Family Demography

Shelly LaMon

Shelly LaMon
category
graduate student associates
Department of Anthropology
UC Santa Barbara
Broom Center Affiliation(s)

Graduate Student Fellow

I am a sociocultural anthropologist with a regional focus on the U.S. and southern Mexico. My research interests encompass the topics of international migration, farm labor, transborder community, ethnicity, race, culture, and indigenous peoples. From 2015 - 2016 I conducted ethnographic fieldwork in California, Florida, and Mexico to gather data for my dissertation project, a comparative study of the migration experiences of two indigenous migrant groups: The Mixtec of Oaxaca and the Highland Maya of Chiapas.

Broom Graduate Associate

Alex Maldonado

Alex Maldonado
category
graduate student associates
Department of Sociology
UC Santa Barbara
Broom Center Affiliation(s)

Graduate Student Fellow

In the past, my research has mainly evolved around Environmental Justice and social vulnerabilities to hazards. From the EJ, perspective, I have conducted research in the US as well as in Australia using mixed methods. I have also participated in research projects examining the relationship between Hispanic immigration and crime at the neighborhood level. Currently, I am interested in migration to the US from Mexico, Mexican family life, and I am working on a project that will measure health outcomes for individuals in Mexico based on skin color stratification.    

Broom Graduate Associate

Justin Cook

Justin Cook
category
graduate student associates
Department of Geography
UC Santa Barbara
Broom Center Affiliation(s)

Graduate Student Fellow

I grew up in Dunwoody, Georgia, just outside Atlanta. I completed my undergraduate degree in meteorology at Penn State in 2005 and entered the US Air Force. After serving as a pilot in the Air Force for several years, I went back to school for a master's degree and then taught geography courses at the US Air Force Academy. My master's degree focused on fertility decline in the US during the Great Recession. My interest in fertility rates began around the birth of my first child and on the heels of some struggles with infertility. I also read a key book that got me more interested in this topic, What to Expect When No One's Expecting by Jonathan V. Last. The declining fertility we see in the developed world, and specifically here in the US, really fascinates me.

Broom Graduate Associate

Michelle DuBreuil

Michelle DuBreuil
category
graduate student associates
Department of Geography
UC Santa Barbara
Broom Center Affiliation(s)

Graduate Student Fellow

Michelle DuBreuil is a PhD student in the SDSU/UCSB Joint Doctoral Geography. Previously she worked with the CSUSM National Latino Research Center. Her research interests include environmentally induced migration, transnationalism, belonging, and identity construction. Future research will explore the most recent diaspora of transnational Haitian migrants, focusing on those arriving in Mexico and Canada post 2015. 

Broom Graduate Associate
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