Native American Studies

Kerri J. Malloy, Lecturer, Native American...

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.

Kerri J. Malloy, Lecturer, Native American...

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)..

Kerri J. Malloy, Lecturer, Native American...

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.

Kaitlin Reed, Assistant Professor, Native...

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://di

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.

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.