College of Social Sciences
Saunders Hall 247
2424 Maile Way
Honolulu, HI 96822
Tel: (808) 956-7693
Fax: (808) 956-3707
Email: socdept@hawaii.edu
Web: sociology.manoa.hawaii.edu
Faculty
*Graduate Faculty
*W. Zhang, PhD (Chair)—medical sociology, social epidemiology, research methods
*K. Mossakowski, PhD (Graduate Chair)—medical sociology, stress and mental health, life course and aging, social psychology, social epidemiology, race/ethnicity
*J. Darrah-Okike, PhD (Undergraduate Chair)—urban sociology, race/ ethnicity, housing policy, sociological theory
*S. K. Chai, PhD—social theory, economic development, comparative sociology (Asia)
*K. Irwin, PhD—criminology, deviance and social control, qualitative methodology
*D. T. Johnson, PhD—criminology, comparative sociology (Japan), law and society
*A. H. Kimura, PhD—science and technology studies, agrifood studies, environmental sociology, gender, social movements, comparative sociology (Asia)
*L. Lin, PhD—economic and organizational sociology, professions, education, medical sociology, comparative sociology (China)
E. Paek, PhD—inequality, gender, work, family, social policy
C. Rost-Banik, PhD—education, gender, civic engagement
*A. Rubin, PhD—law, punishment, organizations, and methods
*N. Sharma, PhD—race/ethnic/minority relations, theory/migration and immigration
*M. Steger, PhD—globalization, social theory, social change, political sociology, economy and society, sociology of religion
*M. Yang, PhD—political sociology, social movements, class politics, globalization, East Asia
Cooperating Graduate Faculty
Visit https://manoa.hawaii.edu/graduate/select-committee-member/ for current list
Affiliate Graduate Faculty
M. Chesney-Lind, PhD (Emeritus)—criminology, gender and women’s issues
M. Delucchi, PhD—UH West O‘ahu sociology of education
C. Hayashida, PhD—gerontology, healthcare systems, Japanese society
Y. Lee, PhD—quantitative methodology, demography, gender stratification, aging and health
Emeritus Faculty
H. Koo, PhD—comparative sociology (Korea), social stratification, development
P. Steinhoff, PhD—Japanese radical left, social movements
Degrees Offered: BA (including minor) in sociology; MA in sociology; PhD in sociology
The Academic Program
Sociology (SOC) is the study of how society organizes itself and how various groups interact with each other and the consequences of these processes. Sociology’s subject matter includes marriage and family patterns, race and ethnic relations, demography, social change, class structure, formal organizations including bureaucracies, value systems, conflict, deviant behavior, medical sociology and aging, criminology, and the people and institutions of other societies.
Sociology uses a range of research techniques for studying social phenomena that can be applied to many areas, whether one is interested in the incidence of crime, client satisfaction, policy evaluations, or demographic trends. In addition to preparing people as professional sociologists in academic settings, sociology is an excellent background for careers in law, social work, public health, urban planning, public administration, and other fields. The graduate program provides students with a foundation in basic theory and methods of research. In addition, faculty and advanced graduate students are involved in several broad areas of sociological interest: the comparative sociology of Asia; the study of crime, law, and deviance; aging and medical sociology; and race and ethnic relations.
Undergraduate Study
Bachelor’s Degree
Requirements
Students must complete a minimum of thirty (30) credit hours of sociology courses, including:
- SOC 100 or one 200-level SOC course
- SOC 300 and 321
- three 400-level courses
- one course from SOC 475, 476/476L, 478, or SOCS 225 (Note: an additional SOC 400-level course is required if SOCS 225 is taken instead of SOC 47X)
- three credits of SOC 494 and 499 can count toward the major requirements
Consult the department for graduate and career opportunities.
For further information on the Bachelor Degree Program Sheet, go to programsheets/.
Minor
Requirements
Students must complete a prerequisite introductory-level sociology course and 15 credit hours, including:
- SOC 300
- One 400-level course
- Three other upper division sociology courses
- SOC 100 or a 200-level course is a prerequisite for all 300-level courses; SOC 300 is a prerequisite for all 400-level courses
- To fulfill minor requirements, courses must be passed with a grade of C (not C-) or better
4+1 BA/MA Sociology
The Department of Sociology offers a combined Bachelor’s and Master’s in Sociology pathway (Plan A and Plan B) that will allow a student to earn a BA and an MA in five years. The program will require students to complete a minimum of 150 credits, nine (9) of which will count for the BA and the MA (i.e., double-counted). Thus, of the total 150 credits, 120 credits will count towards the BA and 30 credits toward the MA.
Graduate Study
Two programs of graduate study in sociology are offered: a PhD program, intended to provide a professional basis for research and university teaching, and an MA program, designed to offer general training in sociology and research methods that can be applied to address major social problems. The following are brief descriptions and do not list all procedures and requirements; the department provides a complete statement of its graduate degree program on its website at sociology.manoa.hawaii.edu. All requirements specified by the Graduate Division and general university regulations also apply.
Applicants for graduate study in the department must specify whether they wish to enter the MA or PhD program. A Statement of Purpose, three letters of recommendation, academic writing sample and resume/CV are required of all applicants, in addition to the Graduate Division’s general application and required documents. GRE scores are optional and not required for admission into the program. An undergraduate major in sociology is not required for admission, but makeup course work may be required in some cases. The application deadline for admission is January 15 for the Fall semester. Please see the department website for more information.
Master’s Degree
The department offers an MA Plan A (thesis) program.
Plan A (Thesis) Requirements
The MA curriculum in sociology (Plan A) should prepare students for positions involving expertise in social research. In addition, preparatory training is provided to those who are aspiring to a doctoral degree but feel they need more preparation. However, an MA candidate cannot assume that satisfactory completion of this curriculum will lead to placement in the department’s PhD program.
The Plan A program aims to provide the student with a firm foundation in sociological theory and methods and statistics, as well as their application to the study of various substantive aspects of society.
A minimum of 30 credit hours of sociology-related course work is required for this program, as well as the successful completion of an MA thesis. All candidates are required to take at least one course each in the core areas of sociological theory, research methodology, and social statistics at the 400 level or higher, as well as five substantive courses, of which four must be at the 600 level or higher. In addition, students must take 6 credits of Thesis Research (SOC 700). The thesis is a substantial research project that shows a student’s ability to produce original substantive and intellectual work. All courses credited toward the 30 credit hour minimum required for the MA degree must be passed with a grade of B or better.
The first semester’s work is planned in consultation with the graduate chair and a temporary advisor appointed by the graduate chair. During the first semester, under the guidance of the temporary advisor, the student prepares a statement outlining a study plan that reflects his or her special interests and meets the credit requirements of the program. By the end of the second semester, the student should form a thesis committee of three or more faculty members, generally drawn primarily from the department.
The thesis committee assists the student in deciding upon a thesis topic. The student then writes a thesis proposal, which must be approved by the committee. Under the supervision of the committee, the student carries out the proposed research and writes the MA thesis. When the committee feels the student is ready, the student submits the final draft of the thesis, and the committee conducts a final oral examination. Both the oral examination and the written paper must meet the committee’s approval for an MA to be awarded.
Plan B (Non-thesis) Requirements
A Plan B (non-thesis) MA is offered only in special circumstances. Students are only admitted to the Plan A MA program.
Doctoral Degree
This is an academically-oriented program. It is designed to provide the student with a firm foundation in sociological theory, methods, and research so the student is prepared to engage in professional research and university teaching
The PhD program is designed to give the student systematic exposure to sociological theories, methods, and statistics, as well their application to a number of substantive areas of sociology. It also provides the opportunity to develop special, high-level competence within an area of research, and the training to publish and present this research in professional settings.
The first phase of the PhD program provides basic training in theory, methods, and research. The requirement in this phase is to complete five required courses in theory, methods, and statistics, as well as 15 additional course credits consisting of substantive courses and up to three credits of SOC 699. All courses that count towards PhD requirements must be at the 600 level or higher and passed with a grade of B or above. The minimum total number of course credits necessary for graduation is 33, but most PhD students take more than the minimum in order to gain adequate knowledge. Completing non-course requirements (QR, comprehensive exam, dissertation) generally takes more time than course requirements. Please consult the department website for more details regarding each of the stages in the PhD program.
By the third semester, the student should form a guidance committee consisting of at least three faculty members, typically drawn primarily from within the department. By approximately the fourth semester, the student submits one of their best course papers for their qualifying review. The paper is judged by a specially constituted qualifying review panel. The qualifying review must be passed before proceeding onto Phase II of the PhD program.
The second phase provides advanced training in areas of concentration and dissertation research. The requirement in this phase is to take three additional credits of substantive courses at the 600 level or above. In addition, the student is required to take a written and oral comprehensive examination in two areas of concentration, write a dissertation proposal, perform the approved dissertation research, and finish writing and orally defending the dissertation.
Early in the second phase, the student must organize a dissertation committee consisting of at least five members of the graduate faculty, including the official university representative from the Graduate Division’s list of eligible university representatives for sociology, in accordance with the Graduate Division policies.
Preferably by the fifth semester, all PhD students must take a comprehensive examination from the dissertation committee. The written examination covers two broadly defined research areas, as determined by the student and the dissertation committee. The student develops a bibliography for each area, and the dissertation committee composes questions from each. After the student has taken the written examination, the dissertation committee evaluates the results and holds a closed oral examination to determine whether or not the student is prepared to undertake dissertation research.
Following successful completion of the comprehensive examination, the student prepares a dissertation proposal. This proposal describes the theoretical basis and the research strategy to be employed in the study of the dissertation problem. When it has been successfully defended before the doctoral committee, the student proceeds to the research and writing phase of the dissertation. The dissertation should represent a major original scholarly contribution to the field of sociology suitable for publication in the form of a monograph. A PhD is given only after completion of the dissertation text and an oral defense.