Kathryn Foster
Ph.D. Student, Development Sociology, Department of Global Development

About
Kathryn Foster is a Ph.D. student in Development Sociology at Cornell University in the Population and Development track. Kathryn uses demographic and quantitative methods in their research. Their current research focuses on temporality in shaping the migration experience, especially in the context of climate migration. Similarly, Kathryn’s research interests also include environmental injustices, rurality, and education.
Publications
- Kathryn Foster, Melissa S. Jones, and Hayley Pierce. (2022) “Youth, Race, and Police Interaction: The effect of direct and vicarious police encounters on youths’ perceptions of police.” Criminal Justice and Behavior. 49(5):660-680
- Foster, Kathryn. (2021). [ Review of the book Cultivating Nature: The Conservation of Valencian Working Landscape by SH.] Rural Sociology. 86(1):165-167
- Pierce, Hayley and Kathryn Foster. (2020). “Health and Well-Being Outcomes of Women and Children in Sub-Saharan Africa: Examining the Role of Formal Schooling, Literacy, and Health Knowledge.” International Journal of Educational Development. 79(1): 1-7.
- Foster, Kathryn. (2020). “Does My Child’s Educational Success Depend on Me? A Qualitative Field Study of Attitudes and Beliefs on Parental Involvement in a Child’s Education Throughout Malawi" in National Conference of Undergrad Research Proceedings. Bozeman, Montana.
Current Project
- Mellon Foundation Just Futures Initiative Grant, Project Coordinator, From Invasive Others toward Embracing Each Other: Migration, Dispossession, and Place-Based Knowledge in the Arts of the Americas.
Education
- BYU, BS in Sociology, Nonprofit Management, and International Studies
Interests
The intersectionality of temporalities in climate migration
Environmental injustice
Population changes and rural migration
Contact Information
kef72 [at] cornell.edu
Kathryn in the news

News
The Polson Institute for Global Development announced its fall 2022 grants to support research at the intersection of systemic inequality and social-environmental justice.
- Polson Institute for Global Development
- Department of Global Development
- Global Development