Jacob Richard Thomas (唐龙)is a Research Assistant Professor in the Department of Sociology and a recently appointed Research Fellow at Princeton University’s Center on Migration and Development (honorific appointment). In 2020 he obtained his Ph.D from the Department of Sociology at University of California, Los Angeles. After serving as a Postdoctoral Research Associate at Princeton University’s Center on Contemporary China during the 2020-2021 academic year, he joined the CUHK Department of Sociology in September of 2021. Dr. Thomas’s main research interests are international migration/mobility/travel, social stratification, sociology of law, economic sociology, mixed methods research, and U.S.-China relations. His early research projects at University of Chicago drew on political theory to both normatively and empirically critique migrant-receiving country-centric perspectives of international migration merely as “immigration” and comparatively and historically analyze why the national sources of immigrants coming from Canada and Australia diversified so rapidly in the 1960s to 1980s. At University of California, Los Angeles, his Ph.D dissertation “The Denied, the Deterred and the Disenchanted,” surveyed over 2,500 individuals in Mainland China (the Non-Migrant Survey or NS) to explain why many might-have-been-migrants instead are either denied visas, deterred from applying at all, or went abroad to immigrate and then become disenchanted with the prospect and returned to their country of origin. He has expanded this project into a completed seven-chapter book manuscript that Cambridge University Press is now considering to put under contract based on recently positive reports. In addition, while a graduate student training in a diverse range of methods he completed many other migration- and travel-related papers that employ multilevel modeling regression, ethnographic methods, social network analysis, online survey experiments, quasi-experimental time series designs, computational analysis of social media text, interpretive analysis of artwork, and formal mathematical modeling, summaries of which one can find on his website. At Princeton he led a collaborative project with Lemeng Liang at Peking University, Sonoda Shigeto at Tokyo University, and Yu Xie at Princeton University to assess to the extent to which COVID-19 has impacted how unfavorably 13 OECD nationalities view both China and the United States in 2020 and also how the specific ways COVID-19 transformed their lives was associated with such increasingly unfavorable views.
Dr. Thomas has recently won a GRF research grant ($612,000 HKD) to fund an ongoing survey and oral history interview project about emigration out of Hong Kong in recent years . The project seeks to explain how those who have emigrated from Hong Kong since 2019 are different from those who thought about migrating but remained with respect to their traits, general reasons for migrating, and specific events. He is applying event-history models to survey data and analyzing discourses of migrants’ oral histories, to show how distinct waves of migration have changed over time. With data from emigrants and potential emigrants, he plans to estimate propensities to migrate, risk rates, and risk factors predisposing different types of individuals to emigrate from the population. For more information about this project please visit www.hkemigrationproject.space and for anyone who has thought about migrating out of Hong Kong and would like to participate in the online survey, please reach out to Jacob Thomas.
You can learn more about Jacob Thomas and his research at his personal website: http://jacobrthomas.me .
Area/ Project Title | Open for |
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- International migration/mobility/travel
- Inequality/stratification
- Sociology of law
- Travel and Travelers
- Mixed methods research
- US-China relations
Year | Title of the Grant | Project Title |
2023-2024 | General Research Fund, Research Grants Council | “Who Realizes Their Online Intentions To Emigrate? What Distinguishes Emigrants from Potential Emigrants in the Context of Rapid and Sudden Social Change” |
2023 | Direct Grant, Faculty of Social Science, CUHK | “Does What We Can See Matter for American Opinion About Gun Regulation? The Experimental Impact of Images of a Bleeding Dead Child and a “Good Guy with a Gun”” |
2022 | Direct Grant, Faculty of Social Science, CUHK | “When Are Emigration-Intentions Genuine? A Test of Emigrant Self-selectivity Theory in the Context of China’s Increasing Control Over Hong Kong” |
Project Title | Description |
Why Do Some Emigrate and Most Merely “Want” To Emigrate? What Specific Events and General Reasons Prompt Thoughts of Emigrating and Emigration from Hong Kong | Collecting and Comparing Survey and Oral history interview data from 1) potential emigrants who have thought about migrating from Hong Kong and 2) those who have already emigrated out of Hong Kong to other countries |
Denial, Deterrence, and Disenchantment: Why A Variety of Potential Immigrants Never Immigrate (coding data on potential migrants in Mainland China) | Collecting and coding data from inhabitants of Mainland China 1) denied visas, 2) deterred from applying for visas, 3) who previously immigrated from other countries but later gave up and returned to China |
Does What We Can See Matter for American Opinion About Gun Regulation? The Experimental Impact of Images of a Bleeding Dead Child and a “Good Guy with a Gun” | Analyzing public opinion data about gun regulations from online survey experiment inhabitants of US |
Does the Race of Rapists and Rape Victims Affect Abortion Opinions? “Pro-life” Univeralism Vs. Raciali Eugenicist Bias | Analyzing public opinion data about how attitudes toward abortion of baby from rape vary by race of male rapist and female rape victim, from online survey experiment inhabitants of US |
Journals |
Thomas, Jacob. Forthcoming. “The Gendered Ways Familial Ties Deter International Migration and Mobility.” International Migration Review. |
Thomas, Jacob. Forthcoming. “Visual Art as a Channel and Embodiment of Symbolic Interaction Between Migrants and the Native-born.” Symbolic Interaction. |
Thomas, Jacob. Forthcoming (2024). “Disenchanted With the Immigrant Dream: The Sociological Formation of Ex-Immigrant Subjectivity.” European Journal of Sociology. |
Thomas, Jacob Richard. (2023). Bureaucratic and Organizational Amenability to Racial Diversification: How Points Systems Replaced White-Only Immigration Policies. International Journal of Sociology 53, no. 2 (2023): 103-131. |
Thomas, Jacob. (2021). From local control to remote control: an excavation of international mobility constraints. Theory and Society 50, no. 1 (2021): 33-64. |
Thomas, Jacob. (2020). When Political Freedom Does Not Offer Travel Freedom: The Varying Determinants of Visa‐Free Travel Opportunities. International Migration 58, no. 2 (2020): 80-97. |
Book Chapters |
Jacob Thomas, Lemeng Liang, Shigeto Sonoda, and Yu Xie. (2022). “Shingata Korona wuirusu wa sekaino taichu/taibei ninsiki wo ikani kaetaka?” (How Did COVID-19 Change Global Views of China and US?) in Shigeto Sonoda and Yu Xie, eds., Sekai no Taichu Ninshiki: Deta de saguru sono tokucho to henka (Global Views of China: Empirical Analysis of Their Trends): Tokyo: University of Tokyo Press. |
Thomas, Jacob R., and Min Zhou. (2022). “Ethnic entrepreneurship and its transnational linkages.” Handbook on Transnationalism, 404-419. |
Conferences |
Thomas, Jacob. (2023). From “Illegal” to “Undocumented”—Anti-Immigrant Reactance Toward a Ban of a Term Within the US Press and Society. American Political Science Association. |
Thomas, Jacob. (2023). Does the Race of Rapists and Rape Victims Affect Abortion Opinions? “Pro-life” Universalism Vs. Racist Eugenicist Bias. American Sociological Association Annual Meeting. |
Thomas, Jacob,Yu Xie, Lemeng Liang, and Shigota Sonoda. (2023). The Soft Power Cost of COVID-19: A Lose-Lose Outcome for China and the United States. International Chinese Sociological Association. |
Thomas, Jacob. (2023). Bureaucratic and Organizational Amenability to Racial Diversification: How Points Systems Replaced White-Only Immigration Policies. International Sociological Association Global Congress. |
Thomas, Jacob. (2023). Why Do Some Emigrate and Most Merely “Want” To Emigrate? What Specific Events and General Reasons Prompt Thoughts of Emigrating and Emigration from Hong Kong. Population Association of America. |
Thomas, Jacob. (2023). What Types of Political Dissidents Escape Autocratic States? An Individual-Level Analysis of Emigration Control in the People’s Republic of China. Population Association of America. |
Thomas, Jacob, and Huang, Peng. (2023). Affinity and Inequality in the Global Structure of the Visa-Free Mobility Network. Population Association of America. |
Thomas, Jacob. (2022). Disenchanted with The Immigration Dream: The Sociological Formation of Ex-Immigrant Subjectivity. International Chinese Sociological Association. |
Thomas, Jacob, and Huang, Peng. (2022). Affinity and Inequality in the Global Structure of the Visa-Free Mobility Network. American Sociological Association. |
Thomas, Jacob, and Huang, Peng. (2022). Affinity and Inequality in the Global Structure of the Visa-Free Mobility Network. Sunbelt: International Network of Social Network Analysis. |
- SOCI 3231 Qualitative Research
Member
- International Sociological Association
- Population Association of America
- American Sociological Association
- International Chinese Sociological Association
- American Political Science Association