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Curriculum Vitae ALFONSO MORALES, PH.D. Home: 5302 Shawano Terrace Madison, WI 53705 (608) 238-3537 (608) 770-2652 (cell) Office: University of Wisconsin – Madison Department of Urban and Regional Planning 925 Bascom Mall 104 Old Music Hall Madison, WI 53706 (608) 263-4848 (608) 262-9307 e-mail: [email protected] Education: Ph.D. Northwestern University, June, 1993. Dissertation: “Making Money at the Market: The Social and Economic Logic of Informal Markets.” Directed by Arthur L. Stinchcombe A.M. Sociology, University of Chicago, 1989. Masters Thesis: "Property Rights and Informal Economic Activity: An Ethnographic and Historical Analysis of the Maxwell Street Market.” Directed by Richard Taub M.A. Political Economy, University of Texas at Dallas, 1987. Concentration in Economic Development, Formal Organizations and Strategic Planning B.A. Sociology/Economics, New Mexico State University, 1984. Employment 8-07/ Present Assistant Professor of Urban and Regional Planning, The University of Wisconsin at Madison. Affiliated with Chican@/o Latin@/o Studies. 1-05/6-07 Visiting Assistant Professor of Sociology, The University of Wisconsin at Madison. 8-98/12-04 Assistant Professor of Sociology and Anthropology (Chicano Studies, the Center for Law and Border Studies, the Center for Inter-American and Border Studies), The University of Texas at El Paso, El Paso, TX. 6-96/5-98 Assistant Professor of Sociology and Mexican American Studies, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ. 6-95/5-96 Ford Foundation Minority Post-doctoral Fellowship. 8-93/5-95 Assistant Professor of Sociology and Assistant Research Social Scientist, Mexican American Studies and Research Center, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ. 12-84/12-85 Manager, Casa San Martin de Porres, Sanctuary, Dallas TX.

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Curriculum Vitae ALFONSO MORALES, PH.D. Home: 5302 Shawano Terrace

Madison, WI 53705 (608) 238-3537 (608) 770-2652 (cell)

Office: University of Wisconsin – Madison Department of Urban and Regional Planning 925 Bascom Mall 104 Old Music Hall Madison, WI 53706 (608) 263-4848 (608) 262-9307 e-mail: [email protected]

Education:

Ph.D. Northwestern University, June, 1993. Dissertation: “Making Money at the Market: The Social and Economic Logic of Informal Markets.” Directed by Arthur L. Stinchcombe

A.M. Sociology, University of Chicago, 1989.

Masters Thesis: "Property Rights and Informal Economic Activity: An Ethnographic and Historical Analysis of the Maxwell Street Market.” Directed by Richard Taub

M.A. Political Economy, University of Texas at Dallas, 1987. Concentration in Economic Development, Formal Organizations and Strategic Planning

B.A. Sociology/Economics, New Mexico State University, 1984.

Employment 8-07/ Present Assistant Professor of Urban and Regional Planning, The University of

Wisconsin at Madison. Affiliated with Chican@/o Latin@/o Studies. 1-05/6-07 Visiting Assistant Professor of Sociology, The University of Wisconsin at

Madison.

8-98/12-04 Assistant Professor of Sociology and Anthropology (Chicano Studies, the Center for Law and Border Studies, the Center for Inter-American and Border Studies), The University of Texas at El Paso, El Paso, TX.

6-96/5-98 Assistant Professor of Sociology and Mexican American Studies, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ.

6-95/5-96 Ford Foundation Minority Post-doctoral Fellowship.

8-93/5-95 Assistant Professor of Sociology and Assistant Research Social Scientist, Mexican American Studies and Research Center, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ.

12-84/12-85 Manager, Casa San Martin de Porres, Sanctuary, Dallas TX.

Substantive Interests Social Organizations: community and urban life, community based, informal and formal organizations. Law and Society: race and the law, taxation, property, zoning for food and markets, the legal profession. Political Sociology: borders and borderlands, social movements, immigration and citizenship. Economic Sociology: Entrepreneurship and community development, urban agriculture, healthcare and access to health, markets and economic transformations. Policy aspects; race/ethnicity and gender are salient and central components of these interests. Qualitative Methods; Social Theory, especially Symbolic Interactionism and Pragmatism; Critical Pedagogy. Board of Directors Economic Development Catalyst Organization: A Non-Profit Organization devoted to economic development. Advisory Board Member, Center for Women’s Health Research, University of Wisconsin. Advisory Board Member, National Science Foundation Doctoral Mentoring Proposal. Publications Books Street Entrepreneurs: People, Place, & Politics in Local and Global Perspective. June 2007. Edited by John Cross and Alfonso Morales. UK Routledge Press, (312 pages). Renascent Pragmatism: Studies in Law and Social Science, edited by Alfonso Morales. 2003. UK: Ashgate Press, (278 pages). A review in the Law and Politics Book Review can be found at: http://www.bsos.umd.edu/gvpt/lpbr/ Articles and Book Chapters (* = Refereed Journal or Book) *Fernandez, Leticia and Alfonso Morales. 2007. “Hispanic Women's Language Proficiency and Utilization of Cancer Screening Services.” Ethnicity and Health. 12-3:245-63. *Morales, Alfonso. 2007. “Conclusion: Law, Deviance and Defining Vendors and Vending.” Street Entrepreneurs: People, Place, & Politics in Local and Global Perspective. Edited by John Cross and Alfonso Morales, London, Routledge. *John Cross and Alfonso Morales. 2007. “Introduction: Locating Street Markets in the Modern/Postmodern World.” Street Entrepreneurs: People, Place, & Politics in Local and Global Perspective. *Morales, Alfonso and Leticia Fernandez. 2006. “The Social Origins and Prospects for Mobility of Recent Mexican Law School Graduates.” Del gobierno de los abogados al imperio de las leyes. Estudios sociojurídicos sobre educación y profesión jurídicas en el México contemporáneo. (From Governance by Lawyers to the Rule of Law: Socio-legal studies of education and Law in Contemporary Mexico) Edited by Hector Fix-Fierro. Mexico City, UNAM Press. *Morales, Alfonso. 2005. “Radio Mercado: Electronic Mercados in the U.S.-Mexico Border Region.” Mass Media Systems in a Multi-cultural World edited by Guy Meiss and Alice Tait. CT: Greenwood Press.

*Morales, Alfonso. 2003. “Pragmatism as a Discipline: (Re)Introducing Philosophy to Law and Social Science.” Renascent Pragmatism: Studies in Law and Social Science, edited by Alfonso Morales. UK: Ashgate Press, xi-xxiv. *Morales, Alfonso and Robert Jimenez 2003. “A Pragmatist Theory of Social Movement Leadership” Renascent Pragmatism: Studies in Law and Social Science, edited by Alfonso Morales. UK: Ashgate Press, 198-219. *Morales, Alfonso. 2003. “A Pragmatist Position on (Re)Constructing Latin American Socio-Legal Studies,” Beyond Law, 26:169-190.

Morales, Alfonso. 2003. “A Pragmatist Position on (Re)Constructing Latin American Socio-Legal Studies,” Translated into Spanish and reprinted in Law and Society in Latin America: Toward the Consolidation of Critical Legal Studies, edited by Mauricio García Villegas and César Rodríguez. ILSA/National University of Columbia.

Morales, Alfonso, Marco Delgado and Elizabeth Carson. 2003. “Succeeding by Six: The Training Parents are Requesting for Supporting their Children in South and South Central El Paso,” Digame: Policy and Politics in the Texas Border, edited by Dennis Soden, Christine Brenner and Irasema Coronado. IA: Kendall Hunt Publishing, (241-258). *Morales, Alfonso. 2002. “Radio Mercado: Station Format and Alternative Models of the Audience in the U.S.-Mexico Border Region.” Journal of Borderlands Studies 17 (1:79-102). *Morales, Alfonso. 2001. “Policy from Theory: A Critical Reconstruction of Theory on the ‘Informal’ Economy,” Sociological Imagination, 38 (3): 190-203. *Morales, Alfonso. 2000. “Peddling Policy: Street Vending in Historical and Contemporary Context,” International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy, 20 (3/4): 76-99. *Balkin, Steve and Alfonso Morales. 2000. “Linking Street Vendors to the Internet,” International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy, 20 (3/4) 99-122. *Morales, Alfonso. 1998. “Income Tax Compliance and Alternative Views of Ethics and Human Nature,” Journal of Accounting, Ethics and Public Policy, 1 (3): 380-400.

Morales, Alfonso. 1998. “Income Tax Compliance and Alternative Views of Ethics and Human Nature,” Reprinted in The Ethics of Tax Evasion, edited by Robert W. McGee. NJ: The Dumont Institute for Public Policy Research

Morales, Alfonso. 1997. “Epistemic Reflections on the Informal Economy,” The International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy, 17 (3/4):1-17. Morales, Alfonso. 1997. “Uncertainty and the Organization of Street Vending Business,” The International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy, 17 (3/4): 191-212. *Morales, Alfonso, Steve Balkin and Joe Persky. 1995. "The Value of Benefits of a Public Street Market: The Case of Maxwell Street." Economic Development Quarterly, 9 (4): 304-320.

Debate in this journal over this paper:

Rhonda Halperin, “The Use of Economic Anthropology in Economic Development,” 321-322. Wim Wiewel, “The Use of Economic Analysis in Public Policy,” 324-326.

Morales, Alfonso, Steve Balkin and Joe Persky. 1995. "Contradictions and Irony in Policy Research on the Informal Economy: A Reply." Economic Development Quarterly, 9 (4): 327-330.

Accepted but not yet Published (* = Refereed Journal or Book) *Morales, Alfonso. “Acequias y Venas: The Social Organization of Water in Northern New Mexico” in Voces de la Tierra: Four Hundred Years of Acequia Farming in the Rio Arriba Bioregion, 1598-1998, edited by Devon Peña. AZ: University of Arizona Press. *Edited book: Butler, John S., Alfonso Morales and David Torres (ed) Wealth Creation and Business Formation Among Mexican-Americans: History, Circumstances and Prospects. Purdue University Press.; anticipated publication date 2009. Morales, Alfonso. 2008. “A Woman’s Place is on the Street: Purposes and Problems of Mexican American Women Entrepreneurs,” Wealth Creation and Business Formation Among Mexican-Americans: History, Circumstances and Prospects. Purdue University Press, anticipated publication date 2009. Articles and Book Chapters Under Review (* = Refereed Journal or Book) *Morales, Alfonso. “Public Markets as Community Development Tools,” Journal of Planning Education and Research. Revise and resubmit. *Morales, Alfonso. “A Social Currency Approach to Improving the Health Related Quality of Life for Migrant Workers,” Health Promotion Practice. Grant, Don, Alfonso Morales and Jeff Sallaz [The final order of Sallaz and I is still to be determined]. “Pathways to Meaning: Advancing the Study of Workplace Emotions,” American Journal of Sociology (revise and resubmit). Editor, Special Issue of Journals (* = Refereed Journal or Book) *Morales, Alfonso. 2001. Special Issue on the Informal Economy, Sociological Imagination 38 (3). *Morales, Alfonso and John Cross. 2000. Testing the Boundaries of the Informal Sector, International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy, 20 (9–10). *Morales, Alfonso and Steve Balkin. 2000. The Informal Economy: Concepts and Culture, International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy, 20 (1–2) Morales, Alfonso. 1997. The Informal Economy, The International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy, 17 (3/4). Other Publications John Cross and Alfonso Morales. 2007. “Preface and acknowledgements.” In Street Entrepreneurs: People, Place, & Politics in Local and Global Perspective. Edited by John Cross and Alfonso Morales, London, Routledge. Morales, Alfonso and Roberto Pedace. 2005. “The Economic Assimilation of Latinos” in

Encyclopedia Latino: History Culture, Society. Edited by Ilan Stavans. New York, Grolier. (3000 words) Morales, Alfonso and Roberto Pedace. 2005. “The Economic Assimilation of Latinos” in Hispanics Today. A report of the Hispanic Association for Corporate Responsibility. Washington DC. (5000 words) Morales, Alfonso. 1998. “Pragmatism’s Mundanity: Epistemic Foundations for a Practicing Socio-legal Science.” Review essay of the book, Realistic Socio-Legal Theory, by Brian Tamanaha, Law and Society Review, 32 (2): 493-514. Electronic Publications Open-Air Market net: The World Wide guide to Farmers’ markets, Street markets, Flea Markets and Street vendors, initiated with Steve Balkin, Roosevelt University, currently co-edited with Gregg Kettles, Mississippi College of Law, URL:http://www.openair.org/. This is the premier webpage for international scholarly research, teaching and service work on street vendors and street vending. Students and faculty colleagues contact us regularly to discuss research projects. The page has been visited from almost every country in the world. The page serves as a forum for the exchange of research and ideas, which results in a variety of scholarly publications, for myself, and others. Morales, Alfonso. 2005. “Social Currency and the Collective Quality of Life.” A report prepared based on grants earned from the Ford Foundation and Texas Tech/UTEP. http://academics.utep.edu/cce' Book Reviews Morales, Alfonso. 2007. Review of The Modern Art of Dying: A History of Euthanasia in the United States. By Shai J. Lavi. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2005. Morales, Alfonso. 1996. Review of Critical Race Theory, edited by Richard Delgado. Philadelphia PA: Temple University Press, Contemporary Sociology 25 (3): 388-89 Morales, Alfonso. 1994. "Household Provisioning and Rationalization Processes." Book Reviews of Beyond Regulation: The Informal Economy in Latin America, edited by Victor E. Tokman. Boulder, CO: Rienner and Creating and Transforming Households, Joan Smith and Immanuel Wallerstein et al. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, Contemporary Sociology 23, 4: 553-55. Morales, Alfonso. 1994. Book Review of Risk: A Sociological Theory by Niklas Luhmann, American Journal of Sociology 100: 303-05. Reports Morales, Alfonso. 2006. Chicago’s Maxwell Street Market: Promise and Prospects. Prepared for the Maxwell Street Foundation. Morales, Alfonso and Marco Delgado. 2001. “What Community Members Need to Help Children Succeed: El Pasonans requests for Training to Enrich Children’s Lives.” United Way Success by Six Program, for the United Way of El Paso. Morales, Alfonso. 1997. “The Spirit of Property.” Commissioned by the Center for Land Grant Studies at the University of Wisconsin, Madison.

Morales, Alfonso. 1991. “Institutionalizing Informal Economic Resources: The Case of Property in Chicago’s Maxwell Street Market.” American Bar Foundation, ABF Working paper 9125. Morales, Alfonso. 1991. “Tax Problems of New Immigrants: Merchants of Chicago’s Maxwell Street Market.” American Bar Foundation, ABF Working paper 9126. Media Featured in the documentary "Cheat You Fair: The Story Of Maxwell Street." The film made its world premiere at this year's Chicago International Documentary Festival. http://www.chicagodocfestival.org/07_cheat%20your%20fair.htm Morales, Alfonso and Steve Balkin. 1995. Making Money at the Market: The Social Organization of Street Vending. Video. Purchased by various University libraries. Morales, Alfonso. 1991. Making Money at the Market: Photos from Chicago’s Maxwell Street Market. Photographs accepted to a juried art show in Chicago. Work in Progress Making Money in the Market: Street Vending at Chicago’s Maxwell Street Market. Sole authored Book Draft – 60,000 words. “(Self) Regulating (Street) Markets,” to be submitted to Journal of the American Planning Association, anticipated submission date July 1, 2008 “Organizing Migrant Workers for Health,” with Thy Vo, to be submitted to Journal of Planning Education and Research or another planning journal, anticipated submission date July 1, 2008 “Street Merchants and Supply Chain Management,” with Tyler Marcus, to be submitted to a business/entrepreneurship journal, anticipated submission date September 1, 2008. Research Grants Funded The University of Wisconsin – Robert Woods Johnson Course Development Grant, 2008, $5000. Rotary Foundation Fellowship for University Teachers, 2005-2006, $25,000, plus expenses. The University of Texas at El Paso, College of Health Sciences, “Migrant Workers and Time dollars”, 2002-2003 (Principal Investigator: $34,698). Ford Foundation, “Research on Time Dollars as a Measure and Tool for Developing Social Capital,” 2002 –2003. (Co-Principal Investigator: $300,000). The University of Texas at El Paso, URI Grant, “Evaluating the Effectiveness of Service Learning and Research Experience in the Classroom,” 1999-2000. (Co-Principal Investigator: $4,000). The University of Texas at El Paso, URI Grant, “Online Order: Race Relations and Education on the Internet,” 1998-1999. (Principal Investigator: 4,000).

University of Arizona, “Writing to Teach and Learn,” Workshop Grant, 1996. ($500). University of Arizona, Arizona Core Course Development grant. 1995. (Principal Investigator: $3000). University of Arizona, Continued Funding - Dean's Office of Undergraduate Education, “Update Computer Bulletin Board System” (Principal Investigator: $1000). University of Arizona, Continued Funding - Dean's Office of Undergraduate Education, “Establish Computer Bulletin Board System,” 1994. (Principal Investigator: $3000). University of Arizona, Social and Behavioral Sciences Research Initiative. Mini-grant to establish bibliography for borderlands toxic waste issues, 1994 ($750). Submitted but not Funded National Telecommunications and Information Administration. “I-HELP Improving the Health of El Pasoans”, 2004-2007, (Co-Principal Investigator: $2,498,748). National Science Foundation, Research Experience for Undergraduates, “Research Experiences for Undergraduate Students along the Texas-Mexico Border.” 2004-2007. (Co-Principal Investigator $908,680). Southwest Center for Environmental Research and Policy, “Developing Border Communities,”

2003. (Co- Principal Investigator: $74,999). Aspen Community Foundation, “Measure of Social Capital,” 2001. (Co-Principal Investigator:

$50,000). National Science Foundation, “Lawyering on the Border: The Social Organization of the El Paso and Juarez Bars in Comparative Perspective.” 2001. (Principal Investigator: $367,000). Law and Society Association, Grant to bring LSA Summer Institute to UTEP. 1999. (Co-Investigator: $15,000. This was a matching grant that was funded by the association, but UTEP was unable to match funds). National Science Foundation, “Human Dimensions of Global Change: Vulnerability to Environmental Change in the World’s Borderland Regions, Policy Designs and Strategies.” 1995. (Co-Investigator: $1,250,000). Honors and Awards Pfaehler Award of Excellence in Teaching, University of Wisconsin – Madison 2007. Pfaehler Award of Excellence in Teaching, University of Wisconsin – Madison 2006. Teaching and Service Award, Latina/o section of the American Sociological Association, 2001. Certificate of Appreciation (2000) from the Faculty of Law at the University of New Mexico School of Law. Certificates from the University of Texas at El Paso for Mentoring in the Institute for Community Based Teaching and Learning (1999 and 2000).

Certificate of Appreciation (1999) from the Diocese of El Paso Office of Migration Refugee Services. Certificates of Appreciation (1996 and 1997) from the Graduate College at the University of Arizona for Mentoring. Certificate of Appreciation (1996) from the Inter-University Program for Latina/o Research. Ford Foundation Minority Post-doctoral Fellowship, 1995-96, $25,000 plus research expenses. Law and Society Association, Summer Institute, 1992. American Bar Foundation, Minority Dissertation Fellowship, 1990-1992, $12,000/year plus other benefits. Committee on Institutional Cooperation, graduate school fellowship, 1987-1989, $10,000/year plus benefits, four years. University of Chicago Trustee Fellowship, 1987 $10,000/year four years (awarded, but not accepted). New Mexico State University, Outstanding Chicano Graduate in Sociology, 1984. Editorial Positions Member, Editorial Board, The International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy 2002 - 2006. Member, Editorial Board, The Law and Society Review, 2001-2006. Member, Editorial Board, The Journal of Law and Border Studies, 2000-2002 Referee for numerous presses and journals including: Journal of Planning Education and Research, Journal of Borderlands Studies, American Journal of Sociology, Law and Policy, Law and Human Behavior, Sociological Forum, Law and Society Review and Teaching Sociology; and scholarly presses: University of Michigan Press, Stanford University Press, Polity Press, SUNY Press, Blackwell Publishers, Pine Forge Press, and grant reviewer for the National Science Foundation and the Health Resources and Services Administration. Committee Work and Service (Extramural) Various Consulting projects associated with the regulation of street vendors and the organization of street markets. The work is ongoing and details available on request. I have also acted as an external reviewer for three promotion and tenure files, limited details are available on request. Member of the Faculty Advisory board for the Law and Society Association NSF doctoral fellowship and mentoring program proposal 2005 and 2007. Member of the Nominations committee for the Law and Society Association, 2007. Consultant to the City of Chicago on the Maxwell Street Market, 2005-present. Member, American Sociological Association, Sociology of Law Book Award Committee, 2005-06.

Facilitator of a Research Roundtable for the Committee on Institutional Cooperation/Summer Research Opportunity Program, 2005. Grant Reviewer for Health Resources and Service Administration, Rural Health Network Development Grant Program, December, 2004. Grant Reviewer for Health Resources and Service Administration, Office of Rural Health Policy, Rural Health Network Development Grant Program, November, 2004. Grant Reviewer for Health Resources and Service Administration, Office of Rural Health Policy, Rural Health Network Development Grant Program, January, 2004. Sociology of Law Section Membership Committee, American Sociological Association, 2003-04. Grant Reviewer for Health Resources and Service Administration, Office of Rural Health Policy, Rural Health Network Development Planning Grant Review, November, 2003. Fellow Liaison in the Southwest, Ford Foundation, 1998-2004. Member, Nominations Committee, Law and Society Association, 2003-2004. Chair, Outstanding Article Committee, Sociology of Law Section, American Sociological Association, 2001. Co-Chair, Summer Institute Committee, Law and Society Association, 2000-2001. Member, Summer Institute Committee, Law and Society Association, 1999-2000. Consultant to the City of Las Cruces NM in the creation of a Public Market, 1998. Member, Board of Trustees, Law and Society Association 1998-2000. Member, Membership Committee, Sociology of Law Section, American Sociological Association, 1997-98. Member, Jacobs Book Award Committee, Law and Society Association, 1998. Member, Program Committee, Pacific Sociological Association Meetings, 1997. Invited lecturer, Graduate Student Workshop, Law and Society Association, 1997. Secretary-Treasurer, Section on Latina/o Sociology, American Sociological Association, 1993-96. Member, Student Paper Award Committee, Latina/o Section, American Sociological Association, 1996. Member of the ASA, Sociology of Law section, Book award committee, 1996 Invited lecturer, Methods and Epistemology, Inter-University Program for Latino Research Graduate Training Seminar: Qualitative-Quantitative Research Methods, Arizona State University, 1996. Committee Work and Service (Intramural) Masters Committee, Urban and Regional Planning, The University of Wisconsin-Madison, 2007-

currently. Minority Student Advisor, Urban and Regional Planning, The University of Wisconsin-Madison, 2007-currently. Department Liaison to the UTEP Library, 2002-2005. Senator, Faculty Senate, The University of Texas at El Paso, 2001-2003. Member, University Graduate Fellowship Committee, University of Texas at El Paso, 2002-2004. Member, Abernathy Scholarship Committee, The University of Texas at El Paso, 2003. Member, Liberal Arts, Curriculum Committee, The University of Texas at El Paso, 1999-2004. Member, Faculty Search Committee, Center for Inter-American and Border Studies, The University of Texas at El Paso, 2003. Member, Faculty Search Committee, (social geographer), The University of Texas at El Paso, 2002-03. Member, Committee to develop PhD program in Urban Studies/Policy, The University of Texas at El Paso, 2002. Member, Social Studies Curriculum Revision for K-8th grade Committee, College of Education and College of Liberal Arts, The University of Texas at El Paso, 2001. Member, University Committee for the Reorganization of the Chicano Studies Program, The University of Texas at El Paso, 2001. Member, Liberal Arts Advisory Board for the Criminal Justice Program, The University of Texas at El Paso, 1998-2000. Coordinator, Immigration Taskforce of the Kellogg funded Community Partnerships Program, The University of Texas at El Paso, 1999-2000. Member, Public Policy MA Formation Committee, The University of Texas at El Paso, 1999-2000. Member, Department of Sociology Graduate Advisory Committee, The University of Texas at El Paso, 1998-1999. Chair, Committee for Nominations and Elections (ad hoc), RAZA Faculty Association, The University of Texas at El Paso, 1999. Member, Undergraduate Studies Committee, Department of Sociology, University of Arizona, 1997. Chair, Committee on Diversity, College of Social and Behavioral Sciences, Department of Sociology, University of Arizona, 1996-1997 Member, Faculty Recruitment Committee, African American Studies, University of Arizona, 1995-1996. Treasurer, Association of Chicanos for Higher Education, University of Arizona Chapter, 1995-1997.

Member, Merit Peer Review Committee, Mexican American Studies and Research Center, University of Arizona, 1995. Member, Grade Appeals Committee, Department of Sociology, University of Arizona, 1995. Curriculum Coordinator, Mexican American Studies and Research Center, University of Arizona, 1994-1995 and 1992 – 1993. Member, Strategic Plan Committee, Arizona Association for Chicanos in Higher Education, University of Arizona, 1994. Member, Graduate Studies Committee, Department of Sociology, University of Arizona, 1992 – 1994. Member, Faculty Recruitment Committee, Department of Sociology, University of Arizona, 1993. Session Organizer Organizer. 2008. Thematic Session: Worlds Without Work: Latinos in Urban America. American Sociological Association Meetings, Boston MA. Organizer. 2008. Planning for Street Markets and Street Merchants. American Planning Association Meetings, Las Vegas NV. Co-Organizer. 2005 Dissertation Workshop. Ford Fellows Meeting, Washington DC. Co-Organizer. 2003 Dissertation Workshop. Ford Fellows Meeting, Washington DC. Organizer. 2001. Regular Paper Session on Pragmatism and Realism in Socio-legal Studies. Law and Society Association. Organizer. 2000. Regular Paper Session on the Informal Economy, American Sociological Association Meetings, Washington D.C. Organizer. 2000. “Pragmatism in Law and Social Science.” Law and Society Association meetings, Miami, FL. Organizer. 2000. Law and Society Panel, Southwest Sociological Association Meetings. Organizer. 1999. New Fellows Pre-doctoral Information Panel, Ford Foundation Annual Fellows Meeting, Irvine CA. Organizer. 1999. “Pragmatism Confronts Cultural Studies.” Law and Society Association. Organizer. 1995. "The Informal Economy." American Sociological Association Meetings, Washington D.C. Organizer. 1994. Property Panel, Law and Society Association, Phoenix, AZ. Thesis Committees URPL, Chair Rachel Jacque, 2008. “ “

Kristy SeBlonka, 2008. “Democratizing Community Economic Development: What do planners think about cooperatives?” Latin American, Carribean and Iberian Studies, Chair Brenda Thomas, 2007. M.A. Thesis Committee, The University of Wisconsin-Madison. Emily Martin, 2006. BENEFITS OF COMMUNITY PROGRAMS FOR LATINO YOUTH IN MADISON, WI, M.A. Thesis Committee, The University of Wisconsin-Madison. University of Texas-El Paso, Sociology, Chair Michelle Mendez-Duburle, 2005. “High School Teachers as Examples and Students.” M.A. Thesis Committee, The University of Texas at El Paso. Daniel Duran, 2004. “English Language Learners and Standardized Testing: Considering Test Bias.” M.A committee, The University of Texas at El Paso. Ramiro Gallardo. 2002. “The Market Paradigm in the Sierra Tarahumara and Its Social, Economic, and Human Rights Problems” M.A. Thesis Committee, The University of Texas at El Paso. Toby Vance. 2001. “Intelligent Design as a Methodological Basis for a Postmodern Science.” M.A. Thesis Committee, The University of Texas at El Paso. UTEP-Sociology, Member Karen Estrada, “The Elderly in El Paso.” M.A. Thesis Committee, The University of Texas at El Paso. Anticipated date of completion, 2004. Donna Griffin, 2003. “Managing Work, Putting Families First: Women’s Dilemma.” M.A. Thesis Committee, The University of Texas at El Paso. University of Arizona-Sociology, Member Liam Downey. 1997. M.A. Thesis Committee, The University of Arizona. Janine Goldman-Pach. 1997. M.A. Thesis Committee, The University of Arizona. Max Herman. 1996. M.A. Thesis Committee, The University of Arizona. Christine Horn. 1996. M.A. Thesis Committee, The University of Arizona. Stacy Nofziger. 1996. M.A. Thesis Committee, The University of Arizona. Other Department, Ph.D. committee member Elise Martel, “Taking the good with the bad”: Entrepreneurship and Exploitation in the Informal Economy. Ph.D. Dissertation Committee, Department of Sociology. The University of Illinois at Chicago. Bonnie Mack, “Teachers and Excellent Teachers: Why some Teachers Become Great.” Ph.D. Dissertation Committee, Education Leadership and Administration. The University of Texas at El Paso. Anticipated date of completion, 2009.

Paul Lopez. 1999. “A Study of the Effects of Industry Location and Occupational Segmentation upon Mexican and non-Latino White Workers in the Los Angeles Labor Market, 1980-1990.” Ph.D. Dissertation Committee, Brandeis University. Jose Blas Acosta Fuller. 1998. “NAFTA, Globalization, and Higher Education Departments of Business Administration: Case Studies from Northwestern Mexico.” Ph.D. Dissertation Committee, Higher Education Administration. Chair, Sociology Minor, The University of Arizona. Richard H. Fridena. 1998. “Community College Presidents and Institutional Decisionmaking.” Ph.D. Dissertation Committee, Higher Education Administration. Chair, Sociology Minor, The University of Arizona. Other Department, M.A. Chair committee member Ada Salazar, 2004. “Arabs in Hollywood: U.S. Films Cultivation of Viewers’ Perceptions and Attitudes toward Arabs.” M.A. Thesis Committee, Department of Communications. The University of Texas at El Paso. Samantha Dena, 2004. “Stigma and Self-Disclosure in Interpersonal Relationships of Registered Sex Offenders.” M.A. Thesis Committee, Department of Communications. The University of Texas at El Paso. Caroline McDaniel Kalman, “Communal Lands to Capitalist Hands: The excluded political participation of the Community of San Elizario, Texas.” M.A. Thesis Committee, Department of Political Science. The University of Texas at El Paso. Anticipated date of completion: 2005. Estrella Escobar. 2004 “Successful Bond Elections in El Paso” M.A. Thesis Committee, Department of Political Science. The University of Texas at El Paso. Jessica Wichmann. 2003. “Concertive Control Theory in Connection to College Students’ Levels of Group Identification and Alcohol Consumption.” M.A. Thesis Committee, Department of Communications. The University of Texas at El Paso. Patricia Islas, 2003. “Uncertainty Reduction and Level of Disclosure among Homeless Internet Users.” M.A. Thesis Committee, Department of Communications. The University of Texas at El Paso. Adrian Aragones. 2002. “Aoy School (1880-1920): Veiled Racism and Implicit Segregation.” M.A. Thesis Committee, Department of History. The University of Texas at El Paso. Yadira Berigan. 2002. “Language Acquisition: Usage and Culture.” M.A. Thesis Committee, Department of Linguistics. The University of Texas at El Paso. Myrna P. Enriquez. 2002. “The Use of Literature in Developing Second Language Proficiency.” M.A. Thesis Committee, Department of Linguistics. The University of Texas at El Paso. Ruben Espinosa. 2001. “Resonating Truth: Finding Voice Amid Patriarchal Expectation in Hamlet and King Lear.” M.A. Thesis Committee, Department of English. The University of Texas at El Paso. Samuel Sisneros. 2001. “Los Emigrantes: The Repatriation of Nuevomexicanos to Northern Chihuahua: 1849-1859.” M.A. Thesis Committee, Department of History. The University of Texas at El Paso. Meachell LaSalle. 2001. “A Literature Based Teaching Method for ESL Students.” M.A. Thesis

Committee, Department of English.The University of Texas at El Paso. Cindy Conroy. 1999. “A Study of Locke, Machiavelli, and the Federalist.” M.A. Thesis Committee, Department of Political Science. The University of Texas at El Paso. Honors Theses Vicky Vasquez. 2002. “Exploring the Linkages between Day Labor and Migration.” Honors thesis. The University of Texas at El Paso. Robert Rene Jimenez. 1998. “Sources of Dependency for Los Angeles Based Community Organizations.” Honors Thesis, Director. The University of Arizona. Formal Mentoring I informally advise many students with the same vigor I bring to these organizationally sanctioned relationships. Adam Vang. 2006-8. Chancellor’s Scholar, The University of Wisconsin – Madison. Vicky Vasquez. 2002-3. McNair Scholars, The University of Texas at El Paso. (PhD student Northwestern University)

Roberto Elorduy. 2001. Career Opportunities in Research, The University of Texas at El Paso. Karla Hernandez. 2001. Minority Opportunity Summer Training. The University of Texas at El Paso. (JD Indiana University) Roberto Alvillar. 1998. Summer Research Institute. The University of Arizona. (Culinary Institute of San Francisco) Robert Jimenez. 1997. Summer Research Institute. The University of Arizona. (MA University of Michigan) Kristin Emily Burge. 1996. Summer Research Institute. The University of Arizona. (JD/MA University of Wisconsin - Madison) Courses Taught Graduate: Central City Planning; Markets and Urban Food Systems; Classical Social Theory; Contemporary Social Theory; Qualitative Methods; Economic Sociology; Law and Society; Chicanos in American Society; Social Research Methods; Social Organizations I have prepared and evaluated Ph.D. Exams in: Sociology of Law/Law and Society; Race, Class and Gender; Stratification; Research Design and Research Methods; Health Planning; and Public Participation and Democratic Governance. I have also delivered workshops in Qualitative analysis for the Law and Society Association and the Inter-University Program for Latino Research. Undergraduate:

General Social Theory; Law and Society; Ethnographic Field Methods; Minority Relations in Urban Society; Introduction to Sociology; Chicanos in American Society; Urban Sociology; Introduction to Mexican-American Studies; Social Research Methods; Social Problems, Mexican Migration to the U.S.; Sociology of Law. Syllabi Found in: American Sociological Association, Syllabi and Instructional Materials for: Chicanos in American Society and Economic Sociology. Professional Development Workshops Accepted but unable to attend National Cancer Institute Minority Investigator Career Development Workshop. 2004. Faculty Fellow in the Professions Capacity Building Program sponsored by the Hispanic Association of Colleges and Universities (HACU) and Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS). 2004-2005 IMPACT for UTEP. 2004. A five-day workshop to develop academic leadership for the University. National Library of Medicine. 2004. Empowering Communities with Health Information. Invited Presentations and Colloquia Morales, Alfonso. 2006. Invited to Ford Foundation Conference as a panelist for two sessions: 1. Special interest session on Public Advocacy and 2. Workshop for Sciences and Quantitative Social Sciences at the Junior Faculty Level. Morales, Alfonso. 2006. Invited guest to Wisconsin Public Radio show “Hear on Earth.” http://www.wpr.org/hereonearth/archive_060429j.cfm Morales, Alfonso. 2005. Respondent to the “Speed Researching” workshop hosted by the Diversity Committee of the Law and Society Association. Annual meeting of the LSA, Las Vegas, NV. Morales, Alfonso. 2005. Roundtable-On the Job Market and Surviving he Early Years of Academic Life.. Annual meeting of the LSA, Las Vegas, NV. Morales, Alfonso. 2005. Facilitated Research Roundtable for the Summer Research Opportunity Conference sponsored by the Committee for Institutional Cooperation. Madison Morales, Alfonso. 2004. “Making Order in the Market.” Department of Sociology and Criminology at the University of Denver. Morales, Alfonso. 2004. “The Border as a Socio-Legal Reality.” Border Crossing: Experiencing the US-Mexico Border, a Three Week Seminar in El Paso TX for students from Goucher College. Morales, Alfonso. 2004. “The Social Origins and Prospects for Mobility of Mexican Law School Graduates.” The International Congress on the Study of Legal Systems and Cultures. Mexico City, Mexico (prepared but not delivered).

Morales, Alfonso. 2003. “Ethnographic Field Methods.” Workshop Presenter, Law and Society Association, Pittsburgh, PA (prepared presentation but was unable to arrive for the workshop). Morales, Alfonso. 2003. Critic, Author Meets Critic Panel, book “Pragmatism and Law: From Philosophy to Dispute Resolution.” Law and Society Association meetings, Pittsburgh, PA. Morales, Alfonso. 2003. “An Overview of Health Disparities in Minority Populations.” Lecture to McNair Fellows, University of Arizona. Morales, Alfonso. 2002. “Individual and Household Capabilities and Social Capacity: Applications to Public Health.” Pima Community College/University of Arizona. Morales, Alfonso. 2002. “Funding Opportunities at the Ford Foundation.” Video Conference, Graduate Student Association, University of New Mexico. Morales, Alfonso. 2002. “Research Design for Value Driven Social Change.” Time Bank Conference, Glasgow Scotland. Morales, Alfonso. 2001. “Market and Community: (Re)Constructing Social Capital Responsive to Community Needs.” Towards a Healthy Border Population: An Economic Perspective, a conference organized by the University Texas System, El Paso TX. Morales, Alfonso. 2000. “The Social Organization of Property.” Summer Institute of the Law and Society Association. Morales, Alfonso. 2000. “Socioeconomic Effects on Households of Recent Changes Immigration Law.” LATCRIT V, Breckenridge CO. Morales, Alfonso. 2000. “Socioeconomic Effects on Households of Recent Changes Immigration Law.” University of New Mexico Law School’s Race Judicata, University of New Mexico. Morales, Alfonso. 1999. “Law and Society Perspectives on Social Disadvantage.” 35th Anniversary Plenary Panel (invited presentation), Law and Society Association. Morales, Alfonso. 1999. Panel Discussant. “Asking Hard Questions: Qualitative Research in Law and Society.” Law and Society Association. Morales, Alfonso. 1998. “An Anti-Foundationalist Theory of Social Movement Leadership.” Department of Chicano Studies, Arizona State University. Morales, Alfonso. 1998. “Street Vendors and Tax Compliance.” Department of Sociology and Anthropology, University of Texas at El Paso. Morales, Alfonso. 1998. “An Anti-Foundationalist Approach to Social Order.” Department of Socioloby and Anthropology, New Mexico State University. Morales, Alfonso. 1997. “Democratizing Global Communications: Evaluating the ‘People’s Communication Charter’ as a Strategic Document.” Working Conference, organized by the Havens Center for the Study of Social Structure and Social Change at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Morales, Alfonso. 1996. Graduate School Orientation Workshop, University of Arizona Graduate school. Morales, Alfonso. 1996. ‘Where’s the Finish Line in Race Relations?” Invited to lecture at the University of Arizona Library.

Morales, Alfonso. 1995. "Biography and Career." Graduate Student Workshop of the Law and Society Association. Morales, Alfonso. 1995. “Creative Responses to Economic and Political Stress.” Panel on the U.S-Mexico Border: An International Region Under Stress. Conference organized by The Udall Center for Studies in Public Policy at the University of Arizona and The International Transboundary Resources Center at the University of New Mexico, Bisbee, AZ. Morales, Alfonso. 1994 "Reconciling Agency and Structure in Informal Regulatory Settings." Invited Lecture, American Bar Foundation, Chicago, IL. Morales, Alfonso. 1993. "Linking Past and Future through Structurally Similar Biographies: Or How I Am Like My Grandfather." Cinco de Mayo lecture, Ft. Huachuca, AZ. Morales, Alfonso. 1993. Maxwell Street Market Colloquia, at the University of Illinois at Chicago, May 1993. Morales, Alfonso. 1992 "The Cultural Construction of Gender Role Production: Moving from Housewife to Entrepreneur at Chicago's Maxwell Street Market." Crossing Borders Creating Spaces: Mexican and Chicana Women: 1848-1992, The University of Illinois at Chicago. Presentations at Scholarly Meetings and University Workshops Morales, Alfonso. 2008. “A Woman’s Place is on the Street: Purposes and Problems of Mexican American Women Entrepreneurs,” presented at the American Sociological Association meetings, Boston MA. Morales, Alfonso. 2008. “A Woman’s Place is on the Street: Purposes and Problems of Mexican American Women Entrepreneurs,” at the conference "An American Story: Mexican-American Entrepreneurship and Wealth Creation," Austin Texas. Morales, Alfonso. 2008 “In the Zone: Street Markets and Street Merchants in Socio-Legal Perspective,” at the annual meeting of Law and Society – Montreal Canada. Morales, Alfonso. 2008. “Regulating the (Street) Market,” at the annual meeting of Association of Collegiate Schools of Planning. Morales, Alfonso. 2007. “Public Markets and the Incubation of Small Business.” Association of Collegiate Schools of Planning, Milwaukee WI (85% acceptance rate for abstract). Morales, Alfonso. 2007. “A Social Currency Approach to Improving Health Related Quality of Life Among Migrant Workers.” Association of Collegiate Schools of Planning, Milwaukee WI (85% acceptance rate for abstract). Morales, Alfonso. 2007. "Street Entrepreneurs: Finding Business on the Street." SPAM seminar University of Wisconsin Sociology. Revised and represented to the Department of Urban and Regional Planning at the University of Wisconsin. Morales, Alfonso. 2007. “Management Practices among Chicago’s Street Merchants.” Seminar in Race and Ethnicity. University of Wisconsin-Madison. Revised and represented at the American Sociological Association meetings, . Morales, Alfonso. 2006. “Ethnicity and Mobility among Street Merchants” Seminar in Race and

Ethnicity. University of Wisconsin-Madison Fernandez Leticia and Alfonso Morales 2006. “Hispanic Women's Language Proficiency and Utilization of Cancer Screening Services.” PAA meetings, Los Angeles CA. Also Presented to the University of Wisconsin Center for Women’s Health Research. Morales, Alfonso. 2006. “Making Order in the Market.” University of Wisconsin, Socio-Legal Studies Brownbag. Morales, Alfonso. 2006. “Different Trajectories for Street Vending at Chicago's Maxwell Street Market.” University of Wisconsin, SECD. Morales, Alfonso. 2005. “Focusing to Finish your Dissertation.” Ford Fellows meeting, Washington DC. Morales, Alfonso. 2005. "Women's Cancer Screening Practices and Language Preference: Border and Nonborder Comparisons" University of Wisconsin, FEMSEM. Morales, Alfonso. 2005. "Emotion and Instrumentality in Becoming a Street Vendor." University of Wisconsin, SPAM. Morales, Alfonso. 2005. “First Years on the Job.” Law and Society Association, Las Vegas. Morales, Alfonso. 2004. "The Social Origins and Prospects for Economic Mobility of Recent Mexican Law School Graduates." American Sociological Association, San Francisco, CA. Morales, Alfonso. 2004. “Migrant Workers and the Co-production of Health.” Law and Society Association, Chicago IL. Morales, Alfonso. 2003. “On the Co-Production of Capabilities.” Ford Foundation Fellows meeting, San Juan, Puerto Rico. Morales, Alfonso. 2002. “Negative Outcomes for Households Associated with the 1996 IIRIRA Act.” Law and Society Association, Vancouver. Morales, Alfonso. 2002. “Theory and Value Driven Social Change.” Ford Fellows Annual Meeting, Albuquerque, New Mexico. Morales, Alfonso. 2002. “VAWA: The Effect of Grassroots Organizing around Violence Against Women.” Accepted but not presented, American Sociological Association, Chicago, IL. Morales, Alfonso. 2001. “The Social Origins of Mexican Law School Graduates.” American Sociological Association Meetings, Los Angeles, CA. Morales, Alfonso. 2000. “Policy from Theory: A Critical Reconstruction of Theory on the ‘Informal’ Economy.” American Sociological Association, Washington D.C. Morales, Alfonso and Robert Jimenez. 1999. “An Anti-foundationalist Approach to Social Movement Leadership.” American Sociological Association. Morales, Alfonso. 1998. “Street Vendors and the Internet: Using Technology to Assist the Informal Sector.” Pacific Sociological Association. Morales, Alfonso. 1998. “Epistemology for Liberation: Acknowledging Power and Interest in Research and Life.” Ford Foundation Annual Fellows Meeting.

Morales, Alfonso. 1997. “Property and Ethnicity: Distinct Philosophical Traditions in the Empirical Analysis of Property.” Law and Society Association, St. Louis. Morales, Alfonso. 1996. “New Immigrants and Taxation.” Thematic session on Immigration and Crime, American Sociological Association, New York. Morales, Alfonso. 1996. “Inter-generational Differences Among Immigrants Organizing Street Vending Businesses.” National Association of Chicana/o Studies Meetings, Chicago IL. Morales, Alfonso. 1995. “Irrigation Conflict in New Mexico” in the University of Arizona’s Conflict Analysis and Resolution Working Group brown bag series. Morales, Alfonso. 1995. “Clarifying the Theoretical Status of the Concept ‘Border’” for the University of Arizona’s Borderlands Working group. Morales, Alfonso. 1994. "When Use and Preservation Conflict: Law Versus Culture in Allocating Water in Northern New Mexico, " American Sociological Association Meetings, Los Angeles CA. Morales, Alfonso. 1994. "Household Organization and Becoming a Street Vendor." American Sociological Association Meetings, Los Angeles, CA. Morales, Alfonso. 1993. "Utilizing Local Resources in Teaching.” Minority Forum: "The Influence of Minority Educators.” College of Arts and Sciences Student Advisory Council, University of Arizona. Morales, Alfonso and Steve Balkin. 1993. "Economic Advocacy for a Street Market: The Case of Maxwell Street." Illinois Economic Association, Chicago, Illinois. Morales, Alfonso. 1993. "The Social Organization of Marketing." Department of Sociology, University of Arizona. Morales, Alfonso. 1993. "Social Organizational Implications of Toxicity." University of Arizona's Seminar in Social Movements. Morales, Alfonso. 1993. "Local Resources for Teaching Undergraduates." American Sociological Association Meetings, Miami, Florida. Morales, Alfonso. 1993. "How Street Vendors Organize Risk." American Sociological Association Meetings, Miami, Florida. Morales, Alfonso. 1993. "Organizing Property Relations in the State's Shadow: The Organization of Property at Chicago's Maxwell Street Market." American Sociological Association Meetings, Miami, Florida. Morales, Alfonso. 1993. "Photographs and Video from Chicago's Maxwell Street Market.” Law and Society Association Meetings, Chicago, IL. Morales, Alfonso. 1993. "Taxation, Representation and Citizenship: Issues in the Informal Economy.” Law and Society Association Meetings in Chicago, IL. Morales, Alfonso. 1992 "Chicanos, Law and Society." National Association of Chicano Studies Meetings, San Antonio, Tx. Morales, Alfonso. 1992 "Chicanos in Labor Markets." National Association of Chicano Studies Meetings, San Antonio, Tx.

Professional Memberships American Sociological Association 1991 - present Law and Society Association 1988 - present National Association of Chicano and Chicana Studies 1988-1993; 1997-present Association of Borderlands Scholars 1998 - 2002 U.S.-Mexico Bar Association 1999-2002 Texas-Mexico Bar Association 1999-2002 Rasch Analysis Special Interest Group of the American Educational Research Association 1992-2000

References Ray Bromley, PhD Professor Geography & Planning Department SUNY-Albany Arts & Sciences Bldg. 224 Albany, NY 12222, USA Phone: (518) 442-3521 E-mail: [email protected]

Jorge Chapa, PhD Professor & Director Center for Democracy in a Multiracial Society University of Illinois-Urbana 1108 W. Stoughton Ave. Urbana, IL 61801 (217)244-0188 email: [email protected]

Wendy Espeland, PhD Associate Professor Department of Sociology Northwestern University 1810 Chicago Avenue Evanston, Illinois 60208-1330 Phone: (847) 467-1252 E-mail: [email protected]

Patty Ewick, PhD Professor and Chair Department of Sociology Clark University 950 Main Street Worcester, MA 01610 Phone: (508) 793-7529 email: [email protected]

Laura E. Gómez, JD, PhD Professor, School of Law and American Studies MSC11 6070, 1 University of New Mexico Albuquerque, NM 87131-0001 Phone: (505) 277-2113 email: [email protected]

Don S. Grant, PhD Professor of Sociology Department of Sociology Social Sciences Building, Room 400 University of Arizona Tucson, AZ 85721 Phone: (520) 621-5161 email: [email protected]

Charles Ragin, PhD Professor of Sociology and Political Science Department of Sociology University of Arizona Social Sciences Building, Room 400 Tucson, AZ 85721 Phone: (520) 621-3804 email: [email protected]

Rogelio Saenz, PhD Professor of Sociology Texas A and M University MS 4351 College Station TX, 77843 Phone: (979) 845-5133 [email protected]

Austin Sarat, JD, PhD William Nelson Cromwell Professor of Jurisprudence and Political Science Amherst College Amherst, Massachusetts 01002 Phone: (413) 542-2308 or 542-2318 email: [email protected]