thread throughout her publications. You can find out more about Jessi’s work on her website.
In this episode, we discuss her publication, Privilege Lost: Who Leaves the Upper Middle Class and How They Fall.
Catch us on the Twitter handle @DTRRHpodcast for updates.
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Taylor Price is a PhD candidate at the University of Toronto’s department of sociology. His key areas of expertise include cultural sociology, sociological theory, quantitative research methods. You can find out more about Taylor's work on his website.
In this episode, we discuss his PhD dissertation which looks at changes in the music production process with time, the role of technology, and what easier and widespread access to music has done for musicians and listeners.
Catch us on the Twitter handle @DTRRHpodcast for updates.
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Fabien Accominotti is an assistant professor of Sociology at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. His research broadly lies at the intersections of cultural and economic sociology and stratification. You can find out more about Fabien on his UW-Madison Department of Sociology profile or on his personal website.
In this episode, we discuss his co-authored publication The Architecture of Status Hierarchies: Variations in Structure and Why They Matter for Inequality.
Catch us on the Twitter handle @DTRRHpodcast for updates.
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Christian Smith is a postdoctoral scholar in sociology at the University of California Merced and holds a PhD in the same from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. His areas of research interest include inequality, mobility, and the sociology of education. You can find out more about Christian on his website or on his UWisconsin-Madison profile.
In this episode, we discuss his paper, In the Footsteps of Siblings: College Attendance Disparities and the Intragenerational Transmission of Educational Advantage.
Catch us on the Twitter handle @DTRRHpodcast for updates.
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Poonam Gandhi is a sociologist and professor at FLAME University’s Department of Sociology. Her areas of research interest include art and culture, gender and human relations. You can find out more about Poonam on FLAME University's faculty page.
In this episode, we discuss her co-authored publication Museums and Heritage Sites — The Missing Link in Smart City Planning: A Case Study of Pune City, India.
Catch us on the Twitter handle @DTRRHpodcast for updates.
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Min Zhou is a distinguished professor of Sociology and Asian-American studies at UCLA. She also holds positions of the Walter & Shirley Wang Endowed Chair in US-China Relations & Communications and Director of the Asia-Pacific Centre at the university. Her areas of research interest include Asia and Asia-America, migration and development (particularly Chinese diasporas) and urban sociology. You can head over to Min’s website or her UCLA faculty profile page to know more.
In this episode, we discuss her publication Chinatown: The Socioeconomic Potential of an Urban Enclave.
Catch us on the Twitter handle @DTRRHpodcast for updates.
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James Braun is an economic sociologist and lecturer at the University of Toronto’s Department of Sociology. His areas of research interest include financialization, the sociology of markets and diaspora-making. You can find his publications on his academia.edu page or catch him on the Twitter handle @jbrauneconsoc.
In this episode, we discuss his PhD thesis Local Culture and the Problem of Coordination: The Case of Jamaica’s Diasporic Real Estate Market.
Catch us on the Twitter handle @DTRRHpodcast for updates.
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Gil Eyal is an author and professor of sociology affiliated with Columbia University. His broad research interests encompass sociological work around science, medicine, professions, knowledge and intellectuals, which he broadly calls ‘the sociology of expertise’. He has been awarded the Guggenheim Fellowship for Social Sciences (US & Canada). You can find out more about Gil on his Presidential Scholars in Society and Neuroscience Directory Page or his faculty profile on Columbia’s Sociology Department website.
In this episode, we discuss his book The Crisis of Expertise.
Catch us on the Twitter handle @DTRRHpodcast for updates.
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Jose Eos Trinidad is a doctoral student (2020) at the University of Chicago's Department of Sociology and is currently pursuing a joint PhD in Sociology and Comparative Human Development. His areas of research interest include organizational sociology, educational policy, and quantitative methods, and his research has been published in 20+ journals including Social Science and Medicine, the International Journal of Educational Development, and Studies in Educational Evaluation, among others. You can find out more about Eos and his research on UChicago's Sociology Department directory.
In this episode, we discuss his publication, Social Consequences and Contexts of Adverse Childhood Experiences.
Check out the Twitter handle @DTRRHpodcast for updates.
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TW: mentions of death, suicide and dark humour
Adam Valen Levinson is the author of the nonfiction novel The Abu Dhabi Bar Mitzvah (W. W. Norton, 2017) — dubbed "Eat, Pray, Laugh" by The New York Times but/and not without its controversy. Morgan Parker, the National Book Critics Circle award winner for poetry, called him "an incredibly generous, compassionate, and thorough writer who gorgeously blends lyricism with reportage and philosophy with a confession." Adam has written, filmed, and photographed for Al Jazeera, The Paris Review, Haaretz, Neue Zürcher Zeitung, and VICE, and done college stints at the Meccas of real fake news, namely, The Colbert Report and The Onion. He holds an MFA in Creative Nonfiction from Goucher College and is in the latter stages of his PhD at Yale University, where he travels globally to investigate new standup comedy scenes as a fellow at the Center for Cultural Sociology. You can find out more about Adam and his work on his website.
In this episode, we dig a bit deeper into humour and standup comedy as his areas of research.
Catch us on the Twitter handle @DTRRHpodcast for updates.
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Marco Garrido is an assistant professor of sociology at the University of Chicago. His work broadly looks at the relationship between the urban poor and middle class in Manila, and particularly how it shapes politics, urban spaces and social life. His work has been published in journals including the American Journal of Sociology, Social Forces, Qualitative Sociology, and the International Journal of Urban and Regional Research.
His book The Patchwork City illuminates how segregation, class relations, and democracy are connected and thus helps us make similar connections in other cases. It shows class as a social structure to be as indispensable to the study of Manila—and of many other cities of the Global South—as race is to the study of American cities, which is what we discuss in this episode.
Catch us on the Twitter handle @DTRRHpodcast for updates.
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Kimberly Burke is a PhD student in Sociology from UC Berkeley (anticipated graduation 2023). She holds MA and BA degrees in women's studies from San Diego State University and Duke University respectively and has worked at UCLA's Centre for Police Equity (CPE) for four years. Her areas of research interest include Policing, State Violence, Inequality, Criminal Justice, Feminist Theory.
On this episode, we discuss her research on police brutality and the lived realities of policing.
Catch us on the Twitter handle @DTRRHpodcast for updates.
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Josh Seim is an assistant professor of Sociology at the University of Southern California. He is broadly interested in the governance of poverty and suffering, which has thus led him into the sociologies of medicine, punishment, and labour. His work has appeared in American Sociological Review, Sociological Methods and Research, Punishment and Society, Journal of Contemporary Ethnography, RSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences, and Teaching Sociology, among other outlets. You can find out more about Josh's work on USC's faculty page.
In this episode, we discuss his book, Bandage, Sort, and Hustle: Ambulance Crews on the Front Lines of Urban Suffering, published by the University of California Press.
Catch us on the Twitter handle @DTRRHpodcast for updates.
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Karlyn Gorski is a pre-doctoral fellow at the Institute of Educational Sciences (IES) at the University of Chicago's sociology department. Her research focuses on high school students in and around Chicago, and she is especially interested in youths' strategies for navigating the structures of schooling. You can find out more about Karlyn's work on her Linkedin profile.
In this episode, we discuss her publication titled My Voice Matters: High School Debaters’ Acquisition of Dominant and Adaptive Cultural Capital, and briefly touch upon her recent research on the curbing of snack-selling at schools.
Catch us on the Twitter handle @DTRRHpodcast for updates.
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Dr. Rituparna Patgiri teaches Sociology at the Indraprastha College for Women, University of Delhi, and holds a PhD in Sociology from Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU), New Delhi. She is also one of the co-founders of Doing Sociology, an independent, women-led academic blog dedicated to promoting sociological content. Her areas of research interest include food, gender, culture, media, and the public. You can take a look at Rituparna's publications on her Google Scholar page, and follow her on the Twitter handle @Rituparna37.
On this episode, we discuss her dissertation on the art of mobile theatre in the Indian state of Assam.
Catch us on the Twitter handle @DTRRHpodcast for updates. -
Dr. Divya Balan is Assistant Professor of International Studies at Flame University, Pune, India. She holds Doctorate, Masters and M.Phil degrees in International Studies, and is a political science graduate. Her areas of teaching and research interest include the disciplinary histories of International Studies and European Studies, international migration and migration policies, Indian diasporic communities, Gulf migration, and Kerala studies. You can find about more about Divya on Flame University's faculty page.
On this episode, we discuss her doctoral thesis, Immigrants Integration Policies in Britain: A Study of Indian Immigrants Incorporation 2000-2010, in tandem with her general research on Indian immigrants in the UK.
Catch us on Twitter at the handle @DTRRHpodcast for updates.
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Kyle Shupe is a PhD student in Sociology at the University of Cincinnati, and is also the managing editor of Social Problems, the official publication for the Society for the Study of Social Problems. He holds an MA in Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies from the University of Cincinnati and a BA in Sociology from Bowling Green State University, with minors in Sexuality Studies and Political Science. His areas of research interest include queer men's sexual identities, communities, and practices as well as the social organisation of desire. You can find out more about Kyle on the University of Cincinnati's website.
On this episode, we discuss his recent work on queer men's cruising strategies and the surveillance and regulation of public sex.
Catch us on the Twitter handle @DTRRHpodcast for updates. -
Niharika Pandit is a PhD candidate at the Department of Gender Studies from the London School of Economics (LSE). She holds an MA in Gender Studies as a Felix Scholar from SOAS, University of London and a bachelor’s degree in Media Studies and Journalism from Sophia College, Mumbai. Her research interests lie at the intersection of gender, sexuality, anti-colonial and anti-militarist feminist thought, and the politics of representation.
On this episode, we discuss her PhD on everyday politics and practices of living under military occupation in the Kashmir valley. As a feminist researcher, she uses feminist, anti-colonial thought and transnational feminist epistemologies to ground her ethnographic research work.
Catch us on the Twitter handle @DTRRHpodcast for updates. - Montre plus