Ronit DinovitzerProfile page
Professor
Faculty of Arts and Science, Department of Sociology
BIO
Ronit Dinovitzer is Professor of Sociology at the University of Toronto, where she is cross appointed to the Institute for Management and Innovation (IMI). She is also a Faculty Fellow at the American Bar Foundation in Chicago, where she is Co-Director of the Research Group on Legal Diversity, and Affiliated Faculty in Harvard's Program on the Legal Profession. She serves as Editor of the Journal of Professions and Organization. She has served as a Visiting Professor of Law at Georgetown University and the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. She holds a PhD in Sociology from the University of Toronto.
Ronit is a sociologist of the professions. Through her research on the legal profession, Ronit draws together analyses of the professions with research in social policy, including the social organization of lawyers, the context of labor markets, and the role of gender and diversity in professional careers. She has taken leading roles with the After the JD project, the first national longitudinal study of law graduates in the US, and the Law and Beyond Study, the first national study of law graduates in Canada. Ronit's work also studies ethics within professional practice. In current research, she is studying the role of ethical decision-making and professional autonomy, through a qualitative project on the ways in which corporate lawyers interact with their clients.
MEDIA
ACADEMIC POSITIONS
- ProfessorUniversity of Toronto, Department of Sociology, Toronto, Canada2017 - present
- Associate ProfessorUniversity of Toronto, Department of Sociology, Toronto, Canada2011 - 2017
- Assistant ProfessorUniversity of Toronto, Department of Sociology, Toronto, CanadaJul 2006 - 2011
- Faculty FellowAmerican Bar Foundation, Chicago, United States1 Jul 2005 - present
- Affiliated FacultyHarvard University, Program on the Legal Profession, Harvard Law School, Cambridge, United States2014 - present
NON-ACADEMIC POSITIONS
- EditorJournal of Professions and Organization, UK2023 - present
DEGREES
- Ph.D., SociologyUniversity of Toronto, Toronto, Canada2001
- M.A., SociologyMcGill University, Montreal, Canada1995
- B.A. (with distinction), SociologyQueen's University, Kingston, Canada1992
AVAILABILITY
- Media enquiries
- Masters Research or PhD student supervision