BOOKS
Hordge-Freeman, Elizabeth. The Color of Love: Racial Features, Stigma, and Socialization in Black Brazilian Families. Austin: The University of Texas (in press, November 2015).
Mitchell-Walthour, Gladys and Hordge-Freeman, Elizabeth. eds. Race and the Politics of Knowledge Production: Diaspora and Black Transnational Scholarship in the USA and Brazil, Palgrave (Forthcoming 2016).
JOURNAL PUBLICATIONS (articles/reviews)
Hordge-Freeman, Elizabeth. Review of “Racism in African American Families: Literature as Social Science.” By Paul C Rosenblatt, Ethnic and Racial Studies, Vol. 38, no. 13.
Hordge-Freeman, Elizabeth. 2013. “What’s Love Got to Do With It?: Racial Features, Stigma and Socialization in Afro-Brazilian Families,” Special Edition: Rethinking Race, Identity and Nationalist Ideologies in Latin America, Ethnic & Racial Studies, Vol. 36, no. 10, 1507-1523.
Burton, L.M., Bonilla-Silva, E., Ray, V., Buckelew, R., & Hordge-Freeman, E. 2010. Race, ethnicity, and colorism in contemporary American families: A decade review and critique, Journal of Marriage and Family, Volume 72, Issue 3, pp. 440-459.
BOOK CHAPTERS
Hordge-Freeman, Elizabeth. “Brokering Brazil or Fostering Global Citizens: Global Engagement and Empowerment in Black Brazilian Communities.” In Race and the Politics of Knowledge Production: Diaspora and Black Transnational Scholarship in the USA and Brazil. eds. Gladys Mitchell-Walthour and Elizabeth Hordge-Freeman, Palgrave (Forthcoming 2016).
Hordge-Freeman, Elizabeth and Jaira Harrington. 2015. “Ties that Bind: Localizing the Occupational Motivations that Drive Non-Affiliated Domestic Workers in Salvador, Brazil.” In Perspectives on Domestic and Caregiving Work: A Global Approach, ed. Marcel van der Lindon, pp.137-157. Brill publishers, United Kingdom.
Hordge-Freeman, Elizabeth. 2015. “Out of Bounds?: Negotiating Researcher Positionality in Brazil.” In Bridging Scholarship and Activism: Reflections from the Frontlines of Collaborative Research, eds. Bernd Reiter and Ulrich Oslender, pp. 123-133, Michigan State University Press.
Hordge-Freeman, Elizabeth, Sarah Mayorga, and Eduardo Bonilla-Silva. 2011. “Exposing Whiteness Because We Are Free: Emancipation Methodological Practice in Becoming Empowered Sociologists of Color.” In Rethinking Race & Objectivity in Research Methods, ed. John Stanfield, pp. 95-121. Left Coast Press.
RESEARCH IN PROGRESS
Hordge-Freeman, Elizabeth. Second Class Daughters: Informal Adoptions as Modern Slavery in Brazil. (Solo-authored book manuscript in progress).
Hordge-Freeman, Elizabeth. The Socialization of Black Folks in Brazil and the U.S. (Revise and Re-Submit: Women, Gender, & Families of Color.)
Mayorga-Gallo, Sarah and Hordge-Freeman, Elizabeth. Between Power and Marginality: Managing Power in Qualitative Research. (Submitted Qualitative Sociology)
Winfield, Adia, Elizabeth Hordge-Freeman, and Lynn Smith-Lovin. Does the Job Matter? Occupational Differences in Racialized Stress.
Hordge-Freeman, Elizabeth. Review of “Race on the Move: Brazilian Migrants and the Global Reconstruction of Race.” By Tiffany Joseph, International Review of Modern Sociology (invited review).