headshot of Tom


Tom Wooten

Assistant Professor

Address:
133 Stubbs Hall

Email Address:
tomwooten@lsu.edu

College:
Humanities and Social Sciences

Department:
Sociology

Areas of Expertise

  • Poverty
  • Education
  • Crime and criminalization

 

Biography

Tom Wooten is an ethnographer who studies the lives and struggles of people living in poverty. To be poor in the United States is often to be trapped in a set of institutions that define the experience of poverty and perpetuate poverty. These institutions include low-wage employers; class- and race-segregated neighborhoods, schools, and colleges; exploitative financial services; arbitrary, nosy, and punitive social services; and the uneven-but-harsh criminal legal system. Tom studies this institutional landscape of poverty by going along with people as they try to navigate it. In one project, Tom studies the experience of trying to escape poverty by following a group of young men through their senior year of high school and their first year of college. In another, Tom studies the experience of trying to survive targeted violence in urban gun conflicts. In a third project, with Charlotte Baker, Tom studies the inner workings of the cash bail system. 
 
Tom’s research has appeared in The American Journal of Sociology and Criminology. His book about the transition to college for low-income students is under contract with The University of Chicago Press. Prior to his time in sociology, Tom wrote two books about disasters and disaster recovery. No One Had a Tongue to Speak, with Utpal Sandesara, is a social history of the deadly 1979 Machhu dam disaster in Gujarat, India. We Shall Not Be Moved is a social history of neighborhood-based recovery efforts in post-Katrina New Orleans.

Education

Ph.D., Harvard University (2022)

Curriculum Vitae