FORREST STUART EMPLOYMENT - Sociology

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December 2020FORREST STUARTStanford UniversityDepartment of Sociology450 Jane Stanford Way – Building 120Stanford, CA 94305Email: fstuart@stanford.eduEMPLOYMENT2019—Associate Professor of Sociology, Stanford University.Director, Stanford Ethnography Lab.Advisory Board Member, African and African American Studies.Affiliate, Center for Comparative Studies in Race and Ethnicity.Affiliate, Center for Global Ethnography.Affiliate, Urban Studies Program.2018—2019Associate Professor of Sociology and the College, University of Chicago.2012—2018Assistant Professor of Sociology and the College, University of Chicago.EDUCATION2012Ph.D., Sociology, University of California—Los Angeles.2008M.A., Sociology, University of California—Los Angeles.2006M.S., Justice, Law & Society, American University.2004B.A., Politics, University of California—Santa Cruz.PUBLICATIONSBooks2020Stuart, Forrest. Ballad of the Bullet: Gangs, Drill Music, and the Power of OnlineInfamy. Princeton: Princeton University Press.Reviews: Crime, Media, Culture: An International Journal; TheEconomist; Ethnic and Racial Studies; The Sociological Review.Features: BBC; Chicago Magazine; Chicago Tribune; GQ; TheIntelligence; National Public Radio; Vice.1

December 20202016Stuart, Forrest. Down, Out, and Under Arrest: Policing and Everyday Life in SkidRow. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Awards: American Sociological Association Robert E. Park Book Award(2017); CHOICE Outstanding Academic Title Award (2017); Gordon J.Laing Book Prize (2018); American Sociological Association Law SectionBook Award Honorable Mention (2018); American Society ofCriminology Michael J. Hindelang Award (2019).Reviews: American Journal of Sociology; Canadian Journal of Sociology;Chicago Reader; Choice; Contemporary Sociology; Criminal JusticeReview; Los Angeles Review of Books; Los Angeles Times Book Review;Policing and Society; Public Administration Review; Shelf Awareness;Social Forces; Social Service Review; Society; Theoretical Criminology;Theory in Action; Times Higher Education.Features: Mother Jones; National Public Radio; Publisher’s Weekly(named as a “Big Indie Book of 2016”); South Side Weekly.Articles and Book ChaptersForthcoming Collins, Charles, Forrest Stuart, and Patrick Janulis. “Policing Gentrification orPolicing Displacement?: Testing the Relationship between Order MaintenancePolicing and Neighborhood Change in Los Angeles.” Urban Studies.2020White, Kailey, Forrest Stuart, and Shannon L. Morrissey. “Whose Lives Matter?:Race, Space, and the Devaluation of Homicide Victims in MinorityCommunities.” Sociology of Race and Ethnicity doi:10.1177/2332649220948184.2020Stuart, Forrest, Alicia Riley, and Hossein Pourreza. “A Human-MachinePartnered Approach for Identifying Social Media Signals of Elevated TraumaticGrief in Chicago Gang Territories.” PLOS ONE 15(7): e0236625.2020Stuart, Forrest. “Code of the Tweet: Urban Gang Violence in the Social MediaAge.” Social Problems 67 (2): 191-207.American Sociological Association Communication, InformationTechnology, and Media Sociology (CITAMS) Section Article Award,2020.2018Herbert, Steve, Katherine Beckett, and Forrest Stuart. “Policing SocialMarginality: Contrasting Approaches.” Law and Social Inquiry 43 (4): 14911513.2

December 20202018Stuart, Forrest, and Ava Benezra. “Criminalized Masculinities: How PolicingShapes the Construction of Gender and Sexuality in Poor Black Communities.”Social Problems 65 (2): 174-190.2017Miller, Reuben Jonathan, and Forrest Stuart. “Carceral Citizenship: Race, Rights,and Responsibility in the Age of Mass Supervision.” Theoretical Criminology 21(4): 532-548.2017Stuart, Forrest. “Reflexivity: Introspection, Positionality, and the Self as ResearchInstrument—Toward a Model of Abductive Reflexivity.” Approaches toEthnography, edited by Colin Jerolmack and Shamus Khan. New York: OxfordUniversity Press.2017Stuart, Forrest, and Reuben Jonathan Miller. “The Prisonized Old Head:Intergenerational Socialization and the Fusion of Ghetto and Prison Culture.”Journal of Contemporary Ethnography 46 (6): 673-698.2016Stuart, Forrest, and Steve Herbert. “The Police and Inequality: Tale of TwoCities.” The Sage Handbook of Global Policing, edited by Ben Bradford, BeatriceJauregui, Ian Loader, and Jonny Steinberg. London: Sage. (equal authorship)2016Stuart, Forrest. “Becoming ‘Copwise’: Policing, Culture, and the CollateralConsequences of Street-Level Criminalization.” Law and Society Review 50 (2):279-313. [Lead Article]Law and Society Association Article Award, 2017.2015Stuart, Forrest, Amada Armenta, and Melissa Osborne. “Legal Control ofMarginal Groups.” Annual Review of Law and Social Science11: 235-254.2015Stuart, Forrest. “On the Streets, Under Arrest: Policing Homelessness in theTwenty-First Century.” Sociology Compass 9 (11): 940-950.2014Stuart, Forrest. “From ‘Rabble Management’ to ‘Recovery Management’:Policing Homelessness in Marginal Urban Space.” Urban Studies 51 (9): 19091925.2013Deener, Andrew, Steve Erie, Vlad Kogan, and Forrest Stuart. “Planning LA: TheNew Politics of Neighborhood Development and Downtown Revitalization.” InNew York and Los Angeles: The Uncertain Future, edited by David Halle andAndrew A. Beveridge. New York: Oxford University Press. (equal authorship)2011Stuart, Forrest. “Constructing Police Abuse after Rodney King: How Skid RowResidents and the LAPD Contest Video Evidence.” Law and Social Inquiry 36(2): 327-353. [Lead Article]3

December 2020Law and Society Association Graduate Student Paper Award (HonorableMention), 2016.2011Stuart, Forrest. “Race, Space, and the Regulation of Surplus Labor: PolicingAfrican-Americans in Los Angeles’ Skid Row.” Souls: A Critical Journal ofBlack Politics, Culture, and Society 13 (2): 197-212.2010Stuart, Forrest. “From the Shop to the Streets: UNITE HERE Organizing in LosAngeles Hotels.” In Working for Justice: The L.A. Model of Organizing andAdvocacy, edited by Ruth Milkman, Victor Narro, and Joshua Bloom. Ithaca:Cornell University Press.2008Saguy, Abigail, and Forrest Stuart. “Culture and Law: Beyond a Paradigm ofCause and Effect.” The Annals of the American Academy of Political and SocialScience 619: 149-164.Book Reviews2015Stuart, Forrest. Review of Pulled Over: How Police Stops Define Race andCitizenship, by Charles R. Epp, Steven Maynard-Moody, and Donald HaiderMarkel. Theoretical Criminology 19 (1): 133-135.2014Stuart, Forrest. Review of God’s Gangs: Barrio Ministry, Masculinity, and GangRecovery, by Edward Orozco Flores. American Journal of Sociology 120 (2):613-615.2014Stuart, Forrest. Review of Down and Out in Los Angeles and Berlin: TheSociospatial Exclusion of Homeless People, by Jürgen von Mahs. AmericanJournal of Sociology 119 (5): 1489-1491.2012Stuart, Forrest. Review of Hobos, Hustlers and Backsliders: Homeless in SanFrancisco, by Teresa Gowan. Sociological Forum 27 (3): 793-797.Reports, Essays, and Other WritingForthcoming Stuart, Forrest. “Urban Ethnography.” Oxford Bibliographies.2017Stuart, Forrest. “Public Criminology for Whom?: Bringing ‘Organic’ PublicScholarship Out of the Shadows.” The Criminologist 42 (2): 1-6.2016Stuart, Forrest. “How Zero Tolerance Policing Pits the Poor against the Poor:Lessons from Los Angeles’ Skid Row.” Mother Jones. August.2016Stuart, Forrest, and Elly Fishman. “Dispatches from the Rap Wars: My 18 MonthsInside One of Chicago’s Most Notorious Gangs.” Chicago Magazine. October.Nominated for the Lisagor Award for Best Feature Story, 2016.4

December 20202016Stuart, Forrest. “Watching the Police: Let’s All Start Filming, Early and Often.”Wired Magazine. October.2008Blasi, Gary, and Forrest Stuart. “Has the Safer Cities Initiative in Skid RowReduced Serious Crime?” Los Angeles: UCLA School of Law.Work in ProgressUnder Review Stuart, Forrest, and Katherine Beckett. “Un-Policing Behavioral Health: AFramework for Reducing Police Harms and Improving Outcomes for VulnerablePopulations.” (article manuscript)Under Review Beckett, Katherine, and Forrest Stuart. “Dignity in the Management of DrugAddiction: The Case of Seattle’s LEAD Program.” (article manuscript)Under Review Stuart, Forrest. “The Unintended Effects of Community Policing.” (articlemanuscript)In ProgressStuart, Forrest, Andrew Miller, and Charles Collins. “Network Epistemics: HowYouth in Violent Neighborhoods Discover and Disclose NetworkCharacteristics.” (article manuscript)In ProgressStuart, Forrest and Hesu Yoon. “Cultural Diffusion and the Appropriation ofUrban Slang on Twitter.” (article manuscript)HONORS AND 20152015MacArthur Fellowship, John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation.Gordon and Dailey Pattee Faculty Fellowship, Stanford University.American Sociological Association Communications, Information Technology,and Media Sociology (CITAMS) Section Article Award (“Code of the Tweet”).Faculty Research Fellowship, Center for Comparative Studies in Race andEthnicity, Stanford University.American Society of Criminology Michael J. Hindelang Award (Down, Out, andUnder Arrest).American Sociological Association Law Section Book Award (HonorableMention) (Down, Out, and Under Arrest).Gordon J. Laing Book Prize (Down, Out, and Under Arrest).CHOICE Outstanding Academic Title Award (Down, Out, and Under Arrest).American Sociological Association Robert E. Park Award for Best Book inCommunity and Urban Sociology (Down, Out, and Under Arrest).University of Chicago Women’s Board Research Grant.Law and Society Association Article Award.Woodrow Wilson Career Enhancement Fellowship.Social Sciences Divisional Grant, University of Chicago.5

December 102010200920082007Ethnography Project Junior Fellowship, Yale University.Urban Health Initiative Faculty Fellowship.Neubauer Collegium for Culture and Society Seed Grant, University of Chicago.Social Sciences Divisional Grant, University of Chicago.Social Sciences Divisional Grant, University of Chicago.John Randolph and Dora Haynes Foundation Dissertation Fellowship.Dissertation Fellowship, UCLA.Law and Society Association Best Graduate Student Paper Prize (HonorableMention).American Sociological Association Minority Fellowship.Ford Foundation Predoctoral Fellowship (Alternate).Distinguished Teaching Award, UCLA.Charles E. and Sue K. Young Graduate Student Award.Department of Sociology Graduate Teaching Award, UCLA.Peter Kollock Distinguished Graduate Teaching Award, UCLA.Graduate Summer Research Mentorship Award, UCLA.UC Diversity Initiative for Graduate Study in the Social Sciences SummerResearch Award.INVITED LECTURES AND TALKS2020“Ballad of the Bullet.” Yale University – Urban Ethnography Workshop, October. Yale University – Center for Empirical Research on Social Inequality,October. University of California, Santa Barbara – Gender Workshop, October. Northwestern University – Crime, Law, and Society Workshop,November. University of Pennsylvania – Urban Studies Annual Lecture, November. Chicago Humanities Festival, November.“Fields, Fabrications, and Felonies.” Stanford University – Platformed Creation Virtual Symposium, October.“Un-Policing Behavioral Health.” University of Chicago – Reimagining/Reinventing Policing Symposium,July.“Toward a Digital Urban Ethnography?” Stanford University – Center for Global Ethnography, January.2019“Down, Out, and Under Arrest.” Boston University – Department of Sociology, February.“The Promise and Peril of Citizen Police Videos.”6

December 2020 2018UCLA – Center for Language, Interaction, and Culture, February.“Violence in the Digital Age.” UC—Berkley, Center for the Study of Law and Society, September.“Down, Out, and Under Arrest.” Pomona College – Department of Sociology, March. UC—Irvine – Department of Criminology, Law, and Society, April. Miami University – Penny Lecture Series, April. Colorado College – O’Connor Lecture, September.2017“Violence in the Digital Age.” Harvard University – Poverty, Violence, and the Policy ResponseSymposium, January. American Bar Foundation, October. University of Chicago Paris Center – “Black Metropolis” Symposium,November.“Down, Out, and Under Arrest.” Ohio State University – Department of Sociology, February. Northwestern University – Department of Sociology, May. Stanford University – Department of Sociology, October. University of Washington—Bothell – SIAS, October. University of Texas—Austin – Department of Sociology, October.“Performing Innocence: How Homeless Individuals Respond to Policing.” University of California—Riverside – Homelessness, Crime, and PublicPolicy Symposium, February.2016“Policing, Culture, and the Collateral Consequences of Street-LevelCriminalization.” UCLA – Department of Sociology, January. Duke University – Department of Sociology, January. University of Kansas – Hall Center for the Humanities, September. Cornell University – Department of Policy Analysis and Management,September.2015“Problematizing Community Policing.” University of Chicago – City/Cité: A Transatlantic Exchange, November.“Confidentiality, Journalists, and Boxes of Donuts: How Do We EvaluateEthnography?” Northwestern University – Politics of Ethnography Symposium,November.7

December 2020“Who is Mr. Ticket?” Yale University – Policing Post Ferguson Conference, April.2014“Cop Wisdom and the Emerging Cultural Context in Criminalized UrbanNeighborhoods.” University of Pennsylvania – Department of Sociology, December. Yale University – Department of Sociology, October. New York University – Department of Sociology, October. University of California Berkeley – Department of Sociology, September.“Becoming ‘Copwise’”: How the Urban Poor Negotiate Hyperpolicing inEveryday Street Life.” Yale University – Yale Ethnography Conference, April. CSU Fullerton – Department of Sociology, March 2014. Northwestern University – Urban Sociology Workshop, February.2013“Becoming ‘Copwise’”: How the Urban Poor Negotiate Hyperpolicing inEveryday Street Life.” University of Chicago – Urban Network Emerging Scholars Lecture,November.“‘Cooling off the Block’: Informal Social Control in a Hyper-PolicedNeighborhood” Ohio State University – Racial Democracy, Crime, and Justice Network,July.“Policing Urban Poverty in the 21st Century.” American Bar Foundation, January. Northern Illinois University – Department of Sociology, January.2012“Policing Urban Poverty in the 21st Century.” University of Illinois, Chicago – Department of Sociology, November.2011“Policing Rock Bottom: Regulation, Rehabilitation, and Resistance on SkidRow.” Brown University – Department of Sociology and Urban Studies,November. University of Chicago – Department of Sociology, November. University of Wisconsin, Madison – Department of Sociology, November. University of California, Irvine – Criminology, Law and Society, October. University of Denver – Department of Sociology and Criminology,October.2010“Local Solutions to Global Economic and Ecological Crises: Gardening andUrban Farming in the Black Community of Los Angeles.”8

December 2020 CSU Long Beach (with Edna Bonacich).TEACHINGStanford UniversityThe Social Life of NeighborhoodsThe Sociology of MusicEthnographic and Fieldwork MethodsQualitative and Fieldwork Methods WorkshopUniversity of ChicagoPower, Identity, ResistanceUrban EthnographyCrime and the CityUrban Structure and ProcessDoctoral Writing SeminarUniversity of California—Los AngelesIntroduction to SociologyEthnography in Los AngelesSociology of Deviant BehaviorSociology of Race and LaborPROFESSIONAL SERVICEBook Review EditorAmerican Journal of Sociology (2016—2018)Editorial BoardQualitative Sociology (2019—)Theoretical Criminology (2018—)Sociological Theory (2016—2020)American Journal of Sociology (2012—2018)Law and Social Inquiry (2012—2016)ReviewerAmerican Journal of SociologyCity and CommunityJournal of PovertyLaw and Social InquiryLaw and Society ReviewPunishment and SocietySocial Forces9

December 2020Social ProblemsSociological ForumTheoretical CriminologyMemberAmerican Society of CriminologyAmerican Sociological AssociationLaw and Society AssociationSociety for the Study of Social Problems10

2018—2019 Associate Professor of Sociology and the College, University of Chicago. 2012—2018 Assistant Professor of Sociology and the College, University of Chicago. EDUCATION 2012 Ph.D., Sociology, University of Calif

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