Judith Treas, sociology professor and Center for Demographic and Social Analysis director, has been named a UCI Chancellor’s Professor. Granted for a five-year term, the distinguished title recognizes those on campus who have demonstrated unusual academic merit and who continue notable achievement in scholarship.

Treas specializes in research on family, gender, inequality, aging and the life course. Her findings on how mixing kids and careers affect men and women and how homemakers are no more happier than women who work for pay have been featured in leading journals including American Sociological Review,  Journal of Gerontology, Social Forces, and Journal of Marriage and Family, to name a few. Besides The Wiley Blackwell Companion to Sociology of Families, she’s co-edited Dividing the Domestic, which demonstrated that societal characteristics have a major influence on how couples divvy up the domestic duties in homes around the globe. Combining international survey data with sociological analysis, Treas and co-authors report that the lion’s share of domestic responsibilities still rests with women, even as more women are working outside the home.  While some countries are closing this gender chore gap, other countries may be inadvertently reinforcing traditional roles through family-friendly policies that encourage women to take time off work to keep house and raise children.

Her work has been supported by the National Science Foundation, the Russell Sage Foundation, and  others. Outside campus, she’s served as a consultant on the research and design of the 2010 Census, on awards committees for the American Sociological Association and on editorial boards of many journals. She’s a past recipient of the ASA’s Matilda White Riley Distinguished Scholar Award for Career Achievement, and in 2015, she was a co-recipient of best article awards from two ASA sections.  In 2009, she was president of the Pacific Sociological Association. In 2012, she was named the recipient of the Theoretical Developments in Social Gerontology award. The following year, she was named a fellow of the National Council of Family Relations. Awarded to no more than three-percent of the council's 3400+ membership base, the honor recognizes those who have made outstanding and enduring contributions to the field of family relations through scholarship, teaching, outreach and/or professional service.  

Treas received her master’s and Ph.D. in sociology from UCLA. She was a professor at the University of Southern California for 15 years, serving as department chair for a five-year term. When she came to UCI in 1989, she was the founding chair of the sociology department. In 1997, she founded the Graduate Program in Demographic and Social Analysis, followed by the Center for Demographic and Social Analysis, a campus research center.

Treas’s term as Chancellor’s Professor begins in July. There are currently fewer than 50 Chancellor’s Professors on campus, six of whom call social sciences home: Jan Brueckner (economics); George Marcus (anthropology); Kristen Monroe (political science); David Neumark (economics); Charles Ragin (sociology) and now Judith Treas (sociology).

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