Executive Committee
Alejandro Portes, Ph.D. 1970, University of Wisconsin-Madison. Director of the Center for Migration and Development and Professor of Sociology, Princeton University. Economic sociology, international development, comparative urbanization.
József Böröcz, Ph. D. 1992, The Johns Hopkins University. Associate Professor of Sociology, Rutgers University; and Senior Scholarly Advisor, Institute for Political Studies, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest. Global structures, geopolitical economy of borders and flows, regionalism, and the European Union as a global actor.
Miguel Centeno, Ph.D. 1990, Yale University. Professor of Sociology and Public Affairs, Princeton University. Social change, historical sociology, sociology of war, and contemporary Latin America.
Rene Flores, B.A. Interdisciplinary Studies, University of California-Berkeley. Immigration, race and ethnicity, and contemporary international political economy. Formerly a research assistant at El Colegio de México in Mexico City and a recipient of the National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship.
Amaney Jamal, Ph.D. 2002, University of Michigan. Assistant Professor of Political Science, Princeton University. Political development, Middle East
Atul Kohli, Ph.D. 1981, University of California, Berkeley. Professor of Political Science and International Affairs, Princeton University. Comparative political economy, with a focus on the developing countries.
Douglas S. Massey, Ph. D. 1978, Princeton University. Professor of Sociology and Public Affairs, Princeton University. International migration, Latin American culture and society, Mexico-U.S. migration, U.S. racial stratification.

Edward Telles, Ph.D.Professor of Sociology, Princeton University. Immigration, race and ethnic relations, social demography and urban sociology.

Deborah Yashar, Ph.D. 1992, University of California-Berkeley. Professor of Politics and International Affairs, Princeton University. Comparative politics, Latin America, democracy, development, ethnic politics, and social movements.






