JOB TALK: "The Role of Work Identity in Distributive Justice Processes." Please join the Sociology Department in presenting a job talk by Doctoral candidate Tenshi Kawashima entitled: "The Role of Work Identity in Distributive Justice Processes." Tenshi currently teaches SOCI 3730 Social Psychology. Read more about JOB TALK: "The Role of Work Identity in Distributive Justice Processes."
JOB TALK: “Gaming, Masculinities, and Identity Threat.” Please join the Sociology Department in presenting a job talk by Doctoral candidate Kylie Smith entitled: “Gaming, Masculinities, and Identity Threat.” Read more about JOB TALK: “Gaming, Masculinities, and Identity Threat.”
JOB TALK: “Creating Counternarratives: Single Stay-at-Home Mothers (SAHMs), Entrepreneurship, and Challenging Cultural Understandings.” Please join the Sociology Department in presenting a job talk by Doctoral candidate Makeiva Jenkins entitled: “Creating Counternarratives: Single Stay-at-Home Mothers (SAHMs), Entrepreneurship, and Challenging Cultural Understandings.” Read more about JOB TALK: “Creating Counternarratives: Single Stay-at-Home Mothers (SAHMs), Entrepreneurship, and Challenging Cultural Understandings.”
Dr. Pridemore wins Senior Scholar Award from the American Sociological Association Department Head and Franklin Professor of Sociology, Dr. William Pridemore, is the 2024 recipient of the Senior Scholar Award from the American Sociological Association’s Section on Drugs and Society. The award is presented annually to an established scholar who has made significant contributions to the scientific discipline and has provided service to the Section. Throughout his career, Dr. Pridemore has done research on the individual- and population-level effects of alcohol consumption on violence and on health, and the impact of alcohol policy on these outcomes. Read more about Dr. Pridemore wins Senior Scholar Award from the American Sociological Association
Peng Huang Assistant Professor Peng Huang is an Assistant Professor of Sociology at the University of Georgia. He received his PhD in Sociology and an MS in Statistics from the University of California, Irvine, trained in the Networks, Computation, and Social Dynamcis Lab. He also holds BAs in Sociology and Economics from Peking University. Huang’s research focuses on social networks and population dynamics, adopting a relational and structural approach to explore social processes and people’s experiences therein. His first line of research examines how network dynamics and geopolitical contexts shape migration patterns. He studies the social and political cleavages contributing to the population immobility in the United States. Another paper critically engages with the phenomenon known as the “California Exodus.” Huang’s another research program investigates the spatial distribution of social relations and the network diffusion process. This line of inquiry offers insights into infectious disease research: the spatial pattern of local outbreak, the network diffusion mechanism that undermines disease reproduction, and the related health disparity issues. Huang’s methodological work concentrates on developing statistical and computational methods to model network and population structures, dynamically and at a large scale. He studies computational methods that model valued/weighted networks, especially for large networks with high edge variance, under the framework of exponential-family random graph models (ERGMs). Alongside collaborators, he also develops imputation methods and algorithms for cross-tabulation data, which can be applied to infer distributions of multiple demographic characteristics in small areal units. Huang is a recipient of the Outstanding Publication Award and the Dissertation Award from the Mathematical Sociology Section of the American Sociological Association, and the Best Student Paper Award from the International Network for Social Network Analysis (INSNA). His research articles have appeared in American Sociological Review, Journal of Mathematical Sociology, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), Social Networks, and Sociological Methodology. Education Education: Ph.D. Sociology, University of California, Irvine, 2024 M.S. Statistics, University of California, Irvine, 2023 B.A. Sociology, Peking University, 2018 B.A. Economics, Peking University, 2018 Research Read more about Peng Huang Research Areas: Social Networks Inequality Medical Sociology Globalization Political Sociology Selected Publications Selected Publications: Huang, Peng, Zack W. Almquist, Carter T. Butts. 2025. “Endogenous competition and the underrealized reproduction of infectious diseases.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), 122(23):e2502676122. Huang, Peng, Carter T. Butts. 2024. “California Exodus? A Network Model of Population Redistribution in the United States.” Journal of Mathematical Sociology, 48(3):311-339. Huang, Peng, Carter T. Butts. 2024. “Parameter Estimation Procedures for Exponential-Family Random Graph Models on Count-Valued Networks: A Comparative Simulation Study.” Social Networks, 76:51-67. Thomas, Loring J., Peng Huang, Xiaoshuang Luo, John R. Hipp, Carter T. Butts. 2024. “Marginal-preserving Imputation of Three-way Array Data in Nested Structures, with Application to Small Areal Units.” Sociological Methodology, 54(1):157-191. Huang, Peng, Carter T. Butts. 2023. “Rooted America: Immobility and Segregation of the Intercounty Migration Network.” American Sociological Review, 88(6):1031-1065. Thomas, Loring J., Peng Huang, Fan Yin, Junlan Xu, Zack W. Almquist, John R. Hipp, Carter T. Butts. 2022. “Geographical Patterns of Social Cohesion Drive Disparities in COVID Infection Hazard.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), 119(12):e2121675119. Thomas, Loring J., Peng Huang, Fan Yin, Xiaoshuang Luo, Zack W. Almquist, John R. Hipp, Carter T. Butts. 2020. “Spatial Heterogeneity Can Lead to Substantial Local Variations in COVID-19 Timing and Severity.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), 117(39):24180-24187. Awards, Honors, and Recognition Of Note: 2025 Outstanding Article Publication Award, Mathematical Sociology Section, American Sociological Association (ASA) 2025 James S. Coleman Outstanding Article Award Honorable Mention, Decision-Making, Social Networks, and Society Section, ASA 2024 Best Student Paper Award, International Network for Social Network Analysis (INSNA) 2024 Outstanding Publication Award Honorable Mention, Methodology Section, ASA 2024 Outstanding Graduate Student Paper Award Honorable Mention, Mathematical Sociology Section, ASA 2024 Outstanding Research Award, Department of Sociology, University of California, Irvine 2023 Conference Accelerator Grant, Institute for Humane Studies 2023 Student Travel Award, Sunbelt Network Conference, INSNA 2022 Geoffrey Tootell Dissertation-in-progress Award, Mathematical Sociology Section, ASA 2022 Best Paper Award, U.S.-Japan Joint Conference on Mathematical Sociology and Rational Choice
Rachael Weaver Education Education: B.S. in Psychology - University of Georgia, 2023 Other Affiliations: Enter the name of department or institution you are affiliated with Research Read more about Rachael Weaver Research Areas: Medical Sociology Family, Life Course, and Aging Labs: Families, Communities, and Health Workshop Selected Publications Selected Publications: Lei, Man-Kit, Rachael Weaver (2025). “The Buffering Effect of Social Support on the Link between Biologically Embedded Childhood Maltreatment and Adult Cardiovascular Disease.” Social Science and Medicine, 384, 118530. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2025.118530 Simons, Ronald L., Mei Ling Ong, Man-Kit Lei, Steven R.H. Beach, Yu-Wen Lu, Rachael Weaver, and Michelle M. Mielke (2025). “Diabetes and Hypertension at Midlife Predict Increases in Biomarkers of Dementia among Black Americans.” Journal of Racial and Ethnic Health Disparities. https://doi.org/10.1007/s40615-025-02310-2 Rigg, Khary K., Rachael Weaver, and Ethan Kusiak (2023). “Attitudes toward Methadone Treatment among Black/African Americans: Implications for Engagement and Retention.” American Journal of Orthopsychiatry, 93(6), 476-485. https://doi.org/10.1037/ort0000692.
Tamara Sezer Education Education: B.A. Sociology, University of California Riverside, 2024 Other Affiliations: Enter the name of department or institution you are affiliated with Research Read more about Tamara Sezer
Kendall Sanders Graduate Student Teaching Assistant Education Education: B.A. Sociology, University of North Carolina at Greensboro, 2024 Research Read more about Kendall Sanders Research Areas: Race and Ethnicity Sociology of Education