Troy Duster

Troy S. Duster
Born
Troy Smith Duster

(1936-07-11) July 11, 1936 (age 88)
Alma materNorthwestern University (BA, PhD)
University of California, Los Angeles (MA)
MotherAlfreda Duster
RelativesIda B. Wells (grandmother), Ferdinand Lee Barnett (grandfather)
AwardsGuggenheim Fellowship
Scientific career
FieldsSociology
InstitutionsUniversity of California, Berkeley
New York University
ThesisThe Social Response to Abnormality (1962)
Doctoral advisorRaymond Mack

Troy Smith Duster (born July 11, 1936) is an American sociologist with research interests in the sociology of science, public policy, race and ethnicity and deviance. He is a Chancellor’s Professor of Sociology at University of California, Berkeley, and professor of sociology and director of the Institute for the History of the Production of Knowledge at New York University. Duster is on the faculty advisor boards of the Berkeley Center for Social Medicine and the Berkeley Center for Right-Wing Studies.[1]

In 1970, Duster published The Legislation of Morality in which he showed how hundreds of thousands of previously law-abiding drug addicts became associated with the deviant and criminal segment of society after the United States Supreme Court in Webb v. United States interpreted the Harrison Narcotic Law (1914) to prohibit physician prescriptions for the maintenance of existing physical opiate dependance.[2] It was easier, Duster concluded, for middle America to direct its moral hostility "toward a young, lower-class Negro male than toward a middle-aged white female".[3] More recently he contributed to the book White-Washing Race: The Myth of a Color-blind Society (2005).

From 2004–2005, Duster served as president of the American Sociological Association.[4] He was also a contributing member of the International HapMap Project, an organization that worked to develop the first haplotype map of the human genome.[5]

He is the grandson of civil rights activist Ida B. Wells.[4]

  1. ^ "Troy Duster - ISSI". ISSI People. Retrieved 9 April 2024.
  2. ^ "Book Reviews". Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology. 62 (2): 263. 1971.
  3. ^ Brownstein, Henry H. (2017). "Sociological Perspectives on Illicit Involvement with Drugs". In Korgen, Kathleen Odell (ed.). The Cambridge Handbook of Sociology. Cambridge University Press.
  4. ^ a b Cite error: The named reference asanet was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  5. ^ International HapMap Consortium (2003). "The International HapMap Project". Nature. 426 (6968): 789–796. doi:10.1038/nature02168. hdl:2027.42/62838. PMID 14685227. S2CID 4387110.