William Goode Book Awards
1985 Jessie Bernard, The Pennysylvania State University 1986 Not awarded 1987 Alan MacFarlane, University of Cambridge 1988 1) Frank Furstenberg, J. Brooks-Gunn, and S. Philip Morgan, University of Pennsylvania 2) Lenore Weitzman, Harvard University 1989 Steven Ruggles 1990 Judith Blake, 1991 Not awarded 1992 A.F. Robertson 1993 Eleanor E. Maccoby and Robert H. Mnookin 1994 Gay C. Kitson, University of Akron 1995 1) Arland Thornton, University of Michigan and Hui-Sheng Lin, Taiwan Provincial Institute of Family Planning 2) Sara McLanahan, Princetown and Gary Sandefur, University of Wisconsin 1996 Toby L. Parcel and Elizabeth G. Menaghan, The Ohio State University 1997 John R. Logan and Glenna Spitze, State University of New York-Albany 1998 Donna L. Franklin, Lorna Linda University 1999 Steven L. Nock, University of Virginia 2000 Anita I. Garey, University of New Hampshire 2001 Cecilia Menjiver 2002 Glen Elder (University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill) and Rand D. Conger (University of California-Davis) 2003 Not awarded 2004 Annette Lareau, Temple University 2005 Mary Blair Loy, University of California-San Diego 2006 Karthryn Edin and Maria Kefalas, University of Pennsylvania 2007 Arland Thornton, University of Michigan 2008 Madonna Harrinton Meyer and Pamela Herd, Syracuse University 2009 Pamela Stone, Hunter College and CUNY 2010 Allison Pugh, University of Virginia 2011 1) Joanna Dreby, Divided by Borders: Mexican Migrants and Their Children. University of California Press, 2010. 2) Brian Powell, Catherine Bolzendahl, Claudie Geist, and Lala Carr Steelman, Counted Out: Same-Sex Relations and Americans' Definitions of Family. Russell Sage Foundation, 2010.
The purpose of the Section on Family is to encourage the development of sociological perspectives on families, to bring together those who study and teach about families, and to consider the implications of such analyses for public policy, politics and professional practice. The section seeks to foster understanding of family structures and practices, of differences between and within families and of those social institutions and forces -- race, class, and gender; the economy, culture, social movements, the law, and demographic trends -- that shape families or are shaped by them. Do you have a question to ask the ASA Family Section? Please fill out the contact form below and submit your question and an officer will respond promptly. Section on Family Contact Form
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