Spring Newsletter 2012
Spring Newsletter 2012
S P R I N G 2 0 1 2 N E W S L E T T E R D E P A R T M E N T O F S O C I O L O G Y Chair s Column
I hope that everyone had a productive and enjoyable year. We will see a few changes in the coming months.
Andre Smith will be promoted to the rank of Associate Professor (with tenure) in July. Congratulations, Andre! Andre has worked extremely hard in the classroom and on his many publications over the past several years.
After decades of service, Richard Ogmundson will retire in July. Best wishes, Rick.
The Department said goodbye to Daniel Fridman, who is taking up a position in Texas.
We welcome Seantel Anas. Seantel comes to us from Carleton University, where she recently completed her doctorate.
Bill Carroll
PG 3 PG 2 PG 4 Karen Kobayashi Kristine Votova Bill Carroll has won was awarded an defended her PhD the Outstanding Innovation for dissertation in Community Evaluation January. In July Outreach Award Research Grant by 2012, she will begin from the UVic the Michael Smith a two-year CIHR Faculty of Social Foundation for funded Postdoctoral Sciences. Fellowship at UBC. Health Research.
FALL 2016
Project Profile
Dr. Karen M. Kobayashi was awarded a three-year (2011-2014) Innovation for Evaluation Research Grant by the Michael Smith Foundation for Health Research. The $225,000 grant was matched by the Fraser Health Authority for a total of $450,000 in funding for the project. Dr. Kobayashi is leading a research team that is using a mixed methods (quantitative and qualitative) research design to investigate how the Residential Program Care Delivery Model (i.e., changing the nursing staff mix, funding methodology, direct care hours) affects the quality of care that is delivered (by staff) and received (by residents and their family members) in residential care facilities operated by the Fraser Health Authority in British Columbia. Members of the interdisciplinary research team include Dr. Denise Cloutier-Fisher (Geography-UVIC), Dr. Kelli Stajduhar (Nursing-UVIC), Heather Cook, Executive Director of Residential Care and Assisted Living for the Fraser Health Authority, and Gina Gaspard, Clinical Nurse Specialist in Residential Care and Assisted Living for the Fraser Health Authority. The study has had two project coordinators since its inception. They are Lois Stewart, PhD candidate in Sociology, and currently, Ruth Kampen, MA (Sociology). The site coordinator, Dee Taylor, is a PhD candidate in Health Services Research at the University of Calgary and works out of the Fraser Health Authority offices in Surrey.
FALL 2016
Congratulations, Kristine!
Kristine Votova successfully defended her PhD dissertation in January. In July 2012, she will begin a two-year CIHR funded Postdoctoral Fellowship at UBC, Faculty of Medicine, Department of Anesthesiology, Pharmacology, and Therapeutics. Influenced by sociologists Cockerham and Scambler, for the dissertation she developed a medical pluralism paradigm to frame her analysis of national survey data and to theorize how social structure and agency interact to shape health needs. Working through what she calls aspirational health consumerism, individuals shape and are shaped by decisions to use health services within or across conventional, complementary and public health care systems. In keeping with medicalization theorists, she concluded that medicalization has indeed transformed since the 1960s, but adds that medicalization today is less about passive resistance to medical dominance and more about aspiring to do health through medical pluralism. For the post-doc, her mixed-methods research will examine drug benefit in early Alzheimer's patients. She will use both a therapeutic and policy lens to better understand the shift toward assessment-based drug coverage in pharmacotherapy. In the meantime, Kristine is the project manager for a national multi-site study on police use of force and medical outcomes. This epidemiologic study is the first of its kind in Canada to quantify prospectively use of force encounters and to link restraint modalities with use of health services. Results will inform a national framework for standardized reporting of and transparency in use of force encounters.
Cornett is 50.
The Cornett Building officially opened in 1967 and has been home to the social sciences for over 40 years. Originally named the Social Sciences Complex, it was renamed the Cornett Building in honour of Thomas Warren Cornett, an outstanding history professor who drowned in 1924 in Shawnigan Lake. Over the years the Faculty of Social Sciences expanded and a second building, Social Sciences & Mathematics Building, was officially opened June 23, 2008. The departments of political science, geography and the school of environmental studies moved into the new space the same year. Today, Cornett is home to the departments of psychology, sociology and anthropology.
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FALL 2016
FALL 2016
Dorothy Smith
Dorothy Smith has made some of the most important contributions to sociology. Her writings on feminism, organizations, education, and Marx have been recognized by the American Sociological Association (Career of Distinguished Scholarship Award 1999), the Canadian Sociological Association (Outstanding Contribution Award 1990), and by the universities where she spent much of her career: the University of British Columbia and the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education. Since 1994 when she became adjunct professor in sociology at UVic, Dorothy has made countless contributions to training and learning. She has enriched the department with her novel insights and helped to create yet another generation of critical scholars in Canada. Dorothys tireless efforts to teach about institutional ethnography and feminist epistemologies have benefited students in our department and across the university. Indeed, students from across Canada come to attend Dorothys seminars and teaching sessions. She is a world-renowned sociologist, and we have been lucky to benefit from her teachings and writings. She has achieved something that very few sociologists ever do she has changed the discipline while personally touching so many of us with her generosity and kindness. Dorothy has enriched our lives and our work. We wish to recognize all her contributions to the department and to sociology as a whole.
FALL 2016
Research Travels
Cecilia Benoit and Mikael Jansson were in Uganda and Kenya recently, conducting research for the National Institutes of Health funded project, A Kenya Free of AIDS: Harnessing Interdisciplinary Science for HIV Prevention, which they are collaborating on with Helga Hallgrimsdottir and Eric Roth (Anthropology). Cecilia and Mikael conducted fieldwork in one of the largest slums in the world (Kibera, Nairobi, Kenya), and also got to take a side trip on their tandem bike, travelling through small towns and open countryside. The most common response from the amazing people they met along the way (shouted from the roadside when Cecilia and Mikael rode by or when they stopped for tea in a food stall) was two-in-one; mama/papa! Given that tandem bikes are nowhere to be seen in Uganda and Kenya, and life expectancy is approximately 55 years, the response made a lot of sense to the bikers!
Neena Chappell travelled to an event called the Symposium on the Future Ageing Society, Sau Po Centre on Ageing, University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, December 2011. She delivered the keynote. She writes Canadians seem to either love or hate Hong Kong; Im in the former category. Its vibrancy contrasts with the quiet and untouched countryside with unspoiled beaches less than an hour from the city. Shopping is always a must and this time the weather obliged by being unseasonably cold so, having packed only clothes for warmer weather, survival demanded the purchase of new items! Even better, the pollution that drifted over from industrial cities in mainland China and was caught in the mountains of Hong Kong has improved tremendously. Neena also travelled to an event called the 1st International Symposium on Alzheimers Disease and Related Disorders, French National Foundation on Alzheimers Disease, Paris, February 2012. She delivered the keynote. She writes Sarkozy put $1.6B over 5 years into research on Alzheimers and related dementias. Feb. 1 (at his request) marked the 4 year anniversary. However, it was dominated by geneticists and neurologists; the few social scientists involved talked largely about how lonely they are at the Foundation. Sarkozy hosted a champagne reception at the Palais dElysees. The palace of course is stunning and was heavily guarded at various check points but that may have been because the president was there. Paris itself was in an unusual cold snap but the food, architecture, and ambience seems to persist whatever the weather (and 70% off sales everywhere). The trip back was one not to be repeated plane delayed 23 hours we were told it was due to a generator that wouldnt start due to the cold weather (-8). This was an Air Canada plane that flies in -40 but they didnt seem to appreciate what we were saying! As typically happens in such situations (spending hours in a very cold airport; being shuttled late at night to an airport hotel, up at 4:30a.m. for an early flight back that didnt leave until noon, etc.), you bond with select other passengers who you otherwise have nothing in common with that part makes it all worthwhile.
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SOCI NEWSLETTER
SPRING 2012
Kevin Walby: My partner Seantel and I spend all our affection on Darwin. This little dog loves walking around the Fernwood Springridge Common.
Sean Hier: Sara Hier (March 1998 February 2012). Sara was featured on the first Pet Page. On the day she passed away she was as grumpy as the day I found her.
Margaret Penning: Here is a picture of our dog Gillian (age 3 1/2 - Portugese Water Dog).
Congratulations to Andrew Wender for earning the Gillian Sherwin Alumni Award for Excellence in Teaching. Andrew teaches Religion in Society for the Department.
NEGOTIATION NEWS: Douglas Baer is the Faculty Associations Chief Negotiator in the current round of salary negotiations, which started on April 4. Sociology Department faculty member Helga Hallgrimsdottir is also a member of the Faculty Associations 6person Negotiating team. This year, for the first time, Framework Agreement negotiations which basically involve non-monetary items in the agreement between the Faculty Association and the University and salary negotiations are being conducted at a single negotiating table. Usually, the Framework Agreement comes up for re-negotiation once every four years, while salary settlements typically (though not always) last for 2 years. The Faculty Association at the University of Victoria is not unionized, though the Framework Agreement looks very much like many contracts found at unionized universities (the majority of Canadian universities is unionized), with grievance processes and an arbitration mechanism to settle most disputes. The present round of negotiations is scheduled to run until June 30. The Faculty Association seeks to obtain reasonable salary increases such as those currently in place at other Canadian universities at the same time as the provincial government is mandating universities to fight off wage increases. The Association has indicated, in its Bargaining Bulletins, that it is concerned about the fact that faculty salaries at the University of Victoria are considerably behind those at other, comparable Canadian universities (with comparability defined as those institutions the Board of Governors uses in making the comparisons it uses to pay the Universitys President).
Recent Graduates
Alanna MacLellan-Mansell (MA) July 2011 Katelin Bowes (MA) August 2011 Diane Barlee (MA) August 2011 Nicolas Graham (MA) August 2011 Esther Lee (MA) August 2011 Lisa Poole (MA) August 2011 Ashley Pullman (MA) August 2011 Michelle Bass (PhD) May 2011 Kristine Votova (PhD) January 2012 Daniel Grace (PhD) April 2012 Connie Carter (PhD) April 2012 Christopher Dodge (MA) April 2011 Robin Tunnicliffe (MA/INTD) April 2011 Craig Ashbourne (MA) April 2012 Sheri Watkins (MA) April 2012 Camille Stengel (MA) April 2012
Mario
By Peyman Vahabzadeh
Mario Torres is studying Latin American social movement history in the later 20th century. He started his research in April 2010, examining the transformation of Guatemalas UNRG guerrillas into civil society activists after a long process of peace talks that resulted in the 1996 peace accord. The predecessors of UNRG had engaged in guerrilla uprising since 1963. Mario is interested in exploring how individuals who gave up friends, family, comfort, and even their name deal with the disappearance, and transformation, of the movement. How does this shift affect personal lives of over 4000 former Guatemalan guerrillas? Mario focuses on the lives of the actors situated in the historical context through a qualitative inquiry. Mario has already applied to several law schools in Canada and the USA, as well as a couple of MA programs in Latin American Studies in the US. Hes casual about where he goes next (he did get in to Columbias Latin American Studies MA program), but he ultimately wishes to become a human rights lawyer. He is one of our Department's rising stars embarking on the path of future success.
PUBLICATIONS
Ngugli, E., Benoit, C., Hallgrimsdottir, H., Jansson, M., Roth, E. (forthcoming) Family Kinship Patterns and Sex Work Involvement among Women from the Informal Urban Settlement of Kibera, Nairobi, Kenya. Human Ecology. McCarthy, B., Benoit, C., Jansson, M. (forthcoming) Regulating Sex Work: Heterogeneity in Legal Strategies for Controlling Prostitution. Annual Review of Law and Social Science. Phillips, R., Benoit, C., Vallance, K., & Hallgrimsdottir, H. (2012) Courtesy Stigma: a Hidden health Concern among Frontline Service Providers to Sex Workers. Sociology of Health & Illness. Ngugia, E., Benoit, C., Hallgrimsdottir, H., Jansson, M. & Roth, E. (2012) Partners and Clients of Female Sex Workers in an Informal Urban Settlement in Nairobi, Kenya. Culture, Health & Sexuality. 14, 17-30. Carroll, Bill. (2011) Transnational Class Formation? Globalization and the Canadian Corporate Network. Journal of World-Systems Research 17: 379-402, with Jerome Klassen as co-author. Carroll, Bill. (2011) Corporate Elites and Intercorporate Networks. In John Scott and Peter Carrington (eds.), The Sage Handbook of Social Network Analysis. London: Sage, 180-95, with J.P. Sapinski as second author. Carroll, Bill. (2011) Crisis, Movements, Counter-Hegemony: in Search of the New. Pp. 151-174 in Henry Veltmeyer (ed.), 21st Century Socialism: Reinventing the Project. Halifax: Fernwood Publishing. Charalambous, A., Chappell, N.L., Katajisto, J., Suhonen, R. (forthcoming 2012) The Conceptualization ad Measurement of Individualized Care. Geriatric Nursing. Chappell, N.L. & Funk, L.M. (2011) Filial Responsibility: Does it Matter for Caregiving Behaviours? Ageing and Society, 1-19. Chappell, N.L. & Funk, L.M. (2011) Filial Caregivers; Diasporic Chinese Compared with Homeland and Hostland Caregivers. Journal of Cross-Cultural Gerontology, 26, 315-329. Devor, Aaron et al. (2011) World Professional Association for Transgender Health Standards of Care Committee. Standards of Care for the Health of Transsexual, Transgender, and Gender Nonconforming People (7th Version).
Garlick, Steve (2011) Complexity, Masculinity, and Critical Theory: Revisiting Marcuse on Technology, Eros, and Nature, Critical Sociology. Garlick, Steve (2011) A New Sexual Revolution? Critical Theory, Pornography, and the Internet, The Canadian Review of Sociology 48 (3): 221-39. Koehn, S., Neysmith, S., and K.M. Kobayashi (forthcoming) Revealing the Shape of Knowledge using an Intersectionality Lens: Results of a Scoping Review on the Health and Health Care of Ethnocultural Minority Older Adults. Ageing and Society. Kobayashi, K.M. and S.G. Prus (2012) Examining the Gender, Ethnicity, and Age Dimensions of the Healthy Immigrant Effect: Implications for Health Care Policy. International Journal of Equity in Health, 11(8).
PUBLICATIONS
Lett, Dan, Sean P. Hier, and Kevin Walby (2012) Policy Legitimacy, Rhetorical Politics, and the Evaluation of City-Street Video Surveillance Monitoring Programs in Canada. Canadian Review of Sociology (forthcoming) Smith, Andre, Jay Fiddler, Kevin Walby, and Sean P. Hier (2011) Blood Donation and Institutional Trust: Risk, Policy Rhetoric, and the Men Who Have Sex with Men Lifetime Deferral Policy in Canada. Canadian Review of Sociology, 48, 4: 369-389. Wu, Z., Schimmele, C.M., Penning, M.J., Zheng, C., Noh, S. (2012) The Effect of Marital Status on Duration of Treatment for Mental Illness. Canadian Studies in Population, in press. Chappell, NL and Penning MJ. (2012) The Intersection of Aging and Health. In RJ Brym (Ed.), New Society: Sociology for the 21st Century (7th edition). Toronto: Nelson. Chappell, NL and Penning, MJ (2012) Health Inequalities in Later Life, Differences by Age/Stage. Ottawa: Public Health Agency of Canada. Smith, A., & Anas, S. (2012) Diagnostic Categorization and Regulation of Water Intoxication in a Psychiatric Asylum. The Journal of Deviant Behavior, 33: 324338. Smith, A., Gair, J., McGee, P., Valdez, J., & Kirk, P. (2011) Teaching Empathy through Role-play and Fabric Art: An Innovative Pedagogical approach for End-of-life Health Care Providers. The International Journal of the Creative Arts in Interdisciplinary Practice, 10: 1-16, Fisher-Cloutier, D. Kobayashi, K., & Smith, A. (2011) The subjective dimension of social isolation: A qualitative investigation of older adults experiences in small social support networks. Journal of Aging Studies, 25(4): 407-414 Vahabzadeh, P. (2011) Civil Society in Iran: The Story of a Century-Long Struggle, in Ramin Jahanbegloo (ed.), Civil Society and Democracy in Iran (London: Lexington Books). 3-25. Walby, Kevin. (forthcoming) Institutional Ethnography and Data Analysis: Making Sense of Data Dialogues. International Journal of Social Research Methodology Walby, Kevin and Mike Larsen. (2012) Access to Information and Freedom of Information Requests: Neglected Means of Data Production in the Social Sciences. Qualitative Inquiry, 18/1: 31-42. Walby, K. and J. Monaghan. (2011) Dark Side of the Security-Development Nexus: Canadas role in the Securitization of Haiti, 2004-2009. Alternatives, 36/4: 273-287. Guo, Zhen, Zheng Wu, Christoph M. Schimmele, and Shuzhuo Li. (forthcoming) The Effect of Urbanization on Chinas Fertility. Population Research and Policy Review. Zheng Wu, Christoph M. Schimmele, and Neena L. Chappell. (2012) Aging and Late-Life Depression. Journal of Aging and Health. 24(1), 3-28. Christoph M. Schimmele and Zheng Wu. (2011) Cohabitation and Social Engagement. Canadian Studies in Population. 38(3-4), 23-36. Zhou, Min and Chan-ung Park. (forthcoming) The Cohesion Effect of Structural Equivalence on Global Bilateral Trade, 1948-2000. International Sociology. Beckfield, Jason and Min Zhou. (forthcoming) Embedded Regionalism. In Crisis or Reinvention? New Visions for Market Governance, edited by Kate Macdonald, Shelley Marshall and Sanjay Pinto. Routledge.
NEXT ISSUE: FALL 2012 Please let us know if you have recommendations for the next issue of the newsletterhave a good summer!