Politics of Public Higher Education Scholarship
Public Sociology Publications
Corbin, Michelle and Scott, Tim (2014) “From Public Good to Profitable Commodity”. MTA Today. (October: Fall Issue)
Academic Conference Presentations
“Foreclosing Women’s Studies: How racialized austerity politics threaten Women’s Studies and “public” higher education”
National Women’s Studies Association; Atlanta, GA; November 2018
“No University Left Behind: Transforming Higher Education from Public Good to Profitable Commodity”
National Women’s Studies Association; Milwaukee, WI; November 2015
Public Sociology Conference Presentations
“No University Left Behind: Transforming P-16 Education from Public Good to Profitable Commodity”
Conference: Building a Movement to Reclaim Public Education: Organizing Unions, Empowering Communities, Growing Coalitions; Worcester, MA; November, 2014
Invited Speaker & Workshops
Invited Speaker: Bridge Partnership Program; Bridgewater, MA: July 27, 2018
Event Location: Bridgewater State University
Workshop: “Education Inequality: Race, Class, Education and the American”
Invited Speaker: First Generation to College Summit; Amherst, MA: April 21, 2018
Event Sponsor: Class Action
Location: Mt. Holyoke College
Workshop: “Deep Education, Not Cheap Schooling?: Public Higher Education, Democracy and Social Justice”
Lunch Panel: Faculty & Staff Panel on serving First Generation to College Students
Closing Panel: Workshop summary and synthesis
Academic Conference & Panel Organizing
Conference Co-Organizer: “Public Universities and Neoliberalism Today”; Oct 25, 2018
Host: Center for the Study of Inequality, Social Justice and Policy
Co-Organizer: Dr. Chris Sellers,
Professor of History, SUNY Stonybrook
Director CSISJP
Location: SUNY, Stonybrook
Public Conference Organizing
Conference Planning Committee, Nov. 2014
Conference: Building a Movement to Reclaim Public Education: Organizing Unions, Empowering Communities, Growing Coalitions, Worcester, Ma.
Sponsor: Educators for a Democratic Union
Co-Sponsor: Department of Sociology, Worcester State University
Politics of Public Higher Education Scholarship
Public Sociology Publications
Corbin, Michelle and Scott, Tim (2014) “From Public Good to Profitable Commodity”. MTA Today. (October: Fall Issue)
Academic Conference Presentations
“Foreclosing Women’s Studies: How racialized austerity politics threaten Women’s Studies and “public” higher education”
National Women’s Studies Association; Atlanta, GA; November 2018
“No University Left Behind: Transforming Higher Education from Public Good to Profitable Commodity”
National Women’s Studies Association; Milwaukee, WI; November 2015
Public Sociology Conference Presentations
“No University Left Behind: Transforming P-16 Education from Public Good to Profitable Commodity”
Conference: Building a Movement to Reclaim Public Education: Organizing Unions, Empowering Communities, Growing Coalitions; Worcester, MA; November, 2014
Invited Speaker & Workshops
Invited Speaker: Bridge Partnership Program; Bridgewater, MA: July 27, 2018
Event Location: Bridgewater State University
Workshop: “Education Inequality: Race, Class, Education and the American”
Invited Speaker: First Generation to College Summit; Amherst, MA: April 21, 2018
Event Sponsor: Class Action
Location: Mt. Holyoke College
Workshop: “Deep Education, Not Cheap Schooling?: Public Higher Education, Democracy and Social Justice”
Lunch Panel: Faculty & Staff Panel on serving First Generation to College Students
Closing Panel: Workshop summary and synthesis
Academic Conference & Panel Organizing
Conference Co-Organizer: “Public Universities and Neoliberalism Today”; Oct 25, 2018
Host: Center for the Study of Inequality, Social Justice and Policy
Co-Organizer: Dr. Chris Sellers,
Professor of History, SUNY Stonybrook
Director CSISJP
Location: SUNY, Stonybrook
Public Conference Organizing
Conference Planning Committee, Nov. 2014
Conference: Building a Movement to Reclaim Public Education: Organizing Unions, Empowering Communities, Growing Coalitions, Worcester, Ma.
Sponsor: Educators for a Democratic Union
Co-Sponsor: Department of Sociology, Worcester State University