Sara Wallace Goodman Explained

Sara Wallace Goodman
Birth Place:Beachwood, Ohio, USA
Education:BA, Political Science, 2003, Miami University
MA, 2005, PhD, Government, 2009, Georgetown University
Thesis Title:Civic integration requirements and the transformation of citizenship
Thesis Year:2009
Workplaces:University of California, Irvine

Sara Wallace Goodman (born 1979) is an American political scientist. She is an associate professor of Political Science at the University of California, Irvine.

Early life and education

Wallace Goodman was born in 1979[1] to parents Roni and Benjamin Wallace in Beachwood, Ohio.[2] She earned her Bachelor of Arts degree at Miami University and her Master's degree and PhD at Georgetown University.[3] While completing her PhD, Wallace Goodman married computer security specialist Adam Goodman in 2007.[2]

Career

Upon receiving her PhD, Wallace Goodman spent six months in the Netherlands completing a post-doctoral fellowship at Maastricht University. She returned to North America and accepted an assistant professor position at University of California, Irvine's (UCI) political science department.[4] During the 2013–14 academic year, Wallace Goodman earned UCI's Social Sciences Assistant Professor Research Award and UCI's Hellman Fellowship.[5] She also received an Israel Institute Grant to study citizenship and immigrant integration.[6] Following these grants, she published her first book titled Immigration and membership politics in Western Europe which won the 2015 Best Book Award from the European Politics & Society section of the American Political Science Association.[7]

, Wallace Goodman also sits on the Editorial Board of the International Studies Quarterly.[8] During the COVID-19 pandemic in North America, she collaborated with Shana Kushner Gadarian and Thomas Pepinsky to survey "3,000 Americans on a wide range of health behaviors, attitudes, and opinions about how to respond to the crisis."[9] They continued to survey Americans during the pandemic to see if their beliefs and attitudes had changed. By July, Wallace Goodman and her research team found that there were "growing partisan gap in terms of fear of the disease, perceived safety of different behaviors, and preferred policy solutions."[10]

Selected publications

The following is a list of selected publications

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Goodman, Sara Wallace, 1979- . id.loc.gov . October 21, 2020.
  2. Web site: Goodman-Wallace . clevelandjewishnews.com . October 21, 2020 . February 8, 2007.
  3. Web site: Sara Wallace Goodman . faculty.uci.edu . October 21, 2020.
  4. Web site: Social Sciences' new fall faculty lineup . socsci.uci.edu . October 21, 2020 . September 24, 2009.
  5. Web site: Goodman receives 2013 Hellman Fellowship . socsci.uci.edu . October 21, 2020 . July 16, 2013.
  6. Web site: FORMER GRANT RECIPIENTS: SARA WALLACE GOODMAN . israelinstitute.org . October 21, 2020.
  7. Web site: Goodman earns APSA book prize . socsci.uci.edu . October 21, 2020 . October 8, 2015.
  8. Web site: Editorial Board . academic.oup.com . . October 21, 2020 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200924205923/https://academic.oup.com/isq/pages/Editorial_Board . September 24, 2020.
  9. Web site: Partisanship is the strongest predictor of coronavirus response . news.uci.edu . October 21, 2020 . March 31, 2020.
  10. Web site: Klein . Ezra . Trumpism, not polarization, drives America's disastrous coronavirus politics . vox.com . . October 21, 2020 . July 1, 2020.