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

1st blog from Nicaragua

Dulles.  3:25 a.m.  7 March 2009.  The "first team" has assembled and we're waiting to board Taca Airlines.  By 6:30 we'll be in San

Nicaragua in five days: March 2009.

The excitement is palpable.  Each class meeting this semester has been more intense, more focused, and more productive than the one before.  The students

Paraiso, Villa Mella, Dominican Republic, part 3

We were scolded today.  It was inevitable.  A middle-aged male resident, obviously in pain and a little inebriated, wanted aspirin.  We explained that we

Paraiso, Villa Mella, Dominican Republic, part 2

The rewards of good work are beginning to manifest:  “travelers’ disease,” suspicious rashes, sunburn, and fatigue.  Kevin Salinas (’12) and Daniela Gutierez (’10) have

Paraiso, Villa Mella, Dominican Republic

We have completed interviews in nearly half of the homes in Esfuerzo, the most remote of the neighborhoods of Paraiso.  We are beyond collecting

Santo Domingo

No internet connection.  The bus did come – at 9:30.  We had the clinic set up and operating by 10:30.  By 6pm, we had

Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic

The last of our crew arrived at 3:30 this morning.  It’s 6:45 a.m. and the bus is late.  We are scheduled to open the

Blogging from the Dominican Republic: Sustainability

Sustainability. It’s the last word in the name of our project:  Student Organization for Medical Outreach and Sustainability. Our work is beginning to have

Laura Olsen: Laura Bush UNESCO Fellow

Laura Olsen (’08, at left), co-leader of SOMOS for 2007-2008, was selected as one of three inaugural Laura Bush UNESCO fellows.  She used the