The School of Social Sciences cordially invites you to the
Social Sciences Annual Welcome Reception
Wednesday, October 3, 2012
3:00-4:30 p.m.
Social & Behavioral Sciences Gateway, Room 1517
Come celebrate with us as we welcome a new Chancellor's Professor, six new assistant professors and one lecturer with potential security of employment to our fall 2012 faculty lineup. We'll also be officially welcoming two new faculty members - Yingying Dong and Glenda Flores - who started in winter quarter 2012. With research interests ranging from environmental politics of oil spills and space exploration to mathematical models that help explain deficits in decision processes associated with risky behaviors such as drug abuse, their scholarly contributions will further expand the diversity and interdisciplinary research strengths for which the School of Social Sciences is known.
For further information, please contact Lina Hernandez, lina.hernandez@uci.edu or 949-824-6802.
Charles Ragin
Chancellor's Professor, Sociology
Ph.D., Sociology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 1975
Charles Ragin comes to UCI as a Chancellor's Professor, a title reserved for faculty members who have demonstrated exceptional academic merit and
promise for ongoing scholarly achievement. His primary contributions are methodological; he develops and uses set-theoretic models to explain and
compare detailed, qualitative data across multiple datasets. His methods for qualitative comparative and fuzzy set analyses have been widely adopted in
sociology and political science, and his approaches are making inroads in medicine, engineering, and organizational studies. In addition to his
methodological work, Ragin focuses on social inequality, the welfare state, and ethnic political mobilization. He is the author of more than 100
articles in research journals and edited books, and he has developed several software packages for data analysis. He is a past recipient of the
International Social Science Council Stein Rokkan Prize and the Policy Studies Organization Donald Campbell Award for Methodological Innovation, and he
received honorable mention for the American Sociological Association Barrington Moore, Jr. Award. His work has been funded by the National Science
Foundation, Ford Foundation, Mellon Foundation and Kenan Foundation. Prior to joining the faculty at UCI, Ragin held appointments at Indiana University,
Bloomington, Northwestern University, the University of Oslo in Norway, and most recently, the University of Arizona, where he was a political science
and sociology professor.
Jacob Avery
Assistant Professor, Sociology
Ph.D., Sociology, University of Pennsylvania, 2010
M.A, Sociology, University of Pennsylvania, 2007
Jacob Avery has focused primarily on the causes, effects and experiences of homelessness, using fieldwork methods to study urban poverty, social
inequality, and the delivery of human services from an interactionist perspective. His work has been funded by the National Institutes of Health and
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. His findings have been published in Contexts and Ethnography, and he has a book manuscript in
progress
that examines how a network of chronically homeless and chemically addicted individuals experience life, and how and why they subsist without regular
aid from formal systems of support. He comes to UCI following a two-year post doctoral fellowship at the National Poverty Center in the Gerald R. Ford
School of Public Policy at the University of Michigan.
Valerie Olson
Assistant Professor, Anthropology
Ph.D., Anthropology, Rice University, Houston, Texas, 2010
Valerie Olson is a sociocultural anthropologist whose field work has taken her from the ocean subsurface of the Gulf of Mexico where she's examining
causes and consequences of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill, to NASA space centers where she's studying the environmental politics of outer space
exploration. American Extreme: An Ethnography of Astronautical Visions and Ecologies, her book-in-progress, examines how engineers, scientists,
physicians, and architects seek to turn humans into spacefarers and, in the process, connect outer space to the terrestrial environment. She's published
articles on this topic in the Psychology of Space Exploration: Contemporary Research in Historical Perspective, and she has two more articles that
have
been accepted for publication in Anthropological Quarterly. Her previous work, which focused on issues of nursing staffing and patient care, has been
featured in Medical Anthropology and the Journal of Nursing Administration.
Sean Walsh
Assistant Professor, Logic & Philosophy of Science
Ph.D., University of Notre Dame, 2011
Sean Walsh studies the philosophy of mathematics, the philosophy of logic and mathematical logic. A graduate of the University of Notre Dame, he's spent
the past year as a postdoctoral fellow at the University of London where he contributed to a European Research Council-funded study aimed at better
understanding logical paradoxes. His work has been published in the journal Kant-Studien and has a forthcoming article in the Annals of Pure and
Applied
Logic. He's presented his research at annual meetings and seminars in Paris, Chicago, London and Budapest. His current research is funded by an award
and three-year fellowship he received in 2011 from the Kurt Godel Society with support from the John Templeton Foundation.
Jim Weatherall
Assistant Professor, Logic & Philosophy of Science
Ph.D., Logic & Philosophy of Science, University of California, Irvine, 2012
Ph.D., Mathematics and Physics, Stevens Institute of Technology, 2009
M.F.A., Creative Writing, Fairleigh Dickinson University, 2010
A.M. (Master's), Physics, Harvard University, 2005
James (Jim) Weatherall is a 2012 UCI alumnus whose research focuses on the philosophy of physics, philosophy of science and mathematical physics. His
research has shown that, in addition to the theory of general relativity, classical physics can be used to explain the fundamental concept of inertial
motion. He's published four philosophy of physics articles, including one in the journal Philosophy of Science for which he currently serves as
managing
editor. He's co-written five papers in top-tier physics journals, published nine popular science articles, and he has a forthcoming book, The Physics of
Wall Street: A Brief History of Predicting the Unpredictable, with Houghton, Mifflin, and Harcourt Press. Weatherall is a past recipient of the UCI
Alumni Association Lauds & Laurels Outstanding Graduate Student Award and Justine Lambert Graduate Prize in the Foundations of Science, and the
University of Western Ontario Robert K. Clifton Memorial Book Prize.
Jennifer Trueblood
Assistant Professor, Cognitive Sciences
Ph.D., Cognitive Science, Indiana University Bloomington, 2012
M.A., Mathematics, Indiana University Bloomington, 2009
Cognitive scientist Jennifer Trueblood uses experimental work combined with mathematical modeling to study how people make judgments and decisions. Her
research investigates dynamic models of multi-alternative, multi-attribute decision-making, applications of quantum probability theory to subjective
judgments, and deficits in decision processes associated with risky behaviors such as drug abuse. Her work has been published in Psychological Review
and Cognitive Science, and she has two book chapters on quantum probability models of decision-making. She comes to UCI after having completed her
graduate degree at Indiana University where she was supported by the National Science Foundation.
Graeme Boushey
Assistant Professor, Political Science
Ph.D., Political Science, University of Washington, Seattle, 2007
M.A., Political Science, University of Washington, Seattle, 2004
Graeme Boushey's research specializations include public policy innovation and political decision-making in America, particularly at the state level.
His recent book, Policy Diffusion Dynamics in America, explores the issue of why some policies - like vaccination policies and tobacco control
programs
- spread more rapidly across states than others. Boushey contends that different patterns of policy diffusion can be explained by variations in the
particular features of policies and the political and institutional traits of states, as well as differences in interest group carriers. He has
provided perspectives on these topics to a variety of media outlets, including the Associated Press, NPR Marketplace, and local news media. Prior to
joining the faculty at UCI, Boushey was a Robert Wood Johnson Scholar in Health Policy Research at the University of Michigan, and an assistant
professor of political science at San Francisco State University.
James Hull
Lecturer with Potential Security of Employment, Social Sciences
Ph.D., Sociology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 2010
James (Jim) Hull comes to UCI from Brown University where he's spent the past two years as a postdoctoral research associate with the Environmental
Change Initiative & Population Studies Training Center. His research focuses on relationships, migration and monetization; his findings have been
published in the Brazilian Journal of Population Studies and Asian Pacific Migration Journal. His work has been supported by the National
Science
Foundation and Carolina Population Center and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. As a new lecturer with potential security of employment in
social
sciences, he brings experience teaching both undergraduate and graduate courses in sociology.

Yingying Dong
Assistant Professor, Economics
Ph.D., Economics, Boston College, 2009
Yingying Dong is a microeconomist who uses econometric models and research methods to study practical issues in labor, health and education. Specific topics she's worked on include health insurance and health care utilization, alcohol consumption, household consumption and retirement behavior, impacts of time inputs on consumption, and childhood education. Her research has been published in the European Economic Review, Economics Letters, and Journal of Econometrics. Prior to coming to UCI, Dong was an assistant professor at California State University, Fullerton.

Glenda Flores
Assistant Professor, Chicano/Latino Studies
Ph.D., Sociology, University of Southern California, 2011
Glenda Flores is a sociologist who pursues research on race, gender, social inequality, education and immigrant and multiracial communities. She has articles forthcoming in Qualitative Sociology and the Latino Studies Journal; the first deals with how Latina teachers navigate the teaching profession while the second addresses Latina/o participation in science, technology, engineering and math.
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