Spring 2025 Sociology Undergraduate Research Grant Mentors

The Sociology Department is excited to run the Undergraduate Research Grant competition again in Academic Year 2025.

This award gives undergraduate students an opportunity to earn independent study credit while pursuing their own research or working on a faculty member's ongoing project. Following the success of last year's Spring Research Symposium, students will present their research at the end of the spring semester. We encourage you to apply for the chance to win one of five $300 awards.

Applicants must have a faculty mentor who has agreed to serve on the project. Read on to learn about the exciting research being done by faculty who are available to serve as mentors in Spring 2025.

Headshot of Beatriz Aldana Marquez

Beatriz Aldana Marquez

Research Interests: Immigration Detention, Latino Sociology, Critical Race Theory

contact: beatriz.aldana_marquez@uconn.edu

Headshot of Ruth Braunstein

Ruth Braunstein

Research Interests: Religion, US politics, culture, money/taxes, Christian nationalism

contact: ruth.braunstein@uconn.edu

Photo of Laura Bunyan

Laura Bunyan

Research Interests: Gender, work, family

contact: laura.bunyan@uconn.edu

Headshot of Simon Cheng

Simon Cheng

Research Interests: Quantitative Analyses on education and family

(*Only for students who have basic knowledge in quantitative analysis and are willing to work on large-scale secondary datasets)

contact: simon.cheng@uconn.edu

Headshot of David Embrick

David Embrick

Research Interests: Diversity, Race/Place/Space, Racism, Urban/Community, Whitelash

contact: david.embrick@uconn.edu

Headshot of Phoebe Godfrey

Phoebe Godfrey

Research Interests: Social justice, climate change, sustainability, education, food

contact: phoebe.godfrey@uconn.edu

Headshot of Elizabeth Holzer

Elizabeth Holzer

Research Interests: human rights, political sociology, science and technology studies, African studies

contact: elizabeth.holzer@uconn.edu

Headshot of Matthew Hughey

Matthew Hughey

Research Interests: Race, Science, Religion, Media. Ongoing research project on Huey P. Newton, Black Nationalism, and varied theologies

contact: matthew.hughey@uconn.edu

Photo of Elizabeth Jacobs

Elizabeth Jacobs

Research Interests: Immigration, labor, gender, policy

contact: elizabeth.2.jacobs@uconn.edu

Headshot of Christin Munsch

Christin Munsch

Research Interests: Gender, gender identity, work, family, health, discrimination, bias I am particularly looking for students to work on one of two projects. The first is a qualitative study of the medical healthcare experiences of transgender and non-binary people. The second is an experimental study of racial and ethnic discrimination among professors.

contact: christin.munsch@uconn.edu

Headshot of Nancy Naples

Nancy Naples

Research Interests: Professor Naples could train and supervise a student in conducting interviews as part of an ongoing project, which could be done online.

contact: nancy.naples@uconn.edu

Headshot of Jeremy Pais

Jeremy Pais

Research Interests: The environment and sustainable urban development, natural disasters, migration, social stratification over the life course, quantitative methods, neighborhoods and community sociology

contact: jeremy.pais@uconn.edu

Headshot of Kim Price-Glynn

Kim Price-Glynn

Research Interests: Paid and unpaid carework, gender, and qualitative research methods

contact: kim.price-glynn@uconn.edu

Photo of Ingrid Semaan

Ingrid Semaan

Research Interests: social determinants of health, gender/race/class/sexuality-based violence, racial capitalism, fat studies

contact: ingrid.semaan@uconn.edu

Headshot of Simon Shachter

Simon Yamawaki Shachter

Research Interests: Nonprofit organizations, politics, immigration, history, race, cities Interested students should inquire about possibility of working on an ongoing project, "Understanding Urban Political History,” where they would assist in reviewing archival documents from the 1800s and early 1900s from Seattle, Portland, San Francisco, and Los Angeles, to understand what politics was like in each of these cities, how it evolved over time, and how it involved, or not, immigrant groups, elites, and other private organizations.

contact: simonys@uconn.edu

Photo of Professor Raja Staggers-Hakim.

Raja Staggers-Hakim

Research Interests: Racial ethnic health disparities, racism, substance use/substance use disorder, mental health, African Americans/Black, minoritized populations

contact: raja.staggers-hakim@uconn.edu

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Jessica Yorks

Research Interests: Class/Poverty/Mobility, Inequality, Family, Education

contact: jessica.yorks@uconn.edu