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    Meet Dr. Jackson

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    Regine O. Jackson, Ph.D.

    Morehouse College

    Humanities, Social Sciences, Media, And Arts Division Faculty

    • Professor
    • Dean, Humanities, Social Sciences, Media, and Arts Division
    Education

    Brown University

    Bachelor of Arts

    University of Michigan

    Master of Arts

    University of Michigan

    Doctor of Philosophy

    Contact Information

    Phone
    (470) 639-6412
    Office Location

    Wheeler Hall, Room 203

    Office Hours

    Fridays 
    12 p.m. to 2 p.m.

    About Dr. Regine O. Jackson

    Dr. Regine Jackson is a professor of sociology and dean of the Humanities, Social Sciences, Media, and Arts Division at Morehouse College. 

    She has received grants and awards from the American Sociological Association, Social Science Research Council, Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, Ford Foundation, Spencer Foundation, National Endowment for the Humanities, and the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston.  Prior to coming to Morehouse, she served as Assistant Vice President for Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Initiatives at Agnes Scott College. She also has had faculty leadership roles at Agnes Scott, including Sociology & Anthropology Department Chair, Faculty Coordinator of Global Learning, co-chairing a pandemic instructional planning task force, participating in a college-wide strategic planning committee, serving as an officer on the Faculty Executive Committee, and chairing the Campus Life Committee, as well as leadership appointments at Emory University.

    With an undergraduate degree from Brown University and M.A. and Ph.D. from the University of Michigan, Dr. Jackson continues to be an active scholar in the areas of Haitian migration and diaspora, race and ethnicity, American immigration, spatial inequality, and global learning. Her work includes a book, Geographies of the Haitian Diaspora, with another on the way (Boston Haitians: Navigating Race, Place, and Belonging in a Majority-Minority City) under contract and numerous solo- and co-authored publications in journals and books. Dr. Jackson’s research is complemented by public scholarship, commentary, faculty development workshops and invited presentations that place her in high demand as a speaker.

    • PUBLICATIONS & PRESENTATIONS

      PUBLICATIONS & PRESENTATIONS

      • Geographies of the Haitian Diaspora (New York and London: Routledge, 2011). 
      • “Atlanta’s Caribbean Carnival as Cultural and Spatial Practice” Contexts21.2 (2022): 57 -59. 
      • Gundolf Graml and Regine O. Jackson, “It Starts with a Journey: Global Learning as a Holistic, Interdisciplinary Curricular and Co-curricular Framework at a Liberal Arts College” Journal of Higher Education Theory and Practice 21.5 (2021): 186 – 195.
      • Darrick Hamilton and Regine O. Jackson, “An Asset-Poor Black American Middle Class: The Iterative Role of Hard Work, Education, and Intergenerational Poverty” in Christian Suter, S. Madheswaran and B. P. Vani, eds., The Middle Class in World Society: Negotiations, Diversities and Lived Experiences (London: Routledge, 2020): 201 – 218.
      • Tatjana Meschede, Darrick Hamilton, Ana Patricia Muñoz, Regine O. Jackson, and William Darity Jr., “Inequality in the ‘Cradle of Liberty’: Race/Ethnicity and Wealth in Greater Boston” Race and Social Problems 8.1 (2016): 18 – 28.
      • “The Failure of Categories: Haitians in the United Nations Organization in the Congo, 1960 -1964” Journal of Haitian Studies 20.1 (2014): 34 – 64.
      • Regine O. Jackson, Kathryn A. Sweeney and Adria N. Welcher, “‘It Just Happens’: Colorblind Ideology and Undergraduate Explanations for Lack of Interaction across Race Lines” Education, Citizenship and Social Justice 9.3 (2014): 91 – 208.
      • “Imagining Boston: Haitian Immigrants and Place in Zadie Smith’s On Beauty” Journal of American Studies 46.4 (2012): 855 – 873.
      • “Black Immigrants and the Rhetoric of Social Distancing” Sociology Compass 4.3 (2010): 193 –206.
      • “The Shifting Nature of Racism” in Cameron D. Lippard and Charles A. Gallagher, eds. Being Brown in Dixie: Race, Ethnicity, and Latino Immigration in the New South (Boulder, CO: First Forum Press, 2010): 25 – 51.
      • “After the Exodus: The New Catholics in Boston’s Old Ethnic Neighborhoods” Religion and American Culture 17.2 (Summer 2007): 191 – 212.
      • “Beyond Social Distancing: Intermarriage and Ethnic Boundaries among Black Americans in Boston” in Y. Shaw-Taylor and S.A. Tuch, eds. The Other African Americans: Contemporary African and Caribbean Immigrants in the United States (Lanham, MD: Rowman &Littlefield, 2007): 217

    • AWARDS & HONORS

      AWARDS & HONORS

      • President’s Award for Social Justice — Mellon Foundation/ Agnes Scott College (2020)
      • Kathy ’68 and Lawrence Ashe Professorship – Agnes Scott College (2018)
      • Space, Place and the Humanities Summer Institute Award – National Endowment for the Humanities (2017)
      • Scholars in Residence Award – Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture (2012)
      • Center for Faculty Development & Excellence Book Manuscript Conference Award – Emory University for “Local Strategies of Belonging” (2010)
      • Open Society Visiting Scholar Fellowship – Vilnius University, Lithuania (Fall 2004)
      • W.E.B. Du Bois Institute for African and African American Research Residential Fellowship –Harvard University (Fall 2003)
      • Salzburg Seminar in American Studies Fellowship – Salzburg, Austria: “Migration, Race and Ethnicity in Europe” (2003)
      • Ford Foundation Postdoctoral Fellowship – National Research Council (2002-2003)
      • Arts & Sciences Faculty Summer Research Fellowship – University of Richmond (2002)
      • Dissertation Fellowship – University of Michigan, Center for African & Afro-American Studies (1999)
      • Henry A. Murray Dissertation Award – Murray Research Center, Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study (1998)
      • Summer Fellowship – Social Science Research Council, International Migration Program (1997)
      • ICPSR Summer Institute Award – University of Michigan, Institute for Social Research (1995, 1994)
      • Horace C. Rackham Merit Fellowship – University of Michigan (1993)
      • Samuel C. Lamport Award – Brown University, Department of Sociology (1993)
    • FEATURED CONTENT

      FEATURED CONTENT

    PUBLICATIONS & PRESENTATIONS

    • Geographies of the Haitian Diaspora (New York and London: Routledge, 2011). 
    • “Atlanta’s Caribbean Carnival as Cultural and Spatial Practice” Contexts21.2 (2022): 57 -59. 
    • Gundolf Graml and Regine O. Jackson, “It Starts with a Journey: Global Learning as a Holistic, Interdisciplinary Curricular and Co-curricular Framework at a Liberal Arts College” Journal of Higher Education Theory and Practice 21.5 (2021): 186 – 195.
    • Darrick Hamilton and Regine O. Jackson, “An Asset-Poor Black American Middle Class: The Iterative Role of Hard Work, Education, and Intergenerational Poverty” in Christian Suter, S. Madheswaran and B. P. Vani, eds., The Middle Class in World Society: Negotiations, Diversities and Lived Experiences (London: Routledge, 2020): 201 – 218.
    • Tatjana Meschede, Darrick Hamilton, Ana Patricia Muñoz, Regine O. Jackson, and William Darity Jr., “Inequality in the ‘Cradle of Liberty’: Race/Ethnicity and Wealth in Greater Boston” Race and Social Problems 8.1 (2016): 18 – 28.
    • “The Failure of Categories: Haitians in the United Nations Organization in the Congo, 1960 -1964” Journal of Haitian Studies 20.1 (2014): 34 – 64.
    • Regine O. Jackson, Kathryn A. Sweeney and Adria N. Welcher, “‘It Just Happens’: Colorblind Ideology and Undergraduate Explanations for Lack of Interaction across Race Lines” Education, Citizenship and Social Justice 9.3 (2014): 91 – 208.
    • “Imagining Boston: Haitian Immigrants and Place in Zadie Smith’s On Beauty” Journal of American Studies 46.4 (2012): 855 – 873.
    • “Black Immigrants and the Rhetoric of Social Distancing” Sociology Compass 4.3 (2010): 193 –206.
    • “The Shifting Nature of Racism” in Cameron D. Lippard and Charles A. Gallagher, eds. Being Brown in Dixie: Race, Ethnicity, and Latino Immigration in the New South (Boulder, CO: First Forum Press, 2010): 25 – 51.
    • “After the Exodus: The New Catholics in Boston’s Old Ethnic Neighborhoods” Religion and American Culture 17.2 (Summer 2007): 191 – 212.
    • “Beyond Social Distancing: Intermarriage and Ethnic Boundaries among Black Americans in Boston” in Y. Shaw-Taylor and S.A. Tuch, eds. The Other African Americans: Contemporary African and Caribbean Immigrants in the United States (Lanham, MD: Rowman &Littlefield, 2007): 217

    AWARDS & HONORS

    • President’s Award for Social Justice — Mellon Foundation/ Agnes Scott College (2020)
    • Kathy ’68 and Lawrence Ashe Professorship – Agnes Scott College (2018)
    • Space, Place and the Humanities Summer Institute Award – National Endowment for the Humanities (2017)
    • Scholars in Residence Award – Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture (2012)
    • Center for Faculty Development & Excellence Book Manuscript Conference Award – Emory University for “Local Strategies of Belonging” (2010)
    • Open Society Visiting Scholar Fellowship – Vilnius University, Lithuania (Fall 2004)
    • W.E.B. Du Bois Institute for African and African American Research Residential Fellowship –Harvard University (Fall 2003)
    • Salzburg Seminar in American Studies Fellowship – Salzburg, Austria: “Migration, Race and Ethnicity in Europe” (2003)
    • Ford Foundation Postdoctoral Fellowship – National Research Council (2002-2003)
    • Arts & Sciences Faculty Summer Research Fellowship – University of Richmond (2002)
    • Dissertation Fellowship – University of Michigan, Center for African & Afro-American Studies (1999)
    • Henry A. Murray Dissertation Award – Murray Research Center, Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study (1998)
    • Summer Fellowship – Social Science Research Council, International Migration Program (1997)
    • ICPSR Summer Institute Award – University of Michigan, Institute for Social Research (1995, 1994)
    • Horace C. Rackham Merit Fellowship – University of Michigan (1993)
    • Samuel C. Lamport Award – Brown University, Department of Sociology (1993)

    FEATURED CONTENT