Areas of Research/Interest: Race and ethnicity, especially racial classification; multiracial population; demography; sociology of knowledge and science; immigration; economic sociology. Fellowships/Honors: 2008-09 Fulbright Scholarship to University of Milan-Bicocca, Italy; 2006-07 Ford Foundation Postdoctoral Fellow at Columbia University; 2005 Co-Recipient, American Sociological Association Dissertation Award; 2002-03 Spencer Foundation Dissertation Fellow.
Select Publications:
Bolnick, Deborah A., Duana Fullwiley, Troy Duster, Richard S. Cooper, Joan H. Fujimura, Jonathan Kahn, Jay Kaufman, Jonathan Marks, Ann Morning, Alondra Nelson, Pilar Ossorio, Jenny Reardon, Susan M. Reverby, and Kimberly TallBear. 2007. “The Science and Business of Genetic Ancestry.” Science, October 19: 399-400. Click here to read. Morning, Ann. 2005. "Multiracial Classification on the United States Census: Myth, Reality, and Future Impact." Revue Européenne des Migrations Internationales 21(2): 111-134. http://remi.revues.org/document2495.html. Morning, Ann. 2005. "Keyword: Race." Contexts 4(4): 44-46. Click here to read. Morning, Ann. 2005. "On Distinction." In Is Race Real? a web forum organized by the Social Science Research Council. http://raceandgenomics.ssrc.org/Morning/. Morning, Ann. 2005. "Everything You Always Wanted to Know About the Census: Gearing Up For 2010." Census FAQs produced for Swirl, Inc. http://www.swirlinc.org/censusfaqs.htm. Morning, Ann, and Daniel Sabbagh. 2005. "From Sword to Plowshare: Using Race for Discrimination and Antidiscrimination in the United States." International Social Science Journal 57(183): 57-73. Click here to read. Lamont, Michèle, Ann Morning, and Margarita Mooney. 2002. “Particular Universalisms: North African Immigrants Respond to French Racism.” Ethnic and Racial Studies 25(3): 390-414. Click here to read. Goldstein, Joshua R., and Ann J. Morning. 2002. "Back in the Box: The Dilemma of Using Multiple-Race Data for Single-Race Laws." Pp. 119-136 in The New Race Question: How the Census Counts Multiracial Individuals, edited by Joel Perlmann and Mary C. Waters. New York: Russell Sage Foundation and Levy Economics Institute. Morning, Ann. 2002. “New Faces, Old Faces: Counting the Multiracial Population Past and Present.” Pp. 41-67 in New Faces in a Changing America: Multiracial Identity in the 21st Century, edited by Herman DeBose and Loretta Winters. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage. Click here to read. Del Pinal, Jorge H., Leah M. Taguba, Arthur R. Cresce, and Ann Morning. 2001. “Reporting of Two or More Races in the 1999 American Community Survey.” Working Paper No. 329 (May). Annandale-on-Hudson, NY: The Jerome Levy Economics Institute of Bard College. Click here to read. Morning, Ann. 2001. “The Racial Self-Identification of South Asians in the United States.” Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 27(1): 61-79. Click here to read. Tienda, Marta, and Ann Morning. 2001. "Population Composition by Ethnicity and Race in North America." Pp. 11745-9 in International Encyclopedia of the Social and Behavioral Sciences, edited by Neil J. Smelser and Paul B. Baltes. Oxford: Pergamon. Click here to read. Goldstein, Joshua, and Ann Morning. 2000. “The Multiple-Race Population of the United States: Issues and Estimates.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 97(11): 6230-6235. Click here to read. Morning, Ann. 2000. “Who Is Multiracial? Definitions and Decisions.” Sociological Imagination 37(4): 209-229. |

