
Greg Wilson
Assistant Professor of Management and Public Affairs and (by courtesy) Sociology
Greg Wilson is a Provost’s Fellow and an Assistant Professor of Management and Public Affairs and (by courtesy) Sociology. He is also a faculty affiliate at the Kirwan Institute for the Study of Race and Ethnicity and the Center for Community and Nonprofit Studies at University of Wisconsin-Madison.
His research agenda examines how and why the nonprofit sector, itself, is racialized and how this system impacts the work of nonprofits led by people of color, particularly those led by African Americans. His research has appeared in Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Quarterly, Perspectives on Public Management and Governance, and Sociology of Race and Ethnicity. He is currently working on a major theoretical article that proposes the existence of a Racialized Nonprofit Industrial Complex (RNIC) - a racialized social system created and maintained by an interconnected relationship between the State and Philanthropy where Black-led and white-led nonprofit organizations differ schematically in their approach to, acquisition and understanding of key areas (e.g. leadership, funding, data, collaboration and volunteering) thought to be race-neutral but whose differences constitute the racial structure of the sector. He is deeply committed to a pluralistic approach to inquiry which prompts him to draw upon multidisciplinary theories and is guided by the axiom that questions determine methodological choices which leads him to employ diverse methodologies to answer questions.
Prof. Wilson earned a PhD in Sociology at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He also holds a Master of Arts degree in social sciences from the University of Chicago as well as a Master of Education degree in higher education administration and Bachelor of Arts degree in political science and English — both from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.