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Downey, Liam

Associate Professor

Positions

Research Areas research areas

Research

research overview

  • Liam Downey has two primary areas of research. In a book published in 2015, Inequality, Democracy, and the Environment, I study the role that elite-controlled organizations, institutions, and networks play in harming people, societies, and the environment, focusing in particular on elitecontrolled policy planning networks, armed violence organized by the state, commodity chain power, and international trade and finance institutions such as the World Bank and the World Trade Organization. In a recently published book, I study the role that violence, broadly defined, plays in producing social order, with a particular emphasis on gender and race violence, the violence of profit and consumption, and the violence of U.S. militarism.

keywords

  • environmental sociology, inequality democracy and the environment, natural resource extraction and violence, political economy, political sociology, violence and social order

Publications

selected publications

Teaching

courses taught

  • SOCY 1001 - Introduction to Sociology
    Primary Instructor - Fall 2018 / Fall 2019 / Fall 2020 / Fall 2021 / Fall 2022 / Fall 2023
    Examines basic sociological ideas including social relations, social interaction, social structure, and social change. Examples are drawn from societies around the world.
  • SOCY 1021 - United States Race and Ethnic Relations
    Primary Instructor - Spring 2020
    Examines how concepts of race and ethnicity have manifested historically and manifest currently in U.S. society. Covers foundational concepts such as prejudice, discrimination, and privilege. Also addresses the structural causes and consequences of race and ethnicity in various aspects of U.S. society, such as the housing market, the criminal justice system, and education.
  • SOCY 4027 - Inequality, Democracy, and the Environment
    Primary Instructor - Fall 2018 / Fall 2019 / Spring 2021 / Fall 2021 / Fall 2022 / Fall 2023
    Focuses on the structural forces affecting environmental degradation and environmental behavior by examining the relationships between (a) inequality and democratic decision making and (b) undemocratic decision making; U.S. and corporate food and energy policy; and global environmental degradation. Focuses on the role that global inequality plays in fostering environmental degradation. Same as ENVS 4027.
  • SOCY 5350 - Comparison, Narrative, Meaning, and Method in Historical Sociology
    Primary Instructor - Spring 2022 / Spring 2024
    Examines the comparative, narrative, and interpretive methods historical sociologists use when investigating temporally unfolding social processes occurring in the recent or distant past. Through an introduction to the methodological literature and a close reading of exemplary historical research, students will learn to (a) critically evaluate historical sociological research and (b) design methodologically sophisticated historical research projects that address questions that most interest them, potentially incorporating ethnographic and/or quantitative methods into their research designs. Previously offered as a special topics course.
  • SOCY 6017 - Inequality, Democracy, and the Environment
    Primary Instructor - Spring 2018 / Fall 2020 / Spring 2023
    Focuses on the structural forces affecting environmental degradation and environmental behavior by examining the relationships between a) inequality and democratic decision making and b) undemocratic economic and political decision making, U.S. and corporate food and energy policy; and global environmental degradation. Focus will also be placed on the role that global inequality plays in fostering environmental degradation.
  • SOCY 7171 - Special Topics
    Primary Instructor - Spring 2019
    May be repeated up to 9 total credit hours.

Background

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