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Marx, Gary T

LC control no.n 79119083
Descriptive conventionsrda
Personal name headingMarx, Gary T.
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Birth date1938-10-01
Place of birthHanford, Calif.
Field of activitySociology
AffiliationUniversity of California, Berkeley
Harvard University
Joint Center for Urban Studies
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
University of Colorado
Profession or occupationProfessor
Found inProtest and prejudice: a study of belief in the black community, 1967: title page (Gary T. Marx)
Goodman, N. Society today, c1982: t.p. (Gary T. Marx; M.I.T.) CIP data sheet (b. 10/1/38)
Self, social structure, and beliefs: explorations in sociology, c2004: title page (Gary T. Marx) page 270 (Professor Emeritus at MIT; he also taught at the University of California, Berkeley, Harvard, and the University of Colorado; he is the author of Protest and Prejudice, Undercover: Police Surveillance in America, Windows into the Soul: Surveillance and Society in an Age of High Technology, and articles in academic and popular media)
Contemporary Authors, via WWW, February 27, 2013 (Gary T. Marx; born October 1, 1938 in Hanford, CA; son of Donald and Ruth Marx; B.A., University of California, Los Angeles,1960; M.A., University of California, Berkeley, 1962; Ph. D., University of California, Berkeley, 1966; University of California, Berkeley, research associate at Survey Research Center, 1965-1967, lecturer in sociology, 1966-1967; Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, assistant professor of social relations, 1967-1969, lecturer, 1969-1973, research associate, Harvard-Massachusetts Institute of Technology Joint Center for Urban Studies, 1967-1973; Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, associate professor, beginning 1973, professor, 1979-)
M.I.T., via WWW, February 27, 2013 (Gary T. Marx; Professor Emeritus of Sociology, M.I.T.; he has worked in the areas of race and ethnicity, collective behavior and social movements, law and society and surveillance studies; in recent decades he has been working on surveillance issues, illustrating how and why surveillance is neither good nor bad, but context and comportment make it so; he has sought to create a conceptual map of new ways of collecting, analyzing, communicating and using personal information)