Begin OSU masthead and toolbar

Begin Sociology header and quick links


Begin Sociology main navigation menu.

Townshend Hall

Begin the main content of this page.

Regular Faculty

Picture of Reanne Frank

Reanne Frank

Assistant Professor

Office: 219 Townshend
Phone: 614.247.4679
Email: frank.219@sociology.osu.edu

CV: View my Curriculum Vitae (pdf)

Ph.D.: University of Texas at Austin, 2002


Research Interests:

Demography; immigration/migration, health and mortality, race/ethnicity. Current research focuses on the ways in which demographic outcomes are influenced by the migration process, with specific attention to the case of the U.S.-Mexico migration flow. Most recent work focuses on the role of changing immigrant settlement patterns and different social contexts in contributing to the health and health-risk behaviors of first-, second-, and later-generation immigrants in the United States. More recently, research includes an investigation of the reemergence of a biological conceptualization of race in research on race/ ethnic disparities in health.


Recent Publications:

  • Akresh, Ilana Redstone and Reanne Frank.* Forthcoming. “The Health of New Immigrants: an Evaluation of Competing Explanations.” American Journal of Public Health. *Authors are listed in alphabetical order denoting equal contributions.
  • Frank, Reanne, Magdalena Cerda, and Maria Rendon. Forthcoming. “Barrios and Burbs: Residential Context and Health-Risk Behavior among Angeleno Adolescents.” Journal of Health and Social Behavior.
  • Frank, Reanne. 2007. “What to Make of It? the (Re)emergence of a Biological Conceptualization of Race in Health Disparities Research” Social Science and Medicine 64(10): 1977-1983.
  • Frank, Reanne and Danielle Frank. 2006. “Race and Genetic Influences on Health-Letter.” JAMA 295(4): 384-5.
  • Frank, Reanne and Patrick Heuveline. 2005. “A Crossover in Mexican and Mexican-American Fertility Rates: Evidence and Explanations for an Emerging Paradox.” Demographic Research. 12-4.
  • Frank, Reanne and Elizabeth Wildsmith*. 2005. “The Grass Widows of Mexico: Migration and Union Dissolution in a Binational Context.” Social Forces. 83(3): 919-948. *Authors are listed in alphabetical order denoting equal contributions.