Sociology Faculty
Sociology faculty members bring versatile academic backgrounds and plentiful professional experience to the classroom. With dedication to teaching and passion for the subject, professors guide students through hands-on learning and academic coursework.
Dr. Tennille Nicole Allen
Professor, Department Chairallente@lewisu.edu
BE171
(815) 836-5799
2009 Ph.D. Northwestern University
2001 M.A. Northwestern University
Tennille Nicole Allen, Ph.D. is Professor and Chair of Sociology at ÌðÐÄÖ±²¥. She is also the director of both African American and Ethnic and Cultural Studies. Her primary teaching and research interests are in the intersections of race, class, gender, identity, and place. She is the author of works on social networks, food inequities, the sociological contributions of Zora Neale Hurston, as well as African American intimate relationships, and African American cultural and creative practices. Her current research centers African American girls and women living in Joliet and Chicago as they understand and create resilient and resistive practices in their lives. She also engages and teaches experiential learning courses in community-based participatory research in communities in Joliet and Chicago.
Dr. Thomas Brignall, III
Associate Professortbrignall@lewisu.edu
BE150A
(815) 836-5371
2001 Ph.D Western Michigan University
Dr. Brignall specializes in the sociology of social change, multicultural studies and technology in society. Dr. Brignall is the author of two forthcoming books about the Internet's impact on society. He enjoys helping students develop, present and publish their research.
Dr. Jennifer Tello Buntin
Associate Professor, Department of Sociology
Director, Honors Program
Director, Latin America & Latina/o Studies
buntinje@lewisu.edu
BE160C
(815) 588-7087
2010 Ph.D., University of Chicago
2001 M.A. University of Chicago
1996 B.A., University of Oklahoma
Jennifer Tello Buntin is an Associate Professor of Sociology and Director of the Latin American and Latina/o Studies program at ÌðÐÄÖ±²¥. She also directs the University’s Honors Program. Her research and teaching interests focus on the Latine experience in the U.S., international migration, social inequality and the intersectionality of race, class and gender. Before starting her position at ÌðÐÄÖ±²¥, she was a visiting assistant professor at the Julian Samora Research Institute at Michigan State University and held teaching positions at North Central College and the University of Illinois-Chicago. She received her Ph.D. from the Department of Sociology at the University of Chicago in 2010.
Dr. Carlene Sipma
Assistant Professorsipmadca@lewisu.edu
BE160B
(815) 836-5334
2013 Ph.D. Loyola University Chicago
1997 M.A. San Diego State University
1988 B.A. University of North Carolina Wilmington
Dr. Sipma teaches courses which examine race, gender, and social class inequities, the causes and outcomes of violence, restorative justice and peacemaking, and inequalities in the criminal justice system. She is an alumnus of Loyola University Chicago where her dissertation research explored the reentry experiences of formerly incarcerated men returning to a suburban city from prison. Before coming to Lewis, she was a Research Associate at the George Washington University School of Medicine studying the impact of breast cancer on families and a Visiting Professor of Sociology at North Central College. was a Research Associate at the George Washington University School of Medicine studying the impact of breast cancer on families and a Visiting Professor of Sociology at North Central College.
Her research interests include race, poverty and place, First Generation college students, cultural survival and social/environmental activism of indigenous peoples, and the economic, environmental, and post-civil war structural violence experiences of the Maya of Guatemala.