Candidate for President of RC44 Curriculum Vitae Bridget C. Kenny Personal Details Associate Professor Sociology School of Social Sciences University of the Witwatersrand Private Bag 3, Wits 2050

Tel. +27-11-717-4445 Email: [email protected]

Academic Qualifications Ph.D. in Anthropology, Minor in Sociology Department of Anthropology University of Wisconsin-Madison Madison, Wisconsin, United States

Awarded Jan. 2005

PhD Title: Divisions of Labor, Experiences of Class: Changing Collective Identities of East Rand Food Retail Sector Workers through SA’s Democratic Transition

Master of Arts-(MA), Anthropology Department of Anthropology University of Wisconsin-Madison Madison, Wisconsin, United States

Awarded Dec. 1992 Entered programme Sept. 1989

Undergraduate, Bachelor of Arts-(BA) Sept. 1985-June 1989 University of Chicago Chicago, Illinois, United States Graduated with ‘Honors’ (Distinction) in Anthropology, Phi Beta Kappa

Academic and Professional Experience Work Experience The Sociology Department The University of the Witwatersrand Johannesburg, South Africa

July 2002-present

Lecturer; Senior Lecturer; Associate Professor

The Sociology of Work Unit The University of the Witwatersrand Johannesburg, South Africa

August 1997-June 2002

Researcher

The Electoral Institute of South Africa Johannesburg, South Africa

August 1996-May 1997

Research & Information Department Coordinator

Industrial Aid Society Johannesburg, South Africa

Jan. 1994-July 1996

Assistant Education Director and Gender Desk Coordinator

Anthropology Department University of Wisconsin-Madison Page 1

August 1989-Dec. 1993

Madison, Wisconsin, United States Teaching Assistant

Editorships/Editorial Boardships Editorial Board, African Studies (2014- present) Editor, African Studies (2008-2013) Editor, South African Review of Sociology (2009-2012)

Membership in Professional Associations/Affiliations International Sociological Association (ISA), member (1998-2014) Research Committee-44, Labour Movements, of the ISA, member (1998-2014) ! Africa Representative to RC-44 Executive Board (2010-2014) South African Sociological Association (SASA), member (1997-2014) ! Chair, Local Organising Committee for annual conference, and SASA Council member (2008-2009) ! Convenor of Economic and Industrial section (2007-2008) ! Treasurer (2005-2006) American Sociological Association (ASA), member (2009-2012) ! Labor Movements section of the ASA, member (2009-2012) Southern Labor Studies Association, member (2011-2012) Affiliated to the African American Studies Department, University of Maryland.

Publications (by category) Journal articles: Kenny, B. 2011. “Reconstructing the Political?: Mall Committees and South African Precarious Retail Workers” in Labour, Capital and Society Vol. 44(2):44-69 Kenny, B. 2009. “Mothers, extra-ordinary labour, and amacasual: Law and politics of nonstandard employment in the South African retail sector” in Law & Policy, Vol. 31(3): 282-306. Kenny, B. and C. Mather. 2008. “Milking the region? South African capital and Zambia’s industry” in African Sociological Review. Vol 12(1): 55-66. Kenny, B. 2008. “Servicing Modernity: White women shop workers and changing gendered respectabilities, 1940s-1970s” in African Studies. Vol. 67(3): 365-396. Kenny, B. 2007. “Claiming workplace citizenship: ‘Worker’ legacies, collective identities and divided loyalties of South African contingent retail workers” in Qualitative Sociology. Vol. 30(4):481-500. Kenny, B. 2006. “Retail workers at odds with unity” in South African Labour Bulletin, Vol. 30(1):21-25. Kenny, B. 2005. “Militant Divisions, Collective Possibilities: Lessons for Labour mobilization from South African retail sector workers”. Labour, Capital & Society, Vol. 38 (1&2), pp. 156-183. Page 2

Kenny, B. 2004. “Selling Selves: East Rand retail sector workers fragmented and reconfigured” in Journal of Southern African Studies, Vol. 30(3): 477-498. Kenny, B. 2003. “From Insurrectionary Worker to Contingent Citizen: Restructuring labor markets and repositioning East Rand (South Africa) retail sector workers” in City & Society. Vol. 15(1): 31-57. Barchiesi, F. and B. Kenny. 2002. “From Workshop to Wasteland: DeIndustrialization and Fragmentation of the Black Working Class on the East Rand (South Africa), 1990-1999” in International Review of Social History, Vol. 47: 35-63. Kenny, B. and E. Webster. 1999. “Eroding the Core: Flexibility and the Resegmentation of the South African Labour Market” in Critical Sociology, Vol. 24(3): 216-243. Kenny, B. and A. Bezuidenhout. 1999. “Contracting, Complexity and Control: An Overview of the Changing Nature of Subcontracting in the South African Mining Industry” in The Journal of the South African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, Vol. 99(4): 185-191. Kenny, B. and A. Bezuidenhout. 1999. “Fighting Subcontracting: Legal Protections and Negotiating Strategies” in South African Labour Bulletin, Vol. 23(3): 39-46. Kenny, B. 1998. “Cutting Standards” in South African Labour Bulletin, Vol. 22(1): 16-19. Chapters in books: Kenny, B. 2014. “Citizen Wal-Mart? South African food retailing and selling development” in New South African Review 4, G. Khadiagala, P. Naidoo, D. Pillay and R. Southall, eds. Johannesburg: Wits University Press, pp. pp. 56-74. Kenny, B. 2009. “Consumption or Collectivity? Malls and working class life on the East Rand”. In Sun Tropes: Sun City and (Post-)Apartheid Culture in South Africa, Aljoscha Westcott and Marietta Kesting (eds.) Bonn, Germany: August Verlag, Berlin, pp. 249-262.

Kenny, B. 2005. “The ‘Market Hegemonic’ Workplace Order in Food Retailing”. In E. Webster and K. Von Holdt (eds.), Beyond the Apartheid Workplace: Studies in Transition. Durban: University of Kwazulu-Natal Press, pp. 217-242. Mather, C. and B. Kenny. 2005. “The Difficulties of ‘Emerging Markets’: CrossContinental investment in the South African Dairy Sector”. In Cross-Continental Food Chains, N. Fold and B. Pritchard (eds.) London: Routledge, pp. 179-190. Kenny, B. 2003. “Labour Market Flexibility in the Retail Sector: Possibilities for Resistance”. In F. Barchiesi and T. Bramble (eds.). Rethinking the Labour Movement in the ‘New South Africa’. Aldershot, UK: Ashgate Publishing, pp. 168-186. Kenny, B. 2001. “‘We are nursing these jobs’: The impact of labour market flexibility on South African retail sector workers” in Newman, N., J. Pape, and H. Page 3

Jansen (eds), Is there an alternative? South African workers confronting globalisation. Cape Town: ILRIG, pp. 90-107. Kenny, B. and A. Bezuidenhout. 1999. “Decoding the labour market flexibility debate” and “Organising new forms of employment” in R. Naidoo, Unions in Transition: Cosatu into the new Millennium. Johannesburg: NALEDI. Baskin, J. with B. Kenny, J. Maphutle, R. Naidoo, a. Smith and H. Toolo. 1994. Unions in Transition: Cosatu at the Dawn of Democracy. Johannesburg: NALEDI. Other publications: Kenny, B. 2012. “Book Review: Anita Chan’s Wal-Mart in China” in Global Labour Journal, Vol 3(2): 268-270. Kenny, B. 2011. “Wal-Mart: Not Such a Bargain”. In the South African Labour Bulletin, Vol. 25 (1): 20-23. Ceruti, C. and Kenny, B. 2009. “‘Amalungelo wethu’: Woolworths flexis strike for rights” in South African Labour Bulletin. Vol. 32(5): 6-8. Kenny, B. 2002. ‘Book Review: P. Alexander, Workers, War and the Origins of Apartheid’ in Society in Transition. Vol. 33 (3): 45-47. Kenny, B. and M. Clarke. 2000. “University Workers: Exclude them out” in Southern Africa Report, Vol. 15(4): 27-30. Kenny, B. and A. Bezuidenhout. 1999. “Contracting, Complexity and Control: Subcontracting in the Mining Industry” in Indicator SA, Vol. 16(4): 33-37. Kenny, B. 1999. “Casualisation and Fragmentation” in NALEDI Policy Bulletin, May, Vol. 2(2): 6. Kenny, B. 1998. “Casualisation in the retail sector” in Indicator SA, 15(4):25-31. Bezuidenhout, A. and B. Kenny. 1998. “Subcontracting in the mining industry” in the Innes Labour Brief, Vol. 10, No. 1: 30-36. Kenny, B. 1998. “Gauteng Cleaners and Security Guards Face Redeployment and Privatisation” in Educator’s Voice, Vol. 2(1): 11

ISA Conference Papers: Co-convenor of panel, 2014: “Confronting the Challenge of Global Corporate Empires”, RC-44, ISA, Yokohama, Japan. Co-convenor of panel, 2014: “Precarious Employment Regimes: Divergent Trajectories of Regulation and Union Mobilization”, RC-44, ISA Yokohama, Japan. Kenny, B. 2014. “Contract and Cruelty: Wal-Mart and Labour Conditions in South Africa”. Paper to be presented at Research Committee-44, Labour Movements, International Sociological Association, Yokohama, Japan, July 13-19. Kenny, B. 2014. “Precarity and the Law: Regulating Casual and Contract Labour in Page 4

the South Africa Retail Sector”. Paper to be presented at Research Committee-44, Labour Movements, International Sociological Association, Yokohama, Japan, July 13-19. Kenny, B. 2012. “Wal-mart and transnational union solidarity in the South African Competition Tribunal process”. Paper presented at Research Committee-44, Labour Movements, International Sociological Association, Buenos Aires, August 1-4. Kenny, B. 2010. “Local politics amid regional capital flows: Mall committees and South African precarious retail workers”. Paper presented at International Sociological Association World Congress 2010, 11-17 July, Gothenburg, Sweden. Kenny, B. 2010. “Reconstructing the Political: Mall committees and South African precarious retail workers”. Paper presented at International Sociological Association World Congress 2010, 11-17 July, Gothenburg, Sweden. Kenny, B. 2006. “Claiming workplace citizenship: ‘Worker’ legacies, collective identities, divided loyalties of SA contingent retail workers”. Paper delivered at the International Sociological Association Meetings, Durban, South Africa, 24-29 July. Kenny, B. and C. Mather, 2006. “Milking the region? Trade and investment in Southern Africa’s dairy complex”. Paper delivered at the International Sociological Association Meetings, Durban, South Africa, 24-29 July. Convener of panel, 2002: ‘Trade unions and casualisation’, RC-44, International Sociological Association World Congress of Sociology, Brisbane, Australia, July. Kenny, B. 2002. “Casualised employment, insecure households, and isolated subjects: Labour market flexibility in South Africa’s retail industry and explorations of resistant possibilities”. Paper delivered at XV World Congress of Sociology, International Sociological Association, Brisbane 7-13 July 2002. Kenny, B. and E. Webster. 1998. “Eroding the Core: Flexibility and the Resegmentation of the South African Labour Market”. Paper presented to Symposium II, Work and Technology, XIVth World Congress of Sociology, International Sociological Association, July. Montreal, Canada.

Selected other conference papers Kenny, B. 2014. “Exhausting recognition: Precarious workers and the law”. Paper presented to ‘Contentious Politics, Capitalism, and Social Movement Theory: South Africa in Global Perspective’, 22 May. South African Research Chair in Social Change, University of Johannesburg, Johannesburg. Kenny, B. 2013. ‘The ‘Lift Girls’ Lament’: Sex and Race in Johannesburg Department Stores, 1950s & 1960s”. Paper presented to Discourse, Gender and Sexuality: South-South Dialogues, 15-16 November 2013, Wits University. Kenny, B. 2012. “Keynote Lecture: Service, the ‘Public’ and the Polity: Understanding the labour of consumption”. Invited Opening Address given to Consumer Practices, Media and Landscapes in South Africa: Empirical and Theoretical Perspectives, A Symposium organized by the Critical Research in Page 5

Consumer Culture (CRiCC) Network, 9-­‐10 November 2012, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg. Kenny, B. 2011. “Servicing a racial regime: White women shop workers in Baltimore, MD and Johannesburg, South Africa, 1940-1970”. Paper presented at Southern Labor Studies Conference, 7-10 April, Atlanta, Georgia. Kenny, B. 2010. “Servicing a racial regime: The labour of South African white women shop workers in building a nation, 1940s-1970s”. Paper presented at Labour Histories from the Global South, Universidade Federalde de Santa Catarina, Florianopolis, Brazil, 25-28 October.   Barchiesi, F. and B. Kenny. 2008. “Precarious Collaborations. Working-Class Subjectivities, Community Activism, and the Problem with “Social Movement Unionism” in Late-Apartheid East Rand (South Africa)”. Paper presented at 8th Northeastern Workshop on Southern Africa (NEWSA), Burlington, Vermont, 17-19 October. Kenny, B. 2005. “Workplace Citizens, Feminized Providers: The importance of worker identity in retail sector organizing in post-apartheid South Africa”. Paper presented at the ‘Global Labor’ conference, co-sponsored by the American Sociological Association sections on the Political Economy of the World System, Labor Movements, and Political Sociology, Philadelphia, 12 August. Kenny, B. 2001. “Selling Selves: Control, resistance, and detachment on South African supermarket shopfloors”. Paper presented at the 19th International Labour Process Conference, 26-28 March, Royal Holloway University of London, London, UK. Bezuidenhout, A. and B. Kenny, 1999, “The Social Cost of Subcontracting in the South African Gold Mining Industry”. Paper presented to the Conference on Mining, Development and Social Conflicts in Africa, African Secretariat of the Third World Network, 15-18 November Accra, Ghana. Bezuidenhout, A. and B. Kenny. 1999. “The Language of Flexibility and the Flexibility of Language: Post-Apartheid South African Labour Market Debates”. Paper presented to the Industrial Relations Association of South Africa, 4-5 October, Cape Town, South Africa.

Presentations/inputs delivered to union/community organisations Presentation to Africa Massmart/Walmart Shopsteward Alliance meeting, organised by SACCAWU and UNI-Global, 11-12 June 2014, Johannesburg. Based on research on Cambridge stores. Kenny, B. 2012. “Wal-Mart and the South African merger process”. Presentation to UNI Global conference on FDI in Retail in India. 20-22 March, Delhi, India. Kenny, B. 2005. “’Extra-Ordinary’ Labour? The History of Union Bargaining around Part-time and Casual Employment in the Retail Industry”. Paper presented at Khanya College’s “20 Years of COSATU” conference, 20-22 October.

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South African Commercial, Catering and Allied Workers Union (SACCAWU)/National Labour, Economic and Development Institute (NALEDI) Workshop in preparation for the SACCAWU Sectoral Jobs Summit. Three inputs: ‘Casualisation in retail’, ‘Franchising in retail’, and ‘Preliminary thoughts on an industrial strategy for retail’. 6-7 October 2000. Johannesburg, South Africa. Joint AFL-CIO and Congress of South African Trade Unions (COSATU) Exchange Programme: “New Challenges to Labour: the Impact of Globalisation”. Input on the Retail sector and re-organization. 31 March 2000. Johannesburg, South Africa. International Labour Resource and Information Group (ILRIG) workshop on Restructuring and Work Re-organization Challenges (a Follow-up). Input on ‘Ongoing research findings in the retail sector’. 9 March 2000. Johannesburg, South Africa. International Labour Resource and Information Group (ILRIG) workshop on Restructuring and Work Re-organization Challenges. Input on ‘Research findings in the retail sector’. 4 November 1999. Cape Town, South Africa. Development Institute of Training, Support and Education for Labour (DITSELA) Advanced Trade Union Studies, Module 4. Input on ‘Labour market flexibility’ to South African trade unionists. 18-19 October 1999. Cape Town, South Africa. Kenny, B. 1999. “Retail Restructuring and Changes in Work Organisation: the Impact on Women Workers”. Paper presented to the Women and the Global Food Industry Seminar, International Federation of Workers’ Educational Associations (IFWEA), 1-5 August. Cape Town, South Africa. Institute for the Advancement of Journalism ‘Course for journalists on labour reporting’. Input on atypical forms of employment. April 1998. Johannesburg, South Africa. Department of Labour policy reviews, including to regular reviews of the Sectoral Determination in the retail sector, and my research report on casualisation in retail for the DoL, Research Directorate, assisted it to conduct a policy review on flexible labour. United Food and Commercial Workers Union (USA, Canada) support and background briefings around Wal-Mart entry into South Africa, 2010, 2011.

Service to the University/profession/discipline/community Academic Coordinator, Development Studies Programme, Wits University, 20122014 Editor of African Studies, 2009-2013 Editorial Board of African Studies, 2006-2008; 2014-present Editor, South African Review of Sociology, 2009-2012. Executive committee member, Global Labour University, 2007-2008 Convenor of Economic and Industrial programme, South African Sociological Association, Stellenbosch, July 2008 Coordinator of Economic and Industrial Sociology Programme, Sociology Department, Wits University, 2006-2008 Page 7

Treasurer of the South African Sociological Association, 2005-2006 Coordinator of academic programme, Global Labour University, 2006 Editorial Board and Collective, Debate: Voices from the Left. Johannesburg, South Africa. Referee for South African Review of Sociology Development Southern Africa Global Labour Journal Citizenship Studies Conference organising committees: Co-convenor of CRiCC South-South Consumption Studies Workshop, 3-7 November 2013, Wits University, Johannesburg. Chair of Local Organising Committee, Wits hosting of the annual Congress of the South African Sociological Association, June-July 2009 Committee member, Local Organising Committee of “Labour Crossings: World, Work and History”, University of the Witwatersrand, July 2008.

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Candidate for RC44 Vice- President Program Prof. Andreas Bieler

Date of Birth

22 April 1967, Stuttgart, Germany.

Present Position

Professor of Political Economy, School of Politics and International Relations, University of Nottingham.

Correspondence Address

Nottingham NG7 2RD E-mail: [email protected]

Employment 10/98 – 07/01 Lecturer in Social and Political Sciences, Selwyn College and Newnham College, University of Cambridge; Education 31/03/1998

Award of the degree of Doctor of Philosophy at the University of Warwick after the successful viva. Title of Ph.D. thesis: Austria’s and Sweden’s accession to the European Community: a comparative neoGramscian case study of European integration.

10/93 - 09/94 MA (Econ.) in European Politics and Policy, Department of Government, University of Manchester/UK (Distinction). (My MA Dissertation was awarded the Dehn Prize for best Dissertation of the year 1994.) Research Grants 08/2013 07/2014

Research Fellowship at the Centre for Advanced Studies, Oslo/Norway (£45000),

02/2011

British Academy Small Research Grant ‘Trade unions, free trade and the problem of transnational solidarity’ (SG102043) (£6960).

11/2010

Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) Research Grant ‘Globalisation, national transformation and workers’ rights: an analysis of Chinese labour within the global economy’ (RES-062-23-2777) (£275000).

08/2009 07/2010

Research Fellowship at the Helsinki Collegium for Advanced Studies, Finland (£84500).

01/2006

Research grant (together with Simon Tormey and Adam Morton) to support the project ‘Global Civil Society’ by the University of

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Nottingham Humanities and Social Science Strategy Group (HSSSG), Strategic Funds Initiative (£6000). 10/2003

Research funding (together with Adam Morton) for workshop on “Images of Gramsci: Connections and Contentions in Political Theory and International Relations” from PSA, BISA, School of Politics/Nottingham, Department of Politics and International Relations/Lancaster (£5600).

03/02 – 02/03 British Academy Small Research Grant (SG-33623) (£3350) for project on Austrian, French, Swedish and European trade unions and EMU.   Selected  publications   A. Single authored research monographs: Bieler, Andreas (2000) Globalisation and Enlargement of the European Union: Austrian and Swedish Social Forces in the Struggle over Membership. London/New York: Routledge. ISBN 0-415-21312-6. [translated into Georgian] Bieler, Andreas (2006) The Struggle for a Social Europe: Trade unions and EMU in times of global restructuring. Manchester: Manchester University Press. ISBN 07190-7252-2. B. Jointly authored books: Bieler, Andreas, Werner Bonefeld, Peter Burnham and Adam David Morton (2006) Global Restructuring, State, Capital and Labour: Contesting neo-Gramscian Perspectives. Basingstoke: Palgrave. ISBN 1-4039-9232-0. C. Co-edited books: Bieler, Andreas and Adam David Morton (eds) (2001) Social Forces in the Making of the ‘New Europe’: the restructuring of European social relations in the global political economy. Basingstoke: Palgrave. PP.1-243. ISBN 0-333-91321-3. Bieler, Andreas and Adam David Morton (eds) (2006) Images of Gramsci: Connections and Contentions in Political Theory and International Relations. London: Routledge. ISBN 0-415-36670-4. Bieler, Andreas, Ingemar Lindberg and Devan Pillay (eds.) (2008) Labour and the Challenges of Globalisation: What prospects for transnational solidarity? London: Pluto Press. PP.1-330. ISBN 978-0-7453-2756-3.

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Bieler, Andreas and Ingemar Lindberg (eds.) (2010) Global Restructuring, Labour and the Challenges for Transnational Solidarity. London: Routledge. PP.1-256. ISBN 978-0-415-58083-0.

D. Articles in refereed journals: Bieler, Andreas, Ingemar Lindberg and Werner Sauerborn (2010) ‘After thirty years of deadlock: labour’s possible strategies in the new global order’, Globalizations, Vol.7/1-2: 247-60. Bieler, Andreas (2011) ‘Labour, new social movements and the resistance to neoliberal restructuring in Europe’, New Political Economy, Vol.16/2: 163-83. Bieler, Andreas (2012a) ‘“Workers of the world, unite?” Globalisation and the quest for transnational solidarity’, Globalizations, Vol.9/3: 365-78. Bieler, Andreas (2012b) ‘Small Nordic Countries and Globalisation: Analysing Norwegian exceptionalism’, Competition and Change, Vol.16/3: 224-42. Bergholm, Tapio and Andreas Bieler (2013) ‘Globalisation and the erosion of the Nordic model: A Swedish – Finnish comparison’, European Journal of Industrial Relations, Vol.19/1: 55-70. Bieler, Andreas (2013) ‘The EU, Global Europe and processes of uneven and combined development: the problem of transnational labour solidarity’, Review of International Studies, Vol.39/1: 161-83. Bieler, Andreas and Adam David Morton (2013/14) ‘The Will-O’-The-Wisp of the Transnational State’, Journal of Australian Political Economy, Issue No.72: 23-51. Bieler, Andreas and Adam David Morton (2014) ‘Uneven and combined development and unequal exchange: the second wind of neoliberal “free trade”?’, Globalizations, Vol.11/1: 35-45.

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Curriculum Vitae

PERSONAL INFORMATION

Adam Mrozowicki Wrocław (Poland) 602817721 [email protected] www.mrozowicki.pl Skype adam_mrozowicki

JOB APPLIED FOR WORK EXPERIENCE 01/10/2009–Present

Assistant professor / lecturer Institute of Sociology, University of Wrocław Koszarowa 3, 51-149 Wrocław (Poland) www.socjologia.uni.wroc.pl Current main employer - fixed term employment contract. Teaching the courses: “Theories of social change” (3rd year BA programme in sociology), “Social groups in a workplace” (3rd year BA programme in sociology), Macrosystems and social structures” (2nd year BAprogramme in sociology), “Qualitative techniques of data analysis” (1styear MA programme in sociology), "Labour and Migration in Eastern Europe" (1st year EMMC MItra). Business or sector Education

01/12/2013–Present

Leader of the Polish team in the Marie Curie FP7-PEOPLE-ITN-2012 project "Changing Employment" Institute of Sociology, University of Wrocław ul.Koszarowa 3, 51-163 Wrocław (Poland) www.changingemployment.eu ProjectFP7-PEOPLE-ITN-2012 "Changing Employment" (The changing nature of employment in Europe in the context of challenges, threats and opportunities for employees and employers). The leader of the Polish team and the training group in the project. Responsible for: co-supervising one Early Stage Researcher at the Institute of Sociology and co-supervising the implementation of the training programme in the project, as well as the project's management at the University of Wroclaw. Business or sector Research

01/12/2013–30/04/2014

Expert Johannes Kepler Universitaet Linz, Institut fuer Wirtschafts- und Organisationssoziologie, Linz (Austria) Expert in the project "Horizontal Europeanisation" responsible for carrying out interviews at the plant and regional level in the automotive sector and preparing summaries and analysis

09/2012–09/2013

Deputy Director for International Cooperation and Development of the Institute of Sociology, University of Wroclaw Institute of Sociology, University of Wroclaw Koszarowa 3, 51-149 Wrocław (Poland) www.socjologia.uni.wroc.pl Responsible for international cooperation of theInstitute of Sociology, University of Wroclaw, including international educational programmes (since 1 September 2012), including the Erasmus Mundus Master Course MITRA (2012-2017, together with dr Marcelina Zuber) and theFP7-Marie Curie-ITN

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Adam Mrozowicki

Changing Employment (2012-2016) and the Master Programme inSociology, Specialty "Intercultural Mediation" (starting in 2013); Business or sector Education 01/10/2010–Present

Expert Instytut Spraw Publicznych Szpitalna 5 lok.22, 00-031 Warszawa (Poland) www.isp.org.pl National expert / correspondent in the project “Network of European Observatories” working for the European Industrial Relations Observatory (EIRO). Preparing Comparative Analytical Reports, Representativeness Studies and Information Updates based on the qualitative interviews, media reports and existing statistical data.

Business or sector Research 25/06/2012–24/05/2013

Expert Universite Catholique de Louvain Place de l'Universite 1, 1348 Louvain-la-Neuve (Belgium) Expert in the project"40 years of the European Trade Union Confederation" - analysing the pathways of the Polish trade unions to the ETUC based on archival historical data and oral history interviews. Business or sector Research

31/01/2012–01/11/2012

Expert European Trade Union Institute Bld.du Roi Albert II, 5 bte 4, 1210 Bruksela (Belgium) www.etui.org Expert in the project "The impact of socio-economic shocks on collective bargaining and social dialogue in Central and Eastern Europe" - exploring the social partners responses to economic crisis in the retail sector in Estonia, Poland and Slovenia - with Tatiana Bajunk-Sencar and Triin Roosalu. Business or sector Research

01/10/2009–10/10/2011

Postdoctoral fellow of the Foundation for Polish Science University of Wrocław, Institute of Sociology ul. Koszarowa 3, 51-149 Wrocław (Poland) www.socjologia.uni.wroc.pl Carrying on and coordinating international research project “Negotiating capitalism in Central and Eastern Europe. Between marginalisation and revitalisation of organised labour” on trade union renewal in the automotive sector and the retail sector in Estonia, Poland, Romania and Slovenia (Programme “Homing”, HOM/2009/8B, financed by the EEA financial mechanism).Approach used: case studies of companies, expert interviews with trade union leaders, biographical interviews with company-level trade union activists. Responsible for: project coordination, data collection, data analysis, dissemination of results

Business or sector Education 01/04/2009–30/12/2009

Contractual researcher in the project "The improvement of the functioning of the system of social dialogue and the reinforcement of the participants and institutions of social dialogue" Warsaw School of Economics (SGH), Economic Sociology Research Unit, Warszawa (Poland)

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Curriculum Vitae

Adam Mrozowicki

The researchaimed at exploringworkers’ expectations of trade unionism in Poland. The approach used includedquantitative surveys and qualitative in-depth interviews with trade union leaders. I was responsible for: organising fieldwork, designing a part of questionnaire concerning workers’ expectations of trade unions, collecting qualitative interviews with trade union leaders, analysing qualitative and quantitative data, preparing the final report and publication in an edited book. 01/10/2008–31/01/2009

Trainee European Trade Union Institute Bld. du Roi Albert II, 5 bte 4, 1210 Bruksela (Belgium) www.etui.org Expert in the project"Development of Trade Unions in the New Member States of the European Union"funded bythe European Trade Union Institute; continued until10.2010. Responsible for: collecting empirical data in the largest trade union federations located outside Warsaw (approx. 80 semi-structured interviews with trade union leaders), collecting secondary data on the dynamics of labour force in Poland, preparing database including yearly data about trade union membership and historical data about the changes in trade union structures, writing the final report and a book chapter on the evolution of the Polish trade union movement after 1989. Business or sector Research

01/10/2004–30/09/2008

Researcher and PhD student Centre for Sociological Research, Catholic University of Leuven Parkstraat 45 box 3601, 3000 Leuven (Belgium) Own doctoral project "Project “Coping with social change. Life strategies of workers in Poland after the end of state socialism"supported by the PhD research grant 3H050291 funded by the Research Council of the Catholic University of Leuven. Carrying on the entire project: organising 3 fieldworks Poland, developing theoretical framework and research design, training and supervising interviewers, analysing qualitative primary data and quantitative secondary data (grounded theory methodology),writing publications and the final report (in the form of the PhD thesis and a book published by the Leuven University Press in 2011)

01/11/2003–15/02/2004

Contracted researcher in a project on the temporary work market in Wrocław Pentor Research International, Division Wrocław, Wrocław (Poland) Carrying on quantitativedata analysisand writing the report.

EDUCATION AND TRAINING 20/11/2011–19/02/2012

Visiting researcher University of Strathclyde, Business School, Human Resource Management Department, Glasgow (United Kingdom) Scholarship and postdoctoral traineeship at the University of Strathclyde, Human Resource Management Department founded within the Project „Development of the potential and educational offer of the University of Wrocław - the chance to enhance the competitiveness of the University” (EU Human Capital Funds). Obtaining skills at preparing grant applications for the FP7 Programmes "People" and "Cooperation" (including writing one successful application for the FP7-Marie Curie-Initial Training Network "Changing Employment)

01/10/2004–20/02/2009

Doctor of Social Sciences (PhD) Catolic University of Leuven, Centre for Sociological Research, Leuven (Belgium)

29/06/2009–10/07/2009

Summer School at the Central European University - module “Work and Inequality in a Global Economy” Central European University, Budapest (Hungary)

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Curriculum Vitae

01/10/1997–30/09/2002

Adam Mrozowicki

Master in Sociology University of Wroclaw, Faculty of Social Sciences, Wrocław (Poland)

01/10/2000–30/03/2001

Scholarship of the GFPS at the University of Goettingen Universitaet Goettingen, Goettingen (Germany)

PERSONAL SKILLS Mother tongue(s)

Polish

Other language(s)

UNDERSTANDING

SPEAKING

WRITING

Listening

Reading

Spoken interaction

Spoken production

English

C2

C2

C2

C2

C2

German

B1

B2

A2

A2

B1

Dutch

B2

B2

B1

A2

A2

French

A2

A2

A2

A2

A2

B1

A2

A2

A2

A1

Russian

Levels: A1/A2: Basic user - B1/B2: Independent user - C1/C2: Proficient user Common European Framework of Reference for Languages

Communication skills

Good ability to adapt to international environment acquired during the last 4.5 years of work at the Catholic University of Leuven in Belgium and experiences in international research and educational projects. Good ability to develop networks and contacts at the international level acquired through participation in an international academic milieu during the last 10 years.

Organisational / managerial skills

Collaborating & communicating in international research teams (acquired through participation in international research projects) Coordinating and managing international comparative research projects (most recently the project ‘Negotiating capitalism in Central and Eastern Europe. Between marginalisation and revitalisation of organised labour’ founded by the Foundation for Polish Science as comparative research in Poland, Romania, Slovenia and Estonia) Coordinating and managing international educational projects at the university level, including the Polish part of the Erasmus Mundus Master Course MITRA (2012-2017,together with dr Marcelina Zuber) and the FP7-Marie Curie-ITN Changing Employment (2012-2016)

Job-related skills Computer skills

20/5/14

Analysing, conceptualising & synthesising complex problems in social sciences.

Windows, Word, Excel, Access, Power Point, SPSS, NVivo, Reference Manager, ProCite

© European Union, 2002-2014 | http://europass.cedefop.europa.eu

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Candidate for RC44 Secretary Kim Voss Department of Sociology 476 Barrows Hall University of California, Berkeley Berkeley, California 94720-1980

Phone: 510-642-4766 Email: [email protected] http://sociology.berkeley.edu/faculty/kim-voss

PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE Director, Berkeley Connect in Sociology Program, University of California, Berkeley, 2013Acting Dean, Division of Social Sciences, University of California, Berkeley, July 2009, Jan.-June 2012. Chair, Department of Sociology, University of California, Berkeley, 2004-2007, August 2010- December 2011. Associate Dean, Division of Social Sciences, University of California, Berkeley, 2008-2010. Professor, Department of Sociology, University of California, Berkeley, 2004Associate Director, Institute of Industrial Relations (now Institute for Research on Labor and Employment), 1997-2004. Associate Professor, University of California, Berkeley, 1993-2003. Director of Graduate Studies, Sociology Department, University of California, Berkeley, 2000-2002, 20032004. Visiting Scholar, New School for Social Research, Center for Studies of Social Change, 1988. Assistant Professor, Department of Sociology, University of California, Berkeley, 1986-1993. EDUCATION Ph.D. Sociology, Stanford University, 1986 M.S. Sociology of Development, Cornell University, 1977 B.A. Magna cum laude, Catawba College, Salisbury, N.C., 1974 PUBLICATIONS Books:

Rallying for Immigrant Rights: The Fight for Inclusion in 21st Century America. Edited Volume with Irene Bloemraad, Berkeley: University of California Press, 2011. Hard Work: Remaking the American Labor Movement. With Rick Fantasia. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2004. Des Synidcats Domestiques: Repression Patronale et Resistance Syndicale Aux Etas-Unis. With Rick Fantasia. Paris: Editions Raisons D’Agir, 2003. Rebuilding Labor: Organizing and Organizers in the New Union Movement. Edited volume, with Ruth Milkman, Cornell University Press, 2004. Inequality by Design: Cracking the Bell Curve Myth. With Claude Fischer, Michael Hout, Martin Sanchez Jankowski, Sam Lucas, and Ann Swidler. Princeton University Press, 1996. * Award: 1998 “Outstanding Book” on Human Rights, Gustavus Myers Center for the Study of Human Rights in North America. * Excerpted in: – T. Shapiro (ed.), Great Divides: Readings in Social Inequality in the United States, 2nd Ed. (Mayfield, 2000)

– D. Grusky (ed.), Social Stratification, 2nd Ed. (Westview 2001). – D. Grusky and S. Szelényi (eds.), The Inequality Reader (Westview, 2006). The Making of American Exceptionalism: The Knights of Labor and Class Formation in the Nineteenth Century. Cornell University Press,1993. * Winner of the Distinguished Contribution to Scholarship Award for a First Book, 1995 Political Sociology Section of the American Sociological Association Journal articles and book chapters: “The Local in the Global: Rethinking Social Movements in the New Millennium, with Michelle Williams, Democratization, Vol. 19 (2) 2012, pp. 352-377. “The Immigration Rallies of 2006: What Were They, How Do We Understand Them, Where Do We Go?” with Irene Bloemraad and Taeku Lee. In Voss and Bloemraad, Rallying for Immigrant Rights, University of California Press, 2011, pp. 3-43. “Enduring Legacy? Charles Tilly and Durable Inequality,” American Sociologist 41 (November 2010): 368-374. “Democratic Dilemmas: Union Democracy and Union Renewal,” Transfer: European Review of Labor and Research, 16 (August 2010): 369-382. *German Translation, “Innergewerkschaftliche Demokratie und die Erneuerung der Gewerkschaften.” In Stefan Schmalz and Klaus Dörre, (eds.), Comeback der Gewerkschaften? Machtresssourcen, innovative Praktiken, internationale Perspektiven, Frankfurt/ New York: Campus, 2013, pp. 56-69. “New Unity for Labor?” With Ruth Milkman. Labor, Spring 2005; 2: 15 - 26. A shorter version appeared in South African Labor Bulletin, vol. 28, no. 2 (April 2004), pp. 43-47. “The Future of American Labor: Reinventing Unions” With Rick Fantasia. Contexts 3 (Spring 2004): 35-4. “Against the Tide: Projects and Pathways of the New Generation of Union Leaders, 1984 2001,” With Marshall Ganz, Teresa Sharpe, Carl Somers and George Strauss. In Milkman and Voss, Rebuilding Labor: Organizing and Organizers in the New Union Movement, Cornell University Press, 2004. An earlier version was published as “Why Lead Labor: Projects and Pathways in California Unions, 1984-2001,” With Marshall Ganz and George Strauss, Center for Public Leadership, Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University, 2003. “Sombart, the Knights of Labor, and Class Formation in America.” In Werner Sombart and “American Exceptionalism,” edited by Mark R. Thompson. Berlin: Lit Verlag, 2004. “Made in the USA: The TUC, the Organising Model and the Limits of Transferability.” With Bob Carter, Peter Fairbrother, and Rachel Sherman. In Labor Revitalization: Global Perspectives and New Initiatives, edited by Daniel B. Cornfield and Holly J. McCammon, Research in the Sociology of Work, Volume 11. Amsterdam: JAI Press, Elsevier, 2003. "You Can't Just Do It Automatically: The Transition to Social Movement Unionism in the United States." With Rachel Sherman. In Trade Unions in Renewal: A Comparative Study, edited by Peter Fairbrother and Charlotte A.B. Yates, pp. 51-77. London: Continuum, 2003. “Breaking the Iron Law of Oligarchy: Tactical Innovation and the Revitalization of the American Labor 2

Movement,” With Rachel Sherman. American Journal of Sociology, 106 (September 2000): 303-349. * Distinguished Article Award, Society for the Study of Social Problems, Labor Studies Division, 2001. *Reprinted in The Sociology of Organizations: An Anthology of Contemporary Theory and Research, edited by Amy Wharton, Roxbury, 2007. “Organize or Die: Labor’s New Tactics and Immigrant Workers.” With Rachel Sherman. In Organize or Die: Labor’s New Tactics and Immigrant Workers, edited by Ruth Milkman, pp. 81-108. Cornell University Press, 2000. "Claim-Making and the Interpretation of Defeats: The Interpretation of Losses by American and British Labor Activists, 1886-1895." In Challenging Authority: The Historical Study of Contentious Politics, edited by Michael Hanagan, Leslie Page Moon and Wayne Te Brake, pp. 136-148. University of Minnesota Press, 1998. "The Collapse of a Social Movement: The Interplay of Mobilizing Structures, Framing, and Political Opportunities in the Knights of Labor." In Comparative Perspectives on Social Movements: Political Opportunities, Mobilizing Structures, and Cultural Framing, edited by in Doug McAdam, John McCarthy, and Mayer Zald, pp. 227-258. Cambridge University Press, 1996. "The Political Economy of Inequality in the `Age of Extremes'," with Michael Hout and Richard Arum. Demography 33 (November 1996): 421-425. "Disposition Is Not Action: The Rise and Demise of the Knights of Labor," Studies in American Political Development 6 (Fall 1992): 272-321. "Formal Organization and the Fate of Social Movements," With Carol Conell. American Sociological Review 55 (1990): 255-269. Winner of the Best Recent Article Award, Comparative Historical Section of the American Sociological Association, 1991 "Labor Organization and Class Alliance: Industries, Communities, and the Knights of Labor," Theory and Society 17 (1988): 329-364. Work in progress: “So Goes the Nation? A preliminary report on how immigration is reshaping the identities of workers in California.” With Fabiana Silva. (Working paper, Institute for Research on Labor and Employment, May 2013.) “Framing the Immigrant Movement as about Rights, Family, or Economics: Which Appeals Resonate and for Whom?:” With Irene Bloemraad and Fabiana Silva. (Journal article under submission.) Fit and Fate: College Admissions In an Era of Escalating Inequality (Book manucript in progress)

Policy briefs, encylopedia articles, and public commentaries: “What it Takes for Unions to Enlarge Their Mission Beyond Existing Workplace Contracts,” Scholars Strategy Network, Key Findings, August 2013. “Labor Movement,” with Rick Fantasia and Barry Eidlin, in David A. Snow, Donatella Della Porta, Bert Klandermans, and Doug McAdam, eds, The Wiley- Blackwell Encyclopedia of Social and Political 3

Movements, Blackwell, 2013. “Labor Movement,” With Rick Fantasia. Blackwell Encyclopedia of Sociology, 2006. “US: State of the Unions,” with Rick Fantasia, Le Monde Diplomatique, June 2003. (In French; English translation entitled “Bush Administration’s Low-Intensity War Against Labour.”) "Myths About Inequality in America," with Claude Fischer, Michael Hout, Martin Sanchez Jankowski, Sam Lucas, and Ann Swidler. Survey Research Center, University of California, Berkeley, July 1996. Reviews and Comments: “Forum on Ann Miche’s “Projects and Possibilities: Researching Futures in Action,” Sociological Forum 24 (2009): 901-906. Ruth Milkman, L.A. Story: Immigrant Workers and the Future of the U.S. Labor Movement, American Journal of Sociology 114 (2008): 553-555. Gay Seidman: Beyond the Boycott: Labor Rights, Human Rights, and Transnational Activism, review symposium, Labor History 49 (2008): 341-368. Roger Gould, Insurgent Identities, International Labor and Working Class History, 52 (Fall 1997): 186188. Victoria C. Hattam, Labor Visions and State Power: The Origins of Business Unionism in the United States, Contemporary Sociology 23 (1994): 196. "Rosie Revisited," a review of Ruth Milkman's Gender At Work, Socialist Review 19 (1989): 143-150. HONORS, AWARDS, AND GRANTS Mellon Project Grant ($35,000), “Worker Identities in a New Era of Immigration,” 2012-13. University of California Humanities Research Institute Summer Reseach Award ($7000), “Worker Identities in a New Era of Immigration,” Summer 2013. Committee on Research Bridging Grant, ($20,000) “From Character to Fit in College Admissions,” 20122013. Spencer/Teagle Grant for Undergraduate Education in Research Universities ($45,000), “Enhancing Writing in Sociology,” 2008-2011. Labor and Employment Research Fund Grant ($34,388), 2008-09. Educational Innovation Grant ($10,000), “Creating a Booklet on Writing for Sociologists,” 2007-2008. First Elected Chair of the Labor and Labor Movements Section of the American Sociological Association, 2002-03. Institute for Labor and Employment Grants ($90,000), “Leadership, Organization, and Institutional Change,” 2001-2003. Distinguished Article Award, Society for the Study of Social Problems, Labor Studies Division, 2001, for “Breaking the Iron Law of Oligarchy.” National Science Foundation Grant ($101,722), “Defeat Frames and Social Movements,” 1997-1999 Elected to the Sociological Research Association, 1998 The Myers Center Award for the Study of Human Rights in North America, 1998, for Inequality by Design: Cracking the Bell Curve Myth Fellow, Center for the Teaching and Study of American Cultures, Summer 1996. 4

Distinguished Contribution to Scholarship Award for a First Book, 1995 Political Sociology Section of the American Sociological Association, for The Making of American Exceptionalism Best Recent Article Award, Comparative Historical Section of the American Sociological Association, 1991, for "Formal Organization and the Fate of Social Movements." Regents' Junior Faculty Fellowship, 1990 National Science Foundation Dissertation Grant, 1983-84 American Association of University Women, 1983-84 New Jersey Historical Commission Grant, 1984 PRESENTATIONS, PROFESSIONAL MEETINGS “Worker Identities in a New Era of Immigration.” Paper presented to the “How Global Migration Changes the Workplace Diversity Equation” conference, UCLA, June 2013. Annual Meeting of the American Sociological Association, New York, August 2013. “Fighting For Inclusion: The origins and consequences of the 2006 immigration protests in the United States,” Paper presented to the International Sociological Association, Buenos Aires, Argentina, August 2012. “Contentious Politics and Immigrant Mobilization,” Presentation at “The Political Incorporation of Immigrants: Progress, Prospects, and Pitfalls in Europe and North America,” UC Berkeley International House, March 2011. “Whither Social Movement Unionism?” Paper presented to the International Sociological Association, Gothenburg, Sweden, July 2010. “Durable Inequality,” Paper presented to the annual meetings of the Social Science History Association, Long Beach, California, November 2009. “ Community Organizing and Labor Renewal,” Paper presented to the annual meetings of the American Sociological Association, San Francisco, California, August 2009. “From the Folks Who Brought Us May Day: Labor’s Role in Mobilizing the U.S. Immigrants Rights Protests of 2006,” Biannual meetings of the International Sociological Association, Barcelona, Spain, September 5-8, 2008. “Democratic Dilemmas: Labor Revitalization and Union Democracy,” Annual meetings of the Canadian Industrial Relations Association, Vancouver, Canada, June 4-6, 2008. “The Local in the Global: Rethinking Social Movements Theory in the New Millennium.” Annual meetings of European Group for Organizational Studies, Bergen, Norway, July 6-8, 2006 International Sociological Association, Durbin, South Africa, July 23-29, 2006 American Sociological Association, New York, New York, August 14, 2007. “Rethinking Union Democracy,” Conference on Union Democracy, Harry Bridges Center, University of Washington, Seattle, February 2006. “How Social Movement Theories Might Help US Make Sense of Union Leadership” Paper presented to the annual meetings of the American Sociological Association, Atlanta, Georgia, August 2004 “Projects and Pathways of Labor Activists,” Conference on Narrative Analysis in Sociology, sponsored by the American Sociological Association, Boston, Massachusetts, October 2002. 5

“Stories of Defeat,” Paper presented to the annual meetings of the Eastern Sociological Association, Boston, Massachusetts, March 2002. “Breaking the Iron Law of Oligarchy,” Paper presented to the annual meetings of the American Sociological Association, Washington, DC, August 2000. “Putting the `Move’ Back in Labor Movement: Tactical Innovation and Contemporary American Unions,” with Rachel Sherman. American Sociological Association, Toronto, Canada, August 1997 Annual meetings of the UCLEA/AFL-CIO Education Conference, May, 1998 Work, Employment and Society Conference, Cambridge, England, September 1998. "Defeat `Frames' and Solidarity: Researching the Impact of Social Movement Culture," Paper presented at the annual meetings of the American Sociological Association, New York, N.Y., August, 1996. Giving Up or Living On? The Lessons Participants Draw From Social Movement Failures," Paper presented at the annual meetings of the Pacific Sociological Association, Oakland, Ca., April 1992. "The Knights of Labor Through a Social Movements' Lens," Paper presented at the annual meetings of the Social Science History Association, Chicago, Ill., November 1988. "Disposition Is Not Action," Paper presented at the annual meetings of the American Sociological Association, Atlanta, Ga., August 1988. "Working Class Formation and the Knights of Labor," Paper presented at the annual meetings of the Social Science History Association, St. Louis, Missouri, October 1986. INVITED TALKS “Worker Identities in a New Era of Immigration,” University of British Columbia, Kelowna, March 6, 2013. University of Essex, U.K., March 21, 2013 Institute for Research on Labor and Employment, September 23, 2013. “Fighting For Inclusion: The origins and consequences of the 2006 immigration protests in the United States,” London School of Economics, March 19, 2013. “What’s at Stake: The View From California,” Plenary talk presented to the International Conference on Union Futures, Montreal, October 2012. “The Transformation of Actors and the Transformational Role of Actors,” Plenary session, at the 5th CRIMT Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council MCRI Project Meeting, Magog, Quebec, Canada, May 9-12, 2012. “Rallying for Immigrant Rights” Book talks, University Press Books, Center for Latino Policy Studies, Center for Race and Gender, Fall 2011. “The Immigrant Rights Protests of 2006: Explanatory Quandaries and Future Prospects,” UCLA Institute for Labor and Employment, May 18, 2011. “Representation, Employee Rights, Voice and Power at Work,” Plenary session at the 4th CRIMT Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council MCRI Project Meeting, Magog, Quebec, Canada, May 6-10th 6

2009. “The Local in the Global,” Dept. of Sociology, University of California, San Diego, March 5, 2009. “Looking Backward and Facing Forward: A Decade of Research on Union Renewal,” Inter-University Research Centre on Globalization and Work, Magog, Quebec Canada, October 12, 2007. “Motherhood and the Professoriate: Women, Family, and the Academy,” Changing the Culture of the Academy Conference, UC Berkeley, March 22, 2007. “The Present and Future State of Labor,” 60th Anniversary Conference for the Institute of Industrial Relations, Berkeley, California, November 17, 2006. “Rebuilding the American labor Movement in an Era of Globalization,” LO, Bergen, Norway, July 5, 2006. “The Local in the Global: Rethinking Social Movements Theory in the New Millennium,” Dept. of Sociology, University of California, Irvine, April 2006. “Hard Work: Remaking the American Labor Movement,” Local 925, Service Workers International Union, Seattle, Washington, September 2005. “The American Labor Movement in Neoliberal Times,” Departments of Sociology and Political Science, University of Tromso, Norway, June, 2005. and University of Trondheim, Norway, June 2005 and University of Bergen, Norway, June 2005. “Rethinking Social Movement Theory,” University of Tromso and University of Oslo, Norway, 2005. “Against the Tide: Projects and Pathways of the New Generation of Union Leaders.” Dept. of Political Science, University of Washington, Seattle, May 2005 Depatment of Sociology, University of California, San Diego, May, 2004. “Rebuilding the American Labor Movement in an Era of Globalization.” University of Pittsburg, March, 2005 Boalt Law School, University of California, April, 2005. “Designing Good Research,” Haas Scholars Conference, June 2003, Berkeley, California. “Consent and Cooperation in the Workplace” Comment to the UC Institute for Labor and Employment Graduate Student Conference, Santa Barbara, Feb. 21-22, 2003. “Where Have All the Leaders Gone?” Institute for Labor and Employment Research Conference on Union Organizing, May 17, 2002, UCLA. “Social Movement Unionism: Perspectives from South Africa and the United States,” with Edward Webster, May 2, 2002, UC Berkeley. “The Causes and Consequences of Overwork,” Berkeley Journal of Sociology Conference, March 16, 2001, UC Berkeley. “Breaking the Iron Law of Oligarchy,” Dept. of Sociology, UCLA, March 12, 2001 7

“The Changing Face of Labor,” Berkeley Journal of Employment and Labor Law Conference, February 23, 2001. “What Makes Social Movements Successful?” Comment to the annual meetings of the American Sociological Association, Washington, DC, August 2000. “Changing to Organize: The Revitalization of the American Labor Movement,” Bay Area Labor History Workshop, San Francisco, May 2000. “‘You Just Can’t Do It Automatically’: The Transition to Social Movement Unionism in the United States,” Cardiff University, UK, November 1999. “Class Formation and the American Labor Movement: A Challenge to the Sombartian Understanding of American Exceptionalism,” Werner Sombart and American Exceptionalism Conference, Erlangen, Germany, July 1999. “The Right and Capacity to Organize,” The AFL-CIO Lawyers Conference, Colloquium with the Academic Community on the Right to Organize, New Orleans, May 1999. “Tactical Innovation and the Revitalization of the American Labor Movement,” The Coming of the Information-Intensive Century Conference, Honolulu, Hawaii, December 1998. McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, March, 1999. “The Outcomes of Social Movements,” Comment, annual meetings of the American Sociological Association, San Francisco, August, 1998. “Public Policy, Organizational History, and Political Movements,” Workshop on Social Movements and Society, University of California, Davis, August 20, 1998. “New Organizing Tactics and Immigrant Workers,” with Rachel Sherman, Lewis Center for Policy Studies, University of California, Los Angeles, May 15, 1998. "Inequality By Design," with coauthors, Cody's Bookstore, Berkeley, California, Sept. 1996; Berkeley Hillel, March, 1997; Cal Day, April 1997. "Setback or Failure? A Comparison of the ways British and American labor activists framed defeat, 18861914," Invited paper, Structure, Identity, and Power: The Past and Future of Collective Action Conference in honor of Charles Tilly, Amsterdam, June 1995. "The Making of American Exceptionalism," Invited lecture, Department of Sociology, University of Arizona," April 1993. "Studying Social Movement Defeats and Framing Processes," Invited seminar, Department of Sociology, University of Arizona, April 1993. Comment, "The Shifting Boundaries of Labor Politics Conference," European Center, Harvard University, March 1993. "Social Movement Defeats and Framing Processes," Invited paper, the European/American Perspectives on Social Movements Conference, Washington, D.C., August, 1992. "The Knights of Labor Through a Social Movements' Lens," Invited lecture, Department of Sociology, 8

University of California, Los Angles, March 1991. "Disposition is Not Action," Invited lecture, Sociology Department, University of California, Santa Cruz, May 1989. "Why Did the Knights of Labor Fail?" New School for Social Research, New York, Winter 1988 Department of Sociology, City University of New York, Winter 1988. "The Decline of the Knights of Labor: A Failure of Solidarity?" Invited lecture, The Bay Area Labor History Workshop, San Francisco, California, November 1987. "The Rise of the Knights of Labor," Invited lecture, Department of Sociology, University of California, Davis, Spring, 1986. "Women Have Always Worked . . .," Invited lecture, American Association of University Women, Pittsburgh, California, 1984. TEACHING AND ADVISING Courses taught Graduate Classes Two semester sequence on Historical and Comparative Methods; Seminars on Work and Politics, Gender and Work, Industrial Sociology, Comparative Labor Movements, Social Movements, Research Design. Undergraduate Classes Lecture courses on Working People in the Global Economy, Industrial and Occupational Sociology, Evaluation of Evidence, Social Movements; Seminars on Social Movements, Work and Labor in the New Economy, Doing Sociology, and Researching and Writing a Honors Thesis. Advising and mentoring Post-doctoral mentoring Joanna Robinson, University of Brisith Columbia, postdoctoral fellow, 2010-2012 Susanne Pernicka, Oldenberg University, Visiting Scholar, Austria, 2009 David Peetz, Griffith University, Visiting Scholar, 2008 Georgina Murray, Griffin University, Visiting Scholar, 2008 Ph.D. Dissertations Ph.D. Dissertation Chair, Completed [graduation date] Barry Eidlin (Sociology), “The Class Idea: Politics, Ideology, and Class Formation in the U.S. and Canada in the Twentieth Century” [December 2012] Teresa Sharpe (Sociology), “Cultures of Creativity: Politics, Leadership and Organizational Change in the U.S. Labor Movement” [December 2010] Christopher Wetzel (Sociology), “One Spirit, One Nation: The Politics of Potawatomi Cultural Revitalization” [May 2007] 9

Andrew Perrin (Sociology), “Civil Society and the Democratic Imagination” [May 2001] Ph.D. Dissertation Chair, In-progress Nicholas Adams (Sociology), “Varieties of Protest Policing: How American Cities Responded to the Occupy Movements of 2011” Pablo Gaston (Sociology), “From Practice to Politics: Healthcare Marketization and Union Density in California” Laura Nelson (Sociology), “Critical Communities, Social Movements, and Language: Understanding the Development of Women's Collective Political Action in the United States, 1900-1975” Jen Schradie (Sociology), “This is (Not Exactly) What Democracy Looks Like: The Internet and Democratic Practices in Social Movement Organizations” Ph.D. Dissertation Committee Member, Completed Benjamin Moodie (Sociology), “Plus Ça Change: Change and Continuity in French and American Gender Culture, 1952-2007” [December 2013] Lina Hu (Sociology), “Familial Politics of Production: Household Production in China” [May 2013] Hillary Berk (JSP), “The Legalization of Emotion: Risk, Gender and the Management of Feeling in Contracts for Surrogate Labor” [May 2013] Francisco Casique (Ethnic Studies), “"Race, Space and Contestation: Gentrification in San Francisco's Latina/o Mission District, 1998-2002" [May 2013] Megan Adams (History), “The Patrolmen's Revolt: Chicago Police and the Labor and Urban Crises of the Late Twentieth Century” [December 2012] Adam Reich (Sociology), “Between Mission and Market: The Contested Commodification of Hospital Care” [August 2012] Ronald Williams (African American Studies), “Adversarial Diplomacy and African American Politics” [December 2011] Eli Friedman (Sociology) “Rupture and Representation: Migrant Workers, Union and the State in China” [August 2011] Angelo James Gonzales (Political Science), “ Forbidden Fruit: Contested Policy Change, Organizational Resources, and the Teaching of Evolution in Public Schools” [August 2011] Robert W. Smith (City and Regional Planning), “ Towards a Theory of Movement Planning Practice” [August 2011] Lynette Chua (JSP), “How Does Law Matter to Social Movements? A Case Study of Gay Activism in Singapore” [May 2011] Celeste Arrington (Political Science), “Accidental Activists: How Victim Groups Hold the Government Accountable in Japan and South Korea” [August 2010] 10

Ligaya Domingo (Education), “Building a Movement: Filipino American Union and Community Organizing in Seattle in the 1970s” [May 2010] Ofer Sharone (Sociology), “Blame Games: Why Unemployed Israelis Blame the System and Americans Blame Themselves” [December 2009] Gretchen Purser (Sociology), “Labor on Demand: Dispatching the Urban Poor” [August 2009] Marianne Cooper (Sociology), “Doing Security in Insecure Times: Class and Family Life in Silicon Valley” [December 2008] Edith Replogle Sheffer (History), “Burned Bridge: How East and West Germans Made the Iron Curtain” [August 2008] Shannon Gleeson (Sociology), “The Intersection of Legal Status and Stratification The Paradox of Immigration Law and Labor Protections in the United States” [May 2008] Mark Massoud (JSP), “Who Rules the Law? How Government, Civil Society, and Aid Agencies Manipulate Law in Sudan” [May 2008] Mark Toney (Sociology), “A Second Chance For the First Time: Movement Formation Among Formerly Incarcerated People” [December 2007] Elizabeth Popp Berman (Sociology), “Creating the Market University: Science, the State, and the Economy, 1965-1985” [May 2007] Joshua Page (Sociology), “The 'Toughest Beat': Incarceration and the Prison Officers Union in California” [May 2007] Jennifer Jee Hae Chun (Sociology), “The Symbolic Politics of Labor: Transforming Employment Relations in South Korea and the United States” [May 2006] Hwa-Jen Liu (Sociology), “Red and Green: Labor and Environmental Movements in Taiwan and South Korea” [August 2006] Brinda Sarathy (ESPM), “Hidden in the Understory: Immigrant Labor and Forest Management in Southern Oregon” [August 2006] Timothy Randazzo (Ethnic Studies), “Terms of Acceptance: Social Inequalities in United States Asylum Policy” [December 2005] Michelle Williams (Sociology), “Democratic Communists: Party and lass in South Africa and Kerala, India” [May 2005] Tamara Kay (Sociology), “NAFTA and the Politics of Labor Transnationalism” [December 2004] Brian McCook (History), “The Borders of Integration: Polish Migrant Workers in the Ruhr Valley of Germany and Pennsylvania Anthracite Regions of the United States, 1870-1924” [December 2004] Laura Henry, “Activism, Civil Society, and Political Transformation in Russia” [August 2004 Isaac Martin (Sociology), “The Roots of Retrenchment: Tax Revolts and Policy Change in the 11

United States and Denmark, 1945-1990” [August 2003] Rachel Sherman (Sociology), “Class Acts: Producing and Consuming Luxury Service in Hotels” [December 2003] Alesia Montgomery (Sociology), “Family, Friends and Co-Ethnics as ‘Reserve Labor’ in Silicon Valley” [December 2002] Melissa Wilde (Sociology), “Reconstructing Religion: A Sociological Analysis of Vatican II” [May 2002] Maria Yen (City and Regional Planning), “Welcome to the Neighborhood? Understanding Ethnic Conflict and Its Urban Planning Implications in Demographically Changing Communities” [December 2001] April Gilbert (Business Administration), “Work Absorbtion: Causes among highly educated workers and consequences for their families” [May 2001] Steven Lopez (Sociology), “Reorganizing the Rust Belt: Social Movement Unionism and the SEIU in Pennsylvania” [August 2000] Elizabeth Rudd (Sociology) “Coping with Capitalism: Gender and the Transformation of WorkFamily Conflicts in Former East Germany” [December 1999] Elizabeth Armstrong (Sociology), “Multiplying Identities: Identity Elaboration in San Francisco's Lesbian/Gay Organizations, 1964-1994” [December 1998] Lisa Ellen Cohen (Business Administration, Deus Ex Machina? A Study of How Jobs are Designed” [December 1997] Lawrence Casalino (Public Health), “Medical Groups and the Transition to Managed Care in California” [May 1997] Deborah Cohen (History), “The War Come Home: Disabled Veterns in Great Britain and Germany, 1914-1939” [August 1997] Mona Younis (Sociology), “Liberation and Democratization: The South African and Palestinian National Liberation Movements in Comparative Perspective, 1910s-1990s” [December 1996] Samuel Weinstein (History) “"The Cause of Our Hard Times." Popular Economic Belief, Popular Economic Movements, Professional Economists, and the Expansion of the American State, 18771941” [December 1996] Jeff Manza (Sociology), “Policy Experts and Political Change During the New Deal” [December 1995] Tomoji Nishikawa (Sociology), “Diversifying the State: American Grassroots Groups and Japanese Companies” [December 1995] Ruth Florence MacKay (History), “To Obey and Comply: The Limits of Royal Authority in Seventeenth-Century Castile” [May 1995] Valerie Sperling (Political Science), “Engendering Transition: The Women's Movement in 12

Contemporary Russia” [May 1994] Nancy Lynn Quam-Wickham (History) “Petroleocrats and Proletarians: Work, Class, and Politics in the California Oil Industry, 1917-1925” [August 1994] Richard Kaplan (Sociology), “Transformations in the American Public Sphere: News and Politics, 1865- 1920” [May 1994] Brian Lindsay Rich (Sociology), “Class,Patriarchy, or Human Capital? Determinants of Labor Feminization in the United States Banking Industry, 1940-1980” [December 1993] Andrew Green (Political Science), “South Korea in the 1990s: Dependent Development or Economic Breakdown” [December 1993] Marshall Poe (History), “’Russian Despotism’: The Origins and Dissemination of an Early Modern Commonplace” [December 1993] Eleanor Bell (Sociology), “Social Institutions, Individual Choice and Risk Aversion: Fertility and Labor Force Participation Among American Women” [December 1992] Charles Kurzman (Sociology), “Structure and Agency in the Iranian Revolution of 1979” [December 1992] Lawrence Glickman (History), “A Living Wage: Political Economy, Gender, and Consumerism in American Culture, 1880-1925” [August 1992] Michael Tien-Lung Liu (Sociology), “Playing Cricket and State Dikat: The Role of British and German Labor Ministries, 1916-1930 Toward a Constrained Autonomy Model of the State” [May 1992] Steven Leikin (History), “The Practical Utopians: Cooperation and the American Labor Movement, 1860-1890” [May 1992] Lynn Spillman (Sociology), “The Culture of National Identities: Constitutional Conventions, Centennials, and Bicentennials in the United States and Australia” [December 1991] Beth Roy (Sociology), “Some Trouble with Cows: Making Sense of Social Conflict” [May 1991] Kurt Alan Thompson (Sociology), “Social Theory and the Origin of the Modern Peace Movement in the United States” [May 1991] Maxwell Allan Cameron (Political Science), “Political Cycles of Class Conflict and Regime Change: The Case of Peru 1956-1986” [May 1989] Ph.D. Dissertation Committee Member, In Progress (UC Berkeley, unless otherswise indicated) Mina Barahimi (JSP) – returns, removals, and the politics of deportation in the U.S. Louise Birdsell Bauer (Univ. of Toronto, Sociology) – adjunct academic workers, Canada, U.S. Christopher Chambers-Ju (Political Science) – politics of teachers’ unions, Colombia and Mexico Venna Dubal (JSP) --  activism  and  transnational  politics  of  taxi  drivers  in  San  Francisco Fidan Elcioglu (Sociology) – pro and anti-immmigration reform activism in Arizona Perrin Elkind (Sociology) – foundation funding and reproductive health activism 13

Kristin George (Sociology) – religion and organizational structures in the abolition of slavery Kate Maich (Sociology) – comparative study of domestic worker movements in Peru and U.S. Akasemi Newsome (Political Science) – incorporation of immigrant workers, W. European unions Elizabeth Pearson (Sociology) – comparative study of politics of taxing in U.S. states, 1940-80 Fabiana Silva (Sociology) – networks, race, and immigration in the the U.S. labor market Maliheh Vafai (Education) -- education and job training of adult immigrant English learners Mentoring on Teaching With funding from the Teagle and Spencer Foundation and the co-leadership of Irene Bloemraad, instituted a Teaching Fellows program in Sociology and produced two editions of Writing For Sociology (2009, 2011) and Instructors Guide (2010) Undergradaute Mentoring and Advising Undergraduate Research Mentoring Program (URAP) U.C. Berkeley, 2009-2013 Becky Ming Chao, Gladis Chavez, Cindy Gamez, Hugo Garcia, Patricia Gomez, Francesca Gonnella, Amariah Hash, David Herrera, Abhilasha Madan, Alejandra Martin, Eva Masadiego, Sandra Portocarrero, Ana Reyes, Maria Rohani, Denise Stephen, Rebecca Thompson Hass Scholar Mentor, Malcom Harvey, 2003-4 McNair Scholar Mentor, Sandra Portocarrero, 2011-12 PROFESSIONAL SERVICE AND AFFILIATIONS Service, professional & international Organizer, "The Attack on Public Sector Unions and Labor’s Response ,” for the Second Forum of Sociology, International Sociological Association, Buenos Aires, Argentina, August 2012 Nominations Committee, American Sociological Association, 2008-2010. Elected Council Member, Research Committee on Labor Movements (RC 44), International Sociological Association, 2006-2010. Organizer, "Building and Rebuilding Labor Movements Around the World,” for the annual meetings of the American Sociological Association, Boston, 2008. Research Collaborator, Social Science and Humanities Research Council of Canada [roughly equivalent to a combination of NSF and NEH], Major Collaborative Research Initiative, “Building institutions and capabilities for work and Employment in a global era: the social dynamics of labor regulation, 2007-Organizer, Labor and Social Movements stream for the annual meetings of the European Group for Organizational Studies, Bergen, Norway, July 6-8, 2006. Organizer, “Understanding the Immigration Protests of Spring 2006: Lessons Learned, Future Trajectories Conference,” Institute for Research on Labor and Employment and Pew Hispanic Center, April 20, 2006. Organizer, Author Meets Critic Session, The Next Upsurge: Labor and The New Social Movements,” by Dan Clawson, for the annual meetings of the American Sociological Association, San Francisco, 2005. 14

Organizer, “New Perspectives on Labor Movement Research,” for the annual meetings of the American Sociological Association, Atlanta, Georgia, 2004. Editorial board, Rose Monograph Series, 2003—2006. Chair, Labor and Labor Movements Section of the American Sociological Association, 2002-2003 Secretary/Treasurer, Political Sociology Section of the American Sociological Association, 2002-2005. Editorial board, Contexts, 2000--2005 Editorial board, American Sociological Review, 1995 - 1998. Council Representative, Comparative Historical Section of the American Sociological Association, 19961999 Nominations Committee, Comparative Historical Section of the American Sociological Association, 1999 Council Representative, Collective Behavior and Social Movements Section of the American Sociological Association, 1994-1997 Chair, Prize Committee, Comparative Historical Section of the American Sociological Association, 19911992 Session organizer and discussant, "Sociology of Labor Movements," Annual meetings of the American Sociological Association, Washington, D.C., August 1990. Member, American Sociological Association, International Sociological Association Service for UC Berkeley Director, Berkeley Connect in Sociology, 2013Organizer, Faculty Workshop, Framing Immigrant Rights, Institute for Integrative Social Sciences, 2013Academic Senate Committee Member, Admissions, Enrollment & Preparatory Education, 2013On The Same Page Selection Committee, 2013-14 Diversity Officer, Sociology Department, 2013-14 Acting Dean of Social Sciences, University of California, Berkeley, July 2009, January-June 2012 Faculty Affliate, Center for Latino Policy Research, 2011Associate Dean of Social Sciences, University of California, Berkeley, 2008-2010 Chair, Sociology Department, 2004—2007, 2010-11. Member, Social Science Research Transition Team, 2009-2011 Director of Graduate Studies, Sociology Department, 2000-2002, 2003-2004 Advisory Board, Intitute for Research on Labor and Employment, 2004Associate Director, Institute of Industrial Relations, 1997– 2004 Transition Team, Institute for Labor and Employment Labor Center Advisory Board, 1996— Chair, Graduate Admissions Committee, 1994-95 Reviewer for: Journals: American Journal of Sociology, American Sociological Review, Contexts, Industrial Relations, Industrielles/Industrial Relations, Mobilization, Perspectives on Politics, Qualitative Sociology, Social Prolems, Theory and Society. 15

Publishers: Cornell University Press, University of California Press, University of Illinois Press Grant Programs: National Science Foundation, U.S.-Israel Binational Science Foundation

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Hwa-­‐‑Jen  Liu     The  Department  of  Sociology   National  Taiwan  University   No.  1,  Sec.  4,  Roosevelt  Rd.   Taipei,  Taiwan  10617   [email protected]   Phone:  +886.2.33661236   Fax:    +886.2.23683531    

Current  Position     Associate  professor,  Department  of  Sociology,  National  Taiwan  University,  2012-­‐‑   Assistant  professor,  Department  of  Sociology,  National  Taiwan  University,  2007-­‐‑2012     Education     Ph.D.,  Sociology,  University  of  California  at  Berkeley,  2006   Master  of  Arts,  Sociology,  University  of  Minnesota,  Twin  Cities,  1996   Master  of  Arts,  Sociology,  National  Taiwan  University,  1993   Bachelor  of  Arts,  Sociology,  National  Taiwan  University,  1990     Other  Affiliations  

    Visiting  student,  Resource  Center  for  Asian  NGOs,  Sungkonghoe  University,  South   Korea,  2003-­‐‑4     Visiting  student,  Institute  of  Sociology,  Academia  Sinica,  Taiwan,  2002-­‐‑4     Areas  of  Research  Interest     Social  movements   Late  industrialization   Capitalism   Historical  comparative     Awards  and  Grants  

 

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National  Taiwan  University  Distinguished  Teaching  Award,  2011   National  Taiwan  University  Teaching  Excellency  Award,  2010   National  Taiwan  University  Teaching  Excellency  Award,  2009   Harvard  University  Fairbank  Center  for  East  Asian  Research,  Post-­‐‑doctoral   Fellowship,  2006-­‐‑2007   UC  Berkeley  Chancellor’s  Dissertation-­‐‑Year  Fellowship,  2005-­‐‑2006   UC  Berkeley  Dean’s  Normative  Time  Fellowship,  2004-­‐‑2005   Chiang  Ching-­‐‑Kuo  Foundation  Dissertation  Fellowship,  2004-­‐‑2005   Social  Science  Research  Council  International  Dissertation  Field  Research   17

• • • • • • • •

Fellowship,  2003-­‐‑2004   UC  Berkeley  John  L.  Simpson  Memorial  Research  Fellowship,  Institute  of   International  Studies,  2002-­‐‑2003   Academia  Sinica  Research  Fellowship,  Institute  of  Sociology,  2002-­‐‑2003   UC  Berkeley  Soong  Fellowship,  2001-­‐‑2002   Institute  of  International  Education  Margoes  Fellowship,  2000-­‐‑2002   UC  Berkeley  Sociology  Department  Fellowship,  2000-­‐‑2002   Fulbright-­‐‑Hays  IIE  Grant  for  Graduate  Study,  1999-­‐‑2001   University  of  Minnesota  Sociology  Department  Fellowship,  1994-­‐‑1995   Ministry  of  Education  Fellowship  for  Graduate  Student  Scholars,  1990-­‐‑1992  

  Books     The  Sources  of  Movement  Power:  Labor  and  Environmental  Struggles  in  in  Taiwan  and  South   Korea.  (under  contract  to  the  University  of  Minnesota  Press,  Social  Movements,  Protest,  and   Contention  series)     Journal  Articles     2014  “ : ‧ “,   , 5 , pp. 3-44. (Korean translation of 2008 from Taiwanese Sociology article).

  2011  “Vanishing  Farmers:  Taiwan’s  Early  Environmental  Protests  Revisited  (in  Chinese).”   Taiwanese  Sociology  21:  1-­‐‑49.     2011  “When  Labor  and  Nature  Strike  Back:  A  Double  Movement  Saga  in  Taiwan.”   Capitalism  Nature  socialism  22(1):  22-­‐‑39.     2010   “On  Taiwan’s  Labor  Protests  in  the  1970s  (in  Chinese).”  Taiwan  Democracy  Quarterly   7(1):31-­‐‑63.     2008   “Rethinking  Movement  Trajectories:  Labor  and  Environmental  Movements  in   Taiwan  and  South  Korea  (in  Chinese).”  Taiwanese  Sociology  16:1-­‐‑47.     2005   “The  Role  of  Environmental  NGOs  in  Implementing  Environmental  Justice  –  Taiwan   and  South  Korea  Compared  (in  Korean).”  Bulletin  of  Environmental  Sociology  ECO  9:   45-­‐‑69  (with  Ye-­‐‑Yong  Choi).     1997   “Land-­‐‑Housing  Problems  and  the  Limits  of  the  Non-­‐‑Homeowners  Movement  in   Taiwan.”  Chinese  Sociology  and  Anthropology  29(4):  42-­‐‑65.  (with  Hsin-­‐‑Huang  Michael   Hsiao)     1993   “Land-­‐‑Housing  Problems  and  the  Non-­‐‑Homeowners  Movement  in  Taiwan  (in   Chinese).”  Hone  Kong  Journal  of  Social  Sciences  2:  1-­‐‑20.  (with  Hsin-­‐‑Huang  Michael   Hsiao)     Book  Sections     18

2012.  “Will  They  Tie  the  Knot?  Labor  and  Environmental  Trajectories  in  Taiwan  and  South   Korea.”  Pp.  162-­‐‑178  in  Trade  Unions  in  the  Green  Economy:  Working  for  the   Environment,  edited  by  David  Uzzell  and  Nora  Rathzel,  London:  Earthscan.     2008   “Labor  Trajectory:  Taiwan’s  and  Korea’s  Labor  Movements  Compared  (in  Chinese).”   Pp.  188-­‐‑211  in  Yam  and  Kimchi:  A  Comparison  of  the  Taiwanese  and  Korean  Experiences,   edited  by  Hwei-­‐‑Luan  Poong.  Taipei:  Asia-­‐‑Pacific  Academic  and  Cultural  Exchange   Foundation.     2002   “Collective  Action  Toward  A  Sustainable  City:  Citizens’  Movements  and   Environmental  Politics  in  Taipei.”  In  Livable  Cities?  The  Politics  of  Urban  Livelihood  and   Sustainability.  Ed.  Peter  Evans,  67-­‐‑94.  Berkeley,  CA:  University  of  California  Press.   (with  Hsin-­‐‑Huang  Michael  Hsiao)     1999   “Local  Practice  of  Violence  in  Environment  Protests  in  Taiwan  since  the  1980s.”   Ritsumeikan  Journal  of  Asia  Pacific  Studies  9:  45-­‐‑57.  (with  Hsin-­‐‑Huang  Michael  Hsiao)     1999   “Culture  and  Asian  Styles  of  Environmental  Movements.”  In  Asia'ʹs  Environmental   Movements:  Comparative  Perspectives.  Ed.  Yok-­‐‑shiu  F.  Lee  and  Alvin  So,  210-­‐‑29.   Armonk,  NY:  M.E.  Sharpe.  (with  Hsin-­‐‑Huang  Michael  Hsiao,  et  al.)     1999   “The  Impact  of  Democratization  on  Environmental  Movements.”  In  Asia'ʹs   Environmental  Movements:  Comparative  Perspectives.  Ed.  Yok-­‐‑shiu  F.  Lee  and  Alvin  So,   230-­‐‑51.  Armonk,  NY:  M.E.  Sharpe.  (with  Su-­‐‑Hoon  Lee,  et  al.)     1999   “The  Making  of  Anti-­‐‑Nuclear  Movements  in  East  Asia:  State-­‐‑Movement   Relationships  and  Policy  Outcomes.”  In  Asia'ʹs  Environmental  Movements:  Comparative   Perspectives.  Ed.  Yok-­‐‑shiu  F.  Lee  and  Alvin  So,  252-­‐‑68.  Armonk,  NY:  M.E.  Sharpe.   (with  Hsin-­‐‑Huang  Michael  Hsiao,  et  al.)     1999   “The  Contradictions  and  Synergy  of  Environmental  Movements  and  Business   Interests.”  In  Asia'ʹs  Environmental  Movements:  Comparative  Perspectives.  Ed.  Yok-­‐‑shiu   F.  Lee  and  Alvin  So,  269-­‐‑86.  Armonk,  NY:  M.E.  Sharpe.  (with  On-­‐‑Lwok  Lai,  et  al.)     Review     2012  “Comparing  Organized  Labor,  comparing  Korea  and  Taiwan.”  Book  review  of   Militants  or  Partisans:  Labor  Unions  and  Democratic  Politics  in  Korea  and  Taiwan.   Taiwanese  Sociology  24:  207-­‐‑219.       Conference  Paper    

2014.  "ʺEarly-­‐‑Riser  Legacy  and  Institutional  Politics:  Labor  and  Environmental  Movements  in  Taiwan   and  Korea"ʺ,  presented  at  "ʺMultiple  Crises  and  Sustainable  Social  Integration  in   Contemporary  Societies"ʺ  conference,  Chung-­‐‑Ang  University,  Seoul,  South  Korea,  February   21-­‐‑22.  

 

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2012.  "ʺTwo  Types  of  Movement  Powers:  the  Emergence  of  Labor  and  Environmental   Movement  in  Taiwan  and  South  Korea,  1970-­‐‑1987"ʺ,  presented  at  "ʺEast  Asia  and   Globalization  in  Comparison"ʺ  conference,  Chung-­‐‑Ang  University,  Seoul,  South   Korea,  February  22-­‐‑23.     2010   “Mirrored  Trajectories  of  Labor  and  Environmental  Movements:  The  Cases  of   Taiwan  and  South  Korea”,  XVII  ISA  World  Congress  of  Sociology,  Gothenburg,   Sweden,  July  11-­‐‑17.     2009   “Who  Becomes  the  Early-­‐‑Riser  Movement?  Labor  and  Environmental  Movements  in   Two  Rapidly  Industrializing  Countries”,  104th  Annual  Meeting  of  the  American   Sociological  Association,  San  Francisco,  USA,  August  8-­‐‑11.     2009   “When  Labor  and  Nature  Strike  Back:  A  Double  Movement  Saga  in  Taiwan”,   6 12-­‐‑13     2009   “Movement  sequences  and  institutional  politics:  labor  and  environmental   movements  in  Taiwan  and  Korea”,  IPSAS  International  Conference  on  The  Logics  of   Civil  Society  in  New  Democracies:  East  Asia  and  East  Europe,  Academia  Sinica,   Taipei,  June  5-­‐‑7.     2008   “ ”   ─ 5 24     2007   “Notes  on  Labor  Trajectory:  Taiwan’s  and  South  Korea’s  Labor  Movements   Compared.”  Paper  presented  at  the  102nd  Annual  Meeting  of  American  Sociological   Association,  Section  on  Labor  and  Labor  Movements.  New  York,  August  11-­‐‑14.     2006   “When  Labor  and  Nature  Strike  Back:  A  Double  Movement  Saga  in  Taiwan.”  Paper   presented  at  the  Annual  Meeting  of  Association  for  Asian  Studies,  Penal  of   Commodification  and  Social  Activism:  Cases  from  Mainland  China  and  Taiwan,  San   Francisco,  April  6-­‐‑9.  

  2004   “Red  or  Green?  Historical  Trajectories  of  Labor  and  Environmental  Movements  in   Taiwan  and  Korea,  1971-­‐‑2000.”  Paper  presented  at  the  99th  Annual  Meeting  of   American  Sociological  Association,  Section  of  Environment  and  Technology.  San   Francisco,  August  14-­‐‑17.     2004   “The  Role  of  Environmental  NGOs  in  Implementing  Environmental  Justice:  Taiwan   and  South  Korea  Compared.”  Paper  presented  at  the  International  Sociological   Association  RC  24  “Globalization,  Localization,  and  Environment.”  Seoul  National   University,  Seoul,  June  28-­‐‑30.  (with  Yeyong  Choi)     2003   “Red  or  Green,  How  Wouldst  Thou  Glow?  Historical  Trajectories  of  Labor  and   Environmental  Movements  in  Taiwan  and  Korea.”  Paper  presented  at  the   international  workshop  on  “Social  Movements  and  Democratic  Consolidation:   Taiwan  and  South  Korea  Compared.”  Center  for  Asia-­‐‑Pacific  Area  Studies,  Academia   Sinica,  Taipei,  July  23.   20

 

  2001   “Collective  Action  Toward  A  Sustainable  City:  Citizens’  Movements  and   Environmental  Politics  in  Taipei.”  Paper  presented  at  American  Sociological   Association  Annual  Meeting,  Anaheim,  California.  (with  Hsin-­‐‑Huang  Michael  Hsiao)     2001   “The  Strategic  Training  and  Economic  Partnership  of  San  Mateo  County:  Labor   Educator  Partner  in  a  Union-­‐‑led  High-­‐‑road  Training  Initiative.”  Paper  presented  at   AFL-­‐‑CIO/UALE  Education  Conference  “Building  Union  Power  in  a  Changing   Economy,”  Boston,  Massachusetts.  (with  Kirsten  Snow  Spalding)     1998   “Local  Practice  of  Violence  in  Environmental  Protests  of  Taiwan:  1980-­‐‑1996.”  Paper   presented  at  the  International  Workshop  on  "ʺViolence  and  the  Environment,"ʺ   Berkeley,  California.  (with  Hsin-­‐‑Huang  Michael  Hsiao)     1997   “Degradation,  Livelihood  and  Sustainability  in  Taipei:  Emerging  Issues  and  Public   Action.”  Paper  Presented  at  the  Workshop  on  “Sustainability,  livelihood  and   Degradation  in  the  Third  World  Cities,”  Berkeley,  California.  (with  Hsin-­‐‑Huang   Michael  Hsiao)     1994   “How  do  Social  Movement  Organizations  Survive?  A  Case  Study  of  Two  Taiwanese   SMOs’  Resource  Management  (in  Chinese).”  Paper  presented  at  the  Fifth   Symposium  of  Young  Social  Scientists,  Taiwan  Research  Fund,  Taipei,  Taiwan.  

Invited  Talks  

 

2007   “Rethinking  Movement  Trajectories:  A  Comparison  of  Labor  and  Environmental   Movements  in  Taiwan  and  South  Korea.”  The  Watson  Institute  for  International   Studies,  Brown  University,  February  21.     2006   “Two  Environmental  Movements  Compared:  Taiwan  and  South  Korea.”   Department  of  Geography,  University  of  California  at  Berkeley,  April  13.     2004   “If  Social  Movements  Matter.”  Resource  Center  for  Asian  NGOs,  Sungkonghoe   University,  Seoul,  May  21.     2004   “Environmental  Movements  in  the  Late  Industrializers:  Taiwan  and  South  Korea   Compared.”  The  Citizens’  Information  Center  of  Environment,  Seoul,  March  16.     2003   “Notes  on  Taiwan’s  Labor  and  Environmental  Movements.”  Green  Formosa  Front,   Taipei,  August  16.  

  Teaching  Experiences     Instructor,  Department  of  Sociology,  National  Taiwan  University   Sociological  Theory  (undergraduate)   Comparative  Methods  (undergraduate)     Reading  Classics  in  Sociology  (undergraduate)   Social  Movements  (undergraduate)  

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  Sociology  of  Development  (undergraduate)   Comparative  Sociology  and  Methods  (graduate)     Classical  Sociological  Theory  (graduate)   Contemporary  Sociological  Theory  (graduate)     Development  and  Comparative  History  (graduate)     Graduate  Student  Instructor,  Department  of  Sociology,  UC  Berkeley   Introduction  to  Sociology,  2002     Teaching  Assistant,  Department  of  Sociology,  University  of  Minnesota   Sociology  of  Family,  1996   Social  Problem,  1996   Sociology  of  Organization,  1996   Introduction  of  Sociology,  1995  

  Research  Experiences     Western  Environmentalism  and  Local  Environmental  Protests:  Taiwan  and  South  Korea,   1961-­‐‑1990,  National  Science  Council,  2012-­‐‑2015  (NSC  101-­‐‑2410-­‐‑H-­‐‑002-­‐‑102-­‐‑MY3)     Labor  protests  during  early  industrialization  -­‐‑  the  East  Asian  experiences  compared,   National  Science  Council,  2010-­‐‑2012  (NSC  99-­‐‑2410-­‐‑H-­‐‑002-­‐‑174-­‐‑MY2)     How  Is  'ʹEast  Asia'ʹ  Seen  and  Compared  in  Social  Science?  An  Investigation  of  East  Asian   Comparative  Studies  in  the  Past  30  Years,  National  Science  Council,  2009-­‐‑2010  (NSC  98-­‐‑ 2410-­‐‑H-­‐‑002  -­‐‑128  -­‐‑)     How  to  empirically  confirm  the  emergence  of  a  social  movement?  Labor  and  environmental   movements  compared,  National  Science  Council,  2008-­‐‑2009  (NSC  97-­‐‑2410-­‐‑H-­‐‑002-­‐‑006-­‐‑MY2).     Asian  Labor,  Department  of  Sociology,  UC  Berkeley,  2001-­‐‑2002     The  Construction  Workers’  Work  and  Family  Survey,  Center  of  Labor  Research  and   Education  (CLRE),  Institute  of  Industrial  Relations,  UC  Berkeley,  2001     The  Strategic  Training  and  Economic  Partnership  of  San  Mateo  County,  CLRE,  Institute  of   Industrial  Relations,  UC  Berkeley,  2000     Capital  Strategy,  CLRE,  Institute  of  Industrial  Relations,  UC  Berkeley,  2000     Sustainable  Taiwan  2011,  Institute  of  Sociology,  Academia  Sinica,  Taipei,  1998-­‐‑1999     Middle  Class  in  East  Asia  and  Southeast  Asia:  Taiwan,  South  Korea,  Hong  Kong,   Singapore,  Philippines,  Indonesia,  Malaysia,  and  Thailand,  Institute  of  Sociology,   Academia  Sinica,  Taipei,  1998-­‐‑1999     Taiwan'ʹs  Local  Environmental  Protests:  1980-­‐‑1996,  Institute  of  Sociology,  Academia  Sinica,   22

Taipei,  1997-­‐‑1999     Confucian  Values  in  Modern  Chinese  Communities:  Hong  Kong,  Taipei,  Singapore,  and   Guangzhou,  Department  of  Sociology,  Chinese  University  of  Hong  Kong,  Hong  Kong,   1997-­‐‑1998     The  Social  Ecology  between  Environmental  Protection  Agency,  NGOs,  and  Local  Protest   Groups,  Institute  of  Sociology,  Academia  Sinica,  Taipei,  1996-­‐‑1997     Conflict  Resolution  between  Local  Communities  and  State-­‐‑owned  Polluting  Enterprises  -­‐‑   The  Involvement  of  Local  Factions  and  the  Mechanism  of  Money  Politics,  Department  of   Sociology,  National  Taiwan  University,  Taipei,  1993-­‐‑1994     Civil  Education  in  Elementary  School:  Content  Analysis  on  Textbooks,  Department  of   History,  National  Taiwan  University,  Taipei,  1993     Other  Experiences     Public  sociology  video  project,  UC  Berkeley,  sociology,  an  interview  with  Kim  Voss   (including  editing)  

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