Evelyn Nakano Glenn is Professor of Gender and Women's Studies and Ethnic Studies and founding director of the Center for Race and Gender, an organized research unit.
Other positions include: Society for the Study of Social Problems; Deputy Editor, American Sociological Review; Editorial Collective, Feminist Studies; Outstanding Article Prize from the Association of Black Women Historians; Award for Outstanding Scholarly Achievement, American Sociological Section on Race, Gender and Class; Oliver Cromwell Cox Award, American Sociological Association Section on Race and Ethnic Minorities, President of the "Society for the Study of Social Problems"
"My teaching and research interests center on comparative race and gender studies focusing especially on political economy, immigration, labor, and citizenship. I also work in the areas of critical race and feminist theory and transdisciplinary methods. "
Publications
Unequal Freedom: How Race and Gender Shaped American Citizenship and Labor, Harvard University Press, 2002
"Citizenship and Inequality: Historical and Global Perspectives," Social Problems; v. 47, n1 (Feb 2000) 1-20.
"Creating a Caring Society, " Contemporary Sociology;, v29, no1 (Jan 2000), 84-94
"The Social Construction of Race and Gender," in Revisioning Gender, Myra Ferree et al. (eds.) Sage Publications, 1999.
"African American Women's Labor," in Readings in Black Political Economy /, John Whitehead,and Cobie Kwasi Harris [eds.) Kendall/Hunt, 1999.
"Gender, Race, and Class: Bridging the Language-Structure Divide," Social Science History, v.22, no1 (Spring, 1998) 29-38
Mothering: Ideology, Experience and Agency, Routledge, 1994.
"From Servitude to Service Work: Historical Continuities in the Racial Division of Paid Reproductive Labor," Signs 1992.
"Cleaning up/kept down: A historical perspective on racial inequality in 'women's work'" Stanford Law Review; v43, n6 (Jul 1991)
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