Jason Beckfield

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Jason Beckfield
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Jason Beckfield (Boston, Massachusetts, 2022)
Born (1976-03-17) March 17, 1976 (age 47)
Alma mater Indiana University
Known forContributions to social inequality, political sociology, population health, and climate change.
Scientific career
FieldsSociology
Institutions Harvard University University of Chicago
Doctoral advisor Arthur Alderson
Other academic advisorsClem Brooks, Patricia McManus, Robert V. Robertson
Notable students Benjamin Cornwell, Anny Fenton, Benjamin Sosnaud, Linda Zhao

Jason Beckfield is an American sociologist. He is the Robert G. Stone Jr. Professor of Sociology at Harvard University.

Contents

Early life

Jason Beckfield was born to Cathy and Albert Beckfield in 1976. He grew up in Joplin, Missouri and graduated from Truman State University. [1] [2] He earned his Ph.D. in Sociology from Indiana University, Bloomington. [2]

Career

Beckfield was an assistant professor of Sociology at the University of Chicago from 2004 to 2007. [2] He joined Harvard University as assistant professor in 2007, and became a tenured professor in 2011. [2] He later served as the department chair. [1] He is an affiliate scholar of the Stanford Center on Poverty & Inequality at Stanford University. [3] He is also the Associate Director of the Center for Population and Development Studies at Harvard .

His research focuses on social inequality, especially in the European Union. [1] [2] He has also written about world polity theory. [2] [4] His work has been published in numerous outlets, including American Journal of Public Health, American Journal of Sociology, American Sociological Review, and Annual Review of Sociology, among others.

He is perhaps best known for his work documenting the role that different cities play in connecting international networks of investment and trade, giving rise to a world city system. [5] This approach has helped to refine and expand work on the world system. His research shows persistent inequality in different countries' ties to international non-governmental organizations (INGOs) – levels that rival world income inequality. [6] His book, Unequal Europe: Regional integration and the rise of European inequality, shows how growing integration among European national economies has simultaneously increased inequality among European households. [7] [8]

His work also shows how the structure of national political systems and income inequality combine to perpetuate consequential health inequities within societies. [9] [10] [11]

Personal life

Beckfield has two children. [1] [2]

Selected scholarly works

Related Research Articles

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References

  1. 1 2 3 4 "Jason Beckfield". Department of Sociology. Harvard University. Retrieved October 1, 2017.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "Alumnus Finds a Home at Harvard". Truman Review. June 5, 2014. Retrieved October 1, 2017.
  3. "National & International Affiliates". Stanford Center on Poverty & Inequality. Stanford University. Retrieved October 1, 2017.
  4. Beckfield, Jason (August 2008). "The Dual World Polity: Fragmentation and Integration in the Network of Intergovernmental Organizations" (PDF). Social Problems. 55 (3): 419–442. doi:10.1525/sp.2008.55.3.419. S2CID   43679196.
  5. Alderson, Arthur S., and Jason Beckfield. 2004. "Power and Position in the World City System." American Journal of Sociology 109:811-851.
  6. Beckfield, Jason. 2003. “Inequality in the World Polity: The Structure of International Organization.” American Sociological Review 68:401-424.
  7. Beckfield, Jason. 2019. Unequal Europe: How Regional Integration Reshaped the Welfare State and Reversed the Egalitarian Turn. Oxford University Press.
  8. Beckfield, Jason. "European integration and income inequality." American Sociological Review 71, no. 6 (2006): 964-985.
  9. Beckfield, Jason. 2004. "Does Income Inequality Harm Health? New Cross-National Evidence." Journal of Health and Social Behavior 45(3):231-248.
  10. Beckfield, Jason, Clare Bambra, Terje A. Eikemo, Tim Huijts, Courtney McNamara, and Claus Wendt. 2015. "An Institutional Theory of Welfare State Effects on the Distribution of Population Health." Social Theory & Health 13:227-244.
  11. Beckfield, Jason, and Nancy Krieger. 2009. "Epi+ demos+ cracy: Linking Political Systems and Priorities to the Magnitude of Health Inequities—Evidence, Gaps, and a Research Agenda." Epidemiologic Reviews 31(1):152-177.