Sarah Song (professor)

Sarah Song is professor of law and political science at the University of California, Berkeley. She is a political and legal theorist with a special interest in democratic theory and issues of citizenship, immigration, multiculturalism, gender, and race.

Sarah Song
Born
Seoul, South Korea
NationalityAmerican
Alma materYale University
AwardsAPSA Ralph Bunche Award
Scientific career
InstitutionsUniversity of California, Berkeley
ThesisGender, Culture, and Equality (2003)
Doctoral advisorRogers Smith
Other academic advisorsIan Shapiro

Biography

Born in Seoul, South Korea, Song immigrated to the United States at the age of six. She grew up in Kansas City, Missouri, and Belleville, Illinois, before moving to New Hampshire, where she attended Pinkerton Academy. She received her B.A. from Harvard University in 1996, an M.Phil from Oxford University in 1998, and a Ph.D. from Yale University in 2003.

Career and writing

Song is the first Korean American woman to receive tenure at Berkeley Law School and in the Berkeley Political Science Department. She is a popular teacher of a large undergraduate lecture course on justice at Berkeley. She has been awarded fellowships from the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation. She is the author of Justice, Gender, and the Politics of Multiculturalism, which was awarded the 2008 Ralph Bunche Award[1] by the American Political Science Association for the "best scholarly work in political science that explores the phenomenon of ethnic and cultural pluralism." Prior to moving to Berkeley, she was an assistant professor of Political Science and affiliated faculty in Philosophy at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.[2]

She is currently Director of the Kadish Center for Morality, Law, & Public Affairs at UC Berkeley. The Kadish Center, founded by the American criminal law scholar and theorist Sanford Kadish, sponsors a weekly Workshop in Law, Philosophy, and Political Theory. Co-hosted by Joshua Cohen, the workshop provides an opportunity for Berkeley students and faculty to discuss work-in-progress with leading philosophers, political theorists, and legal scholars working on normative questions.

Bibliography

Books

  • Immigration and Democracy. New York: Oxford University Press. 2018. ISBN 9780190909222.
  • Justice, Gender, and the Politics of Multiculturalism. Cambridge New York: Cambridge University Press. 2007. ISBN 9780521697590.

Selected articles

  • Jack Knight (ed.). "Why does the state have the right to control immigration?". NOMOS: Migration, Immigration, and Emigration. New York: New York University Press.
  • "The Significance of Territorial Presence and the Rights of Immigrants". Migration in Political Theory: The Ethics of Movement and Membership. Oxford: Oxford University Press. 2016.
  • "Immigration and Democratic Principles: On Carens's Ethics of Immigration". Journal of Applied Philosophy. 2016.
  • "The Boundary Problem in Democratic Theory: Why the Demos Should Be Bounded by the State". International Theory. 4, no. 1. 2012.
  • "Multiculturalism". Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 2010.
  • "Democracy and Noncitizen Voting Rights". Citizenship Studies. 13, no. 6. 2009.
gollark: Not currently. It could be, and it would be a fairly simple way to do it.
gollark: Probably the best approach to avoiding surveillance now would have to involve deliberately polluting facial recognition databases and such with fake pictures of you.
gollark: Just say that any data derived from stuff directly harvested from you is "yours".
gollark: It's easy enough *legally*.
gollark: https://ansuz.sooke.bc.ca/entry/23

References

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