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Adjuncts and Affiliates |
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Adjunct and Affiliate List
REBECCA AANERUD Affiliate Assistant Professor. Ph.D., University of Washington (1998). Issues of race and racism with special emphasis on whiteness and feminism. CAROLYN ALLEN Affiliate Professor. Ph.D., Minnesota (1972). English: theories of race, gender, class, and sexuality and their intersections; 20th century women writers. DAVID ALLEN Affiliate Professor. School of Nursing: Psychosocial and Community Health. ANN ANAGNOST, Adjunct Associate Professor. Ph.D., Michigan (1990).Anthropology: the politics of reproduction, especially population discourses in late capitalism (area focus on China); anthropology of the body. JORDANNA BAILKIN Adjunct Associate Professor. Ph.D. Stanford University (1998). History: faculty website GERALD BALDASTY Adjunct Professor Ph.D., Washington (1978). Communications: gender, minorities, and media; the American press. SAMANTHA BARBAS, Affiliate Assistant Professor. Ph.D., UC-Berkeley (2000). History, Chapman University: American cultural history, women's history, film history. SUTAPA BASU, Affiliate Assistant Professor. Ph.D. Human and Organizational Development Program at the Fielding Institute in Santa Barbara. Director of the UW Women's Center: research interests are the trafficking of women and children, microcredit programs and food security in the lives of women from the Global South, and the anti-dowry movement in India. JENNIFER BEAN, Adjunct Associate Professor. Ph.D., Texas. Comparative Literature: film studies, American literature and culture, studies in gender and sexuality KATHLEEN BLAKE, Adjunct Professor. Ph.D., California-San Diego (1971). English: women and literature; feminist literary criticism and theory; Victorian literature, including "the woman question"; issues of empire RUBY BLONDELL, Adjunct Professor. Ph.D., Berkeley. Classics, Graduate Program Coordinator: Greek and Roman philosophy and literature DEE BOERSMA, Adjunct Professor. Ph.D., Ohio State (1974). Zoology; conservation biology; resource use and its impact on women and development; women in science and environmental problems. DORIS BOUTAIN, Adjunct Associate Professor. Ph.D., Washington (2000). School of Nursing. Health Disparity Research, Critical Theory, Community Health Systems, Worry, Stress and Health. DEBRA BOYER, Affiliate Assistant Professor. Ph.D., Washington (1986). Feminist research methodology; policy and evaluation issues; sexuality; reproduction; child maltreatment; deviant behavior and adolescence; urban applied anthropology. SUZANNE BRAINARD, Affiliate Professor. Ph.D., Ohio State, (1972). Executive Director: Center for Workforce Development: Women in Engineering and Science. MICHAEL BROWN, Adjunct Professor. Ph.D., British Columbia (1994). Geography: local, political, and cultural geography; sexuality; health geography; history of geography thought; the home. JESSICA BURSTEIN, Ph.D., Chicago (1998). English: Modern British and American literature and poetry, late 19th-century British literature. LOUISE CABEEN, Adjunct Associate Professor. MFA, Art Institute of Chicago (1989). Fiber Arts Program: specifically fibers; textile history including 19th century women and art making; contemporary feminist art practice STEPHANIE M. H. CAMP, Adjunct Associate Professor. Ph.D., Pennsylvania (1998).History: Black American Historiography; Race and Gender in American History; Theories of Domination and Resistance; Comparative Gender Field Course ANA MARI CAUCE, Adjunct Professor. Ph.D., Yale (1984). Psychology: social support networks; community psychology; at-risk-adolescents; minority populations.EVA CHERNIAVSKY, Adjunct Professor. Ph.D., UC-Berkeley (1985). English: American studies, post-colonial studies, feminism, 18th, 19th, and 20th C. US literatures; film and television. LAURA CHRISMAN, Adjunct Professor. D. Phil, Oxford (1992). English: African and African Diaspora Studies; Postcolonial Studies and Theory; South African Literature; 19th and 20th Century British Literature. RACHEL CICHOWSKI, Adjunct Associate Professor. Ph.D., UC Irvine (2001). Political Science: comparative law and politics, empirical democratic theory and European integration with an emphasis on the role of courts and public participation in the processes of integration and democratization in Europe; the interactions between the European Court of Justice, transnational activists and the expansion of European Union governance in the areas of women's rights and environmental protection. KENNETH CLATTERBAUGH, Adjunct Professor. Ph.D., Indiana (1966). Philosophy: philosophical problems of gender studies; contemporary men's movements and their ideologies. CATHERINE CONNORS,Adjunct Associate Professor. Ph.D., Michigan. Classics: Roman epic; the ancient novel; women in Greek and Roman antiquity KATHERINE CUMMINGS, Adjunct Asssociate Professor. Ph.D., Wisconsin (1985). English: Queer studies; AIDS (to a lesser degree, contemporary representations of activist response to illness); cultural studies; contemporary US feminism and other critical theories CAROLYN DI PALMA, Affiliate Assistant Professor, Ph.D., Hawaii (1987). Political theory; Feminist theory. CHRISTINE DI STEFANO, Adjunct Associate Professor. Ph.D., Massachusetts (1984). Political Science: feminist political theory. MADELEINE DONG, Adjunct Associate Professor. Ph.D., UC San Diego (1996). Jackson School of International Studies JULIE ELWORTH, Affiliate Assistant Professor. Ph.D., Stanford (1996). Seattle University: social psychology. KIM ENGLAND, Adjunct Associate Professor. Ph.D., Ohio (1988). Geography: gendered use of space with emphasis on child care and working mothers; gendered geographies of the financial and insurance industries JOSEPHINE ENSIGN, Adjunct Associate Professor. DPH., Johns Hopkins (1994). Nursing: adolescent female health and health programs for homeless populations KATHIE FRIEDMAN, Ph.D., SUNY-Binghamton (1991), Associate Professor, Liberal Studies -Tacoma: sociology of race; international migration and ethnic group relations ANN-CHARLOTTE GAVEL-ADAMS, Adjunct Professor. Ph.D., Washington (1990). Scandinavian Languages and Literature; Scandinavian women in literature, art, drama, and film DIANE GILLESPIE, Adjunct Professor. Ph.D., Nebraska(1982)Interdisciplinary Arts & Sciences - Bothell: cultural and psychological studies in education, race/ethnicity, gender studies, cognitive and educational psychology. SUSAN A. GLENN, Adjunct Professor. Ph.D., California-Berkeley (1983). History: 20th century U.S. social history; women's history; labor and immigration. LAYNE GOLDSMITH, Adjunct Professor. MFA, Cranbrook Academy of Art, (1979). Art: the expressive potential of 'cloth'; the history of textiles. CLAUDIA GORBMAN, Adjunct Professor. Ph.D., Washington (1978). Liberal Studies-Tacoma: film studies, women and film, French film, film music GILLIAN HARKINS, Adjunct Associate Professor. Ph.D., UC-Berkeley (2002). English: modern and contemporary American literature, female novelists, autobiography, trauma, psychoanalysis, narrative theory, feminist and queer theory, citizenship. NANCY C.M. HARTSOCK, Adjunct Professor. Ph.D., Chicago (1972). Political Science: feminist theory, especially US; Marxist theory as it relates to feminist issues; critiques of post modernist theories, particularly as French theory has been received in the US. JEANNE HEUVING, Adjunct Professor. Ph.D., Washington (1988). Liberal Studies - Bothell: feminist theory; gender and literature. JUDITH HOWARD, Adjunct Professor. Ph.D., Wisconsin (1982). Sociology: sociology of gender; teaching initiatives. CHRISTINE INGEBRITSEN, Adjunct Professor. Ph.D., Cornell (1993). Scandinavian Studies: international relations, women in Scandinavian society. LUCY JAROSZ, Adjunct Associate Professor. Ph.D., California-Berkeley (1990). Geography: rural development and agriculture; agrarian and environmental change; the political economy of development; changing labor processes in industrial agriculture and impacts upon social relations; gender, race, class and development in rural areas. RALINA JOSEPH, Adjunct Assistant Professor. PhD, UC-San Diego (2005). Communication: Post-structuralist perspectives on representation, ethnicity and anti-racism. SYDNEY KAPLAN, Adjunct Professor. Ph.D., UCLA (1971). English: feminist and literary theory; literary modernism. SUSAN KEMP, Adjunct Associate Professor. PhD, Columbia University, School of Social Work: supports for low-income families; public child welfare; community-based and environmental intervention; social work history and theory. MARCIA KILLIEN, Adjunct Professor. Ph.D., University of Washington (1982). School of Nursing: Family and Child Nursing. MARIEKA KLAWITTER, Ph.D., Wisconsin (1992), Associate Professor, Public Affairs: effects of public policies on family work and income; child support policies; welfare; anti-discrimination policies for sexual orientation VICTORIA LAWSON, Adjunct Professor. Ph.D., Ohio State (1986). Geography: critical Latin American development studies including gender relations and economic change, and gender and employment; gender and migration focusing on Mexico and Ecuador. SABINE LANG, Adjunct Assistant Professor. PhD., Berlin (1995). Jackson School of International Studies: German and European Studies. CELIA LOWE, Adjunct Associate Professor. Ph.D., Yale (1999). Anthropology: Science studies; post-colonial theory; nationalism and transnationalism; representation, ethnicity and identy; gender; critical environmental studies; Southeast Asia, Indonesia, Sulawesi; African and Pacific Island art histories. SHELLY LUNDBERG, Adjunct Professor. Ph.D., Northwestern (1981). Economics: labor economics; Director, Center for Research on Families. EDWARD MACK, Adjunct Assistant Professor. Ph.D., Harvard (2002). Asian Languages & Literature: contemporary Japanese literature and gender studies. SERENA MAUER, Affiliate Assistant Professor. Ph.D., Washington (2006). Transnational Feminism and Immigration. BARBARA McGRATH, Adjunct Research Associate Professor. Ph.D., UW (1993). School of Nursing: death and dying, HIV/AIDS, diabetes, and the social and cultural implications of the Human Genome Project. KATHARYNE MITCHELL, Adjunct Professor. Ph.D., California-Berkeley (1993). Geography: migration; racial and ethnic identity; community formation and representation; Pacific Rim issues. NAOMI MURAKAWA, Adjunct Assistant Professor. Ph.D., Yale (2005). Political Science: race and gender dimensions of U.S. crime policy. GAIL NOMURA, Adjunct Associate Professor. Ph.D., University of Hawai'i (1978). American Ethnic Studies: Asian American studies, Asian American history, Asian American women's history ARZOO OSANLOO, Adjunct Assistant Professor. Ph.D., Stanford (2002). Anthropology: anthropology of law, transnational law, human rights, Islam and women's studies. LIRONG PANG, Affiliate Assistant Professor. M.A., Pacific Lutheran University (2002). Teaching English as a second language, teaching Chinese as a second language. DEVON PENA, Adjunct Professor. Ph.D., Texas-Austin (1983). Anthropology: Agroecology, bioregionalism, ethnoecology, social movements, labor process theory, workplace politics. UTA POIGER, Adjunct Associate Professor. Ph.D., Brown University, (1995). History: Germany, Historiography, Comparative Gender. BARBARA RESKIN, Adjunct Professor. Ph.D., UW (1970). Sociology: stratification, sociology of work, sex, race and ethnic inequality in work organizations. SONNET RETMAN, Adjunct Assistant Professor. Ph.D., UCLA (1997). American Ethnic Studies: African-American literature and culture; popular music and film; critical race theory. JEAN ROBERTS, Adjunct Associate Professor. Ph.D., Pittsburgh (1982). Philosophy: feminist ethics and political theory ELAINA ROSE, Adjunct Associate Professor. Ph.D., Pennsylvania, (1993). Economics: labor and development economics focusing on gender differences in allocation of resources and economic outcomes in the USand in South Asia. ELIZABETH SALAS, Adjunct Associate Professor. Ph.D., UCLA (1987). American Ethnic Studies: New Mexican Hispanic history and politics; Chicana history; Mexicana history; minority women in US military history. CAROLE SCHROEDER, Adjunct Associate Professor. Ph.D., Colorado (1993). Community Health Care Systems: critical theory of women's health; health care inequities; socio-economic inequities and health PEPPER SCHWARTZ, Adjunct Professor. Ph.D., Yale (1974). Sociology: gender, family, and sexuality; power, equity, sexual identity, intimacy, family and intimate roles. LAURIE SEARS, Adjunct Professor. Ph.D., Wisconsin (1986). History: gender in Southeast Asia. KIMBERLY SEGALL, Affiliate Assistant Professor. PhD., Northwestern (2001). Seattle Pacific University: Modern and contemporary literature, emphasizing Postcolonial Studies. JULIE SHAYNE, Affiliate Assistant Professor. Lecturer in Interdisciplinary Arts & Sciences and Center for University Studies at UW, Bothell. Faculty Website. SANDRA SILBERSTEIN, Adjunct Professor. Ph.D., Michigan (1982). English: women and language; language and ethnicity; discourse analysis; storytelling. JANE SIMONI, Adjunct Professor. Ph.D., UCLA (1993). Psychology: health and community psychology in underrepresented populations CAROLINE CHUNG SIMPSON, Adjunct Associate Professor. Ph.D., Texas-Austin (1994). English: Asian-American literature and culture. SUE SOHNG, Adjunct Associate Professor. Ph.D., Pittsburgh. School of Social Work: social justice and cultural diversity; intergroup dialogue; participatory action research; feminist pedagogy; multicultural research; community development with immigrant and refugee populations. NAOMI SOKOLOFF, Adjunct Associate Professor. Ph.D., Princeton (1980). Near Eastern Languages and Civilization: feminist criticism; gender and modern Hebrew and Jewish literature. CLARK SORENSEN, Adjunct Associate Professor. Ph.D., Washington.Jackson School of International Studies: Korean Anthropology; East Asia.. MARIANNE STECHER-HANSEN, Adjunct Associate Professor. Ph.D., California-Berkeley (1990). Scandinavian Languages and Literature: feminist theory and criticism; Isak Dinesen; modern Scandinavian literature. CYNTHIA STEELE, Adjunct Professor. Ph.D., California-San Diego (1980).Romance Languages: Mexican women writers and photographers; Mexican feminism; Mexican and Guatemalan indigenous women; Spanish American testimonial literature. GAIL STYGALL, Adjunct Professor. Ph.D., Indiana (1989). English: feminist rhetorical theory; gender and languag.e JANELLE TAYLOR, Adjunct Assistant Professor. Ph.D., Chicago (1999). Anthropology: medical anthropology; science and technology studies; critical perspectives on consumption and culture. LYNN THOMAS, Adjunct Associate Professor. Ph.D., Michigan (1997). History: Africa, comparative gender studies DEBI THOMAS-JONES, Affiliate Assistant Professor. Ph.D., Washington State (2006). Psychosocial and Community Health: Reconnecting Youth, Middle School Study. SHERYL TYSON, Adjunct Assistant Professor. Ph.D., UCLA (2002). Psychosocial and Community Health: intimate partner violence against women. DEBORAH WARD, Adjunct Associate Professor. Ph.D., BostonUniversity (1988). School of Nursing Psychosocial & Community Health: health politics and policy as well as unpaid and low-wage caregiving ALYS EVE WEINBAUM,Adjunct Associate Professor. Ph.D., Columbia (1998). English: "Reproduction in modern thought and literature"; "Recent feminist writing on race". CAROLYN WEST, Adjunct Associate Professor. Ph.D., Missouri (1994). Liberal Studies-Tacoma: clinical psychology, family violence, female body images, child abuse. NANCY F. WOODS, Adjunct Professor. Ph.D., North Carolina (1978). Professor, Nursing: menopause and mid-life. ANDREA WOODY, Adjunct Associate Professor. Ph.D, Pittsburgh (1996). Philosophy: feminist approaches to philosophy, environmental issues, and aesthetics (dance) (. ALISON WYLIE, Adjunct Professor. Ph.D., State University of New York (1982). Philosophy and Anthropology: philosophical issues raised by archaeological practice, and by feminist analyses of science. |
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Last modified: 6/20/2008 11:39 AM |
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