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Regular
Faculty
BLOEMRAAD,
Irene
BONNELL, Victoria
BURAWOY, Michael
ENRIQUEZ, Laura
EVANS, Peter
FISCHER, Claude
FLIGSTEIN, Neil
FOURCADE-GOURINCHAS,
Marion
GOLD, Thomas
GOODMAN, Leo
HOCHSCHILD, Arlie
HOUT, Michael
KARABEL, Jerome
LIE, John
LUCAS, Samuel R.
LUKER, Kristin
MOON, Dawne
PETERSEN, Trond
RAY, Raka
RILEY, Dylan
SANCHEZ-JANKOWSKI,
Martin
SMITH, Sandra
SWIDLER, Ann
THORNE, Barrie
TUGAL, Cihan
VOSS, Kim
WACQUANT, Loic
WEIR, Margaret
Emeritus
Faculty
BELLAH,
Robert
BLAUNER, Bob
CASTELLS, Manuel
CHODOROW, Nancy J.
COLE, Robert, E
DUSTER, Troy
EDWARDS, Harry
MATZA, David
OFSHE, Richard
SCHURMANN, Franz
SMELSER, Neil
Affiliated
Faculty
EDELMAN,
Lauren
ELLIS, W. Russel, Jr.
LINCOLN, James R.
NONET, Philippe
OMI, Michael
SHORTELL, Stephen
SKOLNICK, Jerome H.
THOMPSON, Charis
WILENSKY, Harold
WILMOTH, John
Visiting
Faculty
BARLOW,
Andrew
BROOK, Dan
HAVEMAN, Heather
HAYTIN, Daniel
HUDIS, Paula
KELSEY, Mary E.
NASATIR, David
NESBITT, Paula
PARK, Myoung Kyu
POWERS, Brian
STOCKINGER, James
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Kristin Luker
Professor
Jurisprudence and Social Policy
University of California
2240 Piedmont Ave.
Berkeley, CA 94720
(510) 642-4038
luker@socrates.berkeley.edu
Kristin Luker is Professor of Sociology and a professor in the Jurisprudence and Social Policy Program (Boalt Hall School of Law) at the University of California, Berkeley. She is the author of many scholarly articles, as well as three books: Taking Chances: Abortion and the Decision Not to Contracept (1975), Abortion and the Politics of Motherhood (1984) and Dubious Conceptions: The Politics of Teenage Pregnancy (1996). She is currently at work on her fourth book, tentatively entitled Bodies and Politics, which is about sex education controversies in the United States.
Professor Luker has been elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the Sociological Research Association, and was invited to the White House by President Clinton to discuss issues of politics and social policy. She has been awarded grants from the Spencer and Ford Foundations, as well as the Commonwealth Fund, and has won fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation and the National Endowment for the Humanities. Her book Abortion and the Politics of Motherhood was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize.
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