Sarah Iverson

Assistant Professor, Department of Sociology

My work is motivated by novel and enduring questions in sociology: How do people create collective meaning in institutional settings? How do these meanings inform action? What role does meaning making play in facilitating or inhibiting inequality?

Motivated by these questions, I study a range of sites and populations, including an ethnoracially diverse community health organization, the multiracial population in the U.S., and a bottle and can redemption center frequented by unhoused workers. By investigating taken-for-granted assumptions about the nature of race, work, sustainability, and identity, my work aims to strengthen institutional efforts to combat inequality.

My research is published in Genealogy, Demography, and the Journal of Contemporary Ethnography, with funding from the National Science Foundation, the Social Science Research Council, the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, and the Antiracist Research & Policy Center. 

Current Projects

  • Systems Lens to Increase Sustainable Procurement Success:  Co-creating Insights to Bolster Employee Engagement

Affiliations

Antiracist Research & Policy Center

Center for Health, Risk, and Society