| Professor, LSJ/Jackson School for International StudiesPhD, Political Science, Hebrew University, 1987
Courses: LSJ 366/SIS 366, Comparative Law, Societies and Courts; LSJ 336, Place of Law in Multicultural Conflicts; LSJ 439, Law and Political Power Interests: Theories of law; politics and law Email: gbarzil@u.washington.edu |
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Katherine Beckett
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Professor, LSJ/SociologyPhD, Sociology, UCLA, 1994
Courses: LSJ 200, Introduction to LSJ; LSJ 376/Sociology 376, Drugs and Society; Interests: Race and the regulation of drugs; politics and law of foods Email: kbeckett@u.washington.edu |
Rachel Cichowski![]() |
Associate Professor, LSJ/Political SciencePhD, Political Science, UC Irvine, 2002
Courses: LSJ 367/Pol S 367, Comparative Law and Courts; LSJ 327/Pol S 327, Women’s Rights as Human Rights; LSJ 428/Pol S 428, Women’s Rights in an Integrated Europe Interests: Comparative law and politics; Courts and European integration Email: rcichows@u.washington.edu |
Angelina Godoy ![]() |
Associate Professor, LSJ/Jackson School for International StudiesPhD, Sociology, UC Berkeley, 2001
Courses: LSJ 322/SIS 322, Human Rights in Latin America; LSJ 490, Health as a Human Right Interests: Human rights in Latin America; the politics of property in international trade agreements Email: agodoy@u.washington.edu |
Steve Herbert![]() |
Professor, LSJ/Geography; Director, LSJPhD, Geography, UCLA, 1995
Courses: LSJ 200, Introduction to LSJ; LSJ 378/Geography 378, Policing the City; LSJ 467/Geography 467, Law, Justice and the Environment Interests: Urban policing; environmental regulation Email: skherb@u.washington.edu Website: http://depts.washington.edu/geog/people/herbert_index.htm |
George Lovell![]() |
Associate Professor, Political Science; Adjunct, LSJPhD, Political Science, University of Michigan, 1997
Courses: LSJ 360/Pol S 360, Introduction to US Constitutional Law; LSJ 361/Pol S 361, U.S. Courts and Civil Liberty Interests: Politics and courts; Popular conceptions of justice Email: glovell@u.washington.edu |
Jamie Mayerfeld![]() |
Professor, Political Science; Adjunct, LSJPhD, Political Science, Princeton, 1992
Courses: LSJ 320/Pol S 320, The Politics of International Human Rights Interests: Political theory and human rights; International human rights institutions Email: jasonm@u.washington.edu Website: https://catalyst.uw.edu/workspace/jasonm/9329/45858 |
Michael McCann![]() |
Professor, Political Science; Adjunct, LSJPhD, Political Science, UC Berkeley, 1983
Courses: LSJ 363/Political Science 363, Law in Society; LSJ 420/Political Science 420, The Politics of Rights Interests: Law and social movements; media, politics and the law Email: mwmccann@u.washington.edu Website: http://www.polisci.washington.edu/Directory/Faculty/Faculty/faculty_mccann.html |
Naomi Murakawa![]() |
Assistant Professor, Political Science; Adjunct, LSJPhD, Political Science, Yale University, 2005
Courses: Pol S 317, Politics of Race and Ethnicity in the United States Interests: Politics of crime and punishment; American racial formation Email: murakawa@u.washington.edu Website: http://www.polisci.washington.edu/Directory/Faculty/Faculty/faculty_murakawa.html |
Arzoo Osanloo![]() |
Associate Professor, LSJPhD, Anthropology, Stanford University, 2002. J.D. American, 1993.
Courses: LSJ 321, Human Rights Law in Culture and Practice; LSJ 421, Women’s Rights and Politics in Islamic Society; LSJ 425, Domesticating International Human Rights Interests: Rights and politics in contemporary Iran; Cultural politics of human rights Email: aosanloo@u.washington.edu Website: http://arzoo-osanloo.com |
Carolyn Pinedo Turnovsky![]() |
Assistant Professor, LSJ/American Ethnic StudiesPhD, Sociology, City University of New York, The Graduate Center, 2006
Courses: LSJ 381, Immigration, Citizenship and Rights; LSJ 381 Immigration, Labor and Rights Interests: Race, immigration, and labor; qualitative methods Email: cpt4@u.washington.edu |
Jonathan Wender![]() |
Lecturer, LSJ/SociologyPhD, Criminology, Simon Fraser, 2004
Courses: LSJ 375, Crime, Politics and Justice; LSJ 376/Soc 376, Drugs and Society; LSJ 480, Policing Modern Society Interests: Policing modern urban society; phenomenology of urban violence Email: jmwender@u.washington.edu Website: http://www.soc.washington.edu/people/faculty_detail.asp?UID=jmwender |
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WISER Affiliated Faculty
Bethany AlbertsonAssistant Professor of Political Science Research Interests: Political Psychology and Public Opinion Office Location: Gowen 125 Office Hours: TBA eMail: balberts AT u DOT washington DOT edu Website: http://faculty.washington.edu/balberts Bethany Albertson (Ph.D., University of Chicago), assistant professor, joined the department in 2006. She studies political psychology and public opinion. Her dissertation research examined the use of religious language in political appeals, and used experimental methods to understand the effects of these appeals on political attitudes. This research was supported by the National Science Foundation and the Center for the Study of Democratic Politics at Princeton University. Her substantive research interests include persuasion, ambivalence, implicit attitudes, and race and religion in US politics. She teaches American Politics, Voting and Elections, and Political Psychology at the University of Washington. Manish Chalana Lecturer in Urban Design and Planning Research Interests: Urban Gentrification, Multicultural Planning and Preservation, Equitable Developments, South-Asian Immigration in North American, and Right to Public Parks. Office: Gould Hall, Room 410 Dr. Manish Chalana holds a doctorate in Design and Planning from the University of Colorado. He also holds a masters in Landscape Architecture from the Pennsylvania State University and masters in Architecture from the School of Planning and Architecture, New Delhi, India. Dr. Chalana’s research focuses on international and multicultural preservation and planning. He is also interested in immigration of South Asians to North America, and their settlement and network patterns. Additional interests include the use of urban open spaces by marginalized communities and the displacement of disadvantaged communities as a result of gentrification in urban areas. Frances Contreras Assistant Professor, College of Education Research interests: affirmative action in higher education, Latinas/os in Ph.D. programs Office Location: M204 Miller eMail: frances@u.washington.edu Dr. Contreras presently researches issues of equity and access for underrepresented student in the education pipeline. She recieved her B.A. from the University of California, Berkeley in 1994, her M.Ed. at Harvard University in 1995, and her Ph.D. from Stanford University in 2003. She addresses transition between K-12 and higher education, community college transfer, faculty diversity, affirmative action in higher education, and the role of the public policy arena in higher education access for underserved students of color. In addition to her research and teaching Dr. Contreras serves on the Boards of the Harvard Journal of Hispanic Policy, LEAP, California Tomorrow, and the Chicana/Latino Foundation. Gloria Coronado, PhD Dr. Coronado is a Hispanic epidemiologist who received her undergraduate training at Stanford University. She works as an Assistant Member for the Cancer Prevention Program at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center. Dr. Coronad is a Co-investigator for several community-based intervention studies taking place in Eastern Washington and New Mexico. She serves as the Principal Investigator on two National Cancer Institute-funded investigations; Increasing Colorectal Screening in Minorities and ESL Curriculum for HBV Testing in Chinese Americans. She has co-authored several publications from qualitative research conducted in Hispanic communities and has long history of mentoring undergraduate and graduate students. She was recognized as a Young Hispanic Leader by the Embassy of Spain. She serves as a board member on two local organizations: CASA Latina and Planned Parenthood of Western Washington. Laura E. Evans Assistant Professor of Public Affairs Research interests: Political Institutions, Urban and Regional Affairs, Race and Ethnicity Office Location: Parrington 207B Office Phone: 206.543.8343 Professor Evans’s research explores local politics and intergovernmental relations in the United States. She examines the forces shaping regional policy coordination, with particular attention to the effects of racial and economic divisions on interaction between governments. Her current project examines Native American tribal governments’ efforts to build political capacity and to manage relations with other governments–the Feds, states, and localities. She finds that some tribes have developed effective strategies for building capacities and winning successes in regional politics, although racial context strongly conditions results. Ultimately, this study addresses how information and organizational learning matter in politics, and how politically marginalized groups can challenge the obstacles facing them. Luis R. Fraga Professor of Political Science Research Interests: Urban Politics and Policy, Educational Politics and Policy, Race and Ethnicity Politics Office Location: TBA Office Hours: TBA eMail: fraga@stanford.edu Luis R. Fraga joined the University of Washington as Associate Vice Provost for Faculty Advancement in July of 2007. He is the Director of the Diversity Research Institute at UW, and also serves as a political science professor. Fraga received his Ph.D. from Rice University. He was a member of the American Political Science Association standing committee on Civic Engagement and Education that co-authored Democracy at Risk: How Political Choices Undermine Citizen Participation, and What We Can Do About It (Brookings Institution Press 2005). He is also co-author of the recently published Multiethnic Moments: The Politics of Urban Education Reform (Temple University Press 2006). He is one of six principal investigators on the Latino National Survey (LNS), the first-ever sixteen state-stratified survey of Latinos in the U.S. It asks questions regarding political attitudes, behavior, and beliefs. This project has received $1.2M in support from major foundations and universities. Fraga is also the principal investigator on the project “Interests and Representation: Ethnic Advocacy on California School Boards,” the first-ever statewide study of Latino school board members in California.Ralina Joseph Assistant Professor of Communications Research interests: race, gender, sexuality, representation Office Location: Communications 339 Office Hours: Wed 12:30 – 2:30, or by appointment eMail: rljoseph@u.washington.edu Dr. Joseph completed an undergraduate degree at Brown University, majoring in American Civilization. She received an M.A. and Ph.D. in Ethnic Studies from the University of California, San Diego. Her dissertation, “New Millennium ‘Mulattas’: Post-Ethnicity, Post-Feminism, and the Mixed-Race Excuse,” investigates how contemporary representations of multiracial African American women are used for neo-conservative political agendas. She is broadly interested in contemporary representation of race, gender, and sexuality in the United States. Her current research includes an analysis of California’s failed “Racial Privacy Initiative” (Proposition 54) alongside “post-identity” performances in Tyra Banks’s popular reality show, America’s Next Top Model.
Moon-Ho Jung Assistant Professor of History Research Interests: Asian American History Office Location: Office Hours eMail: mhjung@u.washington.edu website: http://depts.washington.edu/history/faculty/jung.html Tetsuden Kashima Professor of American Ethnic Studies Research Interests: WWII American & Canadian Internment sites, Asian American Sociology Office Location: A-519 Padelford Office Hours: eMail: kashima@u.washington.edu website: http://depts.washington.edu/aes/faculty/tkashima.html Mark C. Long Assistant Professor of Public Affairs Public Economics, Labor Economics, Economics of Education, Race and Inequality, and Applied Econometrics Office Location: Parrington Hall 209E marklong@u.washington.edu Mark C. Long joined the Daniel J. Evans School of Public Affairs in 2004. He holds a doctorate in economics from the University of Michigan (2002). His research focuses on the effects of affirmative action (and alternative) college admissions policies on college entry; the effects of college financial aid on household savings; and his recent work examines the effect of school and college quality on test scores, educational attainment, labor market outcomes, family formation, and other behaviors. He is the winner of The Association for Public Policy Analysis and Management’s 2002 Ph.D. Dissertation Award for the Best Ph.D. Dissertation in Public Policy and Management. He has publications in The Review of Economics and Statistics, the Journal of Public Economics, the Journal of Econometrics, and Public Administration Review. Naomi Murakawa Assistant Professor of Political Science Research interests: race, crime policy, American political development Office Location: Gowen 133 Office Hours: By appointment eMail: murakawa@u.washington.edu Naomi Murakawa is an assistant professor of political science at the University of Washington and a founding member of the Washington Institute for the Study of Ethnicity, Race and Sexuality. She is broadly interested in race, American political development, and crime policy and the carceral state. Her current research projects address how racial and electoral politics affect the proliferation of mandatory minimum statutes, the rise and fall of sentencing guidelines, and the nationalization of crime policy. She received her B.A. in women’s studies from Columbia University, her M.S. in social policy from the London School of Economic, and her Ph.D. in political science from Yale University. During the 2006-07 and 2007-08 academic years, Naomi will be at the University of California, Berkeley as a Scholar in Health Policy Research with the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. Christopher Parker Assistant Professor of Political Science Research Interests: Political Psychology, Political Behavior, Race and Politics, Survey Research. eMail: parker@polsci.ucsb.edu website: http://www.polsci.ucsb.edu/faculty/parker/index.htm Professor Parker’s recent research centers upon the myriad ways in which war and military service affect race relations. Specifically, he examines whether or not veterans and non-veterans differ systematically in their socio-political attitudes and behavior. More broadly, however, Professor Parker’s research agenda focuses on the intersection between race and national identity, and how this combination affects political attitudes and behavior. Before joining the faculty at the University of Washington, Professor Parker was a member of the faculty at the University of California, Santa Barbara. Parker also spent a year at Grinnell College where he was a CSMP Fellow. He has published in International Security, and is currently working on a book manuscript entitled, “Fighting for Democracy: Race, Military Service, and Insurgency during Jim Crow.” He also is the principal investigator for the California Patriotism Pilot Study (CPPS, 2002), a survey that investigates the multi-dimensionality of patriotism. Professor Parker was a recipient of a Robert Wood Johnson Health Policy Fellowship, in residence at the University of California, Berkely/San Francisco in fall 2007. Currently, Professor Parker teaches a graduate level seminar in Public Opinion at the University of Washington. Professor Parker spent a total of ten years in the United States Navy, after which he attended the University of California, Los Angeles. Parker received his doctorate at the University of Chicago. Nikhil Singh Associate Professor of History Research Interests: US Intellectual, African American, Ethnicity and Nationalism Office Location: Office Hours: On Sabbatical during Academic Year 2006-2007 eMail: nsingh@u.washington.edu website: http://faculty.washington.edu/nsingh/ Adam Warren Assistant Professor of History Latin American History Office Location: Office Hours: eMail: awarren2@u.washington.edu |














Manish Chalana 
Gloria Coronado, PhD
Laura E. Evans
Luis R. Fraga
Mark C. Long
Naomi Murakawa
Christopher Parker


