Professor
Robert E. Wood received his B.A. from Harvard University
and his Ph.D. from the University of California at Berkeley.
He regularly teaches introductory sociology, sociological theory,
social stratification, globalization
and social change, and occasional courses on Japan, Southeast
Asia and travel and tourism. He is the author of From
Marshall Plan to Debt Crisis: Foreign Aid and Development Choices
in the World Economy (University of California Press)
and co-editor, with Michel Picard, of Tourism,
Ethnicity and the State in Asian and Pacific Societies
(University of Hawaii Press), and several dozen articles and
book chapters on international development, globalization, ethnicity,
tourism, technology and teaching, and other subjects. He serves
on the editorial boards of Annals of Tourism Research, Tourist
Studies, and Innovate: A Journal of Online Education.
He recently completed a Senator Walter Rand Institute for Public
Affairs-sponsored project on farmland preservation and agritourism
in South Jersey. Professor Wood was the recipient of the Provost's
Award for Teaching Excellence in 1996, the Warren I. Susman
Award for Excellence in Teaching in 2000, the Outstanding
Contribution to Instruction Award at the American Sociological
Association meetings in 2002, and the Lindback Distinguished Teaching Award in 2007. He served as department chair when the department received the Rutgers University Programmatic Excellence Award in Undergraduate Education in 2003.
Office Phone: 856-225-6013;
Fax: 856-225-6435. Email: wood@camden.rutgers.edu
Selected Recent Papers: Farmland
Preservation and Agritourism in South Jersey: An Exploratory
Study (pdf)
Neoliberal
Globalization: The Cruise Ship Industry as a Paradigmatic Case
(pdf) |