Esther Ngan-ling Chow (PhD University of
CA-Los Angeles) has a wide range of teaching and research interests
that span from the intersectionality of race/ethnicity, class,
gender and sexuality; work and family; social inequality and
justice; ethnic community; gender and development; migration,
globalization and social change; transnationalism, economic
sociology; feminist methodology and pedagogy; citizenship;
policy studies; and Chinese/Asian American studies. She
pioneered scholarship on the intersectionality of race, class,
gender and sexuality in the early 1980s, particularly in the
case of Asian American women. She investigated the social
history and formation of ethnic community of Chinatown in Washington
D.C., a gateway city for immigrants. She has been at
the forefront of studying gender, family, work and policy from
global perspectives. Her current research focuses on
the issues of citizenship, identity, and empowerment of women
workers in circular migration in rural China across times and
places. Her work reflects expertise in both quantitative
and qualitative research methodologies with a recent emphasis
on participatory action research.
She was a Fulbright New Century Scholar, 2004-2005 and recipients
of numerous research grant awards, including from the National
Institute of Mental Health, the U.S. Department of Education,
and the National Science Found. She was
honored with a Feminist Activism Award (2008) and Mentoring Award (2000) by Sociologists
for Women in Society; Outstanding Teaching Award by the Asia and Asian America
Section of the American Sociological Association; and Stuart Rice Award for Career
Achievement (2006) and Morris Rosenberg Award for Recent Achievement (2002) by
the District of Columbia Sociological Society; Distinguished Faculty Award by
the Offices of Multicultlural Affairs and International Student Services (2000,
AU), and the Outstanding Scholarship Award in Social and Behavioral Sciences,
from the Washington Academy of Social Science (1995). She has served as
an editorial board member for Gender & Society, International Sociology,
and Rose Series monograph on sociology and social policy.
She has been active in many national and global professional
associations and scientific communities. Her
elected positions include member-at-large on the Council of the American Sociological
Association, Chair of the Asia and Asian America Section (ASA), and Vice President
of the Eastern Sociological Society. She is currently the Co-President
of the Research Committee 32, “Women in Society” of the International
Sociological Association. Her publications include several journal publications
and books on Women, the Family, and Policy: A Global Perspective (1994), Race,
Class and Gender: Common Bonds and Difference Voices (1996), Transforming
Gender and Development in East Asia (2002), “Globalization, Gender,
and Social Change in the 21st Century” guest-edited special issue of International
Sociology (2003), and Women and Citizenship in Local/Global World (forthcoming).