Three new Spring Term Abroad courses allow the liberal arts ethos to shine as professors in different disciplines combine forces.
Anthropology and Sociology Archive (85 Stories)
Dyer is looking forward to gaining classroom experience in France before pursuing a career in education policy.
Álvarez looks forward to immersing herself in a different culture with the Fulbright English Teaching Assistantship and will attend W&L Law when she returns, with plans to become an immigration lawyer.
The professor of sociology and anthropology and W&L alum explore building computational literacy into sociological curricula.
Giannoula, an international student from Greece, said W&L's genuine community drew her in.
The William P. Ames Jr. Professor of Sociology will discuss this year’s Nobel Peace Prize winner on March 10 in Leyburn Library.
The W&L Ethics Bowl team recently participated in an annual statewide competition.
The William P. Ames Jr. Professor of Sociology and Anthropology Emeritus’ chapter focuses on the collapse of the communist system in Eastern Europe.
Thirty years apart, a W&L love story continues.
Eastwood’s talk, titled “Reflections on the Sociology of Cynicism and Distrust,” will be held Feb. 19 in Northen Auditorium.
Ward has found his 'home' on campus with the Shepherd Program.
Marsh will work with Nature Camp in Vesuvius, Virginia, and Jones will collaborate with the Legal Aid Justice Center for the 25th Judicial District.
Eleven W&L students participated in the first full year of programming spread across multiple states.
The interactive experience will be in Kamen Gallery at noon on Oct. 14 and is a part of the Lenfest Center’s Outreach & Engagement Series.
W&L alumni return to campus as lecturers for the annual event series, which examines how food systems interact with issues of social justice.
The pop-up exhibit will be on view in Kamen Gallery beginning Sept. 4 and is part of the Lenfest Center’s Outreach & Engagement Series.
The William P. Ames Jr. Professor of Sociology and Anthropology Emeritus was presented the award by the Polish Institute of Arts & Sciences of America.
The associate professor of sociology received an honorable mention citation for the Premio Iberoamericano Book Award.
The rising sophomore completed a week-long program held in Washington, D.C.
The professor of cultural anthropology and director of the Community-Based Learning Program experienced a 10-day residency at Trinity College in Dublin.
These faculty have been recognized for their outstanding teaching, scholarship and service to the university.
Two innovative sociology research projects conducted in collaboration with professor of sociology Jonathan Eastwood give “networking” a whole new meaning.
This round of recipients marks a record-setting Gilman Scholar cohort for W&L.
Wagner will teach English in Austria before pursuing a career as a German language educator.
Jeff Schatten and Teresa Aires ’19 co-wrote a book on the impacts of artificial intelligence on the workforce.
The weekend’s seminar will feature Jayne Anne Phillips discussing her Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, “Night Watch.”
Mouton entered college with plans to be a surgeon, but a sociology class changed his career path.
The professor of sociology’s book, titled “Social Structure: Relationships, Representations and Rules,” was released on Feb. 26.
The solo exhibition will open Feb. 17 with an artist’s talk slated for March 4.
Robinson will deliver a lecture titled “The Sociology of Cardi B: A Trap Feminist Approach” on campus on Mar. 4.
The Jan. 30 screening of the award-winning documentary about disability, perseverance and the story of a girl and her wheelchair is free and open to the public.
Newly promoted faculty members will present their research in a PechaKucha format on Jan. 28.
The Gilman Scholarship Program offers awards of up to $5,000 to U.S. undergraduate students who are Pell Grant recipients.
The assistant professor of sociology explores Black femininity through a contemporary perspective.
The Nov. 18 lecture is open to the public and marks the centenary of the case argued in Amherst County, Virginia.
The annual event series examines the ways in which food systems interact with issues of social justice.
Konishi, Chief Merchandising Officer at Forever 21, will deliver her talk on Sept. 25.
Through the Davis Projects for Peace Grant and a Fulbright ETA, Allie Stankewich ’23 is building relationships with the communities she serves in East Africa.
Kim is pursuing her Master of Public Policy at Duke University.
The Gilman Scholarship Program offers awards of up to $5,000 to U.S. undergraduate students who are Pell Grant recipients.
Sai Chebrolu ’26 and Valentina Giraldo Lozano ’25 are among 13 students chosen for the Zero Hunger Internship program.
W&L students in the Spring Term course Global Urban Sociology are examining the social consequences of an increasingly urbanized world.
Moye-Green ’23 is the university’s first Knight-Hennessy Scholar.
Hess will teach English in Austria and prepare for a career as an educator.
Morgan was selected for a Fulbright English Teaching Assistantship to teach English in North Macedonia.
Students, faculty and alumni gathered April 12-13 to recognize the archaeological evolution of W&L’s back campus.
The April 6 gathering marks the restoration of “The Foundation” on the university’s campus, originally part of the historic Liberty Hall Academy property.
The Critical Language Scholarship Program funds a summer of overseas language and cultural immersion.
Hafsa Oubou’s essay “Churches Can, Mosques Can’t” appears in the January edition of Canopy Forum.
The professor and pollster will discuss applied sociology methods in her March 19 talk.
The professor of cultural anthropology will serve a dual role leading Community-Based Learning and the SHECP Consortium.
Krzysztof Jasiewicz authored “Roads to and from Democracy” from a collection of papers written over the course of 40 years.
De Zoysa is the university’s first recipient of the two-year scholarship for juniors interested in a public service career.
Allie Stankewich ’23 will spend the summer in Tanzania before pursuing a Fulbright English Teaching Assistantship in Uganda.
Stankewich has been awarded a Fulbright English Teaching Assistantship to teach English in Uganda.
Graham appreciates how W&L empowers students to follow their passions.
Talton has been awarded a Fulbright English Teaching Assistantship to teach English to the Roma student population in Hungary.
Marcos Perez is an assistant professor of sociology.
Anne Rodgers '20, '23L writes about her experience using creativity and emotion in her work helping her client seek asylum.
For W&L alumni Kevin Green ’07 and Amanda Green ’06, nature and nurture go hand-in-hand.
Godsey has been awarded a Fulbright English Teaching Assistantship to teach English in Taiwan.
Moye-Green will pursue a master’s degree in criminal justice and penal change at the University of Strathclyde.
The fourth edition of “Comparative Politics” is a collaboration between faculty in W&L’s Department of Politics and Department of Sociology and Anthropology.
Whether it was inside the classroom or out and about on campus, Rebecca Dunn Piatt '16 looks back on her time at W&L fondly.
Scott's advice for current students: "There is no one way to do college. Do it your way and make it count."
Terrence Johnson, professor of African American religious studies at Harvard University, will discuss his latest book on March 1.
Mugo says that, above all, W&L taught her to "always be curious."
The series, which highlights the range of post-graduate opportunities, features department alumni and kicks off Jan. 24.
“Practical Symbolic Interactions in the Shrine of the South: Conversations with a Damn Yankee” is set to be released on Jan. 15.
The panel will discuss "What Happened Last Night?” on Nov. 9 at 6 p.m. in Newcomb Hall.
Jon Eastwood serves as department chair for sociology and anthropology.
Booker will give a lecture on Sept. 27 at 5 p.m. in in Leyburn Library’s Northen Auditorium.
Spanfeller will be applying her studies in sociology and strategic communication to her new role as an editorial assistant for Women's Health magazine.
Jasiewicz, the William P. Ames Jr. Professor of Sociology at W&L, recently published a book titled “On the Streets and at the Polls."
Stankewich received a David L. Boren Scholarship from the National Security Education Program to study abroad in Tanzania in fall 2022.
Tripathi will teach English to students in Colombia for 10 months.
The Beinecke Scholarship Program provides funds for post-graduate study to students of unusual promise.
Cambridge University Press will publish Marcos Perez's book on Argentina's Unemployed Workers' Movement.
Moye-Green will attend the PPIA Junior Summer Institute at Princeton.
As part of a community-based learning class in the Sociology and Anthropology Department, students worked with community partners to create a workshop about positive sexual culture for first-year students.
The new social justice series titled “Measuring Choice and Freedom" will highlight the work of department alumni.
Hulya Dogan, visiting assistant professor of anthropology, joined W&L this fall.
Allie Stankewich '23 spent summer 2021 learning about public health in Uganda and green roofs in New York City.
Two presenters who met at a 2017 conference at Washington and Lee joined forces to repatriate a stolen Nepali deity.
Tanajia Moye-Green '23 is a small-town girl with big plans to make a difference in the world.