|

IPR Faculty Awards and Honors
Fall
2004, Volume 26, Number 2
|
|
P. Lindsay
Chase-Lansdale, IPR faculty fellow and
developmental psychologist, was awarded the Martin E. and
Gertrude G. Walder Award for Research Excellence from
Northwestern University in May. Also, she and her co-authors
received the Society for Research on Adolescence’s Social
Policy Award in March for “Mothers’ Transitions from
Welfare
to Work and the Well-Being of Preschoolers and Adolescents,”
Science 299 (5612): 1548-1552. She was a visiting scholar at
Princeton University in spring 2004.
|
|
P. Lindsay Chase-Lansdale |
|
|
Dorothy Roberts'
book Shattered
Bonds: The Color of Child Welfare received the 2003 Research
Award from the Institute on Domestic Violence in the African American
Community. Roberts also appeared in the three-part PBS program Frontline,
Failure to Protect, which received the 2004 Dupont Columbia University
Award for broadcast journalism. Roberts is a law professor and an
IPR faculty fellow.
|
|
Dorothy Roberts |
|
|
Benjamin I. Page, Gordon S. Fulcher Professor
of Decision Making and IPR faculty associate, received the American
Association for Public Opinion Research’s (AAPOR)
highest honor, its Award for Exceptionally Distinguished Achievement
on May 15.
He also received the American
Political Science Association’s 2003 Converse Award for
a work of lasting significance on public opinion for The
Rational Public (University of Chicago Press, 1992), co-written
with Robert Shapiro of Columbia University.
|
|
Ben Page receives his award from Elizabeth Martin,
AAPOR president. |
| |
The W. T. Grant Foundation awarded Emma Adam,
assistant professor of human development and social policyand IPR
faculty fellow, a five-year W. T. Grant Scholars Award, which is
given to promising junior faculty. |
| Emma
Adam |
| |
Thomas McDade,
assistant professor of anthropology and IPR faculty fellow, was
recognized by President George W. Bush as one of the nation’s
57 most promising young scientists. He received a 2002 Presidential
Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers (PECASE)
in a ceremony on May 4 at the White House. PECASE awardees are drawn
from those who have already received prestigious Faculty Early Career
Development (CAREER)
grants from the National Science Foundation. Only 5 percent of CAREER
winners have received this award (about 140 scientists and engineers
since 1996). |
| Thomas
McDade at the PECASE
White House ceremony |
Economist Greg
J. Duncan, Edwina S. Tarry Professor of Education
and Social Policy and IPR faculty fellow, has been invited to
serve as a member of the Social Sciences and Population Studies
Study Section of the Center for Science Review in the Department
of Health and Human Services from July 2004 to June 2008. He also
became president of the Midwestern Economics Association.
|
IPR Faculty Fellow and sociologist Thomas
D. Cook was named the Joan and Sarepta Harrison Professor
in Ethics and Justice at Northwestern University.
|
| |
Celeste
Watkins, assistant professor of sociology and African
American studies and IPR faculty fellow, was appointed as a Visiting
Summer Fellow at the Center for AIDS Prevention Studies, HIV-Prevention
Research in Minority Communities Collaborative Program. She is working
on a pilot study investigating the social consequences of HIV/AIDS
for African American women. She also received the 2004 Department
of African American Studies Teaching Award. |
| Celeste
Watkins |
Dennis Chong,
John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Professor of Political Science
and IPR faculty fellow, gave an endowed lecture on “Free
Speech and Multiculturalism Inside and Outside the Academy”
at Cornell University in February.
|
Alice Eagly,
IPR faculty fellow and professor of psychology, delivered an invited
address, “On the Flexibility of Human Mating Preferences,”
at the annual meeting of the Midwestern Psychological Association
on April 30.
|
Jeff Manza,
associate professor of sociology and IPR acting director and faculty
fellow, gave the Doris Selo Memorial Lecture on felon disenfranchisement
at the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill on March 17.
|
Thomas D. Cook,
Joan and Sarepta Harrison Professor in Ethics and Justice and
IPR faculty fellow, gave the March 29 Clifford Clogg Memorial
Lecture, “Towards a Practical Theory for Generalizing Causal
Knowledge,” at Penn State University.
|
Wesley G. Skogan,
professor of political science and IPR faculty fellow, led an
April 19 briefing at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C.
on “Making our Streets Safer.”
|
As an associate professor of sociology and IPR faculty fellow,
Kathryn Edin testified before the Senate Finance
Committee’s Social Security and Family Policy Subcommittee
on “The Benefits of Healthy Marriage” on May 5.
|
|