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Department of Sociology, UCLA
University of California, Los Angeles

UCLA Department of Sociology Papers  •  UCLA Department of Sociology Website  •  Policies
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Located in Los Angeles, the city that the world watches to detect the shape of the future, UCLA Sociology sets the discipline’s pace. Our internationally-renowned faculty spans the entire disciplinary gamut, from conversation analysis and ethnomethodology on one end, to mathematical sociology on the other, and with virtually every other major specialty represented. We study any number of topics, from the past (18th century China) to the future (the internet); from here (Los Angeles) to there (Eastern and Western Europe; southeast Asia; Latin America); from the smallest-scale (two people in conversation) to the largest (world empires). Committed to methodological diversity, we boast the largest contingent of ethnographers of any department, working in friendly co-existence with a very sophisticated group of quantitative researchers. We conduct sociological research in a myriad of ways, whether through direct observation, archival work, recording of naturally occurring data, large-scale sample surveys, experiments, or secondary data analysis.

Paper Series for the Department of Sociology, UCLA


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PAPERS FROM 2006
Renee P. Reichl and Roger D. Waldinger (October 18, 2006) Has the mainstream been remade? Mexican-origin workers in the new economy
Roger Waldinger (August 1, 2006) Between 'here and there': Immigrant cross-border activities and loyalties
Roger Waldinger (January 1, 2006) Conflict and Contestation in the Cross-Border Community: Hometown Associations Reassessed
PAPERS FROM 2005
Roger D. Waldinger (December 1, 2005) Did Manufacturing Matter
Roger D. Waldinger (January 1, 2005) Foreigners Transformed: International Migration and the Remaking of a Divided People
PAPERS FROM 2004
Roger D. Waldinger (January 1, 2004) Nationalizing Foreigners
PAPERS FROM 2003
Roger D. Waldinger and David Fitzgerald (October 7, 2003) Transnationalism in Question
Roger D. Waldinger and David Fitzgerald (October 7, 2003) Immigrant “Transnationalism” Reconsidered
Roger D. Waldinger and Cynthia Feliciano (August 29, 2003) Will the new second generation experience "downward assimilation"?

 
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