College of Natural and Behavioral Sciences
Department of Sociology
Associate Professor
Biography:
Dr. Joanna Perez joined the Sociology Department in fall 2016. Grounded on her experience as a proud daughter of Guatemalan immigrants and first-generation scholar, she is committed to engaging in social justice work. Her research lies at the intersection of immigration, family, education, and social movements. Using qualitative methods and accounting for intersectionality, she examines how systems of power and inequality shape the social conditions of immigrant communities. To that end, her research reveals key pathways by which historically castigated and stigmatized social groups are capable of using activism to rectify and potentially reverse their prescribed positions in society. As an educator, she is invested in meeting the needs of underserved students and facilitating student-centered learning environments that draw from students鈥 experiences, strengths, and resilience. Informed by the voices, experiences, and needs of the community, her service commitments aim to promote equity, access, and empowerment.
Education:
| Ph.D | Sociology University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign | 2016 |
| M.A. | Sociology (Minor in Latina/o Studies) University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign | 2011 |
| B.A. | Sociology (Minos in Civic Engagement and Labor & Workplace Studies) University of California, Los Angeles | 2009 |
Research:
Latina/o Sociology, Immigration, Family, Education, Racial & Ethnic Minorities, Law and Society, Social Movements, and Qualitative Methods
Teaching:
Publications:
Perez, Joanna B. 2020. 鈥溾楾argeted But Not Shut Down!:鈥 Latino Undocumented Immigrant Activists Fighting for Social Change.鈥 Pp. 507-516 in Race & Ethnicity: The Sociological Mindful Approach, edited by J. Brooks, H. Sarabia, & A. Kimura Ida. San Diego,CA: Cognella Academic Publishing.
Abrego, Leisy J., Andrea G贸mez Cervantes, Briceida Hernandez-Toledo, Leigh-Anna Hidalgo, Lucia P. Leon, Joanna B. Perez, & Iris M. Ramirez. 2020. 鈥淐ompassionate Pedagogies in a Pandemic: Reflections from Latina Scholars.鈥 Latinx Talk: The Ohio State University Libraries. Retrieved June 17, 2020
Perez, Joanna B. 2019. 鈥淭he Evolution of Undocustudent Resistance, Activism, & Empowerment.鈥 The Center for the Study of Social Movements at the University of Notre Dame. Mobilizing Ideas. Retrieved January 2, 2019
Perez, Joanna B. 2019. 鈥淣ational Community of Latino Faculty.鈥 Hispanic Outlook on Education Magazine, 30(3):31. Retrieved December 1, 2019
Perez, Joanna B. 2019. 鈥淚cebox.鈥 Chiricu Journal: Latina/o Literatures, Arts, and Cultures, 4(1): 197-199. doi:10.2979/chiricu.4.1.21.
Burciaga, Edelina M., Lisa M. Martinez, Kevin Escudero, Andrea Flores, Joanna B. Perez, and Carolina Valdivia. 2018. 鈥淢igrant Illegality across Uneven Legal Geographies: Introduction to the Special Issue of Law & Policy.鈥 Law & Policy, 41(1):5-11. doi: 10.1111/lapo.12116.
Perez, Joanna B. 2018. 鈥淯ndocuartivism: Latino Undocumented Immigrant Empowerment Through Art and Activism.鈥 Chiricu Journal: Latina/o Literatures, Arts, and Cultures 2(2):23-44. doi:10.2979/chiricu.2.2.04.
Zerai, Assata, and Joanna B. Perez. 2018. 鈥淐onclusion: Paying Serious Attention to Women鈥檚 Scholarship to Influence Policy in East Africa.鈥 Pp. 133-140 in Safe Water, Sanitation, and Early Childhood Malnutrition in East Africa: An African Feminist Analysis of the Lives of Women in Kenya, Tanzania, and Uganda, edited by A. Zerai & B.N. Sanya. Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield Publishers, Inc.
Perez, Joanna B. 2017. 鈥淏ecoming an Agent of Social Change.鈥 Hispanic Outlook on Education Magazine, 27(11):30. Retrieved August 1, 2017
Zerai, Assata, Joanna B. Perez, and Chenyi Wang. 2016. 鈥淎 Proposal for Expanding Endarkened Transnational Feminist Praxis: Creating a Database of Women鈥檚 Scholarship and Activism to Promote Health in Zimbabwe.鈥 Qualitative Inquiry, 23(2):107-118.
doi:10.1177/1077800416660577.
Gonzales, Roberto. G., Joanna B. Perez, & Ariel G. Ruiz. 2016. 鈥溾淣i de aqui, ni de alla鈥: Undocumented Immigrant Youth and the Challenges of Identity Formation amid Conflicting Contexts.鈥 Pp. 119-139 in Mexican Migration to the United States: Perspectives From Both Sides of the Border, edited by H.D. Romo and O. Mogollon-Lopez. Austin, TX: University of Texas Press.鈥