David Aday

David Aday
  • Professor, Sociology and Community Studies
  • Archived Blogger

About David Aday

Professor of Sociology and Community Studies
Reves Fellow for International Service Learning, 2008-2010
Academic Director of Students for Medical Outreach and Sustainability (SOMOS, Paraiso, Dominican Republic) and Medical Aid Nicaragua: Outreach Scholarship (MANOS) .
B.A., M.A., and Ph.D. in Sociology

My teaching and research interests focused on community, the ways in which people live and work together to solve collective problems. This interest emerged over a career of interests in crime, regulatory arrangements and theory, and a deep distrust of hierarchical and coercive strategies of “helping” and “managing” in human affairs. My work in the Dominican Republic and in Nicaragua represented a shift from issues of security and social control to those of health and well-being. I see the two as inherently related and believe that effective communities must find ways to solve these and other persistent and thorny problems. Students taught me much over the years — not the least, the need to continue to learn and to press forward to create and use knowledge. Students are responsible directly for my work in community health and for my involvement in the two most exciting projects (SOMOS and SHC) of my now lengthy career.

Posts by David Aday

SOMOS Advance Team Moving and Shaking in Paraiso

John Pothen, Kaveh  Sadeghian, and Lindsay Shliefer have been in Paraiso for several days now and have done exceptional work in preparing for the

SOMOS advance team has arrived; SOMOS clinic opens Monday

We have begun our sixth year in Paraiso, Dominican Republic.  The advance team (John Pothen, 4th year in SOMOS; Lindsay Schliefer, 1st year; and

Dominican Republic, Nicaragua, and the Eastern Shore

Our work in community health and health care for marginalized groups continues full speed.  In the Dominican Republic and in Nicaragua, SOMOS and MANOS  establish and

Last day in Nica, March 2010

Guest Blogger:  Gabriela Arias.  Alex Ferraro (first year, 2012), is sitting right in front of me making a friendship bracelet after a strenuous week

What the . . .?

Gabriela Arias (3rd year) manages in-country logistics - and cultural relations - with grace and charm.  In many ways, she is the face of the

Of colors and perceptions

Of colors and perceptions How do they see us?  Americans of East-Indian, Mexican, Korean, Puerto Rican, Cuban, and Afghani descent; wearing scrubs of green, pink, blue, and

Schooled by a newbie

I overlooked it - thought it was a corn crib and concluded that this house had no visible latrine.  Jill Olszewski went further to see directly

Through new eyes

Through new eyes. Michael Cammarata did not imagine either the distances or the remoteness of the location; he expected the area to be more open, with fewer

Chaguite Brigadista

Saturday, March 6.  The advance team met this morning with the local "brigidista" for Chaguite, the community where we will direct our primary field research efforts this