
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. — Dr. Bronwen Lichtenstein, assistant professor in The University of Alabama department of criminal justice, will be honored by the American Sociological Association for her research on health issues and women in the South.
The 2007 Race, Class, Gender Committee of the American Sociological Association has selected a research article by Lichtenstein as the winner of the Contribution to Scholarship Article Award.
Lichtenstein’s article, “Domestic Violence, Sexual Ownership, and HIV Risk in Women in the American Deep South,” examined critical factors facing women (such as domestic violence and the objectification of women’s bodies) in conjunction with the rapid growth in HIV/AIDS that is affecting women in the South.
Lichtenstein’s research areas have focused on health, crime, law and society. She has conducted research on HIV/sexually transmitted infections in both New Zealand and the United States with an emphasis on the social dimensions of HIV/AIDS. Lichtenstein has published 40 scholarly articles, monographs and book chapters and has been awarded 13 grants for studies on HIV/AIDS.
Lichtenstein will receive the award at the RCG annual meeting in New York in August.
Contact
Meesha Emmett or Linda Hill, UA Public Relations, 205/348-8325, lhill@ur.ua.edu
Source
Dr. Bronwen Lichtenstein, 205/348-7782, blichten@bama.ua.edu