CURRICULUM VITAE 2012

LYNNE HANEY

DEPARTMENT OF SOCIOLOGY266 EAST 19th STREET

NEW YORK UNIVERSITY BROOKLYN, NEW YORK 11226

295 LAFAYETTE STREET, 4TH FLOOR (646) 515-1363

NEW YORK, NEW YORK

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ACADEMIC POSITIONS AND EDUCATION

2009-Present Professor. Department of Sociology, New York University.

2003-2009 Associate Professor. Department of Sociology, New York University.

2002-2004 Associate Director. Center for the Study of Gender and Sexuality, New York

University.

1997-2003 Assistant Professor. Department of Sociology, New York University.

1997 Ph.D. Sociology, University of California, Berkeley.

1992 M.A. Sociology, University of California, Berkeley.

1990 B.A. Sociology, University of California, San Diego(Magna Cum Laude).

BOOKS

2013 The Sociology Project: An Introduction to the Sociological Imagination.

Editor and Co-Author with NYU Colleagues. (Pearson).

2010 Offending Women: Power, Punishment, and the Regulation of Desire.

(University of California Press).

Received the 2011 American Sociological Association Award for Best Book in

Crime, Law, and Deviance.

2003 Families of a New World: Gender, Politics, and State Development in a Global

Context. Edited with Lisa Pollard (Routledge).

2002 Inventing the Needy: Gender and the Politics of Welfare in Hungary.

(University of California Press).

Received the 2004 American Sociological Association Award for Best Book

in Political Sociology.

Received the 2003 American Sociological Association Award for

Outstanding Book in Sex and Gender.

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2000Global Ethnography: Forces, Connections, and Imaginations in a Postmodern

World. Michael Burawoy et al (University of California Press).

BOOK-IN-PROGRESS

In progress Prisons of the Past: ThePolitics of Punishment in Central Europe.

JOURNAL ARTICLES

Forthcoming “Motherhood as Punishment: The Case of Parenting in Prison.” Signs, Fall 2013.

2010 “Working through Mass Incarceration: Gender and the Politics of Prison Labor

from East to West.” Signs, Fall2010.

2005 “Minimizing Vulnerability: Selective Interdependence after Welfare Reform”

(with Robin Rogers-Dillon). Qualitative Sociology.

2004 “Gender, Welfare, and States of Punishment.” Social Politics, Vol. 11 No.3.

2003“Married Fathers and Caring Daddies: Welfare Reform and the Discursive

Politics of Paternity” (with Miranda March).Social Problems, Vol. 50, No.4.

2002“After the Fall: East European Women Since the Collapse of State Socialism.”

Contexts, vol. 1, no. 3.

2000“Feminist State Theory: Applications to Jurisprudence, Criminology, and the

Welfare State.” Annual Review of Sociology, Vol. 26.

2000 “Familial Welfare: Building the Hungarian Welfare Society, 1948-1968.” Social

Politics, Vol. 7, No.2.

1999 “Structure and Culture in Feminist Accounts of the Welfare State.”

Contemporanea (Italian Historical Review), December, 1999.

1998 “Engendering the Welfare State: A Review Article.” Comparative Studies in

Society and History, Vol. 40, No. 4.

1998 “The Creation of a Discretionary Welfare State: Professionalization and the

Politics of Welfare in Hungary.” Journal of Social Science, Vol.2, No.1.

1997 “But We Are Still Mothers: Gender and the Construction of Need in Postsocialist

Hungary.” Social Politics, Vol. 4, No. 2.

1996 “Homeboys, Babies, Men in Suits: The State and the Reproduction of Male

Dominance.” American Sociological Review, Vol. 61, No. 5.

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1994 “From Proud Worker to Good Mother: Gender, the State, and Regime Change in

Hungary.” Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies, Vol. 14, No. 3.

BOOK CHAPTERS

2013 “Studying the Social World.” In NYU Sociology Department, The Sociology

Project: An Introduction to the Sociological Imagination (Pearson).

2013 “The Sociological Imagination” (with Jeff Manza and Richard Arum). In

NYU Sociology Department, The SociologyProject: An Introduction to the

Sociological Imagination (Pearson).

2010 “Imagining the Self and Other: Women Narrate Prison Life across Cultures” (with

Andras Tapolcai). In Rickie Solinger ed. Interrupted Lives: The Experiences of

Incarcerated Women in the United States (University of California Press).

2008 “Combiner l’Historie et l’ethnographie en Dehors de la Reviste des Terrains Deja

Etudies” (with Ruth Horowitz). In Anne-Marie Arborio et.al eds. Observer le

Travail. (La Decouverte).

2007 “Competing Empowerments: Gender and Neoliberal Punishment in the East and

West.” In Carolyn Ellison ed. TheGlobal Empowerment of Women(Routledge).

2005 “Beyond Dependency: Welfare States and the Reconfiguration of Social

Inequality” (with Robin Rogers-Dillon). In Mary Romero and Eric

Margolis eds. Blackwell Companion to Social Inequalities (Blackwell).

2003 “Welfare Reform with a Familial Face: Reconstituting State and Domestic

Relations inPostsocialist Eastern Europe.” In Lynne Haney and Lisa

Pollard eds. Families of a New World: Gender,Politics, and State

Developmentin Global Context (Routledge).

2003 “In a Family Way: Theorizing State and Familial Relations” (with Lisa Pollard).

In Lynne Haney and Lisa Pollard eds. Families of a New World: Gender,

Politics, and State Development in Global Context (Routledge).

2002 “Negotiating Power and Expertise in the Field.” In Tim May ed. Qualitative

Research: An International Guide to Issues inPractice (Sage).

2000 “Global Discourses of Need: Mythologizing and Pathologizing Welfare in

Hungary.” In Michael Burawoy et al. Global Ethnography.(University of

California Press).

2000 “Global Forces” (with Teresa Gowan and Joseph Blum). In Michael Burawoy

et al. Global Ethnography.(University of California Press).

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FELLOWSHIPS AND RESEARCH GRANTS

2010-2011 Straus Institute for the Advanced Study of Law and Justice, New York University

School of Law.Project: “Transnational States of Punishment.”

2010-2011 University Research Challenge Fund. New York University. Project:

“Transnational States of Punishment.”

2005-2006 International Research & Exchanges Board Short-term Research Grant.

Project: “Transnational States of Punishment.”

2004-2005 Fulbright New Century Scholar. Project: “Transnational States of Punishment.”

2003-2004 Humanities Council Development Grant (with Carolyn Dinshaw).

2002-2003 University Research Challenge Fund. New York University.

1999-2000 American Council of Learned Societies, Postdoctoral Fellowship.

1999-2000 Remarque Institute, New York University, Faculty Fellowship.

1995-1996 University of California, Berkeley, Chancellor's Dissertation Fellowship.

1994-1995 American Council of Learned Societies/Social Science Research Council

Dissertation Fellowship.

1993-1994 International Research & Exchanges Board Advanced Research Grant.

1990-1992Foreign Language and Area Studies Fellowship.

1990 American Council of Learned Societies Summer Language Fellowship.

HONORS AND AWARDS

2011 American Sociological Association Award for Best Book in Crime, Law, and

Deviance. Received for Offending Women (University of California Press 2010).

2010 Krieger Wolf Distinguished Visiting Professor. Department of Gender Studies,

Northwestern University. January 2010.

2004 American Sociological Association Award for Best Book in Political Sociology.

Received for Inventing the Needy: Gender and the Politics of Welfare in

Hungary. (University of California Press, 2002).

2003 American Sociological Association Award for Outstanding Book in Sex and

Gender. Received for Inventing the Needy: Gender and the Politics of Welfare in

Hungary. (University of California Press, 2002).

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1999 American Sociological Association Award for Distinguished Contribution to

Scholarship in Sex and Gender. Received for “Homeboys, Babies, Men in Suits:

The State and theReproduction of Male Dominance.”

1999Distinguished Teaching Award. Department of Sociology, New York University.

1996 Phi Beta Kappa Dissertation Award.

1993 Outstanding Graduate Student Instructor Award. Department of Sociology,

University of California, Berkeley.

1991Gertrude Jaeger Award, Department of Sociology, University of California,

Berkeley.

1990Magna Cum Laude, University of California, San Diego.

1989 Phi Beta Kappa, University of California, San Diego.

CONFERENCE PARTICIPATION AND INVITED LECTURES

2012 “Parents as Prisoners: Welfare, Punishment, and the Disciplining of Family.” Keynote

address given at Childhood Studies Association: Everyday Life and Public Politics in

Argentina and Latin America. 1880 - 2010. Buenos Aires, Argentina.

2012 “Parents as Prisoners: Thinking Through the Gender Politics of Punishment.” Invited

paper given Annual Meeting of the Society for the Study of Social Problems.

2012 “Author-Meets-Critic: Offending Women: Power, Punishment, and the Regulation of

Desire.” Annual Meeting of the Eastern Sociological Association.

2011 “Author-Meets-Critic: Offending Women: Power, Punishment, and the Regulation of

Desire.”American Society of Criminology.

2011 “The Prison Industrial Complex.” Organizer, presider, and discussant for panel at the

Annual Meeting of the American Sociological Association.

2011 “Gender, Rehabilitation, and the Politics of Prison.” Organizer, presider, and discussant

for panel at the Annual Meeting of the American Sociological Association.

2011 “Gender and Punishment.” Invited lecture given at the Central European University,

Summer School.

2010 “Parenting in Prison.” Talk presented at the Goldstock Seminar, NYU Law School.

2010 “New Perspectives on Carework.” Organizer and discussant for panel at the Annual

Meeting of the Social Science History Association.

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2010 “Feminist Political Economy.” Organizer and discussant for panel at the Annual

Meeting of the Social Science History Association.

2010 “Gendered Citizenships across Social Institutions.” Organizer and discussant

for panel at the Annual Meeting of the American Sociological Association.

2010 “Working through Mass Incarceration: Gender and the Politics of Prison Labor

from East to West.” Invited paper presented at the Frankle Institute for the

Humanities and the Department of Anthropology, University of Chicago.

2010 “Offending Women: Power, Punishment, and the Regulation of Desire.” Public

lecture given at Northwestern University.

2010 “Working through Mass Incarceration: Gender and the Politics of Prison Labor

from East to West.” Invited paper presented at the Comparative Historical Social

Science Workshop, Northwestern University.

2010 “The Present and Future of the Sociology of Gender.” Invited panel at the

Gender Studies Program, Northwestern University.

2010 “Working through Mass Incarceration: Gender and the Politics of Prison Labor

from East to West.” Invited paper presented at Meetings of the International

Studies Association.

2009 “Offending Women: Power, Punishment, and the Regulation of Desire.” Sociology

Department Colloquium, University of Southern California.

2009 “Offending Women: Power, Punishment, and the Regulation of Desire.” Invited

lecture given at the Department of Sociology, University of Pennsylvania.

2009 “Offending Women: Power, Punishment, and the Regulation of Desire.” Invited

lecture given at Department of Gender Studies, Indiana University.

2009 “Transnational Politics of Punishment.” Invited paper presented at the Working

Group on Gender and Citizenship, Indiana University.

2009 “Reading the Past from the Gender Politics of the Present.” Invited paper presented

at Queens University, Belfast. January 2009.

2008 “Transnational Politics of Punishment.” Invited paper presented at the Meetings of

the International Studies Association. April 2008.

2007 “Transnational Politics of Punishment.”Invited paper presented at the Meetings of

the American AnthropologicalAssociation, December 2007.

2007 “Gender, Sexuality, and Politics.” Organizer, presider, and discussant for two

panels at the Annual Meeting of the American Sociological Association.

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2007 “Offending Women: Power, Punishment, and the Regulation of Desire.” Invited

lecture given at the Legal Studies Department , University of Massachusetts,

Amherst. April 2007.

2006 “The Possibilities for History and Ethnography: Beyond the Revisit” (with Ruth

Horowitz). Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Sociological

Association, session on “Qualitative Methodology.”

2005 “Gender, Globalization, and Governance.” Participant in the Fulbright New Century

Scholars Plenary, Institute forInternational Education, New York. April 2005.

2005 “Transitional States of Punishment: Gender and Neoliberal Governance in the East

and West.”Paper presented at the Final Meeting of the Fulbright New Century

Scholars Program. Airlie Conference Center, Virginia. April 2005.

2004 “Qualitative Methodology.” Organizer, presider,and discussant for panel at the

Annual Meeting of the American Sociological Association. August 2004.

2004 “Offending Women: Hybrid Prisons and the Production of the Self.” Paper

presented at the Annual Meeting of the Law and Society Association. May 2004.

2004 “Representations of Women in the Legal System.” Presentation at the Meeting

of the Fulbright New Century Scholars Program. Emory University. April 2004.

2003 “Integration or Disintegration? The Transnational and Local Politics of Welfare in

Hungary.” Invited presentation given at the Department of Sociology and the

European Union Center at the University of Wisconsin, Madison. December 2003.

2003 “Girls Just Shouldn’t Have Fun: Gender, Punishment, and the Regulation of Desire.”

Invited lecture at the Department of Sociology, University of Wisconsin,

Madison. December 2003.

2003 “Offending Women: Hybrid Prisons and the Production of the Self.” Paper

presented at the Meeting of the Social Science History Association session

on “Gender, Welfare, and States of Punishment.” November 2003.

2003 “Beyond Dependency: Welfare Reform and the Reconfiguration of State

Assistance.” Invited lecture given at the Mellon Lecture Series on Welfare States,

Department of Politics, University of Virginia. May 2003.

2003 “Author-Meets-Critics: Inventing the Needy: Gender and the Politics of Welfare in

Hungary.” Eastern Sociological Association Special Session. February, 2003.

2002 “A Tale of Two Welfare States: Gender and Social Policy Reform in Hungary and

the Czech Republic.” Invited paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the

Association of Public Policy Analysis and Management, November, 2002.

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2001 “Gender Regimes and Transitional Societies.” Invited presentation given at the

Department of Sociology, Yale University.December 2001.

2000“Stepping In: Familial Survival Strategies in an Era of Welfare Reform.” Paper

presented at the Annual Meeting of the AmericanSociological Association.

2000 “A Tale of Two Welfare States: Social Policy Reform in Hungary and the Czech

Republic.” Invited paper given at the London School ofEconomics. June 2000.

2000 “Familial Welfare and Constructions of State Socialism.” Paper presented

at the European Social Science History Conference. Amsterdam. April 2000.

1999“Engendering Welfare Reform in Postsocialist Hungary.” Research presentation

at New York University’s Remarque Institute. November 1999.

1999 “The Ties that Bind: Familialism and the Welfare State.” Organized panel for

presentation at the Berkshires Conference on the History of Women. June 1999.

1999 “Gender and State-Building in the Hungarian Welfare Society, 1948-1968.” Paper

presented at the Berkshires Conference on the History of Women. June 1999.

1998 “Global Discourses of Need: Democratization and Welfare Regime Change.” Paper

presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Sociological Association.

1998 “Gender and Welfare Regime Change in Hungary.” Invited lecture given at the

University of California at Los Angeles, Series on the Sociology of Gender

and Workshop on Comparative Social Analysis. May 1998.

1998 “Engendering Welfare Reform.” Invited lecture given at New York University’s

Center for European Studies, Workshop on Gender in Transition. April 1998.

RESEARCH EXPERIENCE

2008-present Fieldwork, Hungarian National Prison System, Vác Hungary.

Ethnographic study of a maximum-security men’s prison.

2004-2006 Fieldwork, Hungarian National Prison System, Kalocsa Hungary.

Ethnographic study of a maximum-security women’s prison.

Taught English to inmates and staff; held creative writing classes for inmates.

2002-2004 Fieldwork, California Department of Corrections.

Ethnographic study of a women’s prisonhousing female offenders and their

children. Taught creative writing to inmates; wrote grant proposals for the prison.

1999-2001 Interviewing. Baltimore, Maryland.

Completed 51 interviews with a random sample of low-income women.

Examined how welfare reform affectedtwo generations of sole mothers.

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1998-2000 Survey Research. Horace Mann School, Riverdale, New York.

Conducted two-year study of coeducation at Horace Mann School. Created

and administered questionnaires to 800 students; led focus groups with students

andfaculty; presented findings to the head of school and the faculty.

1994-1995 Archival Research. Budapest District Archives, Budapest, Hungary.

Conducted primary source research on the welfare apparatus of state socialist

Hungary. Secured access to archives; randomly sampled 1,209 case files from

1952-1989; coded and analyzed documents.

1993-1994 Fieldwork. Family Support Centers, Budapest, Hungary.

Conducted fieldwork in Family Support Centers in two districts of Budapest.

Observed the workings of these agencies in order to understand the gender

practices of post-communist state institutions.

1992-1993 Fieldwork. California Juvenile Justice System.

Participated in and observed the institutional practices of the juvenile justice

system. Assisted probation officers; taught courses to a group of teenage

mothers incarcerated in a group home.

TEACHING EXPERIENCE

1997-Present Department of Sociology, New York University.

Graduate courses taught include Ethnography, Gender and the Politics of

Welfare, Feminist Theory, and Sex and Gender. Currently supervising 10

graduate students on dissertation and/or comprehensive exam committees.

1997-Present Department of Sociology, New York University.

Undergraduate courses taught include Research Methods, Sex and Gender,

Introduction to Sociology, Social Policy, Theories of Gender and Sexuality,

Gender and Punishment, Social Change, and Gender in Transition.

Fall, 1996 Department of Sociology, UC Berkeley.

Instructor, Sociology 190: Gender and the Politics of Welfare.

Summer, 1996 Department of Sociology, UC Berkeley.

Instructor, Sociology 133: The Sociology of Gender.

DEPARTMENT SERVICE

2011-2014 Executive Committee, Department of Sociology, New York University (elected).

2011-2012 Director, Law and Society Minor. Department of Sociology, New York University.

2009-2010 Recruitment Committee, Department of Sociology, New York University.

2008-2010 Executive Committee, Department of Sociology, New York University (elected).

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2007-2008 Recruitment Committee, Department of Sociology, New York University.

2006-2007 Recruitment Committee, Department of Sociology, New York University.

2005-2006 Director of Undergraduate Studies, Department of Sociology, New York

University.

2003-2004 Director, Workshop on Gender and Inequality, Department of Sociology, New

York University.

2002-2003 Director, Workshop on Gender and Inequality, Department of Sociology, New

York University.

2002-2003 Graduate Admissions, Department of Sociology, New YorkUniversity.

2001-2002 Co-Director, Workshop on Gender and Inequality, Department of Sociology,

New York University

Spring 2001 Director of Undergraduate Studies, Department of Sociology, New York

University.

Spring 2001 Chair, Undergraduate Curriculum Committee, Department of Sociology, New

York University.

Spring 2001 Senior Recruitment Committee, Department of Sociology, New York University.

2000-2001 Director, Workshop on Gender and Inequality, Department of Sociology, New

York University.

1999-2000Co-Director, Workshop on Gender and Inequality, Department of Sociology,