1st Edition

Intersectional Experiences and Marginalized Voices Research, Analysis, and Praxis

Edited By Sarah B. Donley, Melencia Johnson Copyright 2024

    Intersectional scholarship represents a significant cornerstone to the study of the social inequality. This book makes visible the contribution of social scientists to intersectional research, analysis, and praxis in a diverse sampling of scholarship from across the sociological spectrum highlighting various quantitative and qualitative methodologies.

    The contributions to this volume show how multiple dimensions of identity intersect with dimensions of power and privilege to shape the opportunities and obstacles that people encounter in their day to day lives. Utilizing a variety of quantitative and qualitative methods, scholars included in this book center:

    • Methods of intersectional research
    • Marginalized faculty’s experiences in the neoliberal university
    • Victim characteristics of transgender Americans
    • The effect of immigration and gender status on PhD engineers’ earnings
    • How social capital access is shaped by race and gender status
    • Latinas’ experiences in sports
    • Trans men’s pathways to incarceration

    Intersectional scholarship holds significant importance in providing a nuanced understanding of oppression and power dynamics as well as functioning as critical praxis for doing social justice work. This insightful volume will be useful for scholarly readers and researchers in the subject areas of sociology, gender and sexualities studies, race and ethnicity, feminist pedagogy, and criminology. The chapters in this book were originally published in the journal Sociological Spectrum.

    Introduction: Intersectional Experiences and Marginalized Voices
    Sarah B. Donley and Melencia Johnson

    1. Methods of Intersectional Research
    Joya Misra, Celeste Vaughan Curington, and Venus Mary Green

    2. How the “neutral” University Makes Critical Feminist Pedagogy Impossible: Intersectional Analysis from Marginalized Faculty on Three Campuses
    Erika Busse, Meghan Krausch, and Wenjie Liao

    3. Examining Case Outcomes in US Transgender Homicides: An Exploratory Investigation of the Intersectionality of Victim Characteristics
    Rayna E. Momen and Lisa Dilks

    4. Earnings of Foreign-Born Doctoral Engineers in the United States: Intersectionality of Citizenship and Status
    Yu Tao

    5. A Changing Landscape? An Intersectional Analysis of Race and Gender Disparity in Access to Social Capital
    Song Yang, Brandon A. Jackson and Anna Zajicek

    6. The Intersection of Class, Race, Gender, and Generation in Shaping Latinas’ Sport Experiences
    Jen McGovern

    7. Trans Men’s Pathways to Incarceration
    Sarah A. Rogers and Baker A. Rogers

    Biography

    Sarah B. Donley is Associate Professor of Sociology at Jacksonville State University, USA. Her teaching and research interests include gender, work, sexuality, culture, methodology, death and dying, and intersectionality. Dr. Donley’s current research has been published in Journal of Policy Practice and Research, Omega: Journal of Death and Dying, Deviant Behavior, and Sex Roles.

    Melencia Johnson is Associate Professor of Sociology at the University of South Carolina Aiken, USA. Her current teaching and research interests include feminist pedagogies, environmental justice, and the intersection of gender, race and crime.