
I received my Ph.D. in Anthropology from the University of Pittsburgh in 1993. I hold a Bachelor's degree in Sociology/Anthropology from Towson University in Baltimore, MD. and an Masters' degree in Anthropology from the University of Denver. From August 1993 to May 1999 I was an Assistant Professor and Associate Professor of Anthropology at the University of Southern Mississippi (USM). In May 1999, I left USM and accepted an offer of employment from what was then Moorhead State University – now Minnesota State University Moorhead (MSUM). I was attracted to this new department, which combines anthropology with geography and geology, because of my interests in ecological and environmental matters. After arriving at MSUM, I added a number of new courses to the curriculum, including Ecological Anthropology, Peoples and Cultures of Africa, Ethnographic Research Methods, and Culture and Ecology in East Africa (more on this follows below). I was granted academic tenure and promoted to the rank of associate professor in 2002.
My doctoral research in Kenya from 1990 to 1991 was supported through a Fellowship for Training and Dissertation Research from the Social Science Research Council, the American Council of Learned Societies, and the Rockefeller Foundation. My dissertation, entitled The Historical and Ecological Bases of Economic Opportunity and Inequality in Elgeyo-Marakwet District, Kenya situated the contemporary household economy of a group of smallholder peasant farmers within both environmental and historical frameworks. In 1995 I returned to Elgeyo-Marakwet District in Kenya for further research, assisted by a Summer Faculty Research Grant and Aubrey K. Lucas Endowment for Faculty Excellence, both from The University of Southern Mississippi.
My publications include articles/chapters in:
Human Ecology: An
Interdisciplinary Journal (1996),
Worldmark Encyclopedia of Cultures and
Everyday Life (Timothy Gall, ed. 1997),
Commodities and Globalization: Anthropological Perspectives (Angelique
Haugerud, M. Priscilla Stone, and Peter D. Little, eds. 2000),
The
Globalization of Food (Leonard Plotnicov and Richard Scaglion, eds.
2002) and the
Encyclopedia of the Developing World
(Thomas
K. Leonard, ed. 2005).
As a way of further expanding my understanding of Africa, in June 2001 I participated in the
International Faculty
Development Seminar
in South Africa, organized by the Council on
International Educational Exchange. This opportunity was made possible
through an MSUM Faculty Development Grant, as well as through monies
generously provided by President Roland Barden, Vice President for Academic
Affairs Bette Midgarden, and College of Social and Natural Sciences Dean Ronald
Jeppson. In the summer of 2002 I visited Kogi state, Nigeria as part of a
month-long curriculum revision process with a team of faculty members from MSUM
and North Dakota State University. In Summer 2006
I traveled to India to participate in an International Faculty
Development Seminar co-sponsored by
South Dakota State University
and the
University of Hyderabad.
In January 2008 I will travel to Guru
Ghasidas University in Bilaspur, India as
part of a Fulbright Teaching Award.
In 1998 I began leading short-term summer student
tours to the Republic of Kenya and Tanzania, thereby providing many American undergraduate
students with their first (and perhaps only) opportunity to experience the
realities of life in Africa.
Culture
and Ecology in East Africa has enabled me to give a
small group of students firsthand experience with issues of enormous import for
many of the world's developing countries.