While technology may be an ongoing theme in my research, my background in Sociology and feminist theory provide the lenses through which I interpret the world. I see the area of Public Administration/Affairs as being the site for transforming theory into practice and action. A continuing aspect of my work, both inside and outside of academia, is social equity. I look at the ways in which race, class, and gender, in addition to other categories, interact within society, often stratifying it according to the "matrix of domination," which denotes the ways in which these classifications interact to privilege certain groups over others. The term 'matrix' is used here because it indicates that these categories do not simply have an additive effect of discrimination and oppression (or conversely, privilege), but instead, they affect different people differently depending on other circumstances. Without more knowledge of how these interactions occur, we will not be able to better tailor public policy decisions to help more groups in society, nor will we be able to understand the ways that the government and nonprofit sectors may be reaching or not reaching these populations in effective ways.
My current research for this semester centers around three main projects:
- I am working with a group of classmates to assist the Richmond Public Library System in determining how to continue making the library a relevant source of information in the age of technology. In this, we will be exploring ways to position the library as a leader in the community to better effect social change through increasing access to technology and facilitating improved use of technology.
- Continuing my research from last spring comparing the reactions of the U.S. government following 9/11 with the U.K. response following the 7/7 London bombings, I will be comparing the approaches that both the U.S. and the Spanish governments took following so-called "fourth wave" terrorist attacks (foreign attacks by non-state actors) of 9/11 and the 2004 Madrid train bombings, both believed to be perpetrated by al-Qaeda .
- In late February 2010, I will be presenting a paper that applies postmodern and feminist theoretical lenses to the 9/11 Commission Report's analysis and recommendations and illustrates how approaching a global event from a single perspective, in this case the Public Administration field, will only provide limited understanding of events.
I hope you blog about your work with the public library. I would be interested in your group's findings.
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