Melanie Penny
Graduate Student in
Sociology and Social Policy
Biographical Note
Melanie Rose Penny hails from Compton, CA, and has arrived at Harvard after spending five years on the Stanford University farm. She received her bachelor's degree in Political Science in 2002, and spent most of 2003 working as a research assistant in Stanford's Departments of Communication and Psychology, studying a wide range of race-related issues. Her senior thesis dealt with the effect of the news media on the creation of criminal justice policy and the resultant disproportionate incarceration of African-American youth. Melanie's many research interests revolve around the issue of perception and the way in which popular perceptions can significantly influence the content of social acts. Currently, she is studying how neighborhood-level perceptions may affect the quality of life experienced within various neighborhood contexts. Although she is most frequently consumed by the weight of pressing social issues, in her lighter moments, Ms. Penny enjoys partaking of the comedic stylings and social commentary of Martin Lawrence and Eddie Murphy (the early years).
10/25/2007
Curriculum Vitae
- Research Interests
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Social Organization, Perception, Law and Society, Race, Media, Stigma
- Previous Degrees
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Stanford University, BA, Political Science
| Teaching Experience |
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SOC189 |
Law and Social Movements |
Teaching Fellow
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SOC 185 |
Race and Crime in American |
Teaching Fellow
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SA66 |
Race, Ethnicity, and Politics |
Teaching Fellow
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- Qualifying Paper Title
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The Perceptual Basis of Social Organization
- Committee
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William J. Wilson, Robert Sampson, Wendy Mendes (Department of Psychology)
- Abstract
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Traditional literature on the subject of social organization argues that it is the condition of being organized that produces positive community outcomes. These theories strongly assert that neighborhood characteristics matter, only insomuch as they determine the organizational state that a community is able to achieve. However, if neighborhood attributes are significant determinants of the level of social organization achieved by the community, theorists fail to specify why communities with ostensibly identical characteristics may nonetheless realize divergent levels of social organization—and eventually outcomes. The research I present argues that scholars must consider the factors that influence residents’ willingness to engage within their communities, instead of narrowly focusing on neighborhood traits believed to impact their ability to become organized. In this paper I will use experimental survey methods to argue that the decisions to engage in community social organization are not only dependent on objective neighborhood characteristics, but also influenced by normative community evaluations transmitted across individuals.
Miscellaneous Additional Information
- Oral Exam Topic
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Neighborhood Social Organization
- Conferences at Which I've Made Presentations
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Eastern Sociological Society
Inequality Summer Institute, Harvard University
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