Social Sciences

Our Faculty

Full-Time Faculty

Dr. Carina Bandhauer

Professor of Sociology
bandhauerc@wcsu.ed
203-837-8650

Dr. Carina Bandhauer, Professor of Sociology, earned a Ph.D. at Binghamton University in 2001. She specializes in the sociology of racism, immigration, Latino/a/x studies, and globalization with a regional specialization in Latin America.  Her research focus is on the study of racism, the anti-immigrant movement, international migration and globalization.  Bandhauer is committed to teaching, researching and working to achieve social justice through awareness.  Dr. Bandhauer founded Undocumented Student Services at WCSU in 2017 in conjunction with Connecticut Students for a Dream, and coordinates the UndocuAlly Task Force.  In 2020 she co-founded and now co-chairs the Racial Justice Coalition.  Dr. Bandhauer has ongoing partnerships with humanitarian groups in El Salvador where she has worked with rural communities since 1993.  Dr. Bandhauer served as creative consultant for the production of the film, “El Pueblo Unido,” which documented her work in El Salvador and premiered at the Montreal Film Festival in 2004.  Dr. Bandhauer hosts a variety of alternating speakers series on campus including a Latinx Speakers Series; an Undocumented Speakers Series; a Racial Justice Speakers series; a Transnational Families Speakers Series; and a geographically rotating International Social Sciences Symposium.  Please feel free to email to find out what’s on the horizon!

Christine Hegel-Cantarella

Chair of Social Sciences & Professor of Anthropology
hegelcantarellac@wcsu.edu
203-837-3914

Christine Hegel-Cantarella (Ph.D./M.Phil. Cultural Anthropology, City University of New York Graduate Center) is currently researching and writing about the fight for livelihood rights and recognition for waste pickers (also called canners/informal recyclers/micro-haulers) in New York City and globally. She has conducted ethnographic research in Cairo and Port Said, Egypt on the use of legal fictions to reconfigure debt relations, collaborated on a study of Finnish hockey workers as part of the Cold Rush project on Arctic economies, and undertaken multiple projects that explore the intersections between design, art, and anthropology. Her co-authored book, Ethnography by Design: Scenographic Experiments in Fieldwork, (2019, Routledge) with George E. Marcus and Luke Cantarella, offers a model for using design thinking and methods for ethnographic research. She has been awarded research grants from the National Science Foundation, the Social Science Research Council, and the Fulbright Commission. She is currently the Chair of the New York Academy of Sciences Anthropology Section.

ANT100 – Introduction to Cultural Anthropology
ANT/SOC 340 – Women, Work, and Power
ANT/SOC216 – Middle East Anthropology
ANT/SOC 352 – Women and Gender in the Middle East
ANT/SOC360 – Public Anthropology & Sociology: Research for Social Change
SS201 – Researching Social Issues
ANT/ART/HON 398 – No Place Like Home
ANT/SOC/SS410 – Connecticut Futures Lab Internship

Cultural Anthropology, Informal Labor, Theories of Value, Circular Economy, Sanitation Politics, Waste and Discard Studies, Middle East, Visual Anthropology, Qualitative and Engaged Research Methodologies

Dr. Manoj Misra

Associate Professor of Sociology
misram@wcsu.edu
203-837-8453

Dr. Manoj Misra earned a PhD in Sociology from the University of Alberta, Canada. Before joining this university, he was an Assistant Professor of Sustainable Development at Hankuk University of Foreign Studies in Seoul, Republic of Korea. After the completion of his PhD, Dr. Misra was invited as a visiting research fellow at the Agrarian Alternatives cluster at Heidelberg University, Germany. His writings have won best graduate paper awards at the American Anthropological Association and the Canadian Association for the Study of International Development. He has published research articles in top-tier academic journals including in the Journal of Agrarian Change, Agriculture and Human Values, and Climate and Development. He also regularly writes in newspapers and magazines. His research interests are agrarian change and food sovereignty, energy issues and climate justice, and development dispossession in South Asia.

Dr. Jessica Anderson Schofield

Assistant Professor of Political Science
schofieldj@wcsu.edu
203-837-8454

Dr. Jessica Anderson Schofield earned a Ph.D. in Political Science from the University of Missouri in 2017 and a B.A. in Global Studies and Political Science from South Dakota State University. She specializes in the study of international relations and comparative politics. Her research focuses primarily on issues relating to international human rights and enforcement of human rights law through international courts, and she is currently working on a project examining allegations of African bias in the International Criminal Court. Dr. Schofield also conducts research on topics relating to women’s rights, political violence, and African politics. She has presented her research at numerous national and international conferences, and her work on human rights theory has been published in the Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Empirical International Relations Theory. 

Dr. Robert D. Whittemore

Professor of Anthropology
whittemorer@wcsu.edu
203-837-8461

Dr. Robert D. Whittemore earned his Ph.D. at the University of California in Los Angeles. After serving as a Peace Corps Volunteer and teacher and educational director for a child development center in Massachusetts, he did ethnographic fieldwork among the Mandinka people of the Casamance region of the Republic of Senegal. He also worked in urban Los Angeles with the developmentally disabled. As an associate of the Institute for Writing & Thinking at Bard College, Whittemore, in his classes at Western, explores the relationship between writing and thought, underscoring the importance of developing the kind of ethnographic sensibility essential to global citizenship. His wife, Elizabeth, who has collaborated with him on some of his research and writing, is a poet, playwright and novelist. Their eldest daughter, Miranda, is a novelist and their youngest, Vanessa Kai, is a filmmaker.

Dr. Howell Williams

Associate Professor of Political Science
williamsh@wcsu.edu
203-837-9335

Dr. Howell Williams, Associate Professor of Political Science, holds a PhD in Politics from the New School for Social Research. He is broadly interested in how race, class, gender, and sexuality shape U.S. welfare state development. He is currently working on two research projects. First, he is completing a book manuscript on fatherhood as a racialized site of welfare policymaking. The second project is a collaboration with historian Dr. Leslie Lindenauer on the impact of Lochner Era Supreme Court jurisprudence on the day-to-day lives of factory workers in industrial cities in the Northeast. He has published articles in Laws; PS: Political Science and Politics; New Political Science; and Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy. His research has been recognized with the American Political Science Association’s Cynthia Weber Award for the best paper exploring sexuality and politics, the Robert Bailey award for best paper on LGBTQ issues, and the New School’s Hannah Arendt Prize for best dissertation in politics.

PS 102 American Government
PS 201 Political Theory
PS 217 The Legislative Process
PS 218 State and Local Government
PS 273 Politics in Film
PS 350 Congress & The Presidency
PS 340 Gender, Justice, and the State

American political development, political theory, identity politics, race and ethnicity politics, feminist theory, queer theory, critical race theory

Part-Time Faculty

Western Connecticut State University

Vincent Bloch

(Sociology)

Martha Tepepa Covarrubias

Martha Tepepa Covarrubias

(Anthropology and Sociology)

Martha holds an M.A. in cultural anthropology from Columbia University in New York and a Ph.D. in urban environmental studies from El Colegio de México in Mexico City. She has studied various Latin American job guarantee and cash transfer programs through the lenses of gender, environmental issues, and social policy. Her research draws on extensive fieldwork conducted in popular neighborhoods in Buenos Aires Province, Argentina. Using a multidisciplinary approach, she has explored the impacts of social policy on residents of irregular settlements facing environmental and health risks, high crime rates, and elevated unemployment. Her background in economics has enabled her to convert data from her ethnographic research into a multidimensional poverty index.

ANTH 100 Introduction to Cultural Anthropology
ANTH 400 Advanced Topics in Anthropology: Urban Poverty,
WP 198 Indigenous Mexico & Maya Civilization

Poverty and social policy, urban settlements and the environment, Latin America, conditional cash transfers, employment programs, indigenous movements in the global south, decolonizing theory

Western Connecticut State University

Richard Duque

(Sociology)

I hold a B.A in Economics and an MA and PhD in Sociology. My doctoral research assessed the impact of digital technologies on knowledge communities in the global south. More recently, I have conducted research on intergenerational poverty & health inequalities during Covid-19, as well as on the historical context & present day dynamics explaining the increase in active shooter events over the past three decades. Currently, guided by a socio-ecological approach, I have been co-developing a mental health intervention for schools, which leverages Artificial Intelligence in organizational decision making. The interdisciplinary global and local research I have conducted has led to multiple peer reviewed publications and book chapters, and is also reflected in many of the courses I have taught over the years. These include, for example, Environmental Crime & Justice, Sociology of Globalization, Sociology of Deviance, Sociology of Health, Urban Sociology, Compex Organizations, New Digital Technologies & Society, Social Networks of Crime & Health, as well as Science, Technology & Society.

SOC 100 Introduction to Sociology

Global and Local topics located at the intersection of Technological Innovation, Inequality, (i.e., class, gender, race) and Risk. This would include issues related to global development, environmental sustainability, the promise and threat of Artificial Intelligence, and community health & security (i.e., active shooters threats, intergenerational poverty and access to quality healthcare, and supporting mental health in schools/work)

Western Connecticut State University

Jayson Funke

(Geography and Sociology)

B.A., History (University of Minnesota), M.A. History (Northeastern University), Ph.D., Geography (Clark University). My scholarly work seeks to advance critical theory and analyses in the quest for viable solutions to global issues and problems. I am Editorial Associate for the academic journal Human Geography, Series Editor for the forthcoming Radical Geography book series, a subset of Brill’s Studies in Critical Social Sciences, and Grants Coordinator for the Institute of Human Geography. I have published several academic books chapters and articles (Human Geography, Cambridge Journal of Economics etc.) and co-edited a collective reference volume Geography in the 21st Century (Bloomsbury).

GEO 100 Principles of World Geography
SOC 100 Introduction to Sociology

International Political Economy, Financial Geography, Geopolitics, Political Ecology

Western Connecticut State University

Lisa Worth Huber, Ph.D

(Sociology)

Lisa Worth Huber (PhD in Peace Studies from Lancaster University, UK) is president of the National Peace Academy US, in partnership with the International Institute of Peace Education (IIPE) and the Global Campaign for Peace Education (GCPE); serves on the board of directors and faculty of Global Peace Education Network (GPEN) who are currently in partnership with UNESCO at the UN, a trainer for UnGUN-Healing Trauma through the Arts, and an advisor and mentor for teaching artists at the Connecticut Center for Nonviolence. Through her work, Lisa addresses conflict, creates dialogue, and designs and implements peacebuilding programs in institutions, communities, and schools. In addition, she’s been a teaching artist for over 20 years and integrates the arts in multiple forms into her work.

SOC 100 Introduction to Sociology
SOC 120 Principles of Sociology: Writing Intensive

Sociology, Social justice, Human Rights, Conflict Resolution and Transformation, Peacebuilding, Peace Education, Trauma Healing through the Arts

Western Connecticut State University

Emily Metzner

(Anthropology)

Western Connecticut State University

Belinda Quartey

(Sociology)

Western Connecticut State University

Michelle Santoro, JD

(Political Science and Sociology)

Western Connecticut State University

Faline Schneiderman

(Anthropology and Sociology)

Faline Schneiderman (BA Anthropology/Business Administration, State University of New York at New Paltz; MA Archaeology, University of Connecticut) is a practicing archaeologist and historic preservationist with Historical Perspectives, Inc., a Connecticut women-owned Cultural Resources Management firm. Areas of study include vast metropolitan New York City infrastructure and transit systems, and Indigenous archaeological settlements and specialized sites. Through her professional and volunteer work on the board of a local zoning commission, a local preservation group, and a regional land trust, she has informed communities on issues related preservation and conservation, and worked to recognize and respond to diverse public views and needs. She also serves as a Justice of the Peace.

ANT 100 Introduction to Cultural Anthropology
ANT 104 Introduction to Archaeology
ANT 229 41 Archaeology Field School
ANT 341 Cultural Resources Management
SOC 100 Introduction to Sociology
SOC 101 Social Problems

Applied Anthropology, Indigenous and Historical Archaeology, Historic Preservation, Cultural Resources Management, Land Use, Environmental Conservation, Local Social Awareness

Western Connecticut State University

Hans Tokke

(Sociology)

About Dr. Laurie Weinstein

Dr. Laurie Weinstein is Professor Emeritus at WCSU Anthropology. Although she is retired, she still teaches for the Department and handles the Permaculture Garden logistics or everything from grant-writing to managing the student interns and networking with the food pantries in the Danbury region. The Permaculture Garden was her initiative when she was Chair of the JGC. When she is not working at WCSU, she is writing her books about Native England (Between Two Rivers and Two Wars: Western New England in the 18th century with Dr. Lucianne Lavin, for U of Arizona Press) and managing a major series for the U of Arizona Press. Weinstein also started the Archaeology Program and CRM minor at WCSU and she still consults with state officers, local museums, and historical societies about regional culture history. In particular, she is active with the Institute for American Indian Studies in Washington, CT. Dr. Weinstein has a lot of pets and helps to rehab small animals up in Massachusetts where she lives.

About Dr. R. Averell Manes

Dr. R. Averell Manes earned a Ph.D. from Syracuse University’s Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs. She taught comparative politics, research methodology and conflict resolution courses at WCSU for 28 years. As the founder and Director of the Conflict Resolution Project, she offered information, training and services to members of the WCSU from 1995 to 2020. Since its inception in 2008 until 2019, Dr. Manes co-founded, co-chaired and coordinated the Hancock Student Leadership Program with the Office of Academic Affairs. She served as the faculty editor of the Social Sciences Journal from 2001 to 2016. A conflict analysis and resolution specialist, she continues to work as a consultant, trainer, and intervener with non-profit organizations, government agencies, public and private schools, businesses, and private individuals. In 2021, the R. Averell Manes Gender Equity Award was created in recognition of her career of service in the fields of gender justice and conflict resolution. Currently, she is a Faculty Affiliate at the Program on the Advancement of Research on Conflict and Collaboration (PARCC) at the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs, Syracuse University.

About Dr. Christine Hegel-Cantarella

Dr. Christine Hegel holds an M.Phil. and a Ph.D. in Anthropology from the Graduate Center of the City University of New York. She teaches courses on economic and legal anthropology, public anthropology, qualitative research methods, and the Middle East, among others. In 2017, Hegel received the CSCU Board of Regents Award for Teaching Excellence. Her current research project examines and contributes to the fight for livelihood rights for waste pickers (also called canners/informal recyclers/micro-haulers), for which she conducts field research in Brooklyn, New York and collaborates with local and global organizations. Prior collaborations have taken her to Finland to study hockey workers as part of research on Arctic economies, and she has undertaken a number of projects since 2012 focused on the intersections between design and anthropology. Her recent co-authored book, Ethnography by Design: Scenographic Experiments in Fieldwork, (2019, Routledge) with George E. Marcus and Luke Cantarella, offers a model for using design thinking and methods for ethnographic research. She has been awarded research grants from the National Science Foundation, the Social Science Research Council, and the Fulbright Commission to conduct ethnographic research in Cairo and Port Said, Egypt, on on the use of legal fictions to reconfigure debt relations. Hegel has authored essays for the edited volumes Collaborative Anthropology Today: A Collection of Exceptions (2021, Cornell University Press) Anthropology of the Middle East and North Africa Into the New Millennium (2013, Indiana University Press) and Family Law in the Muslim World (2016, I.B. Tauris) and articles, essays, and reviews in The Anthropology of Work; Proceedings of the Participatory Design Conference; American Anthropologist; Cultural Anthropology; Anthropological Quarterly; and Law, Culture, and Humanities Journal. Her website is http://christinehegel.com/wp/

About Dr. Howell Williams

Dr. Howell Williams holds a PhD in Politics from the New School for Social Research. His doctoral dissertation, “Re-Focus on the Family: The Development of a Liberal Family Politics,” was awarded the 2017 Hannah Arendt Dissertation Award in Politics. Williams researches the relationship between families and the state in America politics from the mid-twentieth century to the present. This research combines Williams’s interest in welfare policy, political discourse, and the rights of women and LGBT people. Williams incorporates these research interests into his political science classes on a range of topics, including American government, political institutions, political theory, and gender and sexuality politics. He has fellowships from the British Library and the U.K. Higher Education Academy. His writing has appeared in PS: Politics & Political Science, American Immigration (2nd Ed.), and The Guardian, and he contributes political commentary for the BBC. His current research project is a book on family values rhetoric in the contemporary Democratic Party.

About Dr. Robert D. Whittemore

Dr. Robert D. Whittemore earned his Ph.D. at the University of California in Los Angeles. After serving as a Peace Corps Volunteer and teacher and educational director for a child development center in Massachusetts, he did ethnographic fieldwork among the Mandinka people of the Casamance region of the Republic of Senegal. He also worked in urban Los Angeles with the developmentally disabled. As an associate of the Institute for Writing & Thinking at Bard College, Whittemore, in his classes at Western, explores the relationship between writing and thought, underscoring the importance of developing the kind of ethnographic sensibility essential to global citizenship. His wife, Elizabeth, who has collaborated with him on some of his research and writing, is a poet, playwright and novelist. Their eldest daughter, Miranda, is a novelist and their youngest, Vanessa Kai, is a filmmaker.

About Jessica Anderson Schofield

Dr. Jessica Anderson Schofield earned a Ph.D. in Political Science from the University of Missouri in 2017 and a B.A. in Global Studies and Political Science from South Dakota State University. She specializes in the study of international relations and comparative politics. Her research focuses primarily on issues relating to international human rights and enforcement of human rights law through international courts, and she is currently working on a project examining allegations of African bias in the International Criminal Court. Dr. Schofield also conducts research on topics relating to women’s rights, political violence, and African politics. She has presented her research at numerous national and international conferences, and her work on human rights theory has been published in the Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Empirical International Relations Theory. 

About Dr. Manoj Misra

Dr. Manoj Misra earned a PhD in Sociology from the University of Alberta, Canada. Before joining this university, he was an Assistant Professor of Sustainable Development at Hankuk University of Foreign Studies in Seoul, Republic of Korea. After the completion of his PhD, Dr. Misra was invited as a visiting research fellow at the Agrarian Alternatives cluster at Heidelberg University, Germany. His writings have won best graduate paper awards at the American Anthropological Association and the Canadian Association for the Study of International Development. He has published research articles in top-tier academic journals including in the Journal of Agrarian Change, Agriculture and Human Values, and Climate and Development. He also regularly writes in newspapers and magazines. His research interests are agrarian change and food sovereignty, energy issues and climate justice, and development dispossession in South Asia.

About Dr. Carina Bandhauer

Dr. Carina Bandhauer, Professor of Sociology, earned a Ph.D. at Binghamton University in 2001. She specializes in the sociology of racism, immigration, Latino/a/x studies, and globalization with a regional specialization in Latin America. Her research focus is on the study of racism, the anti-immigrant movement, international migration and globalization. Bandhauer is committed to teaching, researching and working to achieve social justice through awareness. Dr. Bandhauer founded Undocumented Student Services at WCSU in 2017 in conjunction with Connecticut Students for a Dream, and coordinates the UndocuAlly Task Force. In 2020 she co-founded and now co-chairs the Racial Justice Coalition. Dr. Bandhauer has ongoing partnerships with humanitarian groups in El Salvador where she has worked with rural communities since 1993. Dr. Bandhauer served as creative consultant for the production of the film, “El Pueblo Unido,” which documented her work in El Salvador and premiered at the Montreal Film Festival in 2004. Dr. Bandhauer hosts a variety of alternating speakers series on campus including a Latinx Speakers Series; an Undocumented Speakers Series; a Racial Justice Speakers series; a Transnational Families Speakers Series; and a geographically rotating International Social Sciences Symposium. Please feel free to email to find out what’s on the horizon!