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{{Short description|Canadian sociologist}}
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{{External links|date=August 2023}}
{{Autobiography|date=August 2023}}
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| doctoral_students = [[Crystal Marie Fleming]]
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'''Michèle Lamont''' is a [[sociologist]] and is the Robert I. Goldman Professor of [[European Studies]] and a professor of [[Sociology]] and [[African American Studies]] at [[Harvard University]]. She is a contributor to the study of culture, inequality, [[racism]] and anti-racism, the sociology of morality, evaluation and higher education, and the study of cultural and social change. She is the recipient of international prizes, such as the Gutenberg Award and the prestigious Erasmus award, for her "devoted contribution to social science research into the relationship between knowledge, power, and diversity."<ref name="erasmus">{{Cite news |date=2017-11-28 |title=Harvard's Michèle Lamont receives Erasmus Prize for her social science research |language=en-US |work=Harvard Gazette |url=https://news.harvard.edu/gazette/story/2017/11/harvards-michele-lamont-receives-erasmus-prize-for-her-social-science-research/ |access-date=2018-06-06}}</ref> She has received honorary degrees from five countries. and been elected to several national honorary scientific societies (British Academy, Royal Society of Canada, Chevalier de l’Ordre des Palmes Academiques, Sociological Research Association).<ref name=":0">{{Cite web |last=Lamont |first=Michele |date=June 2018 |title=Michele Lamont Long CV |url=https://scholar.harvard.edu/files/lamont/files/lamont_long_cv_062018.pdf?m=1528212934 |website=Harvard University}}</ref> She served as president of the [[American Sociological Association]] from 2016 to 2017.<ref name=":1">{{Cite web|url=http://www.asanet.org/press/new_asa_president.cfm|title=American Sociological Association: Harvard Professor Elected President of the American Sociological Association|website=www.asanet.org|date=12 August 2015|access-date=2015-10-15}}</ref>
'''Michèle Lamont''' is a Canadian [[sociologist]] who is the Robert I. Goldman Professor of [[European Studies]] and a professor of [[Sociology]] and [[African American Studies]] at [[Harvard University]]. She is a contributor to the study of culture, inequality, [[racism]] and anti-racism, the sociology of morality, evaluation and higher education, and the study of cultural and social change. She is the recipient of the Gutenberg Award and the Erasmus award, for her "devoted contribution to social science research into the relationship between knowledge, power, and diversity."<ref name="erasmus">{{Cite news |date=2017-11-28 |title=Harvard's Michèle Lamont receives Erasmus Prize for her social science research |language=en-US |work=Harvard Gazette |url=https://news.harvard.edu/gazette/story/2017/11/harvards-michele-lamont-receives-erasmus-prize-for-her-social-science-research/ |access-date=2018-06-06}}</ref> She has received honorary degrees from five countries. and been elected to the [[British Academy]], [[Royal Society of Canada]], Chevalier de l’[[Ordre des Palmes académiques]], and the [[Sociological Research Association]].<ref name=":0">{{Cite web |last=Lamont |first=Michele |date=June 2018 |title=Michele Lamont Long CV |url=https://scholar.harvard.edu/files/lamont/files/lamont_long_cv_062018.pdf?m=1528212934 |website=Harvard University}}</ref>{{better source needed|date=August 2023}} She served as president of the [[American Sociological Association]] from 2016 to 2017.<ref name=":1">{{Cite web|url=http://www.asanet.org/press/new_asa_president.cfm|title=American Sociological Association: Harvard Professor Elected President of the American Sociological Association|website=www.asanet.org|date=12 August 2015|access-date=2015-10-15}}</ref> In 2024, she was elected to the [[American Philosophical Society]].<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.amphilsoc.org/blog/american-philosophical-society-welcomes-new-members-2024 | title=The American Philosophical Society Welcomes New Members for 2024 }}</ref>


==Biography==
==Biography==
Lamont (born 1957 in [[Toronto, Ontario]], Canada<ref>{{Cite news|title=Biographical Note|language=en|url=https://scholar.harvard.edu/lamont/biocv|access-date=2017-10-15}}</ref>) completed her [[Bachelor of Arts]] and [[Master of Arts]] degrees in [[political theory]] at the [[University of Ottawa]] in 1979. She received her [[Doctor of Philosophy]] degree in [[sociology]] from the French university of [[La Sorbonne]] in 1983 and was a [[postdoctoral fellow]] at [[Stanford University]] from 1983 to 1985. Lamont served as professor at the [[University of Texas-Austin]] (1985–1987), [[Princeton University]] (1987–2003), and [[Harvard University]] (2003–present). She is married to sociologist [https://scholar.harvard.edu/dobbin Frank Dobbin] and together they have three children.
Lamont (born 1957 in [[Toronto, Ontario]], Canada<ref>{{Cite news|title=Biographical Note|language=en|url=https://scholar.harvard.edu/lamont/biocv|access-date=2017-10-15}}</ref>) completed her [[Bachelor of Arts]] and [[Master of Arts]] degrees in [[political theory]] at the [[University of Ottawa]] in 1979. She received her [[Doctor of Philosophy]] degree in [[sociology]] from the French university of [[La Sorbonne]] in 1983 and was a [[postdoctoral fellow]] at [[Stanford University]] from 1983 to 1985.{{cn|date=August 2023}} Lamont served as professor at the [[University of Texas-Austin]] (1985–1987), [[Princeton University]] (1987–2003), and [[Harvard University]] (2003–present). She is married to sociologist Frank Dobbin and together they have three children.{{cn|date=August 2023}}


==Career==
==Contributions to Sociology==
From 2002 to 2019, Lamont served as co-director of the Successful Societies Program of the [[Canadian Institute for Advanced Research]].<ref>{{Cite web |title=Michèle Lamont |url=http://www.cifar.ca/michele-lamont |access-date=2015-10-15 |website=Canadian Institute for Advanced Research |language=en}}</ref> The group has produced two books: ''Successful Societies: How Institutions and Culture Affect Health''<ref>{{Cite web |title=Successful Societies |url=http://www.cambridge.org/us/academic/subjects/sociology/sociology-general-interest/successful-societies-how-institutions-and-culture-affect-health |access-date=2015-10-15 |website=Cambridge University Press}}</ref> (2009) and ''Social Resilience in the Neo-Liberal Era''<ref>{{Cite web |title=Social Resilience in the Neoliberal Era |url=http://www.cambridge.org/us/academic/subjects/politics-international-relations/comparative-politics/social-resilience-neoliberal-era |access-date=2015-10-15 |website=Cambridge University Press}}</ref> (2013). The group also produced a special issue of ''Daedalus'' on "Inequality as a Multidimensional Process," which Lamont co-edited with Paul Pierson (2019).<ref>{{Cite web |title=Inequality as a Multidimensional Process |url=https://www.amacad.org/daedalus/inequality-multidimensional-process |access-date=2021-06-28 |website=American Academy of Arts & Sciences |date=July 2019 |language=en}}</ref> The SSP research agenda led to a collaboration with the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation around “the culture of health.” Together with the foundation's vice president for research, Lamont co-edited a special issue of ''Social Science and Medicine'' (2016) on "Mutuality, Mobilization, and Messaging".<ref>{{Cite web |title=Social Science & Medicine {{!}} Vol 165, Pages 1-296 (September 2016) {{!}} ScienceDirect.com by Elsevier |url=https://www.sciencedirect.com/journal/social-science-and-medicine/vol/165/suppl/C |access-date=2021-06-28 |website=www.sciencedirect.com |language=en-us}}</ref> She also collaborated with a team of ecologists and economists from the Beijer Institute and the Stockholm Resilience Center (Royal Academy of Sweden), on "Our future in the Anthropocene biosphere," which became the White Paper for the 2021 Nobel Summit on sustainability (2021).<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Folke |first1=Carl |last2=Polasky |first2=Stephen |last3=Rockström |first3=Johan |last4=Galaz |first4=Victor |last5=Westley |first5=Frances |last6=Lamont |first6=Michèle |last7=Scheffer |first7=Marten |last8=Österblom |first8=Henrik |last9=Carpenter |first9=Stephen R. |last10=Chapin |first10=F. Stuart |last11=Seto |first11=Karen C. |date=2021-04-01 |title=Our future in the Anthropocene biosphere |url=https://doi.org/10.1007/s13280-021-01544-8 |journal=Ambio |language=en |volume=50 |issue=4 |pages=834–869 |doi=10.1007/s13280-021-01544-8 |issn=1654-7209 |pmc=7955950 |pmid=33715097}}</ref> She was also invited to co-chair the advisory board to the 2022 UN Human Development Report, "Uncertain times, Unsettled Lives: Shaping our Future in a World in Transformation.”
Lamont's major works compare how people's shared concepts of worth influence and sustain a variety of social hierarchies and inequality. She is concerned with the role of various cultural processes in the creation and reproduction of inequality. Recent publications include the [[Erasmus Prize]]-winning essay, ''[https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3091233 Prisms of Inequality: Moral Boundaries, Exclusion, and Academic Evaluation];'' her co-authored book, ''Getting Respect: Responding to Stigma and Discrimination in the United States, Brazil, and Israel;'' and her presidential address to the ASA (ASR June 2018).


In 2009 and 2010, Lamont served as Senior Advisor on Faculty Development and Diversity in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences at Harvard University. From 2014-2021 Lamont served as acting director and director of the [[Weatherhead Center for International Affairs]] (WCFIA).<ref>{{Cite news |date=2014-05-27 |title=Weatherhead Center Names Permanent Director a Year After Its Last Leader Resigned |work=The Harvard Crimson |url=http://www.thecrimson.com/article/2014/5/27/weatherhead-center-names-director/ |access-date=2015-10-15}}</ref> Since 2018, she has been leading the Research Cluster on “Comparative Inequality and Inclusion” at WCFIA.
Lamont's early writing formulated influential criticisms of the work of [[Pierre Bourdieu]], a leading sociologist with whom she studied in Paris. Her first book, ''Money, Morals, Manners'',<ref>{{Cite book |url=http://www.press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/chicago/M/bo3645663.html |title=Money, Morals, and Manners |website=University of Chicago Press |access-date=2015-10-15}}</ref> showed that Bourdieu's theories of [[cultural capital]] and [[Habitus (sociology)|habitus]] ignore moral status signals and national repertoires that explain differences in [[Americans|American]] and [[French people|French]] class cultures. This criticism set the stage for a large American literature that was critical of, but built upon, the work of Bourdieu. This movement coincided with the development of [[cultural sociology]] in [[American sociology]]. With fellow sociologists [[Ann Swidler]], [[Michael Schudson]], and numerous others, Lamont contributed to setting the agenda for the scholarly study of "meaning-making" in sociology. The research of Lamont and colleagues demonstrated the importance of considering various aspects of culture as [[explanandum and explanans|explanans and explanandum]] in the social sciences as something more than a "residual category". Since the late nineties, she has been editing the [https://press.princeton.edu/series/princeton-studies-in-cultural-sociology Princeton Studies in Cultural Sociology series] with Paul DiMaggio, Robert Wuthnow and Viviana Zelizer at Princeton University Press. This series has published numerous prize-winning monographs over more than twenty years and contributed to the development of the field.


From 2006 to 2009, Lamont was the chair of the Council for European Studies and from 2016 to 2018, she served as president elect, president, and past president of the American Sociological Association.<ref name=":1" /> She [https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/socf.12466 led the response] of the ASA to the Trump Presidency.
In their widely cited paper “The Study of Boundaries across the Social Sciences,” Lamont and Molnar demonstrated how boundary work is studied across a wide range of field (identity, professions, knowledge, race, class and more). They also propose the distinction between "symbolic" and "social" boundaries provides a framework within which to analyze the independent causal role of individual's worldviews in explaining structural phenomena such as [[social inequality|inequality]]. [[Symbolic boundaries]] are "conceptual distinctions made by social actors... that separate people into groups and generate feelings of similarity and group membership."<ref>{{Cite book |last1=McLeod |first1=Jane |title=Handbook of the Social Psychology of Inequality |last2=Lawler |first2=Edward |last3=Schwalbe |first3=Michael |publisher=Springer |year=2014 |isbn=978-94-017-9002-4 |pages=140}}</ref> Conversely, "social boundaries are objectified forms of social differences manifested in unequal access to an unequal distribution of resources… and social opportunities."<ref name="Lamont and Molnar">Lamont, Michèle and Virag Molnar. 2002. "The Study of Boundaries in the Social Sciences". ''Annual Review of Sociology''. 28:167–195</ref> In making this distinction, Lamont acknowledges that symbolic boundaries are a "necessary but insufficient" condition for social change. "Only when symbolic boundaries are widely agreed upon can they take on a constraining character… and become social boundaries."<ref name="Lamont and Molnar" />


Lamont has been a visiting professor at the [[Collège de France]], [[SciencesPo]], [[Université de Paris|Université de Paris 8]], [[École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales]], [[Mainz University]], and [[Tel Aviv University]]. She has been a fellow at the Center for Advanced Study in Behavioral Studies at [[Stanford University]] (2002), the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Studies (2006), and the Russell Sage Foundation in 1996, and again from 2019 to 2020. She was also the recipient of the [[John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship]] and the Andrew Carnegie Fellowship (2019–21).<ref name="acf19" />
Lamont extended her "[[boundary-work]]" approach to the case of American and French [[race relations]]. In her award-winning<ref>{{Cite web |title=Society for the Study of Social Problems {{!}} Past Winners |url=http://www.sssp1.org/index.cfm/m/512/Past_Winners/ |access-date=2015-10-15 |website=www.sssp1.org}}</ref> ''Dignity of Working Men'', Lamont shows how white and [[African-American]] conceptions of class are grounded in vastly different conceptions of [[self-worth]]. In ''Getting Respect'', Lamont compares how stigmatized groups respond to ethnoracial exclusion in the United States, Brazil, and Israel.


Lamont serves on scientific boards for the [[American Council of Learned Societies]] (ACLS), [[Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies|The Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies]] (IHEID), [[Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity]], [[Princeton Institute for International and Regional Studies]] (PIIRS) and Nordic Centre for Research on Gender Equality in Research and Innovation (NORDICORE).<ref name=":0" />
In her 2009 book, ''How Professors Think: Inside the Curious World of Academic Judgment'', Lamont analyzes how experts in the social sciences and the humanities debate what defines originality, social and intellectual significance, and more. This book also analyzes the place of the self, emotion and interaction in [[evaluation]]. It has influenced current debates on funding, evaluation, and audit culture in the United States and Europe.<ref>{{Cite news |last=Cohen |first=Patricia |date=2010-08-23 |title=For Scholars, Web Changes Sacred Rite of Peer Review |newspaper=The New York Times |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2010/08/24/arts/24peer.html |access-date=2015-10-15 |issn=0362-4331}}</ref> Of particular interest is the question of whether social sciences should be evaluated with different criteria than the sciences. With this book, Lamont defined a broader program in the sociology of evaluation (including her 2012 paper "Toward a Sociology of Valuation and Evaluation"<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Lamont |first=Michèle |date=2012-01-01 |title=Toward a Comparative Sociology of Valuation and Evaluation |url=http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:11177698 |journal=Annual Review of Sociology |volume=38 |issue=1 |pages=201–221 |doi=10.1146/annurev-soc-070308-120022|s2cid=1015036 }}</ref>), which also links to the growing interest in the [[sociology of valuation]]. It also sheds light on cultural processes, a topic she took up in a more systematically in an innovative 2014 article titled, “[https://scholar.harvard.edu/files/lamont/files/socioecon_rev-2014-lamont-ser-mwu011.pdf What is Missing? Cultural Processes and Causal Pathways to Inequality].”


==Contributions to sociology==
An expert in qualitative methods and comparative sociology, Lamont was invited to coedit (with Patricia White) an influential NSF report on “[https://scholar.harvard.edu/files/lamont/files/issqr_workshop_rpt.pdf The Evaluation of Systematic Qualitative Research in the Social Sciences]” (2008).
Lamont's major works compare how people's shared concepts of worth influence and sustain a variety of social hierarchies and inequality. She is concerned with the role of various cultural processes in the creation and reproduction of inequality. Recent publications include the [[Erasmus Prize]]-winning essay, "Prisms of Inequality: Moral Boundaries, Exclusion, and Academic Evaluation"; her co-authored book, ''Getting Respect: Responding to Stigma and Discrimination in the United States, Brazil, and Israel;'' and her presidential address to the ASA in June 2018.{{cn|date=August 2023}}


Lamont's early writing formulated influential criticisms of the work of [[Pierre Bourdieu]], a sociologist with whom she studied in Paris. Her first book, ''Money, Morals, Manners'',<ref>{{Cite book |url=http://www.press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/chicago/M/bo3645663.html |title=Money, Morals, and Manners |series=Morality and Society Series |publisher=University of Chicago Press |access-date=2015-10-15}}</ref> showed that Bourdieu's theories of [[cultural capital]] and [[Habitus (sociology)|habitus]] ignore moral status signals and national repertoires that explain differences in [[Americans|American]] and [[French people|French]] class cultures. This criticism set the stage for a large American literature that was critical of, but built upon, the work of Bourdieu. This movement coincided with the development of [[cultural sociology]] in [[American sociology]]. With fellow sociologists [[Ann Swidler]], [[Michael Schudson]], and numerous others, Lamont contributed to setting the agenda for the scholarly study of "meaning-making" in sociology. The research of Lamont and colleagues demonstrated the importance of considering various aspects of culture as [[explanandum and explanans|explanans and explanandum]] in the social sciences as something more than a "residual category". Since the late nineties, she has been editing the ''Princeton Studies in Cultural Sociology series'' with Paul DiMaggio, Robert Wuthnow and Viviana Zelizer at Princeton University Press.{{cn|date=August 2023}}
Her new book, ''Seeing Others: How Recognition Works and How It Can Heal a Divided World'', will be published by Simon and Schuster (US) and Penguin (UK) in September 2023. This research was supported by a Carnegie Fellowship, Russell Sage Foundation, and Harvard. This book builds on her [https://onlinelibrary-wiley-com.ezp-prod1.hul.harvard.edu/doi/full/10.1111/1468-4446.12667 British Journal of Sociology paper "From 'having' to 'being': Self-worth and the current crisis of American society."]


In their widely cited paper “The Study of Boundaries across the Social Sciences,” Lamont and Molnar demonstrated how boundary work is studied across a wide range of field (identity, professions, knowledge, race, class and more). They also propose the distinction between "symbolic" and "social" boundaries provides a framework within which to analyze the independent causal role of individual's worldviews in explaining structural phenomena such as [[social inequality|inequality]]. [[Symbolic boundaries]] are "conceptual distinctions made by social actors... that separate people into groups and generate feelings of similarity and group membership."<ref>{{Cite book |last1=McLeod |first1=Jane |title=Handbook of the Social Psychology of Inequality |last2=Lawler |first2=Edward |last3=Schwalbe |first3=Michael |publisher=Springer |year=2014 |isbn=978-94-017-9002-4 |pages=140}}</ref> Conversely, "social boundaries are objectified forms of social differences manifested in unequal access to an unequal distribution of resources… and social opportunities."<ref name="Lamont and Molnar">Lamont, Michèle and Virag Molnar. 2002. "The Study of Boundaries in the Social Sciences". ''Annual Review of Sociology''. 28:167–195</ref> In making this distinction, Lamont acknowledges that symbolic boundaries are a "necessary but insufficient" condition for social change. "Only when symbolic boundaries are widely agreed upon can they take on a constraining character… and become social boundaries."<ref name="Lamont and Molnar" />
==Career==
At UT-Austin, Princeton, and Harvard, Lamont has dedicated her time to research and to educating students. She is a recipient of [https://sociology.fas.harvard.edu/news/mich%C3%A8le-lamont-receives-2010-everett-mendelsohn-excellence-mentoring-award Harvard’s Everett Mendelson Award for graduate mentorship]. She has also occupied several leadership positions in academia:


Lamont extended her "[[boundary-work]]" approach to the case of American and French [[race relations]]. In her<ref>{{Cite web |title=Society for the Study of Social Problems {{!}} Past Winners |url=http://www.sssp1.org/index.cfm/m/512/Past_Winners/ |access-date=2015-10-15 |website=www.sssp1.org}}</ref> ''Dignity of Working Men'', Lamont shows how white and [[African-American]] conceptions of class are grounded in vastly different conceptions of [[self-worth]]. In ''Getting Respect'', Lamont compares how stigmatized groups respond to ethnoracial exclusion in the United States, Brazil, and Israel.
From 2002 to 2019, Lamont served as co-director of the Successful Societies Program of the [[Canadian Institute for Advanced Research]].<ref>{{Cite web |title=Michèle Lamont |url=http://www.cifar.ca/michele-lamont |access-date=2015-10-15 |website=Canadian Institute for Advanced Research |language=en}}</ref> The interdisciplinary program brings together leading social scientists who meet three times a year to discuss how societies met various types of challenges. The group has produced two books: ''Successful Societies: How Institutions and Culture Affect Health''<ref>{{Cite web |title=Successful Societies |url=http://www.cambridge.org/us/academic/subjects/sociology/sociology-general-interest/successful-societies-how-institutions-and-culture-affect-health |access-date=2015-10-15 |website=Cambridge University Press}}</ref> (2009) and ''Social Resilience in the Neo-Liberal Era''<ref>{{Cite web |title=Social Resilience in the Neoliberal Era |url=http://www.cambridge.org/us/academic/subjects/politics-international-relations/comparative-politics/social-resilience-neoliberal-era |access-date=2015-10-15 |website=Cambridge University Press}}</ref> (2013). The group also produced a special issue of ''Daedalus'' on "Inequality as a Multidimensional Process," which Lamont co-edited with Paul Pierson (2019).<ref>{{Cite web |title=Inequality as a Multidimensional Process |url=https://www.amacad.org/daedalus/inequality-multidimensional-process |access-date=2021-06-28 |website=American Academy of Arts & Sciences |language=en}}</ref> The SSP research agenda led to a collaboration with the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation around “the culture of health.” Together with the foundation's vice president for research, Lamont co-edited a special issue of ''Social Science and Medicine'' (2016) on "Mutuality, Mobilization, and Messaging".<ref>{{Cite web |title=Social Science & Medicine {{!}} Vol 165, Pages 1-296 (September 2016) {{!}} ScienceDirect.com by Elsevier |url=https://www.sciencedirect.com/journal/social-science-and-medicine/vol/165/suppl/C |access-date=2021-06-28 |website=www.sciencedirect.com |language=en-us}}</ref> She also collaborated with a team of ecologists and economists from the Beijer Institute and the Stockholm Resilience Center (Royal Academy of Sweden), on "[https://www.nobelprize.org/uploads/2014/07/summary-our-future-in-the-anthropocene-biosphere-wp.pdf Our future in the Anthropocene biosphere]," which became the White Paper for the 2021 Nobel Summit on sustainability (2021).<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Folke |first1=Carl |last2=Polasky |first2=Stephen |last3=Rockström |first3=Johan |last4=Galaz |first4=Victor |last5=Westley |first5=Frances |last6=Lamont |first6=Michèle |last7=Scheffer |first7=Marten |last8=Österblom |first8=Henrik |last9=Carpenter |first9=Stephen R. |last10=Chapin |first10=F. Stuart |last11=Seto |first11=Karen C. |date=2021-04-01 |title=Our future in the Anthropocene biosphere |url=https://doi.org/10.1007/s13280-021-01544-8 |journal=Ambio |language=en |volume=50 |issue=4 |pages=834–869 |doi=10.1007/s13280-021-01544-8 |issn=1654-7209 |pmc=7955950 |pmid=33715097}}</ref> She was also invited to co-chair the advisory board to the 2022 UN Human Development Report, [https://hdr.undp.org/content/human-development-report-2021-22 "Uncertain times, Unsettled Lives: Shaping our Future in a World in Transformation].”

In 2009 and 2010, Lamont served as Senior Advisor on Faculty Development and Diversity in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences at Harvard University. In this role she put in place a universal mentoring program for tenure-track faculty. And from 2014-2021 Lamont served as acting director and director of the [[Weatherhead Center for International Affairs]] (WCFIA).<ref>{{Cite news |date=2014-05-27 |title=Weatherhead Center Names Permanent Director a Year After Its Last Leader Resigned |work=The Harvard Crimson |url=http://www.thecrimson.com/article/2014/5/27/weatherhead-center-names-director/ |access-date=2015-10-15}}</ref> With a large endowment and 235 faculty associates, this center is among the largest social science centers at Harvard. Since 2018, she has been leading the Research Cluster on “[https://inequality.wcfia.harvard.edu/ Comparative Inequality and Inclusion]” at WCFIA.

From 2006 to 2009, Lamont was the chair of the Council for European Studies and from 2016 to 2018, she served as president elect, president, and past president of the American Sociological Association.<ref name=":1" /> She [https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/socf.12466 led the response] of the ASA to the Trump Presidency.


In her 2009 book, ''How Professors Think: Inside the Curious World of Academic Judgment'', Lamont analyzes how experts in the social sciences and the humanities debate what defines originality, social and intellectual significance, and more. This book also analyzes the place of the self, emotion and interaction in [[evaluation]]. It has influenced current debates on funding, evaluation, and audit culture in the United States and Europe.<ref>{{Cite news |last=Cohen |first=Patricia |date=2010-08-23 |title=For Scholars, Web Changes Sacred Rite of Peer Review |newspaper=The New York Times |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2010/08/24/arts/24peer.html |access-date=2015-10-15 |issn=0362-4331}}</ref> Of particular interest is the question of whether social sciences should be evaluated with different criteria than the sciences. With this book, Lamont defined a broader program in the sociology of evaluation (including her 2012 paper "Toward a Sociology of Valuation and Evaluation"<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Lamont |first=Michèle |date=2012-01-01 |title=Toward a Comparative Sociology of Valuation and Evaluation |url=http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:11177698 |journal=Annual Review of Sociology |volume=38 |issue=1 |pages=201–221 |doi=10.1146/annurev-soc-070308-120022|s2cid=1015036 }}</ref>), which also links to the growing interest in the [[sociology of valuation]]. It also sheds light on cultural processes, a topic she took up in a more systematically in a 2014 article titled, “What is Missing? Cultural Processes and Causal Pathways to Inequality.”{{cn|date=August 2023}}
Lamont has been a visiting professor at various institutions including the [[Collège de France]], [[SciencesPo]], [[Université de Paris|Université de Paris 8]], [[École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales]], [[Mainz University]], and [[Tel Aviv University]]. She has been a fellow at the Center for Advanced Study in Behavioral Studies at [[Stanford University]] (2002), the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Studies (2006), and the Russell Sage Foundation in 1996, and again from 2019 to 2020. She was also the recipient of the [[John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship]] and the Andrew Carnegie Fellowship (2019–21).<ref name="acf19" />


An expert in qualitative methods and comparative sociology, Lamont was invited to coedit (with Patricia White) an NSF report on “The Evaluation of Systematic Qualitative Research in the Social Sciences” (2008).
She currently serves on various scientific boards including: [[American Council of Learned Societies]] (ACLS), [[Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies|The Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies]] (IHEID), [[Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity]], [[Princeton Institute for International and Regional Studies]] (PIIRS) and Nordic Centre for Research on Gender Equality in Research and Innovation (NORDICORE).<ref name=":0" />


==Selected awards and honors==
==Selected awards and honors==
* Kohli Prize for Sociology 2024<ref>{{cite web | url=https://kohlifoundation.eu/news/kohli-prize-for-sociology-2024-michele-lamont/ | title=Kohli Prize for Sociology 2024: Michèle Lamont – Kohli Foundation | date=6 May 2023 }}</ref>
* Honorary Doctorate, University of Warwick (2022)<ref>{{Cite web |last=Smeds |first=Bengt |title=Nyhetssida - Department of Sociology - Uppsala University, Sweden |url=https://www.soc.uu.se/current-events/news-archive/nyhetssida/?tarContentId=816006 |access-date=2023-01-13 |website=www.soc.uu.se |language=en}}</ref>
* [[Honorary Doctorate]], [[University of Warwick]] (2022)<ref>{{Cite web |last=Smeds |first=Bengt |title=Nyhetssida - Department of Sociology - Uppsala University, Sweden |url=https://www.soc.uu.se/current-events/news-archive/nyhetssida/?tarContentId=816006 |access-date=2023-01-13 |website=www.soc.uu.se |language=en}}</ref>
* TEDWomen Speaker (2021)<ref>{{Cite web |last=Lamont |first=Michèle |title=Michèle Lamont {{!}} Speaker {{!}} TED |url=https://www.ted.com/speakers/michele_lamont |access-date=2023-01-13 |website=www.ted.com |language=en}}</ref>
* TEDWomen Speaker (2021)<ref>{{Cite web |last=Lamont |first=Michèle |title=Michèle Lamont {{!}} Speaker {{!}} TED |url=https://www.ted.com/speakers/michele_lamont |access-date=2023-01-13 |website=www.ted.com |language=en}}</ref>
* Top Ten Breakthroughs in Social Sciences and Humanities Award, Falling Walls Foundation (2021)<ref>{{Cite web |title=Michèle Lamont {{!}} Falling Walls |url=https://falling-walls.com/people/michele-lamont/ |access-date=2023-01-13 |website=falling-walls.com |language=en-US}}</ref>
* Top Ten Breakthroughs in Social Sciences and Humanities Award, Falling Walls Foundation (2021)<ref>{{Cite web |title=Michèle Lamont {{!}} Falling Walls |url=https://falling-walls.com/people/michele-lamont/ |access-date=2023-01-13 |website=falling-walls.com |language=en-US}}</ref>
* Honorary Doctorate, University of Warwick (2020)<ref>{{Cite web|title=List of all Honorary Graduates and Chancellor's Medallists|url=https://warwick.ac.uk/services/gov/hongrads/list/|access-date=2021-06-23|website=warwick.ac.uk}}</ref>
* Honorary Doctorate, University of Warwick (2020)<ref>{{Cite web|title=List of all Honorary Graduates and Chancellor's Medallists|url=https://warwick.ac.uk/services/gov/hongrads/list/|access-date=2021-06-23|website=warwick.ac.uk}}</ref>
*Honorary Doctorate, University of Uppsala (2020)<ref>{{Cite web|date=2019-10-22|title=New Honorary Doctors Appointed at Uppsala University|url=https://vietnguyen.info/2019/new-honorary-doctors-appointed-at-uppsala-university|access-date=2021-06-23|website=Viet Thanh Nguyen}}</ref>
*Honorary Doctorate, [[Uppsala University]] (2020)<ref>{{Cite web|date=2019-10-22|title=New Honorary Doctors Appointed at Uppsala University|url=https://vietnguyen.info/2019/new-honorary-doctors-appointed-at-uppsala-university|access-date=2021-06-23|website=Viet Thanh Nguyen}}</ref>
*Andrew Carnegie Fellow, [[Carnegie Corporation of New York]] (2019)<ref name="acf19">{{Cite news|url=https://news.harvard.edu/gazette/story/2019/04/harvard-economist-sociologist-win-prestigious-carnegie-fellowships/|title=Carnegie Corporation names fellowship winners|date=2019-04-23|work=Harvard Gazette|access-date=2019-05-01|language=en-US}}</ref>
*Andrew Carnegie Fellow, [[Carnegie Corporation of New York]] (2019)<ref name="acf19">{{Cite news|url=https://news.harvard.edu/gazette/story/2019/04/harvard-economist-sociologist-win-prestigious-carnegie-fellowships/|title=Carnegie Corporation names fellowship winners|date=2019-04-23|work=Harvard Gazette|access-date=2019-05-01|language=en-US}}</ref>
*Elected Corresponding Fellow, The British Academy (2019)<ref>{{Cite web|title=Professor Michèle Lamont FBA|url=https://www.thebritishacademy.ac.uk/fellows/michele-lamont-FBA/|access-date=2021-06-28|website=The British Academy|language=en}}</ref>
*Elected Corresponding Fellow, [[British Academy]] (2019)<ref>{{Cite web|title=Professor Michèle Lamont FBA|url=https://www.thebritishacademy.ac.uk/fellows/michele-lamont-FBA/|access-date=2021-06-28|website=The British Academy|language=en}}</ref>
*[[Erasmus Prize]] (2017)<ref name="erasmus" />
*[[Erasmus Prize]] (2017)<ref name="erasmus" />
*Honorary Doctorate, University of Ottawa (2017)<ref>{{Cite web|title=University honours outstanding individuals|url=https://www.uottawa.ca/gazette/en/news/university-honours-outstanding-individuals|access-date=2021-06-23|website=Gazette|language=en}}</ref>
*Honorary Doctorate, [[University of Ottawa]] (2017)<ref>{{Cite web|title=University honours outstanding individuals|url=https://www.uottawa.ca/gazette/en/news/university-honours-outstanding-individuals|access-date=2021-06-23|website=Gazette|language=en}}</ref>
*Honorary Doctorate, Université de Bordeaux (2017)<ref>{{Cite web|title=Lamont receives honorary degree|url=https://sociology.fas.harvard.edu/news/lamont-receives-honorary-degree-0|access-date=2021-06-23|website=sociology.fas.harvard.edu|language=en}}</ref>
*Honorary Doctorate, [[Université de Bordeaux]] (2017)<ref>{{Cite web|title=Lamont receives honorary degree|url=https://sociology.fas.harvard.edu/news/lamont-receives-honorary-degree-0|access-date=2021-06-23|website=sociology.fas.harvard.edu|language=en}}</ref>
*Honorary Doctorate, University of Amsterdam (2017)<ref>{{Cite web|last=Amsterdam|first=Universiteit van|date=2016-10-11|title=Honorary doctorates for refugee law expert, cultural sociologist and Aids advocate|url=https://www.uva.nl/en/content/news/news/2016/10/honorary-doctorates-for-refugee-law-expert-cultural-sociologist-and-aids-advocate.html|access-date=2021-06-23|website=University of Amsterdam|language=en}}</ref>
*Honorary Doctorate, [[University of Amsterdam]] (2017)<ref>{{Cite web|last=Amsterdam|first=Universiteit van|date=2016-10-11|title=Honorary doctorates for refugee law expert, cultural sociologist and Aids advocate|url=https://www.uva.nl/en/content/news/news/2016/10/honorary-doctorates-for-refugee-law-expert-cultural-sociologist-and-aids-advocate.html|access-date=2021-06-23|website=University of Amsterdam|language=en}}</ref>
*108th President, American Sociological Association (President-elect: 2015–16; Past-president, 2017–2018)<ref name=":1" />
*108th President, American Sociological Association (President-elect: 2015–16; Past-president, 2017–2018)<ref name=":1" />
*Elected Member, Royal Society of Canada (2015)<ref>{{Cite web|date=2015-10-09|title=CIFAR Researchers appointed to the Royal Society of Canada and RSC College|url=https://cifar.ca/cifarnews/2015/10/09/cifar-researchers-appointed-to-the-royal-society-of-canada-and-rsc-college/|access-date=2021-06-23|website=CIFAR|language=en-US}}</ref>
*Elected Member, [[Royal Society of Canada]] (2015)<ref>{{Cite web|date=2015-10-09|title=CIFAR Researchers appointed to the Royal Society of Canada and RSC College|url=https://cifar.ca/cifarnews/2015/10/09/cifar-researchers-appointed-to-the-royal-society-of-canada-and-rsc-college/|access-date=2021-06-23|website=CIFAR|language=en-US}}</ref>
*Chevalier de l’Ordre des Palmes Académiques, Gouvernement Français (2014)<ref>{{Cite web|title=Biographical Note|url=https://scholar.harvard.edu/lamont/biocv|access-date=2021-06-28|website=scholar.harvard.edu|language=en}}</ref>
*Chevalier de l’Ordre des Palmes Académiques, Gouvernement Français (2014)<ref>{{Cite web|title=Biographical Note|url=https://scholar.harvard.edu/lamont/biocv|access-date=2021-06-28|website=scholar.harvard.edu|language=en}}</ref>
*Gutenberg Research Award, Johannes Gutenberg University (2014)<ref>{{Cite web|title=Ernst Fehr and Michèle Lamont receive Gutenberg Research Award 2014|url=https://www.uni-mainz.de/presse/17311_ENG_HTML.php|access-date=2021-06-28|website=www.uni-mainz.de}}</ref>
*Gutenberg Research Award, Johannes Gutenberg University (2014)<ref>{{Cite web|title=Ernst Fehr and Michèle Lamont receive Gutenberg Research Award 2014|url=https://www.uni-mainz.de/presse/17311_ENG_HTML.php|access-date=2021-06-28|website=www.uni-mainz.de}}</ref>
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*{{Cite book |last=Lamont |first=Michele |editor-first=Alan |editor-last=Wolfe |year=1992 |title=Money, Morals and Manners: The Culture of the French and the American Upper-Middle Class |series=Morality and Society series |publisher=University of Chicago Press |isbn=978-0-674-00992-9}}
*{{Cite book |last=Lamont |first=Michele |editor-first=Alan |editor-last=Wolfe |year=1992 |title=Money, Morals and Manners: The Culture of the French and the American Upper-Middle Class |series=Morality and Society series |publisher=University of Chicago Press |isbn=978-0-674-00992-9}}
*{{cite journal |last1=Lamont |first1=Michele |last2=Pierson |first2=Paul |date=2019 |title=Inequality as a Multidimensional Process |url=https://direct.mit.edu/daed/issue/148/3 |journal=Daedalus |volume=148 |issue=3|doi=10.1162/daed_a_01748 |s2cid=84181880 |doi-access=free }}
*{{cite journal |last1=Lamont |first1=Michele |last2=Pierson |first2=Paul |date=2019 |title=Inequality as a Multidimensional Process |url=https://direct.mit.edu/daed/issue/148/3 |journal=Daedalus |volume=148 |issue=3|doi=10.1162/daed_a_01748 |s2cid=84181880 |doi-access=free }}
*{{cite journal |last1=Lamont |first1=Michele |date=2019 |title=From 'having' to 'being': self-worth and the current crisis of American society |url=https://onlinelibrary-wiley-com.ezp-prod1.hul.harvard.edu/doi/full/10.1111/1468-4446.12667 |journal=The British Journal of Sociology |volume=70 |issue=3 |pages=660–707|doi=10.1111/1468-4446.12667 |pmid=31190392 |s2cid=189815689 }}
*{{cite journal |last1=Lamont |first1=Michele |date=2019 |title=From 'having' to 'being': self-worth and the current crisis of American society |journal=The British Journal of Sociology |volume=70 |issue=3 |pages=660–707|doi=10.1111/1468-4446.12667 |pmid=31190392 |s2cid=189815689 |doi-access=free }}
*{{cite journal |last1=Lamont |first1=Michele |date=2018 |title=Addressing Recognition Gaps: Destigmatization and the Reduction of Inequality |url=https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/0003122418773775 |journal= American Sociological Review |volume=83 |issue=3 |pages=419–444|doi=10.1177/0003122418773775 |s2cid=149672040 }}
*{{cite journal |last1=Lamont |first1=Michele |date=2018 |title=Addressing Recognition Gaps: Destigmatization and the Reduction of Inequality |url=https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/0003122418773775 |journal= American Sociological Review |volume=83 |issue=3 |pages=419–444|doi=10.1177/0003122418773775 |s2cid=149672040 }}
*{{cite journal |last1=Lamont |first1=Michele |last2=Beljean |first2=Stefan |last3=Clair |first3=Matthew |date=2014 |title=What is missing? Cultural processes and causal pathways to inequality |url=https://academic.oup.com/ser/article/12/3/573/2268687?login=true |journal=Socio-Economic Review |volume=12 |issue=3 |pages=573–608|doi=10.1093/ser/mwu011 }}
*{{cite journal |last1=Lamont |first1=Michele |last2=Beljean |first2=Stefan |last3=Clair |first3=Matthew |date=2014 |title=What is missing? Cultural processes and causal pathways to inequality |url=https://academic.oup.com/ser/article/12/3/573/2268687?login=true |journal=Socio-Economic Review |volume=12 |issue=3 |pages=573–608|doi=10.1093/ser/mwu011 }}
Line 81: Line 83:
==External links==
==External links==
*[https://sociology.fas.harvard.edu/people/michèle-lamont Michèle Lamont’s homepage at Harvard University]
*[https://sociology.fas.harvard.edu/people/michèle-lamont Michèle Lamont’s homepage at Harvard University]
*[http://www.ciar.ca/web/home.nsf/pages/ss The Successful Societies Program (Canadian Institute for Advanced Research)].
*[http://www.booksandideas.net/Culture-of-poverty-and-Social.html Culture of poverty and Social Resilience : An interview with Michele Lamont] (Books & Ideas, 2011-05-20)
*[http://www.booksandideas.net/Culture-of-poverty-and-Social.html Culture of poverty and Social Resilience : An interview with Michele Lamont] (Books & Ideas, 2011-05-20)
*[https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/0038038516646283 Michèle Lamont: A Portrait of a Capacious Sociologist] (Interviewed by Nasar Meer, SAGE, 2016-10-04)
*[https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/0038038516646283 Michèle Lamont: A Portrait of a Capacious Sociologist] (Interviewed by Nasar Meer, SAGE, 2016-10-04)
Line 99: Line 100:
[[Category:Ottawa University alumni]]
[[Category:Ottawa University alumni]]
[[Category:Scientists from Toronto]]
[[Category:Scientists from Toronto]]
[[Category:21st-century American women]]
[[Category:21st-century American women academics]]
[[Category:21st-century American academics]]
[[Category:Members of the American Philosophical Society]]
[[Category:cultural sociologists]]

Latest revision as of 20:09, 3 September 2024

Michèle Lamont
Lamont in 2018
Born1957 (age 66–67)
Children3
Academic background
Alma mater
Academic work
DisciplineSociology
Institutions
Doctoral studentsCrystal Marie Fleming

Michèle Lamont is a Canadian sociologist who is the Robert I. Goldman Professor of European Studies and a professor of Sociology and African American Studies at Harvard University. She is a contributor to the study of culture, inequality, racism and anti-racism, the sociology of morality, evaluation and higher education, and the study of cultural and social change. She is the recipient of the Gutenberg Award and the Erasmus award, for her "devoted contribution to social science research into the relationship between knowledge, power, and diversity."[1] She has received honorary degrees from five countries. and been elected to the British Academy, Royal Society of Canada, Chevalier de l’Ordre des Palmes académiques, and the Sociological Research Association.[2][better source needed] She served as president of the American Sociological Association from 2016 to 2017.[3] In 2024, she was elected to the American Philosophical Society.[4]

Biography

[edit]

Lamont (born 1957 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada[5]) completed her Bachelor of Arts and Master of Arts degrees in political theory at the University of Ottawa in 1979. She received her Doctor of Philosophy degree in sociology from the French university of La Sorbonne in 1983 and was a postdoctoral fellow at Stanford University from 1983 to 1985.[citation needed] Lamont served as professor at the University of Texas-Austin (1985–1987), Princeton University (1987–2003), and Harvard University (2003–present). She is married to sociologist Frank Dobbin and together they have three children.[citation needed]

Career

[edit]

From 2002 to 2019, Lamont served as co-director of the Successful Societies Program of the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research.[6] The group has produced two books: Successful Societies: How Institutions and Culture Affect Health[7] (2009) and Social Resilience in the Neo-Liberal Era[8] (2013). The group also produced a special issue of Daedalus on "Inequality as a Multidimensional Process," which Lamont co-edited with Paul Pierson (2019).[9] The SSP research agenda led to a collaboration with the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation around “the culture of health.” Together with the foundation's vice president for research, Lamont co-edited a special issue of Social Science and Medicine (2016) on "Mutuality, Mobilization, and Messaging".[10] She also collaborated with a team of ecologists and economists from the Beijer Institute and the Stockholm Resilience Center (Royal Academy of Sweden), on "Our future in the Anthropocene biosphere," which became the White Paper for the 2021 Nobel Summit on sustainability (2021).[11] She was also invited to co-chair the advisory board to the 2022 UN Human Development Report, "Uncertain times, Unsettled Lives: Shaping our Future in a World in Transformation.”

In 2009 and 2010, Lamont served as Senior Advisor on Faculty Development and Diversity in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences at Harvard University. From 2014-2021 Lamont served as acting director and director of the Weatherhead Center for International Affairs (WCFIA).[12] Since 2018, she has been leading the Research Cluster on “Comparative Inequality and Inclusion” at WCFIA.

From 2006 to 2009, Lamont was the chair of the Council for European Studies and from 2016 to 2018, she served as president elect, president, and past president of the American Sociological Association.[3] She led the response of the ASA to the Trump Presidency.

Lamont has been a visiting professor at the Collège de France, SciencesPo, Université de Paris 8, École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales, Mainz University, and Tel Aviv University. She has been a fellow at the Center for Advanced Study in Behavioral Studies at Stanford University (2002), the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Studies (2006), and the Russell Sage Foundation in 1996, and again from 2019 to 2020. She was also the recipient of the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship and the Andrew Carnegie Fellowship (2019–21).[13]

Lamont serves on scientific boards for the American Council of Learned Societies (ACLS), The Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies (IHEID), Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity, Princeton Institute for International and Regional Studies (PIIRS) and Nordic Centre for Research on Gender Equality in Research and Innovation (NORDICORE).[2]

Contributions to sociology

[edit]

Lamont's major works compare how people's shared concepts of worth influence and sustain a variety of social hierarchies and inequality. She is concerned with the role of various cultural processes in the creation and reproduction of inequality. Recent publications include the Erasmus Prize-winning essay, "Prisms of Inequality: Moral Boundaries, Exclusion, and Academic Evaluation"; her co-authored book, Getting Respect: Responding to Stigma and Discrimination in the United States, Brazil, and Israel; and her presidential address to the ASA in June 2018.[citation needed]

Lamont's early writing formulated influential criticisms of the work of Pierre Bourdieu, a sociologist with whom she studied in Paris. Her first book, Money, Morals, Manners,[14] showed that Bourdieu's theories of cultural capital and habitus ignore moral status signals and national repertoires that explain differences in American and French class cultures. This criticism set the stage for a large American literature that was critical of, but built upon, the work of Bourdieu. This movement coincided with the development of cultural sociology in American sociology. With fellow sociologists Ann Swidler, Michael Schudson, and numerous others, Lamont contributed to setting the agenda for the scholarly study of "meaning-making" in sociology. The research of Lamont and colleagues demonstrated the importance of considering various aspects of culture as explanans and explanandum in the social sciences as something more than a "residual category". Since the late nineties, she has been editing the Princeton Studies in Cultural Sociology series with Paul DiMaggio, Robert Wuthnow and Viviana Zelizer at Princeton University Press.[citation needed]

In their widely cited paper “The Study of Boundaries across the Social Sciences,” Lamont and Molnar demonstrated how boundary work is studied across a wide range of field (identity, professions, knowledge, race, class and more). They also propose the distinction between "symbolic" and "social" boundaries provides a framework within which to analyze the independent causal role of individual's worldviews in explaining structural phenomena such as inequality. Symbolic boundaries are "conceptual distinctions made by social actors... that separate people into groups and generate feelings of similarity and group membership."[15] Conversely, "social boundaries are objectified forms of social differences manifested in unequal access to an unequal distribution of resources… and social opportunities."[16] In making this distinction, Lamont acknowledges that symbolic boundaries are a "necessary but insufficient" condition for social change. "Only when symbolic boundaries are widely agreed upon can they take on a constraining character… and become social boundaries."[16]

Lamont extended her "boundary-work" approach to the case of American and French race relations. In her[17] Dignity of Working Men, Lamont shows how white and African-American conceptions of class are grounded in vastly different conceptions of self-worth. In Getting Respect, Lamont compares how stigmatized groups respond to ethnoracial exclusion in the United States, Brazil, and Israel.

In her 2009 book, How Professors Think: Inside the Curious World of Academic Judgment, Lamont analyzes how experts in the social sciences and the humanities debate what defines originality, social and intellectual significance, and more. This book also analyzes the place of the self, emotion and interaction in evaluation. It has influenced current debates on funding, evaluation, and audit culture in the United States and Europe.[18] Of particular interest is the question of whether social sciences should be evaluated with different criteria than the sciences. With this book, Lamont defined a broader program in the sociology of evaluation (including her 2012 paper "Toward a Sociology of Valuation and Evaluation"[19]), which also links to the growing interest in the sociology of valuation. It also sheds light on cultural processes, a topic she took up in a more systematically in a 2014 article titled, “What is Missing? Cultural Processes and Causal Pathways to Inequality.”[citation needed]

An expert in qualitative methods and comparative sociology, Lamont was invited to coedit (with Patricia White) an NSF report on “The Evaluation of Systematic Qualitative Research in the Social Sciences” (2008).

Selected awards and honors

[edit]

Selected bibliography

[edit]
  • Lamont, Michèle (Forthcoming, 2023). Seeing Others: How Recognition Works and How It Can Heal a Divided World. New York: One Signal, Simon and Schuster; London: Penguin.
  • Lamont, Michèle; Moraes Silva, Graziella; Welburn, Jessica S.; Guetzkow, Joshua; Mizrachi, Nissim; Herzog, Hanna; Reislast, Elisa (2017). Getting Respect: Responding to Stigma and Discrimination in the United States, Brazil, and Israel. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-16707-7.
  • Lamont, Michele; Hall, Peter A., eds. (2013). Social Resilience in the Neoliberal Era. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-139-54242-5.
  • Lamont, Michele (2009). How Professors Think: Inside the Curious World of Academic Judgment. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-05733-3.
  • Lamont, Michele (2002). The Dignity of Working Men: Morality and the Boundaries of Race, Class, and Immigration. Cambridge: Harvard University Press and New York: Russell Sage Foundation. ISBN 978-0-674-00992-9.
  • Lamont, Michele (1992). Wolfe, Alan (ed.). Money, Morals and Manners: The Culture of the French and the American Upper-Middle Class. Morality and Society series. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-674-00992-9.
  • Lamont, Michele; Pierson, Paul (2019). "Inequality as a Multidimensional Process". Daedalus. 148 (3). doi:10.1162/daed_a_01748. S2CID 84181880.
  • Lamont, Michele (2019). "From 'having' to 'being': self-worth and the current crisis of American society". The British Journal of Sociology. 70 (3): 660–707. doi:10.1111/1468-4446.12667. PMID 31190392. S2CID 189815689.
  • Lamont, Michele (2018). "Addressing Recognition Gaps: Destigmatization and the Reduction of Inequality". American Sociological Review. 83 (3): 419–444. doi:10.1177/0003122418773775. S2CID 149672040.
  • Lamont, Michele; Beljean, Stefan; Clair, Matthew (2014). "What is missing? Cultural processes and causal pathways to inequality". Socio-Economic Review. 12 (3): 573–608. doi:10.1093/ser/mwu011.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b "Harvard's Michèle Lamont receives Erasmus Prize for her social science research". Harvard Gazette. 2017-11-28. Retrieved 2018-06-06.
  2. ^ a b Lamont, Michele (June 2018). "Michele Lamont Long CV" (PDF). Harvard University.
  3. ^ a b c "American Sociological Association: Harvard Professor Elected President of the American Sociological Association". www.asanet.org. 12 August 2015. Retrieved 2015-10-15.
  4. ^ "The American Philosophical Society Welcomes New Members for 2024".
  5. ^ "Biographical Note". Retrieved 2017-10-15.
  6. ^ "Michèle Lamont". Canadian Institute for Advanced Research. Retrieved 2015-10-15.
  7. ^ "Successful Societies". Cambridge University Press. Retrieved 2015-10-15.
  8. ^ "Social Resilience in the Neoliberal Era". Cambridge University Press. Retrieved 2015-10-15.
  9. ^ "Inequality as a Multidimensional Process". American Academy of Arts & Sciences. July 2019. Retrieved 2021-06-28.
  10. ^ "Social Science & Medicine | Vol 165, Pages 1-296 (September 2016) | ScienceDirect.com by Elsevier". www.sciencedirect.com. Retrieved 2021-06-28.
  11. ^ Folke, Carl; Polasky, Stephen; Rockström, Johan; Galaz, Victor; Westley, Frances; Lamont, Michèle; Scheffer, Marten; Österblom, Henrik; Carpenter, Stephen R.; Chapin, F. Stuart; Seto, Karen C. (2021-04-01). "Our future in the Anthropocene biosphere". Ambio. 50 (4): 834–869. doi:10.1007/s13280-021-01544-8. ISSN 1654-7209. PMC 7955950. PMID 33715097.
  12. ^ "Weatherhead Center Names Permanent Director a Year After Its Last Leader Resigned". The Harvard Crimson. 2014-05-27. Retrieved 2015-10-15.
  13. ^ a b "Carnegie Corporation names fellowship winners". Harvard Gazette. 2019-04-23. Retrieved 2019-05-01.
  14. ^ Money, Morals, and Manners. Morality and Society Series. University of Chicago Press. Retrieved 2015-10-15.
  15. ^ McLeod, Jane; Lawler, Edward; Schwalbe, Michael (2014). Handbook of the Social Psychology of Inequality. Springer. p. 140. ISBN 978-94-017-9002-4.
  16. ^ a b Lamont, Michèle and Virag Molnar. 2002. "The Study of Boundaries in the Social Sciences". Annual Review of Sociology. 28:167–195
  17. ^ "Society for the Study of Social Problems | Past Winners". www.sssp1.org. Retrieved 2015-10-15.
  18. ^ Cohen, Patricia (2010-08-23). "For Scholars, Web Changes Sacred Rite of Peer Review". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2015-10-15.
  19. ^ Lamont, Michèle (2012-01-01). "Toward a Comparative Sociology of Valuation and Evaluation". Annual Review of Sociology. 38 (1): 201–221. doi:10.1146/annurev-soc-070308-120022. S2CID 1015036.
  20. ^ "Kohli Prize for Sociology 2024: Michèle Lamont – Kohli Foundation". 6 May 2023.
  21. ^ Smeds, Bengt. "Nyhetssida - Department of Sociology - Uppsala University, Sweden". www.soc.uu.se. Retrieved 2023-01-13.
  22. ^ Lamont, Michèle. "Michèle Lamont | Speaker | TED". www.ted.com. Retrieved 2023-01-13.
  23. ^ "Michèle Lamont | Falling Walls". falling-walls.com. Retrieved 2023-01-13.
  24. ^ "List of all Honorary Graduates and Chancellor's Medallists". warwick.ac.uk. Retrieved 2021-06-23.
  25. ^ "New Honorary Doctors Appointed at Uppsala University". Viet Thanh Nguyen. 2019-10-22. Retrieved 2021-06-23.
  26. ^ "Professor Michèle Lamont FBA". The British Academy. Retrieved 2021-06-28.
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  29. ^ Amsterdam, Universiteit van (2016-10-11). "Honorary doctorates for refugee law expert, cultural sociologist and Aids advocate". University of Amsterdam. Retrieved 2021-06-23.
  30. ^ "CIFAR Researchers appointed to the Royal Society of Canada and RSC College". CIFAR. 2015-10-09. Retrieved 2021-06-23.
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