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Session Submission Type: Paper Session (90 minute)
This session invites papers that examine how consumption practices reproduce, challenge, or transform systems of inequality. We welcome research that explores intersections of class, race, gender, sexuality, and nationality in shaping access to goods, services, and cultural practices. Papers may address topics such as the politics of taste and distinction, consumer debt and financialization, racialized and gendered markets, global supply chains, and alternative forms of consumption. The goal is to highlight how consumption both reflects and reshapes broader structures of power and privilege.
Consuming health or status? Navigating new technology-driven public health programs - Carmen Choong, University of Washington
Customers as a Constraint: Minority Entrepreneurship in U.S. Street Level Marketplaces - Victoria Zhang, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Intersections of Race and Gender in Navigating Racialized Retail Environments - Stacy De Coster, North Carolina State University; Martha Crowley, North Carolina State University; Eucharia Nkem Ozoemenam, North Carolina State University; Mahabuba Islam Meem, North Carolina State University
“It’s nice to see a woman ask questions”: Intersectionality, Stigma, and Harassment at Gun Shows - Callie Cleckner, Arizona State University
Tips, Toes, and Tension: Black Women’s Resistance Practices in US Asian-Dominated Nail Salons - Chaprill Danielle Bostick, Howard University