CITAMS William F. Ogburn Career Achievement Award
2015 William Grant Blank, Oxford Internet Institute
2014 William Dutton, Oxford Internet Institute
2013 Judy Wajcman, The London School of Economics and Political Science
2012 Ron Anderson, Professor Emeritus, University of Minnesota
2011 James E. Katz, Rutgers University
2010 John Robinson, University of Maryland
2009 Elihu Katz, Annenberg School of Communication and the Hebrew University
2008 William Sims Bainbridge, National Science Foundation
2007 David Lyon, Queen’s University
2006 Manuel Castells, University of Southern California
2004 Barry Wellman, University of Toronto
2003 Caroline Hodges Persell, New York University
CITAMS Public Sociology Award
2015 Jessie Daniels, Hunter College, CUNY
2014 Zeynep Tufekci, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
2013 Shelia R. Cotten, University of Alabama, Birmingham
2012 Lisa Wade and Gwen Sharp for their work creating and maintaining the Sociological Images blog.
2011 Lee Rainie, Pew Research Center
2010 danah boyd, Microsoft Research and Berkman Center
2009 Peter Kollock, University of California at Los Angeles
2008 Michael Macy, Cornell University
2007 Keith Hampton, University of Pennsylvania
2006 Marc Smith, Microsoft Research
2005 Stephen P. Borgatti, Boston College
2004 Earl Babbie, Chapman University
2002 Robert Wood, Rutgers University
Prior to 2008 this award was for teaching or the design of a computer application.
CITAMS Book Award
2015 Susan Crawford, Harvard Law School, The Telecom Industry and Monopoly Power in the New Gilded Age
2014 Lee Rainie, Pew Research Center and Barry Wellman, University of Toronto, Networked: The New Social Operating System
2013 Gina Neff, University of Washington, Venture Labor
and
Yuri Takhteyev, University of Toronto, Coding Places
2012 Leah Lievrouw, UCLA, Alternative and Activist New Media (Polity, 2011)
2011 Pablo Boczkowski, Northwestern University, News at Work: Imitation in an Age of Information Abundance (University of Chicago Press, 2010).
2010 Guobin Yang, Barnard College, Columbia University, The Power of the Internet in China Citizen Activism Online (Columbia University Press, 2009).
2009 Tarleton Gillespie, Cornell University, Wired Shut: Copyright and the Shape of Digital Culture. (MIT Press, 2007)
2008 Yochai Benkler, Harvard University, The Wealth Of Networks: How Social Production Tranforms Markets and Freedom (2006, Yale University Press)
2008 Fred Turner, Stanford University (Special Mention), From Counterculture to Cyberculture. (2006) Chicago University Press
2007 Andrew Chadwick, University of London, Internet Politics (2006)
2006 Philip Howard, University of Washington, New Media Campaigns and the Managed Citizen(2006)
2005 Paul Starr, Princeton University, The Creation of the Media (2004)
CITAMS Paper Award
2015 Keith Hampton, Rutgers University; Lauren Sessions Goulet, Facebook; and Garret Albanesius, University of Pennsylvania. “Change in the social life of urbanpublic spaces: The rise of mobilephones and women, and the declineof aloneness over 30 years.” Urban Studies 52(8): 1489-1504.
2014 Christopher Bail. 2012. “The Fringe Effect: Civil Society Organizations and the Evolution of Media Discourse about Islam since the September 11th Attacks.” ASR 77(6): 855-879.
2013 Shelley Boulianne. 2011. “Stimulating or Reinforcing Political Interest: Using Panel Data to Examine Reciprocal Effects Between News Media and Political Interest.”
2012 Robert Ackland and Mathieu O’Neil. 2011. “Online collective identity: The case of the environmental movement.” Social Networks, 33(3): 177-190.
2011 Hampton, Keith N., University of Pennsylvania, Oren Livio, University of Pennsylvania, and Lauren Sessions Goulet, University of Pennsylvania. “The Social Life of Wireless Urban Spaces: Internet Use, Social Networks, and the Public Realm,” Journal of Communication 60: 701-722. (2010)
2010 James Evans, University of Chicago, “Electronic Journals and the Narrowing of Science and Scholarship,” Science 321: 395-399. (2008)
2009 Hargittai, E., Gallo, J. & Kane, M.Y. (2008). “Cross-Ideological Discussions among Conservative and Liberal Bloggers.” Public Choice. 134(1-2):67-86.
2008 Paul Leonardi, Northwestern University
2007 Laura Robinson, University of Southern California
2006 Fred Turner, Stanford University
2005 Daniel Beunza, Unversitat Pompeu Fabra and David Stark, Columbia University
2005 Siobhan O’Mahony, Harvard Business School
CITAMS Student Paper / Application Award
2015 Christine Larson, Stanford University. “Live publishing: the onstage redeployment of journalistic authority.” Media Culture and Society 37(3): 440-459.
2014 Angèle Christin, Princeton University, “Counting Clicks: Commensuration in Online Journalism in the United States and France”
2013 Jeffrey Lane, Princeton University, “Code Switching on the Digital Street”
2012 Ya-Wen Lei – “Institutional-social Embeddedness of the Public Sphere: Media, Law, Networks, and the Heterogeneous Development of the Public Sphere in China”
2011 Dmitry Epstein, Cornell University, “Who’s Responsible for the Digital Divide? Public Perceptions and Policy Implications.” co-authored with Erik Nisbet and Tarleton Gillespie. The Information Society 27(2), 92-104. (2011)
2010 Lauren F. Sessions, University of Pennsylvania, “How offline gatherings affect online commiunities: When virtual community members meetup”
2009 Daniel A. Menchik and Xiaoli Tian, University of Chicago, “Putting Social Context into Text: The Semiotics of E-mail Interaction.” American Journal of Sociology 114(2): 332-370. (2008).
2008 Steven G. Hoffman, Northwestern University
2008 Alison Powell, Concordia University
2007 Lee Humphreys, University of Pennsylvania
2006 Sara Nephew, Princeton University
2005 Laura Robinson, UCLA (paper)
2005 Sean Zehnder, Northwestern University (software)
2004 Jeffrey Boase, University of Toronto
2003 Tracy Kennedy and Kristine Klement, University of Toronto
2002 Julian Dierkes, University of British Columbia
2001 Eszter Hargittai, (1999). “Weaving the Western Web: Explaining Differences in Internet Connectivity Among OECD Countries.” Telecommunications Policy, 23(10/11), 701-718.