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Minority Fellowship Program


Minority Fellowship Program


About the ASA Minority Fellowship Program

Through its Minority Fellowship Program (MFP), the American Sociological Association (ASA) supports the development and training of sociologists of color in any sub-area or specialty in the discipline. Funded by generous annual contributions from organizations such as Alpha Kappa Delta, Sociologists for Women in Society, Association for Black Sociologists, Southwestern Sociological Association, as well as membership donations, MFP seeks to attract talented doctoral students to ensure a diverse and highly trained workforce is available to assume leadership roles in research that is relevant to today’s global society (courtesy of ASA website 2010).


Congratulations to

Sean Arayasirikul, 2011-2012

  Recipient of the 2011-2012 Alpha Kappa Delta MFP

Jean Shin and Sean Arayasirikul

Undergraduate Institution: University of California - Los Angeles

Graduate Institution: University of California-San Francisco

Sean is an early-stage Ph.D. student whose research roots lie in social justice; LGBT activism; and HIV/AIDS prevention, care, and research. He recently completed a Health Policy Fellowship at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services in the Office of Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, where he authored and championed national Healthy People 2020 objectives, emphasizing the integral role of social support in making healthy decisions.  Sean is investigating the role and impact of social structures on health and illness.

 


Eugenia Conde

  Recipient of the 2010-2011 Alpha Kappa Delta MFP


Undergraduate Institution: Clark University
Graduate Institution: Texas A & M University

Eugenia grew up in Actopan Hidalgo, Mexico. When she was 16 years old, she immigrated to the United States. She received her bachelor’s degree in Psychology and Philosophy from Clark University in Massachusetts and holds two master’s degrees, one in Vocational Rehabilitation from the University of Texas at Austin and the other in Epidemiology from the Texas A&M University Health Science Center. She is currently a doctoral candidate in demography and sociology at Texas A&M University and is now writing her dissertation. Her main areas of interest are demography, medical sociology, and statistics and research methods. She is especially interested in the application of these research areas to health disparities and the fertility of minorities in the United States. In her dissertation, she is investigating the factors that contribute to high rates of teen pregnancy among minorities, with a special focus on Latinas. Eugenia is specifically addressing the relationship between access to education and teen pregnancy. Additionally, among her other ongoing research projects is an analysis of the impacts of missing data on hypothesis testing.


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