Scholar

Amy Lee

H-index: 11
Education 31%
Communication & Media Studies 16%
ericklinenberg.bsky.social
It's a small step from here to prohibiting professors from teaching about climate change, slavery, colonialism, racial discrimination, evolution, and the efficacy of vaccines.
Texas Tech Moves to Limit Academic Discussion to 2 Genders
www.nytimes.com

Reposted by: Amy Lee

uclaits.bsky.social
The Jan 2025 LA fires showed how urban wildfires endanger transit riders and ppl w/o cars.

📊 Among transit riders surveyed:
- 28% relied on rides from others
- 21% used transit to evacuate
- Black respondents were most likely to evacuate via transit (42%)
www.its.ucla.edu/publication/...
Evacuation modes by subgroups: This bar chart figure shows how various population groups traveled to safety during the wildfire evacuation. While getting rides from others was most frequent among evacuees, public transit or walking/biking were more commonly used by transportation-disadvantaged groups, including low-income, Black, and carless residents

Reposted by: Amy Lee, Ana Delicado

ebharrington.bsky.social
Listen, Broligarchy is not some cute synonym for oligarchy. It's genuinely different & WAY more dangerous.

I'm a sociologist who's been studying the ultra-rich globally for 17 yrs, entering their world as an offshore wealth mgr. Published 2 books abt them.

🧵Broligarchs are distinct in 3 ways:
nicholasgrossman.bsky.social
There’s a sort of Trump apologist, a relatively small but loud subset, who probably don’t realize or intend to be, but are so attached to a previous hyperbolic claim that they deny anything important changed.

-US was already an oligarchy
-US was already fascist
-Biden gave Israel a blank check
-Etc

Reposted by: Amy Lee

mbrozen.bsky.social
Our multi-campus research team shared preliminary results from our work about the evacuation experiences of transit riders with LA county transportation and emergency management professionals yesterday! Can’t wait to release these findings publicly later this summer

Reposted by: Amy Lee

marcelmoran.com
Same street, two years apart. Rue Charles Moureu.

Reposted by: Amy Lee

bencollins.bsky.social
There are no distractions. It's all bad. Systematically stripping trans people of their rights, guys in balaclavas shoving any brown person with a tattoo into a ummarked vans, ending healthcare for millions. It's all in service of fascism and technofeudalism. It's all one thing. That's the point.
amyelee.com
A springtime trip to Buenos Aires was where I first encountered jacarandas, which is absolutely part of why I love LA’s so much
amyelee.com
So much is terrible these days but it's also jacaranda season in Los Angeles, which is beautiful from the ground and absolutely stunning from air.
a photo from an airplane with a corridor of jacaranda street trees blooming purple
needhibhalla.bsky.social
"Women are PIs on 58% of the canceled grants, although they are PIs on only 34% of all active NSF grants.

Similarly, Blacks are PIs on 17% of the terminated grants, although they make only 4% of the total pool. Hispanic PIs and those with disabilities were twice as likely to lose a grant."
davidmalakoff.bsky.social
Another scoop from Jeff Mervis (@policyhound.bsky.social): NSF's ~1400 grant terminations have disproportionately affected PIs from groups underrepresented in science: women, racial & ethnic minorities, & those with disabilities. 1/3
www.science.org/content/arti...
Trump officials take steps toward a radically different NSF
Efforts to shrink staff, budget, and focus have alarmed members of Congress
www.science.org
philiprocco.bsky.social
As federal data infrastructure is gutted, we'll lose a window into the vast local health disparities. But those disparities will remain because place is an engine of health provision and stratification, not just an analytic vessel. New essay from me in UAR:
journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/...
An Engine, Not a Vessel: Place, Politics, and Health in the United States
Philip Roccohttps://orcid.org/0000-0001-5971-7039
Abstract
Social scientists often treat places as containers for social and economic phenomena that shape health outcomes. Yet this analytic practice conceals more than it reveals. Local governments in the United States should be understood as engines of both health promotion and stratification. As the contributions to this symposium suggest, governments not only occupy a formal place in the U.S. public health system, their decisions on everything from housing to transportation infrastructure can also have profound impacts on health outcomes. Local political economies likewise renegotiate the parameters of acceptable health interventions, public understandings of health disparities, and the status of population health as a public good. By illustrating these linkages, the authors here suggest important future lines of research on both the promise and limits of local health governance, as well as how the allocation of local political power shapes health disparities.

Reposted by: Amy Lee

hakeemjefferson.bsky.social
A colleague at Stanford’s business school used The Stanford Daily to argue—poorly—against DEI. The piece was riddled with historical errors and left one searching for fact, so I broke my public writing hiatus to respond.

I hope you’ll read and share the piece.

stanforddaily.com/2025/04/22/w...
What DEI threatens isn’t merit. It’s monopoly.
Political science professor Hakeem Jefferson argues for DEI's importance to de-monopolizing universities.
stanforddaily.com
amyelee.com
Re-upping this, given news from the UK today, because it investigates what is and who decides the definition of "biological sex," which is anything but straightforward.
amyelee.com
Amy Lee @amyelee.com · Apr 14
Just finished "Tested" and highly recommend. This theme, brought up about the 1936 Games in Nazi Germany, echos throughout: "Scholars of this period have argued that for sports officials, the point of all this concern…about fraudulent, incorrect women, wasn’t accuracy, or logic. It was control."
Tested | CBC Podcasts | CBC Listen
Who gets to compete? Since the beginning of women’s sports, there has been a struggle over who qualifies for the women’s category. Tested follows the unfolding story of elite female runners who have b...
www.cbc.ca

Reposted by: Amy Lee

atrupar.com
"Private sector money is what should make these investments" -- Duffy on Fox indicates the federal government is likely to pull funding for a high-speed rail project in California
amyelee.com
Phenomenal on every account. I learned to drive in my family's almost identical '91 240 wagon -- my dad still has it!
amyelee.com
Ah bummer -- sorry, Dave
amyelee.com
Just finished "Tested" and highly recommend. This theme, brought up about the 1936 Games in Nazi Germany, echos throughout: "Scholars of this period have argued that for sports officials, the point of all this concern…about fraudulent, incorrect women, wasn’t accuracy, or logic. It was control."
Tested | CBC Podcasts | CBC Listen
Who gets to compete? Since the beginning of women’s sports, there has been a struggle over who qualifies for the women’s category. Tested follows the unfolding story of elite female runners who have b...
www.cbc.ca

Reposted by: Amy Lee

davidzipper.bsky.social
For “abundance” to improve transportation, supporters must consider the kinds of infrastructure that gets built – not just the quantity.

Without addressing externalities (esp from cars), a supply-side spigot of new construction would be a disaster.

Me, in Bloomberg CityLab 🧵
What Would ‘Transportation Abundance’ Look Like?
Fans of the abundance movement say that adding supply solves big problems in housing and health care. But when it comes to getting around, things get complicated.
www.bloomberg.com

Reposted by: Amy Lee

deborahnarcher.bsky.social
It’s book release month!! I’m so excited. Get your copy here: wwnorton.com/books/978132...
amyelee.com
I commuted on Amtrak for about a decade and came up with so many research ideas. Not sure how many I remember, but would be so interested in this someday- sabbatical project
amyelee.com
Such a neat research idea & amazing findings:
- Nighttime pedestrian deaths fall 5% on nights w/ peak moonlight
- In cloud-free conditions, moonlight reduces pedestrian deaths by 17%
- Rural areas with low artificial lighting see a 39% drop in deaths under bright moonlight
- Links are causal
justintyndall.bsky.social
My paper, Road Illumination and Nighttime Pedestrian Deaths: Evidence from Moonlight, is now published at Economics of Transportation. authors.elsevier.com/a/1kptw_oIvi...

Reposted by: Amy Lee

justintyndall.bsky.social
My paper, Road Illumination and Nighttime Pedestrian Deaths: Evidence from Moonlight, is now published at Economics of Transportation. authors.elsevier.com/a/1kptw_oIvi...
paleofuture.bsky.social
Video of the international student at Tufts being arrested by "federal authorities" in Massachusetts has been released and it's terrifying.

They're not even uniformed officers. Just secret police thugs in hoodies and masks.

From WCVB: youtu.be/PuFIs7OkzYY

by Gerry CanavanReposted by: Amy Lee

gerrycanavan.bsky.social
every college, corporate, and nonprofit president right now
amyelee.com
University of California has banned diversity statements in the hiring process because "the requirement to submit a diversity statement may lead applicants to focus on an aspect of their candidacy that is outside their expertise or prior experience."
By that logic, what about teaching statements?

Reposted by: Amy Lee

ucs.org
In 2018 Musk won a bid for high-speed transit in Chicago. He tried to sell the city on technology that didn’t exist and his proposal was never built. He lied and showed little regard for public services. "We are now seeing the consequences of putting someone like that in a position of power."

Blog:
Transportation Professionals Saw Elon Musk’s Lies and Disdain for the Public Firsthand.
We can't sit on the sidelines now.
blog.ucs.org

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