History
mikayla.makleKen Faunce, associate professor, history, authored Heavy Traffic: The Global Drug Trade in Historical Perspective (Oxford University Press).
Ken Faunce, associate professor, history, authored Heavy Traffic: The Global Drug Trade in Historical Perspective (Oxford University Press).
Daryl DeFord, assistant professor of data analytics, mathematics and statistics, coauthored “Recombination: A Family of Markov Chains for Redistricting” in Harvard Data Science Review.
Andrew Gillreath-Brown, doctoral candidate, anthropology, authored Robert J. Hard and John R. Roney: Early Farming and Warfare in Northwest Mexico (University of Utah Press).
Michael Tsatsomeros, professor, mathematics and statistics, co-authored Matrix Positivity (Cambridge University Press).
John Streamas, associate professor, languages, cultures, and race, authored two poems, “Shelter Out of Place” and “Golden Years,” in Tales from Six Feet Apart.
Richard Gomulkiewicz, professor, and Micki Thies, undergraduate student, biological sciences, coauthored with a colleague “Evading resistance to gene drives” in Genetics.
Samuel Ginsburg, assistant professor, languages, cultures, and race, authored “Bombs, Bodies and Ghosts: Navigating the Rhetorical Legacies of Nuclear Technology in Recent Caribbean Science Fiction” in Mitologías Hoy.
Greg Yasinitsky, Regents professor, music, released a new CD, YAZZ Band: New Normal on Origin Records. Recorded partially in the WSU Recording Studio, it features Yasinitsky’s compositions and saxophone playing, and music faculty members Horace Alexander Young, Gabe Condon, Jake Svendsen, F. David Snider, and David Jarvis, professor emeritus. Other recent releases from Yasinitsky include String Theory, featuring his compositions for saxophone and strings with WSU faculty, including music’s Meredith Arksey and Ruth Boden; and “Gregory W. Yasinitsky | Jazz Concerto | Version for Piano and Wind Ensemble.”
Trish Glazebrook, professor, politics, philosophy, and public affairs, and a colleague published the chapter “Standing Rock: Water Protectors in a Time of Failed Policy” in The Wonder of Water: Lived Experience, Policy and Practice (University of Toronto Press). She also organized and hosted a well-attended, international, online conference for the Society for Women in Philosophy.
Matt Stichter, associate professor, politics, philosophy, and public affairs, coauthored “It Just Feels Right: An Account of Expert Intuition” in Synthese, Special Issue on Minds in Skilled Performance (2020). Stichter also coauthored and published “Exploring Relations between Beliefs about the Genetic Etiology of Virtue and the Endorsement of Parenting Practices,” in Parenting: Science and Practice.