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For the past ten years or so, my
research
interest has been
in the area of social control and punishment. Specifically, I am
influenced by
Foucault and other writers who assess the ways that language shapes
people’s
experience, and the way that language limits how we think about
behavior, for
example, in prison therapy programs. Also, I am fascinated by the
ironies of
social control—the unintended consequences of well-intentioned efforts.
Currently, I am
doing research on
offender
reentry programs in the state of Vermont.
I have always been a qualitative researcher, and have conducted
observational
research and in-depth interviews. I have mostly studied intervention
programs,
such as the offender reentry programs I am studying now. My
dissertation was on
an HIV prevention program for injection drug users on the west coast.
I
came to UVM right after
finishing my Ph.D. at UC Berkeley
in 1994. I also received my Master’s degree in sociology from Berkeley.
While
there I focused on the study
of deviance and on qualitative research. At UVM I teach a large section
of
Deviance and Social Control, a mid-level class on Punishment and
smaller senior
seminars on Contemporary Justice and a service-learning course on
applied
sociology. I supervise internships for the sociology department as
well.
I
am active in the
international organization, the Society
for the Study of Social Problems. I am also crime and deviance section
editor
for the new Blackwell on-line Sociology
Compass journal. In my spare time, I am a coffee and dark
chocolate
enthusiast, fitness zealot, and avid mom of two adorable kids.
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