Skip to content

Sociology Boasts 11 Tenure-Track Faculty Placements in Its Short History

September 1, 2022
Recent sociology Ph.D. alumnus Alejandro Zermeño is now an assistant professor in the Department of Sociology at California State Polytechnic University, Pomona.
Recent sociology Ph.D. alumnus Alejandro Zermeño is now an assistant professor in the Department of Sociology at California State Polytechnic University, Pomona.

Just seven years after it began offering graduate degrees, UC Merced’s Sociology Department has already begun shaping the future of the professoriate by placing 11 of its graduate alumni in tenure-track positions — five of those in the 2022-23 academic year.

“These new faculty members shine a light on the promise of UC Merced to transform the landscape of higher education,” Sociology Department Chair Laura Hamilton said. “Our graduates are giving back to the Central Valley and to the state of California, showing future generations of college students that the knowledge and experiences of marginalized communities are vital to the academy.”

For many graduate-level degree seekers, the goal of earning a doctoral degree is to secure a faculty appointment on the tenure track. However, it’s not a given since it’s estimated between 10% and 30% of Ph.D. alumni get a permanent position at academia.

“Our graduates have great success in securing positions,” Sociology Graduate Group Chair and Professor Nella Van Dyke said. “We believe a big part of that success is that our department emphasizes research on the cutting edge of sociology, and we designed our program around supporting our graduate students — most of whom are students of color and first-generation college students.”

The University of California approved the campus’ sociology doctoral program in 2015 and the department awarded its first Ph.D. in 2017 to Marcus Shaw who is an assistant professor in the Criminology Department at Fresno State. His research is in the areas of intergenerational equality, critical criminology, immigration and educational mobility.

Shaw mentored younger students in the community during one of his undergraduate classes, and the Merced native says, “college saved my life.” Now, he is paying it forward by incorporating a service-learning component to his classes requiring students to go out and mentor a child in the community. He also received a federal grant to work with youth and reduce delinquency in Kings County.

Most of the sociology tenure-track placements are at California universities, and over half are in Central California. Ten out of the 11 are underrepresented students, and most are from working-class backgrounds.

Some are the first Latinx faculty hired in their new departments. That’s the case for Veronica Lerma-Gonzalez from Lodi who received her Ph.D. in the sociology program in May 2022 and will start this fall as an assistant professor in the Department of Sociology at UC Davis. Hamilton points out, “Faculty in the UC system often do not represent the communities that they serve. Dr. Lerma-Gonzalez’s appointment is a notable exception — and hopefully part of larger change in faculty representation.”

Lerma-Gonzalez’s research centers on women of color and offers an intersectional framework that considers how race, gender, class and geographic location shape criminalization processes. She examines the life histories of formerly incarcerated Mexican American women living in the Central Valley.

Our graduates are giving back to the Central Valley and to the state of California, showing future generations of college students that the knowledge and experiences of marginalized communities are vital to the academy.

Sociology Department Chair Laura Hamilton

Recent Ph.D. graduate Alejandro Zermeño is now an assistant professor in the Department of Sociology at California State Polytechnic University, Pomona. His teaching preparation at UC Merced included evidence-based pedagogy training and six years as a teaching assistant and instructor of social stratification.

“I learned a lot of pedagogical skills from my professors from taking courses for the first two years of my graduate studies,” Zermeño said. “These teaching experiences were very important for my preparation because the diverse student demographics at UC Merced are very similar to those at Cal Poly, Pomona, including a large percentage of Latinx and first-generation college students.”

He credits graduate courses, qualifying examinations and his years of experience working on his master's thesis and dissertation as having contributed to his research preparation.

“I learned so much from the sociology faculty and especially from my committee members who have always encouraged and supported me in my research and professional development and still do,” he said. “I also was given the opportunity to collaborate on various group-research projects with my advisor, Paul Almeida, and co-chair, Whitney Pirtle, both of whom are also my mentors. All these experiences have helped me further develop valuable research skills that will assist me throughout the professoriate.”

    I learned so much from the sociology faculty and especially from my committee members who have always encouraged and supported me in my research and professional development and still do.

    Alumnus Alejandro Zermeño, Ph.D.

    Other sociology graduate alumni who have secured tenure-track faculty positions include:

    • Yajaira Ceciliano-Navarro who joined the faculty of the University of Houston-Downtown as an assistant professor in the Department of Social Sciences in January 2022 after receiving her Ph.D. in 2021. Her current research focuses on comparing the impacts of incarcerations and deportations on nuclear and extended families.​​​

    • Kathryn "Katie" Daniels graduated in May 2020 with her Ph.D. In fall 2020, she joined the Department of Sociology at California State Polytechnic University, Pomona, as an assistant professor. Her research mainly looks at racism and its relationship to health — such as how the stress of racism affects maternal outcomes among women of color.

    • Maria Escobar, whose research focuses on immigration, race/ethnicity and sense of belonging in the U.S. South, has joined Albright College in Pennsylvania as an assistant professor of sociology. She earned her Ph.D. earlier this year.

    • Maria De Jesus Mora, who graduated with her Ph.D. in 2020, is an assistant professor in the Sociology, Gerontology and Gender Studies Department at Stanislaus State. Her research centers on race, immigration and social movements. She studies how racialized and immigrant groups mobilize against threats and the long-term organizing outcomes for immigrant rights social movements.

    • Amalia Pérez Martín starts in January 2023 as a faculty member at the Department of Sociology at Sacramento State. Her research interests include anti-austerity protest and resistance against neoliberalism in Latin America, community organizing, legal mobilization, political repression, intersectionality, political identities, discursive framing and storytelling, content analysis and historical sociology.

    • Rodolfo Rodriguez is an assistant professor of sociology at West Hills College Coalinga. He completed his master’s degree at UC Merced in 2017.

    • Houa Vang started as a faculty member in the Sociology, Gerontology and Gender Studies Department at Stanislaus State this fall. Her research interests are race and ethnicity, education, identity and racialized organizations. She examines how the educational system and schools shape identities, resources and opportunities for underrepresented students, especially the experiences and racialization of Southeast Asian Americans.

    • Chia Xiong is an assistant professor of Ethnic Studies at Stanislaus State. She completed her Ph.D. in 2019. Her teaching and research interests include critical refugee studies, immigration and deportation.

    Brenda Ortiz

    Senior Public Information Representative

    Office: (209) 228-4203

    Mobile: (209) 628-8263

    bortiz@ucmerced.edu