Department of Sociology |
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FACULTY & STAFF faculty |
Faculty Nancy T. Ammerman | Professor Emily Barman | Associate Professor Jeff Coulter | Professor Susan Eckstein | Professor Julian Go | Associate Professor Alya Guseva | Associate Professor Stephen Kalberg | Associate Professor Nazli Kibria | Associate Professor Ashley Mears | Assistant Professor Sigrun Olafsdottir | Assistant Professor Laurel Smith-Doerr | Associate Professor John Stone | Professor David Swartz | Assistant Professor Peter Yeager | Associate Professor
Part-time Faculty Susan Holsapple| Adjunct Professor Patricia Rieker | Visiting Professor
Emeritus Faculty Peter Berger Sally Whelan Cassidy Adelaide M. Cromwell Mark G. Field S.M Miller Paule Verdet Eugene Walter
Senior Teaching Fellows Cara Bowman | Economic Sociology Courtney Feldscher | The Workplace Don Gillis | Boston's People Itai Vardi | Race, Ethnic, and Minority Relations
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![]() Peter Yeager Sociology 261 | 617.358.0635 | pcyeager@bu.edu BIO AND RESEARCH In our classrooms I presently teach courses in the sociology of law, crime and punishment, and deviancy and social control. I have also taught courses in medical sociology, social issues, and white-collar crime, and have additional interests in the sociology of the professions, organizational sociology, and environmental sociology. In my courses I use the theoretical insights of classical and contemporary sociology to assess a wide array of contemporary social issues and policy responses to them. In addition to the excitement of teaching, I have greatly enjoyed watching former students go on to excel in diverse fields, including among others law, social welfare (social work, nonprofits), medicine, professional sociology, business and politics. Despite their obvious differences, my various research projects are linked by my enduring interest in systems of rules, from persons’ codes of ordinary morality and basic norms of social interaction to the informal expectations of bureaucracies and the formalized laws of governments. I am especially interested in ways in which these various rule systems intersect with each other, requiring individuals and groups to navigate between often inconsistent or even contradictory expectations for their behavior. How these rules systems operate, and how persons navigate these various sorts of expectations and dilemmas in their private, work and public lives, are questions that have motivated my research into such matters as juvenile delinquents attitudes toward criminal laws, lawbreaking by powerful corporations, constraints on government’s ability to make and enforce environmental law, and the handling of ethical dilemmas by managers and executives in large companies. I have also become interested in questions regarding professional ethics, in particular the ways in which the special obligations in such professions as law, medicine, science, engineering and accounting are either realized or confounded as professionals carry out their work in organizations. In this area I have spent a year as a Faculty Fellow in Ethics in Harvard University’s Program in Ethics in the Professions, and I have advised the U.S. government on its initiative in recent years to build a policy-advising research agenda to examine misconduct in scientific research. SELECT PUBLICATIONS The Limits of Law: The Public Regulation of Private Pollution, Cambridge University Press, 1991, 1993. ‘Science, Values and Politics: An Insider’s Reflections on Corporate Crime Research.’ ‘Environmental Lawbreaking in Business.’ In Michael Tonry (ed.), Handbook on Crime and Public Policy, Oxford University Press, 2009. With Sally S. Simpson. “Understanding Corporate Lawbreaking: From Profit-Seeking to Law-Finding.” In Henry Pontell and Gilbert Geis (eds.), International Handbook of White-Collar and Corporate Crime. Springer, 2007. "Management, Morality and Law: Organizational Forms and Ethical Deliberations." In Frank Pearce and Laureen Snider [eds.], Corporate Crime: Contemporary Debates. The University of Toronto Press, 1995. "Fielding Hot Topics in Cool Settings: The Study of Corporate Ethics." In Jonathan B. Imber and Rosanna Hertz [eds.], Studying Elites Using Qualitative Methods. Sage Publications, 1995. With Kathy E. Kram. |
| Department of Sociology | 96-100 Cummington Street | Boston, MA | 02215 | tel. 617.353.2591 | socinfo@bu.edu | ||