戴维•格伦斯基(Cornell U.)

发布时间:2009-05-04浏览次数:10934文章来源:dong

【专家姓名】DAVID B. GRUSKY

【译名】戴维 • 格伦斯基

【基本信息】美国著名社会学家,康奈尔大学社会不平等研究中心主任

【Introduction】

DAVID B. GRUSKY is a Professor of Sociology at Stanford University. Dr. Grusky received his training in Sociology from the University of Wisconsin - Madison (M.S., 1983; Ph. D., 1987) and Reed College (B.A., 1980). Prior to coming to Cornell in 1999, Dr. Grusky held faculty positions at Stanford University (1988-1999) and the University of Chicago (1986-1988) and was an honorary fellow at the University of Wisconsin-Madison (1997-98).

He was also a Presidential Young Investigator of the National Science Foundation, a Fellow of the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences, Associate Editor of the American Journal of Sociology, and on the Editorial Boards of Contemporary Sociology, Research in Social Stratification and Mobility, Worldwide Attitudes, and the Stanford University Press. He is co-editor (with M. Tienda) of the Studies in Social Inequality Series at Stanford University Press and was former co-editor (with M. Tienda) of the Series on Social Inequality at Westview Press.

【Research Interests】

Dr. Grusky's areas of interest include social mobility, racial and sex segregation, class analysis, and postmodern anomie. He has recently completed the second edition of Social Stratification: Class, Race, and Gender in Comparative Perspective (Westview Press, 2001), coedited Social Differentiation and Social Inequality (Westview Press, 1996), and is coauthor (with M. Charles) of the forthcoming book, Sex Segregation in Comparative Perspective (Stanford University Press).

In his current research, he is developing new models for the analysis of occupational segregation by race and ethnicity (with D. Pager), examining the demographic contours of postmodern anomie (with E. Rice), and charting long-term trends in occupational and geographic mobility (with J. Herting and S. Van Rompaey). In collaboration with K. Weeden and J. Sørensen, Dr. Grusky is also writing a series of research papers that evaluate the now-fashionable "death of class" hypothesis and argue for an occupation-level approach to class analysis.

【Email】dbg23@cornell.edu