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Katrin Auspurg

Katrin Auspurg currently holds a full professorship in sociology (specializing in quantitative empirical research) at the Department of Social Sciences at the Goethe-University Frankfurt. Since 2012, she has been a research associate at the Institute for Social & Economic Research (ISER), University of Essex. Her main research interests are in survey research methods, analytical sociology, and social inequalities.




David Austen-Smith

David Austen-Smith is the Peter G. Peterson Professor of Corporate Ethics, and Professor of Political Science and Economics. He received his PhD in economics from Cambridge University in 1978. He joined the Northwestern faculty from the University of Rochester in 1996, transferring to the Kellogg School as the Earl Dean Howard Professor of Political Economy in September 2004 from the Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences where he was the Ethel and John Lindgren Professor.

Carol J. Auster

Carol J. Auster, Ph.D., is Professor of Sociology at Franklin & Marshall College. She has a longstanding research interest in women who choose male-dominated occupations, such as engineering, and male-dominated leisure activities, such as ice hockey. Recent publications, however, have focused on Mother’s and Father’s Day greeting cards as well as on the gender marketing of Disney toys.

Lisa A. Auster-Gussman

Lisa A. Auster-Gussman is a doctoral student in Psychology at University of Minnesota. Her research focuses primarily on health-related mindsets and health outcomes. Her research program aims to clarify the connections between individual’s beliefs about their health and their health behaviors with a strong focus on determining the processes that mediate these connections.   





D. Mark Austin

D. Mark Austin is a Professor of Sociology and also serves on the program faculty of the Urban and Public Affairs PhD program. A substantial portion of his past research has focused on issues related to community and urban sociology examining matters such as perceptions of safety, attitudes about growth and the environment, reactions to crime, and factors related to neighborhood satisfaction.

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