Peggy Petrzelka
Dept. of Sociology, Social Work and Anthropology l Utah State University l Logan, UT 84322-0730 l USA l
EDUCATION
Doctor of Philosophy
Department of Sociology, Iowa State University, 1999.
Master of Science
Department of Sociology, Iowa State University, 1991.
Bachelor of Arts
Department of Political Science, College of St. Thomas, 1984.
EMPLOYMENT
Professor
Utah State University, College of Humanities and Social Sciences, July 2015 to present.
Associate Professor
Utah State University, College of Humanities and Social Sciences, July 2007 to June 2015.
Adjunct Professor
Utah State University, College of Natural Resources, July 2007 to June 2015 (Associate).
July 2015 to present (Full).
Assistant Professor
Utah State University, July 2001 to June 2007.
Assistant Visiting Professor
Grinnell College, August 2000 to May 2001.
Adjunct Assistant Professor and Post Doctoral Research Associate
Iowa State University Sociology Department, May 1999 to July 2000.
Research Assistant
Iowa State University Extension, September 1995 to May 1999.
North Central Regional Center for Rural Development, August 1989 to October 1992.
Extension Associate
Iowa State University Extension, May 1994 to August 1995.
Iowa State University Extension, November 1991 to December 1992.
U.S. Peace Corps Volunteer
Morocco, May 1986 to September 1988.
RESEARCH PUBLICATIONS
A. Peer Reviewed (PR) Journal Articles
PR35. Colter Ellis, Gene Theodori, Peggy Petrzelka, Douglas Jackson-Smith, Al Luloff. 2016. “Unconventional Risks: Rural Communities Response to Acute Energy Development in the Eagle Ford Shale.” Energy Research and Social Science. Vol. 20:91-98.
PR34. Peggy Petrzelka and Paul Jacobs†. 2016. “Why Utah? The “Reddest of States” and Inclusive Immigration Policy”. Social Science Journal. Vol. 53:156-166.
PR33. Peggy Petrzelka and Andrea Armstrong†. 2015. “Absentee Landowners of Agricultural Land: Influences upon Land Management Decision Making and Information Usage.” Journal of Soil and Water Conservation. Vol. 70:303-312.
PR32. Paul Jacobs †, Beth Kiester †, Christy Glass, and Peggy Petrzelka. 2015. “Bringing Them “Out of the Shadows”: Analyzing the Movement to Reframe the Immigration Policy Narrative in Utah.” Journal of Sociology and Social Work. Vol. 3:52-65.
PR31. Peggy Petrzelka and Sandra Marquart-Pyatt. 2015. “Perceptions of Power and Manner of Designation: Impacts on Trust.” Society and Natural Resources. Vol. 28: 1261-1277.
PR30. Christy Glass, Susan Mannon, and Peggy Petrzelka. 2014. “Good Mothers as Guest Workers: Constructing the Trope of Compliant Maternity in Spain’s Strawberry Industry.” International Journal of Sociology. Vol. 44: 8-22.
PR29. Peggy Petrzelka, Sandra Marquart-Pyatt, and Stephanie Malin. 2013. “Political Trust in Utah:
It's not just Scale that Matters.” Social Science Journal. Vol. 50: 338-348.
PR28. Peggy Petrzelka, Zhao Ma, and Stephanie Malin. 2013. “The Elephant in the Room: Absentee Landowners and Conservation Management.” Land Use Policy. Vol. 30: 157-166.
PR27. Peggy Petrzelka and Sandra Marquart-Pyatt. 2013. “With the Stroke of a Pen”: Designation of the Grand Staircase Escalante National Monument and the Impact on Trust.” Human Ecology. Vol. 41:285-297.
PR26. Peggy Petrzelka. 2012. “Absentee Landowners in the Great Lakes Basin: Who They Are and Implications for Conservation Outreach.” Society and Natural Resources. Vol. 8:821-832.
PR25. Jamie McEvoy†, Peggy Petrzelka, Claudia Radel, and Birgit Schmook. 2012. “Gendered Mobility and Morality in a South-Eastern Mexican Community: Impacts of Male Labour Migration on the Women Left Behind.” Mobilities. Vol. 7:369-388.
PR24. Susan E. Mannon, Peggy Petrzelka, Christy M. Glass, and Claudia Radel. 2012. “Keeping Them in Their Place: Migrant Women Workers in Spain’s Strawberry Industry.” International Journal of the Sociology of Agriculture and Food. Vol. 19:83-101.
† Student co-author
PR23. Claudia Radel, Birgit Schmook, Jamie McEvoy†, Crisol Mendez, and Peggy Petrzelka. 2012. “Labor Migration and Gendered Agricultural Relations: The Feminization of Agriculture in the Ejidal Sector of Calakmul, Mexico.” Journal of Agrarian Change. Vol. 12:98-119.
PR22. Peggy Petrzelka, Stephanie Malin†, and Brian Gentry†. 2012. “Absentee Landowners and Conservation Programs: Mind the Gap.” Land Use Policy. Vol. 29:220-223.
PR21. Stephanie Malin† and Peggy Petrzelka. 2012. “Attempting Community Development Among Toxic Tailings: An Interactional Case Study of Community Health and Extralocal Institutions.” Community Development Journal. Vol. 43: 379-392.
PR20. Christy M. Glass, Peggy Petrzelka, and Susan E. Mannon. 2011. “Mothers, Migrants and Markets: Re-Thinking the Link Between Motherhood and Work in the Global Economy.” Journal of the Motherhood Initiative for Research and Community Involvement. Vol. 2:129-145.
PR19. Peggy Petrzelka and Sandra Marquart-Pyatt. 2011. “Land Tenure in the US: Power, Gender, and Consequences for Conservation Decision Making.” Agriculture and Human Values. Vol. 28:549-560.
PR18. Stephanie Malin† and Peggy Petrzelka. 2010. “Left in the Dust: Uranium's Legacy and
Victims of Mill Tailings Exposure in Monticello, Utah.” Society and Natural Resources. Vol. 23:1187–1200.
PR17. Sandra Marquart-Pyatt and Peggy Petrzelka. 2009. “Digging the Dugway?: Understanding Involvement in Local Politics.” Journal of Community Development. Vol. 40, No. 3:262-274.
PR16. Brandon Chapman†, Douglas Jackson-Smith, and Peggy Petrzelka. 2008. “Comparative Institutions and Management Resiliency in Latin American Small-Scale Fisheries.” Social Science Journal. Vol. 45, No. 2:312-29.
PR15. Sandra Marquart-Pyatt and Peggy Petrzelka. 2008. “Trust, the Democratic Process, and Involvement in a Rural Community.” Rural Sociology. Vol. 73, No. 2:250-274.
PR14. Peggy Petrzelka, Richard S. Krannich, and Joan Brehm. 2006. “Identification with Resource-Based Occupations and Desire for Tourism: Are the Two Necessarily Inconsistent?” Society and Natural Resources. Vol. 19, No. 8:693-707.
PR13. Peggy Petrzelka and Susan Mannon. 2006. “Keepin’ This Little Town Going: Gender and Volunteerism in Rural America.” Gender and Society. Vol. 20, No. 2:236-258.
PR12. Peggy Petrzelka. 2005. “They Make HOW Much? Investigating Faculty Salaries to Examine Gender Inequalities.” Teaching Sociology. Vol. 33, No. 4:380-388.
PR11. Peggy Petrzelka, Richard S. Krannich, Joan M. Brehm, and Carla Koons Trentelman†. 2005. “Rural Tourism and Gendered Nuances.” Annals of Tourism Research. Vol. 32, No. 4:1121-1137.
† Student co-author
PR10. Peggy Petrzelka. 2004. “The New Landform’s here! The New Landform’s here! We’re Somebody Now!! The Role of Discursive Practices on Place Identity.” Rural Sociology. Vol. 69, No. 3:386-404.
PR9. Peggy Petrzelka, Steve Padgitt, Carol Pilcher, and Wendy Wintersteen. 2002. “The Role of Sociologists in Evaluation of a Pest Management Tool.” Journal of Applied Sociology. Vol. 19, No. 2:68-80.
PR8. Steve Padgitt, Peggy Petrzelka, Wendy Wintersteen, and Eric Imerman. 2001. “Integrated Crop Management: The Other Precision Agriculture.” American Journal of Alternative Agriculture. Vol. 16, No. 1:16-22.
PR7. Peggy Petrzelka and Michael M. Bell. 2000. “Rationality and Solidarities: The Social Organization of Common Property Resources in the Imdrhas Valley of Morocco.” Human Organization. Vol. 59, No. 3:343-352.
PR6. Peggy Petrzelka, Steven C. Padgitt, and Wendy Wintersteen. 1999. “Extension’s Portfolio for the 21st Century: A Place for One-on-One Consultations.” Journal of Extension. Vol. 37, No. 6:1-8.
PR5. Wendy Wintersteen, Steven C. Padgitt, and Peggy Petrzelka. 1999. “Evaluation of Extension’s Importance to Agribusinesses: A Case Study of Iowa.” American Entomologist. Vol. 45, No. 1:6-9.
PR4. Jeffrey K. Iles, Steven C. Padgitt, Peggy Petrzelka, and Wendy Wintersteen. 1998. “Iowa State University Extension: Evaluation of Programs and Services offered to Iowa’s Turfgrass, Nursery, and Landscape Plant Installation and Maintenance Industries.” HortTechnology. Vol. 8, No. 1:89-92.
PR3. Peggy Petrzelka, Steven C. Padgitt, and Kay Connelly. 1997. “Teaching Old Dogs Survival Tricks: A Case Study in Promoting Integrated Crop Management.” Journal of Production Agriculture. Vol. 10, No. 4:596-602.
PR2. Peggy Petrzelka, Peter F. Korsching, and James E. Malia. 1996. “Farmers’ Attitudes and Behavior Toward Sustainable Agriculture.” Journal of Environmental Education. Vol. 28, No. 1:38-44.
PR1. Timothy Borich, Peter F. Korsching, and Peggy Petrzelka. 1993. “Importance of Community Ethnic Background in Community Activeness.” Journal of the Community Development Society. Vol. 24, No. 1:72-87.
B. Refereed Book Chapters (BC)
BC6. Douglas Jackson-Smith and Peggy Petrzelka (first authorship shared). 2014. “Land Ownership in American Agriculture.” In C. Bailey, L. Jensen, and E. Ransom (eds.), Rural America in a Globalizing World: Problems and Prospects for the 2010s. Pp. 51-68. West Virginia Press. Invited.
BC5. Peggy Petrzelka. 2014. “New Migration and New Communities: Social Changes born from Agricultural Changes.” In J. Gertel and S. R. Sippel (eds.), Seasonal Workers in Mediterranean Agriculture: The Social Cost of Eating Fresh. Pp. 232-236. Routledge Press. Invited.
BC4. Birgit Schmook, Claudia Radel, Crisol Méndez, Jamie McEvoy†, and Peggy Petrzelka. 2012. “Migración, Género y Tenencia de la tierra: Identidades Femeninas Complejas en el Sector Rural de Calakmul.” In E. Tuñón Pablos and M. L. Rojas Wiesner (eds.) Género y Migración, 2 vols. Pp. 275-305. ECOSUR / EL COLEF / COLMICH / CIESAS, San Cristóbal de Las Casas, Chiapas, México.
BC3. Richard S. Krannich, Peggy Petrzelka, and Joan Brehm. 2006. “Social Change and Well-Being in Western Amenity-Growth Communities” In W. A. Kandel and D. L. Brown (eds.), Population Change and Rural Society. Pp. 311-331. Springer Press.
BC2. Richard S. Krannich and Peggy Petrzelka. 2003. “Tourism and Natural Amenity Development: Real Opportunities?” In D.L. Brown and L. E. Swanson (eds.), Challenges for Rural America in the Twenty-First Century. Pp. 190-199. The Pennsylvania State University Press.
BC1. Steven C. Padgitt and Peggy Petrzelka. 1994. “Making Sustainable Agriculture the New Conventional Agriculture: Social Change and Sustainability.” In Sustainable Agriculture Systems. Pp. 261-285. Lewis Publishers.
C. Book Reviews (BR)
BR4. Peggy Petrzelka. 2014. Girls of the Factory: A Year with the Garment Workers of Morocco by M. Laetitia Cairoli. (Gainesville, FL: University Press of Florida), Contemporary Sociology: A Journal of Reviews. 43(4): 511-512. Invited.
BR3. Peggy Petrzelka. 2009. We Share Walls. Language, Land, and Gender in Berber Morocco by Katherine E. Hoffman (Malden, MA: Blackwell Publishing), The Australian Journal of Anthropology 20(3):391-392. Invited.
BR2. Peggy Petrzelka. 2004. Taking Stands: Gender and the Sustainability of Rural Communities by Maureen G. Reed (Vancouver: UBC Press), Society and Natural Resources 17(9):855-857.
BR1. Peggy Petrzelka. 2000. Choices and Chances: Sociology for Everyday Life by Lorene Tepperman and Angela Djao (San Diego: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich), Rural Sociology, 65:351-353.
D. Editor Reviewed Publications (ER)
ER8. Peggy Petrzelka. 2014. “Absentee Landlords and Agriculture.” Encyclopedia of Agricultural and Food Ethics. P. B. Thompson and D. M. Kaplan (eds.). Springer Reference Publications. Invited.
ER7. Peggy Petrzelka, Sandra Marquart-Pyatt, and Michael Iacolucci†. January 2013. “Designation of the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument and the Impact on Trust.” Institute for Outdoor Recreation and Tourism, Utah State University. http://extension.usu.edu/files/publications/factsheet/IORT031.pdf.
ER6. Peggy Petrzelka and Stephanie Malin†. 2011. “Natural Resource-Based Occupations and Desire for Tourism: Are the Two Necessarily Inconsistent?” Institute for Outdoor Recreation and Tourism, Utah State University. http://extension.usu.edu/files/publications/factsheet/IORT_025.pdf.
† Student co-author
ER5. Peggy Petrzelka, Stephanie Malin†, and Emily Goodwin. 2011. “Rural Tourism and Gendered Nuances.” Institute for Outdoor Recreation and Tourism, Utah State University. http://extension.usu.edu/files/publications/factsheet/IORT_024.pdf.
ER4. Peggy Petrzelka, Tom Buman, and Jamie Ridgely. May/June 2009. “Engaging Absentee Landowners in Conservation Practice Decisions: A Descriptive Study of an Understudied Group.” Journal of Soil and Water Conservation. Vol. 64, No. 3:94A-99A.
ER3. Peggy Petrzelka. 2006. “They Make How Much? Investigating Faculty Salaries to Examine Gender Inequalities” in Teaching Work and Family: Strategies, Activities, and Syllabi, Pp. 201-209. Edited by S. Sweet and M. Pitt-Catsouphes. Washington DC: American Sociological Association. (Reprint of article appearing in Teaching Sociology 2005, 1 of 2 articles selected from Teaching Sociology articles published between 1990 and 2006.)
ER2. Peggy Petrzelka and Susan Mannon. 2006. “Keepin’ This Little Town Going: Gender and Volunteerism in Rural America.” The Rural Sociologist Vol. 26, 3:40-45. (Derived from article published in Gender and Society 2006).
ER1. Peggy Petrzelka. 2006. “Gender, Inequality, Research Methods” in 4th edition of Innovative Techniques for Teaching Sociological Concepts, Pp. 119-120. Edited by S. K. Nenga and E. L. Kain. Washington DC: American Sociological Association. (Derived from article published in Teaching Sociology 2006).
E. Articles and Book Chapters Under Review
X1. Peggy Petrzelka, Colter Ellis, Gene Theodori, Douglas Jackson-Smith. “Frac(k)ing Communities, Fractured Communication: Obstacles to citizens’ engagement in decision making around hydraulic fracturing.” Under review with editors of Governing Shale Gas, to be published by Earthscan from Routledge. Submitted November 2016. Invited.
X2. Peggy Petrzelka, Ann Sorensen, Jennifer Filipiak. Women Agricultural Landowners—Past Time to Put Them “On the Radar”. Under review with Society and Natural Resources. Submitted January 2017.
F. Non-Refereed Reports (NR)
NR5. Peggy Petrzelka and Ann Sorensen. 2016. “Preparing for Outreach and Engagement of Women Non-Operating Landowners and their Operators in the Great Lakes.” Submitted to Great Lakes Protection Fund (Funding Agency).
NR4. Adrian Uzunian†, Peggy Petrzelka, Douglas Jackson-Smith, Colter Ellis, and Gene Theodori. 2016. “Community Resident Perceptions of the Oil & Gas Activity & Industry in the Eagle Ford Shale Play.” Submitted to Houston Advanced Research Center (Funding Agency).
NR3. Colter Ellis, Gene L. Theodori, Peggy Petrzelka and Douglas Jackson-Smith. 2015. “Socially Responsible Drilling: Perspectives of Industry Representatives in the Eagle Ford Shale.” Submitted to Houston Advanced Research Center (Funding Agency).
† Student co-author
NR2. Jebadiha E. Potterf† , Peggy Petrzelka, Douglas Jackson-Smith, Colter Ellis, Gene L. Theodori and Cameron Alex Carmichael†. 2014. “Community Perceptions of the Oil and Gas Industry in the Eagle Ford Shale Play.” Submitted to Houston Advanced Research Center (Funding Agency).
NR1. Peggy Petrzelka and Ann Sorensen. 2014. “Women Non-Operating Landowners (WNOLs):
Overcoming Barriers to Increasing Conservation on Leased Farmland Preliminary Report.” Submitted to Rachel’s Network (Funding Agency).
G. Research Grant Funding
External Research Grants
A. Awarded External Research Grants (EG)
EG9. Peggy Petrzelka, co-PI. 2016. “Working with Non-Operating Landowners and their Lessees to Improve Water Quality in the Great Lakes.” Great Lakes Protection Fund. $1,057,835.
EG8. Peggy Petrzelka, co-PI. 2015. “Developing a Project Plan to Strategically Target Women
Absentee Farmland Owners to Test the Widespread Use of Sustainable Agricultural Leases in Key Watersheds in the Great Lakes Region.” Great Lakes Protection Fund. $88,000.
EG7. Peggy Petrzelka, PI. 2014. “Women Non-Operator Farmland Owners: A Multi-Region Study.”
Rachel’s Network. $25,000.
EG6. Peggy Petrzelka, PI, 2013. “Non-operator Farmland Owners: A National Study.” American Farmland Trust. $50,193.
EG5. Peggy Petrzelka, PI, 2013. “Engagement for Effective Communication: Development and Testing of Best Communication Practices in Eagle Ford Shale Communities.” US Department of Energy. $120,059.
EG4. Peggy Petrzelka, co-PI, 2012. “Technology Improvement Program for Environmentally Friendly Drilling Project.” US Department of Energy. $3000.
EG3. Peggy Petrzelka, co-PI, 2011. “Global Migrants, Guest Workers and Good Mothers: A Study of Gender and (Con)Temporary Labor Migration to Spain”. American Sociological Association Fund for the Advancement of the Discipline. $6978.