Overview
James Moody is the Robert O. Keohane professor of sociology at Duke University. He has published extensively in the field of social networks, methods, and social theory. His work has focused theoretically on the network foundations of social cohesion and diffusion, with a particular emphasis on building tools and methods for understanding dynamic social networks. He has used network models to help understand school racial segregation, adolescent health, disease spread, economic development, and the development of scientific disciplines. Moody's work is funded by the National Science Foundation, the National Institutes of Health and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and has appeared in top social science, health and medical journals. He is winner of INSNA's (International Network for Social Network Analysis) Freeman Award for scholarly contributions to network analysis, founding director of the Duke Network Analysis Center and editor of the on-line Journal of Social Structure.
Current Appointments & Affiliations
Professor in the Department of Sociology
·
2010 - Present
Sociology,
Trinity College of Arts & Sciences
Faculty Director of the Duke Network Analysis Center (DNAC)
·
2020 - Present
Duke Network Analysis Center,
Social Science Research Institute
Faculty Research Scholar of DuPRI's Population Research Center
·
2010 - Present
Duke Population Research Center,
Duke Population Research Institute
Bass Fellow
·
2016 - Present
Sociology,
Trinity College of Arts & Sciences
Recent Publications
Identifying Social-Epidemiological Roles Associated with Viral Exposure Using Regular Equivalence Blockmodeling.
Preprint · December 2, 2025 Full text Link to item CiteGaps in Effective HIV Pre-exposure Prophylaxis Screening and Uptake Among Fishermen in Kenya.
Journal Article AIDS and behavior · November 2025 Despite oral daily HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) effectiveness, uptake remains a challenge. Awareness of one's HIV status and engagement in prevention is essential to interrupting transmission among populations at high risk of HIV. We explored gaps i ... Full text CiteFamily Ties and Health: Exploring the Link Between Parents' Social Networks and Child Obesity.
Journal Article Child Obes · October 2025 Background: African American (AA) and Hispanic children are at high risk of developing obesity. Social networks are powerful drivers of health behaviors and outcomes. Parent social network characteristics may influence child health behaviors and obesity ri ... Full text Link to item CiteRecent Grants
Dynamics of Ghanaian immigrants' health in the US: Critical life-stage experiences, social networks, acculturation and selection (GMHeS)
ResearchCo Investigator · Awarded by National Institutes of Health · 2024 - 2029US-Israel Collab: Market Integration, Land Use, and Pathogen Transmission in Rural Madagascar
ResearchCo Investigator · Awarded by National Science Foundation · 2023 - 2028Effectively Linking Molecular Informatics and Network Analytics to Reduce Malaria (ELIMINAR-Malaria)
ResearchCo-Mentor · Awarded by National Institutes of Health · 2024 - 2028View All Grants
Education, Training & Certifications
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill ·
1999
Ph.D.
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill ·
1997
M.A.
University of Oregon ·
1992
B.S.