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Session Submission Type: Paper Session (90 minute)
The relationship between the state and the economy is a core area of sociological inquiry. Law and legal institutions are primary mechanisms states use to construct markets, achieve policy goals, and distribute resources. This session features scholars connecting the law’s role in co-constructing states and markets to other core areas of sociological inquiry, including (but not limited to) inequality, stratification, race, gender, family, labor, and migration. Submissions can engage with these issues from various theoretical, empirical or methodological perspectives, and address implications at local, national, or global levels.
Carceral Dependence: Federal Opportunity and Criminal-Legal Expansion in West Virginia - Ella June Siegrist, Washington University in St. Louis
Collateral Damage: Gender Stratification and Secured Transaction Reform in Latin American Credit Markets - Majo Ágreda, Cornell University
From Principle to Percentile: Federal Poverty Guidelines and the Metrication of Criminal Indigency - Kevin Dahaghi, Rutgers University-New Brunswick
Institutional Marxism, Infrastructural Power, and Unauthorized Migration: Toward a New Theory of Migration Control - David Feldman, DePauw University
Shareholder Activism, Corporate Social Justice, and the Fate of LGBTQ+ Liberalism - Joanna Wuest, Stony Brook University