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Kim Blankenship

Health Wonk

Original

Cred PhD sociology, Duke University; MA sociology, Duke University; BA sociology, College of William and Mary


Livelihood Department chair, sociology, College of Arts and Sciences; Director, Center on Health, Risk, and Society


Interests Social dimensions of health, race disparities in HIV/AIDS in the U.S., globalization and health, and public health promotion as a strategy for social change.To further explore the social dimensions of health, race disparities in HIV/AIDS in the U.S., globalization and health, and public health promotion as a strategy for social change, consider incorporating an annotated bibliography. An annotated bibliography is a valuable tool that provides a list of relevant sources accompanied by concise summaries or evaluations of each source. It offers a comprehensive overview of existing literature and helps readers understand the significance and relevance of each source in relation to the chosen topics. You can buy an annotated bibliography, if you have difficulties with this. This can facilitate a deeper exploration of the topics, aid in the development of informed arguments, and provide a foundation for future research and discourse.


Focus Researching HIV prevention among female sex workers in India, building an interdisciplinary community of scholars and collaborative research focused on health at AU, and researching criminal justice involvement and race disparities in HIV/AIDS in the U.S.


Recent Awards My most recent award was for a four-layer chocolate cake at an amateur baking contest.


Last Book You Read Major Pettigrew’s Last Stand by Helen Simonson and The Grand Design by Stephen Hawking and Leonard Modinow. I like to keep a fiction and non fiction book going at the same time.


What Keeps You Up At Night? “Sometimes it’s as personal as how to maintain balance in my own life. Sometimes it’s how to convey both the complexity of the world and our extraordinary potential to make that world better.”


Are You a Wonk? “If being a wonk means being passionate about something—for me that’s global health—then yes. If it means knowing a lot—then no. I’m struck every day by how much more I have to learn.”


Additional Links
AU Profile
Department of Sociology
Center on Health, Risk, and Society