Robert C. Smith

 Curriculum Vitae

 

Contact
robert.smith@baruch.cuny.edu; (646)-660-6717
Baruch College, The City University of New York
School of Public Affairs
135 East 22nd Street, Room 909
New York, NY 10010

Robert Courtney Smith  seeks to increase our understanding of contemporary migration, and to identify strategic sites of intervention for policy.

He has worked in the Mexican community in New York and in Mexico (especially the state of Puebla) for more than twenty years. He is the author of Mexican New York: Transnational Worlds of New Immigrants (University of California Press, 2006), which won four awards from the American Sociological Association: the 2006 Thomas and Zaniecki Award for best book on migration; the 2007 Robert Park Award for the best book on Community and Urban Sociology, the 2008 Latino/a best book award, and the 2008 overall Distinguished Book Award. It also won a Presidential Excellence Prize from Baruch College. He has been awarded grants from the National Science Foundation, the Social Science Research Foundation, the Spencer Foundation/National Academy of Education, the Columbia Oral History Research Project. He was a Russell Sage Foundation Visiting Fellow in 2007-2008, and a Guggenheim Fellow in 2009-2010. He is a member of the Sociology faculty at the CUNY Graduate Center.

Smith’s “public sociology” seeks to identify strategic sites of intervention to promote positive outcomes. He has served several years on the CUNY Chancellor’s Commission on Mexicans and Education in New York, and serves as the Lead Faculty in the Baruch College School of Public Affairs Emerging Mexican Leaders Program. Smith co-founded the Mexican Educational Foundation of New York (which is merging with the Mexican American Students Alliance), which promotes educational achievement and committed leadership in the Mexican community. Smith was an expert witness in the Voting Rights Act case of US. vs Village of Port Chester, focusing on the history of discrimination and racial social dynamics involving Latinos. He also routinely advises Mexican community organizations and leaders. In recognition of this work, Smith was awarded the Youth Advocate of the Year Award in 2008 by the largest Mexican nonprofit organization in New York, Organizacion Tepeyac.

Smith’s Guggenheim Fellow project was to analyze data from a fourteen year project on children of Mexican immigrants (funded currently by the W.T. Grant Foundation), following them from mid-adolescence into early adulthood (mid-teens to about thirty). The resulting book will be called Horatio Alger Lives in Brooklyn… But Check His Papers. This research documents how the majority of his 100 research subjects experienced at least modest upward mobility over the decade, benefitting from the many “second chance” mechanisms or special programs in the New York schools, from good mentoring, and from hard work. The study also shows how undocumented youth, who have grown up in the US, including some with stellar educational records, have experienced harsh and unfair limits. Some have responded by pursuing their educations and becoming leaders in their communities, maintaining a strong hope that America will give all its children a fair chance. It is a morally upside down universe where young people raised in the US are condemned to life at hard labor in the informal economy for the “crime” of coming to the US with their parents as children.