WAYNE STATE UNIVERSITY



WAYNE STATE UNIVERSITYProfessional RecordFacultyNAME: Nicole Trujillo-Pagán, Ph.D.DATE PREPARED: April 14, 2007DATE REVISED: December 14, 2016OFFICE ADDRESSES:Department of Sociology2257 Faculty Administration BuildingCenter for Latino/a and Latin American Studies3315 Faculty Administration BuildingWayne State UniversityDetroit, MI 48202HOME ADDRESS:5245 Coldspring LaneWest Bloomfield, MI 48322OFFICE PHONE: (313) 577-8973HOME PHONE: (347) 816-6623Email: bb3729@wayne.edu______________________________________________________________________________DEPARTMENT/COLLEGE:Department of Sociology, Center for Latino/a and Latin American StudiesCollege of Liberal Arts & SciencesPRESENT RANK & DATE OF RANK:Associate Professor, August 2013-presentWSU APPOINTMENT HISTORY:2006-2013, Assistant Professor______________________________________________________________________________CITIZEN OF: The United States of America______________________________________________________________________________EDUCATION: Baccalaureate: Emmanuel College, Boston, 1994M.A.: University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, 1997Ph.D.: University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, 2003______________________________________________________________________________FACULTY APPOINTMENTS AT OTHER INSTITUTIONS (Years and Rank):2004-2006, Substitute Assistant Professor (Brooklyn College)2003, Adjunct Assistant Professor (Brooklyn College, Hunter College)______________________________________________________________________________PROFESSIONAL SOCIETY MEMBERSHIPS:American Association for the History of Medicine (AAHM)American Sociological Association (ASA)Eastern Sociological Association (ESA)International Sociological Association (ISA)Latin American Studies Association (LASA)Mujeres Activas en Letras y Cambio Social (MALCS)National Association for Chicana and Chicano Studies (NACCS)Puerto Rican Studies Association (PRSA)Society for the Social History of Medicine (SSHM)Society for the Study of Social Problems (SSSP)Sociologists Without Borders (SSF)Southern Sociological Society (SSS)______________________________________________________________________________TEACHINGYears at Wayne State: 9Years at Other Colleges/Universities : 32.5, Brooklyn College, CUNY.5, Hunter College, CUNYCourses Taught at Wayne State in Last Five YearsUndergraduateBasic Sociological Theory (SOC 4050)Learning about your Community through Research (LAS/SOC 3710)Seminar in Latino Urban Problems (LAS 3610)Social Problems (SOC 2020)Directed Study (SOC 3990)Essays/Theses/Dissertations Served as Advisor/Director: COMPLETED:2012. Hannah Mathers, “Regional and National Identity: Ecuadorian and U.S. Americans’ understandings of being ‘American’” (application for Undergraduate Research and Creative Projects Grant, Faculty Mentor)Violeta Donawa, “Exploring the Afro-Latino Presence in the US: The Afro-Panamanian Experience in Michigan” (Undergraduate Research and Creative Projects Grant, Faculty Mentor)Renata Byrnes, “Language and Status in the Workplace” (Undergraduate Research and Creative Projects Grant, Faculty Mentor) John Garza, “Moving Towards Comprehensive Immigration Reform in the New Millennium” (Undergraduate Research Faculty Mentor)Katty Jimenez, “Resolving the Political Status of Puerto Rico” (Undergraduate Research Faculty Mentor)Amanda Jacob, “Adolescents in Urban Settings: A Better Look At Dropout Rate and Teen Parenthood” (Undergraduate Research Faculty Mentor)Angela Gallegos, “Youth Media” (Undergraduate Research Faculty Mentor)Victoria Pardo, “In the Math Depatment the Numbers Just Don't Add Up” (Undergraduate Research Faculty Mentor)Julie Mendoza, “Latino Youth, Lost Potential” (Undergraduate Research Faculty Mentor)Served as committee memberACTIVEMiriama Bracken, Sociology, “Health Beliefs and Health Behaviors of the Samoan Immigrants in the United States” (Master’s Thesis Committee Member) COMPLETED 2016. Porsche VanBrocklin-Fischer, Sociology, “Stuck in Sociological Superglue: The Problems of Acquisition of Social Capital among Public Housing Residents” (Master’s Thesis Committee Member)2015. Lukasz Pawelek, Classical and Modern Languages, Literatures, and Cultures, “El Rol de la Nostalgia en Literatura de las Diásporascaribe?as: Entre la Imaginación, la Memoria y el Regreso al Núcleo Natal” (Dissertation Committee Member)2015. Rondrell Taylor, Sociology, “Affirming Expectations: African American Men’s Perceptions of Trust in Physicians” (Dissertation Committee Member)2015. Amra Poskovic, Sociology, “Immigration and Barriers to Health Care Use” (Master’s Thesis Committee Member)2015. Roshawnda A. Derrick, Classical and Modern Languages, Literatures, and Cultures, “Spanish/English Code-Switching in Recent U.S. Latino-authored Texts” (Dissertation Committee Member)2015. Nicole Little, Sociology, “Race and Student’s Perception of School Counseling” (Master’s Thesis Committee Member)2012. Kelley Unger, Education, “Examining the Content, Process, and Contextual Factors of Professional Development Technology” (Dissertation Committee Member)Course of Curriculum DevelopmentCurriculum Development New CoursesCBS/SOC 3710: Learning About Your Community through ResearchRedesigned Courses SOC 4050_Hybrid section: Basic Sociological TheoryCBS 3610: Seminar on Urban Problems (Fulfills cultural diversity requirement)Courses prepared and taught for the first time:Fall 2013: Basic Sociological TheoryFall 2009: Learning About Your Community through ResearchWinter 2009: Race Relations in Urban Society Winter 2009: Seminar in Latino Urban Problems Fall 2007: Social ProblemsWinter 2007: Sociology of Immigration and Ethnicity Fall 2006: History of Latinos in the United StatesWinter 2006: Puerto Rico: History after 1815Fall 2005: Puerto Rican Communities Winter 2005: Latin AmericaFall 2004: Urban Institutions and the Latino ExperienceFall 2004: Comparative Studies in African, Asian, and Latina American CulturesFall 2003: Puerto Ricans in the United StatesFall 2003: Latinos: Emerging Realities and AlternativesFall 2003: Puerto Ricans and Dominicans: A Comparative Approach Course Materials ______________________________________________________________________________RESEARCHResearch in Progress“Dreamers in Detroit: How Latino/a Urban Youth Understand Opportunity in a “Rustbelt” City”“Immigrants, Jobs and Policy: The Ambivalent Role of Government.” Through discourse analysis of legislative debates in Alabama, this project studies the framing of policy makers’ ambivalent positions on regulating and controlling local labor markets.“Self-Deportation and Repatriation: Using the ‘Invisible Hand’ to Control Mobility.” Through comparative historical analysis, this project analyzes the neoliberal shift in disciplinary techniques for encouraging migration and managing labor through detention and “deportability.”Funded Research in Last Five Years“Old History, New Policy: Understanding Subfederal Immigration Policies.” Through in-depth interviews and secondary data analysis, this project studies the development of state-level (subfederal) immigration regulations in Arizona and Alabama and considers whether immigration status has become a pretext for broader racial/ethnic exclusion, particularly of the Latina/o population. (see below: 2012, Humanities Center Faculty Fellowship)Fellowships/Grants/Special Awards in Last Five Years2016, Office of Teaching and Learning, Wayne State University (WSU), Travel Grant (declined)2012, Humanities Center Faculty Fellowship, Wayne State University (WSU), “Subfederal Immigration Regulation and Enforcement in Arizona and Alabama,” Wayne State University ($5000)Other Research Activities2000-2001, Certified Healthcare Effectiveness Data and Information Set (HEDIS) Data Compliance Auditor, Managed Care Division, Island Peer-Review Organization, Lake Success, NY1997-1999, Senior Data Analyst, Managed Care Division, Island Peer-Review Organization, Lake Success, NY1996, Research Assistant, Institute for Research on Women and Gender, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI1995-1996, Research Analyst, Health & Medicine Policy Research Group, Chicago, IL1993, International Research Intern in Cuernavaca, Mexico, University of Massachusetts, Boston, MAPUBLICATIONBooks 2013. Modern Colonization by Medical Intervention: U.S. Medicine in Puerto Rico. Brill Academic Publishers. Chapters PublishedAuthoredPeer-Reviewed Chapters2011. “Hazardous Constructions: Mexican Immigrant Masculinity and the Rebuilding of New Orleans,” pp. 327-353, in Cedric Johnson, ed. The Neoliberal Deluge. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota.2010. “The Production of the ‘Illegal Subject’,” pp. 151-172, in Richard Della Buono and David Fasenfest, eds. Social Change, Resistance and Social Practices. Boston: Brill Publishers.2009. “The Politics of Professionalization: Puerto Rican Physicians Between Spanish and U.S. Colonialism,” pp. 142-164, in De Barros, Juanita, Steve Palmer, and David Wright, eds. Health and Medicine in the circum-Caribbean, 1800-1968. New York: Routledge.2007. “From “Gateway to the Americas” to the “Chocolate City”: The Racialization of Latinos in New Orleans,” pp. 95-114, in Potter, Hillary, ed. Racing the Storm: Racial Implications and Lessons Learned from Hurricane Katrina. Lanham, MD: Lexington Books.2007. “Katrina’s Latinos: Vulnerability and Social Disasters in Relief and Recovery,” pp. 147-168, in Swan, Richelle and Kristin Bates, eds. Through the Eye of Katrina: Social Justice in the United States. Durham, NC: Carolina Academic Press.--- 2010. 2nd edition.Non-Peer-Reviewed Chapters2006. “Medicine,” pp. 438-440, in Vicki Ruiz and Virginia Sanchez-Korrol, eds. Latinas in the United States: A Historical Encyclopedia. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press. 2006. “Delgado, Jane L. (1953- ),” pp. 203-204, in Vicki Ruiz and Virginia Sanchez-Korrol, eds. Latinas in the United States: A Historical Encyclopedia. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press. 2006. “Rodriguez-Trias, Helen (1929-2001),” pp. 641-643, in Vicki Ruiz and Virginia Sanchez-Korrol, eds. Latinas in the United States: A Historical Encyclopedia. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press. 2006. “De Acosta, Mercedes (1893-1968),” pp. 189-190, in Vicki Ruiz and Virginia Sanchez-Korrol, eds. Latinas in the United States: A Historical Encyclopedia. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press. 2006. “Pedroso, Paulina (1860-1925?),” pp. 563, in Vicki Ruiz and Virginia Sanchez-Korrol, eds. Latinas in the United States: A Historical Encyclopedia. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press. 2006. “‘La Lupe’ (Guadalupe Victoria Yoli Raymond) (1939-1992),” pp. 363-364, in Vicki Ruiz and Virginia Sanchez-Korrol, eds. Latinas in the United States: A Historical Encyclopedia. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press. 2006. “Miranda, Carmen (1909-1955),” pp. 478-479, in Vicki Ruiz and Virginia Sanchez-Korrol, eds. Latinas in the United States: A Historical Encyclopedia. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press. 2006. “Braga, Sonia (1950- ),” pp. 99, in Vicki Ruiz and Virginia Sanchez-Korrol, eds. Latinas in the United States: A Historical Encyclopedia. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press. 2006. “Charo’ (María Rosario Pilar Martínez Molina Baeza) (1942- )” pp. 144, in Vicki Ruiz and Virginia Sanchez-Korrol, eds. Latinas in the United States: A Historical Encyclopedia. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press. 1998. “Controlling Malaria and Men: Rockefeller Health Interventions in Puerto Rico, 1920-1926.” Center for Research on Social Organization Working Paper #560, University of Michigan, January.Co-AuthoredPeer-Reviewed Chapter2014. Logan, Enid, Stayce Blount, Louis Mendoza, Chavella Pittman, Rashawn Ray, & Nicole Trujillo-Pagan. “Double Consciousness: Faculty of Color Teaching Students of Color about Race,” pp. 123-139, in Kristin Haltinner, Ron Aminzade and David Pellow, eds., Teaching Race in Contemporary America. New York: Springer Publishing.2010. Donato, Katherine, Nicole Trujillo-Pagan, Carl Bankston, Audrey Singer. “Immigration, Reconstruction, and Settlement: Hurricane Katrina and the Emergence of Immigrant Communities,” pp. 265-290, in Brunsma, Dave, David Overfelt, And Steve Picou, eds. The Sociology of Katrina: Perspectives on a Modern Catastrophe, 2nd ed. Rowman & Littlefield.2007. “Reconstructing New Orleans After Katrina: The Emergence of an Immigrant Labor Market,” pp. 217-234, in Brunsma, Dave, David Overfelt, And Steve Picou, eds. The Sociology of Katrina: Perspectives on a Modern Catastrophe. Rowman & Littlefield. (This book has been frequently cited and, of its chapters, ours is most frequently cited.)Journal Articles PublishedRefereed JournalsForthcoming. “A Tale of Four Cities: The Meaning of Blackness for Ethiopian Immigrants in Washington, D.C., Tel Aviv, Rome and Melbourne,” Social Identities.Cumberbatch, Prudence and Trujillo-Pagán, Nicole. 2016. “Hashtag Activism and Why #BlackLivesMatter In (and To) the Classroom,” Radical Teacher, 106.2014. “Recovering Latinos’ Place in New Orleans,” Louisiana History, 55, 2, pp.177-197. 2014. “Emphasizing the “Complex” in the “Immigration Industrial Complex,” Critical Sociology, 40, 1, pp. 29-46.2013. “Worms as a Hook for Colonising Puerto Rico,” Social History of Medicine, 26, 4, pp. 611-632.2012. “Commitments to Community: Latina/o Studies Past and Present,” The National Journal of Urban Education and Practice, 6, 1 (Summer), 40-52.2012. “Neoliberal Disasters and Racialization: The Case of post-Katrina Latino Labor,” Race & Class, 53, 4, pp. 54-66.2012. “Boundary Work at the New Corner: Latino Workers in New Orleans,” International Review of Modern Sociology, 38, 1 (Spring), pp. 1-24.2010. “Denaturalizing the ‘Disaster’ and Envisioning ‘Radical Recovery’: Teaching Comparatively on New Orleans and Detroit,” Radical Teacher, 87, Spring, pp. 28-36.Papers Presented (* denotes refereed)Invited and/or Refereed Internationally or Nationally2013. “Somewhere Between Democracy and Force: Choice, Citizenship and Mobility in the Discourse on Self-Deportation,” 63rd Annual Meeting of the Society for the Study of Social Problems, New York, NY, August.2012. “Subfederal Immigration Regulation: The New Juan Crow?,” 6th Annual International Conference on Sociology, Athens, Greece, May. *2011. Invited Panelist, “Social Constructions of Latino Recovery Workers after Hurricane Katrina,” Mini-conference on The Neoliberal Deluge, University of Rochester, Rochester, New York, December.2009, Panelist, “Masculinity, Labor Market Incorporation, and Racial Formation among Latino Recovery Workers in New Orleans” at Annual Meeting of the Eastern Sociological Society, Baltimore, Maryland, March. *2010, Panelist, “Hazardous Construction of Mexican Immigrant Masculinity,” at Historical Materialism Conference, New York City, New York, January. *2008. Invited Panelist, “Latino workers within the Recovery Industry: Wages and Solidarity in post-Katrina Construction Labor,” Left Forum, New York City, March.2006, Panelist, “Disasters of Invisibility: What Hurricane Katrina Tells Us about Latinos in the U.S. South” at Annual Meeting of the Southern Sociological Society, New Orleans, Louisiana, March. *2005, Invited Panelist, “Katrina’s Latinos: Occupational Risk among Relief and Recovery Workers,” Fourth Annual Latino Health Conference, New York City, New York, October.Invited and/or Refereed Locally/Regionally2014. “Improving the Cultural Humility of the Current Healthcare Workforce,” with Dr. Jorge Chinea, Wayne State University, October. 2013. “The Language of ‘Juan Crow’ in Alabama,” Humanities Center Faculty Fellows Conference, Wayne State University, April.2009. “Vulnerability and Dignity among Latino Residential Construction Workers in a post-Katrina New Orleans,” Humanities Center, Wayne State University, April 8.2006, Invited Panelist, “Disasters of Invisibility: What Hurricane Katrina Tells Us about New Orleans and Latinos,” “New Orleans: The Death and Rebirth of an American City” Conference, LaGuardia Community College, New York. April.2007. Invited Speaker, “Corporations and Environmental Justice in Puerto Rico,” Fundraiser for Amig@s del MAR, The Puerto Rican Club, Detroit, December 14.2007. Invited Panelist, Roundtable, 26th Annual North American Labor History Conference, Wayne State University, Detroit, Michigan, October 20. 2007. Invited Speaker, “The Pedagogy of the Independent Learner,” Chicano-Boricua Studies, Wayne State University, February 27.2007. Invited Panelist, “Finding Common Ground: African Americans and Hispanics Uniting Through Dialogue,” Invited Panelist, Marygrove College, February 11.Invited Seminars or Lectures Presented in Last Five Years2016. “Beyond the Madrigal Court Case: Social Structure and the Meaning of Consent,” No Mas Bebes Film Screening, Wayne State University, March 6. 2013. “Writing, Researching and Publishing in Latino/a Studies,” La Academia del Pueblo: Regional Undergraduate and Graduate Latino/a and Latin American Research Conference, Wayne State University, April 20.2008. Invited Panelist, “Mexican Workers in the United States,” Mexico in America: An Educational Forum on Chicanos and Mexicans in the United States, Forum on Contemporary Issues in Society (FOCIS), Wayne State University, September 10.2008. Invited Panelist, “The Hispanic Population of Southeast Michigan: Characteristics and Economic Contributions,” Hispanic Business Association Conference, Detroit, Michigan, October 23.2008. Invited Lecturer, “Katrina’s Latinos: Vulnerability and Social Disasters in Relief and Recovery,” in “Immigration and Social Change in US society,” Wayne State University, February 28.2008. Invited Speaker, “Dear Detroit,” in “State of the Re:Union, Motor City Rebound,” available at , WDET.2008. Invited Speaker, “Town Meeting to Stop the Persecution of Foreign Workers and Families,” Michigan Coalition for Human Rights, Detroit, February 7.2008. Invited Guest, “What the Southeast Michigan Economic Impact Study Tells Us About Hispanics in Michigan,” The Dr. Jimmy Womack Show, WGPR 107.5 FM.G. Other Scholarly Work2007. LaBumbard, Jessica and Nicole Trujillo-Pagan. “From Katrina to Detroit,” Critical Moment, May 29.______________________________________________________________________________SERVICECommittee Assignments in Last Five YearsUniversity Committee MembershipWinter 2016, Reviewer, University Research Grant Committee, Social and Behavioral Sciences, Wayne State UniversityWinter 2014, Judge, 5th Annual Graduate Exhibition, Wayne State UniversityWinter 2013, Reviewer, Graduate-Professional Scholarship Competitions for AY 2013-2014Fall 2009-Fall 2010, Member, Educational Adjustment Committee Winter 2009, Reviewer, Graduate-Professional Scholarship Competitions for AY 2009-2010Fall 2007, Reviewer, Undergraduate Research and Creative Project Grant College/Department Committee Membership2015, 2013, 2010, 2009, Member, Salary Committee 2014, Member, Promotion and Tenure Committee2014, Director of Undergraduate Studies2014, 2007, Member, Graduate Committee2014, 2013, 2008, Member, Coordinating Committee 2013, Member, North American Labor History Conference Planning Committee2013, 2008, Member, Budget Committee2012, 2009, Member, Undergraduate Committee2008-2010, Member, Medical Sociology Preliminary Examination Committee2008, Member, Southeast Michigan Economic Impact Study2007 (Fall), Member, Faculty Search Committee2007 (Winter), Member, Student Research Day Award CommitteeProfessional ConsultationTestimony before Public BodiesWinter 2007, Detroit City Council, Proposal for Changing Detroit’s Status to a Sanctuary CityOther Professionally Related Service2016-Present, Editorial Board, Journal of Undergraduate Ethnography2014-Present, Associate Editor, Critical Sociology2012-2014, 2006-2007, Reviewer, Critical Sociology2013, Reviewer, Population Research and Policy Review2013, Reviewer, Social History of Medicine2013, Reviewer, SOULS: A Critical Journal of Black Politics, Culture and Society2013, “The Right to Stay Home: How US Policy Drives Mexican Migration,” with David Bacon, North American Labor History Conference, Detroit, Michigan, October 24.2012, Reviewer, Caribbean Studies2012, Reviewer, Societies Without Borders2012, Moderator, Academic Panel, Academia del Pueblo, Wayne State University2012 (Spring), Faculty Editor for Sociology Undergraduate Newsletter 2010-Present, Summer Institute for Latino Public Policy (SILPP) Coordinator2008-2010, Faculty Editor, Onda Latina Editorial Board2006-2010, Latino Leadership Opportunity Program (LLOP) Coordinator 2008, Moderator, “Labor Rights are Civil Rights,” 27th Annual North American Labor History Conference, Detroit, Michigan, October 16.2007, Leader-Participant, LLOP in Washington, D.C.2006-Present, Board Member, Centro Obrero (Workers’ Center)2006-2007, Curriculum Development, Labor Rights, Centro Obrero 2006-2007, Instruction, English as a Second Language, Centro Obrero 2006, Reviewer, CENTRO Journal ................
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