"Intersectionality: Origins, Travels, Questions, and Contributions," for the Oxford Handbook on U.S. "Steps Within and Outside: Black Feminist Intellectuals in Post-war America." Chapter in Black Intellectual Thought in Modern America: An Historical Perspective,edited by Brian Behnken and Gregory D. "Learning from the Tea Party: The US Indivisible Movement as Countermovement in the Era of Trump." Sociological Research Online (1-8) Chancellor's Award for Excellence in Teaching.Social Protest in the Postwar United States.
PhD, MA, University of California at Los Angeles.She currently teaches undergraduate and graduate courses that focus on social protest, political sociology, gender and work, the sociology of reproduction, gender studies, and social theory. Professor Roth is the director of Binghamton University's Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies (WGSS) program (see ). Professor Roth is currently working on researching grassroots responses to the opioid epidemic from an intersectional perspective that considers, gender, race/ethnicity, class and sexuality as key c omponents of these responses. Professor Roth’s second book, The Life and Death of ACT UP/LA: Anti-AIDS Activism in Los Angeles from the 1980s to the 2000s was published Cambridge University, 2017. She was an associate editor for the Journal of Women’s History from 2010-2015. During the academic year 2006-2007, she was awarded a 2007 SUNY Chancellor's Award for Excellence in Teaching. She has also published on gender dynamics within the militant anti-AIDS movement, on racial/ethnic and class inequalities among working women, specifically domestic workers in the United States. Her book, Separate Roads to Feminism: Black, Chicana, and White Feminist Movements in America's Second Wave, published by Cambridge University Press, won the 2006 Distinguished Book Award from the Sex and Gender Section of the American Sociological Association. Professor Roth studies the interaction of gender, race/ethnicity, sexuality and class in postwar social protest.