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  1. Patricia M. Collins (April 14, 1927 - March 5, 2024) was an American civic leader and politician who served as the mayor of Caribou, Maine from 1981 to 1982. She has chaired numerous local and state boards and organizations, including the Caribou School Board, the Maine Committee for Judicial Responsibility and Disability, Catholic Charities ...

  2. Jun 18, 2019 · Updated on June 18, 2019. Patricia Hill Collins (born May 1, 1948) is an active American sociologist known for her research and theory that sits at the intersection of race, gender, class, sexuality, and nationality. She served in 2009 as the 100th president of the American Sociological Association (ASA) — the first African American woman ...

  3. Patricia Hill Collins. 1948— Sociologist, educator. Sociologist and scholar Patricia Hill Collins began learning about the complex interactions between class, race, and gender as an African-American girl growing up in a working-class Philadelphia neighborhood during the 1950s.

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  5. Juneteenth National Independence Day. Independence Day. Labor Day. Columbus Day. Veterans Day. Thanksgiving Day. Christmas Day. Federal holidays in the United States are 11 calendar dates designated by the U.S. federal government as holidays. On these days non-essential U.S. federal government offices are closed and federal employees are paid ...

  6. Institutions. University of Cincinnati. University of Maryland, College Park. Notable works. Black Feminist Thought (1990) Notable ideas. Intersectionality, matrix of domination, controlling images. Patricia Hill Collins (born May 1, 1948) is an American academic specializing in race, class, and gender.

    • Patricia Hill Collins
    • 1998
  7. Biography. Professor Collins is a social theorist whose research and scholarship have examined issues of race, gender, social class, sexuality and/or nation.

  8. Patricia Hill Collins is the 100th president of the ASA and the first African American woman to hold this office. Her election is one of the many “firsts” that we are witnessing in this new millennium, as some of the barriers that have existed for women and people of color have lifted.