
Sunmin Kim
Assistant Professor of Sociology
Faculty associate, The Dartmouth Consortium of Studies in Race, Migration, and Sexuality (RMS)
As a sociologist, I am primarily interested in examining the nexus between race, immigration, and national belonging through the lens of knowledge production. While often understood as self-evident, categories such as race, ethnicity, and citizenship are socially constructed through the work of social scientists, government officials, and activists. These actors engage in a collective intellectual endeavor to define who is regarded as different from whom and how they should be treated. Employing archival work, survey analysis, and in-depth interviews, I study how their work manifests in different domains, such as the social sciences, immigration law, public opinion, and electoral politics.
Contact
Department(s)
Sociology
Education
- B.A. Seoul National University
- M.A. Seoul National University
- M.A. University of California, Berkeley
- Ph. D. University of California, Berkley
Selected Publications
Kim, Sunmin. 2025. The Unruly Facts of Race: The Politics of Knowledge Production in the Early Twentieth Century Immigration Debate. The University of Chicago Press. (forthcoming) Link
Kim, Sunmin, and Daniel Lin. 2025. "Collective Past as a Community-building Initiative: Teaching Asian American Studies through the History of Student Activism." (forthcoming in Journal of Asian American Studies)
Choi, Carolyn, and Sunmin Kim. 2024. "Category Traversing: Early Korean Immigrants Eluding the U.S. State." Ethnic and Racial Studies. Link.
Kim, Sunmin. 2024. "Blinded by the Facts: Unintended Consequences of Racial Knowledge Production in the Dillingham Commission (1907-1911)." Theory and Society 53(2): 425-464. Link
Works In Progress
Domesticating the Racial Other: Social Science in the WWII Japanese American Concentration Camps (Book project in preparation)
"Efficacy of Facts-Based Advocacy: Immigration Politics Past and Present." (under review for the 50th-year anniversary issue of Social Science History)
"From Cultural Sociology to Political Sociology: Understanding the Late Works of Pierre Bourdieu." (under review for the special issue of Korean Journal of Sociology on Pierre Bourdieu)(in Korean)
"Assimilation in Market and Politics: Exit and Voice for Children of Imimgrants."
"Quantifying the Inscrutable: The Question of Japanese American Loyalty During the Internment" (with Hyunsik Chun)
"Boundary-Making across 22-OECD Countries: A Multi-Level Latent Class Approach" (with Inkwan Chung)
"The Heterogeneity among Asian Americans" (with Nolan Yee '25)
Selected Works & Activities
"Asian American Student Activism at Dartmouth College" (a student web exhibit from SOCY 76 Winter 2023: Race, Power, and Politics) Link