Elizabeth Popp Berman



ELIZABETH POPP BERMANWeiser Hall, Suite 800500 Church StreetAnn Arbor, MI 48109-1042(734) 764-6767epberman@umich.eduACADEMIC APPOINTMENTSAssociate Professor of Organizational Studies and Sociology, University of Michigan, 2019-Associate Professor of Sociology, University at Albany, SUNY, Sociology, 2013-19Assistant Professor of Sociology, University at Albany, SUNY, Sociology, 2007-13VISITING POSITIONRichard B. Fisher Member, Institute for Advanced Study, School of Social Science, Princeton, NJ, 2013-14EDUCATIONPh.D. University of California, Berkeley, Sociology, 2007M.A. University of California, Berkeley, Sociology, 2000B.A. University of Pennsylvania, Sociology, 1995, magna cum laudeBOOKSBerman, Elizabeth Popp. Thinking Like an Economist: How Economics Became the Language of U.S. Public Policy. Princeton: Princeton University Press. Under contract, full draft submitted to press.Berman, Elizabeth Popp, and Catherine Paradeise, eds. 2016. The University under Pressure. Vol. 46 of Research in the Sociology of Organizations. Bingley, U.K.: Emerald Group Publishing.Berman, Elizabeth Popp. 2012. Creating the Market University: How Academic Science Became an Economic Engine. Princeton: Princeton University Press.? Max Weber Award, American Sociological Association, Section on Organizations, Occupations, and Work? Pierre Bourdieu Award, American Sociological Association, Sociology of Education Section? President’s Book Award, Social Science History Association? Reviewed in the American Historical Review, American Journal of Sociology, Enterprise and Society, History of Education, Journal of American History, Minerva, Review of Higher Education, Sinergia e Innovación, Technology and Culture, Tertiary Education and Management? Translated into Turkish, ChineseJOURNAL ARTICLES AND BOOK CHAPTERSBerman, Elizabeth Popp. 2017. “From Economic to Social Regulation: How the Deregulatory Moment Strengthened Economists’ Policy Position.” History of Political Economy 49:187-212.McCabe, Joshua, and Elizabeth Popp Berman. 2016. “American Exceptionalism Revisited: Tax Relief, Poverty Reduction, and the Politics of Child Tax Credits.” Sociological Science 3:540-567.Berman, Elizabeth Popp, and Catherine Paradeise. 2016. “Introduction: The University Under Pressure.” Research in the Sociology of Organizations 46:1-22.Berman, Elizabeth Popp, and Abby Stivers. 2016. “Student Loans as a Pressure on U.S. Higher Education.” Research in the Sociology of Organizations 46:129-160.? Chinese translation published in Peking University Educational ReviewHirschman, Daniel, and Elizabeth Popp Berman (equal coauthors). 2014. “Do Economists Make Policies?” Socio-Economic Review 12:779-811.? Swedish translation published in Fronesis, 2016Berman, Elizabeth Popp. 2014. “Field Theories and the Move toward the Market in U.S. Academic Science.” Political Power and Social Theory 27:193-221.Berman, Elizabeth Popp. 2014. “Not Just Neoliberalism: Economization in U.S. Science and Technology Policy.” Science, Technology & Human Values 39:397-431.Berman, Elizabeth Popp, and Laura M. Milanes-Reyes. 2013. “The Politicization of Knowledge Claims: The ‘Laffer Curve’ in the U.S. Congress.” Qualitative Sociology 36:53-79.Berman, Elizabeth Popp. 2012. “Explaining the Move toward the Market in U.S. Academic Science: How Institutional Logics Can Change without Institutional Entrepreneurs.” Theory and Society 41:261-299.? Co-winner, 2013 Star-Nelkin Paper Award, American Sociological Association, Section on Science, Knowledge and TechnologyBerman, Elizabeth Popp, and Nicholas Pagnucco. 2010. “Economic Ideas and the Political Process: Debating Tax Cuts in the U.S. House of Representatives, 1962-1981.” Politics & Society 38:347-372.Berman, Elizabeth Popp. 2008. “Why Did Universities Start Patenting? Institution-Building and the Road to the Bayh-Dole Act.” Social Studies of Science 38:835-871.? 2007 Hacker-Mullins Student Paper Award, American Sociological Association, Section on Science, Knowledge and TechnologyBerman, Elizabeth Popp. 2008. “The Politics of Patent Law and Its Material Effects: The Changing Relationship between Universities and the Marketplace.” Pp. 191-213 in Living in a Material World: Economic Sociology Meets Science & Technology Studies, edited by Trevor Pinch and Richard Swedberg. Cambridge: MIT Press.Berman, Elizabeth Popp. 2006. “Before the Professional Project: Success and Failure at Creating an Organizational Representative for English Doctors.” Theory and Society 35:157-191.? Honorable mention, 2006 James D. Thompson Award, Section on Organizations, Occupations and Work, American Sociological AssociationKirp, David L., and Elizabeth Popp Berman. 2003. “A Good Deal of Collaboration: The University of California, Berkeley.” Pp. 207-220 in Shakespeare, Einstein, and the Bottom Line: The Marketing of Higher Education, by David L. Kirp. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.SHORTER PUBLICATIONSBerman, Elizabeth Popp. 2019. “Trump Is Giving Arthur Laffer the Presidential Medal of Freedom: Economists Aren’t Laughing.” Washington Post (Monkey Cage), June 1.Berman, Elizabeth Popp. 2019. “Pete Buttigieg argues against free college.” Washington Post (Monkey Cage), April 5.Berman, Elizabeth Popp. 2018. “Where is Knowledge in The Moral Background?” Review symposium for Gabriel Abend, The Moral Background: An Inquiry into the History of Business Ethics (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2014), Socio-Economic Review 16:651-655.Berman, Elizabeth Popp. 2018. “On the Bookshelf.” SASE Newsletter 2:20.Berman, Elizabeth Popp, and Daniel Hirschman. 2018. “The Sociology of Quantification: Where Are We Now?” Review essay for Contemporary Sociology 47:257-266.Berman, Elizabeth Popp. 2018. “Hinges in a Time of Crisis.” International Studies Quarterly online symposium on “The Rise and Fall of Keynesian Ideas During the Great Recession.”Berman, Elizabeth Popp. 2017. “The Book I Wish Nancy MacLean Had Written.” Book symposium on Democracy in Chains: The Deep History of the Radical Right’s Stealth Plan for America, by Nancy MacLean. ASA Comparative and Historical Sociology section Policy Trajectories blog.Berman, Elizabeth Popp. 2017. Book symposium for Josh Pacewicz, Partisans and Partners: The Politics of the Post-Keynesian Society (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2016), Trajectories 28(3):63-67.Berman, Elizabeth Popp. 2015. Review of Christopher J. Phillips, The New Math: A Political History (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2015), Journal of American History 102:932-933.Berman, Elizabeth Popp. 2015. Book symposium for Dan Lainer-Vos, Sinews of the Nation: Constructing Irish and Zionist Bonds in the United States (Cambridge: Polity Press, 2013), Trajectories 26(2):48-52.Berman, Elizabeth Popp. 2015. Review of Charis Thompson, Good Science: The Ethical Choreography of Stem Cell Research (Cambridge: MIT Press, 2013), Contemporary Sociology 44:861-862.Berman, Elizabeth Popp. 2015. Review of Nicolas Rasmussen, Gene Jockeys: Life Science and the Rise of Biotech Enterprise (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2014), American Historical Review 120:675-676.Berman, Elizabeth Popp, and Daniel Hirschman. 2015. “The Influence of Economists on Public Policy.” Oxford University Press OUPblog (28 January).Berman, Elizabeth Popp. 2014. “Thinking Like an Economist: On Expertise and the U.S. Policy Process.” Occasional Papers of the School of Social Science, Institute for Advanced Study, Paper Number 52 (May).Berman, Elizabeth Popp. 2012. “More STEM Majors Won’t Solve Higher Education’s Problems.” “The Conversation” piece for the Chronicle of Higher Education (November 1).Berman, Elizabeth Popp. 2012. “Economic Engines: At What Cost?” “Views” piece for Inside Higher Ed (June 7).Whelchel, Sarah, and Elizabeth Popp Berman. 2011. “Paying for Perennialism: A Quest for Food and Funding.” Issues in Science and Technology 28:63-76.? Reprinted in Zirulnik, Michael L., Lee Gutkind, and David Guston, eds., The Rightful Place of Science: Creative Nonfiction. Tempe, AZ: Consortium for Science, Policy & Outcomes.Berman, Elizabeth Popp. 2009. “Lost in Translation: Unintended Consequences of the Bayh-Dole Act.” “Expert Opinion” piece for .Berman, Elizabeth Popp. 2007. Review of Monica Prasad, The Politics of Free Markets: The Rise of Neoliberal Economic Policies in Britain, France, Germany and the United States (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2006), Sociological Inquiry 77: 637-639.Kirp, David L., and Elizabeth Popp Berman. 2002. “A Good Deal of Collaboration: A Recent Agreement with Industry Avoids the Pitfalls of the Past.” California Monthly, September.? Reprinted as “A Good Deal of Collaboration.” University Business, October 2002.Plus >100 blog posts at , May 2014 to presentMedia mentions in venues including the New York Times, Washington Post, Politico, Atlantic, NPR’s Morning Edition, National Review, Chronicle of Higher Education, Inside Higher Ed, Times Higher Education, Bloomberg, Business Insider, and othersFELLOWSHIPS AND GRANTSExtramuralInstitute for Advanced Study (Princeton) Membership, 2013-4National Humanities Center Fellowship, 2013-14 (declined)Stanford Humanities Center External Faculty Fellowship, 2013-14 (declined)Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars Fellowship, 2013-14 (declined)Arizona State University Consortium for Science, Policy, and Outcomes, “Next Generation of Science and Technology Policy Leaders,” 2010Spencer Foundation Dissertation Fellowship for Research Related to Education, 2003-4Social Science Research Council Dissertation Fellowship for the Corporation as a Social Institution Program, 2002-3National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship, 1998-2000 and 2001-2IntramuralUniversity at Albany, SUNYFaculty Research Award Program B, 2013Faculty Research Award Program B, 2008University of California, BerkeleyDepartment of Sociology Gertrude Jaeger Prize, 2006Graduate Division Conference Travel Grant, 2005Department of Sociology Fellowship, 2005Dean’s Normative Time Fellowship, 2003Center for Studies in Higher Education Research Grant, 2002-3Center for Culture, Organization and Politics Research Grant, 2000Department of Sociology Fellowship, 1997-8INVITED PRESENTATIONS“Sociology, Economics, and the Power to Shape Education Policy,” Keynote address, Sociology of Education Association, 2019“Thinking Like an Economist: How Economics Became the Language of U.S. Public Policy”Department of Sociology, Washington University in St. Louis, 2019Klopsteg Lecture, Science in Human Culture Program, Northwestern University, 2019Keynote address, ARL-SSRC Meeting on Open Scholarship in the Social Sciences, 2018Department of History, Colgate University, 2018Department of Sociology, Lund University, Sweden, 2018“The Ecosystem for Open Science,” Keynote address, Open Scholarship for the Social Sciences symposium, University of Maryland, 2018.“Open Scholarship: Who Wins, Who Loses, and What Does It Mean for Sociology?” American Sociological Association invited session on Open Scholarship in Sociology, Philadelphia, 2018“The Success of Failure: The Planning-Programming-Budgeting System and the Effort to Rationalize Policy Decisions,” University of Georgia Department of Sociology, 2018“How Antitrust Policy Was Redefined by Economics,” Competition Law & Policy Seminar Series, Antitrust Division, U.S. Department of Justice, 2017“Politics by Other Means: How Experts Channeled Interests in U.S. Antitrust Policy,” Workshops on Money, Markets & Governance and Politics, History & Society, University of Chicago, 2017“Creating the Market University: How Academic Science Became an Economic Engine,” Freedom Project Speaker Series, Wellesley College, 2016“From Economic to Social Regulation: How the Deregulatory Moment Strengthened Economists’ Policy Position,” Workshop on “Becoming Applied,” Center for the History of Political Economy (HOPE), Duke University, 2016“Making Policy Economic: How Economics Became the Language of U.S. Public Policy,” Sociology Department Colloquium, Columbia University, 2015“The Rise of Student Loans and Pressures on U.S. Higher Education Organizations,” University of Wisconsin-Peking University Workshop on “Lessons Learned: International Collaboration and Competition in Higher Education, Science, and Technology,” Peking University, 2015“Humanities as Investment, Humanities as Enlightenment: Competing Visions of the Future,” Keynote speaker, Conference on Humanities and the Public University, University at Buffalo, SUNY, 2015“Thinking Like an Economist: How Economics Became the Language of Public Policy,” Department of Sociology, Ohio State University, 2015“Pressures on the Research University,” Workshop on Creating a Culture of Excellence and Trustworthiness in Research Universities, University of California, Davis Health Systems, 2014“Economic Rationalization and Its Effects on U.S. Universities,” Understanding Innovative Science Symposium, Wisconsin Institutes for Discovery, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 2014“Quantifying the Economic Value of Science: Policy Stories and Policy Devices,” Governing Academic Life Conference, London School of Economics, 2014“Trojan Horses in Linked Fields: Economists and Lawyers in U.S. Antitrust Policy, 1965-1981,” Society, Politics & Culture Workshop, Department of Sociology, Boston University, 2014“Thinking Like an Economist: On Expertise and the U.S. Policy Process,” Thursday Lunch Seminar, School of Social Science, Institute for Advanced Study (Princeton), 2014“Creating the Market University: How Academic Science Became an Economic Engine” and “Trojan Horses in Linked Fields: Economists and Lawyers in U.S. Antitrust Policy, 1965-1981,” Center for the Study of Social Organization-Economic Sociology Workshop, Princeton University, 2014“Academia and Bias in Science” and “The Role of the University in Modern Democracies: Challenges and Opportunities,” ASU-Cambridge Conference on Evidence, Ideology and Orthodoxy: Science in the University and the Public Sphere, Arizona State University, 2014“Economic Rationalization and Its Effects on U.S. Universities,” From Prestige to Excellence: The Fabrication of Academic Excellence, Université Paris-Est, 2013“Sociological Perspectives on Higher Education,” Students of Educational Administration for Change, University at Albany, SUNY, 2013“Creating the Market University: How Academic Science Became an Economic Engine,” Max Planck-Sciences Po Center and Centre de Sociologie des Organisations, Sciences Po, 2012“Creating the Market University: How Academic Science Became an Economic Engine,” Science and Society Seminar Series, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, 2012“Economic Expertise and the Policy Process: Changing Means, Ends, and Models in Three U.S. Policy Domains” (with Josh McCabe), Scandinavian Consortium for Organizational Research (SCANCOR) seminar, Stanford University, 2012“The Narrowing of ‘Public Interest’: How Universities Became Economic Engines,” Conference on The Public Interest and the Future of Public Higher Education in the 21st Century, Wisconsin Center for the Advancement of Postsecondary Education (WISCAPE), University of Wisconsin-Madison, 2012“Creating the Market University: How Academic Science Became an Economic Engine,” University of California, San Diego Department of Sociology colloquium, 2012“Secrets and Lies: Science versus Market as Arbiter of Truth in Early Recombinant DNA Research,” Boston Colloquium for Philosophy of Science, Boston University Center for Philosophy and History of Science, 2011“Creating the Market University: How Academic Science Became an Economic Engine,” Workshop for the Next Generation of Science & Technology Policy Leaders, Arizona State University Consortium on Science, Policy & Outcomes, 2010“Economic Ideas and the Political Process: Debating Tax Cuts in the U.S. House of Representatives, 1962-1981” (with Nicholas Pagnucco), Indiana University Maurer School of Law Tax Policy Colloquium, 2010“Creating the Market University: How Academic Science Became an Economic Engine,” Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Science and Technology Studies Graduate Student Colloquium, 2010“How Patents Became Proxies for the Success of U.S. Science—And the Alternatives that Were Left Behind,” University of British Columbia Centre for Applied Ethics workshop on “Alternative Intellectual Property and Technology Transfer Offices: Exploring the Evolving Landscape,” 2008“Why Do Universities Patent? How Federal Bureaucrats Accidentally Marketized the U.S. University,” McGill University Department of Sociology Graduate Student Colloquium, 2006CONFERENCE AND WORKSHOP PRESENTATIONS“Investing in Higher Education: Human Capital Arguments as Theory and as Technology,” Social Science History Association Annual Meeting, 2017 (Montreal)“Expert Capture and Political Change in U.S. Antitrust Policy,” American Sociological Association, Regular Session on Political Sociology, 2017 (Montreal)“The Hidden Politics of New Technologies at the Environmental Protection Agency,” Social Science History Association Annual Meeting, 2016 (Chicago)“Making the Environment Economic,” Social Science History Association Annual Meeting, 2015 (Baltimore)“Trojan Horses in Linked Fields: Economists, Lawyers and the Transformation of U.S. Antitrust Policy,” American Sociological Association, Regular Session on Economic Sociology, 2015 (Chicago)“Does It Matter Who the Bureaucrats Are? Economists and the Changing Cognitive Infrastructure of U.S. Politics,” Social Science History Association Annual Meeting, 2014 (Toronto)“Dueling Experts in Linked Ecologies: Economists and Lawyers in U.S. Antitrust Policy, 1960-1985,” Social Science History Association Annual Meeting, 2013 (Chicago)“Measure for Measure: From Concentration Ratios to the Herfindahl-Hirschman Index in U.S. Antitrust Policy,” Society for Social Studies of Science Annual Meeting, 2013 (San Diego)“Thinking Like an Economist: The Normative Effects of a Positive Discipline in Two U.S. Policy Domains,” ASA Comparative-Historical and Political Sociology sections Mini-Conference on Capitalism, the Politics of Inequality, and Historical Change, 2013 (New York)“Means, Ends, Methods and Measures: How Economists Matter in U.S. Public Policy” (with Joshua McCabe), American Sociological Association Annual Meeting, Regular Session on Political Sociology, 2013 (New York)“Thinking Like an Economist: The Normative Effects of a Positive Discipline in Three U.S. Policy Domains,” Eastern Sociological Society Mini-Conference on Comparative Cultural Sociology, 2013 (Boston)“The Kennedy-Johnson Economists and Unintended Consequences in U.S. Public Policy,” Social Science History Association Annual Meeting, 2012 (Vancouver)“Not Just Neoliberalism: Economic Rationalization in U.S. Science and Technology Policy” (with Joshua McCabe), Workshop on the Neoliberal State, Science and Technology, University of Wisconsin, 2012 (Madison)“Neoliberalism versus Economic Rationalization: Interests and Experts in U.S. Innovation Policy, 1960-1985,” Social Science History Association Annual Meeting, 2011 (Boston)“Innovation Drives the Economy: The Economic Rationalization of U.S. Science and Technology Policy, 1960-1985,” Society for Social Studies of Science Annual Meeting, 2011 (Cleveland)“From Theory to Symbol: The ‘Laffer Curve’ in the U.S. Congress, 1977-2009” (with Laura Milanes-Reyes), American Sociological Association Annual Meeting, Regular Session on Historical Sociology/Processes, 2011 (Las Vegas)“Is the Commercialization of Academic Science Neoliberal?” Political Sociology of Science and Technology conference, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, 2011 (Troy, NY)“How Economic Models Are Used in Political Discourse: The ‘Laffer Curve’ in U.S. Congress, 1977 to 2009” (with Laura Milanes-Reyes), Society for Social Studies of Science Annual Meeting, 2009 (Washington, DC)“Economic Ideas and the Political Process: Debating Tax Cuts in the U.S. House of Representatives, 1962-1981” (with Nicholas Pagnucco), American Sociological Association Annual Meeting, Regular Session on Political Culture, 2009 (San Francisco)“He Who Pays the Piper Calls the Tune: Thinking about How Funding Shapes Academic Science,” Society for Social Studies of Science and European Association for the Study of Science and Technology Annual Meeting, 2008 (Rotterdam)“Changing Institutional Logics in Academic Science: The Role of the State in Introducing a Market-Oriented Logic to the University,” American Sociological Association Annual Meeting, Regular Session on Organizations, 2008 (Boston)“Creating a New Organizational Form: Causes and Effects of the Emergence of the University-Industry Research Center in the U.S.,” Society for Social Studies of Science Annual Meeting, 2007 (Montréal)“Science, the Economy, and Unintended Consequences: The Bayh-Dole Act and the Accidental Marketization of the University,” Cornell University Economic Sociology and Technology Conference, 2005 (Ithaca, NY)“Reinventing the University as an Economic Engine: Self-Portrayals of University Presidents to Congress,” American Sociological Association Annual Meeting, Regular Section on Organizations, 2005 (Philadelphia)“Redefining Technology Transfer: How Patents Became a Proxy for the Success of U.S. Science,” American Sociological Association Annual Meeting, Regular Section on Science and Technology, 2004 (San Francisco)“Universities Redefining Technology Transfer,” Spencer Dissertation Fellows Spring Forum, 2004 (San Diego)“University vs. Industry? A Comparative Study of University-Industry Research Relationships in Molecular Biology and Electrical Engineering,” Spencer Dissertation Fellows Fall Forum, 2003 (Atlanta)“The Academy and Industry: Holes in the Conventional Wisdom,” Research Symposium of the Center for the Study of Higher Education, 2003 (Berkeley)“Organizing Would-Be Professionals: Success and Failure in Nineteenth-Century English Medicine,” American Sociological Association Annual Meeting, Regular Section on Work and Occupations, 2002 (Chicago).“Industry vs. University? A Comparative Study of University-Industry Research Relationships in Molecular Biology and Electrical Engineering,” SSRC Corporation as a Social Institution Workshop, 2002 (Berkeley)“Professional Project as Institutional Project: The AASA, the PMSA, and the Nineteenth-Century English Medical Field,” Pacific Sociological Association Annual Meeting, 2001 (San Francisco).OTHER CONFERENCE AND WORKSHOP PARTICIPATIONPanelist or discussantSocArXiv O3S (Open Scholarship for the Social Sciences) Conference (2017)Society for the Advancement of Socio-Economics (2016)Social Science History Association (2015, 2014, 2012)Brookings Workshop on the Politics of Science and Innovation Policy (2016)Understanding Innovative Science Symposium, University of Wisconsin (2014)American Sociological Association (2013)Graduate Student Conference on Institutions & Societies, University at Albany, SUNY (2013)Reassessing Academic Entrepreneurship Workshop, National Academies of Science (2010)Author-meets-critics panelSocial Science History Association (2017, 2016, 2014, 2013, 2012)Society for the Advancement of Socio-Economics (2016)Eastern Sociological Association (2013)Panel chairAmerican Sociological Association (2012)Panel or roundtables organizerSocial Science History Association (2016, 2015, 2014, 2012, 2011)Society for Social Studies of Science (2013, 2007) American Sociological Association (2018, 2013, 2010, 2008)Participant, Conference on Fields, Logics, Framing, and Cognition, UC Berkeley (2017)TEACHING (all University at Albany, SUNY)Graduate coursesASOC 510, Sociological Theories IAsoc 511, Sociological Theories IIASOC 666, Selected Topics in Sociology: Economic SociologyASOC 654, Complex Organizations and BureaucracyASOC 708, Selected Topics in Methodology: Comparative, Historical, and Case Study MethodsUndergraduate coursesASOC 220, Introduction to Social ResearchASOC 242Z, Organizations (honors class)ASOC 341, Social InequalityASOC 342, Organizations in SocietyASOC 325, Sociology of ScienceASOC 449W, Selected Topics Seminar in Work and Organizations: Higher Education in AmericaWork supervised:Chair, Ph.D. dissertation committee in sociologyTwo completed, five in progressMember, Ph.D. dissertation committee in sociologyTwelve completed, one in progressExternal member or examiner, Ph.D. dissertation committee in sociologyTwo completed (Lund, Columbia), one in progress (UCLA)Member, Master’s committee in sociologyTwo completedChair, Ph.D. comprehensive exam committee in sociologyFifteen total, in fields of Organizations, Economic Sociology, Comparative-Historical Sociology, and TheoryMember, Ph.D. comprehensive exam committee in sociologyThirty-two total, in fields of Comparative-Historical Sociology, Culture, Economic Sociology, Methods, Organizations, Political Sociology, Stratification, Theory, and WorkSupervised graduate student independent studies (fourteen), undergraduate honors thesis (two), undergraduate independent study (one), and undergraduate internships (six)CONSULTANT AND ADVISORY ACTIVITYConsultant, National Science Foundation Award Number 1149466, P.I. Daniel Kleinman (University of Wisconsin-Madison), “Understanding Innovative Science: The Case of the Wisconsin Institutes for Discovery,” 2012-2014Advisory Committee, Innovation U2 ProjectPROFESSIONAL SERVICE AND AFFILIATIONSInternal (University at Albany, SUNY):Department of Sociology2018-19Executive Committee2018-19Chair, Symposium and Advancement Committee2018Ad Hoc MA Committee2014-17Director of Graduate Studies and Chair, Graduate CommitteeAdviser, Students of Sociology, 2014-172014Sociology Department Administrative Manager Hiring Committee2013Ad Hoc Tenure Review Committee2011-13Executive Committee2011-13Symposium Committee2010-11Teaching Committee2008-10, 2011Graduate CommitteeGraduate Student Awards Subcommittee, 2009, 20112008-09Undergraduate Committee2007-08Teaching CommitteeCollege of Arts and Sciences2009-13Department representative, University in the High School Program2008-10College of Arts and Sciences Faculty CouncilChair, Academic Support Committee, 2009-10Chair, Ad Hoc Grievance Committee, 2009External:American Sociological AssociationOrganizations, Occupations & Work Section Council member (elected position, 2016-19) Committee chair, James D. Thompson Award (2019) Committee chair, W. Richard Scott Award for Distinguished Scholarship (2018) Chair, Nominations committee (2016) Committee chair, Max Weber Award for Distinguished Scholarship (2014) Committee member, James D. Thompson Award (2007)Political Sociology Section Council member (elected position, 2015-18) Committee chair, Distinguished Contribution to Scholarship (Article or Book Chapter) Award (2018) Committee member, Distinguished Contribution to Scholarship (Book) Award (2017) Committee chair, Graduate Student Paper Award (2016)Theory Section Committee chair, Shils-Coleman Paper Award (2015)Science, Knowledge & Technology Section Member, Newsletter committee (2012-14) Council member (elected position, 2009-12) Committee member, Star-Nelkin Paper Award (2011, 2014) Committee member, Robert K. Merton Book Award (2010)Society for Social Studies of ScienceSocial Science History Association Nominating committee (2018-19) Executive committee (elected position, 2015-18) Member, ad hoc website improvement committee (2015) Network representative, Education, Knowledge & Science Studies (2013-16) Committee member, President’s Book Award (2012)SocArXiv Steering Committee (2016-present)Editorial BoardsAmerican Sociological Review (2020-22)American Journal of Sociology (2019-22)Contemporary Sociology (2017-19)Engaging Science, Technology, and Society (2015 to present)Social Science History (2013-18)Sociological Theory (2014-16)Journal of Technology Transfer (2011 to present)Reviewer, American Journal of Cultural Sociology, American Journal of Sociology, American Sociological Review, BioSocieties, Columbia University Press, Contexts, Engaging Science, Technology, and Society, Handbook of Academic Integrity, Higher Education, Journal of American History, Journal of Policy History, Journal of Technology Transfer, Minerva, National Science Foundation (Science of Science and Innovation Policy program; Science, Technology, and Society program; Sociology program), Oxford University Press, Princeton University Press, Research Policy, Rutgers University Press, Science and Public Policy, Science, Technology and Human Values, Social Forces, Social Problems, Social Science History, Social Studies of Science, Socio-Economic Review, Sociological Forum, Sociological Quarterly, Sociological Theory, Sociology of Development, Stanford University Press, Technology and Culture, Theory and Society, Yearbook of Nanotechnology in Society, University of Chicago Press ................
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