József Böröcz


József Böröcz is a global historical sociologist, currently Professor of Sociology at Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey. He earned his PhD in Sociology at The Johns Hopkins University in 1992. He has the Dr. Sc. degree from the Hungarian Academy of Sciences. According to Google Scholar,

Life

József Böröcz grew up in Budapest. He attended Petőfi Gimnázium. He studied literature, linguistics, culture theory, as well as Polish at Kossuth Lajos University of Sciences in Debrecen between 1976 and 1982. As a student in Hungary, he published on the sociology of tourism both in Hungarian and English.
After graduation, he worked for a year as a freelance translator from English. In September 1983, he became a Hungarian-as-ancestral-language instructor in the elementary and high schools of Albany, Louisiana. During his two years in Louisiana, he attended the PhD-Program in in Baton Rouge.
In 1985, he returned to Budapest and became research associate at one of Hungary's leading empirical social science research institutions at the time, the Mass Communication Research Center. He continued his PhD-training in the in the Department of Sociology at The Johns Hopkins University in 1986, where he soon became an academic advisee of, and research assistant to, Alejandro Portes. With Portes, he worked on issues of international labor migration. His dissertation examined the effects of international tourism on socioeconomic, -political and cultural life, through on a world-historical perspective, a European overview, and an Austro-Hungarian comparison. He received his PhD in the summer of 1992. In 2004, he earned his Dr.Sc. degree in sociology at the Hungarian Academy of Sciences.
From 1992 to 1995, he was Assistant Professor of . He spent the 1994-95 academic year as the Resident Director of the University of California-University of Wisconsin joint study abroad program in European Studies in Budapest.
He joined Rutgers University in 1995 as senior faculty in the Department of Sociology and Director of Rutgers' newly established Institute for Hungarian Studies. He passed on the directorship of the institute in 2007. At the Department of Sociology at Rutgers, he founded the area in 1996 and was one of the co-founders of the area in 2012. He regularly teaches courses on Classical Sociological Theory, Comparative-Historical Methods, Global Structures and Change, and Economic Sociology on both the undergraduate and graduate levels.

Recognition