Clare Stacey
Department of Sociology and Criminology
Associate Professor
Campus:
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Biography
As a medical sociologist, Dr. Stacey’s work centers on the provision of long-term and end of life care in the United States. She has written extensively on the emotional labor associated with the paid carework of home care aides (The Caring Self, Cornell University Press 2011) and recently completed an edited volume on paid carework with Mignon Duffy and Amy Armenia (Caring on the Clock, Rutgers University Press, 2015). Dr. Stacey’s current research explores the growing hospice and palliative care movement in the US and documents the barriers patients and providers continue to face as they pursue quality end of life care.
Teaching and Research Interests:
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End of Life
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Palliative Care
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Medical Sociology
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Social Inequality
Education
Ph.D. University of California Davis, 2004
Expertise
Medical and Mental Health
End of life
Palliative care
Medical Sociology
Social Inequality
Care-giving
End-of-Life Care
death and dying
End of life
Palliative care
Medical Sociology
Social Inequality
Care-giving
End-of-Life Care
death and dying
Publications
- Duffy, Mignon, Amy Armenia and Clare L. Stacey. (2015) Caring on the Clock: The Complexities and Contradictions of Paid Care Work. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press.
- Stacey, Clare L. and Lindsey Ayers. (2012). “Caught Between Love and Money: The Meaning of Work for Paid Family Caregivers.” Qualitative Sociology 35(1): 47-64.
- Erickson, Rebecca and Clare L. Stacey. (2012). “Nurturing Mind and Body: Emotion Management in the Context of Caring Work,” in Emotional Labor In the 21st Century: Diverse Perspectives on Emotional Regulation at Work, Alicia Grandey, James Diefendorff a
- Stacey, Clare L. (2011). The Caring Self: The Work Experiences of Home Care Aides. Ithaca: ILR/Cornell University Press. Winner of 2012 Recent Contribution Award, American Sociological Association Emotions Section
Documents
Research Institutes and Initiatives
Healthy Communities Research Initiative