
Women's Studies Department
| S. Charusheela, PhD, Interim Chair 702-895-0467 s.charusheela@unlv.edu | |
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Dr. S. "Charu" Charusheela earned her Ph.D. in Economics from the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, May 1997, her M.A. in Economics, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, May 1992, and her B.A. (Hons.) in Economics, Delhi University, 1985. Her research interests are in feminist political economy, economic methodology (ontology), postcolonial thought and economics, and development discourse. |
| Lynn Comella, PhD 702-895-5451 lynn.comella@unlv.edu | |
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Dr. Lynn Comella earned her Ph.D. in Communication from the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, September 2004, her M.A. in Gender Studies and Feminist Theory, The New School for Social Research, May 1996, and her B.A.(Highest Distinction) in Psychology, with minors in Anthropology and Women’s Studies, May 1990. Her research and teaching interests include media and popular culture, gender and consumer culture, sexuality studies, and ethnographic research. She is presently at work on a book project that explores the history and retail culture of women-owned sex toy stores in the United States. |
| Lois Helmbold, PhD 895-0837 e-mail for UNLV people: lois.helmbold@unlv.edu; e-mail for the rest of the world: helmbold@unlv.nevada.edu Thanks! | |
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Lois Rita Helmbold (Ph.D. American History, Stanford University, 1982), Professor and Chair of the Women’s Studies Department, is a member of the founding generation of women’s studies. She invented the first women’s studies course at San Jose State University in 1970, where she worked with students and faculty to establish a women’s studies program. Her primary research interests include the simultaneity of gender, race, and class in women’s lives; women’s work; working class women; and the Great Depression. Making Choices, Making Do: Survival Strategies of Black and White Working Class Women during the Great Depression is forthcoming. She has published widely in historical and women’s studies interdisciplinary journals, including Labor History, Feminist Studies, Frontiers, Reviews in American History, Women’s Review of Books, and in the award-winning Black Women in America: a Historical Encyclopedia. Among her honors are Phi Beta Kappa, Woodrow Wilson Fellow, Woodrow Wilson Teaching Intern, Rockefeller Humanist in Residence, and Fulbright Senior Lecturer in Japan. In her spare time she is an activist, a martial artist, and a quilter. |
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Anita Tijerina Revilla 895-1525 anita.revilla@unlv.edu |
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Anita Tijerina Revilla is an assistant professor in Women’s Studies at UNLV. She received her Ph.D. at the UCLA Graduate School of Education and Information Studies within the division of Social Sciences and Comparative Education. Her areas of expertise include Latina/o Critical Theory, Critical Race Theory, Education, and 301).Chicana/Latina Feminist and Queer Studies. Her independent research focuses on the intersections of race, class, gender, and sexuality in the experiences of Chicanas/Latinas and other women of color, especially as it relates to feminist and Queer activism, social movements, and social justice education. Some of her most recent publications include: "Muxerista Pedagogy: Raza Womyn Teaching Social Justice Through Activism," published in The High School Journal, 87 (4), 2004, (80-94) and "Inmensa Fe en le Victoria [Immense Faith in Victory]: Social Justice Through Education." Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies, 24 (2&3), 2003, (282-301). |
| Danielle Roth-Johnson danielle@unlv.nevada.edu | |
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A Visiting Assistant Professor in the Department of Women’s Studies, Danielle Roth-Johnson received her Ph.D. in French from Stanford University and has been a professor at Penn State and the University of Texas-Arlington. Her early research centered on sociolinguistic analyses of the French language, with a particular focus on the works of Maryse Condé, Violette Leduc and Alexandra David-Néel. Her most recent works include “Deregulation Policy and Public Management,” which appeared in the Handbook of Public Management (New York: Marcel Dekker, 2001) and a post-publication peer review (e-letter) of Paul T. Shattuck’s article “The Contribution of Diagnostic Substitution to the Growing Administrative Prevalence of Autism in U. S. Special Education (Pediatrics 2006: 1028-1037). An aspiring novelist and essayist, she has also completed a historical novel based upon her research about the French community living in Karakorum in the thirteenth century. Profoundly impacted by her experiences with the medical and educational issues she encountered when her daughter was diagnosed with an Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD), she is currently gathering information for a book about the economic and educational challenges faced with mothers of children with ASD. |
Part-Time Faculty
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Janis Duncan holds a masters degree, MSW in Social Work with a Clinical/Psychiatric concentration, from Tulane University and has done postgraduate course work at Harvard University. She is a professional Psychotherapist with 32 years of experience and maintains a private practice. Prior to moving to Las Vegas, she taught at Rutgers University, Stockton College in New Jersey, and was an Internship Supervisor for the University of Pennsylvania Graduate School of Social Work. One of Janis's specialty areas is adoption reform. She has been an active keynote speaker, consultant and seminar facilitator for professional adoption organizations/conferences across the U.S. She is currently working on a book and documentary film titled "Hiding Places," which researches historical to current perspectives whereby women have been forced into concealment. Her professional paper titled "The Secrecy of American Unwed Mothers and Maternity Homes" was presented in Belgium in 1995 at the Tri-Country (Belgium, Germany, The Netherlands) annual Adoption Conference. Janis currently teaches WMST 113 classes and serves as a faculty advisor for the new all-women's dormitory floor known as W.I.L.L. "Women Involved in Leadership and Learning" at UNLV. Having a passion for acting, Janis performs in the UNLV production of the Vagina Monologues every year. She is an active feminist who enjoys teaching and supports the important Women's Studies creed of "changing the world, one mind at a time." |
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Colleen Hall-Patton teaches WMST 113 for Women’s Studies and several classes in Sociology for UNLV and the University of Phoenix. Her B.A. and M.A. are in Anthropology from UCLA and her PhD is in Sociology from UNLV (2004). Her area of study is using quilting to understand the changes in women’s lives after World War II. Her most recent publication is about Jean Ray Laury, an influential designer and quilter active since the early 1960s (Uncoverings 2005, Journal of the American Quilt Study Group). She is a member of Celebrity City Chorus, which just placed 8th at Sweet Adeline’s International competition. |
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Angela Hernquist, PhD angela.hernquist@unlv.edu |
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Angela Hernquist received her B.S. in Business Administration from the University of Colorado and her M.B.A. from the University of Denver, Daniels School of Business. She has also attended the London School of Economics and the University of Bordeaux, France. Dr. Hernquist completed her Ph.D. in Educational Leadership at the University of Nevada of Las Vegas (2006). Her dissertation and her research focus on dynamic leadership in changing contexts and the insights and experiences of women in top leadership roles (CEOs, Presidents, & Chairman of the Boards). Dr. Hernquist has taught undergraduate courses in Business and Management and graduate courses in Leadership Development, Strategic Decision Making, and Organizational Leadership of Multicultural Change. |
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Sharon Hughes, MBA sharon.hughes@unlv.edu |
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Sharon Hughes has degrees in Behavioral Science and Business Administration (MBA) from California State University, Dominguez Hills and is completing her doctorate in Educational Administration (ABD) at Pepperdine University. She has more than 25 years of educational administrative and senior level nonprofit management experience and has spent the majority of her life working with marginalized populations. She has certificates in Community College instruction and Adult Learning. She has numerous commendations for her community work from City, State and National organizations. She is President of Access One Grant Writing, a grant writing and research organization (www.accessonegrants.biz). She is also a Federal Grant Reviewer for the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and has been an adjunct professor for the University of Phoenix for 14 years. |
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Jan Oller, M.A. jan.oller@unlv.edu |
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I graduated from UNLV with an M.A. in Anthropology in 2004. My area of expertise focuses on linguistic and psychological anthropology, and more specifically the study of identity formation among migrant populations, the discourse of identity within a post-colonial context, and the relationship between the market, culture, and the individual as pertaining to identity formation. I have successfully been published in the Public Anthropology, Journal Archive Project, and am currently the author of a forthcoming book dealing with language conflict and identity formation among Mexican immigrants in the United States. |
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Sandler, Amy amy.sandler@unlv.edu |
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Amy is in her third year in the Higher Education
Leadership Ph.D. Program and is concurrently pursuing a graduate certificate
in women's studies. She currently works in the Office of Student Diversity
Programs and Services. Prior to her arrival at UNLV, Amy was the Jewish
Campus Life Coordinator at the St. Louis Hillel at Washington University.
Amy holds a masters degree in counseling and personnel services from the
University of Maryland at College Park. At Maryland, Amy worked in the
department of athletics as both an assistant coach and an academic
counselor/CHAMPS graduate assistant. She also has experience facilitating
People of Color/White and Black women/Jewish Women inter-group dialogues at
the University of Maryland and Washington University respectively. Amy's
primary research interests include issues concerning gender, religion and
sexual orientation, both in higher education and in athletics.
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Dawn Starrett, Ph.D. daisy9360@cs.com |
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Dawn Starrett graduated from UNLV in 1980 with a B.S. in Biology and a minor in Chemistry. She completed her M.S. degree in Education with an emphasis in Counseling. She became a certified substance abuse counselor while working for the Salvation Army in Las Vegas. She graduated from U.S. International University with a Ph.D. in Psychology that emphasized Industrial/Organizational Psychology. Working for Lockheed-Martin, she became a certified quality auditor through the American Society for quality, ASQ CQA. She is currently a Senior Engineer in Site Planning and manages development of the ten-year plan for the Nevada Test Site. She is a state of Nevada Certified Environmental Manager (NV CEM) and a Project Management Institute certified Project Management Professional, PMI PMP. With 13 years of teaching experience, Dawn has taught psychology classes for UNLV, the Community College of Southern Nevada, Boise State University, University of Phoenix, and Webster University as well as several online programs. She currently teaches psychology classes online for Baker College in addition to teaching Women's Studies at UNLV. She enjoys teaching women's studies because it includes many of her interests - especially how various groups fare in the workplace, an aspect of industrial/organizational psychology. Dawn enjoys reading and/or watching mysteries, gardening, quilting, baking, and flying kites. |
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Jeannine Talar, Ph.D. proftalar@yahoo.com |
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Jeannine Klein Talar teaches WMST113 both in the traditional classroom environment as well as online. Talar holds a bachelor’s degree in journalism from Marquette University, a master’s degree in urban affairs from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, and a Ph.D. in psychology from Saybrook Graduate School and Research Center. She also holds an Accreditation in Public Relations. Her professional career includes more than 15 years as a wire service reporter, newspaper editor and reporter and broadcast journalist. She also served as a public information officer for several Clark County government bodies as well as webmaster for the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department. Today, she is involved in working with nonprofit organizations across the country to develop and evaluate community service programs as well as to secure grant funding. Her research interests include domestic violence, social issues, politics, virtual communication and social support networks. |
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Dustin Wax, Ph.D. Candidate dustin.wax@unlv.edu |
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Dustin M. Wax is a PhD candidate in Cultural Anthropology at the New School for Social Research in New York City, where he is completing a dissertation on action anthropology and the development of an engaged anthropological practice. He currently teaches anthropology at the Community College of Southern Nevada and Women’s Studies at UNLV. His research interests include the history of anthropology, Cold War history, Native American cultures, gender roles and sexual identity, and the representation of culture and identity in scientific literature, museums, and the mass media. He has also been active in attempts to use the Internet to improve and broaden research, education, and academics’ involvement with their society, and is a founding contributor to the anthropology site Savage Minds (www.savageminds.org). |
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Maria Teresa Alves Williams earned her Ph.D. in Educational Leadership at UNLV in May, 2007. Her doctoral dissertation is titled: Voices of Three African American Female College Presidents: A Qualitative Examination of Their Pathway to Higher Education Leadership Positions. Her area of focus is on the intersection of race, class and gender, particularly as it pertains to women of color. Prior to pursuing her doctoral degree, Mrs. Williams obtained her bachelor's degree in social work at Colorado State University and a masters degree in clinical social work at UNLV. She worked for many years in a variety of social work positions. |
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Rebecca Zisch, M.A. zischwmst@aol.com |
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Rebecca Zisch is a part-time faculty member in the Women’s Studies department of University Nevada Las Vegas and the English department of Community College of Southern Nevada. However, she is better known in the Las Vegas community as a regular commentator for both Nevada Public Radio and City Life. She holds a bachelors degree with honors from Willamette University and a masters degree in Popular Culture from Bowling Green State University. Her academic work has appeared in a variety of publications, including the Journal of Popular Film and Television. She also regularly presents original research at national conferences on such topics as Frank Sinatra, Elvis Presley and Mr. Rogers. Prior to her current professional incarnation, Ms. Zisch was a curator for a variety of museums, including the American Museum of the Moving Image in New York, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum in Cleveland and the Liberace Museum in Las Vegas. Rebecca is also known as a jazz singer and stage performer. |