FORREST STUART University of Chicago Department of Sociology 1126 E. 59 th Street Chicago, IL 60637

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1 FORREST STUART University of Chicago Department of Sociology 1126 E. 59 th Street Chicago, IL Phone: Fax: EMPLOYMENT Assistant Professor of Sociology and the College, University of Chicago, 2012 Present. Affiliations Junior Fellow, Yale University Ethnography Project, 2014 Present. Faculty Fellow, University of Chicago Urban Health Initiative, Faculty Affiliate, Center for the Study of Race, Politics, and Culture, University of Chicago, 2012 Present. Faculty Affiliate, Urban Network, University of Chicago, 2012 Present. EDUCATION Ph.D. Sociology, University of California, Los Angeles, M.A. Sociology, University of California, Los Angeles, M.S. Justice, Law & Society, American University, B.A. Politics, University of California, Santa Cruz, PUBLICATIONS *Denotes student author Books Stuart, Forrest Down, Out, and Under Arrest: Policing and Everyday Life in Skid Row. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Articles and Book Chapters Stuart, Forrest. Forthcoming. Becoming Copwise : Policing, Culture, and the Collateral Consequences of Street-Level Criminalization. Law and Society Review. Stuart, Forrest, and Steve Herbert. Forthcoming. Policing (In)Equality. The Sage 1

2 Handbook of Global Policing, edited by Ben Bradford, Beatrice Jauregui, Ian Loader, and Jonny Steinberg. London: Sage. Stuart, Forrest, Amada Armenta, and *Melissa Osborne Legal Control of Marginal Groups. Annual Review of Law and Social Science 11: Stuart, Forrest On the Streets, Under Arrest: Policing Homelessness in the Twenty-First Century. Sociology Compass 9 (11): Stuart, Forrest From Rabble Management to Recovery Management : Policing Homelessness in Marginal Urban Space. Urban Studies 51 (9): Deener, Andrew, Steve Erie, Vlad Kogan, and Forrest Stuart Planning LA: The New Politics of Neighborhood Development and Downtown Revitalization. In New York and Los Angeles: The Uncertain Future, edited by David Halle and Andrew A. Beveridge. New York: Oxford University Press. Stuart, Forrest Constructing Police Abuse after Rodney King: How Skid Row Residents and the LAPD Contest Video Evidence. Law and Social Inquiry 36 (2): (Lead Article) Best Graduate Student Paper Award, Law and Society Association, 2011 (Honorable Mention). Stuart, Forrest Race, Space, and the Regulation of Surplus Labor: Policing African- Americans in Los Angeles Skid Row. Souls: A Critical Journal of Black Politics, Culture, and Society 13 (2): Stuart, Forrest From the Shop to the Streets: UNITE HERE Organizing in Los Angeles Hotels. In Working for Justice: The L.A. Model of Organizing and Advocacy, edited by Ruth Milkman, Victor Narro, and Joshua Bloom. Ithaca: Cornell University Press. Saguy, Abigail C., and Forrest Stuart Culture and Law: Beyond a Paradigm of Cause and Effect. The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 619: Blasi, Gary, and Forrest Stuart Has the Safer Cities Initiative in Skid Row Reduced Serious Crime? Los Angeles: UCLA School of Law. Book Reviews Stuart, Forrest Review of Pulled Over: How Police Stops Define Race and Citizenship, by Charles R. Epp, Steven Maynard-Moody, and Donald Haider-Markel. Theoretical Criminology 19 (1): Stuart, Forrest Review of God s Gangs: Barrio Ministry, Masculinity, and Gang Recovery, by Edward Orozco Flores. American Journal of Sociology 120 (2): 613-2

3 615. Stuart, Forrest Review of Down and Out in Los Angeles and Berlin: The Sociospatial Exclusion of Homeless People, by Jürgen von Mahs. American Journal of Sociology 119 (5): Stuart, Forrest Review of Hobos, Hustlers and Backsliders: Homeless in San Francisco, by Teresa Gowan. Sociological Forum 27 (3): Works in Progress Stuart, Forrest. Introspection/Reflexivity: The Self as Research Instrument. To be published in Approaches to Ethnography, edited by Colin Jerolmack and Shamus Khan. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Stuart, Forrest, and Reuben Miller. The Old Head Goes to Prison: Intergenerational Socialization and the Fusion of Ghetto and Prison Culture in the Carceral Age. Under Review. Stuart, Forrest, and *Ava Benezra. Legibility, Masculinity, and the Gendering Effects of Hyper- Policing. Herbert, Steve, Katherine Beckett, and Forrest Stuart. Policing and Social Marginality: Contrasting Approaches. INVITED TALKS Problematizing Community Policing University of Chicago City/Cité: A Transatlantic Conversation, November 4, Who is Mr. Ticket? Yale University Policing Post Ferguson Conference, April Cop Wisdom and the Emerging Cultural Context in Criminalized Urban Neighborhoods. University of Pennsylvania Department of Sociology, December Yale University Department of Sociology, October New York University Department of Sociology, October University of California Berkeley Department of Sociology, September Becoming Copwise : How the Urban Poor Negotiate Hyperpolicing in Everyday Street Life. Yale University Yale Ethnography Conference, April 2014 CSU Fullerton Department of Sociology, March Northwestern University Urban Sociology Workshop, February University of Chicago Urban Network Emerging Scholars Lecture, November Cooling off the Block : Informal Social Control in a Hyper-Policed Neighborhood Ohio State University Racial Democracy, Crime, and Justice Network, July

4 From Rabble Management to Recovery Management: Policing Urban Poverty in the 21 st Century. American Bar Foundation, January Northern Illinois University Department of Sociology, January University of Illinois, Chicago Department of Sociology, November Policing Rock Bottom: Regulation, Rehabilitation, and Resistance on Skid Row. Brown University Department of Sociology and Urban Studies, November University of Chicago Department of Sociology, November University of Wisconsin, Madison Department of Sociology, November University of California, Irvine Department of Criminology, Law and Society, October University of Denver Department of Sociology and Criminology, October CONFERENCE PRESENTATIONS Cooling off the Block : Informal Social Control in a Hyper-Policed Neighborhood Annual Meeting of the American Sociological Association, Presidential Panel, Strange Bedfellows: Zero-Tolerance Policing and Social Welfare Organizations in America s Punitive Turn. Annual Meeting of the American Sociological Association, Misdemeanors, Discretion, and Net Widening. Annual Meeting of the Law and Society Association, Copwise : How the Urban Poor Negotiate Hyperpolicing in Everyday Street Life. Annual Meeting of the Law and Society Association, Annual Meeting of the American Sociological Association, We re Arresting Them for Their Own Good : Criminal Justice and Social Welfare Partnership on the Streets of Skid Row. Urban Sociology Section, Annual Meeting of the American Sociological Association, Planning L.A.: The New Politics of Neighborhood Development and Downtown Revitalization. Annual Meeting of the American Sociological Association, 2011 (with Andrew Deener). Helping Handcuffs: Criminal Justice and Social Welfare Symbiosis in the Regulation of Skid Row. Annual Meeting of the Law and Society Association, Constructing Police Abuse after Rodney King: How Skid Row Residents and the LAPD Contest Video Evidence. Annual Meeting of the American Sociological Association,

5 Confronting Racism, Capitalism, and Ecological Degradation: Urban Farming and the Struggle for Social Justice. Annual Meeting of the American Sociological Association, 2010 (With Edna Bonacich and Jake Wilson). Local Solutions to Global Economic and Ecological Crises: Gardening and Urban Farming in the Black Community of Los Angeles. Planting Seeds for Social Change, Metropolitan and Policy Studies Network, California State University Long Beach, 2010 (With Edna Bonacich). Entrepreneurs on the Other Wall Street: Identity Construction and the Territorial Stigmatization of Skid Row. Annual Meeting of the American Sociological Association, Caught Slipping on Skid Row: Interactional Struggles to Generate Credible Legal Claims. UCSB Negotiating Legal Boundaries Conference, FELLOWSHIPS, GRANTS, AND HONORS Woodrow Wilson Career Enhancement Fellowship, Yale Ethnography Project Junior Fellowhip, Urban Health Initiative Faculty Fellowship ($50,000), Neubauer Collegium for Culture and Society Seed Grant ($43,000), University of Chicago Social Sciences Divisional Grant ($4,000), University of Chicago Social Sciences Divisional Grant ($4,000), John Randolph and Dora Haynes Foundation Dissertation Fellowship, UCLA Dissertation Year Fellowship, Best Graduate Student Paper Prize Law and Society Association, 2011 (Honorable Mention). American Sociological Association Minority Fellowship, Ford Foundation Predoctoral Fellowship, 2010 (Alternate). UCLA Distinguished Teaching Award, Charles E. and Sue K. Young Graduate Student Award, UCLA Department of Sociology Graduate Teaching Award, Peter Kollock Distinguished Graduate Teaching Award, Graduate Summer Research Mentorship Award, UC Diversity Initiative for Graduate Study in the Social Sciences Summer Research Award, UCLA Departmental Graduate Fellowship, TEACHING University of Chicago Power, Identity, Resistance 5

6 Urban Ethnography Crime and the City Urban Structure and Process University of California, Los Angeles Introduction to Sociology Ethnography in Los Angeles Sociology of Deviant Behavior Sociology of Race and Labor PROFESSIONAL SERVICE Advisory Board University of Chicago Urban Network Editorial Board American Journal of Sociology Law and Social Inquiry Reviewer American Journal of Sociology City and Community Journal of Poverty Law and Social Inquiry Law and Society Review Punishment and Society Social Problems Sociological Forum Theoretical Criminology Member American Sociological Association Society for the Study of Social Problems Law and Society Association Pacific Sociological Association CITED IN THE NEWS Police Officers Work to Build Relationships with Youth in Roanoke, by Amy Friedenberger. Roanoke Times, June 21, The Devastating Impacts of the Safer Cities Initiative on Skid Row, by Paul Boden. Huffington Post, January 20,

7 Skid Row s Policing Eyed, by Brandon Lowry. Los Angeles Daily News, November 19, Study: Cop Cost High for Result on Skid Row Violence: Extent of Reduction Questioned, by Rick Orlov. Los Angeles Daily News, September 26, Study Claims Skid Row Unaffected by Crackdown. CBS News, Los Angeles, September 19,