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Immigration Rights and Resources for the Campus Community

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NAS Achievements

Find out what our students, faculty, and staff are being recognized for.

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Faculty

Cutcha Risling Baldy

Native American Studies

Dr. Cutcha Risling Baldy received a $199,000 grant from the Native American Agriculture Fund to support the Native American Studies Food Sovereignty Lab and Cultural Workspace. The project will build new market opportunities for current and future Native farmers, producers, gardeners and practitioners, implement an internship program, and develop resources for Native farmers and gardeners. The project will establish an Indigenous Food Festival and build an Indigenous Food Guide for California as well as documentary short films. Project collaborators include Dr. Kaitlin Reed (co-director), numerous tribal representatives, and students who are part of the Food Sovereignty Lab Steering Committe

Student

Elton, Robb & Moore, A.

Native American Studies

Humboldt State University and Northcentral University Doctoral Student, Robb Elton, and 20-year (retired) Marine Corps veteran, Amy Moore — both Chippewa Cree members from bands in Montana and North Dakota respectively — recently published their Preprint:
"Revelation of Typology in Historical Native American Leadership: Implications for Contemporary Praxes" at SSRN electronic journal for feedback and those interested in leadership, management and Indigenous Studies. DOI:http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3906996

Faculty

Kerri J. Malloy

Native American Studies

Kerri J. Malloy, Lecturer, Native American Studies, was an invited speaker for “A Conversation about Native American Genocide.” He spoke on the promises and obstacles to transitional justice, reconciliation, and healing associated with the Indigenous genocide in North America. The event was hosted by the Mercer County Holocaust, Genocide and Human Rights Education Center at the Mercer County Community College in West Windsor, New Jersey (March 18, 2021).

Faculty

Kerri J. Malloy

Native American Studies

Kerri J. Malloy, Lecturer, Native American Studies, presented his lecture “Reflections of the Past in the Present: Landscape, People, and Narrative,” as part of the Evening with an Expert speaker series at the Imperial Valley Desert Museum in Ocotillo, California (November 14, 2020)..

Faculty

Kerri J. Malloy

Native American Studies

Kerri J. Malloy, Lecturer, Native American Studies, was the keynote speaker for the screening of “Gather: The Fight to Revitalize our Native Foodways” sponsored by the National Catholic Center for Holocaust Education and the Model United Nations at Seton Hill University, Greensburg, Pennsylvania. His address connected the underpinnings of genocide and survivance with food sovereignty, cultural and traditional resilience, and as a vital response to COVID-19 pandemic.

Faculty

Kerri J. Malloy

Native American Studies

Kerri J. Malloy, Lecturer, Native American Studies, book chapter “Remembrance and Renewal at Tuluwat: Returning to the Center of the World” was published in the edited volume Remembrance and Forgiveness: Global and Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Genocide and Mass Violence, edited by Ajlina Karamehic-Muratovic and Laura Kromják, and published by Routledge. The volume explores the ways in which remembrance and forgiveness have changed over time and how they have been used in more recent cases of genocide and mass violence.

Faculty

Kerri J. Malloy

Native American Studies

Kerri J. Malloy, Lecturer, Native American Studies, has been named a Public Fellow in Religion and the American West at the New-York Historical Society. During this two-year fellowship he will conduct research on the role of religion and spirituality in the history of 19th century U.S. westward expansion focusing on the Indian Shaker Church in the Pacific Northwest. The fellowship is funded by the Henry Luce Foundation to support emerging scholars in Religious Studies and History whose work complements the N-YHS exhibit Acts of Faith: Religion and the American West. He will share his research at the exhibits opening in the Fall of 2022.

Faculty

Kaitlin Reed

Native American Studies

Kaitlin Reed, Assistant Professor, Native American Studies, published her paper “We Are a Part of the Land and the Land Is Us”: Settler Colonialism & Genocide in California” in the Humboldt Journal of Social Relations https://digitalcommons.humboldt.edu/hjsr/vol1/iss42/4/

Faculty

Kerri J. Malloy

Native American Studies

Kerri J. Malloy, Native American Studies presented his paper “Tuluwat: Remembrance, Reconciliation, and Restitution at the Center of the World,” at the The 7th Global Conference on Genocide sponsored by the International Network of Genocide Scholars(virtually)on October 3, 2020.

Faculty

Kerri J. Malloy

Native American Studies

Kerri J. Malloy, Native American Studies presented his paper “Rising from the Terminal Narrative: Rhetoric of anti-Indian violence in the United States,” at the Violence and Society International Conference virtually at the London Centre for Interdisciplinary Studies, London, August 22, 2020.