Rhacel Salazar Parreñas
(9/2022)Rhacel Salazar Parre?asOfficeDepartment of Sociology851 Downey Way/HSH 314Los Angeles, CA 90089(213) 740-3533 ? parrenas@usc.eduHome2012 Ardmore AvenueHermosa Beach, CA 90254CURRENT POSITION Florence Everline Professor of Sociology and Professor of Gender and Sexuality Studies, University of Southern California (2022- )Visiting Professor of Gender and Sexuality Studies and Sociology, Princeton University (2022-2023)OTHER POSITIONSBook Series Co-Editor, Globalization in Everyday Life, Stanford University Press Deputy Editor, American Sociological Review 2022-Member, Board of Trustees of the Association of Members of the Institute for Advanced Study (2020-2023)Honorary President, CASTLE- Centre for the Study of Transnational Families, Babes-Bolyai University, Cluj-Napoca, RomaniaPREVIOUS POSITIONS HELD2020-2021Vice President (elected), American Sociological Association2016-2018Vice President (elected), Sociologists for Women in Society2012-2015Department Chair, University of Southern California (Sociology)2010-2022Professor, University of Southern California (Sociology and Gender and Sexuality Studies)2008-2010Professor, Brown University (American Civilization and Sociology)2006-2008Professor, University of California, Davis (Asian American Studies and Graduate Group of Sociology)2003-2006Associate Professor, University of California, Davis (Asian American Studies and Graduate Group of Sociology)2000-2003 Assistant Professor, University of Wisconsin, Madison (Women’s Studies and Asian American Studies)1998-2000Postdoctoral Fellow, University of California President’s Postdoctoral Fellowship Program (UCLA, Anthropology)MAJOR RECOGNITIONS2022Senior Raubenheimer Award, USC Dornsife College 2020SWS Mentoring Award, Sociologists for Women in Society2020USC Graduate School PhD Mentoring Award, University of Southern California 2019Elected Member, Sociological Research Association 2019American Sociological Association Jessie Bernard Award The Jessie Bernard Award is “presented for significant cumulative work done throughout a professional career” that is “given in recognition of scholarly work that has enlarged the horizons of sociology to encompass fully the role of women in society.”2018American Sociological Association Sex and Gender Section, Feminist Scholar Activist AwardThe purpose of the award is to “recognize and honor scholars who have used feminist research and strategies to foster social change in public understandings and treatments of gender.” 2012Invited Keynote Speaker, Ford Fellows 50th Anniversary ConferenceThe mission of the Ford Fellows Program is to increase and foster diversity in academia. The program hosts an annual conference with 300 new and continuing fellows.2012American Sociological Association Labor and Labor Movements Section, Best Book Award for Illicit Flirtations: Labor, Migration and Sex Trafficking in Tokyo (Stanford)2009Association for Asian American Studies, Best Book Award: Social Sciences for Asian Diasporas (Stanford)INVITED VISITING APPOINTMENTS2022-2023Visiting Professor, Gender and Sexuality Studies and Sociology, Princeton University Summer 2018Visiting Researcher, Singapore Management University, School of Social SciencesSpring 2017Visiting Professor/Fulbright Research Chair, McMaster University (Center for the Study of Globalization and the Human Condition), Hamilton, ONFall 2016Visiting Professor, Department of Sociology, Nanyang Technological University, SingaporeMarch 2016Distinguished Visiting Professor, University of Hawaii, West OahuMay 2010 Edith Kreeger Wolf Distinguished Visiting Professor of Gender Studies, Northwestern UniversityMay 2009 Visiting Research Professor, University of South Australia (Center for Work and Family), Adelaide, Australia2005-2006 Distinguished Visiting Research Professor, Ochanomizu University, (Institute for Gender Studies), Tokyo, Japan EDUCATION 1998 U.C. Berkeley, Ph. D. Comparative Ethnic Studies with a Designated Emphasis in Women, Gender, and Sexuality1994 U.C. Berkeley, M.A. Comparative Ethnic Studies1992 U.C. Berkeley, B.A. Peace and Conflict StudiesAREAS OF RESEARCHGender, Labor, International Migration, Globalization and Transnationalism, Economic Sociology, Family, Asian/Asian American StudiesEXTERNAL GRANTS2015-2020The Academy of Korean Studies, “Rethinking Korea’s Soft Power and Hard Power: On the Globalization of East Asia in the Social Sciences and Humanities,” The Academy of Korean Studies, P.I. Rhacel Parre?as, Co-PI David Kang, Co-PI Youngmin Choe, Co-PI Chris Hanscom, Co-PI Suk-Young Kim, Co-PI Akira Lippit ($1,267,485)2015-2016Korea Foundation, Graduate Award for PhD Student Carolyn Choi ($20,000)2014-2017“Comparative Analysis of Labor Relations and Legal Status in the United Arab Emirates and Singapore,” National Science Foundation, SES-1346750 ($200,000) PI: Rhacel Parre?as, Senior Consultant: Rachel Silvey.2013-2018“Gender, Migration and the Work of Care: Comparative Perspectives,” (File No: 895-2012-1021), Social Science and Humanities Research Council, Canada (C$2,840,000), PI: Ito Peng (University of Toronto), Co-PI: Rachel Silvey (University of Toronto); Southeast Asia Consultants: Rhacel Parre?as and Daniele Belanger (University of Western Ontario). (Southeast Asia Team Portion: C$160,000) 2012-2013Grant for Intimate Industries Workshop, Social Science and Humanities Research Council of Canada (C$14,000) Co-PIs: Rachel Silvey (University of Toronto) and Rhacel Parre?as. EXTERNAL FELLOWSHIPS Fall 2017Invited Fellow, Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (Host: Rikkyo University, Tokyo)Spring 2017Fulbright Research Chair, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON, Canada (Stipend: $25,000)2015-2017Invited Member as Lead Author on “Diasporic Families,” International Panel on Social Progress2015-2016Deutsche Bank Member, Institute for Advanced Study, School of Social Science (Stipend: $60,000)Fall 2015Fulbright Research Chair, Munk Institute, University of Toronto (Declined)2010-2011Member, Institute for Advanced Study, School of Social Science (Stipend: $65,000; Declined)2010-2011Invited Fellow, Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences, Stanford University (Stipend: $60,000)Spring 2004Rockefeller Fellow, Gender and Globalization in Asia and the Pacific, University of Hawaii, Manoa ($15,000)Fall 2002Anna Julia Cooper Postdoctoral Fellowship, University of Wisconsin, Madison ($30,000)2002-2003Australian National University Postdoctoral Fellowship in Southeast Asian Studies (declined)2001-2002Ford Foundation Postdoctoral Research Fellowship ($40,000)1998-2000U.C. President’s Postdoctoral Fellowship, University of California, Los Angeles ($70,000)1999Babilonia Wilner Foundation, Scholar in Residence Program, Berkeley, California ($24,000)1994-1997National Science Foundation Graduate Research FellowshipPUBLICATIONSBOOKSUnder ContractParre?as, Rhacel. The Trafficker Next Door: How Domestic Employers Exploit Forced Labor. New York: W.W. Norton.2021Parre?as, Rhacel. Unfree: Migrant Domestic Workers in Arab States. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press. 2022 Alice Amsden Book Award, Honorable Mention, Society for the Advancement of Socio-EconomicsBook salons/talks sponsored by Work Family Research Network, UC Berkeley, London School of Economics, University of Lancaster.2015Parre?as, Rhacel. Servants of Globalization: Migration and Domestic Work, 2nd Edition. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.Translated into Chinese by Yunnan University Press (2018). 2011Parre?as, Rhacel. Illicit Flirtations: Labor, Migration, and Sex Trafficking in Tokyo. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.2012 Distinguished Book Award in American Sociological Association’s Section on Labor and Labor MovementsChapter 3 translated to Polish.2008Parre?as, Rhacel. The Force of Domesticity: Filipina Migrants and Globalization. New York: NYU Press. 2005Parre?as, Rhacel. Children of Global Migration: Transnational Families and Gendered Woes. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press. Reprinted in the Philippines by: Ateneo University Press.2001Parre?as, Rhacel. Servants of Globalization: Women, Migration, and Domestic Work. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.Honorable Mention, 2002 Association for Asian American Studies Social Sciences Book Award.Reprinted in the Philippines by: Ateneo University Press.Translated into Korean by Alterity Press (2009).EDITED VOLUMES INCLUDING ANTHOLOGIES AND JOURNAL SPECIAL ISSUESIn ProgressParre?as, Rhacel, Pallavi Banerjee, Maria Cecilia Hwang. Gender & Society. Special issue on Violence and Intersectionality. 2022Parre?as, Rhacel, Nicola Piper and Sari Kayoko Ishii, positions: asia critique 30(2), Special Issue on Children and Youth of Migration: States, Families, and Education. 2021 Silvey, Rachel, Tanya Golash Boza, Luin Goldring, Patricia Landolt, and Rhacel Parre?as, Population, Space and Place 27(5). Special Issue on “Mechanisms of Migrant Exclusion: Temporary Labour, Precarious Noncitizenship, and Technologies of Detention.” (First published July 17, 2021). 2017Parre?as, Rhacel, Sexualities 20(4), Special Issue on Technologies of Intimate Labor (June). 2016Parre?as, Rhacel, Hung Thai, and Rachel Silvey, positions: asia critique 24(1), Special Issue on Intimate Industries in Asia. February.2014Hoang, Kimberly and Rhacel Parre?as, eds. Human Trafficking Reconsidered: Migration and Forced Labor, New York: Idebate Press of the International Debate Education Association (Commissioned by the Open Society Institute). 2011Parre?as, Rhacel, Hyuk Rae-Kim and Joon Kim, eds. Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, Special Issue on Multicultural East Asia. December.2010Boris, Eileen, Stefanie Gilmore, and Rhacel Parre?as, eds. Sexualities Journal, Special Issue on Sexual Labors. April.2010Boris, Eileen and Rhacel Parre?as, eds. Intimate Labors: Technologies, Cultures and the Politics of Care. (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press)2007Parre?as, Rhacel and Lok Siu, eds. Asian Diasporas: New Formations, New Conceptions. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.2008 Asian American Studies Association Social Sciences Book Award 1997Editorial Board Member for: Kim, Elaine H., and Lilia V. Villanueva, eds. Making More Waves: An Anthology of Writings by and about Asian American Women. Boston, MA: Beacon Press.PEER REVIEWED JOURNAL ARTICLES (*Indicates PhD Student)In ProgressParre?as, Rhacel Salazar and Maria Cecilia Hwang. “Gender and Transnationalism: Making A Case for Multiscalar Feminist Analysis,” American Journal of Sociology. Invited for 50th anniversary special issue on Sociology and Gender. 2022Parre?as, Rhacel Salazar, Nicola Piper, Sari K. Ishii, and Carolyn Choi. “Children and Youth in Asian Migration,” positions: asia critique 30(2): 219-243. 2021Parre?as, Rhacel Salazar. “Discipline and Empower: The State Governance of Migrant Domestic Workers.” American Sociological Review 86(6): 1043-1065.2022 Louis Worth Best Article Award, ASA International Migration Section2022 Best Article Award, ASA Asian/Asian America Section2021Pandey, Kritika,* Rhacel Parre?as, Gianne Sheena Sabio.* “Essential and Expendable: Migrant Domestic Workers and the COVID-19 Pandemic.” American Behavioral Scientist 65(10): 1287-1301. Lead Article. 2021Hwang, Maria Cecilia and Rhacel Salazar Parre?as. “The Gendered Racialization of Asian Women as Villainous Temptresses.” Gender & Society 35(4): 567-576.2021Parre?as, Rhacel and Rachel Silvey. “The Governance of the Kafala System and the Punitive Control of Migrant Domestic Workers.” Population, Space, and Place 27(5). Available at , Rhacel. “The Mobility Pathways of Migrant Domestic Workers,” Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 47(1): 3-24. Keynote Address. 2020Silvey, Rachel and Rhacel Parre?as. “Rethinking Policy Through Migrant Domestic Workers’ Itineraries,” American Behavioral Scientist 64(6): 859-77. 2020Silvey, Rachel and Rhacel Parre?as. “Precarity Chains: Cycles of Domestic Worker Migration from Southeast Asia to the Middle East,” Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 46(16): 3457-3471.2020Parre?as, Rhacel, Krittiya Kantachote and Rachel Silvey. “Soft Violence: Migrant Domestic Worker Precarity and the Management of Unfree Labor in Singapore,” Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies. Published online April 2, 2020. Available at Available at Parre?as, Rhacel, Rachel Silvey, Maria Hwang and Carolyn Choi*, “Serial Labor Migration: Precarity and Itinerancy among Filipino and Indonesian Domestic Workers,” International Migration Review 53(4): 1230-1258. 2018Parre?as, Rhacel and Rachel Silvey, “The Precarity of Migrant Domestic Work,” South Atlantic Quarterly 117:2 (April).2017Parre?as, Rhacel, “Love’s Labor’s Cost: The Family Life of Migrant Domestic Workers,” World Policy Journal 34(3): 16-20.2017Parre?as, Rhacel. “The Indenture of Migrant Domestic Workers,” Women’s Studies Quarterly 45(1-2): 113-127.2017Parre?as, Rhacel. “Introduction: Technologies of Intimate Labour,” Sexualities 20(4): 407-411.2016Parre?as, Rhacel and Rachel Silvey. “refusing neo-slavery in Dubai,” Contexts 15(3): 36-41.2016Hoang, Kimberly and Rhacel Parre?as. “accessing the hardest to reach populations,” Contexts (March 19), at , Spring.2016Parre?as, Rhacel, Rachel Silvey, and Hung Thai. “Intimate Industries: Restructuring (Im)Material Labor in Asia,” positions: asia critique (24)(1): 1-15. 2014Parre?as, Rhacel. “The Intimate Labor of Transnational Communication,” Families, Relationships and Societies 3(3): 425-442.2012Parre?as, Rhacel. “The Reproductive Labor of Migrant Workers,” Global Networks 12(2): 269-275.2012Parre?as, Rhacel, Maria Hwang* and Heather Lee.* “What is Human Trafficking?” Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 37(4): 1015-1029.2012Parrenas, Rhacel. "The Indentured Mobility of Migrant Women: How Gendered Protectionist Laws Lead Hostesses to Forced Sexual Labor". Journal of Workplace Rights Vol. 15 (3-4): 327-339.2012 Parre?as, Rhacel. “Le travail de care des h?stesses de bar au Japon”. Edited by Helena Hirata and Pascale Molinier Revue Travailler, n° 28, 2012/2, Special issue about gender, care and labour.2011Parre?as, Rhacel, and Joon Kim. “Multicultural East Asia: An Introduction,” Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 37(10): 1555-1561.2010Boris, Eileen, Stephanie Gilmore and Rhacel Parre?as. “Sexual Labors: Interdisciplinary Perspectives Toward Sex as Work,” Sexualities 13: 131-137, Special Issue on Sexual Labors.2010Hwang, Maria,* and Rhacel Parre?as. “Not Every Family,” International Labor and Working Class History 78: 100-109 2010Parre?as, Rhacel. “Homeward Bound: The Circular Migration of Entertainers Between Japan and the Philippines,” Global Networks 10(3): 301-323.2008Parre?as, Rhacel. “Transnational Fathering: Gendered Conflicts, Distant Disciplining, and Emotional Gaps,” Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 34:7: 1057-72.2007Parre?as, Rhacel. “Benevolent Paternalism and Migrant Women: The Case of Migrant Filipina Entertainers in Japan,” Gender Kenkyu (Journal of Gender Studies) 10 (March): 1-17.2005Parre?as, Rhacel. “The Gender Paradox in the Transnational Families of Filipino Migrant Women,” Asian and Pacific Migration Journal 14(3): 243-268. 2005Parre?as, Rhacel. “Long Distance Intimacy: Gender and Intergenerational Relations in Transnational Families.” Global Networks 5(4): 317-336. 2003Parre?as, Rhacel. “At the Cost of Women: The Family and Modernization-Building Project of the Philippines in Globalization,” Interventions: Journal of Postcolonial Studies 5:1: 29-44.2002Parre?as, Rhacel. “Between Women: Migrant Domestic Work and Gender Inequalities in the New Global Economy,” Concilium: Revue Internationale de Théologie 5:2: 28-39.Reprinted as Parre?as, Rhacel. “Tra le donne: labor domestic straniero e disugualianza tra uomo e donna nella nuova economia globale,” Concilium 5: 741-756.Reprinted as Parre?as, Rhacel. “Vrouwen onder elkaar: Huishoudelijk werk doon migranten en sekseongelijkheid in de nieuwe wereldwijde economie,” Concilium 5: 26-37.Reprinted as Parre?as, Rhacel “Migration von Haushaltshilfen und Geschlechterungleichheiten in der neuen globalen wirtschaft,” Concilium 5: 507-518.Reprinted as Parre?as, Rhacel. “Entre mujeres: el trabajo domestico de las inmigrantes y las desigualdades de genero en la nueva economia global,” Concilium 5: 657-669.2001Parre?as, Rhacel. “Mothering from a Distance: Emotions, Gender, and Intergenerational Relations in Filipino Transnational Families,” Feminist Studies 27:2 (Summer): 361-90.Reprinted in Shifting the Center: Understanding Contemporary Families, 3rd edition, ed. Susan Ferguson (Mountain View, CA: Mayfield Publishing Company, 2007).Reprinted in Diversity in Families, 8th edition, eds. Maxine Baca Zinn, Stanley Eitzen, and Barbara Wells (Boston, MA: Allyn and Bacon, 2008). 2001Parre?as, Rhacel. “Transgressing the Nation-State: The Partial Citizenship and ‘Imagined (Global) Community’ of Migrant Filipina Domestic Workers,” Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 26:4: 1129-1154.Reprinted in Social Stratification: Critical Concepts in the Social Sciences, editors David Inglis and John Bone (London: Routledge, 2006).Reprinted in Gendered Citizenships: Transnational Perspectives on Knowledge Production, Political Activism, and Culture, editors Kia Caldwell, Kathleen Coll, Tracy Fisher, Renya Ramirez and Lok Siu. New York: Palgrave.2000Parre?as, Rhacel. “Migrant Filipina Domestic Workers and the International Division of Reproductive Labor,” Gender & Society 14:4(August): 560-80.Reprinted in American Families, 2nd edition, editor Stephanie Coontz, et al (New York, NY: Routledge, 2008). Reprinted in Global Dimensions of Gender and Carework, editors Mary Zimmerman, Jacquelyn Litt, and Christine Bose (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2006).Reprinted in Pinay Power: Peminist Critical Theory, editor Melinda de Jesus (New York: Routledge, 2005).Translated to German and reprinted in Family, Ties, and Love, ed. Han Bertram, Germany: Suhrkamp.1994Parre?as, Rhacel. “Smell This: Undergraduate Women of Color Constructing Our Own Homeplace” (with Catherine Ramirez and Ruxana Meer), Inscriptions 7, A Special Issue on Women of Color in Collaboration and Conflict.NON-PEER REVIEWED JOURNAL ARTICLES2019Parre?as, Rhacel. “The Moral Conundrum of the Day Off,” Turkish Policy Quarterly (Invited). 2016Lee, Robyn and Rhacel Parre?as. “Intimate Labour and Social Justice: Engaging with the Work of Rhacel Salazar Parre?as,” Studies in Social Justice 10(2).2010Parre?as, Rhacel. “Transnational Mothering: A Source of Gender Conflicts in the Family,” University of North Carolina Law Review. Pgs. 1825-1856 2008Parre?as, Rhacel. “Cross National Studies on Production and Protest,” Contemporary Sociology (January). Pgs. 17-20.2007Parre?as, Rhacel. “The Gender Ideological Clash in Globalization: Women, Migration and the Modernization-Building Project of the Philippines,” Social Thought and Research: 37-56.2006Parre?as, Rhacel. “Trafficked? Filipina Migrant Hostesses in Tokyo’s Nightlife Industry,” Yale Journal of Law and Feminism 18(1): 145-80.2003Parre?as, Rhacel. “Workers without Families: Keeping the Dependents of Immigrant Workers outside U.S. Borders,” (co-authored with Cerissa Salazar Parre?as) Asian Law Journal 10:2: 143-59. 1998Parre?as, Rhacel. “‘White Trash’ Meets the ‘Brown Monkeys’: The Politics of Interracial and Gender Alliances Between White Working Class Women and Filipino Migrant Laborers in the Taxi-Dance Halls of the 20s and 30s,” Amerasia Journal 24:2.Reprinted in Major Problems in Asian American History: Documents and Essays, editors Lon Kurashige, Alice Yang Murray, and Thomas Patterson (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 2003).BOOK CHAPTERS (*Indicates PhD Student)ForthcomingSabio, Gianne Sheena,* Kritika Pandey,* and Rhacel Parre?as. “Global Care Chains,” Routledge Handbook on Immigration and Refugee Studies, editor Anna Triandafyllidou. New York: Routledge. 2022Parre?as, Rhacel and Karina Santellano.* “Migrant Domestic Work.” Chapter 22 in Handbook on Women in the Middle East, editor Suad Joseph. New York: Routledge. 2022Parre?as, Rhacel. “Intimate Citizens: Filipina Migrant Hostesses in Japan.” Chapter 11 in Transnational Marriage and Partner Migration: Constellations of Security, Citizenship and Rights, ed. Anne-Marie D’Aoust, New Brunwick, NJ: Rutgers University Press. 2021 Parre?as, Rhacel. “Negotiating Indenture: Migrant Domestic Workers in Singapore,” Spectra of Belonging: Mobility, Precarity, Non/Citizenship, eds. Sylvanna Falcon, Steve McKay, Juan Poblette, Catherine Ramirez and Felicity Amaya Schaeff. New York: Routledge. 2020 Kantachote, Krittiya* and Rhacel Parre?as. “The Precarious Labor of Asian Immigrant Women: 1970s to the Present.” Pp. 223-237 in Local/Global: Asian American and Pacific Islander American Women’s History, editors Shirley Hune and Gail Nomura, New York: NYU Press.2019 Parre?as, Rhacel. “Monitoring International Labor Precarity: The State Management of Migrant Domestic Workers,” Pp. 39-57 in Deepening Divides: How Territorial Borders and Social Boundaries Delineate Our World, editor Didier Fassin, London: Pluto Press.2019Parre?as, Rhacel Salazar; Choi, Carolyn; Hwang, Maria. “Gender, Sexuality, and Migration,” Oxford Bibliographies in Sociology, editor Lynette Spillman. New York: Oxford University Press. Available at Carolyn Choi,* Hwang, Maria, and Rhacel Parre?as. “Gender and Migration,” Springer Handbook on the Sociology of Gender, editors Barbara Risman, Carissa Froyum, and William Scarborough, New York City: Springer. 2018Fan, Yu-Kang* and Rhacel Parre?as. “Who Cares for the Children and the Elderly? Gender and Transnational Families,” Childhood and Parenting in Transnational Settings, eds. Viorela Ducu, Mihaela Nedelcu, and Aron Telegdi-Csetri. New York: Springer.2018Hwang, Maria* and Rhacel Parre?as. “Intimate Migrations: The Case of Marriage Migrants and Sex Workers in Asia,” Routledge Handbook of Asian Migrations, eds. Brenda Yeoh and Gracia Liu-Farrer, Routledge, 64-74.2017Parre?as, Rhacel and Rachel Silvey. “The Indentured Mobility of Migrant Domestic Workers: The Case of Dubai,” Unsettling Paradigms, Revisiting the Law: Human Trafficking, Forced Labor, and Modern Slavery Fifteen Years After the Palermo Protocol, ed. Prabha Kotiswaran, Cambridge University Press, 503-523.2015Parre?as, Rhacel and Carolyn Choi*. “Feminism and Migration,” Chapter 30 in The Oxford Handbook of Feminist Theory, eds. Mary Hawkesworth and Lisa Disch.2014Parre?as, Rhacel. “Migrant Domestic Workers as “One of the Family,”” Care and Migrant Labor: Theory, Policy and Politics, eds. Bridget Anderson and Isabel Shutes, Hampshire, England: Palgrave Macmillan. 2013Parre?as, Rhacel. “Transnational Mothering and Models of Parenthood: Ideological and Intergenerational Challenges in Filipina Migrant Families,” What is Parenthood? Contemporary Debate about the Family, edited by Linda McClain and Daniel Cere, New York, NY: New York University Press. 2013Parre?as, Rhacel. “The Gender Revolution in the Philippines: Migrant Mothering and Social Transformations,” How Immigrants Impact Their Homelands, edited by Susan Eckstein and Adil Najam. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, pp. 191-210.2012Parre?as, Rhacel. “Partial Citizenship and the Ideology of Women’s Domesticity in State Policies on Domestic Work.” Edited by Hans-Georg Soeffner, Transnationale Vergesellschaftungen. Verhandlungen des 35. Kongresses der Deutschen Gesellschaft für Soziologie in Frankfurt am Main 2010. Wiesbaden: VS Verlag, CD-ROM.2012Parre?as, Rhacel. “O trabalho de care das acompanhantes. Imagrantes Filipinas em Tóquio”. Edited by Araujo Guimar?es, Nadya, Hirata, Helena (org) Cuidados e cuidadoras: as varias faces do trabalho do "care", Editora Atlas/Edunesp-CEM, 2012.2010Parre?as, Rhacel. “‘Partial Citizenship’ and the Ideology of Women’s Domesticity in State Policies on Foreign Domestic Workers,” Care and Migration, eds. Ursula Apitzsch and Marianne Schmidbau, pp. 127-140, Opladen and Farmington Hills, MI: Verlag Barbara Budrich. 2010Boris, Eileen and Rhacel Parre?as. “Introduction,” Intimate Labors: Technologies, Cultures and the Politics of Care, eds. Eileen Boris and Rhacel Parre?as, Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press. Pgs. 1-122009Parre?as, Rhacel. “Hostess Work: Negotiating the Morals of Money and Sex,” Economic Sociology and Work, Volume 19 in Research in the Sociology of Work, ed. Nina Bandelj. Bingley, UK: Emerald. Pgs. 201-232.2008Parre?as, Rhacel. “Breaking the Code: Women, Labor Migration, and the 1987 Family Code of the Republic of the Philippines,” Gender and Globalization in Asia and the Pacific: Method, Practice, Theory, eds. Kathy Ferguson and Monique Mironesco. Honolulu, HI: University of Hawaii Press, pp. 176-194.2008Parre?as, Rhacel. “The Placelessness of Migrant Filipina Domestic Workers,” Immigration and Integration in Urban Communities: Renegotiating the City, eds. Lisa Hanley, et al Washington, DC: Woodrow Wilson Press, pp. 49-72.2008Parre?as, Rhacel. “The Globalization of Care Work,” Service Work: Critical Perspectives, eds. Cameron Macdonald and Marek Korczynski, New York, NY: Routledge, pp. 135-52.2008Parre?as, Rhacel. “Geographies of Race and Class: The Place and Placelessness of Migrant Filipina Domestic Workers,” Gender and Globalization, eds. Anne Kingsolver and Nandini Gunewardena, Santa Fe, NM: School of American Research Press, pp. 171-95.2007Parre?as, Rhacel, and Lok Siu. “Introduction,” Asian Diasporas: New Conceptions, New Formations, eds. Lok Siu and Rhacel Parre?as, Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press. Pgs. 1-282007Parre?as, Rhacel. “Perpetually Foreign: Migrant Filipina Domestic Workers in Rome,” Migration and Domestic Work: A European Perspective on a Global Theme, ed. Helma Lutz, Aldershot: Ashgate, pp. 99-112.2006Parre?as, Rhacel. “The Place of Women is Still in the Home: Filipina Migrant Domestic Workers in Globalization,” Motion in Place/Place in Motion: 21st Century Migration, eds. Toshio Iyotani and Masako Ishii. Osaka, Japan: Japanese Center for Area Studies, National Museum of Ethnology, pp. 83-98.2006Parre?as, Rhacel. “Caring for the Filipino Family: How Gender Differentiates the Economic Causes of Labor Migration,” Exploring Migrant Women and Work, ed. Anuja Agarwal, London: Sage Publications, pp. 95-115.2004 Parre?as, Rhacel. “Gender Inequalities in the New Global Economy,” Domestic Service and the Formation of European Identity: Understanding the Globalization of Domestic Work, 16th-21st Century, ed. Antoinette Fauve-Chamouz (Bern, Switzerland: Peter Lang), pp. 369-378.2004Parre?as, Rhacel. “The International Division of Reproductive Labor: Paid Domestic Work and Globalization,” Critical Globalization Studies, eds. Richard Appelbaum and William Robinson (New York: Routledge), pp. 237-247.2004Parre?as, Rhacel. “Race, Labor, and the State: The Quasi-Citizenship of Migrant Filipina Domestic Workers,” Labor Versus Empire: Race, Gender, and Globalization, eds. Gilbert Gonzalez et al., (New York: Routledge) pp. 105-120.2003Parre?as, Rhacel. “Asian Immigrant Women and Global Restructuring, 1970s-1990s,” Asian/Pacific Islander Women: A Historical Anthology, eds. Shirley Hune and Gail Nomura (New York: New York University Press), pp. 271-285.Reprinted in Jean Wu and Thomas Chen, Asian American Studies Now: A Critical Reader, Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 2008.2003Parre?as, Rhacel. “Care Crisis in the Philippines: Children and Transnational Families in the New Global Economy,” Global Woman, eds. Barbara Ehrenreich and Arlie Hochschild (New York: Metropolis), pp. 39-54.French translation in Volume V of Cahiers genre et developpement (Geneva and L’Harmattan (France): Graduate Institute of Development Studies, 2005).Reprinted in D. Stanley Eitzen and Maxine Baca Zinn. 2006. Globalization: The Transformation of Social Worlds. Wadsworth Press.Reprinted in Gwyn Kirk and Margo Okazawa-Rey. 2006. Women’s Lives, 4th Edition. Wheaton, IL: McGraw Hill.2000Parre?as, Rhacel. “New Family Forms, Old Family Values: The Formation and Reproduction of the Filipino Transnational Family in Los Angeles,” Contemporary Asian America: A Multidisciplinary Reader, eds. Min Zhou and James V. Gatewood (New York: New York University Press), pp. 125-140.Reprinted in Coming to America: The Filipinos. Farmington Hills, MI: Thomson Gale, 2006.1996Parre?as, Rhacel. “The Other Issei: Japanese American Women in the Pre-World War II Period” (with Evelyn Nakano Glenn) in Origins and Destinies: Immigration, Race, and Ethnicity in America, eds. Sylvia Pedraza and Ruben Rumbaut (Belmont, CA: Wadsworth Press), pp. 336-351.OTHER ARTICLES (*Indicates Ph.D. Student)2020Parre?as, Rhacel. “The Aging of Migrant Domestic Workers,” American Prospect (October).2020Hwang, Maria Cecilia and Rhacel Parre?as. “Hero nurses, untrustworthy domestic workers, and vilified sex workers,” (November 16). 2019Parre?as, Rhacel, “Domestic Work in the UAE: The Moral Dilemma of the Day Off,” Turkish Policy Quarterly (June 27).2015Rhacel Parre?as and Rachel Silvey, “Not One of the Family: The Tight Spaces of Migrant Domestic Workers,” Harvard Design Review 41 (Invited). 2014Nazareno, Jennifer Pabelonia*, Rhacel Parre?as, and Yu-Kang Fan*. Can I Ever Retire? The Plight of Migrant Filipino Elderly Caregivers in Los Angeles, a policy brief. Los Angeles, CA: Pilipino Workers’ Center. 2011Parre?as, Rhacel. "What I Learned by Being a Migrant Sex Worker (Part 1): Parrenas," Bloomberg View, Op-Eds, October 12, 2011Reprinted in Business Week, San Francisco Chronicle, and Manila Standard2011Parre?as, Rhacel. "What I learned by Being a Migrant Sex Worker (Part 2): Parrenas," Bloomberg View, Op-Eds, October 13, 2011.Reprinted in Business Week, San Francisco Chronicle, and Manila Standard2010“Interview with Rhacel Salazar Parre?as,” Sociologist’s Backstage: Answers to 10 Questions about What They Do, eds. Sarah Fenstermaker and Nikki Jones. New York: Routledge Press. 2009Parre?as, Rhacel. “Inserting Feminism in Transnational Migration Studies,” See Migration Online, Czech Republic. 2008“In transnational households traditional notions of mothering and fathering are reinforced”, Interview with Rhacel Parre?as on transnational families and the gendered division of reproductive labour. In: genderstudies 13 (2008). P. 6-7.2008Parre?as, Rhacel. “Immigrant Domestic Workers,” Encyclopedia of Race and Racism, 3 volumes, ed. John Hartwell Moore, Detroit: Macmillan Reference.2007Legarski, E. “Interview with Rhacel Salazar Parre?as,’ by E. Legarski. Social Thought and Research 28: 57-66.2002Parre?as, Rhacel. “Human Sacrifices: What happens when women migrate and leave families behind?” The Women’s Review of Books 19:5 p. 16. (February)REVIEW ESSAYS2020Review of Follow the Maid: Domestic Worker Migration in and from Indonesia for Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute.2018Review of Domestic Economies for International Migration Review. 2017Review of Caring for Strangers: Filipino Medical Workers in Asia for Bijdragen tot de Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde (Journal of the Humanities and Social Sciences of Southeast Asia).2013Review of Caring for the ‘Holy Land’: Filipina Domestic Workers in Israel for American Anthropologist.2012Review of Confronting Equality for Contemporary Sociology.2006Review of Children in the Global Sex Trade for Contemporary Sociology.2006Review of The Qualities of a Citizen: Women, Immigration, and Citizenship, 1870-1965 for Gender and Society (June).2005Review of Impossible Subjects: Illegal Aliens and the Making of Modern America for American Journal of Sociology (March).2002Review of Domestica for International Migration Review 36:2. 2001Review of Disposable Domestics: Immigrant Women in the New Global Economy for Berkeley Women’s Law Review Journal (Summer).2001Review of The Kitchen Spoon’s Handle: Transnationalism and Sri Lankan Housemaids for Contemporary Sociology 31:1.WORKING PAPERS2005 “Breaking the Code: Women, Labor Migration, and the 1987 Family Code of the Republic of the Philippines,” Gender and Globalization in Asia and the Pacific Occasional Papers Series Volume 2, Department of Women’s Studies, University of Hawaii, Manoa.2002“Worthy Workers, Unworthy Humans: The Citizenship of Women Migrants in the New Global Economy,” Views 2(February). University of San Agustin Coordinating Center for Research and Publications, Iloilo City, Philippines. COLLOQUIA/CONFERENCES/SEMINARS ORGANIZEDSpring 2020“Ethnographies of the Global South: Dissertation Workshop,” Sponsored by Center for International Studies, University of Southern California (April 2). 2019-2020“Monthly Seminar: Works in Progress in Global South Studies,” co-organizer Janet Hoskins and Emily Smith-Greenaway. Sponsored by USC Dornsife. Fall 2018“Spectrum of Migrant Exclusions,” co-organizer with Rachel Silvey, Patricia Landolt, Luin Goldring and Tanya Golash Boza. Sponsored by the Asian Institute, Munk School of Global Affairs, University of Toronto, October 5-6. Fall 2015“Rethinking Race,” Centennial Celebration of USC’s Department of Sociology. Sponsored by USC Department of Sociology, Center for International Studies, Center for Feminist Research, and Gould School of Law.Spring 2014“Aging Across Borders: A Transnational Look at Just Social Policies of Care,” co-organizer with Ange-Marie Hancock. Sponsored by the Center for the Study of Immigrant Integration, January 31-February 1.2013-2014New Directions on Feminist Research Seminar on “Intimate Economies,” Sponsored by the Center for Feminist Research, USC. Spring 2013Workshop on “Intimate Industries in Asia,” co-organizer with Hung Thai and Rachel Silvey. Sponsored by the Pacific Basin Institute, Pomona College and Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada, March 7-8.International workshop with participants from Canada, South Korea, Taiwan, and the United States.Spring 2013Conference, “From Prosecution to Empowerment: Fighting Trafficking and Promoting the Rights of Migrants,” co-organizer with Alice Echols. Sponsored by the Center for Immigrant Integration, University of Southern California, February 2.Spring 2010 Lecture Series, Transnational American Studies, Sponsored by Office of International Affairs, Center for the Study of Race and Ethnicity in America and Department of American Civilization, Brown University.Spring 2009 Lecture Series, Cross-National Circuits of Intimacy in the U.S. and Latin America, Sponsored by Center for the Study of Race and Ethnicity in America, Brown University. Fall 2007 Conference, Intimate Labors: Care Work, Domestic Work, and Sex Work, UC Santa Barbara, co-organizer with Eileen Boris. DISTINGUISHED LECTURES2022IRW Distinguished Lecture Series, Rutgers (November 3). 2022Sorokin Lecture, Pacific Sociological Association, Sacramento, CA (April 8). 2022Plenary Lecture on Families and Relationships, British Sociological Association Annual Conference, Virtual (April 22). 202010th Anniversary Lecture Series, “Who Cares for the Family? The Question of Gender in Transnational Families,” Sciences Po Gender Program, Paris (January 27)2019Keynote Lecture, 7th Annual Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies Conference, Sussex University, England2019 Keynote, “Serial Labor Migration,” 3rd Annual Southeast Asian Studies Graduate Student Conference, University of Wisconsin, Madison (April 13). 2019Keynote, “The Emotional Toolkits of Migrant Domestic Workers,” “Globordered Intimacies: Immigration and Gendered Close Relationships,” Tel Aviv University (June 16-18).2019Keynote, Annual Chicago Ethnography Conference, Northwestern University (March 16).2019Keynote, “Care - Migration - Gender. Ambivalent Interdependencies from a Transdisciplinary Perspective,” Center for Transdisciplinary Gender Studies, Humboldt University, Berlin (January 31-February 1).2018Plenary, “Spectrum of Migrant Exclusions: Contemporary Issues, Interdisciplinary Insights,” University of Toronto Munk School of Global Affairs (October 5). 2018Keynote, “Researching Vulnerable Populations,” Troubles and Challenges in Qualitative Research, Aalborg, Denmark (August 22-24). 2018Opening Plenary, “Migration, Inequalities and Resistance,” International Association for Feminist Economics,” SUNY New Paltz, June 19-21. 2018Keynote Panel, “Celebrating the Work of Joan Acker,” Work, Gender and Organization Conference, Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia (June 13-16).2018 Keynote, Humanities Graduate Student Conference, “Conceptual Crossroads: Rethinking Paradigms of Borders and Migration,” Utrecht University, Netherlands (March 23).2018Acker-Morgen Memorial Lecture, “The Gendered Organization of Migrant Domestic Work,” University of Oregon (March 7). 2017Keynote, “Global Inequalities of Reproduction,” Conference on “Children of Migration in Asia,” Rikkyo University, Tokyo (November 25)2017Keynote, “Transnational Families,” MiReKoc Summer School, Migration Research Center, Koc University, Istanbul (July 5)2017Keynote, “Power and Inequality in Transnational Families,” Conference on Transnational Families: Generations, Differences, Solidarity, Cluj-Napoca, Romania (July 7-8)2017Keynote, “Precarious Citizenship,” Conference on Noncitizenship, University of California, Santa Cruz (April 18)2017Max Weber Lecture, “Labor Regimes of Indenture – A Global Overview of Migrant Domstic Work,” European University Institute, Florence, Italy (April 22)2017Keynote, Conference on Migrant Domestic Workers, University of Venice, Italy (March 17-18)2017 Joint Keynote with Rachel Silvey, “Migrant Exclusion: The Case of Domestic Workers,” York Centre for Asian Research Series on Gender, Migration and Contemporary (Im)Mobilities in Asia, York University, Canada (March 3)2016Keynote, “Revisiting Partial Citizenship,” A Symposium on the “Partial Citizenship” of Family Migrants, Rikkyo University, Tokyo (October 1).2016Keynote, “Thinking Gender in Transnational Families,” Conference on “Doing family in transnational context. Demographic choices, welfare adaptations, school integration and every-day life of Polish families living in Polish-Norwegian transnationality,” Jagiellonian University, Krakow, Poland (June 2-3)2016Keynote, “Serial Labor Migration,” Conference on “Keywords in Migration Studies,” University of California, Santa Cruz (May 6)2015Plenary, Conference on “Perspectives on Domestic Work and its Exploitation,” University of Quebec in Montreal (October 21-22)2015Keynote, Conference on "Consuming Intimacies: Bodies, Labour, Care and Social Justice,” Brock University, St. Catherine’s, Ontario (October 14-16)2015Plenary, “Advocacy, Activism and the Academy,” Conference on “Migration and Late Capitalism,” University of Victoria, Canada (June 11-13)2015Keynote, “The Gender Revolution in the Philippines: Migrant Mothers and Children in Transnational Families,” Conference on “International Migration and Migrant Children,” El Colegio de Senora, Hermosillo, Mexico (May 28-29)2015Keynote, “The Gender Revolution in the Philippines: Migrant Mothers and Children in Transnational Families,” Conference on “Interpreting Memories, Reconstructing Histories,” Ehwa University, South Korea (May 22).2015Keynote, “Asian Women’s Migration: New Paradigms, New Perspectives,” Conference on “Against the Current: Transforming Perspectives and Thought in Asia,” University of Hawaii, Manoa School of Pacific and Asian Studies 2015 Graduate Student Conference (March 18-20)2015Keynote, “Doing Domestic Work, Doing ‘Not Real Work’: The Legal Construction of Migrant Domestic Workers as “One of the Family,” Conference on “Gender, Culture, and Migration,” University of Gdansk, Poland (March 7-8)2014Plenary, “The Way Forward,” Senior Ford Fellows Conference, Irvine, CA (September 28)2013Keynote, “The Sexual Citizenship of Migrant Hostesses in Japan,” Conference on “Multiculturalism in Asia and the Pacific,” Ryukoku University, Kyoto, Japan (November 16-17)2013Distinguished Campus Lecture, “The Indentured Mobility of Migrant Domestic Workers,” Benedictine College, Chicago, IL (November 7-8)2013Plenary, “Body and Embodiment,” Ford Fellows Conference, Washington DC (September 27-28)2013Closing Plenary, Conference on “Family Life in the Age of Migration and Mobility: Theory, Policy and Practice,” Link?ping University, Sweden (September 16-20)2013Keynote, “Revisiting the Transnational Family,” Conference on Research on Families and Relationships, University of Edinburgh, Scotland (June 11)2012Keynote, “The Legal Servitude of Migrant Domestic Workers,” Conference on International Migration, Michigan State University (October 5)2012Keynote, “Can I Ever Retire? The Plight of Elderly Caregivers,” Conference on Transnational Aging, Mainz, Germany (September 26-28)2012Keynote, Ford Fellows 50th Anniversary Conference, Irvine, CA (September 21-22)2012Expert Testimony, Briefing on Sex Trafficking: A Gender-Based Violence?, U.S. Civil Rights Commission, Washington, DC (April 13)2012 Convocation Address, Denison University (March 29)2011Keynote, “Queering International Marriages,” Conference on Pin@y Queers, University of California, Santa Barbara (November 19)2011Keynote, “The Intimate Labor of Transnational Communication,” Conference of TRaNS –Trans-Regional and –National Studies of Southeast Asia Journal, Institute for East Asian Studies at Sogang University, Seoul, Korea (December 2-3)2011 Plenary, “When Domestic Workers Get Old,” Forum on Domestic Work, Geneva, Switzerland (October 11)2011 Keynote, “Gender and Transnational Social Support,” Conference on “Transnational Social Support,” University of Mainz, Germany (October 1-2)2011Keynote, “The Ghost of Orientalism,” Conference on Asia Rising and the Rise of Asian-America, Pomona College (June 17-19) 2011 Keynote, “Bonded Servitude,” Conference on Making Connections: Migration, Gender, and Care Labour in Transnational Context, Oxford University (April 14-15) 2011Keynote, “Inequalities of Transnational Communication,” Conference on “Technologies of Migration: Asia, Media, Mobility and Virtuality,” University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign (April 21-22) 2010 Plenary, "Die transnationale Neuformierung der Geschlechterordnung”, "The transnational re-formation of the gender order,” 100th Meeting of the German Sociological Association (October 11)2010Keynote, “Gender and Transnational Families,” International Conference on Migration and the Family, Basel, Switzerland (June 10-12)2010Keynote, “Cultures of Maternalism: The Conditional Residency of Migrant Domestic Workers,” Open University, Milton-Keynes, UK (May 26)2010Keynote, “Translocations: Travel, Migration, Sexualities,” Northwestern University, Chicago, IL (April 29)2010Keynote, “Beyond Trafficking: A Symposium on Migrant Women Workers and the International Sex Industry,” Brown University (April 23)2010Invited Speaker, “Gender and Migration,” 54th Session of the Commission on the Status of Women, United Nations, New York City (March 2) Talk sponsored by United Nations Institute for Training and Research, Organization for Migration, the United Nations Population Fund, and the Macarthur Foundation.2010 Humanities Institute Public Lecture, “Understanding the Backlash: Why Children Reject Migrant Mothering in the Philippines,” Scripps College, Pomona, CA (February 11)2009Humanities Institute Public Lecture, “Who Cares about the Family?” Panel Discussion with Patricia Hill Collins and Joan Williams, CUNY Graduate Center, New York, NY (November 16)2009 Korenman Lecture, “Resisting Change: Women’s Migration and the Gender ‘Revolution’ in the Philippines,” Women’s Studies, University of Maryland, Baltimore County (November 5)2009 Plenary, “Permanent and Transitional Guest Workers: Variations of Partial Citizenship among Migrant Filipina Domestic Workers in the Diaspora,” An American Dilemma: Race, Ethnicity, and Welfare States in the U.S. and the Nordic Countries, University of Southern Denmark at Odense (October 1-3)2009Keynote, “Future Directions,” Conference on Transnational Mobilities of Care, Asian Research Institute, National University of Singapore (September 10-11)2009Plenary, “The Gender Revolution in the Philippines,” Women in Development Europe Conference on Care, Basel, Switzerland (June 19)2009 Hawke Public Forum Lecture, “Looking at ‘Sex Trafficking’ from Below: Filipina Hostesses in Tokyo’s Nightlife Industry,” The Bob Hawke Prime Ministerial Centre, Adelaide, Australia (June 3) 2009 Keynote, Mosaic of Transnational Spaces, A Conference for Young Scholars, Krakow, Poland. Sponsored by The Faculty of Humanities on AGH University of Science and Technology in Kraków and Institute of Sociology Warsaw University (May 8-9)2009 Keynote, Gender and Sexuality in the Pin@y Diaspora, Oberlin College, (March 7)2008Keynote, Conference on Transnational Domestic Workers and the National Welfare State Eurocores ECRP Networking Event, Amsterdam, Netherlands, (December 4-6)2008Plenary, “The Gender Paradoxes of Globalization,” Women’s Studies Association of the Philippines 2nd Asian Regional and 7th National Conference: 21st Century Engagements: the Politics and Praxis of Women’s Studies in Asia, Miriam College, Quezon City, Philippines (March 24-26)2008Keynote, “Women and the Paradoxes of Globalization: How Globalization Pushes Women Inside and Outside the Home and Nation-State” and “The U.S. War on Trafficking: Moral Panics, Neoliberalism, and the Threat Against Migrant Women’s Agency,” All the Women of the World Conference, Reykjavík – Hvammur, Iceland (January 23)2007 Keynote, “Children and Families at Risk,” California Council for Family Relations Conference, San Diego (March 2-3)2007 Annual Hansen Lecture, “The Globalization of Service Work,” San Diego State University (February 22)2006Clark Lecture, “The Gender Ideological Clash of Globalization,” University of Kansas (October 9)2005 Distinguished Lecture Series in Gender Studies, Ochanomizu University, Tokyo (June-July)20048th Annual Globalization Lecture, Amsterdam, Netherlands (September 30)Sponsored by VPRO-TV/Tegenlicht; the Dutch newspaper de Volkskrant, and De Nationale Commissie voor Internationale Samenwerking en Duurzame Ontwikkeling.2003University Lecture, “Care and Human Rights,” City University of New York - Hunter College (April 10)2001-2007Presidential and Plenary Panels: Association of Asian American Studies Conference (2006, 2007) American Anthropological Association Meeting (2003)American Sociological Association Meeting (2004)Care Network Conference (2001)INVITED LECTURES 2022The Unfree Labor of Migrant Domestic Workers, Migration and Integration Seminar Series, Seoul National University. (September 14, Virtual)2022Unfree: Migrant Domestic Work in Arab States (book talk)-Virtual – Philippine Social Science Association (August 2)-Virtual – Stanford University Press (January 21) -Virtual – London School of Economics (October 5)2021“What is Unfree Labor?” -Virtual – Hamburg University, Germany (October 20)-Virtual - Lancaster University, England (October 25)-Virtual - Kings College, London (November 12)-Virtual – Harvard (December 9)2021“After Atlanta,” Gender Studies, UC Berkeley (October 27) 2020“Cultivating Complicity and Resistance: The Philippine State Governance of Migrant Domestic Workers,” Center for Southeast Asian Studies, UC Berkeley (October 14)2020“Migration Pathways,” Immigration Initiative at Harvard (September 23)2020“Serial Labor Migration,” INALCO, Paris, France (January 28).2019“Migration and Domestic Work,” School of Social Sciences, Singapore Management University (May 10). 2019“Migrant Domestic Work – A Global Overview,” Chao Center, Rice University (April 11).2018“Freedom and Unfreedom as a Lens to Labor, Migration, Gender,” Utrecht Center for Global Challenges, Utrecht, Netherlands (March 21). 2018“Mobilizing Morality: Migrant Domestic Work in the United Arab Emirates,” The Amsterdam Anthropology Lecture Series, Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam (March 22).2018“Labor Regimes of Indenture – The Case of Migrant Domestic Workers,” Simon Fraser University, Canada (January 23). 2017“Citizenship of Migrant Domestic Workers: A Global Overview,” Waseda University, Tokyo (November 23)2017“Migrant Domestic Work”-Department of Sociology, McGill University (February 15)-Women and Gender Studies, Ohio State University (February 16)-Department of Sociology, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada (March 28)2016“The Sponsored Migration of Domestic Workers,” National Sun Yat-sen University, Kaohsiung, Taiwan (December 21). 2016“Mobilizing Morality: Migrant Domestic Workers in Dubai”-Department of Sociology, CU Boulder (February 16)-Department of Sociology, Princeton (February 22)-Bryn Mawr College (February 26)-Women’s, Gender and Sexuality Studies, Yale (April 13)-Center for Southeast Asian Studies, University of Kyoto (October 3)-Department of Sociology, National University of Singapore (October 6)-Department of Sociology, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore (October 27)-Department of Sociology, National Taiwan University, Taipei (December 22)2016“Serial Labor Migration: Filipino Women’s Patterns of Temporary Labor Migration,” Women’s Studies, University of Pennyslvania (February 18)2015“Intimacy,” Department of Sociology, University of Virginia (November 19).2015“Eating in Dubai: The Labor Conditions of Migrant Domestic Workers,” Center for the Study of Slavery and Justice, Brown University (November 12)2015“The Gendered Citizenship of Migrant Domestic Workers,” Department of Sociology, Chung-Ang University (May 20).2015“The Aging of Migrant Domestic Workers,” Department of Sociology, University of Hawaii, Manoa (March 20).2014“Social Citizenship and Migrant Workers,” Program on Democracy, Citizenship and Constitutionalism, University of Pennsylvania (May 9).2014“Food Consumption and Labor Conditions of Migrant Domestic Workers in Dubai,” Sociology Colloquium, University of California, Irvine (April 18).2014“Human Trafficking,” Institute for Research on Women, Rutgers University – New Brunswick (February 27)2013“The Emotional Labor of Buttressing Masculinity in Tokyo’s Entertainer Clubs,” Program for the Study of Women, Gender, and Sexuality, Johns Hopkins University (November 22)2013“Age and Migrant Domestic Work,” UC Davis Law School (October 3)2013“Neither Slave nor Free,” Department of Sociology Colloquium, University of Toronto, St. George (April 3)2013“Moral Imperialism and the U.S. War on Trafficking,” Menlo College Lecture Series (March 25)2013“Trafficking and Migrant Filipina Hostesses in Japan,” Queer Migrations Lecture Series, Boalt Law School (March 18)2013“Neither Slave nor Free: The Sponsored Migration of Migrant Domestic Workers,” Department of Sociology, University of Houston (February 27)2013“The Bound Labor of Migrant Workers,” Center for Research on Race and Ethnicity in Society, Indiana University (February 22)2013“The Bound Labor of Migrant Workers,” UCLA Labor Center (February 15)2012“The Regional Configurations of Asian Women’s Migration,” Shorenstein Center, Stanford University (November 9)2012“The Bound Labor of Unskilled Migrant Workers,” Department of Sociology, Northwestern University (November 1)2012“Queering International Marriages,” UCSD Department of Sociology (May 17)UCLA Department of Anthropology (May 31)2011“Indentured Mobility,” Harvard Law School (November 21)2011“The U.S. War on Trafficking,” Department of Sociology Colloquium, University of California, Riverside (November 14)2011“Moral Imperialism and the U.S. War on Trafficking,” Gender Studies Program Fall Colloquium, Cornell University (November 2) 2011 “The Moral Continuum of Love and Money,” USC Gender Studies Fall Colloquium (October 27)2011“Moral Imperialism and the U.S. War on Trafficking,” Center for Diaspora Studies, University of Toronto (March 29)2011“Moral Imperialism and the U.S. War on Trafficking,” Center for the Study of Race and Ethnicity, Stanford University (March 10)2011“Sexual Citizenship,” Department of Feminist Studies, University of California, Santa Barbara (February 24)2011 “The Indentured Mobility of Migrant Women: How Gendered Protectionist Laws Leave Filipina Hostesses Susceptible to Forced Labor,” Borders, Bodies, and Violence Research Cluster Lecture, University of California, Santa Cruz (January 27)2010“Migrant Domestic Work,” House Without a Maid Symposium, Rotterdam, Netherlands (September 25)2010“Hostess Work: The Accumulation of Bodily, Emotional and Cultural Capital,” Deparment of Sociology Colloquium, University of California, Berkeley, (September 20)2010"What is "care"? Emotions, sexual division of labour, internal et international migrations.” Department of Sociology, University of Sao Paolo, Brazil (August 25-26)2010“The Partial Citizenship of Migrant Filipina Domestic Workers,” Transpacific Studies Conference, University of Southern California (April 2-3)2009“The Gender Revolution in the Philippines: Children and Transnational Families,” Childhoods in Asia Lecture Series, Center for the Study of Asia, Boston University (September 24)Broadcast on WBUR (90.9 fm, Boston) at 9 pm on October 11, 2009, World of Ideas Program2009“The Gender Revolution in the Philippines,” Your Nanny Hates You! Hau Eins, Zwei, Drei, Berlin, Germany (June 15)2009“Moral Boundaries of Hostesses,” Women’s Studies Department, Pomona College (April 8)2008“Sexual Citizens: Moral Hierarchies of Migrant Citizenship,” Department of Anthropology, University of Rovira and Virgili, Tarragona, Spain (October 30)2008“Victor Tsoi, Race and the Study of Asian Diasporas,” Kyopo Project Opening Night Lecture, Korea Society, New York, NY (May 29)2008“Migrant Care Work,” Interdisciplinary Centre for Gender Studies, University of Bern, Switzerland (April 29)2008“Homeward Bound: The Temporal and Spatial Segregation of Migrant Filipina Hotesses in Tokyo,” Department of Anthropology, University of Iceland, Rekyavic (January 22) 2007“The Derivative Status of Asian American Women,” Oakes College Lecture Series, University of California, Santa Cruz (November 8)2007“Feminist Dilemmas in the Globalization of Care,” Trans Pacific America: Histories and Public Cultures Lecture Series, Ethnic Studies, Brown University, (November 2)2007“Rethinking Migrant Citizenship,” The Social Theory Working Group, Harvard Law School, Cambridge, MA (September 17)2007“Homeward Bound: The Temporal Segregation of Migrant Filipina Hostesses,” University of California, San Diego, Center for Comparative Immigration Studies, (May 22)2007“The Racial and Economic Incorporation of Temporary Labor Migrants in the United States,” Center for Comparative Immigration Studies, University of California, San Diego (May 22)2007“Migrant Women and Globalization,” International Women’s Film Festival in Seoul (April 9)2007“Domestic Work in International Perspective,” Brooklyn College (CUNY), Women’s Studies Program (March 7)2006“Homeward Bound: The Temporal Segregation of Migrant Filipina Hostesses,” UCLA, Department of Sociology (November 16)Rutgers University, New Brunswick (November 9)2006The Overlooked Second Generation: Children and Transnational Families,” Globalization and Women Lecture Series, Berkeley City College (October 7)2006“Space, Place, and Temporary Labor Migration,” Department of Environmental Studies, University of the Philippines, Los Ba?os (July 21)2006 “Feminism and Migration,” Institute for Gender Studies, Ochanomizu University, Tokyo, Japan (July 5)2006“Homeward Bound: Filipino Migrant Hostesses in Japan,” Asian Americas Workshop, Stanford University, Stanford, CA (April 26)2006“Servants of Globalization,” South Asian Initiative in the Humanities, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA (March 10)2006“The Temporal and Spatial Segregation of Migrant Filipina Hostesses,” South East Asian Studies Initiative, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA (March 9)2005“Filipino Migrant Hostesses in Tokyo, Japan,” Institute for Gender Studies, Ochanomizu University, Tokyo, Japan (November 19)2005“Migration and Citizenship: Women's Permanent and Temporary Relocation across Borders,” Shizuoka University of Arts and Culture, Hamamatsu, Japan, (October 28)2005“Geographies of Race and Class,” Economics Research Consortium, Ryukoku University, Kyoto, Japan (October 22)2005“Trafficked or Migrants? Filipino Hostesses in Japan,” Ryukoku University, Kyoto, Japan (October 21)2005“The Overlooked Second Generation,” University of Chicago (April 1)2004“The Export of Care: Women, Migration, and the Philippines,” Gender, Empire and Health Series, University of Illinois, Chicago (November 15)2004“The Filipino Labor Diaspora: Its Costs and Consequences,” Global Diasporas International and Area Studies Summer Institute for Educators, UCLA International and Area Studies Institute (August 3)2004“Gender and Transnational Migrant Families” Asian Families Seminar for Educators, UCLA Asia Institute (August 4)Ethnic Studies Colloquium Series, Univesity of Hawaii, Manoa (April 27)2004 “The Gender Paradox: Recreating the Family in Women’s Migration,” Women’s Studies Colloquium Series, University of Hawaii, Manoa (April 16)2004“Questions on Transnational Feminism: Neoliberal States and Women’s Migration,” Gender and Global Governance Lecture Series, University of Delaware (April 14)2004“Care and Globalization”Work and Citizenship Seminar, Yale Law School (February 28)International Studies in Planning Spring Lecture Series, Cornell University, (January 30)2003“Situating U.S. Studies in Globalization,” Comparative Conceptions Series, American Studies, University of California, Santa Cruz (October 22)2003“The Overlooked Second Generation: Children and Transnational Families in the New Economy, Filipino Student’s Association, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York (April 17)2002“Maid in The Philippines: The Domestic Work Diaspora,” Pusod: Center for Arts, Culture, and Environment, Berkeley, CA (July 17)2002“The Care Crisis: Children and Transnational Families in the New Global Economy,” Pacific Basin Institute Lecture Series, Pomona College (April 10)2002“Migrant Women and the International Division of Reproductive Labor,” Center for Immigration Studies Lecture Series, University of California, San Diego, (February 19)2001“Worthy Workers, Unworthy Humans: Migrant Workers and Citizenship in the New Global Economy,” Martin de Rada Human Rights Lecture, University of San Agustin, Iloilo City, Philippines (December 10)INVITED CONFERENCE/WORKSHOP PRESENTATIONS2022Migration Workshop, Institute for Advanced Study, University of Indiana (April 29-30)2021Book Workshop, Western Privilege, University of Chicago (October 5). 2019Chicago Ethnography Incubator, University of Chicago, (March 14-15)2017Conversation on Social Mobility, Sociology Graduate Student Committee, San Diego State University (April 21)2017“Ethnography and Objectivity,” Conference on The Gender of Ethnography and the Ethnography of Gender, Sociology, University of Texas, Austin (April 4)2017“Moral Conflicts in Sex Work,” Conference on Ethics and Economies, Singapore Institute of Technology (January 19-20).2016 Closing Remarks, Conference on Immobilities and Carework, University of Toronto (August 8-9).2016“Serial Labor Migration,” Conference on Migration Patterns in Asia, Chinese University of Hong Kong, Department of Sociology (June 20-21).2015Panel on “Methods to Research Vulnerable Female Populations,” 10th Summer Institute on Migration and Global Health, UC Berkeley’s School of Public Health (June 22-25). 2015“The Gendered Citizenship of Migrant Domestic Workers,” Conference on “Migration and Late Capitalism: Critical Intersections with the Asia-Pacific and Beyond,” University of Victoria, Victoria Island, Canada (June 11-13). 2015“The Unfree Labor of Migrant Domestic Workers,” Slavery Studies Working Group, Pennsylvania State University (April 17-18).2014Panel on “Labor Migration, Citizenship, and the Transnational Demand for Domestic Labor,” Conference “Justice in the Home: Domestic Work Past, Present, and Future,” National Domestic Worker Alliance, New York City (October 16-18)2014Panel on “Visions of the Future, Lessons from the Past: How to Achieve Economic Justice,” Conference Feminism for What? Equality in the Workplace after Lean In, Baffler Magazine, New York City (October 13).2014“Retirement as a Social Right,” Workshop on Work and the Social Rights of Citizenship in the Twenty – First Century,” University of Pennsylvania (May 9)2014Panel on “Feminization of Migration,” Moving to Opportunity: Risks and Rewards of Economic Migration, Symposium of Indiana?International & Comparative Law Review, Indiana University Law School (February 21)2014“Domestic Work as Paid Labor,” Plenary on “Institutional Nexus of Welfare, Work and Family,” Sociologists for Women in Society, Nashville, TN (February 7-9)2013Panel on Transnational Families, Conference of the Council on Contemporary Families, Miami, FL (April 5-6)2012“The Sexual Citizenship of Migrant Filipina Hostesses,” Panel on Sexual Labours, ICOPHIL-9, Michigan State University (October 28-30).2012“The Bound Labor of Migrant Workers,” Migrant and Guest Worker Workshop, Center for Labor Studies, University of California, Santa Cruz (October 13)2011Closing Panel, Global Asias 2 Conference, Penn State University (November 4-5)2011“The Gendered Woes of Children in Transnational Families,” Panel on Globalization and Mothering, The Conference of 5 Continents, Theme: “Psychosocial Effects on Mental Health, Towards an Ecology of Social Links,” Lyon, France (October 19-22)2011Conference on Rethinking Intimate Labors in Asian Migrations, Rockefeller Center, Bellagio, Italy (June 6-11)2011Conference on Gender and Development, Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study (March 4-5)2011Human Trafficking Workshop, Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study (February 3-4)2010“Protectionist Laws: How They Strip Migrant Filipina Entertainers of Autonomy and Leave Them Susceptible to Human Trafficking, Opening the Black Box of Migration: Brokers and the Organization of Transnational Mobility, National University of Singapore (August 18-19)2010 Panel Discussion, “Crossing Borders for Work: Human Trafficking,” Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, Washington DC, (March 1)2010Panel Discussion, “Care and Global Governing Bodies,” The Challenge for Global Policy Making in Care Work, Berlin, Germany (February 18-19)2010Panel Discussion, “Push and Pull of Migration: Children of Global Migration,” UC Davis Law School, Symposium edition of Journal of Juvenile Law and Policy (February 5)2009Roundtable Discussion, Fixing a Broken System, Woodrow Wilson Center, Washington, DC (October 22-23)2009“Transnational Families and Global Migration,” University of North Carolina Law Review Symposium on Global Markets, Families, and the State, Chapel Hill, North Carolina (October 9)2009Workshop on “Revisiting Feminist Methods in Migration Research,” Feminist Research Methods- An International Conference, Centre for Gender Studies, Stockholm University, Sweden (February 4-6)2009“The Circular Migration of Entertainers Between Japan and the Philippines,” Korea Foundation Workshop on East Asian Migration, Colorado State University, Fort Collins (January 30)2008 “Immigrants and Homeland Connections,” Rethinking International Migration Workshop, UCLA, Department of Sociology (November 21)2008“Contemporary Issues,” Transpacific Asian America, Loyola Marymount University, Los Angeles, CA (May 3) 2008“Benevolent Paternalism and the “Trafficking” of Migrant Women,” The Movement of Labor and the Labor of Movements Conference, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ (April 16)2007“Sex Trafficking, Towards a Vision of Sexual and Economic Justice Conference, Barnard College, New York, New York (November 30)2007“Roundtable on Sex Trafficking,” Watson Institute, Brown University, Providence, RI (November 3)2007“Liminal, Partial, and Bare-Life Citizenship: The Racial and Economic Incorporation of Asian Temporary Labor Migrants in Asia and the United States,” Return Migration: A Symposium on Asian American Ties to Asia, University of Southern California (Los Angeles) (April 20)2007“Gender Moralist Protective Laws and the Trafficking of Hostesses from the Philippines to Japan,” Workshop on Labor Migration in East Asia, Woodrow Wilson Center (January 18)2006“Gender Inequalities,” Rethinking Global Inequalities, Russell Sage Foundation, New York City (October 26-27)2006“Trade Governance and Transnational Feminist Alliances,” Gender and Labor: What’s Working? University of Texas School of Law (October 19-20)2006“Filipinos in the Diaspora,” Filipino Centennial Conference, University of San Francisco (October 6)2006“Citizenship Beyond the Nation-State: Transnational Attachments, Indigenous Struggles and Borderless Politcs,” Citizenship Without Borders: Belonging and Exclusion in Immigrant America, Boalt Hall School of Law, University of California, Berkeley (March 17)2006“The Temporal and Spatial Segregation of Migrant Filipina Hostesses,” 10th Annual Cultural Studies Symposium, University of Indiana, Bloomington, IN (February 11)2006“Trafficked? Migrant Filipina Hostesses in Japan’s Nightlife Industry,” Sex for Sale Symposium, Yale Law School, New Haven, CT (February 4)2005Discussant, “The Challenge of Gender Equality Policy in a Globalizing Asia,” 2nd Conference on Inter-Asia Gender Studies in the Post-Cold War Era, Center of Excellence Program “Frontiers of Gender Studies,” Ochanomizu University, Tokyo, Japan (November 5-6)2005“The Place and Placelessness of Migrant Filipina Domestic Workers,” What is the City? Renegotiating the Immigrant City, Woodrow Wilson Center, Washington, D.C., (May 16-17)2005 “Migrant Families since 9/11,” Nervous Borders: People and Culture Flows since 9/11, George Mason University, Fairfax, Virginia (April 6-7)2005 “Transnational Family Values,” Family Values, Society of Fellows, University of Chicago (April 1-2)2005 “Transnational Family and Intergenerational Conflicts,” Diaspora, Development and Conflict Workshop, Danish Institute for International Studies, Bornholm, Denmark (March 10-12)2005 “Transnational Care,” Workshop on Asian Transnational Families, Asian MetaCentre for Population and Sustainable Development Analysis and Department of Geography, National University of Singapore (February 2-4)2004“The Place of Women is in the Home: Gender and Migration in the 21st Century,” Motion in Place/Place in Motion: 21st Century Migration, Hitotsubashi University and the Japan Center for Area Studies, National Museum of Ethnology, Tokyo, Japan (November 25-27)2004“Gender and Transnational Communication,” Gender Dimensions of Immigration to Southeast Europe: Integration, Labour and Transnational Communication, University of Thessaly, Volos, Greece (November 6)2004“The New Dimensions of Capitalism,” Life after Capitalism Conference, New York, New York, (August 20-22)2004“Theoretical Comments,” Workshop on Globalization and the Emergent Femininities and Masculinities in China and Taiwan,” Fairbank Center for East Asian Research, Harvard University (April 24-25) 2004“Asian Americans and Globalization,” Building an Asian Pacific American Women's Movement: A National Economic Justice Gathering, National Asian Pacific American Women’s Forum, Washington, DC (March 26-27)2003“Children and Transnational Families,” Women and Migration in Asia, Sponsored by Developing Countries Research Centre and the Board of Interdisciplinary Programme at the University of Delhi(December 10-13)2003 Moderator, “Sustainable Feminisms: A Cross-Border Conference,” Macalester College (October 3-5)2003“Transnational Mothering,” European Union Network on the Socio-Economic Role of Domestic Service as a Factor of European Identity, Essex, England (May 7-11)2003“Global Domestic Work and Transnational Families,” Towards a Critical Globalization Studies: Continuing Debates, New Directions and Neglected Topics, UC Santa Barbara (May 1-4)2003“Engendering the Political Economy of Labor and Free Trade,” Labor, Race, and Empire Conference, UC Irvine Labor Studies Program (March 6-7)2003“Unequal Relations between Women: Migration and Feminisms in the New Economy,” Race and Gender in Global Perspective, Duke University, Durham, NC (February 7-8)2003Participant, Ford Foundation Sponsored Research Seminar on Meanings and Representations of Work in the Lives of Women of Color, Miami, Florida (January 16-18; June 25-28)2002“Between Women: The Politics of Domestic Work in Globalization,” Gender, Cultural Citizenship and Transnationalism Conference, New York University (October 11-12) 2002“Globalization and Care Inequalities,” Rockefeller’s Sex, Race, and Globalization Project Conference on Migration, University of Arizona (April 5-6)2001Opening Plenary Speaker, “Care and Colonialism: Gender and Labor Migration in the New Global Economy,” Care Networks Conference, Irvine, CA (August 17)2001“Breaking the Code: Women, Migration and the 1987 Family Code of the Republic of the Philippines,” “Globalisation and the Asian Migrant Family,” National University of Singapore (April 16-18)2001“Transnational Scholarship and Activism,” Session on Transnational Scholarship and Activism, Winter Meeting of Sociologists for the Study of Women, Tempe, Arizona (February 1-4)1999“Transgressing the Nation State: The Partial Citizenship and Imagined Global Community of Migrant Filipina Domestic Workers,” Global Diasporas, Madison, Wisconsin (October 29-30)PROFESSIONAL ASSOCIATION CONFERENCE PRESENTATIONS2022Panelist, Thematic Session on Care Regimes, ASA Los Angeles (August)2022Panelist, Book Salon of Nadia Kim, Refusing Death: Immigrant Women and the Fight for Environmental Justice in LA, ASA Los Angeles (August)2022 Presidential Panel, “Work-Family Justice,” Work Family Network Conference, June. 2021Panelist, “The ‘Frontline’ at Home: Domestic Work as Essential,” The Labor and Working Class History Association Conference (May 21)2021Panelist, “Roundtable: On Doing Labor Global History: Challenges and Benefits,” The Labor and Working Class History Association Conference (May 27). 2019Panelist, “Caring in an Unjust Society,” Presidential Panel, Invited Session, ASA New York (August 9-13). 2018Panelist, “Theorizing Emotions in Migration Research,” Invited Special Session, ASA Philadelphia (August 11-14).2017 Panelist, “Gendered and Sexual Violence,” Invited Session, Sex and Gender Section, ASA Montreal (August 12-15).2017Plenary, Association for Asian American Studies, Portland (April 14)2016Panelist, “Feminist Conversations and Sociological Paradigms: Have Sociological Subfields Changed?,” Invited Session, Sex and Gender Section, Seattle, WA (August 20-23)2015Discussant and Organizer for Panel on “Sex Work and Regulation,” Thematic Session, American Sociological Association Meetings, Chicago, IL (August 22-25)2014Discussant for Panel on “Neoliberalism and Sexualities,” Sex and Gender Section, San Francisco, CA (August 15-18)2013“The Micropolitics of Domination,” Invited Thematic Session, American Sociological Association Meetings, New York City (August 9-132012“Rethinking Asia in Asian American Studies,” Roundtable, Association for Asian American Studies, Washington, DC (April 12-14)2011“The Indentured Mobility of Migrant Women,” PEWS Section Session on Women in the Global South, and “Sex Work,” Regional Spotlight Session, American Sociological Association Meetings, Las Vegas, NV (Invited Session). (August)2010“The Conditional Residency of Migrant Domestic Workers,” Thematic Session on “Care and Citizenship: An International Perspective,” American Sociological Association Meetings, August, Atlanta, Georgia (Invited Session).2010“Revisiting the Partial Citizenship of Migrant Domestic Workers,” Thematic Session on “Economy: Migrants and Citizenship,” Eastern Sociological Society Meetings, Boston, MA (Invited Session) (March 18)2009“Love, Money, and Marriage: Hierarchies of Sexual Citizenship in the Filipino Migrant Community of Japan,” Thematic Session on “Constructing Communities Across International Borders,” American Sociological Association Meetings, August, San Francisco, CA (Invited Session).2008“Women and Work in the Philippines,” Thematic Session on “Gender and Work,” American Sociological Association Meetings, Boston, MA (Invited Session) (August 1-4)2008“The Force of Domesticity: Migrant Filipinas and Globalization,” Eastern Sociological Society Meetings, New York City (February 21-24)2007“Liminal, Partial, and Bare-Life Citizenship: The Racial and Economic Incorporation of Temporary Labor Migrants from Asia,” Mega-session on Asian American Studies and the Neoliberal State, Association of Asian American Studies Meeting, New York City (April 5-8)2006“Trafficked. Filipino Hostesses in Japan.” Cross-National Sociology Session, American Sociological Association Meeting, Montreal, Canada. (August 10-14)2006“Where is America in the Philippine Diaspora?” Mega-session on Legacies of Labor: Filipino Migration to the United States and Beyond in the Last One Hundred Years, National Association of Asian American Studies, Atlanta, GA. (Invited Session) (March 22-26)2004 Discussant, “Intimate Relations, Class Negotiations: Gratitude, Trust, and Suspicion in the Service Economy,” American Studies Association Annual Conference, Atlanta, GA (November 11-14)2004 Discussant, PEWS Section Session on The Globalization of Service Work, 100th Annual American Sociological Association Conference, San Francisco, CA, (August 14-17)2004 “The Gender Paradox: Recreating the Family in Women’s Migration,” Thematic Session on the Globalization of Love, 100th Annual American Sociological Association Conference, San Francisco, CA. (Invited Session (August 14-17)2004 “Asian Diasporas: Locating Home in Globalization,” Panel Organizer and Discussant, Annual Meeting of the Association for Asian Studies, San Diego, CA (March 4-7)2003 “Recreating the Family in Migration,” Presidential Session on “The Other Side of Peace: Woman and Globalization, American Anthropological Association Meetings, Chicago, IL (November 21)2003 “The Invisible Norm: Transnational Migrant Families in the Philippines Public Sphere,” 99th Annual American Sociological Association Conference, Atlanta, Georgia (August 12-16)2003 “Shifting Gender in the Family: A Look at Changes Engendered by Overseas Contract Labor on Filipino Migrant Families,” Annual Meeting of the Association for Asian Studies, New York, New York (March 27-30)2002 “Detached Communities: Race, Place, and Community Formation among Migrant Filipina Domestic Workers in Rome and Los Angeles,” Social Science Historical Association 2002 Annual Meeting, St. Louis, Missouri (October 24-27)2001 “Breaking the Code: Women, Migration, and the 1987 Family Code of the Republic of the Philippines,” Association for Asian American Studies Annual Conference, Toronto, Canada (March 29-April 2)1999 “Conflicting Class Mobility and Filipina Domestic Workers,” Annual Conference of the Study for the Society of Social Problems, Chicago (August)1999 “Postindustrial Structures, Preindustrial Values: The Emergence of the Filipino Transnational Family in Transnational Capitalism,” Regular Session on Immigrant Families, 94th Annual American Sociological Association Conference, Chicago (August 6-10)1998 “‘I actually believed that letters are supposed to be read while crying:’ Emotions, Gender, and Intergenerational Relations in Transnational Households,” Regular Session on Sociology of Emotions, 93rd Annual American Sociological Association Conference, San Francisco (August 21-25)1998 “Bad Mothers and Broken Homes: The Politics of Gender in Intergenerational Relations of Filipino Transnational Families,” Association of Asian American Studies Conference, University of Hawaii (June 25-28)1998 “Anomie and Solidarity: The Filipino Migrant Community in Rome,” The Philippines: Local and Global Perspectives, University of California, Berkeley, (May 2-3)1997 “The International Transference of Mothering and the Politics of Distance Mothering,” Mothers and Daughters: Moving into the Next Millennium, York University, Toronto, Canada (September 26-28)1997 “Bad Women, Patriarchy, Filipina (Im)Migrant Domestic Workers and the International Transference of Mothering,” 3rd Annual Filipino American Studies Conference, University of California , Los Angeles (May)1995 “Split Households Means Strong Families: The Emergence of Transnational Families in Contemporary Filipino Migration to the United States,” 1st Annual Filipino American Studies Symposium, University of California, Berkeley, (May). “Everyday Resistances and Negotiations: An Examination of Pilipina Immigrant Nurse’s Aides in the Bay Area,” Association of Asian American Studies Conference, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor (May)INTERNAL GRANTS (Current Institution)2019-2020Grant for Developing Global South Studies, Dornsife Dean’s Office, University of Southern California ($10,000)2019-2020Grant for Developing Global South Studies, Center for International Studies, University of Southern California ($10,000)2013-2014Grant for Intimacy and Capitalism Workshop, Center for International Studies, University of Southern California ($5,000)2013-2014Grant for Intimacy and Capitalism Research Seminar/Workshop, Center for Feminist Studies, University of Southern California ($10,000)2012-2013Program on Environmental and Regional Equity, Social Justice Research Fellow, University of Southern California ($9,000)2012-2013Grant for Human Trafficking Conference, Center for International Studies, University of Southern California ($8,000)2011-2013Advancing the Humanities and Social Sciences Award, University of Southern California ($20,000)SELECT MEDIA APPEARANCESInterviewee, Domestic Workers, Latino USA (April 26, 2021). Interviewee, “The Rescue” KCRW, Unfictional (July 4, 2020). Interviewee, “Academics, social workers say more study needed to know scope of human Trafficking,” Southern California Public Radio (NPR, 89.3 KPCC), (February 3, 2013).Interviewee, “Filipino Workers in Japan: Economic Migrants or Victims of Sex Trafficking?” PRI’s The World (Boston), (October 31, 2011)Rebutted by Alison Kiehl Friedman of the U.S. Department of State (November 4, 2011) Participant, KPCC’s Crawford Family Forum, Pasadena, CA (August 25, 2011).Lecture, “The Gender Revolution in the Philippines: Children and Transnational Mothers,” BU World of Ideas, 90.9 FM (October 11, 2009).Interviewee, “Migrants and Immigration,” Washington Monthly Radio Show (Washington, DC), 1260AM, WWRC (July 1, 2008).Interviewee, “Maids and Madams,” The Brian Lehrer Show (New York City), WNYC (March 2, 2007).Interviewee, “Undercover in Japan: Filipina Sex Workers,” Asia Pacific Forum (New York City), WBAI 99.5 FM (August 22, 2006).Interviewee, Series on Overseas Contract Workers Filipino Language Program at the Special Broadcasting Service - Radio in Melbourne (Australia), 93.1 FM, (April 12, 2006 and April 19, 2006).Interviewee, Women’s Magazine, 1-2 pm, KPFA, 94.1 (Berkeley), (August 22, 2005).Interviewee, “Invisible to Most, Women Line Up for Day Labor” in New York Times by Nina Bernstein (August 15, 2005): Late Edition - Final , Section A , Page 1 , Column 4.Interviewee, Full Circle Program, 7-8 pm, KPFA, 94.1 (Berkeley), (May 6, 2005).Research Consultant, “Mama, come home,” VPRO TV, Netherlands. A film on Filipino transnational migrant families. Director: Marije Meerman (2004).Featured Interviewee, “Globalisering brengt vrouwenleed met zich mee” in Reformatorisch Dagblad [a Protestant news daily] by Marie Verheij-van Beijnum (January 31, 2005).Featured Scholar, “Women who have made this world a better place for women.” Onzewereld Magazine, December 2004 (Netherlands-based monthly magazine).Interviewee, “Moederliefde als handelswaar” in de Volkskrant (the Netherlands), September 18, 2004.Interviewee, “International Women’s Day Program,” KPFA 94.1 Public Radio, Berkeley, California, March 8, 2004.Interviewee, “Pacific Time,” KQED-Radio and National Public Radio, Host: Sydnie Kohara, July 18, 2001.Interviewee and Research Consultant, “Child Cares: To Be a U.S. Nanny, Ms. Bautista Must Hire A Nanny of Her Own,” by Robert Frank, Wall Street Journal, December 18, 2001, A1.Interviewee and Research Consultant, “The Care Chain,” VPRO TV, Netherlands (Episode 42 of the television program The New World, November 12, 2000). A 50-minute video based on my book Servants of Globalization.Panelist, “Women in the New Millennium,” New California Media, Host: Emil Guillermo, December 1999.Guest, “The Global Servants,” Host: Ellen Ratner, Radio interview about my dissertation for a morning talk show in New Hampshire, December 1999.PROFESSIONAL AFFILIATIONSAmerican Sociological AssociationAssociation for Asian American StudiesSociety for the Study of Social ProblemsSociologists for Women in SocietySELECT PROFESSIONAL SERVICEElected PositionsVice President, American Sociological Association (2019-2022) Member, Board of Trustees of the Association of Members of the Institute for Advanced Study (2020-2023)Council Member, American Sociological Association Theory Section, (2017-2020)Vice President, Sociologists for Women in Society (2016-2018)Member, Committee on Nominations, American Sociological Association (2014-2016)Board Member and Northern California Representative, Association for Asian American Studies (2007-2009)American Sociological Association, Philippine/Filipinx Studies Community Group, Core Member (2021-) Mellon/ACLS Dissertation Completion Fellowships Reviewer (2014-2015; 2017-2018)Fulbright Fellowships– Japan and Korea Panelist (2014-2015; 2017-2018)Fulbright Fellowships – Peer ReviewerPanelist (2019-2020) Social Sciences Research Council – Dissertation Proposal Development Fellowship Selection Committee (2014-2015; 2015-2016)Reader (2011-2012, 2012-2013, 2013-2014)National Science Foundation Panelist for Sociology and Geographic Sciences Predoctoral Fellowships (2012-2013; 2014-2015)Panelist for Political Science (2015-2016)National Academy of Sciences, Czech Republic Reviewer (2010, 2011)The Council for International Exchange of Scholars/FulbrightSociology Peer Review Committee for the Fulbright Specialist Program (2010-2011; 2011-2012)National Endowment for the Humanities, Archeology and Anthropology, Panelist (2022) Ford Foundation Fellowship Program Co-Chair, Sociology Panel, Virtual (March 2021)Panelist, Sociology, Washington, DC (March 2020)Plenary Discussion, “The Way Forward,” Senior Ford Fellows Conference, National Academy of Sciences, Irvine, CA (2014)Plenary Discussion, “The Body,” Ford Fellows Conference, National Academy of Sciences, Washington, DC (2013)Keynote Lecture, Ford Fellows Conference, Irvine, CA (2012)Sociology Review Panel (March 2012)Regional Liaison (Southern California – USC and CalTech), (2011- )Regional Liaison (Connecticut and Rhode Island), (2008-2010)Plenary Lecture, “Navigating the Academy,” Ford Fellows Conference, National Academy of Sciences, Irvine, CA (October 16-17, 2009).Regional Liaison (Northern California), (2007 - 2008)Moderator, Pre-dissertation/Dissertation in the Social Sciences Workshop, Ford Fellows Conference, Washington DC (October 22, 2006).Conference Planning Committee Member (2005)Association for Asian American StudiesChair, Advocacy Committee (2008-2009)Association for Asian Studies Steering Committee, Philippine Caucus, (2003-2006; 2006-2009).American Sociological AssociationPanel Organizer, Regular Session on Globalization, 2023 Meetings, Philadelphia, PA.Panel Organizer, Invited Thematic Session on “The Regulation of Sex Work,” 2015 Meetings, Chicago, IL.Panel Organizer, Invited Thematic Session on “Slaves and Servants,” 2013 Meetings, New York City, NY.Panel Organizer, Race, Class, and Gender Section Session on “Race, Class, and Gender in the Global South,” 2012 Meetings, Denver, CO.Panel Organizer, Invited Thematic Session on “Care and Citizenship,” 2010 Meetings, Atlanta, GA.Panel Organizer, Invited Thematic Session on “The World of Care Work” and Regular Session on Gender and Immigration, 2008 Meetings, Boston, MA.Panel Organizer, Section Session on “Political Economy of Work: The Globalization of Service Work” and Regular Session on Gender and Immigration, 2004 Meetings, San Francisco, California.Berkshire Conference on the History of WomenProgram Committee Member, Scripps College, Claremont, California (June 2005)ConsultantIssues of Trafficking, Red Cross of Iceland, Reykavic (January 24, 2008)Expert Testimony on Women’s Migration and Trafficking, Parliament of Iceland (January 24, 2008)“Global Long Term Care Project,” Hastings Centre and World Health Organization (July 12, 2003)JOURNAL EDITOR and EDITORIAL BOARD APPOINTMENTSDeputy Editor, American Sociological Review (2022-2023) International Advisory Board, Sociology (2021-)Editorial Board, Social Politics (2015-2018)Editorial Board, Philippine Studies: Historical and Ethnographic Viewpoints (2015- )Advisory Board, Journal of Migration, Mobility and Displacement (2015- )Advisory Board, Global Labour (2015- )North America Regional Editor, Women’s Studies International Forum (September 1, 2011-April 30, 2013)Editorial Board, Contexts (2011-2014)Editorial Board, Pilipinas (2006-2009)Editorial Board, Gender & Society (2006-2009)Advisory Board, WSQ: Women Studies Quarterly (2007-2010)Editorial Board, Global Labour (2008-2014)Editorial Board, Journal of Critical Studies on Business and Society (2007-2014)COURSES TAUGHT IN LAST TEN YEARSWomen and the FamilyRace, Class and GenderQuestions of IntimacyForced Labor and Human Trafficking in Dubai (A Field Research Course in Dubai)Women and MigrationTransnational Ethnographies Feminist TheoryIntimacy and GlobalizationSociology of LaborSocial Theory Gender in a Global SocietySociological Issues in Asian American StudiesCURRENT GRADUATE STUDENTS AND POSTDOCTORAL FELLOWSDissertation ReaderValentina Cantori, Sociology, USCKyunghwan Lee, Sociology, USCDissertation ChairAnthony DiMario, Sociology, USCKritika Pandey, Sociology, USCGianne Sheena Sabio, USCPostdoctoral FellowsMeredith Hall, Society of Fellows and Sociology, USCPAST GRADUATE STUDENTS (Chair*)Jing Song (Brown, Sociology, 2010 Ph.D.), Assistant Professor of Sociology, Hong Kong Baptist UniversityTimothy Murphy (U.C. Davis, Anthropology, 2012 Ph.D.), Assistant Professor of Urban Studies, Worcester State University Jane Le Skaife (U.C. Davis, Sociology, 2013 Ph.D.), Assistant Professor, Department of Sociology, The University of TampaHeather Lee (Brown, American Studies, 2014 Ph.D.), Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Jennifer Nazareno (UCSF, Medical Sociology, 2015 Ph.D.), NIH Postdoctoral Fellow, School of Public Health, Brown UniversityErin Curtis (Brown, American Studies, 2015, Ph.D.), La Plaza de Cultura y Artes, Museum Curator.Maria Hwang* (Brown, American Studies, 2017 Ph.D.), Chao Center Postdoctoral Fellow, Rice University; Assistant Professor of East Asian Studies, McGill University Erin Kamler (USC, Communications, 2017 Ph.D.), Independent Consultant, ThailandYu Kang Fan* (USC, Sociology, 2018 Ph.D.), Postdoctoral Teaching Fellow, USC Department of Sociology Krittiya Kantachote* (USC, Sociology, 2018 Ph.D.), Assistant Professor of Social Sciences, Srinakharinwirot University, ThailandApril Hovav (USC, Sociology, 2019 Ph.D.), Postdoctoral Fellow, University of California, San Diego Minwoo Jung* (USC, Sociology, 2021 Ph.D.), Assistant Professor, Sociology, Loyola University of ChicagoCarolyn Choi* (USC, Sociology, 2021 Ph.D.), Postdoctoral Fellow, Asian American Studies and Sociology, Dartmouth College Matt Ripley* (USC, Sociology, 2021 Ph.D.), Researcher, FacebookLauren Levitt (USC, Communications, 2021 Ph.D.), Postdoctoral Fellow, TulanePAST POSTDOCTORAL FELLOWS MENTOREDFelicity Shaeffer-Grabiel (2009-2010; Associate Professor of Gender Studies, UCSC)Chaitanya Lakkimsetti (2012-2014; Assistant Professor of Sociology, Texas A&M)Epo Ishiyama (2018-2019; Fulbright Fellow)Kristina Quisimbing-King (2018-2020); Assistant Professor of Sociology, Northwestern UNDERGRADUATE STUDENT SENIOR THESIS ADVISEESShannon Lam (2018-2019, Gender Studies)Constanza Astiazaran (2019-2020, Sociology)INDEPENDENT STUDYKritika Pandey, Gender (Fall 2021)Isaac Jewell, Citizenship (Spring 2019)COMMUNITY SERVICEConsultant on International Labor Organization Discussion of Convention 29 (2013), Office of Child Labor, Forced Labor and Human Trafficking, U.S. Department of Labor Consultant on Domestic Workers in the Middle East (Fall 2013), Human Rights Watch, Women’s Rights DivisionConsultant (2010), Health Impact Assessment of Domestic Worker Bill of Rights California State Legislative Bill.Consultant (2000-2008), Pusod: Filipino Arts and Ecology Center, Berkeley, CA.Volunteer Instructor (Fall 2001), San Agustin University, Iloilo City, Philippines.Graduate Student Representative (1994-1995), Academic Planning Council, UC Office of the President.Festival Coordinator (Spring 1995), Women of Color Film Festival, Pacific Film Archive, Berkeley, CA, April 17-28, 1995.External Affairs Co-Chair (1993-1994), Graduate Assembly, UC Berkeley.Coordinator (Spring 1993), 8th Annual Empowering Women of Color Conference, UC Berkeley.UNIVERSITY SERVICE (Current Institution)*Member, University Research Committee (2021-2022) *Chair, Department of Sociology Search Committee (2018-2019)*Member, Department of Sociology Search Committee (2017-2018)*Member, University Committee on Appointments, Promotions, and Tenure (2012-2015)*Reader, Graduate Fellowship Application Writing Clinic (2013, 2014)*Member, Graduate Council (2013-2015)*Member, Center for International Studies Faculty Board (2012-2015)*Member, Social Sciences Tenure and Promotions Committee, Dornsife College (Spring 2012)*Member, Department of Sociology, Political/Organizations Search Committee (2011-2012)*Member, Department of Sociology, Graduate Committee (2011-2012)REFERENCESAvailable upon request. ................
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