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Rutgers-Camden
Department of Sociology, Anthropology and Criminal Justice
Spring
2003 Newsletter
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Rutgers-Camden
Sends Largest Student Contingent at Eastern Sociological Society
Meetings in Philadelphia
Sponsored
by the Department of Sociology, Anthropology and Criminal Justice,
eighteen students attended sessions at the Eastern
Sociological Society annual meeting in Philadelphia in early
March. Six students attended the opening session celebrating thirty
years of the General Social Survey and heard the Rutgers-Camden
department singled out by session organizer Joanne Miller for
its exemplary use of the GSS in undergraduate education. Over
the next three days, eighteen Rutgers-Camden students sat in on
a wide array of sessions. The Camden contingent was the largest
student one at the ESS. Also at the meetings, Professor Wood gave
a presentation, aimed particularly at non-tenured faculty, entitled
Technology
Payoffs for Teaching and Research.
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Sociologists Goertzel
and Cardoso
Only one a President
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Brazilian
Sociologist/President Hosts Reception for Ted Goertzel's
Book
World-renowned
sociologist Fernando Henrique Cardoso, President of Brazil
1984-2002, hosted a reception at the Presidential Residence
for the Portuguese edition of Professor Goertzel's book,
Fernando Henrique Cardoso: Reinventing Democracy in
Brazil, in November 2002. Further details are available
at Dr. Goertzel's Brazil
webpage.
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Cristin
Steffani

Jamie O'Brien
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Masterton
And Trustees Award Recipients Announced
Named
after the department's first chair, the George
Masterton Award is awarded annually to a graduating
senior for outstanding academic achievement and participation
in the life of the department. This year for the first time,
the award is being presented to three students, one in each
of the department's three disciplines: Chaz Molins
(Sociology), Cristin Steffani (Criminal
Justice), and Jamie O'Brien (Anthropology).
The awards, which include a certificate and a check for
$100, will be formally presented at the Honors Convocation
on May 19th. In addition, Edna Galarza, a Rutgers-Camden
graduate (Sociology, '97) and first year student in the
Master of Arts in Criminal Justice graduate program, has
become the first Rutgers-Camden graduate student to receive
a Trustee's Minority Fellowship for the coming year. The
department heartily extends its congratulations to each
of these outstanding students!
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Chaz
Molins
Edna
Galarza
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Cati
Coe
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New
Faculty Member Wins Intercultural Award
Assistant
Professor Cati Coe has been selected to receive one of three Bildner
Diversity Awards at the Camden Campus, which provide support for
faculty members to develop or revise courses that address issues
of intercultural interaction. As a campus "Intercultural
Fellow," she will pursue her project, entitled Representing
Culture in Classrooms, which aims to give students a more
sophisticated understanding of cultural practices, particularly
in showing how culture is created, represented, and transformed
as people seek to maintain or resist relations of power. To do
so, she plans to incorporate her research on the governments
promotion of cultural heritage in Ghana into three courses (Cultural
Anthropology, Peoples and Cultures of Africa, and Sociology of
Education); the research focuses on performances and school cultural
competitions which can be visually presented and interpreted.
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CCCS
Celebrates Third Anniversary
Complete
with a birthday cake, the Center for Children and Childhood
Studies third anniversary was noted at its monthly associates
seminar on March 13th. In these three years the Center
has introduced a Childhood Studies minor, supported a
broad array of research projects and seminars, and initiated
a broad range of community literacy programs. Research
and community service internships are available through
the Center for qualified undergraduates. Check the Center's
website
for further information about its mission and programs.
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Myra
Bluebond-Langner
Director
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Matt Goodman '95
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Spotlight
on Alumni: Matthew Goodman (Sociology, '95) on the Appalachian
Trail
It's
hard to imagine a more unusual alumni story than Matt Goodman's.
Graduating with a sociology degree in 1995, Matt started out as
a personal trainer at a local gym and contemplated a book on the
sociology of exercise and health. In November 1997, however, suffering
from an array of severe symptoms, Matt was diagnosed with Multiple
Sclerosis. Through a strict regimen of self-discipline, diet,
and exercise, Matt has made a remarkable recovery both physically
and spiritually, and has written a book on his technique and philosophy.
In early April he began hiking from the southern terminus of the
famous Appalachian
Trail and expects to reach the northern terminus at Mt. Katahdin
in Maine (2168 miles away) in early fall. His publicized walk,
designed to give hope to others suffering from so-called "incurable"
diseases, is being sponsored by the Multiple Sclerosis Association
and a variety of other organizations and individuals. Updates
on his progress will be posted at his website, Raw
Power.
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 .
Dr.
Meyer with students and with former Rutgers-Camden graduate Edwin
Smith, now Director of Marketing and Research for the University
of Pretoria, and R-C Associate Provost Felix James.
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CJ
Student Safari to South Africa with Prof. Meyer
During
spring break, while many Rutgers-Camden students were lounging
in Florida or other locations, Dr. Meyer and a delegation
of 5 students flew eighteen hours to South Africa as part
of an international study-tour in criminal justice and sociology.
The group met with criminal justice officials and others,
toured justice facilities, explored museums, visited townships,
and learned a lot. At the conclusion of the trip, the group
went on a safari, hunting Africa's beautiful and wondrous
game with cameras. Dr. Meyer's summary of the trip: "Great!
I can't wait until next year's..." Interested students
should stay tuned... More
trip details & pix
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Who was
watching whom?
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click
for interview transcript
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Recent
Faculty Presentations and Publications
Dr.
Coe presented a paper, “Nationalizing and Localizing
Drum Language: Schools, Youth, and Performance in Ghana,” at African
Studies Association meetings in Washington DC in December. Her
article, "Educating an African Leadership: Achimota and the Teaching
of African Culture in the Gold Coast,” is being published this
month in Africa Today. Dr. Caputo's paper,
"A Survey of Community Service Sentencing in Texas,"
was presented at the annual meeting of the American Society of
Criminology in the fall in Chicago, and "Community Service
in Texas," at the Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences meetings
in Boston. Her book, What's in the Bag? A Shoplifting Treatment
and Education Program, will be published by the American
Correctional Association in May. Dr. Cosminsky,
with Dr. Diane Markowitz, was both an organizer and presenter
at workshop, Obesity Begins Early: the Hispanic Migrant Child,
at the 34th Migrant and Seasonal Head Start National Conference,
in Washington D.C. in early February. Their coauthored paper,
“Stunting
and obesity in the land of plenty: Children of migrant laborers
in New Jersey,” is being presented in April at the American
Association of Physical Anthropology, in Tempe, Arizona. In March,
Dr. Goertzel presented a paper on "Zero
Hunger in Brazil" at the International Workshop on the Role
of the State in the Struggle Against Poverty in Recife, Brazil,
and another paper, "The Brazilian Transition in Comparative
Perspective," at the Latin American Studies meetings in Dallas,
Texas. Dr. Hazzard-Donald is extensively featured at the
beautifully-constructed Free
To Dance website, on the history of African American dance
and its cultural contribution, which includes a long interview
with her. Dr. Meloy presented “’Offender’
Treatment Program for Women Arrested for Domestic Violence”
at the American Society of Criminology meetings, and her chapter,
coauthored with S. MIller, “Women on the Bench: Mavericks,
Peacemakers or Something Else? Research Questions, Issues, and
Suggestions” was published in It’s a Crime: Women
and Justice, edited by R. Muraskin and T. Alleman. Dr.
Meyer is presenting a paper, "Access, analysis and ethics:
Doing research in Native American communities," at the Western
Social Science Association meetings in Las Vegas this month. She
recently coauthored an article on how scientists and other experts
perceive risk in the Journal of Environmental Health. Dr.
Siegel presented two papers at the American Society of Criminology:
"Children of Female Offenders: What Happens When Mom Goes to Prison,"
and "Childhood Sexual Victimization, Running Away and Crime: Results
from a Prospective Study." The Journal of Research in Crime
and Delinquency just published her article, coauthored with
L. Williams, "The Relationship Between Child Sexual Abuse and
Female Delinquency and Crime: A Prospective Study." Monika
Wood's article, "Experiential Learning for Undergraduates:
A Simulation About Functional Change and Aging," was published
recently in Gerontology and Geriatrics Education. Dr.
Wood's "Caribbean of the East? Global Interconnections
and the Southeast Asian Cruise Industry" was published in
the fall in Asian Journal of Social Science.
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From
the 2002 Poster Session
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Undergraduate
Research Poster Session Planned for Wednesday, April 30th
Plan
to present your research this year at the annual Undergraduate
Research Poster Session, co-sponsored with the Psychology
Department, on Wednesday, April 30th, 12:00-1:30 p.m. It looks
good on your resume and it's great fun as well. So save your work
and think about how to present it visually in poster format. Last
year's Poster Session attracted over 100 presenters and guests.
You need not be a presenter to attend, but if you intend to bring
a poster that visually presents your research project, please
sign up by filling in the Poster
Session Online Form with your name and the title of your
poster presentation. That way you will be listed on the printed
program. The event is held in the Multi-Purpose Room of the Campus
Center.
Pictures
of previous sessions may be accessed from the department
homepage. A useful set of Guidelines
for Visual Presentations is available at Skidmore College's
Sociology Department's website. All sociology, anthropology and
criminal justice students are invited to attend, and lunch will
be provided.
To
keep informed of this and other events, sign up for the Departmental
E-list
if you haven't already. Just go to the sign-up
page and enter your name and email address.
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Click
on the image to access
the page

Click
on the Footnotes image to access the ASA story on our department
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Web-Enhanced
Curriculum Attracts Hits, Recognition
The
Department's Web-Enhanced
Curriculum continues to serve as a curricular-level resource
for courses in Sociology, Anthropology and Criminal Justice. Supported
by several Dialogues grants from the Office
of the Vice-President for Undergraduate Education, it received
national recognition in an American Sociological Association newsletter
article on Enhancing
the Curriculum through the Web at Rutgers-Camden. The departmental
website has been averaging 30-40,000 hits per month, by far the
most of any departmental site.
It is regularly used to support sociology, anthropology and criminal
justice courses, and all students are strongly encouraged to make
themselves familiar with it. Several new components will be added
this semester. The departmental website is organized around its
Departmental
Homepage
and its Web-Enhanced
Curriculum Homepage, as outlined below.
Departmental
Homepage
Full-Time Faculty
Adjunct Faculty
Online Syllabi & Course Websites
Masters Program in Criminal Justice
Course Schedule
Major Requirements
Minor Requirements
Advising FAQs
Departmental E-List
Masterton Award
Current Newsletter
Poster Session Photos
Faculty Resources
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Web-Enhanced
Curriculum Homepage
Plagiarism Policy and Guidelines
Citation Guidelines
Table and Graph Format
MicroCase Resources
Excel Resources
Methods Tutorial
Virtual Tours
Library Resources Online
Pedagogy Page
Selected Websites
Streaming Audio and Video Resources
Student Research Opportunities
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September 17, 2003
. Contact Robert Wood with
comments or questions.
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