Mission Statement:

Cornell's Department of Development Sociology prepares tomorrow’s leaders and assists today’s leaders to secure human well-being and environmental sustainability.  It seeks solutions for problems related to social and economic change and engages organizations and people at all levels of society who are working to build community and local/global problem solving capacity.

The Department of Development Sociology conducts theoretical and applied research, teaching, and outreach on the causes, dynamics, and consequences of social, cultural, political and economic change.

Photos provided by J.M. Stycos, M.J. Pfeffer, R. Howe, C. Lentz, M. Schneider.

Cornell University is an equal opportunity, affirmative action educator and employer.

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Fouad M Makki
Assistant Professor

Fouad M Makki

As an undergraduate, I was educated in comparative studies in society and history at Cornell University and received a Ph. D. in sociology from Binghamton University. My principal focus of interest over the past few years has been understanding forms of social power as they change over time, and the... Read Fouad M Makki's full profile

Faculty list for the Department of Development Sociology

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Jason Conscons

I work on issues of state formation, exception, and rights in a series of enclaves along the India Bangladesh border. My research focuses on two questions. First, how have disputes over enclaves along the India-Bangladesh border shaped understandings of territory, nation, and citizenship in India and Bangladesh; Second, how are these understandings reworked within enclaves facing complicated border and institutional configurations?  I answer these questions through a combination of archival and ethnographic research in both India and Bangladesh that focuses on the mutually constitutive relationship between enclaves and their home and bounding states.

© 2006, Department of Development Sociology, Cornell University