Suchman obtained his AB in sociology at
Harvard University in 1983 and his MA in sociology in 1985 at
Stanford University. At Stanford he also obtained his PhD in sociology in 1994 with the thesis entitled "On Advice of Counsel: Law Firms and Venture Capital Funds as Information Intermediaries in the Structuration of Silicon Valley", under the supervision of
W. Richard Scott. In addition, he holds a JD from
Yale Law School (1989). Suchman started his academic career as a research assistant under
Harrison White at Harvard in 1982. At Stanford from 1985 to 1989, he was a teaching assistant, subsequently, of Morris Zelditch,
Ann Swidler, Nancy Tuma and Lawrence Wu. In 1993, he started at the
University of Wisconsin–Madison as assistant professor of sociology and law, and was promoted to associate professor in 1998, and full professor in 2003. In 2008, he moved to
Brown University, Rhode Island, where he was appointed Professor of Sociology. From 2011 to 2012, he was program director for Social, Human and Organizational Factors and Resources in the
National Science Foundation's Division of Advanced Cyberinfrastructure. Suchman was awarded a
National Merit Scholarship in 1979, a Harvard College Scholarship in 1980 and a
NSF Graduate Research Fellowship from 1984 to 1988. He was a
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Scholar in health policy research at
Yale in 1999-2001, and a fellow in residence at the
Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences in 2001-03. He has chaired the
American Sociological Association's Sections on the Sociology of Law (2005-2006) and Organizations, Occupations, and Work (2016-2017), and has served on the board of trustees of the
Law and Society Association (2005-2008). == Work ==