ASA Thanks The Supporting Partners

Transcription

ASA thanks the supporting partnersof the 117th Annual Meeting

117th Virtual Annual MeetingBureaucracies of Displacement2022 Program CommitteeCecilia Menjívar, University of California-Los AngelesNina Bandelj, University of California-IrvineNancy López, University of New MexicoPaul Almeida, University of California-MercedMonica Bell, Yale UniversityCedric de Leon, University of Massachusetts-AmherstCynthia Feliciano, Washington University-St LouisNilda Flores-Gonzalez, Arizona State University-TempeNeda Maghbouleh, University of TorontoRashawn Ray, University of Maryland-College ParkFlorencia Torche, Stanford UniversityChris Uggen, University of Minnesota-Twin CitiesLaurel Westbrook, Grand Valley State UniversityLand Acknowledgement and RecognitionBefore we can talk about sociology, power, and inequality, we must acknowledge our presence onthe traditional, ancestral, and unceded territory of the Gabrielino/Tongva peoples. The AmericanSociological Association (ASA), acknowledges that academic institutions, indeed the nation-stateitself, were founded upon and continue to enact exclusions and erasures of Indigenous Peoples.This acknowledgement demonstrates a commitment to beginning the process of working todismantle ongoing legacies of settler colonialism, and to recognize the hundreds of IndigenousNations who continue to resist, live, and uphold their sacred relations across their lands. We alsopay our respect to Indigenous elders past, present, and future and to those who have stewardedthis land throughout the generations.

TABLE OF CONTENTSThis document reflects the ASA Annual Meeting program as of June 1, 2022.Any changes made after that date are reflected in the online program only.Welcome from the ASA President. 1Concurrent Meetings. 2Minority Fellowship Program Fellows. 3Program ScheduleFriday, August 5.4Saturday, August 6.6Sunday, August 7.41Monday, August 8.78Tuesday, August 9. 107Wednesday, August 10. 132Participants Index. 133Session Index. 165

WELCOME FROM THE ASA PRESIDENTCecilia MenjívarASA PresidentUniversity of California-Los AngelesAmid the challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic and the various manifestationsof violence around us today, we need connection, community, and the powerof sociological thinking to understand the world—and to change it. I am deeplyhonored to welcome you all to Los Angeles to engage in fruitful and invigoratingconversations so that our collective sociological wisdom can sustain us,enlighten us, and help us see possibilities for a better and more just world. It ismy sincerest hope that we can come together for meaningful exchanges whilealso enjoying the bounty that Los Angeles has to offer.This year, ASA returns to Los Angeles for the first time in nearly three decades (the last time ASA wasin L.A. was in 1994), which means that we, local sociologists, are thrilled to welcome you! So, I want towelcome you warmly to my hometown and invite you to explore its rich culture, sights, neighborhoods,and history. The local committee (Jody Agius-Vallejo and Jan Lin, co-chairs; Kevan Harris, Nadia Kim,Alejandra Marchevsky, James McKeever, and Walter Nicholls) has been hard at work curating tours andlists of restaurants, neighborhoods, and places of interest. They also have organized regional spotlightpanels that showcase L.A. for sociologists, including a look back at the thirty years after the L.A. rebellionof 1992, Indigenous Los Angeles, gentrification and displacement, the role of community colleges in L.A.,the immigrant rights movement, and the politics and policies that affect the unhoused.The theme I chose for the 2022 meetings, Bureaucracies of Displacement, allows us to examine the depthand breadth of the effects of political and policy decisions on the wide range of challenges and crises thatwe face in the United States and around the world today. I convened a program committee (Nina Bandelj,Nancy López, Paul Almeida, Monica Bell, Cedric de Leon, Cynthia Feliciano, Nilda Flores-Gonzalez, NedaMaghbouleh, Rashawn Ray, Florencia Torche, Chris Uggen, and Laurel Westbrook) to help me organize ameeting that would create a solid platform to discuss such challenges, aiming to be as inclusive as possibleof different themes, populations, and spaces.I am delighted to open the meetings with the plenary, Beyond Control: Immigration Policy in an Era ofEnforcement, where Muzaffar Chishti (Migration Policy Institute/NYU Law), Kelly Lytle Hernandez (UCLA),Douglas Massey (Princeton), Karen Musalo (Center for Gender and Refugee Studies, Hastings College ofLaw), and Roger Waldinger (UCLA) will discuss pressing questions in immigration policy. Immediatelyfollowing, I invite you all to the welcoming reception, with a musical performance by the Jornaleros delNorte, a band composed of immigrant laborers living in Los Angeles.Two other plenaries include a conversation about Abortion Rights in Crisis: Reflections on Dobbs v Jackson,led by Carole Joffe (UCSF), on the SCOTUS decision and its implications with participation from MicheleGoodwin (UC Irvine Law), Michelle Oberman (Santa Clara University), Bhavik Kumar (Planned Parenthood,Texas), and Patricia Zavella (UC Santa Cruz). And a plenary on Decentering Sociology from the GlobalNorth, with Peggy Levitt (Wellesley College) moderating a discussion on how to center knowledge fromthe Global South to understand our world, with panelists Nazli Kibria (Boston University), Marco Garrido(UChicago), Victor Agadjanian (UCLA), and Paul Almeida (UC Merced).Presidential Panels on guns in society, climate change, voter suppression, race representation in Hollywood,vaccine refusal, housing insecurity, threats to end abortion and LGBTQ rights around the world, familyseparation, mass incarceration, gender-based violence, anti-Asian racism, immigration enforcement (andmore), section sessions, book panels, and regular sessions will ensure meaningful conversations, so we gohome inspired, with our sociological imaginations sharpened. But while in L.A., please enjoy our city andhave fun at the various events, visiting with old friends and meeting new ones!1

CONCURRENT MEETINGSAssociation for the Sociology of ReligionAugust 6-8, 2022Association of Black SociologistsAugust 5, 2022Society for the Study of Social ProblemsAugust 5-7, 2022Sociologists for Women in SocietyAugust 5-9, 20222

2022 MINORITY FELLOWSHIP PROGRAM FELLOWS2022 Minority Fellowship Program Fellows2022 Minority FellowshipProgramFellowsLuis Flores, Jr.is a PhD candidatein sociologyand an affiliate at the Stone Center for InequalityLuisFlores,Jr. Universityis a PhD candidatein sociologyDynamicsat theof Michigan.He is BA in political economy and history from theDynamicsUniversityof Michigan.earnedUniversity oliticaleconomyandhistoryfromthehow the shifting regulatory boundaries separatingUniversityof California,Berkeley.Floreshome and marketshape labor,wealth,and ginequality.home and market shape labor, wealth, andinequality.Edwin Grimsley is a PhD candidate in sociology atthe City University of New York (CUNY), TheEdwinGrimsleyis aearnedPhD candidatesociologyatGraduateCenter. Hehis BA ininbiologyfromtheCity Universityof Broadly,New York(CUNY),The r.HeearnedhisBAinbiologyfromintersection of race and racism, economicWesleyanBroadly,studies theinequality,University.urban sociology,andGrimsleycriminology.intersection of race and racism, economicinequality, urban sociology, and criminology.Theresa Hice-Fromille is a PhD candidate insociology at the University of California, SantaTheresa Hice-Fromille is a PhD candidate inCruz. She graduated from Lock Haven Universitysociology at the University of California, Santain 2016 with a BA in political science and Spanish.Cruz. She graduated from Lock Haven UniversityHice-Fromille’s dissertation research focuses on thein 2016 with a BA in political science and Spanish.processes of teaching, learning, and imaginingHice-Fromille’s dissertation research focuses on theamong Black women and girls at two communityprocesses of teaching, learning, and imaginingbased educational organizations.among Black women and girls at two communitybased educational organizations.Carla Salazar Gonzalez is a PhD candidate insociology at the University of California, LosCarla Salazar Gonzalez is a PhD candidate inAngeles. She earned her MA in social sciences andsociology at the University of California, LosBA in sociology from the University of California,Angeles. She earned her MA in social sciences andIrvine. Gonzalez’s research explores theBA in sociology from the University of California,consequences of immigration border policies andIrvine. Gonzalez’s research explores thelaws on immigrant populations and their familiesconsequences of immigration border policies andwithin and outside of the U.S.laws on immigrant populations and their familieswithin and outside of the U.S.Korey Tillman is a PhD Candidate in the sociologydepartment at the University of New Mexico. HeKoreyTillmana PhD Candidatein the sociologyearned hisMA inissociologyfrom eNevada, Las Vegas, and his BS in computer scienceearnedhisMAinsociologyfromUniversityoffrom Syracuse University. Tillman’s research tracesNevada,Las Vegas,his BS thatin computera human-Blackracialandhierarchyinforms racesmodernity and examines how in momentswhenaBlacknesshuman-Blackracial thishierarchyinformsis policed,racial thathierarchyis reifiedmodernityand examines how in moments whenand challenged.Blackness is policed, this racial hierarchy is reifiedand challenged.3ASA MinorityFellowshipProgramASA Minority(MFP)FellowshipProgram(MFP)ASA’s Minority FellowshipProgram was founded inASA’s Minority Fellowship1974. To date, the programProgram was founded inhas supported more than1974. To date, the program460 students of color inhas supported more thanpursuit of a doctoral degree460 students of color inin sociology. Areas ofpursuit of a doctoral degreeinterest for Fellows includein sociology. Areas ofsocial psychology, genderinterest for Fellows includeand sexuality, education,social psychology, gendermedicine and health,and sexuality, education,inequalities andmedicine and health,stratification, race andinequalities andethnicity, and more. MFPstratification, race andseeks to attract talentedethnicity, and more. MFPdoctoral students to ensureseeks to attract talentedthat a diverse and highlydoctoral students to ensuretrained workforce isthat a diverse and highlyavailable to assumetrained workforce isleadership roles in theavailable to assumediscipline and conductleadership roles in theresearch that is relevant todiscipline and conducttoday’s global society.research that is relevant totoday’s global society.For more informationabout the MinorityFor more informationFellowship Program, theabout the Minorityapplication process, andFellowship Program, thecurrent and past Fellowsapplication process, andvisit:current and past wship-program

4FRIDAY, AUGUST 5, 2022Friday, 8:00 amFriday, 10:00 am0162. Preconference. The Facts, Problems, and Prospects forthe Development of Transnational Migration Communitiesin the Rim Pacific Countries’ Global Cities in the Age ofArtificial Intelligence and Online Culture: ComparativePerspectivesJW Marriott, Level 3, Olympic 3, 8:00am-3:45pmSession Organizers: Andrey V. Rezaev; Tetsuo Mizukami, RikkyoUniversity0307. Preconference. Joint Preconference: Section onRationality and Society; Section on MathematicalSociology; JAMS; ISA RC45LACC, Level 1, 152, 10:00am-4:00pmSession Organizers: Kikuko Nagayoshi, University of Tokyo;Gianluca Manzo, Sorbonne University; Jun Kobayashi, SeikeiUniversity; Richard Edward Gardner, University of California,Irvine; Kazuhiro KezukaPresenter: James A. Kitts, University of Massachusetts0167. Meeting. Alpha Kappa Delta Council MeetingJW Marriott, Level 3, Plaza I, 8:00am-5:00pmFriday, 8:30 am0144. Preconference. Department Leaders PreconferenceLACC, Level 2, 502B, 8:30am-4:00pmSession Organizer: Erynn Masi de Casanova, AmericanSociological AssociationPresenters: Julie Renee Posselt, University of Southern California;Jay R. Howard, Butler University; Justine Eatenson Tinkler,University of Georgia; Michael Dreiling, University ofOregon; Shawn Bauldry, Purdue University; Diego de losRios, Paradigm Strategy Inc; Jeanne Mekolichick, RadfordUniversity; Ahoo Tabatabai, Columbia College of Missouri;Vilna Francine Bashi, Northwestern University; Jennifer VanHook, Pennsylvania State University; Shirley A. Jackson,Portland State University; Enrique S. Pumar, Santa ClaraUniversity; Jeffrey M. Timberlake, University of Cincinnati;Adia M. Harvey Wingfield, Washington University-St. Louis;Zulema Valdez, University of California-Merced; JuliaFerrara Waity, University of North Carolina-Wilmington;Jeanne Anne Holcomb, University of DaytonFriday, 9:00 am0243. Preconference. Teaching and Learning in Bureaucracies ofDisplacementLACC, Level 2, 502A, 9:00am-4:00pmSession Organizers: Sarah Hoiland, CUNY Hostos CommunityCollege; Myron T. Strong, Community College of BaltimoreCounty; Rebecca Bach, Duke University; Natascia Boeri,Bloomfield College; Charles A. Dickinson, College ofWestern Idaho; Michel Estefan, University of California-SanDiego; Alanna Gillis, St. Lawrence University; JacquelineJohnson, Adelphi University; Julie Pelton, University ofNebraska-Omaha; Barbara F. Prince, Lebanon ValleyCollege; Clayton Thomas, Indiana University; Taryn NicoleWield, Ball State UniversityPresenter: Laura Theresa Hamilton, University of CaliforniaMerced0268. Preconference. Self Society SymposiumJW Marriott, Level 3, Plaza II, 9:00am-4:00pmSession Organizers: Lauren Langman, Loyola University-Chicago;Jeremiah Morelock, Boston CollegePresenters: Charles R. Thorpe, University of California-San Diego;Robert J. Antonio, University of Kansas; David Smith, JohnsHopkins University; Neil G. McLaughlinFriday, 12:00 pm0571. Courses. What Would it take to Change your Inference?Quantifying the Discourse about Causal Inferences in theSociologyJW Marriott, Gold Level, Gold Salon 1, 12:00-4:00pmSession Organizer: Kenneth A. Frank, Michigan State UniversityLeader: Kenneth A. Frank, Michigan State UniversityPresenters: Kenneth A. Frank, Michigan State University; Guan K.Saw, Michigan State University0572. Courses. Getting the Grant: Understanding Private FunderRequirements and Grant Writing StrategiesJW Marriott, Gold Level, Gold Salon 2, 12:00-4:00pmSession Organizer: Stephen Glauser, Russell Sage FoundationLeaders: Jenny Irons, William T. Grant Foundation; OiYan Poon,The Spencer Foundation; Korin Davis, Washington Centerfor Equitable Growth; Stephen Glauser, Russell SageFoundationPresenters: John B. Diamond, Brown University; Ann Owens,University of Southern California; Fabian T. Pfeffer,University of Michigan-Ann Arbor; Kristin Turney, Universityof California-Irvine0573. Courses. Transparent Sociology: Challenges and Strategiesfor Ethical Human Participant Data SharingJW Marriott, Gold Level, Gold Salon 3, 12:00-4:00pmSession Organizer: Dessi Kirilova, Syracuse UniversityLeader: Dessi Kirilova, Syracuse UniversityPresenter: Diana Kapiszewski, Georgetown UniversityFriday, 1:00 pm0669. Meeting. Korean Sociologists in AmericaJW Marriott, Level 3, Plaza III, 1:00-5:00pmFriday, 2:00 pm0774. Meeting. ASA Honors Program OrientationJW Marriott, Gold Level, Gold Salon 4, 2:00-4:00pm

FRIDAY, AUGUST 5, 2022Friday, 4:00 pm0975. Plenary Session. Beyond Control: Immigration Policy in anEra of EnforcementJW Marriott, Platinum Level, Platinum Ballroom, 4:00-5:30pmSession Organizer: Cecilia Menjivar, University of California-LosAngelesPresider: Roger Waldinger, University of California-Los AngelesPanelists: Muzaffar Chishti, Migration Policy Institute; Kelly LytleHernandez, University of California-Los Angeles; DouglasS. Massey, Princeton University; Karen Musalo, University ofCalifornia, HastingsDiscussant: Roger Waldinger, University of California-Los AngelesFriday, 5:00 pm01009. Meeting. ABS Panel: Explicit Racism in the ContemporaryPublic Sphere: What Role for Black Sociologists and BlackSociology?LACC, Level 1, 153B, 5:00-7:00pmFriday, 5:30 pm01195. ASA Welcome ReceptionJW Marriott, Outdoor, West Road, 5:30-7:00pmFriday, 6:30 pm01163. Meeting. CAPACS Board MeetingJW Marriott, Level 3, Atrium 2, 6:30-10:30pm5

SATURDAY, AUGUST 6, 2022Saturday, 7:00 am1004. Meeting. Section on Asia and Asian America CouncilMeetingLACC, Level 1, 150C, 7:00-7:45am1008. Meeting. Section on Science, Knowledge, and TechnologyCouncil MeetingLACC, Level 1, 153A, 7:00-7:45am1009. Meeting. Family Section Council MeetingLACC, Level 1, 153B, 7:00-7:45am1011. Meeting. Sociology of Religion Council MeetingLACC, Level 2, 301A, 7:00-7:45am1043. Meeting. Section on Comparative-Historical SociologyCouncil MeetingLACC, Level 2, 502A, 7:00-7:45am1045. Meeting. Section on Organizations, Occupations, andWork Council MeetingLACC, Level 2, 504, 7:00-7:45am1055. Meeting. Section on Peace, War and Social ConflictCouncil MeetingLACC, Level 2, 516, 7:00-7:45amSaturday, 8:00 am1103. Section on Altruism, Morality and Social Solidarity.Altruism, Morality and Social Solidarity Chair's Session -Invited Panel on The Moral Imaginary in American PublicLifeLACC, Level 1, 150A, 8:00-9:00amSession Organizer: Penny Edgell, University of Minnesota-TwinCitiesPresider: David M. Melamed, Ohio State UniversityPanelists: Francesca Polletta, University of California-Irvine; RuthBraunstein, University of Connecticut; Paul R. Lichterman,University of Southern CaliforniaDiscussant: Omar M. McRoberts, University of Chicago1104. Section on Collective Behavior and Social Movements.Widening the Lens of Social Movements and the CivicLACC, Level 1, 150B, 8:00-9:30amSession Organizer: Edward T. Walker, University of California-LosAngelesPresider: Edward T. Walker, University of California-Los AngelesCivic Monitoring: Hybrid Practices of Monitory Democracy inItaly and Spain - Alessandra Lo Piccolo, Scuola NormaleSuperioreUrban social movements and local state capacity - BenjaminBradlow, Princeton UniversityDemocratizing Ballots: The Fight over Ballot Initiatives in a FailingPolitical System - Benjamin Steinhardt Case, Arizona StateUniversity; Michael McQuarrie, London School of EconomicsFrom the Streets to the Ballot Box: Pathways Connecting YouthActivism and Electoral Participation - Johnnie Lotesta,Appalachian State University; Jerusha Osberg Conner,Villanova UniversityTilling Fertile Soil: The Role of Civic Conventions in ShapingLand Use Contestation - Charlotte Glennie, University ofCalifornia Davis61104. Section on Asia and Asian America. Asian AmericanCommunities and IdentityLACC, Level 1, 150C, 8:00-9:30amSession Organizer: Jennifer C. Lee, Indiana UniversityBloomingtonPresider: Jennifer C. Lee, Indiana University-BloomingtonAsian ethnic neighborhoods: Examining their evolution intraditional and emerging immigrant destinations from 19802010 - Hannah Lee, University of WashingtonCoethnic concentration and Asians’ perceived discriminationacross US counties during COVID-19 - Rennie Lee, TheUniversity of Queensland; Yue Qian, University of BritishColumbia; Cary Wu, York UniversityA Relational Approach to Perceived Discrimination: The Caseof South Asian Indians - Muna Adem, Indiana University;Shelley Rao, Indiana University Bloomington; Helen B.Marrow, Tufts University; Melissa Garcia, Indiana University,Bloomington; Dina G. Okamoto, Indiana UniversityBloomingtonBuilding Solidarity to #StopAsianHate: How South AsiansNegotiate the Boundaries of the Asian Category - SharanKaur Mehta, Rice UniversityThe Path to be “Asian” in America: Exploring Racial and EthnicIdentities of Post-1965 Japanese Immigrants - XiaoruiZhang, Rice University1106. Book Forum. Bandage, Sort, and Hustle: Ambulance Crewson the Front Lines of Urban SufferingLACC, Level 1, 151, 8:00-9:30amSession Organizer: Ann Owens, University of Southern CaliforniaAuthor: Josh Seim, Boston CollegePanelists: Ashley E. Mears, Boston University; Jeffrey J. Sallaz,University of Arizona; Forrest Stuart, Stanford UniversityModerator: Catherine Sirois, Stanford University1107. Presidential Panel. Post #OscarsSoWhite? The State ofRepresentation in the Entertainment IndustryLACC, Level 1, 152, 8:00-9:30amSession Organizer: Nancy Wang Yuen, Biola UniversityPresider: Nancy Wang Yuen, Biola UniversityPanelists: Maryann Erigha Lawer, University of Georgia; Darnell M.Hunt, University of California-Los Angeles; Ana-ChristinaRamon, University of California, Los Angeles; Clyde Kusatsu,SAG-AFTRA Los Angeles Local Board; Michael Tuan Tran,UCLASince #OscarsSoWhite, Hollywood has undergone a racialreckoning. Significantly, sociologists have been at theforefront of research and advocacy work on behalf ofBIPOC in Hollywood both in front and behind the camera.They will gather in the city of Los Angeles for a special“one-night only” appearance. On stage will be the authorsof the UCLA Hollywood Diversity Report: Dr. Darnell Huntand Dr. Ana-Christina Ramon, who will talk about theirlatest research on representation in film and television.Joining them are Maryann Erigha, the author of TheHollywood Jim Crow: The Racial Politics of the MovieIndustry. Special guests include Clyde Kusatsu, veteranactor and National Vice President of SAG-AFTRA LosAngeles Local, and Yvonne Villarreal, TV staff writer for theLos Angeles Times. The moderator for the session is NancyWang Yuen, the author of Reel Inequality: Hollywood Actorsand Racism. Join this expert panel for a lively discussion ofrace and racism in the entertainment industry.

SATURDAY, AUGUST 6, 20221108. Section on Science, Knowledge, and Technology.Antiracist Science: Problems and Possibilities forInstitutional ChangeLACC, Level 1, 153A, 8:00-9:30amSession Organizers: Oliver E. Rollins, University of Washington;Christoph Hanssmann, San Francisco State University;Kalindi Vora, University of California, Davis; Taylor M. Cruz,California State University-FullertonPresider: Oliver E. Rollins, University of WashingtonScientific Racism in Autism Research - Jennifer S. Singh, GeorgiaInstitute of TechnologyThe “white” brain: the structuring absence of race indevelopmental juvenile justice reform - William Wannyn,University of California-Los AngelesA decolonizing environmental framework: Climate professionalsand scholarship on climate justice - Carla M. Dhillon,University of ConnecticutDEI without Equity: Persistent Racism in BioengineeringLaboratories - Rene Canady, Washington University of StLouisEvidence of Harm: The Social Justice Promises and Perils ofEnvironmental Epigenetics - Martine Lappe, CaliforniaPolytechnic State University-San Luis Obispo; Robbin M.Jeffries Hein, California Polytechnic State University-SanLuis Obispo; Fionna Fahey, California Polytechnic StateUniversity, San Luis Obispo1109. Family Section. Family Section Families and IncarcerationLACC, Level 1, 153B, 8:00-9:30amSession Organizers: Angela Bruns, Gonzaga University; Patrice DCollins, Yale UniversityPresiders: Patrice D Collins, Yale University; Angela Bruns,Gonzaga UniversityBurdens of Brokering: How Families Navigate the Strains ofIncarceration - Kristin Turney, University of California-Irvine;Steven Edward Schmidt, University of California, Irvine; IshaBhallamudi, UC Irvine; Amy Gong Liu, UC Irvine; AshleyLucia Torres, UC IrvineCareer Track or College Bound? Parental Incarceration, Race, andTeachers’ College or Career Track Referrals - Erin JosephineMcCauley, University of California San Francisco“I had nowhere to go”: Disenfranchised grief and support groupsfor families of incarcerated individuals - Allegra Pocinki,Rutgers UniversityMonetary Sanctions Across 3 Generations - Veronica L. Horowitz,University at Buffalo; Ryan P Larson, University ofMinnesota; Robert Stewart, University of Maryland-CollegeParkThe Consequences of Paternal Incarceration for Youth’sExpectations and Aspirations - Garrett Baker, DukeUniversity1110. Section on Sociology of Sexualities. Quantified andQualified: Metrics of SexualitiesLACC, Level 1, 153C, 8:00-9:30amSession Organizers: Ghassan Moussawi, University of Illinois atUrbana-Champaign; Elliot Noel Chudyk, Boston UniversityPresider: Elliot Noel Chudyk, Boston UniversityDeficits, Disorders, and Risks: Where is the Pleasure inSexual Health Research? - B. Ethan M Coston, VirginiaCommonwealth University; Jamie Hill, VirginiaCommonwealth University; Victoria Thomas, VirginiaCommonwealth University; Kiana Bragg, Virginia7Commonwealth University; Keaton Thorum, VirginiaCommonwealth University“I Didn’t Know Ace Was a Thing”: Bisexuality and Pansexualityin Asexual Identity Formation - Canton Winer, University ofCalifornia, Irvine; Megan Carroll, California State UniversitySan Bernardino; Yuchen Yang, University of Chicago;Katherine Lorena Linder; Brittney Miles, University ofCincinnatiQueering Edgework: An Autoethnographic Account of Cruisingfor Sex - Jacob Wesley Richardson, University of MemphisThe Power of Story Telling: Querying the Past - Wendy Chapkis,University of Southern Maine1111. Section on Sociology of Religion. Religion’s BureaucraticTension—A Force for Displacement, A Sanctuary for theDisplacedLACC, Level 2, 301A, 8:00-9:30amSession Organizers: Edward Orozco Flores, University ofCalifornia-Merced; Christine Soriea Sheikh, MetropolitanState University-DenverPresider: Christine Soriea Sheikh, Metropolitan State UniversityDenverFrom Masquerade to Metamorphosis: Law, Future-Making, andSelf-Making in Asylum-Seeking on Religious Grounds Jaeeun Kim, University of Michigan-Ann ArborHow German Muslims and Christians use Religion to CriticizeCapitalism - Christian Konstantin Sperneac-Wolfer, Institutefor Social Research FrankfurtStigmatized? Muslim American Advocates Crafting Public Imagesof Islam in the U.S. - Valentina Cantori, University ofSouthern California1112. Meeting. Section on Sociological Practice and PublicSociology Business MeetingLACC, Level 2, 301B, 8:00-9:30am1113. Section on International Migration. Bordering and (Im)mobilityLACC, Level 2, 303A, 8:00-9:30amSession Organizer: Heba Gowayed, Boston UniversityPresider: Heba Gowayed, Boston UniversityCaravans, Microchips, and Trump: The Role of Rumor in CentralAmerican Youths’ Migrant Journeys - Angel AlfonsoEscamilla Garcia, Cornell UniversityCoerced Immobility at the EU Borders - Hannah Pool, Max PlanckInstitute for the Study of Societies(Re)framing the Emerging Mobility Regime along the U.S.-MexicoBorderlands: Covid-19, Temporality, and Racial Capitalism- Miguel Arturo Avalos, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign; Ghassan Moussawi, University of Illinois atUrbana-ChampaignThe Transnational Immigration Bureaucracy and theExternalization of Immigrant Regulation - Angie M BautistaChavez, Arizona State University-Tempe1114. Section on Sociology of Culture. The Racial Politics ofCulture? Critical Perspectives from Cultural SociologyLACC, Level 2, 303B, 8:00-9:30amSession Organizer: Derron Wallace, Brandeis UniversityPresider: Derron Wallace, Brandeis UniversityFrom “Critical Race Theory” to CRT: the new front in the AmericanCulture Wars - Yagmur Karakaya, Hamilton CollegeStuff White People Like: BDSM, Polyamory, Neo-Paganism, and Cats - Julie Lynn Fennell, Gallaudet University

SATURDAY, AUGUST 6, 2022Session 1114, continued‘Decolonising fashion’: Fashion consumption and clothingpractices of the South Asian Muslim communities inGlasgow - Rohit K Dasgupta, University of Glasgow; NazliAlimen, Birmingham City Univ

117th Virtual Annual Meeting Bureaucracies of Displacement 2022 Program Committee Cecilia Menjívar, University of California-Los Angeles Nina Bandelj, University of California-Irvine Nancy López, University of New Mexico Paul Almeida, University of California-Merced Monica Bell, Yale University Cedric de Leon, University of Massachusetts-Amherst Cynthia Feliciano, Washington University-St Louis