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The City University of New York

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  • About Us

Simon Yamawaki Shachter

Simon Yamawaki Shachter is an Assistant Professor of Sociology at the University of Connecticut. His research analyzes how the interrelationships between civil society and the state perpetuate and/or alleviate inequality. He takes organizational- and race-based perspectives to understand how people, historically and today, seek to influence policy and politics. He has studied these topics in the varied areas of international development, party machines, biomedical research, immigration policy, veteran’s benefits, and policing. His work has been published in Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Quarterly, Studies in American Political Development, and Voluntas. He is a mixed methods researcher using archival, computational, and quantitative methods to find field-level patterns in organizational demography and institutionalized behavior.

He is currently undertaking a major research project on the interpenetration of immigrant organizations and urban politics during the 19th-century creation of cities on the West Coast of the U.S. This was a site where racism and ethnic community organizations played central roles in defining the boundaries among racial and ethnic groups, developing the political institutions of the states and cities, creating cultures of place, and leaving enduring legacies on the organization of civil society.

He holds an M.A. and Ph.D. in sociology from the University of Chicago, and a B.S. in computer science from Stanford University. He is originally from the San Francisco Bay Area where he has been deeply involved in nonprofit organizations that promote community engagement.

Double-Conscious Formation of Organizational Life: Chinese Civil Society Organizations in the U.S., 1849-1911

July 7, 2025March 28, 2025 By Simon Yamawaki Shachter

How does racism influence the formation and development of organizational life in a racialized community? In this paper, Prof. Simon Yamawaki Shachter extends on Du Bois’s concept of double consciousness to explain community organizations’ roles and development.

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